32
RESPECT:
NCAA TOURNAMENT
In its season opener, the Kansas football team faces the Houston Cougars at 7:20 tonight. Page 1B.
CHANCE OF RAIN High 70° Low 57° Weather: Page 2A.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANS KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL. 104, NO.9
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
2
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
Jennifer K. Williams
NEWS: 864-4810
Critic won't buy degrading ads
Submitted photo
By Nathan Olson Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Four women are shown in tight sweaters and miniskirts. One lifts her skirt, another simulates masturbation.
A scene from a pornographic magazine? No. It is a clothing advertisement in last Sunday's New York Times.
such ads promote the degradation of women, said media critic Jean Kilbourne. She will talk about other similar ads at 8 tonight at the Lied Center. The event, "The Naked Truth: Advertis-
Kilbourne said the popularity of fashion model
ing's Image of Women," will combine Kilbourne's lecture with a slide presentation of outrageous ads. The lecture, which is free, is sponsored by Student Union Activities and Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
Advertising not only sells products but also values, Kibourne said. In the media, she said, this can translate into a lack of objectivity.
"It's difficult to get accurate health statistics from a media that depends on cigarettes and alcohol for money," she said.
Kate Moss was an example of advertising affecting values.
"It's interesting to note that the increased popularity of thinner models coincides with a rise in eating disorders among women," she said.
Kilbourne became interested in advertising while working for a medical journal. An ad for birth control pills that Kilbourne said she thought degraded women angered her enough to begin compiling other ads. Eventually she turned the ads into a slide presentation
Now Kilbourne's popularity nearly is unmatched. An informal poll this summer in The
New York Times Magazine showed that only Maya Angelou rated ahead of Kilbourne in popularity on the college lecture circuit.
Kilbourne also has won a number of awards, including the National Association of Campus Activities' Lecturer of the Year two years in a row.
Despite her popularity, Kilbourne's message may not be reaching everyone. In a survey published this spring in American Demographic, 44 percent of women 18 to 34 were not bothered by sex in advertising.
Prisoner on the move after escape
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
Chad Beers, who was arrested for robbing a Lawrence grocery store in October and who later escaped from authorities, is on the run again and could be headed to Lawrence.
Lawrence police said that Beers and another inmate broke out of the Sebastian Country Jail in Fort Smith, Ark. Lawrence police said they received an alert bulletin at 10:51 p.m. Tuesday from the Sebastian County Sheriff's Department.
"They used a 6- to 8-inch solid-bar tool that was somehow smuggled into the facility," said Sebastian County Sheriff Gary Grimes. "They broke some clips on a gate, climbed on the roof, then climbed down the front of the building."
Grimes said that Beers, 24, and Scott Scanlon, 31, were in the exercise yard of the jail about 6:50 p.m. Tuesday. But the two were missing at 8:25 p.m. when the other prisoners were brought back to the building.
"We found their jail uniforms on the roof of the building." Grimes said. "All they were wearing when they left the facility were their shorts and T-shirts."
Richardson is being held on $25,000 bond for aiding a criminal and could face federal charges, Grimes said.
Grimes said that the prisoners also had an accomplice. Beer's girlfriend, Phyllis Richardson, who lives in Fort Smith, was parked in front of the building waiting for the men, Grimes said. She then drove them to Choutane, Okla, which is about 30 miles east of Tula.
While in Oklahoma, Beers and Scanlon stole a 1987 tan GMC pickup, Grimes said. He said he did not know where the men were heading.
The last time Beers was in Lawrence was October 1993. He was being held for aggravated robbery, aggravated assault and resisting arrest for robbing Checkers Foods, 2300 Louisiana.
Last week, Beers was sentenced to 14 years in prison without parole for his part in the Arkansas kidnapping.
After his arrest in Lawrence, local authorities discovered that Beers was wanted in Arkansas for kidnapping. Beens escaped from a Douglas County Sheriff's deputy after a doctor's appointment and spent the next three weeks on the run. He later was captured in Corpus Christi, Texas.
Brian Vandervliet/KANSAN
1982
Changing the monkey
Chris Berneking, volunteer at the Natural History Museum, opens the museum's donation box, which is decorated with a stuffed Capuchin monkey. He said the $255 he collected was the lowest amount of donations the museum had received in a long time.
IRA declares peace in Ireland
The Associated Press
BELFAST, Northern Ireland — The IRA declared a cease-fire yesterday, and Northern Ireland now waits to see if the long-sought truce will hold and bring talks to end a quarter-century of sectarian bloodshed.
The Irish Republican Army's supporters called the declaration a historic opportunity for peace in the British province. But it disappointed British officials and majority Protestants in Northern Ireland who wanted explicit assurances of a permanent truce.
There also are worries about whether Protestant gunmen will hold their fire. Many militant Protestants fear the British government has made secret concessions to the IRA, and the extremists could try to provoke renewed IRA violence by attacking the province's Roman Catholic minority.
Hours before the IRA's declaration, the outlawed Ulster Volunteer Force kidnapped a 37-year-old Catholic, shot him in the head and dumped his body on the roadside.
Any steps forward will be burdened by the accumulated bitterness of the past.
"I welcome this IRA cease-fire in the sense that for some months no one will be murdered by them — but don't expect me to be grateful," said Alan McBride, whose wife, Sharon, was among 10 people killed by an IRA bomb at a Belfast fish shop last October.
Despite the pain, some people held out hope, such as Michael English, a Catholic bartender in Londonderry who lost two sons
"I can't live in 1981 for my son Gary. I can't live in 1985 for my son Charles. I have to live in 1944 for my grandchildren who have replaced them," English said.
The governments of Britain and Ireland pledged last December that there would be no change in the status of Northern Ireland without the consent of a majority of its people. The IRA has sought for 25 years to end British rule and join the province with the Irish republic.
twelve in Londonbomb who lost two sons — one run over by a British armored car, the other blown up by his own bomb while with the IRA.
In launching the peace campaign late last year, Britain and Ireland said the organization Sinn Fein, the IRA's political party ally,
could join in negotiations once the IRA permanently ended its armed campaign.
Prime Minister Albert Reynolds of Ireland told his parliament the IRA met that condition and "there can be no going back."
"We need to be clear that this is indeed intended to be a permanent renunciation of violence, that is to say, for good," he said. "Let words now be reflected in deeds."
The IRA and Sinn Fein said the onus now was on Britain to make a gesture. They demanded withdrawal of troops from Catholic areas and an end to the ban on broadcasting the voices of IRA supporters and talks with Sinn Fein.
But British Prime Minister John Major was wary.
"This struggle is not over. This struggle is into a new phase," Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams told a happy throng of supporters outside the party's Belfast headquarters.
John Hume, a Catholic leader and longtime critic of the IRA who recently forged a
See IRA, Page 8A.
Faculty to review evaluation policy
By James Evans
Kansan staff writer
By the end of the semester, the University of Kansas will have a formalized faculty evaluation policy in place.
In the past, departments were responsible for creating their own forms, which students filled out at the end of the semester to analyze their professors.
Today faculty will voice their opinions on how the evaluation policy needs to be revised to Regent John Hiebert at the University Council meeting.
In May, the Board of Regents presented recommendations to Faculty Senate on what revisions needed to be made to the current policy. The Regents report asked that teachers be evaluated not only by students but by faculty and by how classes are prepared. Other major points included how data about faculty would be used to identify deficiencies in teaching.
T. P. Srinivasan, presiding officer of University Council, said the faculty is not completely pleased with the some of the recommendations the Regents made for the policy.
"We are in broad agreement with the basic arguments," Srivasan said, "But with all their recommendations."
Srinivasan said that most faculty members disagreed with a proposal that student senators meet with representatives from the Office of Academic Affairs to discuss the evaluations at the end of each semester. Faculty members also disagreed with a recommendation to implement a policy already used at Pittsburg State University in which students monitor and evaluate faculty throughout the semester.
"Students should not be involved in the merit salary evaluation," Srinivasan said in response to the first recommendation. "Student evaluations should be a conglomerate of different things."
He said faculty evaluations should be peer evaluations, exit interviews and a survey of past graduates.
The following is a listing of some of the recommendations that Regent John Hiebert made about the faculty evaluation policy and the faculties reaction.
Recommendations from Board of Regents:
Representatives of Student governance should meet with campus representatives and discuss aggregate data on student ratings.
Faculty Responses: unacceptable
Independent departments can decide whether they have comment sheets with their evaluation forms.
modify,
provide flexibility
Chair to establish an annual agreement specifying time faculty spends on different areas of work.
modify, let departments control specifics
Procedures to improve teaching, acceptable, with such as those initiated at part about Pittsburgh State University. PSU stricken out
INSIDE
Butchering reality
"Natural Born Killers" Imitates society's fixation with violence. But some KU students feel Oliver Stone is guilty of his own message.
Page 7A.
Chancellor keeps his students attentive
By David Wilson
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Most KU students see the chancellor but once in their lives — when they graduate. Not Rott Sherry, McPherson senior
Nor Del Sherk, Every Monday and Wednesday at 8:30 a.m., Sherry and about 30 other students file into 6031 Haworth for Principles of Microbiology 101 with Del Shankel, interim chancellor.
"I don't even notice," she said, although she did say that Shankel told the class about his other job — interim chancellor — on the first day of class.
Is class with the chancellor intimidating? Not at all. Sherry said.
Shankel, a professor of microbiology and former executive vice chancellor, was appointed interim chancellor after then-Chancellor Gene Budig became president of baseball's American League Aug. 1.
Sherry said she was impressed that
Monday morning,
Shankel decided to put off taking roll because of the rain and because two elevators in Haworth Hall weren't working.
"He must like it," she said. "He doesn't have to teach the class."
Shankel even taught the class.
he wanted to give late students a chance to arrive.
Shankel's forgiveness wasn't lost on Sherry
"He's so nice," she said.
Dressed in a tie, gray slacks and black running shoes, Shankel began a straightforward discussion of amino acids and how they link together to form strings of protein.
But people who know Shankel said that wasn't at all unusual for him.
protein He pointed to images of peptide bond formations on the overhead screen with an old-fashioned wooden pointer. His voice rose in pitch when he wanted to emphasize an important term.
But for a chancellor to teach a 100-level class with no more than 40 students might strike some people as unusual.
Betsy Boyce, a research scientist who team-teaches the class with Shankel, said Shankel didn't want to lose his connection with students.
At one point in the lecture, he turned around to warn the class: "Please be careful when you enunciate 'fatty acids.' Someone might think you're saying something else."
For a chancellor to teach classes isn't entirely unusual. Chancellor Gene Budig taught a graduate level course in — what else? — administration in higher education.
"That's why I enjoy teaching introductory classes," he said. "It's a challenge to get students interested in something that I am interested in."
Shankel said he liked teaching an introductory course because he could stoke students' interest in one of his favorite subjects — microbiology.
"He enjoys direct contact with students," she said. "He's a very dedicated educator and always has been. He didn't want to lose that hands-on approach."
The microbiology class, he said, would be a welcome break from administrative duties.
"Part of my therapy this year will be to meet with students," he said.
And while teaching the class soothes Shankel's nerves, being a student in the class piques Sherry's interest.
"I haven’t fallen asleep yet," she said.
2A
Thursday, September 1; 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
✩
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE! Financial security should be your top priority. Set forth an income-producing plan that will provide for you and your loved ones for years to come. Others look to you when a leadership vacuum develops. Be ready to take the reins. Master your own skills and benefits. Relevant pressures fade. Travel enjoys the best influences next spring and summer.
CLEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: comedian Lily Tomlin, singer Gloria Estefan, musician Conway Twitty, basketball player Billy Balls
T
8
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Favored friends influence romance, creative pursuits and children's activities. Doing something to help a younger relative will bring you both warmth for a long time to come.
15
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Void your suggestions to the right person will improve business and boost your own earnings. Cultivate an independent attitude to avoid relying too heavily on mate.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): If you must go on a trip, leave the driving to others. Use words to uplift, not wound. It pays to take the initiative in financial matters. Make sure an insurance policy is adequate.
m
♊
GEMINI (May 21 June 20). Organize your agenda, and get an early start this morning. Shrugging off any frustrations or setbacks will let your concentrate on creative endeavors. Loved one needs a change of pace. Try a new restaurant tonight.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): A delightful new admirer appears, perhaps you meet me last weekend. Go slow; acting too eager could drive this person away. Welcome a last-minute invitation this evening. A flexible approach pays big dividends.
♌
69
Ω
CANCER (June 21 July 22) After a slow start, a community or business project will keep you busy. An upbeat telephone call or letter will life your spirits, be wary of new financial entangements. A disgruntled investor could cause problems.
WP
SAGITTARISI (Nov. 22 Dec 21)
Be more objective when dealing with influential people. Try to fit into a group without acting domineering. A better approach is to reach. Less lessons in the past could apply tonight. Keep you cool!
V8
LEO (July 23-Aug 27) Someone could ask odd questions about a love relationship. Be discreet. Only you can decide what you want the future to hold. A sensitive approach is essential when discussing partnership matters. Avoid making accusations.
Water
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Innovative financial schemes and relationship complications are in the spotlight. Afternoon hours are the best time for confidential meetings and secret transactions. Balance workplaces with pleasurable pursuits. Neighbors help out in an emergency.
AQUARIUS.Jan.20-Feb.18. Confidential matters look promising if link to romance or a creative project. Heed advice from experts. Your career goals probably need revision. Be on the lookout for unexpected financial opportunities. Timely investments pay off.
X
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You could feel at loose ends today. A hobby or avocation can bring the fulfillment that job activities fail to provide. You are much more creative than you realize. Give your imagination free reign.
TODAY'S CHILDREN: Be prepared to answer these youngster's questions honestly. Otherwise their analytical minds will let them know that your answers do not make sense. Straightforward and highly observant, these children are apt to point out flaws in others' attire and performance. Remind the Virgos that they will make more friends if they soft-pedal the criticism! Affectionate and very generous, these hard workers are tempted to spend every penny on those they love. A regular savings program is must!
Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairfloor Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, 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. 60404. 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. 68045.
ON CAMPUS
Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. today at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Wilson at 865-0066.
Canterbury House (Episcopal/Anglican) will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today at Danforth Chapel.
Army ROTC will sponsor an activation ceremony of the KU Army ROTC Jayhawk Battalion at 4:30 p.m. today at the Military Science Building. For more information, call Capt. Harris at 864-3811.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Kansas Union Parlors. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585
Latin American Solidarity will have a planning meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at 1204 Oread. For more information, call Emily Bono at 883-2330.
Friends of KU Women's Studies will sponsor an evening with Barbara Ballard at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Ithus Christian Outreach will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-9529
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
LesBiGay Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Eric Moore at 864-3091.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a new student welcome at 7:30 tonight at 1631 Crescent Road in the Social Hall. For more information, call
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at 158 Strong Hall. For more information, call John Dale III at 749-5666.
843-0357.
KU Democrats will meet at 8 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ted Miller at 842-4596.
Bioethics Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ryan Davis at 841-9627.
Department of Communication Studies has set the Oral Communications Exemption Exam for next Thursday. Interested students must register in 3090 Wescoe to tomorrow. 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 Baaji at 842-7990.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow at Danforth Chapel.
**Friends of Milton Steinhardt**
will sponsor a reception for Milton Steinhardt, a former Professor Emeritus of Fine Arts who died June 30, at 3 p.m. tomorrow at Alvamar Country Club, 1800 Crossgate Drive. For more information, call lise Steinhardt at 843-7833.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-4713.
ON THE RECORD
the fourth floor of Wescoe Hall Tuesday afternoon, KU police reported. A $5 woman's gray vinyl purse with $122, $10 in food stamps, social security card and $7 replacement Kansas driver's license were stolen or mislaid, police said.
A Smith Hawkins chair, table and bench valued at $900 was stolen from a KU staff member Tuesday around 7:30 p.m. on the 600 block of Indiana, Lawrence police reported.
Miscellaneous items totaling $144 were misplaced or stolen from
Weather
TODAY'S TEMPS
A bicycle valued at $450 was stolen Monday afternoon from a bike rack at Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall, KU police reported. The blue men's Cannondale mountain bicycle did not have a front tire, police said.
Lawrence
Kansas City
Topeka
Wichita
Omaha
Tulsa
Des Moines
St. Louis
Chicago
Atlanta
New York
Los Angeles
Seattle
A yellow parking permit valued at $53 was stolen from a KU student's car parked in the Watkins Scholarship Hall parking lot No. 13 Monday afternoon, KU police reported.
HIGH
TODAY
FRIDAY
H I G N L O W
71° • 57°
85° • 62°
87° • 63°
95° • 71°
83° • 58°
96° • 70°
82° • 56°
77° • 71°
67° • 59°
95° • 75°
78° • 64°
81° • 68°
79° • 61°
50 percent chance of showers
Slight possibility of showers
7057
7755
Source: Associated Press
SATURDAY Cool
8055
August 31, 1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
NYSE
3.88
3,913.42
0.11
261.99
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 364,375,800
↑
↓
Advances
0.84
765.62
Declines
1,236
965
Unchanged
-
685
ASE
1.65
454.34
PRE-MED CLUB
Information meeting with Advisors
Doctor
Thursday, September 1st Watkins Health Center Conference Room
7:00pm
"Christianity is...not the end of a journey but the end of wandering, not the end of a road but the end of searching for one, not the end of doubt and questioning but the discovery of a Friend in whose friendship nothing is felt to matter so much as maintaining the love relationship." - L.Weatherhead
BAPTISTSTUDENTUNION
☆
1629W.19th 841-8001
Thursday, September1,
3:0p.M.dinner
The B.S.U. is a Christian campus ministry open to all students.
C
WELCOME BACK! (Look what LPS can do for you!)
C
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
Quality Lithography Design
O
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 for only.
POWER though it.
$1512^{95} or $1757^{95}
LC 475 4/80 LC 475 8/160
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union
technology
center
Computer Supplies. Service & Equipment
Burge Union * Level 5 = 913864-5600
APPLE
18
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 1, 1994
3A
Haskell limits enrollment
First-come, first-serve admittance procedure ends crowding problem
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
For Dominic Palone, Haskell Indian Nations University suddenly seems much smaller.
"You can see the same person twice in one day now," said Palone, Haskell sophomore.
Despite mostly steady growth and a rising number of applicants, Haskell's fall enrollment has shrunk from 833 in 1993 to 791 this semester. The drop is a deliberate move by the university to curb enrollment and cope with limited resources, university officials said.
While the drop itself isn't huge, it's indicative of the problems Haskell faces as it tries to move into the future.
Hannes Combes, educational assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin, said enrollment was
minuted to avoid last year's overcrowding and resource problems.
"There were several hundred students who were not allowed to enroll," she said. "We couldn't handle any more than a certain number."
"We just wanted to make it more comfortable for students," he said.
Last year, Haskell's housing, which can accommodate only 700 students, was stretched to the limit by the record enrollment. Students slept three or four to a room, and 10 to 12 students slept on cots in the hall's' study rooms.
"They got upset and called Mom and Dad," King said. "The Haskell Board of Regents got involved. It was just too overcrowded."
This year, King said, overcrowding is not a problem, and students are more comfortable because of the limited enrollment.
The result of that, King said, could be rejecting a large number of students who otherwise would have been allowed to enroll.
But next semester, academic limits will be applied to students for the first time, King said.
Next semester's applicants must have a 2.0 grade point average and take the ACT test.
"I'm not sure what it's going to do," he said. "We might, I guess, lose one third of our applicants."
Unlike most universities, Haskell cannot apply to the state for a budget increase. As part of its treaty obligations to Native Americans, the federal government funds Haskell and provides free tuition and housing for students. But federal budget constraints and the federal deficit has tied up funds.
Student opinion about the enrollment limits was mixed. Jimmy Snyder, Haskell sophomore, said the future academic limits would have kept him out of Haskell because of his high school grades. But he said he had done well since coming to Haskell.
"They gave me a chance," he said. "Other students deserve a chance, too."
But Hilda Soza, Haskell sophomore, said limiting the number of students would reduce the confusion brought on by an overcrowded school.
Haskell enrollment
"It makes the school feel much more organized."
Haskell Indian Nations University has curtailed enrollment to fight budget restraints and overcrowding.
Jason Hansen / KANSAN
On campus residents
833
791
763
748
703
706
700
Fall '89
Fall '90
Fall '91
Fall '92
Fall '93
Fall '94
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
Source: Kensan staff reports
Amini Scholarship Hall is top choice for men
FARRIS BAY GARDENS
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
When Amini Scholarship Hall opened in 1992, new students were eager to move in.
Amini Scholarship Hall, with all of its amenities, has been the University of Kansas'most sought after scholarship hall by male students.
Two years later, not much has changed.
Twoyears later, not luck has changed. Although students on the waiting list to move into scholarship halls could be placed in any hall, Amiu is the first with most male students.
"I think it's because of its newness and its bathroom," said Kami Thomas, assistant director of student housing. Amini's suites include two bedrooms with cable hookups, two walk-in closets, a living room and a bathroom. The entrance hall has new light fixtures; and the living room has new furniture, plus a leather sofa.
Thomas also said she thought students were choosing Amini because it featured central air conditioning.
Living in Amni cost no more than living in any other scholarship hall. Thomas said.'
Thomas said the scholarship hall had lived up to the expectations placed on it two years ago by student housing.
Our only expectation was that the hall would fit into the rest of the system and maintain the scholarship hall ideal," she said. Students in the scholarship halls tend to have an equal interest in academics and social activities, she said.
Although Amii has remained popular with new students, some residents of other scholarship halls say it still is struggling to fit into the scholarship hall community.
Amuni cost about $1.5 million to build. KU alumni K.K. and Margaret Amini of San Antonio, Texas gave most of the money for the hall. A small amount of the money was paid by the University.
Josh Hummert, president of Stephenson Scholarship Hall, said he thought that, although Amini was a part of the scholarship hall system, it still was set apart from other halls.
"Basically, the impression we've got is that they have more little cliques," Hummert said.
He said he thought that because students in Amiini didn't have to share items like bathrooms and televisions, the interaction needed to bring the group together was lost.
"They only really have to interact at meals," Hummert said.
Jason Haffield, Salina senior, lived in Stephenson prior to moving to Amini in 1923.
He said it had been hard to leave the hall for Amini because of the ties he had before. He decided to move because the idea of participating in a hall from the very beginning was appealing.
He said living in Amni was more pleasant now then when he first moved in.
"We got a lot of flack because we were new and had a lot of material extravagances," Hatfield said.
Amiini's decision to participate in Rock Chalk Revue with the Alpha Delta Pi sorority last year did not improve the image other scholarship halls had of Amiini, Hatfield said.
"We knew we would obviously be seen as setting ourselves away from the other halls," he said.
Jason Hart, one of the directors for the Alpha Delta Pi and Amini show, said Amini made the decision to participate with the sorority because the other scholarship halls seemed ambivalent to participating with Amini.
"Alpha Delta Piasked us, so we went with who wanted us," Hart said.
OBITUARIES
Former music professor dies at 87
He also taught cello at Washburn University in Topeka.
Raymond H. Stuhl, a former KU professor of music, died Aug. 28 in Lawrence. He was 87.
Stuhl taught music theory and cello at the University for 45 years before retiring in 1977.
Stuhl won the KU Hill Teaching Award in 1967 and the Chancellor's Award for Excellence in 1977. In 1990, he won the Teacher of the Year Award from the Kansas City chapter of the American String Teachers Association.
He was a founder of the KU Chamber Music Series and an honorary member of the New York Cello Society.
John Kelley, a former student, said Stuhl could bring out a student's strongest musical ability.
"He had an ability to bring out the best an individual had to offer," Kelley said. "He believed firmly that whatever musical capacity a student had, it was important to enhance those abilities."
whether it was technical competence or emotional expression.
Stuhl's wife, Alberta, said he was well known during his career for organizing a televised cello, violin and viola performance in Hoch Auditorium. About 160 musicians were recruited from seven states for the performance, she said.
According to Rumsey Funeral Home, which is handling the burial, a memorial concert for Stuhl is planned, but the time has not been determined.
med Center administrator dies at 75
Russell C. Mills, a former associate dean of the University of Kansas Medical Center, died Aug. 18 in Port Angeles, Wash. He was 75.
Mills came to the University's Lawrence campus in 1946 as an assistant professor of biochemistry. From 1951 until he left for the Med Center in 1962, he was a full professor and chairman of the department of biochemistry.
He became associate dean of the School of Medicine in 1966. During the summer of 1966, he was acting provost of the Med Center and acting dean of the School of Medicine.
In 1972, he became associate vice chancellor for health affairs, and in 1976 he became director of University Support Services.
From 1979 until his retirement, he was associate to the chancellor and the director of the Kansas Long Term Care Gerontology Center.
Frederick Holmes, a professor of medicine at the Med Center,
"Faculty don't always get along with administrators," he said.
But Holmes said Mills was able to bridge the differences.
Mills also was successful in getting federal funding for projects at the Med Center, Holmes said.
"He had a reputation as a master grant writer," he said.
said Mills was admired by both faculty and staff.
Holmes cited Mills' success in getting funding for the Gerontology Center as one example of his grant-writing prowess.
"He didn't know anything about gerontology, but he sat down for a few days and learned a little something about it." he said.
A memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Sept. 9 at the Adams Alumni Center. The family suggests contributions to the Center on Aging at the Med Center.
He is survived by his wife, Margaret.
Mills was born Nov. 13, 1918, in Milwaukee. He was the son of C.A. and Edith Parrett Mills.
Wetland stays under district's authority
Beaver dam removal now must be approved by Corps of Engineers
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
A government body has kept its right to evict beavers from a south-side waterway.
The Douglas County Commission voted 2-1 last night to keep the Baker Wetlands under the authority of the Wakarusa-Haskell-Eudora Drainage District. The vote clears a hurdle for the drainage district to remove beaver dams it says are blocking the path of a natural waterway.
District representatives had said the waterway served as an overflow valve for the Naismith Canal, which takes Lawrence's drainage runoff to the Wakarusa River. Baker officials had argued that the beaver dams helped retain water in the wetlands. Baker filed a motion earlier this month to be removed from the district's authority.
The issue now will be taken to the Army Corps of Engineers, which has final word over the matter because the wetlands are federally protected, and to the Douglas County District Court.
Jim Chappell, county commissioner, said last night that Baker University, which owns the wetlands, had to prove being under the authority of the district would harm the wetlands. Only then could the wetlands legally be removed from the district's authority. He said he voted against the motion because Baker had not successfully done that at a county commission meeting on Aug. 21.
Louie McEhaney, county commissioner, also voted against the motion. He said removal of the wetlands would impair the district's abilities to direct drainage.
"It's my strong feeling that if it were all to come out of the drainage district; it would have a serious effect north and west of the wetlands," McElhaney said.
But Mark Buhler, county commissioner, voted for the motion. He said the district's representatives had not proven to him that the beaver dams created a significant barrier to runoff.
"Although beaver dams do create impediments to drainage, I don't think two beaver dams are holding up all the water in the district," he said.
Beaver blockage
Lawrence City Limits
31st St.
Natural waterway
This natural waterway at the north end of the Baker Wetlands is blocked by two beaver dams that will impede drainage, officials of the Wakarusa-Haskell-Eudora Drainage District say. The 'beaver dams help hold in the wetlands' water. Baker officials say. But the Douglas County Commission voted 2-1 last night that the wetlands would remain under the district's authority.
KU property
Kansas Parks and Wildlife
(waterway eventually meets up with the Wakarusa River)
Louisiana St.
Haskell Rd.
Baker Wetlands
Wakarusa River
Source: Kansan staff reports
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
The decision also keeps alive a lawsuit filed by the district against Baker because the university would not allow access to the waterway. But Vince Monslow, Baker attorney, said the court had no jurisdiction over the matter.
Monslow also said he felt Baker proved conclusively Aug.21 that removing the dams would drain water from the wetlands.
But Clay Meseraull, district secretary, said the levy between the waterway and the wetlands would protect the wetlands.
"We haven't done any harm to Baker, and we're not planning to do harm to the wetlands," he said. "All the wetlands are to the south of the levy. We're
Supporters of the beaver dams said the decision was made out of ignorance of wetland issues.
not doing anything to that ground, and we don't want to."
"The decision to me indicates we're still dealing with a problem of officials not recognizing the environmental consequences of their actions," said Lena Johnson of the Alliance for Environmental Justice.
The Wakauraus-Haskell-Eudora Drainage District is a legal entity in charge of supervising drainage in a designated area. Residents of the area pay taxes and vote for a governing body.
4A
Thursday, September 1, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
Wake up, live in the now: the'60s are over
NICOLAS SHUMP
Retrohippies need to see the'60s for more than sex drugs and Woodstock.
In the aftermath of Woodstock '94, while I wait for Jupiter to align with Mars, let's do a little "talkin' bout my generation."
Personally, I don't want to usher in a New Age of Aquarius. For all you retrohippies, I have one piece of advice: Just Say Now!
It's the '90s; the '60s are over, despite what Ben and Jerry may tell you on that carton of Wavy Gravy. Besides, what was this Woodstock Generation really all about?
Why is Woodstock the defining moment of the '60s generation? What about Altamont or perhaps Kent State?
For all the hoopla and revisionist historicizing, the 1960s were one of
the most violent and divisive decades in our country's history.
I think we can legitimately argue that the assassination of John F. Kennedy is a more defining moment of a decade that experienced more assassinations of politicians and civic leaders than I have experienced in my entire life.
This does not mean that we should disregard the '60s altogether.
There was a great feeling of enthusiasm and promise that emerged in this decade. The 1960s produced a legion of visionary and courageous leaders, such as Medgar Evers, Kennedy, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy. Sadly, not one of these men survived the decade.
Just what generation did the original Woodstock represent?
Look at the pictures; watch the film of the concert, and who do you see? Middle to upper middle-class white kids, that's who. Why? Because in 1969, most working class and lower class kids were a world away in the jungles of Vietnam. It was wet and muddy there, too, but they weren't hearing the sounds of Janis Joplin or Jimi Hendrix. They were hearing the sounds of enemy artillery.
So what does one make of Woodstock? What does it represent; what does it signify about the 1960s?
According to most observers, Woodstock was a weekend full of fun, free love and rock and roll. It showed
the world that, yes, we can all get along.
Well, as Public Enemy says, "Don't believe the hype." Despite the propaganda, Woodstock was never meant to be a free concert, as a recent edition of NBC's "Dateline" revealed. In short, all of those free lovin', acid dropin', naked ingenues that you associate with Woodstock were gate crashers. They got something for nothing and let someone foot the bill. Sound familiar? That's right, the Woodstock generation became the money hoardin', cellular phone wearin', junk bond tradin', BMW drivin' vynnies of the 1980s.
And we get to foot the bill for their weekend spending spree.
So I ask you fellow members of the Slacker generation, is this what you want to be when you grow up? What ever happened to the slogan "Don't trust anyone over 30?"
Wake up! Live in the NOW! Woodstock was great; the '60s were fine, but it's over.
And as for you Baby Boomers who criticize my generation for being apathetic, it would behoove you to remember the words of one of your lyric poets, Bob Dylan. "Don't criticize what you can't understand ... for the times they are a-changin."
Nicolas Shump is a Lawrence senior in comparative literature.
VIEWPOINT
Accusations of fraud are not in the best interest of Mexico
The Institutional Revolutionary Party in Mexico has been accused once again of doctoring election results.
Even as Presidentelect Ernesto Zedillo asks for cooperation, his opponents refuse to acknowledge him as the victor.
where fraud was suspected, the PRI won by an overwhelming majority.
What the accusers are overlooking is that both international and Mexican observers at the polling stations say there was not enough evidence of fraud to change the outcome.
MEXICAN ELECTIONS
The losing parties should stop accusing the PRI of fraud and cooperate toward economic and social reforms
reforms.
The final vote showed Zedillo with 50.18 percent of the vote, the lowest percentage the PRI has ever received in a national election. In past elections
The minority
parties should accept defeat and do their best to cooperate for a better Mexico. Zedillo has presented plans to move Mexico into the next century.
DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
High school's cigarette ban blowing smoke at residents
Recently, a controversy has developed between the Lawrence School Board and the Centennial and University Place neighborhood associations.
Lawrence High School students have been littering in residents' yards since smoking was
sight of campus is not an effective policy because it compels students to wander deep into the surrounding neighborhoods. Because of crowding
SMOKING BAN
area on campus.
Residents near the high school should not have to suffer because of the ban. Students should have a smoking
banned last spring on the school campus. The school board has been unresponsive to pleas to change the policy.
problems at the school, closing campus would not be a realistic way to combat this problem.
A ban on smoking within
The establishment of an outdoor smoking area is the only realistic solution to a small problem that has mushroomed into an important issue.
JACK LERNER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO
Editor
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
JEN CARR Business manager
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Editors
News ... Sara Bennett
Editorial ... Donna Heame
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
... Mellissa Lacey
Features ... Tracal 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 Masto
Coop mgr ... Emily Gibson
Special Sessions mgr ... Jon Perrier
Production mgrs ... Holly Boren
... Regan Overy
Marketing director ... Alan Stigle
Creative director ... John Carlton
Classified mgr ... Heather Nishaua
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the name, nannatype, name and telephone of the writer affiliated with the University of Kansas at Lawrence or faculty or faculty of the institution.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kanseis reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanseis newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
CUBAN BLOCKADE II
CLINTON
Jeff MacNelly / Chicago Tribune
Pet peeves defy reason; they're acquired with age
It is almost a guarantee that you will feel the need to tell anyone around you about what just caused you to become highly unnerved and severely agitated. And, nine times out of 10, a reaction like that is only brought about by one thing — pet peeves.
It is funny to think that these small things, insignificant to everyone but us, can be one of the main sources of annoyance and irritation in our lives. It is also humorous to realize that even though we all have them, and they cause us much distress, it takes a great deal of thought to recall exactly what they are.
They creep up on you every so often. You see, hear, smell, taste or touch something, and, like clockwork, chaching, your trigger is pulled. You have the urge to yell in frustration. Usually, you will.
You don't really remember what they are until they happen. And when they do happen, it is almost inevitable that it is your BIGGEST pet peeve occurring.
Another thing about pet peeves is that, while some are quasi-rational, most are stupid.
A few of my favorites: people who do not signal a lane change, girls who
COLUMNIST
Ana Maria
KATHY KIPP
leave their nail polish half on/half off, people who do not hold the door open for someone directly behind them, shoe salesmen, when the soap dish gets all gooey and gross, when you can hear people chewing and swallowing, when people call it Chocolate Chip Mint instead of Mint Chocolate Chip ice cream, when you say "Bless You" to someone and they don't say anything back, when the seat belt gets tangled and you are unable to do anything about it, when you pull up the blinds and only one side goes up, the speed at which ice falls out of those little self serve stations at fast food places, bathroom doors that open to the inside and not the outside, people who think they are driving fast
enough to be in the fast lane but, hello,
they are not, sitting next to someone
on the bus and being able to hear their
Walkman and people who ask "will
you borrow me a pencil?"
Pet peeves also usually have no traceable origin. They are not passed down from generation to generation as some kind of messed up hereditary trait.
Just to name a few.
They are not taught in kindergarten along with the ABCs and how to play house.
They just pop up all mysterious like when you notice something irritating you. The way I figure, pet peeves are something you acquire with age.
So, the next time you're at home, in a store, eating out, on campus or just anywhere and that warning bell — cha-ching — dings, go ahead and yell. Feel free to complain, it is only natu-
Unless, of course, the person you choose to complain to happens to have a pet peeve about people who complain about pet peeve's.
Feel free to complain, it is only natural.
Well, then, you're on your own.
Kathy Kipp is a Woodridge, Ill., sophomore in English.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR College is not a business deal
Nicholas Shump writes of the problems of finding a liberating education in his Aug. 24 column. What he really is searching for is one that is amiable to his whims. It is sad to see someone who is about to "earn" their education espouse the belief that schools should give their degrees in lieu of receipts for tuition payment.
True, there are some diplomas that can be earned with little more effort than signing on the dotted line, but those degrees should be reserved for under-achievers who are waiting with credit card in hand. A diploma from University of Kansas is hardly a VCR-repair certificate from Sally Struthers. The degree Mr. Shump will likely receive stands for something more, although I'm not sure he realizes that.
However "distasteful" and infantile, let me continue Shump's assumption: This education we are receiving is just a business transaction. Judging from Shump's column, as an adult he has the right to ignore any part of his course requirements deemed necessary by his instructor — but for which he has no time — because the instructor is his employee, his consultant.
Shump ignores two facets of academia that do not transfer to the business world or even the School of Business. First, by paying the school, he is agreeing to abide by its rules, not vice versa. Mr. Shump is not a "shareholder" of the school. True, there is a symbiotic relationship, but his part of the bargain is that he, by abiding by the school's rules and staying within the academic guidelines for his chosen field of study, will be rewarded with a degree. He may work within the system for change but not to the detriment of that system.
Second, one of these rules is that he must attend classes as part of the curriculum. He is required to be in class because the education for which he paid so dearly is incomplete without the benefits he would receive from being in class — incomplete because he was not exposed to important material to which he needed to be exposed!
Shump begins his article talking about thought control, but he is really worried about being penalized for laziness.
Even the most indolent students know that it is not the instructors who determine the grade, it is the student.
For those of you starting your education here, consider Mr. Shump's musings about grade school. It seems seventh grade is where his collegiate efforts have left him.
Mark Madigan
Lawrence graduate student
HUBIE
WHEW! JUST MADE IT!
AH, OKY, CLASS, WE AH, UH, ARE GOING TO DISCUSS THE ENLIGHTENMENT PHILOSOPHY TODAY...
IT DEALT WITH A LOT OF TENANTS,
AND AM, JU, EMPIR-
ICISM - UH, CONGREVE
IN UTILITARIAN AND SOCIAL TERMS...
TALKING AT PRESS DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT
By Greg Hardin
AND THE ARISTOGRA
UH, UM, UM... AS VH,
UHM, THEY WERE
VERY UH, UH, THEY
BECAME SUCH AN
INTEREST AH, VH,
UH
I'll be there.
UM, A LITTLE MORE
ELECTIC, YES, THAN
THE NEO-CLASSIC
UM, UM, WELL JOHN
LOCKE...
惊讶
I
WHOOPS! LOST
MY PLACE IN MY
READING! IS EVERYONE FOLLOWING
ALONG?
BOOM!
YES, I LIKE TO DROP HISTORY
114, PLEASE.
A person reading a book.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 1, 1994
5A
New milk will do a body good
Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Good news for health-conscious KU students who want low-fat milk without the thin consistency. Skim Delux is here.
Skim Delux is a new milk product being test marketed in all Kansas Dillons grocery stores.
Moooove over skim milk A new type of milk being produced only in Kansas has the consistency of two percent milk but the calories and fat of skim milk.
A new type of milk being produced only in Kansas has the consistency of two percent milk but the calories and fat of skim milk.
Calories
160
Whole
130
Two Percent
90
Skim
80
Skim Delux™
Fat Grams
8
Whole
5
Two Percent
0
Skim
0
Skim Delux™
Skim Delux is a low-fat and no-cholesterol milk, with all the vitamins and nutrients of skim milk, yet has the color and consistency of 2 percent milk, which contains 2 percent fat.
Micah Lanker/KANGAN
Skim Delux has been in the refrigerators of Lawrence Dillons Stores since Friday.
Bob Kolts, manager of Dillons on 1740 Massachusetts St., said that the store had noticed a positive response to the new product.
"We did a sampling of the milk last week and everyone liked it," Kolts said. "I haven't heard one negative response."
Jane Lee, representative for Mendenhall Laboratories of Paris, Tenn., the company that invented the product, said that Skim Delux was created because consumers wanted a low-fat milk, but they didn't want the thin consistency of regular skim milk.
"The product has been in the works for four years and will be on the test market for six months," Lee said. "If the product is successful, then it will be permanently on the market following the six-month period."
A number of states were being considered for the test market, but Kansas was the clear leader. Lee said.
The company chose Kansas because it was a representative Midwestern state." Lee said.
Lee said another reason that
Mendenhall chose Kansas was that their producer, Jackson Ice Cream, of Hutchinson, is owned by Dillons, allowing for easy distribution throughout the state. Other grocery stores in Kansas are not carrying Skim Delux.
Alan Dodge, sales manager for Jackson Ice Cream, said that the milk's sales have done better than he had expected.
"We've had to make three times as much milk as I thought we would." Dodge said. "When we had our demo last weekend, we ran out of the milk in four hours, but the demo was supposed to last eight hours."
Adrienne Baxter, a registered dietitian at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said that the new product would help in nutrition counseling.
is because of a cellulose gel and gum that are added to the milk.
The thicker consistency of the milk
"These additives come from a cotton plant, so it's completely natural," Dodge said.
"Many of our patients want lower fat and calories," Baxter said. "But, they can't make the switch from the current milk that they drink to skim milk."
Lawrence Air Services Instruction • Charter Service • Rental
"Everything about the product is advantageous to the consumer," Dodge said. "Everyone wants a low-fat milk that tastes like fat."
Learn to Fly
842-0000
Escape the daily grind
Purchase one of our coffee blends, dark roasts, flavored or decaffeinated varieties now through September 15 and receive 10% off
BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass.
the BayLeaf
725 Massachusetts 842-4544
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
September 2-3
CITIZEN KANE
Friday 8:00 p.m.
Saturday 8:00 p.m.
Orson Welles' Classic
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HARASSURE
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FULL MOOD REDKEN
VHARNET
FRANCE
VHARNET FRANCE
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass.
Downtown Park in the rear
PARTY!
When it's party time, we've got the clothes and accessories you'll have fun wearing. From costumes to formal wear, you will look right when you get it from
The Etc.
Shop
928
Massachusetts
Lawrence
(913) 843-0611
Costumes-
Costumes- Second Floor
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Volunteer workshop set for October
The chancellor search committee is getting ready for the second phase of its search, said T.P. Srinivasan, head of University Council. He said that 40 to 50 candidates had been nominated to the search by faculty and administrators. Srinivasan said all the candidates that had been nominated were high level administrators at other major universities around the country. The recommended candidates will be contacted by the search committee and encouraged to apply, he said.
Committee enters second phase Kansan staff report
Free training will be available in October for those wanting to volunteer to provide assistance for people with terminal illnesses.
Hospice Care in Douglas County will be sponsoring the workshops on Oct. 5, 6, 8 and 9. Volunteers will be trained to provide care, run errands and do clerical work. For more information, call the organization at 749-5006.
BE A TEAM PLAYER at the
- Sign up in person or by phone
•Pay for 13 weeks ir. advance, get two weeks FREE
•FREE SHOE RENTAL for league bowlers
•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
THE NAKED TRUTH ADVERTISING'S IMAGE OF WOMEN
Dr. Jean Kilbourne
med
film
topics
expert kn
she moves
own, and
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.
Free
Thursday, September 1, 1994 The Lied Center of Kansas 8pm
THE LIED CENTER OF LARSSAS
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
THE LIED CENTER OF TAMPA
The Emily Taylor
Women's Resource Center
THE LIED CENTER OF LAKESIDE
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
The Department of Communication Studies
SUITS
BUY ONE
GET ONE
FREE
REGULAR PRICE $259 TO $599.
BASIC
E
LIMITED
"TRADITIONAL LOOKING WITH DIFFERENCE"
BASTROPH, LONDON, UK 6413 - 6413-5759
Art Fridays
IGIE Save 10% every Friday
on all art,design and architectural supplies...
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Road 843-3826
OPEN TIL 7:00p.m. Mon-Thurs
6A
Thursday, September 1, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU bands cramped for space
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
The room where members of KU bands practice is unbearable, said White, Las Cruces, N.M., junior.
Ben White can't take it anymore.
"The room is way too small and way too loud," he said. "We pack too many people into the room, and it's so loud that we wear ear nlips."
White is one of the more than 200 members of the marching band who cram into the instrumental rehearsal room in Murphy Hall for band practices.
Bob Foster, director of the KU bands, said that although more than 200 students practiced there, the room was designed for a 100-member band.
"We have to open both doors so that band members can sit in folding chairs in the hall," Foster said. "Because there are so many students crammed in there, it's dangerously loud."
rehearsal room exceeded Occupational Safety and Health Administration guidelines for industrial safety.
"This building was built 40 years ago or so, and at that time a 100-member band was very common," Foster said. "People then simply couldn't envision how the program would grow."
Today, 11 bands and the orchestra must compete for rehearsal time in the room.
"Some bands are forced to practice at 10 p.m. because that's the only time they can rehearse in the room," Foster said.
Tom Stidham, assistant director of KU bands, directs University Band, one of KU's three concert bands. He said he had been unable to find a time that his band could rehearse in the Murphy rehearsal room.
"We've been practicing in the basement of the military science building," Stidham said. "It's actually a firing range, but right now we have to use it for band practice."
"There are shooting targets on the walls, and I can't see some of the players because concrete pillars are in the way," Stidham said. "If it weren't so horrible, it would be pretty funny."
Stidham said the inconvenience was exacerbated by the room's low
ceiling and concrete pillars.
Peter Thompson, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said both he and University administrators were aware of the problems.
"We are the first priority for construction on the KU campus on the Board of Regents' list," Thompson said. "The Regents have approved the construction of an addition, but the funding from the legislature hasn't been there."
Building the addition would cost about $10 million, Thompson said. The addition would feature rehearsal space, dressing rooms, storage rooms, library space and faculty offices.
even if the money is allocated this year, we're still five years away from a new building," he said. "In the meantime, we just have to make sure the suffering is moderate."
Duplicating services see increase
For campus duplicating services, preparing for school takes a lot of time and a lot of toner.
By Shannon Newton
Kansan staff writer
Susan Murphy, office assistant at Burge Union Duplicating, said all printing services on campus have been working since June to prepare for the semester.
"We are completely swamped," Murphy said. "August is always busy, but it hasn't slowed down."
Murphy said most of the work her office did in the first weeks of school was printing independent study books, theses, and syllabi.
Peggy Palmer, campus duplicating supervisor, said that though they try to get prepared for fall, the number of copies increase by the thousands in August.
In July, the Kansas Union Duplicating Service made about 545,000, and in August that number went up to 825,000." Palmer said. "And the number of copies for August have not all been recorded yet."
John Saylor, director of campus printing services, said that though they try to get ahead and prepare for the rush at the beginning of semesters, it is still hard to do.
"The beginning of the fall semester is always the busiest season," Saylor said. "But this year we've had more projects than we have had over the past three years."
Saylor said that everything had been accomplished smoothly, and there had not been any equipment break-downs.
"We have only had a few unsettled customers," he said. "Though we try to finish the job on time, sometimes that is impossible with the back load of projects."
Becky Dunavine, office assistant for the department of English, said that they do a lot of their own copying, but they still have to use campus printing a few times a week.
"We use them for special and larger projects," Dunavine said. "We also use them when we need copies on colored paper."
Dunavine said that some classes, such as creative writing, depend on copy services more than others.
"Those classes require that the students pay a copy fee to help pay for the extensive copies that are needed throughout the semester," Dunavine said. "About every two weeks after the students write stories, we have them copied so the professor can distribute them to the other students in the class."
Math department revamps 101 and 002, students no longer self-paced
By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer
Beginning math sections at the University of Kansas are no longer selfpaced, and the math department wants students to know.
"The Lawrence Journal World used to do negative stories on us, but since we've gone to the new math program, they haven't written anything about it," said Marilyn Carlson, director of the Algebra Program.
Math 101 and 002 have been
revamped from a self-paced course.
where students took tests on their own schedule, to a program where students are required to attend three one-hour long classes per week. Students take six common exams, a common final, as well as complete a group mid-term project. Previously, students did not have to attend class and were given exams with questions randomly selected off a computer.
Carlson said that she was interested in letting students and their advisors know that the class had improved. The self-paced programs have been gradually phased out since 1990.
"Many advisors tell students to avoid Math 101 and 002 at KU and go to juco because the class is self-taught," she said. "They are not aware of how we've changed."
In addition to a more structured program, Carlson said that both math classes were emphasizing story problems, dealing with business as well as science. A new emphasis has been placed on communication and critical thinking.
Students are required to complete a group project and use the library and research to solve complex problems.
She said that while they changed many aspects of the classes, they retained the free tutoring room. A help room in Strong Hall is open to students approximately 70 hours per week.
"This is not a weed-out class," said Marian Hukle, graduate teaching assistant. "The University is bending over backwards to help students. They have spent a lot of money on this program, and we want to help students be at the math proficiency level that they should be."
"The tutoring room is very busy until
about 3 p.m.," said Britt Haney, Topeka junior and math tutor. "This is my first year, but I've also heard that it becomes extremely busy around exam time."
"This class is very fast-paced, and it gives the students a chance to catch up," he said.
"I've been to the tutoring room everyday," said Floydine Boyd, Kansas City, Kan., freshman. "I forgot a lot of the math basics from high school and the tutors and instructors in class have helped me refresh my skills."
According to the math department, students not only are more positive about the class, but they are also receiving better grades.
During the fall semester of 1989, when the class was self-paced, only 25 percent of students received As and Bs, and 36 percent either dropped out or withdrew. During the fall semester of 1993, 45 percent of students received As and Bs, and 21 percent either flunked or withdrew.
Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can Save Some Cash
Students scoring lower than a 22 on the math portion of their ACT are required to take Math 002.
KU
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
1116 W23rd
Jayhawk Bookstore
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
- Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore
- First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044
Restaurants & Bars
1819 W. 23rd* 842-1620
Get the daily special prices every day of the week
BLIMPIE'S SUBS AND SALADS
AMIGO'S
1819 W.23rd • 842-1620
BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢
BUNKINER
2329 S. Iowa St•842-1200
$3.99 Freshastes Food Bar
DOMINO'S PIZZA
832 Iowa St *841-8002
25% OFF Any Delivery Order(not valid with any other offer)
815 New Hampshire 841-7286
BUY1 Menu Item, and get the Second One at 1/2 Price
ESPRESS O'HOUSE
10 F. 9th St*843-3007
DRAKE'S SNACK SHOP
10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more
100% Massachusetts P-43-0508
FULL MOON CAFE
JOHNNY'S TAVERN
$1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners Before 6 P.M., Tuesday
$1.00 OFF Anv Purchase Over $3.50 Includes food and coffee drinks
624 8W12b-84H1-2310+FREE Cup of Our House Coffee
(Certified Organically Grown) with Any Meal Purchase
401 N2n+842-0377-BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg.
price, get second for $1.00 Mon thg Fri 4-9 noon
GLASS ONION
PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
1711 W. 200, 0210
2907 W 6th+841-1684*FREE Soft Drink (with REF reefs
with Purchase of Daily Bowl Sweets)
$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 SHOPPE
501 Kasold·842-0600
PIZZA SHUTTLE
601 W23rd-B42-1212
One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only
PYRAMID PIZZA
RUNZA
14th & Ohio&842-3232+$0.50M ad, tops 50s; Md.$6.00;
ad, tops 75c; $8.00Lg, ad, tops 1.00; Carry Out Only
2700 Iowa·749-2615·FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of
TACO JOHN'S
1626 W 23/d/54-8185-1150 I 9th B/643-0936-2309 Haskell Ave. /842-5533-3Haskell Shells 't for 9s (NO LIMIT)
WEST COAST SALOON
WEST CAUST SALON
2222 Iowa St.*841-2739
$1.50 OFF Any Sandwich
Retail/Merchandise
ATHLETE'S FOOT
ATHLETES' FOOT
914 Massachusetts-841-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE
20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals
BOBBI'S BEDROOM
745 New Hampshire*843-3282*$25.00 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor, System Cleaning on IBM Compatible
CENTRAL DATA
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
743 Massachusetts*749-4664
15% OFF Any Item (excludes sale items)
731 Massachusetts-843-4191-15% OFF All Apparel +
FREE Free T-Shirt w/ Worship $2.50
FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET
15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
20% OFF Entire Inventory (sale items excluded)
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
1420 Crescent Rd*843-3826
10% OFF Anv Reference or Study Aid
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
JAYHAWK TROPICAL FISH
846 Illinois, Power D+844-5950-20% OFF Whisper Brand,
Power Filters, and All Other Brand Ultraviolet Filters
10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill
JOWKS HITCHS
840 Massau Ave. 82-2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Salt Items
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
KANSA SPORTS LLC
837 Massachusetts* 842-2992
20% OFF KU Swatshirts
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640
Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book) $£
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS*864-4840
$5.00 Off Ann Javahawk Clothing or Hat Over $20.00
KU BOOKSTORE
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS*864-8460
10% OFF Avn Art. Engineering or Drafting Supply
KIZER-CUMMINGS
LAWRENCE ONE HOUR PHOTO
2340 S. Iowa*842-8564*30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid
MFRLENORMAN
9th & New Hampshire-841-5324
10% OFF All Skin Care Products
MIRACLE VIDEO
910 N 2nd/841-8903-1919 Haskell Ave. Suite 1/841-7504
$1.00 OFF Movie Rental(limit one per visit)
NATURALWAY
OUTITTER'S
740 Massachusetts-843-3933
820 Massachusetts*841-0100%20% All Cotton T-Shirts Mens and Women's (Organic Cotton, Green Cotton, and Recycled Cotton)
740 Massachusetts+843-3933
15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
PLEASE
Lawrence, Ks-865-0692
10% OFF All Sales
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
716 Massachusetts-841-1762-200 OFF (CD): Tapes, Videos, Video Games) Tuesday & 11/5 more (On Cash) on Buy Backs
RECYCLED SOUNDS
622 W 12th St. $841-9475 $2.00 OFF Any One CD, Tape,
or LP (with Value Greater Than $5.00)
RENTCO USA
1741 Massachusetts*749-1605
25% OFF All Monthly Rentals
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
15% OFF Anv Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy)
VIDEO BIZ
SPRINGMAID/WAMSUITTA
1025 N. 3rd-832-1100
10%OFF Any Purchase
832 Iowa*749-3507+2 for 1 Video Rental Monday -
Thursday (limit one per ner day)
Services
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 6th-841-6955
10% OFF All Parts
BRUSH CARE
737 Massachusetts842-0880
15% OFF Complete Eyeglass Purchase
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
2000 Clintown Drive 916-545-8777
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST
EUROPEAN TAN
1601 W23rd-841-6232-FREE 2 Tans with Purchase of 7 Tans For $20 and FREE Trial Formula One
(1/customer)
MANFTAMFRS
$3.00 OFF Haircut or $5.00 OFF Chemical Service
PLANNED PARENTHOOD
R.C.'S STADHIM BARRFY
R.C. *STAUDIUM BARBERY*
1033 Massachusetts*749-5363
Any Haircut or Hairstyle $5.50
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
4 E. 7th St r841-1113
$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
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 Staufer-Flint-864-4358
20% OFF Any Private Classified Ad
lifestyles
NATURAL BORN KILLERS
Above: Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis star as Mickey and Mallory Knox in Oliver Stone's latest film, "Natural Born Killers." Below: Harrelson in one of the movie's many scenes with a gun. The film, a barrage of blood and murder, is described by Warner Bros. as a satire on violence and the American media.
Is Oliver Stone's movie a parody on society or part of it?
By Casey Barnes
Korean staff writer
Kansanstaffwriter
If there is such an image of hell on earth, Oliver Stone gave his best shot at illustrating it in his latest film, "Natural Born Killers."
KU movie-goers were bombarded with images of violence, including the media's portrayal of it, and society's reaction to it in Stone's satirical look at the 90s.
The problem — of the point — is that it scared them. Ed Connealy, Leawood senior, said the movie was well done, but he looked forward to the end. He was most disturbed by the way the audience laughed at scenes where people were brutally killed.
"People love violence; they can't get enough of it," Conneally said. "Some people were laughing at things that weren't funny because they weren't getting the point. They were enjoying the violence when the movie was about how that's a sad part of our society."
The point, Commeally said, was to describe the desensitization of violence in our culture. A point he said, was well illustrated but overdone.
"It was a good parody but exaggerated," Connealy said. "Violence is a really big part of America's entertainment, and it's sad."
Killers, which opened Friday, was advertised as a modern day Bonnie and Clyde, only this time it was Mickey and Mallory. The dysfunctional couple, played by Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis, horrified the streets of America on a nightmarish murder spree, killing anyone who got in their way without remorse.
Stone took a shocking and terrifying look at the media and how it cashes in on society's fascination with violence.
That's a concept that Judi Puckett, Wichita freshman, said was worth bringing to the public's attention.
"It was disturbing, but at the same time it took real situations and made a satire of what could be," Puckett said. "The media makes people who are bad the focus of attention. The movie made people think about how ridiculous and out of control the media and violence are."
While Stone was making fun of reality, students said he was also a part of it.
White Stone was making fun of reality, seductions Sam Stone. He penned a book called Neugebaubler, Shawnee声者, questions Stone's motives. He said Stone was just as enthusiastic.
"It was accurate, to an extent in its portrayal of society, but Stone was doing the very thing he was making fun of by sensationalizing violence," Neubaeuser said.
I am a true believer in the power of love. I am a true believer in the power of love.
John Tibbett, associate professor of theater and film, has interviewed Stone on several occasions and said that he was a shrewd promoter who was good at selling himself.
"He knows exactly what he's doing," Tibbetts said. "Stone is his own best publicist, and although the impressions seem random, don't be fooled. He knows how many buttons to push and when to push them."
Tibbets said that there was nothing in American commercial cinema quite like "Natural Born Killers."
"It is the best combination of subject and style that I've ever seen." Tibbetts said. "It swallows an American culture whole and then spews it out again."
swallows up American culture whole and then spews it out again.
Nobleau said the result was the most disturbing movie he has ever see
Neugebauer said the result was the most disturbing movie he has ever seen.
His biggest fear is that all movie-goers won't understand the satire
it's a good point, but it's hard to catch. "Neugebauer said. "The mentally unstable shouldn't see the movie because they might miss the point."
Reverend Horton Heat warms up for Liberty Hall
music
By Jenny Brannan
Kansan staffwriter
The Reverend Horton Heat's first meeting with its new producer, Al Jourgensen of Ministry, was anything but normal.
"We were backstage after the show, and this guy came back there and started licking our shoes," Jim Heath, lead vocalist, said of the meeting at the Cabaret Metro in Chicago. And he wasn't speaking figuratively.
The trip to Lawrence is a bit sentimental to Heath because the band's first tour stop outside of their home state, Texas, happened in the spring of 1988 at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. They started touring before they even had a record out.
Now the rockabilly band is coming to Liberty Hall on September 15 to make as big of an impression on Lawrence as they did on Jourensen.
Heath said that he had met Jourgensen sometime before the Chicago show. But this time, on his hands and knees, the producer looked completely different than Heath had remembered.
The Reverend Horton Heat has come a long way since then.
"He told us that he worked with Ministry, and I said, 'Oh, I've met Al Jourgensen," Heath said. "Then he said 'Al Am Al Jourgensen."
After the second encounter, Jourgensen produced the band's latest compact disc, "Liquor In The Front." The band decided to work with Jourgensen because of his extensive knowledge of studio equipment and because of his reputation as a crazy guy. Heath said.
Horton Heat plays nearly 200 shows a year that Heath prefers playing live to recording in the studio.
Adopted and raised in Fort Worth, Texas, country music and Latin rhythms influenced Heath a great deal because he spent so much time around them, he said. The Reverend Horton Heat even put an old fashioned country song called Liquor, Beer, and Wine in the middle of their new compact disc.
"I don't think recording is an art form," Heath said. "It's like a guy running around New York City with an instant camera and calling it art. Live music is my art form."
It's obvious by the fact that Reverend
During his younger years in Texas, Heath
played with a Mexican family in which the sister sang, and all the brothers played the instruments.
"One evening their father came in, picked up my guitar and started playing 'Purple Haze' note for note," Heath said. "I couldn't believe this old guy figured out this Jimi Hendrix stuff."
After a period of two or three years when he didn't play with anyone, Heath tried going solo. He said he was getting enough positive feedback that he decided to hire musicians to back him up.
He met "Jimbo" Wallace, upright bass player, six years ago in Houston.
"Iasked him to join the band," Heath said.
ALPHANOYE
Two years later, they hooked up with Patrick "Taz" Bentley, drummer.
"The next day he quit his job and moved to Dallas and lived on my floor for a year or two."
"When we got Taz, he was really solid with his idea of touring America no matter what it took." Heath said.
Since then the trio has taken Taz's philosophy to heart. The Reverend Horton Heat just got back from touring Europe, and the group played in New York on Aug. 30.
death described life on the road as getting up early, having a cup of coffee and driving.
"It a lot of hurry up and wait," Heath said. "You sit around and wait forever, and then all of a sudden someone's yelling that you need to be here now. All right, but I'm not going to run."
COURTESY
Taz, The Reverend and Jimbo
But Heath doesn't have to hurry — with the band's most recent record selling 100,000 copies already.
The Reverend Horton Heat has released two other compact discs, including "Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em" and "The Full-Custom Gospel Sounds Of The Reverend Horton Heat," since they signed d with Seattle's Sub Poo label in 1990.
After releasing three successful records with a flavor all their own, Heath still looks to rock legend Jerry Lee Lewis for personal inspiration.
His favorite story is of the time Jerry Lee Lewis crashed his car into the gates of Graceland, yelling that the only thing Elvis had that he didn't was better drugs.
"I have to try everyday not to be like Jerry Lee Lewis," Heath said. "I could never have that kind of fire, though. He could out party anybody. God knows I love him."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
September 1,1994 PAGE 7A
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
NIGHTLIFE
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Overkill with Propane and Slackjaw, 10 tonight advanced tickets $11
Mountain Clyde and Slugworth, 10 p.m. tomorrow.
$4
Mountain Clyde with The Bubble Boys and The Floating Men. 10 o.m. Saturday, $4
The Back Doors, 10 p.m. Sunday, advanced tickets $6
Nudie Vodoo and The Thugs, 10 p.m. Wednesday,
$4
Open Mic Night, 9:15 p.m. Monday, no cover Fuzzy and Easter Day, 10 p.m. Tuesday, $5
Sinister Dane with Motherwell, 10 p.m. Thursday,
$4
Branding Iron Saloon
806 West 24th St.
Kaw Cajuns, 9 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday, cover charge
18th Amendment
Disco Night, 9 tonight, $1
Full Moon Cafe
Beth Scalet, 8:30 tonight Blue Grass Night, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday Ry Brown and Clark Jamison, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday
Granada Theater
1020 Massachusetts St.
Ever
over), $5
Mondo Disco with D.J. Ray, 9 p.m. Friday, $4, $5
Club 7, 9 p.m. Sunday, $4, $5
Mulligan's
1016 Massachusetts St.
Beatific Smile with Possum Day, 10 tonight, $2-3
The Hearty Viking with Gurus, 10 p.m. tomorrow,
$2-3
Blueshead Beggars, 10 p.m. Saturday, $2-3
Jazz Night, 9 p.m. Tuesday, $2-3
Acoustic Open Mic, 10 p.m. Wednesday, no cover
Wakeland, 10 p.m. Thursday, $2-3
River Valley Music Cafe
1601 West 23rd St.
Burning Spear with Urban Safari, 10 p.m.
Wednesday, advanced tickets $11
Douglas County Fair
4-H Fairgrounds, 2120 Harper St.
Culpepper & Merriweather Great Combined Circus
5:30 and 7:30 p.m. Friday
2 and 4 p.m. Saturday
$4 (kids), $5 (adults), advanced tickets
$5, $7 at the door
8A
Thursday, September 1, 1994
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Mass • 843-5000
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Mass • 843-5000
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-8 M-Th., 8-9 Fri. 9-9 Sat. 12-4 Sun. 843-3826
Make That First Impression
a Lasting One This Fall!
Quality Professional Services for Men And Women!
the total look!
9th & Mississippi
842-5921
BEDS
DESKS
BOOKCASES
Everything But Ice
936 Mass.
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
• Lifecycles/Rowing Machine
• Personal Fitness Training
• Full Spa Area
• 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
AEROBICS with
AEROBICS with
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
Purchase 10 tans for $30 and get 5 tans FREE
...
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
• Lifecycle/Rowing Machine
• Personal Fitness Training
• Full Spa Area
• 60 Aerobic classes per weel
• 2 Aerobic rooms
FIRST VISIT FREE!
$19 PER MONTH
3 month Free for 50 members
749-2424
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Simpson defense suffers blow
Investigator's files won't be opened
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — O.J. Simpson's challenge to the credibility of a key investigator suffered another setback yesterday when a judge denied a defense request to search the detective's personnel file for signs of racism.
"I did not find any reports, incident reports, any information that was pertinent to the issues in this case," Superior Court Judge Lance it said.
The ruling, along with a previous one denying the defense access to the Detective Mark Fuhman's military records, limits defense efforts to interrace into the case.
In another hearing, too heard arguments about his proposed gag order that would prohibit attorneys and investigators involved in the case from talking to the media.
Prosecutors said they would propose full sequestration of the jury in spite of the judge's fear that "we'll succeed in scaring off the entire jury panel."
It also asked Simpson whether he'd waive his right to a speedy trial — within 60 days of arraignment — to provide more time for pretrial hearings. Simpson agreed, and the judge pushed back the start of jury selection a week to Sept. 26 from Sept. 19.
Simpson, 47, has pleaded innocent to the June 12 murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman.
Although the district attorney's office had said it would announce by the end of August whether it would seek the death penalty against Simpson, Deputy District Attorney William Hodgman told the judge no decision had been made.
It urged him to state a position soon since the question would be important in jury selection.
As the hearing got under way, lito squelched a defense effort to pore through police personnel records of Fuhrman, who is Caucasian, in search of evidence that the officer could have planted evidence to incriminate Simpson, who is Black.
Fuhman testified at a preliminary hearing that he found a bloody glove behind Simpson's estate that matched one at the murder scene.
Ito said he examined the personnel records of Fuhrman and another detective, Philip Vannatter, and "found no relevant reports, complaints or other information pertinent
to the issues in this case."
The ruling does not prohibit the defense from challenging Fuhman with evidence already in its possession.
Robert Pugley, a professor at Southwestern University Law School, said the defense may have already accomplished some of its goal of discrediting Fuhrman in motions and in press leaks.
"That's part of the reason it was considering a gag order. The lawyers are accomplishing out of court what they can't accomplish in court," he said.
The defense already has unearthed a number of public records in which Fuhrman expresses dislike for minorities.
Fuhrman's attorney, Robert Tourtelot, called the ruling a validation of the privacy rights of his client and police officers everywhere.
Meanwhile, media attorney Kelli Sager and ACLU volunteer attorney Douglas Mirell argued vigorously against the proposed gag order and record sealing in the case.
"You simply will remove the press' ability to verify or accurately report on things that are being heard by the court," Sager said in opposing Its' order to seal all documents until they are discussed in court.
IRA agrees to peace in Ireland
Continued from Page 1A.
working relationship with Adams, also urged Britain to act on the IRA's gesture. He said concerns about whether the cease-fire was permanent was nit-picking.
But Major said the British government could not enter into negotiations under the threat that the IRA could return to violence.
When asked about the cease-fire, Adams would not use the term "permanent."
Protestants were skeptical the IRA would lay down its arms without achieving its goal of uniting Ireland. In its statement, the IRA reaffirmed its commitment "to our republican objectives," but made no explicit mention of unification.
A statement yesterday from the Combined Loyalist Military Command, an umbrella group that includes the outlawed Ulster Freedom Fighters and the Ulster Volunteer Force, questioned the reasons for the IRA move. "Is our constitution being tampered with or is it not? What deals have been done?"
British and Irish officials said again that no concessions were offered to the IRA in return for a cease-fire.
"There is no secret deal," Reynolds said. "There is no under-the-table deal. It is a beginning."
The IRA last called an extended truce in 1975. It lasted nine months, then negotiations with British officials broke down in mutual recriminations.
The Rev. Ian Paisley, who in the past
has rallied Protestant opposition to compromise, jumped on the IRA's failure to promise a permanent ceasefire.
"Can you show me one word that says that they have renounced (violence), that they have had a change of heart, that they are sorry for what they have done, that the are deeply and bitterly sorry for the mayhem they have caused?" Paisley said.
At the rally in West Belfast, Adams, the Sinn Fein leader, repeated demands for an early meeting between Sinn Fein and British officials and the end of Britain's broadcasting ban on Sinn Fein-IRA supporters. He also urged "demilitarization"
— Sinn Fein parlance for gradual withdrawal of army and police patrols from Catholic areas.
Call Carol for college cash.
Sally F.
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.
- Professional Student Loan Specialists who will help you every step of the way.
- A personal commitment to you.
- Put Mercantile to work for you.Call Carol at 865-0278.
- In-house processing and servicing of all student loans until repayment.
MERCANTILE BANK
Member FDIC
Equal Opportunity Lender
LENDER
JAYHAWK BLANKETS
Show Your Team Spirit And Save On Quality Jayhawk Blankets.
KU
JAYHAWK UNIVERSITY BLANKETS...
BLANKETS...
$9.99
Root for the K.U. Jayhawk 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
LAWRENCE
RIVERFRONT PLAZA
Fieldcrest Cannon offers factory direct savings on a wide variety of quality towels, sheets, blankets, comforters, bath accessories and more.
YIELDCREST CANNON BED AND BATH FACTORY STORES
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza Lawrence 10AM-9PM Mon.-Sat. 10AM-6PM Sun.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1. 1994
SECTION B
KU
Respect starts here
Two football teams are looking to regain respect. Last season the Jayhawks stalled in their climb, and tonight they face a determined Houston team.
UH
The Kansas Jayhawks vs. the Houston Cougars. 7:20 tonight on KSMO 62, Sunflower Cablevision Channel 3.
16 30
Richard Devink/ KANSAN
Senior Keith Rogers and junior Eric Galbreath, linebackers, run drills during practice last week at Memorial Stadium. Kaizen will open the season against Houston, a team that ended last season with a 1-9,1 record.
'Hawks kick off in Astrodome
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas football players have seen enough of each other laterly.
"We're tired of practicing against each other," Kansas coach Glen Mason said during the Big Eight coaches teleconference on Monday.
It's not that the team lacks unity, it's just that they haven't seen another football team since Nov. 20,1993, when they defeated Missouri 28-0 in Lawrence.
The Jayhawks will get their chance tonight when they face the Houston Cougars at 7:20 in the Astrodome.
The game will be televised live on KSMO 62, or Sunflower Cablevision, Channel 3, in Lawrence.
The Cougars, who were 1-9-1 last season, hope their inexperienced team can prevent Kansas from equaling its number of victories away from home last season — one.
Houston plans to start four defensive linemen, three linebackers and two defensive backs who have little game experience. Junior strong safety Gerome Williams, who has started 17 games in his career, and senior cornerback John Brown, who has started 12 games in his career, lead the Cougar's defense in experience.
"I think before it's over with, there's a chance that you may have all three linebacker positions being played by freshmen," Houston coach Kim Helton said.
Mason said he was impressed with Houston's young talent. However, he said not knowing their abilities made Houston a difficult team for which to prepare.
Unlike Houston, Mason does not have to worry about his team's experience. Injuries seem to be Mason's biggest worry.
"Coming through two-a-days, injuries are at a minimum."
Mason said. "But I still worry about our depth."
The Jayhawks will face a team that converted from a run-and-shoot offense during the 1992 season to a two-back, pro-style offense last season. Houston's offense is led by sophomore quarterback Chuck Clements.
The most experienced players offensively for the Cougars are their wide receivers. Seniors Ron Peters and Daniel Adams have two years of experience playing in the run-and-shoot system.
Entering their 105th year, the Jayhawks will again be led on offense by senior quarterback Ashei Preston. The Jayhawks will start sophomore June Henley at tailback.
The Cougars running game is led by potential All-Southwest Conference offensive tackles senior Billy Milner and junior Jimmy Herndon.
Mason would have had a tougher decision had he not moved senior George White to the wingback position.
"I guarantee all three will play." Mason said of his three talented running backs. "We'll just go with the hot hand."
The wingback position is similar to that of a running back that goes out for passes and is used in passing situations. The wingback position was permanently installed in the offense this season.
On defense, the Jayhawks could start as many as seven seniors.
Senior defensive ends Steve Harvey and Harold Harris played at the linebacker position last season.
Senior Sylvester Wright will move from defensive end to defensive tackle and Gerald McBurrows will move from cornerback to strong safety.
The Jayhawks' kicking game is the least-experienced part of the team.
Redshirt freshman Jeff McCord will placekick and junior Darrin Simmons will punt in their first Division I game ever.
Houston Cougars depth chart
OFFENSE
Pos No. Name Ht. Wt. Yr.
WR 10 RON PETERS 6-1 195 Jr.
36 Larkay James 5-9 176 Jr.
LT 7 JIMMY HERNDON 6-8 280 Jr.
67 Ronnie Price 6-4 253 So.
LG 5 JACK HANSEN 6-1 266 Sr.
78 Mark Gray 6-5 252 Sr.
C 66 BEN FRICKE 6-2 275 Fr.
52 Wayne Wheeler 6-2 275 Fr.
RG 63 STEVEN WILLIAMS 6-1 282 Jr.
61 Kevin Carter 6-4 275 Fr.
RT 79 BILLY MILNER 6-8 205 Sr.
70 Justin Hall 6-2 291 Fr.
TE 80 CHRIES HEROLD 6-2 230 Sr.
82 Chann Chavis 6-1 198 Sr.
WR 2 DANIEL ADAMS 6-0 173 Sr.
81 Joey Mouton 5-10 170 So.
QB 12 CHUCK CLEMENTS 6-3 184 So.
7 Clay Helton 6-2 205 Sr.
HB 4 LAWRENCE MCHPERSON 5-10 205 Jr.
34 Jermaine Williams 6-1 202 Jr.
FB 32 TOMMY GUY 5-1 216 Sr.
30 Bobby Rodriguez 5-11 232 Jr.
SR 1 JULIAN PITRE 5-9 166 Sr.
6 Charles West 6-0 180 So.
P 8 JASON STOFT 6-0 185 Sr.
PK 17 TRACE CRAFT 6-0 171 Sr.
DEFENSE
Pos. No. Name Ht. Wt. Yr.
LE 89 OTIS GRANT 6-6 255 Jr.
92 Marlon Foots 6-0 250 Jr.
LT 94 MIKE MEUX 6-1 271 Sr.
75 Leonta Rhems 6-3 250 Fr.
RT 90 CARLOSCHESTER 6-2 245 Jr.
62 Eric Harrison 6-0 276 Sr.
RE 41 JASON BROWN 6-6 225 So.
93 Rusty Foster 6-3 235 Fr.
SLB 43 CHRISE JONES 6-3 215 Jr.
49 Reggie Davis 6-3 225 Fr.
MLB 46 DEMON JAMES 6-0 224 Sr.
44 Mike Parker 6-3 215 Fr.
WLB 55 CHAD SHAW 6-2 225 Fr.
48 Keon Banks 5-11 164 Fr.
LC 22 JOHN BROWN 6-18 Sr.
29 Edwin Sai 5-9 164 Fr.
SS 3 GEROME WILLIAMS 6-0 196 Jr.
35 Michael Jones 6-0 180 Fr.
FS 16 DEDRIC MATHIS 5-10 181 Jr.
5 Thomas McGaughey 6-1 206 Jr.
RC 27 ALFRED YOUNG 5-10 172 Sr.
14 Del Montgomery 5-11 177 So.
MCHIPERSON 5-10 205 Jr.
KR 34 JERMAINE WILLIAMS 12-10 204 Jr.
Compiled by Kansas sports information.
Jayhawk Football Listed are the starters in Kansas' offense and defense
Offense
32, Chris Powell
FB
9, Asheiki Preston
TB
QB
2, George White
WB
78, Mark Allison
RT
69, John Jones
RG
65, Jared Smith
C
66, Hessley Hampstead
LG
79, Scott Whittaker
LT
91, Brent Willeford
TE
7, Robert Reed
WR
CB
29, Harold Harris
DE
DT
DT
DE
52, Steve Harvey
17, Donan Brew
28, Tony Blevins
Defense
FS
8, Kwamie Lassiter
OLB
MLB
OLB
SS
3, Gerald McBurrows
39, Don Davis
51, Tyler Quast
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
VOLLEYBALL
Kansas junior outside hitter Jenny Larson blocks the ball against manager, Jason Yates. Kansas plays in the Colorado State Tournament tomorrow.
Jav Thornton / KANSAN
Junior is a killer on the volleyball court
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
New position, role is no problem for player
For the first time in her college career, Jenny Larson truly feels at home on the volleyball court.
"I'm back in the position I want to be, so now I just want to work on consistency," said Larson, junior outside hitter. "I feel confident where I am now. I have two years left, so I just want to concentrate on that one position."
Kansas coach Karen Schonewise had a big part in bringing Larson to Kansas. When Schonewise was an assistant coach at Kansas under Frankie Albiz, she recruited Larson.
Chonewise said that in the past two seasons, Larson proved her versatility as a player.
"Jenny never had a chance to settle in," she said. "Now she is playing with confidence."
As a freshman, Larson played the
left-side hitter position. In Larson's second semester, Albitz moved her to right-side hitter. Last year Larson had to learn yet another position at the middle blocker spot.
Larson began playing volleyball in the seventh grade. She went to a volleyball camp and got hooked on the sport.
"So this season I decided to put her on the right side and keep her there for the next couple years," Schonewise said. "She's an athlete with tremendous versatility. She's proven herself as a player."
"The coach approach me and told me I was doing a good job," she said. "I was encouraged to try out as a freshman for the (high school) team."
But that wasn't the only game Larson picked up. Larson was an allaround athlete at Millard North High School in Omaha, Neb.
"I played basketball, volleyball, softball and track." Larson said. "Up until high school, I didn't compete in volleyball, so basketball was my favorite sport early on."
After all-state high school her junior
Kansas and Nebraska were two of Larson's top college choices.
But by then, she had already made up her mind to play college volleyball.
and senior years, Larson was recruited by a number of colleges for both basketball and volleyball.
"With my size and everything, I decided it would work out better if I played volleyball," said Larson, who is 5-foot-9. "But basketball was a close second."
Larson is more excited about the Jayhawk program this year than ever before. The outlook for Kansas volleyball is good with Schonewise, she said.
Though Nebraska had a nationally-ranked volleyball program and a recognized coach in Terry Petit, a recruiting trip sold Larson on Kansas.
"I had never been here before, and I thought the campus was beautiful." Larson said. "It was the perfect campus setting. Plus, I really liked Coach Schonewise. She made a big difference in my final decision."
"I knew it had to be done for Kansas volleyball to go in a positive direction," Larson said of Schonewise's promotion to coach this year. "She's a person we all really respect, and we know where she's been and what she's been through. That's what you need to be respected as a coach."
In a scrimmage Saturday against Kansas alumni, Larson led the team with 14 kills.
Schonewihe said Larson was a player with strong movements and a talent to hit effectively from the right side.
"I like the kills," she said. "That's probably my favorite part of the game."
In addition to being a solid player, Larson will provide a much-needed leadership role on the volleyball court this season — even as a junior.
Kansas will start three freshmen tomorrow in the Colorado State Volleyball Tournament.
"We just keep reinforcing to the freshmen that they're doing a good job," Larson said. "They're all tremendous athletes, so they don't need a lot of extra attention, just reinforcement out on the court."
(
2B
Thursday, September 1. 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Charity causes getting struck out with strike
The Associated Press
Each home run by Kirby Puckett helped a child with a heart problem.
Then came the baseball strike.
Each save by John Franco sent hope to someone with leukemia. Each strikeout by Curt Schilling benefited a person with Lou Gehrig's disease.
No more games meant no more money to national and local charities with tie-ins to player performance. Instead of getting $1,000 for every home run by Bobby Bonilla, the Hackensack Medical Center's Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Foundation has struck out.
Major league baseball said a strike that ends the season could cost charities more than $1 million. That estimate, though, may be rather low.
The Jimmy Fund, the long-time official charity of the Red Sox, could lose $100,000 because of the strike, said director Mike Andrews.
The St. Louis Cardinals, Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds, among the teams that let charities run their concession stands, have not been able to contribute since the stadiums went dark on Aug. 12.
"We're not taking sides in the strike. We're just on the side of our patients," said Laurie Barish, director of the Greater Philadelphia Chapter of the ALS Association. "It's just too bad this has happened."
Last year, the Philadelphia Phillies raised $390,000 for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, the fatal muscular disorder also called Lou Gehrig's disease.
The Phillies Family Autograph Party and Auction, expected to raise $400,000 for AIS, was scheduled for Aug. 25 and was canceled.
The event has tentatively been reset for Sept. 29, although Barish admitted that "we're really not publicizing any certain date."
"We're hanging onto the hope that this dispute will be resolved and we can pull off this event," she said. "There are a lot of families counting on us."
Shilling has already given $25,000 to ALS as a personal pledge. He and his wife, Shonda, helped bring in more than $80,000 for ALS last year, and is hoping that this year's big autograph party and auction can be saved.
"This is for very unfortunate people," Schilling said. "It's not for players. It's not for owners."
Not all charities have been shut out.
The Texas Rangers still had their Fifth Annual Celebrity Bowling Extravaganza recently, and raised $53,000 for the American Lung Association. Jose Canseco served as co-chairman, although he did not star on the alley, bowling only 73.
The Houston Astros held their Wives Gala and raised about $110,000 for the Houston Area Women's Center, a shelter for battered women.
Several players, meanwhile, were on the golf course for a benefit tournament sponsored by pitcher Pete Harnisch and center fielder Steve Finley.
"We have a Roy Campanella golf tournament coming up in November." said Monique Brandon, director of community affairs for the Los Angeles Dodgers. "That's a near and dear charity to the Dodger family, a benefit for physical therapist scholarship funds. We will still participate."
Missouri faces stadium renovations
Federal regulations disrupt 2,300 seats
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Complying with a federal access law may prove costly to Missouri, university officials said.
The Associated Press
Bringing the Tigers Memorial Stadium into compliance with the federal Americans with Disabilities Act may cost the university up to $1 million a year in lost ticket sales and gift money from disgruntled boosters, athletic
The changes involve removing about 2,300 seats in four field-level rows and replacing them with 140 new seats for people with disabilities, and about 160 companion seats.
director Joe Castiglione said Tuesday.
The ADA requires public buildings to be accessible.
Castiglione said losses could range from $300,000 to $1 million per year.
Loss projections are based on anticipated drops in ticket sales and fewer donations from boosters who have seats in those four rows, Castiglione said.
He could not say how many season ticket-holders sit in the affected seats, but said the rows are popular.
Assistant ticket manager Mike Burke was more optimistic than Castiglione.
"People aren't going to lose their seats," he said. "Everybody will just have to be bumped up or down three rows."
Ticket sales ultimately hinge on the success of the football team, Burke said.
Ticket sales are brisk for Saturday's season open against Tulsa and easily will open 40,000, he said. Last year's
On Monday, the University of Missouri curators' executive committee approved $2.8 million for renovations to the stadium and Faurot Field.
That included $800,000 for ADA compliance, $1.5 million to replace the artificial turf with grass and $600,000 for drainage work to stabilize the hillside that holds a large white "M."
opening game drew 48,427.
The projects will be funded by athletic department reserves, gifts and capital improvement bonds, said university representative Maurice Manning.
Towers in Spain are mainly made of people
Human tower building reflects Catalan pride
The Associated Press
LA BISBAL DEL PENEDES, Spain
-Xavier Alcaraz is a tough, wiry 20-year-old who's used to getting stepped on.
He is a "casteller" — a member of one of 32 groups in Spain's northeastern region of Catalonia who climb on top of each other to build 50-foot-high human towers.
"It's a strange mixture of art and sport, but there are no stars like in soccer," said Alcaraz, who came to a recent festival in this small town 50 miles southwest of Barcelona to watch three of Catalonia's best groups — or "colles" — put on an exhibition.
But human tower-building is more than just a curious pastime for Alcaraz and his fellow castellers. It's one of the most visible representations of the strong Catalan regional identity.
"This is about solidarity, people working together. It's endurance, balance and strength. It's something that's only ours," Alcaraz said."When
Spain likes to advertise its difference from the rest of Europe. Likewise, Catalonia is Spain's wealthiest and most non-Spanish region — a fact that Catalans often note with an air of superiority that can grate on Spaniards from other regions.
By the turn of the century, "castells" fell out of style. The tradition almost was lost entirely when Gen Francisco Franco suppressed manifestations of regional cultures across Spain during his 36-year dictatorial rule.
I was younger, I had this romantic idea of an independent Catalan nation. Now I see Spain as a state where different nations co-exist."
Like so many other things in Spain, castells have undergone a rebirth since Franco's death in 1975 and the subsequent restoration of democracy. They have become particularly fashionable in the last decade and received a big boost with worldwide TV coverage during the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.
The competition is friendly. There are no prizes or money awards,
The tower-building dates back at least 200 years and probably grew out of traditional dances, eventually becoming more important than the dances themselves.
though fans know clearly who had a good day and who didn't.
Montserratt Colome, a nurse from nearby Villafranca and one of several thousand spectators on hand for this event, winced when her hometown "colla" aborted the first two attempts at building a nine-story high tower. But the third time was a charm.
"We Catalans are a very obstinate people," she said. "When we want something, we get it — no matter the difficulty."
It takes between 200 and 300 people to build a nine-story castell, almost all of them concentrated at the base, known as the "pinya", or pine cone. The second story is usually made up of several dozen people. The remaining stories are composed of two to five people standing on each others' shoulders.
The key accessory is a waist saft that provides a hand and foot grip as climbers step from knee to hip to shoulder scaling the tower. The tower is capped by small children who are nimble and fearless enough to get to the top.
Castellers typically wear white trousers, a brightly colored blouse displaying the group's colors, and soft-soled slippers.
If the base is solid, the castells go up in two or three minutes. The castell is complete only when the top member raises a hand salute — a "filaleda."
There is no record of a castell ever reaching 10 stories, although various configurations of nine are fairly common.
Frightening spills are common, but serious injuries are infrequent. Most who tumble land on the padding of hundreds of people working below. Only one death is known this century; that of a young boy killed in a fall in 1983.
The language of castells is Catalan, a Romance language that Franco tried to stamp out. It resembles both Spanish and French and has seven million speakers — more than either Danish or Finnish.
Fifteen years ago there were only about 10 colles in Catalonia. Now there are 32, and each is composed of people of all ages and professions. Young women began participating several years ago and are often visible high atop the towers.
"I got into it because my whole family was — uncles, cousins, my father" said Francina Cortes Pallares, 18. "When I was younger I climbed up, now I work in the pack below."
fifi's
fifi's 925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM, ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
DISTRICTAL HOUSES $419.91
Wagons East PB-13 $5.00
7:15, $8.00
HILLCRESST
P25 IOWA $449.191
Camp Nowhere PB $5.00
7:15, $8.00
In The Army Now PB $6.00
7:15, $8.00
Milk MoneyPB-13 $7.15, $8.00
The Mask PB-13 $5.00
7:15, $8.00
The Client PB-13 $5.00
7:15, $8.00
Clear & Present Danger PB-13 $5.00
GINAW IAM $419.91
Jurassic Park PB-13 8:30, 7:20, 8:45
Wolf R 8:30, 7:20, 8:45
Clear & Present Danger P8-19 $30.00
CINEMA TWIN
1 USTOVNA 421-577-3651
$1.25
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
SU
STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE
DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS
FOR RENT
2 cu. ft. $45
4 cu. ft. $65
school year
929 Mass.
843-4170
MILE DELIVERY
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
FILMS FOR AUGUST 29 - 31
FAREWELL MY
CONCUBINE
MON. 9:30 PM
TUES. 7:00 PM
BELLE EPOQUE CO-SPONSORED BY HALO
TUES.
WED.
9:30 PM
7:00 PM
& 9:30 PM
ALL SHOWS IN WOODBUFF AUF:
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
Ice Cream
POLARIS
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown
Now Hiring
Reliable, motivated KU
Student to recall KU Alumni
Parking in the rear
Reliable, motivated KU Studentsto call KU Alumni
Tuesday and Thursday evenings
5:45-9:45 p.m
Now Hiring
September 13 through December 2
$4.90 per hour starting wage
THE RAVEN
Call Marie Adams-Young
9-11 and 2-4 M-F
864-4201
Baseball Softball
We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
U
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts phone 841-PLAY
R
- Reporter
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:
- Photographer
- Section Editor (Student Life, Greek Life,
- Assistant Section Editor
DON'T YOU WANT A JOB YOU CAN PUT ON YOUR RESUME?
*Marketing Intern
- General Staff
- Production Assistant
Portraits, Organizations. News/Index
Applications are available at 428 Kansas Union (in the Organizations & Activities Center) and are due Sept. 7 by 5 p.m. We will be conducting interviews from Sept. 7 to Sept. 10. If you have any questions, please call 864-3728.
Congratulations to the new members of Chi Omega:
Susan Amann
Jamie Bruck
Kelli Burngandt
Shelley Burkhart
Annie Campbell
Rachel Carey
Betsy Drumm
Natalie Dunn
Birgit Ederer
Jill Farrell
Tamara Feit
Alyssa Pitts
Brittney Flynn
JenniferGoldman
HeatherGood
Jessica Harris
Holly Hynes
MichelleJohnson
Courtnay Klimowicz
Lori LaBelle
Alisa LaSater
Julianne Leeland
Emily Leonard
have any questions, please call 864-3728
Teresa McRiordan
Alexis McKinley
Amy Mouden
Julie Myrick
Angela Nance
Maegan Napier
Julie Pedlar
Lisa Petr
Kelly Slaughter
Shannon Steeples
Page Surbaugh
WendyTweito
Amy Wewers
Lori Wewers
JessicaYoung
Love,
The Actives
SPECIAL PRICES ON BAUSCH & LOMB
& RAW-BAN SUNGLASSES
Sunday, August 28th - Sunday, September 4th ONLY.
CATS as low as $23.95
SUNGLASSES
WAYFARERS as low as $39.95
---
M M M
THE DEAL:
Shop
AVIATORS as low as $29.95
928 Massachusetts • 843-0611
OPEN: 10:5:30 Mon-Sat · Thurs 'til 8pm · 12:5 Sunday
VISA, MASTERCARD, DISCOVER, AMEX
$50 OFF OVER 30 STYLES OF RAV-BAN SUNGLASSES (140 pairs stock)
$50 OFF ALL STYPES OF VOCUE-FRENZE FASHION SUNGLASSES FROM BUSCH & ONLINE ON DISPLAY.
$50 OFF ALL BUSSET & LOMB AND RAYN SUNGLASSES REGULARLY
PRICED $59 OR MORE. EXCEPT FOR KILLER SUNGLASSES.
All prices marked on tags are our regular prices, no marking up to mark down.
Limited to stock on hand - no special orders or lauways at these special prices.
COME CELEBRATE
LABOR DAY
AT THE CAFE!
$1.50 FOR ANYTHING
ALL WEEKEND LONG
AND ON LABOR DAY
WED., SEPT. 7th
BURNING SPEAR
TURNS, SEPT 8 SUNDAY CLUB
Nexenary Chorus of an Amateur Acoustic Band
FRI., SEPT 9 MUNKAFUST
ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE CAFE OR THROUGH!
SAT., SEPT 10 COMMON GROUND
FRI., SEPT 23 SMITHEREENS
GREAT TIMES
FRI., SEPT. 16, DIXIE DREGS
THE ORIGINAL LABEL OF
ROCK CLUB
1601 W 23rd
Lawrence, KS
For info and current concert
listings call 913-841-9111
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
RIVER VALLEY
}
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, Sept. 1, 1994
3B
Men's sports dominate athletic budgets
The Associated Press
OVERLAND PARK — Most of the money spent by big-time university athletic programs goes to men's sports, which in turn earn the most, according to an NCAA study released yesterday.
Men's sports programs get 54 percent of the average Division I A-budget, according to a survey performed by Daniel I. Fulks of the School of Accountancy at the University of Kentucky.
About 14 percent of the budget, on average, at a Division I-A school is spent on women's programs.
The remaining 32 percent goes to administrative costs.
Men get 12 percent of the budget allotted for scholarships; women get 5 percent. Most of the budgeted recruiting expenses also go to men.
Fulks cautioned that the survey was voluntary and that the response rate was 55 percent. He also said that different schools had different accounting methods that could have tainted the survey results.
The survey also was specifically designed to focus on football and basketball, and lumped information about other programs into one, he said.
Athletic department salaries and benefits, which at 31 percent of the budget are the largest expense, are weighted toward men's programs.
The study found 13 percent of money allocated for salaries and benefits goes to men's programs and 4 percent go to women's programs.
The study found men's football and basketball programs at the Division I A level generate the most revenue. Overall, men's programs generate 69 percent of the revenue of the average athletic department, while women's programs bring in 4 percent. The study said 27 percent of the revenue generated is non-gender.
Division I-A schools, on average.
The study concluded, however, that the average Division I-A athletic department was a money loser once cash infusions from a university's general fund were taken out.
made a profit of $600,000 in 1993 but actually had a $174,000 defect when "institutional support" was removed from the equation.
Different factors were used in the study than in past years, and Fulks said it was difficult to make comparisons. But in general, men's football and basketball at the Division I-A level were more profitable in 1993 than in 1989.
Revenues were up and expenses had increased, but expenses went up at a slower rate than revenues, Fulks said.
Women's Division I-A basketball programs were surveyed for the first time. 6 percent broke even or made a profit.
Olympic gold medalist lobbies for athletes' rights
The Associated Press
PARIS — Athletes should be given greater consideration in the Olympic movement, from independent athlete commissions to clear-cut rules and sanctions for drug use, Edwin Moses said yesterday.
"Fair play is perhaps the most important issue for the athlete," the Olympic gold medal winning hurdler said on the second day of the International Olympic Committee Congress. "It is imperative that we exert full pressure, not only upon the athletes, but also other individuals close to the athletes who may encourage the use of doping or other illegal manipulations."
Moses said athletes "insist on strong sanctions for use of banned substances and techniques as well as continued research into new controls for
new substances."
He singled out "controls for testosterone, growth hormones, blood-doping techniques and other new genetically made materials."
Sports federations and Olympic committees should standardize lists of illegal substances, methods of collecting and testing and sanctions, he said.
Those organizations should also accelerate formation of independent athletes' commission with full voting rights, which, Moses said, "has been slow in taking place."
He made a plea for special consideration to women's sports when additional events are added to the Olympics. The IOC has made such moves recently, such as adding women's ice hockey to the 1998 Winter Games.
With about two weeks before the
IOC Evaluation Commission begins visiting the nine cities bidding for the 2002 Winter Games, Moses said that "the interests and welfare of the athlete should be the most important criteria for the choice of host cities."
Increasing the number of sports or competitors should not be allowed to reduce resources to athletes, Moses said.
At the same time "consideration must also be given to smaller countries with less competitive countries ... and to smaller, less-developed countries."
On Tuesday, delegates heard about the importance of placing priority on the environment when planning and selecting Olympic sites.
An IOC member from Japan, which will host the next Winter Games in Nagano in 1998, said future Olympics could be held in more than one country at a time to avoid construction of sports facilities that are prohibitively expensive and could harm the environment.
"The time may have come now to consider the Olympic Games should be held in a city or cities where competition, facilities are already in existence," said Chiharu Igaya, a member of the IOC and the Japanese Olympic Committee's Executive Board.
Some sports could be held in separate countries even if they do not share a border, as the Olympic Charter now requires, Igaya said.
He singled out bobsled and luge, which are criticized by ecologists for destroying mountain environments and risking leaks of harmful ammonia.
The idea of cross-border Olympics is already being suggested for the 2002 Winter Games.
It's everywhere you want to be. The University Daily Kansan Card... A semester of savings for only $1.00!
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS Now a full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown
---
Carlos O'Kelly's
MEXICAN CAFE
MARGARITAS AND FAJITAS FOR OVER 2 YEARS!
Carlos O'Kelly's
MEXICAN CAFE
MARGARITAS AND FAJITAS FOR OVER 2 YEARS!
WEEKLY
MONDAY
75¢ Killians Red Draws
$1 Small Chili ConQueso
$1 Off ALL Dinner Picados
TUESDAY
$2 All Imports
$5.95 Sancho/Monterrey Combo
99¢ Kids Meals
WEDNESDAY
$2 Margaritas on the rocks
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
• CARRYOUT AVAILABLE!
8 7 - 0 5 5 0
SPECIALS
THURSDAY
$2 Bud Light 23 Oz. Tap
$1.50 Desserts
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
SUNDAY
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 off Chimis
$2 Bloody Marys
Hours of Operation:
M-Th 11-11
Fri,Sat 11-12
Sun 11-10
• TASTE OF THE WORLD BEER CLUB!
707 W. 23rd Street
Congressman Jim Slattery Democratic Candidate for Governor
Come see why experience counts. Discuss the issues with...
September 1,1994 8:00 p.m. Kansas Union Jayhawk Room
Jim Slattery.
For Governor
I
Sponsored by the KU Democrats and KU Students for Slattery.
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
L-R
F-K
Monday,August29 Tuesday,August30 Wednesday,August31 Thursday,September1 Friday, September 2
S-Z
- 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.
(Make-Up) Friday, September 2
- 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
Joy
49
TODAY ONLY!! NOON TO 10 P.M. MOONLIGHT MADNESS
ALL REMAINING SUMMER SPORTS WEAR MENS AND WOMENS
$9, $19, & $29
TOMMY HILFIGER
ALL REMAINING SUMMER ITEMS ...$19 & $29
SHORTS & SHIRTS
TOMMY HILFIGER, SUPPLIES, COLOURS ...$9, $19, $29
SKIRTS & TOPS
CALVIN KLEIN, CAMBRIDGE, WOOLRICH,
FRENCH CONNECTION, HENRY & HARVEY $9,$19,$29
ALL SUMMER SPORTCOATS...$99
SELECTED BELTS...1/2 Price
BOXERS (Huge Selection) ...$9
SILK TIES...$19
SUITS (Selected Year Round)...From $129
BRITCHES CORNER
843 MASSACHUSETTS
843-0454
TODAY ONLY!!
---
WOLF
COYOTE'S
Dance Hall & Saloon
1003 E. 23rd St. - Phone (913) 842-2380 Lawrence's Newest & Largest Nightclub
Coyote's has a $150,000 Sound & Lighting System and Lawrence's Largest Dance Floor Plus, Today's Best Top 40 Country, Pop & Rock Music
ALL NEW Ladies Night Every Thursday
→
$1 ANYTHING!!!
No Cover Charge for Ladies
.25c Kami Shots
Plus, Some Lucky Lady Will Win $100 in Cash !!
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
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 1, 1994
5B
More troops ready for Haiti
WASHINGTON — The Clinton administration is hopeful of winning the support of three more nations for a possible invasion of Haiti if economic and diplomatic sanctions fail to remove the rulling military junta.
Foreign ministers and military commanders from the Bahamas, Antigua and Guyana withheld a commitment at a Tuesday meeting in Kingston, Jamaica. However, Jamaica, Trinidad, Tobago, Barbados and Belize agreed to contribute troops.
The United States would provide the troops for the first wave with the other countries intervening soon afterward, administration officials said. They are less confident of Guyana joining than they are of the Bahamas and Antigua, but the officials said they were hopeful all three
would be part of the coalition.
Meanwhile, an administration official confirmed that the U.S. Coast Guard had provided information to Haiti's military on refugees preparing to board boats for the United States.
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the information was provided once, several months ago, and that there were no further exchanges. "We do not cooperate with the Haitian military," he said.
The administration has been urging Haitians that have been seeking refuge in the United States to apply within the country instead of taking to sea in an unsafe craft. The Coast Guard usually patrols Haiti's shores.
In criticizing the administration for not carrying out the invasion now, Randall Robinson, executive director of TransAfrica, cited a Time magazine "Online" news service report that the
U. S. military had provided the junta with satellite photographs of Haitians preparing to flee the country.
He called it "an example of an administration not in control of all of its parts."
Despite repeated U.S. warnings, Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras and his cohorts "don't believe for a moment this is a serious contemplation," Robinson said at a news conference.
He said it was the only U.S. military intervention in the hemisphere he had ever backed. But Robinson, whose organization lobbies on Latin American and African issues, said the plight of the Haitian people was desperate, with unemployment at 80 percent and food and water so scarce that people were drinking out of sewage pipes.
"We must not allow democracy to be hijacked by a bunch of drug-running thugs." Robinson said.
Crisis forces evacuation in Cuba
Dependents, civilians leave U.S. naval base
The Associated Press
GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba — Tears streamed down Ensign Carmen Booth's cheeks as she waved goodbye to her husband and their two small children yesterday during the base's first evacuation of military dependents since the Cuban missile crisis in 1962.
Booth and her husband are in the Navy and must remain on duty at the base at Cuba's southern tip. But their children — 3-year-old Brian and 7-year-old Laura — were among the first military dependents evacuated from the base to make room for more Cuban refugees.
Chief Petty Officer Patrick Booth accompanied the couple's children on the ferry and charter flight that took 280 people to Norfolk, Va. They will then move on to St. Louis, where they will stay with relatives while Booth returns to his post in Guantanamo.
"What can you say?" Booth said
"Our kids are leaving us for a year."
Military spouses and children, school teachers and some other civilian workers and their dependents are among roughly 2,200 people being moved out from the base throughout the next week.
The 41-square-mile base, known among military personnel for its friendly, small-town atmosphere, has been transformed by the Cuban refugee crisis. Parts of the base, nicknamed "Gitmo," have been turned into small, teeming tent cities with thousands of Cuban and Haitian refugees.
The evacuation was spurred by fears that there could be escapes or riots at the growing refugee camps as well as the need to relieve the strains the new residents have placed on the small base's infrastructure.
Many of the evacuees were bitter.
As they prepared to board the charter flight for Norfolk, three sisters whose parents are in the Navy wore protest T-shirts that read: "American refugee from Cuba" and "I am a dislocated, relocated, evacuated, unemployed Gitmo resident."
Sawyers said she had to give up a civil service job at the base and was only one semester from earning an associate degree in business. All the base schools have been closed because of the evacuations.
"it's hard. All of the sudden you have to leave," said Kia Sawyers, "20. It's
"It gets me all mad because I'm not going to see my friends. We can't see our parents for a long time," said her 9-year-old sister, Desirea Shropshire.
She and her other sister, Danika Shropshire, 13, are going to Atlanta to stay with an aunt they haven't seen in years. They will have to attend new schools and adjust to big-city life after three years at the once-tranquil base.
There are usually about 7,000 residents at the base. They have been joined by nearly 30,000 Cuban and Haitian refugees; 1,500 more Cubans were on the way after being picked up Tuesday by the Coast Guard.
An additional 3,500 military personnel have been sent to the base to deal with the burgeoning exodus of refugees from Cuba. The flood began when Fidel Castro responded to Aug. 5 riots in Havana by suggesting he would no longer stop those trying to flee.
Suicide-scorched scent lingers on horror books
LOS ANGELES—Some horror novels nowadays are enough to turn your stomach. With three copies of "Drawing Blood," you don't even have to turn the pages.
The three books, copies of a $50 limited edition of the novel by Poppy Z. Brite, were marked up to $600 because they smelled of burned human flesh.
The Associated Press
Two sold less than a week after the plastic-wrapped offerings were advertised in rare book dealer Barv R. Levin's catalog.
"Some books sort of sell themselves," Levin said. "Books take on a life of their own. They go through life and meet famous or infamous people, they are involved in famous or infamous events."
The three copies of "Drawing Blood" took on a death of their own.
On Dec. 24 a man walked into Westwood Mail Services with a container of gasoline and set himself and the business aflae. He died a few days later.
The man's motive was unknown.
The fire gutted the lobby of the delivery business, but didn't harm most mail awaiting delivery.
including a package for Barry R. Levin Science Fiction & Fantasy Literature.
"We found the books were just fine," said Levin. "Except for this smell..."
Brite, who works in New Orleans, said she wasn't happy about the fire but isn't at all squalish about the aromatic enhancement.
"I like that sort of thing," she said. "It's very appropriate for the book in question."
She described "Drawing Blood" as a "haunted house love story, with underground comics, computer hackers, family murder, personal hells ... No one actually burns to death in the course of it, but there's a lot of death in the story, a lot of pain."
Levin is giving the special edition profits to Westwood Mail Services to ease the cost of the fire.
"It seemed only fair somehow," he said. "It's a mom-and-pop operation. They're not wealthy people, and they've got everything wrapped up in this business."
Brite has a caveat for collectors:
"The only problem with this is ... if anybody reads it, the smell will dissipate, unless they rewrap it in plastic or keep the book in the fridge."
ACLU files traffic suit
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — After hundreds of motorist complaints, the American Civil Liberties Union finally had proof that the Illinois State Police illegally stopped Black and Hispanic drivers for drug searches.
State police spokesman John Pastovic denied that troopers unfairly target minorities.
The Illinois ACLU filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday based on an incident involving an undercover Hispanic investigator.
through the county when troopers gave him a ticket for not signalling a lane change, the lawsuit said.
Pose Chave of Santa Fe, N.M., was ured to drive through Bureau County in Interstate 80 to test arrest practices. Chavez was on his third pass
When Chavez refused troopers' request to search his car, they brought in a search dog that did not find anything suspicious.
But a state police official said troopers are trained to use all their senses to detect people who are carrying drugs. He said troopers do not use a certain profile to determine whether drivers should be pulled over and their automobiles searched.
The lawsuit claims the stops violate the constitutional guarantee of freedom from unreasonable search and seizure and the nondiscrimination provision of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
Celestial 'fast blob' could provide clues to galaxy mysteries
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A group of astronomers believe they have found the first example in our galaxy of an object moving faster than light. But don't chuck those physics textbooks vet.
It's just an illusion, and the blob of matter is really poking along at only about 92 percent of the speed of light. That's still a record for the galaxy.
The faster-than-light illusion had been spotted several times before outside the Milky Way. But because it's closer than previous ones, further study might help scientists confirm their understanding of the illusion, researchers said.
The discovery is reported in today's issue of the journal "Nature" by Felix Mirabel of the Saclay Center for Studies in Gif-sur-Yvette, France, and Luis Rodriguez of the National Autonomous University in Mexico City. They did the work at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Socorro, N.M.
They observed two blobs of matter blasting away in opposite directions from an object that appears to be a black hole or an ultra-dense neutron star. One of the blobs appeared to be moving 25 percent faster than the speed of light, which is 186,000 miles per second.
But it's an illusion created by the blob's very high speed and its moving closer to Earth while angling well away from a direct path to Earth.
The object launching the blobs is about 40,000 light-years away in the direction of the constellation Aquila, or Eagle. A light-year is the distance light travels in one year, about 5.88 trillion miles.
The "fast blob" is the fastest-moving bulk of matter ever detected in the galaxy, said Galen Gisler, an astrophysicist at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. Individual particles have been known to move faster, he said.
Gisler said further study of the object that ejected the blobs might help scientists understand much more distant objects that pour out large amounts of energy, like quasars.
United Parcel Service
Part time Jobs
ups $8 Hour ups
Interviews will be held
Wednesday, Sept. 7
from 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Sign up in the
placement center,
110 Burge Union
E/O/E m/f
OLDE offers:
CAREER FAIR September 8,1994
OLDE, America's Full Service Discount Broker $ ^{\mathrm{SM}}$ is looking for motivated people to establish a career in the brokerage business.
OLDE offers:
12-18 month paid training program
Potential six-figure income
Excellent benefits
If you possess excellent communication skills, general market knowledge and the desire to excel, see us at the Career Fair on September 8, 1994.
If you are unable to attend the Career Fair call:
1 800 937-0606
or send resume to:
OLDE Discount Stockbrokers
National Recruiting
751 Griswold Street
Detroit, MI 48226
DISCOUNT STOCKBROKERS Member NYSE and SIPC
OLDE
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
"Your Book Professionals"
Jayhawk Bookstore
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-6 M-Th., 8-5 Fri.
9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun.
843-3826
Join SUA.
Adam Sandler Jurassic Park Stan Herd Exhibit Union Open House Dr. Jean Kilbourne Tori Amos New Orleans Vacation Prick Up Your Ears
Programs With Personality. Add Your Personality to Ours.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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.
6B
Thursday, September 1, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COOLER
One Free Wash & Dry
10am - 12am
Sept. 1st-Sept. 15th
INDEPENDENT LAUNDROMAT
26th & Iowa
(across the street south from Dairy Queen)
Air Conditioned • Vending • Changer
Open Daily 6am - 12pm
图示为大型储物柜,内部设有多个抽屉和开放空间,可存放各种物品。柜体材质为不锈钢,表面镀金处理,耐腐蚀性强。
--keep him in our apartment:
Call Kim or Stephane. 749-7530
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!
Large Pizza
2 toppings
2 drinks
ONLY
$899
plus tax
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Open 7 days a week
---
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
Lawrence
Brewers
Supply
Call us and start making your own BEER! 305 E. 7th St. (913) 74- YEAST
"THRIFTY THURSDAY!" SAVE BIG BUCKS!
From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza (of course!)
Fast & Friendly Delivery Now During Lunch! (limited area)
842-3232
Thrifty Thursday
吹
Special Only $3.75 taxincluded (carry out only) For a small
(add. tops only .75)
order 2 or more
for free delivery
Good
Thursday
Only!
14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL)
PYRAMID
"The Play to Go!"
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 • Ne's Addiction
BB King • Rage • the Machine
Clapton • Blind Mist • 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
Film Processing Quick & Inexpensive
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Available at both Union locations.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
Conservative, in a liberal sort of way.
It doesn't matter whether you lean to the left, the right, backwards or forwards. Either way, you'll find that nothing fits you better than the air-cushioned comfort of a pair of Dr. Martens Gibsons.
Arensberg's Shoes
One step ahead since 1958
825 Massachusetts
843-3470
Dr. Airlie Marie's
TORI AMOS
THE LAVER
TICKETS ON SALE
NOW!!!
UNDER THE PINK TOUR
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 8:00PM
LIED CENTER OF KANSAS (LAWRENCE,KS)
Tickets available at all TICKETMASTER locations, The SUA Box Office at the Kansas Union (8am - 5pm M-F), the Lied Center Box Office (Noon - 5:30pm), or Charge By Phone:
(816) 931-3330
TICKET MASTER
PRODUCED BY CONTEMPORARY AND SUA
ROLLERBLADE®
Rentals
Sales
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts
841-PLAY(7529)
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
228 Professional
108 Personal
110 Business
112 Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
Classified Policy
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
100s Announcements
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and does not permit discrimination; 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 dia-
105 Personals
I
Ku Professor will pay for ride from Lawrence to 127th and Quaveria in O.P. on occasional thursday or Friday afternoons. Call Dr. Hawkins 864-3436 or 842-1731.
THE ETC. SHOP 282 Mass.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
LEATHER
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purse
Baskets & Lunch Bags Killer Lens
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops
i's, Réco. Serengeti, and Vuarnet
UNIVERSITY
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops.
Ruth and Kids Discount Floral. 963 East 23rd. 822-0704. Dozen arranged roses with衣袋, $19.95. Delivery extra. We accept all major credit cards and checks.
110 Bus. Personals
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
Really Listen
Call or drop by Headquarters We're here here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open.
We're always open
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
CALCULUS: TAKING CONTROL Workshop. are numbers getting you down? Tuesday, Sep. 7, 9pm. 120 Snow. FREE! Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
CASH FOR COLLEGE 300,000 GRANTS AVAILABLE
IMMUNITELY. (488)259-1111
QUALIFY
WTCs, the shelter in Lawrence for battered women and their children, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training: September 15 at 7:00 p.m. or September 17 at 8:40 p.m. be held at the WTC, 79 Vermont Avenue. For information please call WTCs at 841-6887.
130 Entertainment
NUDIE VODODO
The Wuss-Rock experience
Wed. Sept. 7. The Bottleneck
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire S
140 Lost & Found
Found: One small cat on Overland Drive in W. Lawrence last week. He is grey on top and white on his belly and paws. We would love to keep him, and our doudou will kick us out. Please call Rob at 800-321-7560.
$180 per, possible mailing our circulars; for info call
1222 398-9055
Looking to give away one year old puppy found
with a broken leg, we can't train it, and
pets trained and extremely lonely but we can't
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Men and Women
NOW HIRING
BIZZA DELIVERY DRIVERS
$ BILLIONS OF DOLLARS have been earned in
operations where are setting up
Elite Computer teams seeking key indus-
tuff various time/part time positions. For info-
formation call 913-287-2120 ext. 405
For Little Caesars Pizza locations at 23rd and 4th floors, drivers must have their own reliable transportation, proof of insurance and driver licenses and be at least 18 years old.
out!
$$$$$$$$$$
Adams Alumni Center
30 Walkers on Wheels is hiring now! Delivery position requires ability and be able to prove insurance. Call 844-262-1075.
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. 1268 Oread Ave.
ATTENTION O.T. and P.P. Students. Female attendant needed for disabled woman. Mon. through Sat. mornings and 2 evenings per week. Weekly salary in Kansas Career Work Stud. 110 Birtch. 842.7194
Babysitting needed for two delightful toddler girls in nice home on west side of Lawrence. Flexible in room, willing to work and ref'ed are required. Short drive from KU. Please contact Fulton 420, University Daily K198. Stanfair Fulton 420, University Daily K198.
BABYSITTER NEEDED
Beautician/Barber
Campus Manager:
Morningz 8:30-10:26 on friendly, bright 3-year old,
8419. 3078. m.a. or after 7:30 p.m.
Childcare needed for a 4 year old in home, Friday
Cust. Car and references regarded.
$40./yr. 842/398
www.chicagofirst.org
CITY OF LAWRENCE
BANKS & DECREATION DEPT
Looking for two part-time hairstylists who want to earn great money on weekends or evenings. JEANS AND SUNGLASSES.
National Marketing form 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) 596-3212 PTVT
COLLEGE STUDENTS $14.25-11.65 STARTING
Local branch of na! cal. Filling immediate entry
leave openings. Flex time schedules. 3-days,见
page 84. All majors are accepted for
info 841-8606.
PARTNERS IN MUSEUM
Part-time position as Lifeguard and Aquatic Instructor at Carl Knox Natatorium. Certification required. Applications are available at Admin. Services, Room 210, City Hall, B4 & Mass. Lawrence. KS 66044. Deadline: Sept. 9, 1994 EOE M/F/D
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn up to
1,000/month on the job in a
French/Spanish/World travel. Seasonal & Full-
time employment available. No experience neces-
tries or more information call 1-263-458-4368
c/s7658
CUSTODIAL WORKER: Two (2) positions open for student hourly custodian duties. Must be 16 or older, 20 hours a week (M-F with an occasional Saturday morning. Must be 20 or older. Student work schedule will according to the school's plan.
Must apply in person to Personnel Office. Walkins Health Center, Tuesday, Friday, August 30-15. (800) 627-4500.
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/permission on qualifications. Classes will be held in 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 us at phone & email 912 high 911 location, Lauren KS 60404. Job share possible.
Domino's Pizza is hiring. 10 delivery positions available, two inside positions available. Apply for 4 a.m any day at Domino's Pizza, 9th & Iowa. Benefits include: free meals, flexible schedule, paid time off, paid maintenance items, pay based on hours available. Should be willing to work nights & weekends.
DOORMEN NEEDED
Must be friendly, but able to handle
confrontation.
Call 134-6728. Ask for ZAC
Call 749-5039 - Ask for ZAC
Easy Money $8/day, 4 people needed on Call.
Must include coupons. Must be outgoing. Call Mary 891-2623.
Entry level -part-time student positions available.
Energetic people with a head of details needed for
professional positions. Provide helpful NO SALES INVOLVED. Paid training.
NO SALARY in professional atmosphere. Please call
826-981-6241
Graduate Student Assistant. Half-time position available in the Student Assistance Center. Position for ongoing attention to the concerns of gay, lesbian and bisexual students. Bachelor's degree and graduate student status for Fall 1994 and Spring 1995; demonstrated ability to work independently and to articulate the concerns of gay, lesbian and bisexual persons; the ability to work independently; and availability Thursday evenings. Required position for the Graduate Student Center, must be completed and received by 12:00 p.m. (noon), September 9, 1994, in 138 Strong Hall. University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. Must have equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. Handyman/Gardener needed. Flexible hours. North Lawrencia area. Must be experienced. 841-
Hiring students to contact Alumii 5.48-5.49 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays. $4.90/rm, start waking.
September 13 to December 6. Call please call Marle
Barnett (404-4291), 8-11, or 2-4 Monday through Friday
KU GAME PARKING Attendants
40 people needed for parking attendants at the KU home football and basketball games. Must be able to work consistently throughout both seasons. If interested, please apply immediately. EOE:
Manpower Temporary Services
2011-8-8
704-9200
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 1, 1994
7B
Internship Opportunities
The Kansas Technology Enterprise Corporation, a non-profit corporation which fosters technological innovation in the State of Kansas, Seeks graduate students in the fields of marketing, business engineering and computer science. 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 woke in Topeka. Send a letter of application and resume to:
Kansas Technology Enterprise Corporation
c/o Internship Coordinator
112 W. 8th, Suite 400
Toneka, KS 66033
Jon's Notes of Lawrence is anxious to hire quality note takers for the Fall semester. Preferred GPA of above 3.5. Pick up an application at Jon's Notes office at the Kansas Union.
KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for parttime banquet server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants with a Bachelor's degree in Business or 1286 Gred, caddy door from the Kansas Union.
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT. Make up to $2,000.44/mo / +mo. teaching basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S.Korea. No teachernal fee. No course material required. For info: (206) 328-1146 ext. J57651.
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
Loving Nancy required for 4 yr old boy in our home on Fri, occasional events. Other child care options are available.
dren at school all day. **VIP**
Mail Order Telephone Rep - New Home Improvement catalog has part-time weekday openings between 7am-6pm for inbound call and order takeout. All items are available during the day. Good clerical skills required. Start $Hr. Apply in person: H.I., 2801 Lakeville Rd.: Blue bib, of Lawrence Paper, straight to, 2nd right or for calls (865-382)
Mass Street Deli is now hiring:
Wait staff, bartenders, line cooks, prep cooks, server positions, all positions. Please apply between 9am and 4pm at the Schumann Food Company business office. 719 Mass. (Upstairs against Buffalo Bob S Smokey.)
Need graphic artist for T shirt design. Rage Images. Carl jarrod Townsend, 841-798-7882. Please contact us now accepting applications for a variety of permanent part-time custodial positions.
842-6264 Ask for Jeannie.
SHIPPING AND DATA ENTRY ASSISTANTS NEEDED
Lawrence-based, technical publishing company has several part-time (15-20 hours per week) positions available. Duties include installing computer disks for inventory; deploying computer disks for inventory; daily mail delivery to and pickup from the post office; inputting subscription orders into a computer, and sorting mail in the warehouse; working 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 large workforce that helps other areas of the company as needed.
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 23rd Street, 2002 Lawrence, KS.
R.D.
publications, Inc.
Part time help needed for delivery work. After-
ternoon and Saturday. Apply in person. Hanna
Part time, evenings and Sat new home construction clean up Laverince 5 # 05hr. 381-831-5155
partial time cleaning person for property management
reference and resume
Morning Star, 97 Twent
Part-time Jobs - The Kansas and Burge Unions,
Food Service, Bookstore, Catering, Wescoe, and
Custodial Departments are hiring. Variety of job
positions available in the following areas:
Level 5, Kansas Union Personnel Office, EOE
Preschool Sub
Part-time sales opportunity. Mark Shale at Country Club Plaza has day, evening and weekend available. Hourly plus bonus. Generous discount. Call Eva at (816) 758-3588.
Prefer 71, 11:30-30; or all day any weekday Jr. or Sr in child-related field. Center experience.
Part-time truck washer. M-F evenings. Approx.
Year round, in work call. Work 180-543-2043
helpful Sunshine Acres School 842-223.
Rainforest Moriock school located on thirteen acres with horses and a pet-belled pig named Katie. Students must be 11:30 - 1:30 or 11:30 - 1:30 or 11:30 - 1:30. Must love children. Will训. Transportation required call 843 - 6800.
Retired college professor needs local college student (male) to stay overnight. Can sleep on the job. Travel for vacationing locations. R.S. Raymond 2514 Arkansas 843 - 6814.
SPRING BREAK 95* SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE!! !!! Student Travel Services is now hiring campground representatives. Lowest rates to campgrounds in Panama City Beach. Call 1-800-484-6489
RETAIL
J.CREW FACTORYSTORE OPENING OCT. LAWRENCE, KS
SALES ASSOCIATES
Our Factory Store captures all the color & spirit of our catalogues. J. Crew is looking for a few exceptional candidates of fill sales positions in our newest Kansas factory store location.
J. Crew will provide you with an exciting work environment, competitive salary and a great store discount.
You must be able to provide I, Grew with an outstanding customerservice,a positive and enthusiastic attitude,a great work ethic and a commitment to be part of a successful team.
We will be
conducting interviews
8:00 a.m. ~ 6:00 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept 6th and
Wednesday, Sept 7th.
ELDRIDGEHOTEL 701 massachusetts lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT I. J. Deadline:
9/29% Salary: $4.35/hr. Duties include typing, filing, photocopying, distributing mail, and performing all assigned client tasks in order 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 EOA EMPLOYER. The Computer Center. EO/A EMPLOYER.
Noappointments necessary No phone calls, please
STUDENTS
Need extra money? Job hunt now here? Now grow your company? Piggy肥育 company now hiring part and full people to meet the expanding demand for our product. Professional training available. Call K.C. Hale. 800-627-5111.
Teacher's Aide 1:00-5:30 pm weekdays. Classroom experience with preschool children preferred but not required. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 208 N. Michigan EOE
Valley View Care Home is currently seeking motiva-
tionals to provide daycare services at VA CNA day shift and evening positions. We offer flexible scheduling, competitive hourly wages and benefits. Apply in person at 2518 Ridge Court, Suite 610.
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!" Now Taking Applications
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what greatservice is all about!
Now Hiring:
Now Hiring:
DRIVERS
(HOURLY PLUS COMMISSION, MUSTHAVE OWN CARAND PROOF OF INSURANCE) FULL AND PART TIME
Apply in person 14th and Ohio (under the Wheel)
Vista Restaurant is now taking applications for full and part time. Apply now at 1327 W. 6th.
Wanted: Fainter - Maintenance assistant part time for property management, good pay, resume and references to Morning Star 917 Tenn.
WILLIE CSAFE & 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 a dedicated team of unconventional restaurant management team. Prior restaurant experience NOT necessary. Prefer individuals with a solid background in people management. Requires good communication, attention to detail, high energy level, positive attitude, and the ability to manage multiple projects and people while running high sales. Req's a Bachelor's degree and/or vour resume.
I look forward to hearing from you.
I look forward to hearing from you.
WORK STUDY? The School of Business has many positions available now. Please come to the Placement Center in 125 Summer-field to apply
225 Professional Services
< Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7748.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
G. SALLE G. SALLE
Donald G. Stale G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Be healthier and happier!
He beather and happier!
She will massage therapy!
Student discounts available.
729/1/2 Massachusetts Suite 216.
Call Anna Lumaris and Laureace at 841-1587.
Tarot card readings.
Love! Success! Career!"
The U.D.K. and 109. The Lawer
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-9944
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature, ESL classes. Highly
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3313.
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer.
Call An Luna Nuria at 841-1587.
DU/THAFFIC*TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANKSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Female care care provider for individual who is mentally handicapped. Mon/Tuesday, overnights starting at SPM and two Sat. per month Prefer working on the floor or as a reference working with disabled individuals. Referrences required. Send reply to Carol Kopels P.O. Box 6738 Topkka, KK 6657-0323 or (913) - 627-7128
X
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
Put my service to the test.
For what things are you willing,
MAKIN' THE GRADE
is the one call to
CRASTON B. COPEL
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
Richard A. Frydman
ATTORNEY AT LAW
843-4023
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
Free Consultation
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
300s
Merchandise
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
305 For Sale
P
235 Typing Services
701 Tennessee
RELEASE RSP109
Tune-up, overbands, upgrades, air 304 Mas sacuettes 843-5000
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor types of letter type. Also translations for other typenames.
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, These
term-papers, Resumes, Business letters, etc.
Laser printing 865-0062.
We carry Bianchi, Specialized and Trek. Plus accessories & a full service bike shop. Layaway available. 304 Massachusetts 943-5000
SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR SAILBOARD CLOSE-OUTS Mistral, Hi Fly, O'Brien. Get one cheap. 804 Massachusetts 943-5000
1979 Ford Granada, 4-door, automatic,
air conditioning, 89,000 miles. $650.
Call Ford at 894-8244.
Beds, Desks, Bookcases Everything But Ice 028 Mass
78 New York Celesta. Good condition. Only 91km lk.
New Alpine gear with 4speakers. Asking for $2300
or more. Available in Manhattan.
1992 Slump Juniper FS. Full DX, Specialized
Future Shock, low miles. Call 842-2069.
Americrec 610 rowing machine Call 1008 842 1731
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N. 2nd • 841-8903
19th & Blackst • 841-7504
Centurion Frame, Shimano comp. gel seat, great condition, $170 749-378, ask for Susan
*******
4221
Curtis Audio
2 and 3 way speakers in the back. Will also custom build. Blown woofers? Tom grills? Will repair blown woofers?
For Sale: 1980 Honda Civic
600 841 3091
Honor 1894 Elite 50 red scorer, with baskets: 60
for Lyman at 88-222 and tune-up for $10. Ask
for Lyman at 88-222.
For Sale. Mac SE, loc of loaded software w printer,
carrying case, kit 816-333-1249 with best offer
Giant Mountain Bike in excellent condition. Make offer. 749-9230.
$15
Today
$30
This Week
Plus a
$3
Bonus
EARN CASH
Bonus
By donating your blood plasma
Showyour student ID car
between Aug. 7 and Aug. 31 and receive a $3 bonus on your second donation of the month.
Walk-ins welcome
Hours:
M-F9-6:30
Sat.10-4
Lawrence Donor Center
$
816 W.24th
Behind
Laird Noller
Ford
749-5750
Honda Aero Bldc scooter. Long miles excellent
tug-mop lug (camp access)
759 1-398-4360 ews
NABI The Quality Source
Macintosh Plus with metro 201D and Image writer II printer in condition $650 best offer 814-723-8922
King Waterbater mirrored, headboard $150,
17000 TU AC $200, Nintendo and joystick $50
Hutch Husch $40, Antique Round Coffee Table $150. Call
608-0899. After 6:00 pm.
Fabulous 4 bdm屋 for rent. clean and new
available immediately. No Pets. B43-74580
Nikon F 3 I Shift Eye point, new in box. Price $120.00
$750.19 913-729-915.1
FIRST BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great first plan, 2 bath, on bus route 09,
PETS. AVAILABLE.
Need a Break from Classes?
Get credit having fun riding horses.
Enroll in HIPER 180 HORSEMANSHIP
Call Joy 1-584-6180 for more info.
Looking for a place to live?
1903 Ponca Grand Am GT, V6. Loaded $14,500.
Day: 749-962 Evening: 1-836-3507
1977 Dodge Aspen station wagon - runs well. Make offer 841-4440.
340 Auto Sales
Diplex close to KU Stadium, large two bedroom,
off street parking, DW/AC, large $500 a month.
Lee 832-1034 or Kathy 863-3126
4 bultim for kid. house for rent
360 Miscellaneous
A
91 WJetta GL, 51K, 5-speed, suroir, CAFE,
great shape, great shape (bottiggle, *1337-6448*
)
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well located housing. STAR (129)
- Laundry Facilities
- Great campus location
400s Real Estate
- A few steps from Allen Fieldhouse
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
QD other holders BST-STK (7827)
Available now in Lawrence: 1 to 4 BDMM Home
B6429
Call Naismith Hall for More information at 843-8559
Check out these housing options...
- 2 bedroom with study
House for rent: 2 or 3 bdmr, convenient to downtown and KU. Avail immediately. $650 per mo. plus deposit. Call 748-0995, leave message
Looking for a place to live?
- Available for fall.
NAISMITH Hall
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Directly on bus route
Check out these housing options...
*Call 843-4754
- Fitness room
"Don't get left out in the cold."
- Front door bus service
- Dine anytime meals
- Weekly maid service
- Private parking
Call naismith Hall for more information at 843-8559
NAISMITH Hall
Lg. 2 BDRM api. off campus. Avail. immed.
Lower level garden; new kitchen overlooking
living room. Full carpet, fireplace,
fireplace, A/C. Very clean. $480 + utilities.
139, dxy
PETS WELCOME
South Pointe
ATLANTIC
No Sublease Fee
- Swimming Pool
- Close to KU Bus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
- Water & Trash Paid
Outstanding New Staff!!
TRAILRIDGE APARTMENTS
One bedroom available immediately, Gas, water and trash paid
No discount. # 172 blocks from campus. $420 a month utilizes include. #82-7944.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 or 2 roommates need to find apt. close to campus. Call Jim in Topeka at 379-0488
I roommate needed immediately. Beautiful 3
price back from campus $255; price nege
date $92-93.
ROOMMATE FINDER
841-5454
A&S MANAGEMENT SERVICES
NEED A ROOMMATE?
841-5454
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Grad. student seeking commission for 3-berm
apt great location, on bus route, jacuzzi, 820/mo,
floor 5/6, 104th street, 17th floor.
- By phone: 864-4358
Non-smoking female $250/month plus utilities. 3
Female Washer/dryer. More information call
Lilv at 749-1347
How to schedule an ad:
Ad phone in may be held to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
a phone number 1-850-321-Starflower
ROOMMATE WANTED! FE n/ s. House w/ owl
BEDS. Nest in sunny room. Dogs all
about. North nest. Please call 841-326-
5600.
Wanted. Two neat, responsible, n/5 roomsites to share new house. three, 2 baths, Quit neighborhood. Grad students preferred. $225 + 1/3 utility.
Please call 943-8478
Two females looking for a third to share three cables immediately. Cable immediate. Call 824-8357. Call 824-8357.
Classified Information and order form
Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on masterCard or VISA.
- By Mail: 119 Slaunter Fint, LawFence, KS 60645
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansasan office. Or you may choose to have billed to your MasterCard or Via account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified data 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.
Dear user:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Rates
st per line per day
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
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
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
140 local fund
252 help wanted
222 professional services
225 pymo service
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Classifications
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form • Please Print:
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Looking for a place to live?
Check out these housing options...
Phone:
Address:
1
2
3
4
5
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper.
Total ad cost:___ CIBssification:___
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dale Kanson)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Signature
Apple Macintosh and IBM Computers
and carpeted
- Fullyfurnished
- Computer room with
Call Naismith Hall for More Information at 843-8559
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60045
- Free Utilities
- Quiet Study Areas
NAISMITH HALL
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
A TODD BROWNING NO. 150 BY JAMES R. PENDLE IN MAY, 1938
The often romanticized image of cowboys and aliens
8B
Thursday, September 1, 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.
10
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
M.T. OREAD
MEDICAL ARTS.
CENTR'E
B.
parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative.
CLINTON PARKWAY
1
CAMPUS
One year later, a KU policy has many people standing outside. Page 5A PARTLY CLOUDY High 76° Low 60° Page 2A.
AAAAAHHH
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL. 104, NO. 10
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2.1994
(USPS 650-640)
RX
Kansas fans rejoice; 'Hawks crush Cougars
NEWS:8644810
UH
1992
Yumi Chikamori/ KANSAN
Graduate students in the School of Business celebrate as the Kansas football team scores a touchdown against Houston. The students watched the game last night at the Yacht Club, 530 Wisconsin St. The Jayhawks won their season opener 35-13 at the Astrodome.
There's Spirits run free as 'Hawks play their first game
There's cheer in the beer
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
KU students gathered at Lawrence bars last night to watch what many of them called a season-opening "ego-booster," the Jayhawk's 35-13 trouncing of the Houston Cougars, which was shown on KSMO62, channel 3 on Sunflower Cablevision in Lawrence.
Houston's inadequacy didn't mean KU wasn't doing well, said Ryan Spelak, Kansas City junior, who watched the game while perched on a wooden stool at The Crossing, 618 W. 12th Street.
"KU looks good," he said.
At the Yacht Club, 530 Wisconsin, about 20 MBA candidates from KU's school of business huddled around pitchers of beer and roared every time the Jayhawks gained yards. They reserved their loudest yells for touchdowns but acknowledged good defensive tackles with conversation-level "yeahs."
Jody Schrandt, a Lansing graduate student, said he and his fellow business students were out-cheering a group of law school students who were milling outside on the Yacht Club's patio.
"The they paid $100 for a keg to sit outside and watch the air," he said. "We were smart and got to the TVs."
Scharndt looked longingly at the more than 1,000 screaming Jayhawk waving for the television cameras at the Houston Astrodome.
Ross DeVore, Wichita graduate student, said the preseason injuries that plagued the Cougars would ensure $ \varrho $
"I want to be there," he said.
Jayhawk victory.
"If you take off four starters of any team, you've got it made," he said.
Outside on the patio, Jon Hunt, a third-year law student from Lincoln, Neb., said he wasn't watching the game because he was a Cornhusker fan.
"We hope Kansas does well so that when Nebraska beats them, they look better," he said.
But Sal Intagliata, a third-year law student from Overland Park, stepped in to defend Jiahawk pride.
back inside, Joe Bosco, a 1992 graduate of KU, sat calmly at a back table with four friends and a pitcher of Bud Light.
"The day they win the Orange Bowl is the day you can talk to me about Nebraska football," he said.
Boscopredictedan easy win for the Jayhawks.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
"They're just not a good team," he said of the Cougars.
85
Kansas quarterback Asheki Preston, No. 9, passes over the Jayhawks offensive line during the first quarter of yesterday's game against the Houston Cougars.
Rosh Hashana begins Monday
By Nathan Olson
Kansan staff writer
Monday will be the year 5755 in the Hebrew calendar
or visit:
Rosh Hashana is the beginning of the High Holidays,
which are made up of Rosh Hashana, Yom Kippur and the
10 days between the two.
Monday will be the year 5755 in the Hebrew calendar. The day is known in the Jewish culture as Rosh Hashana and is celebrated on the first and second days of the month of Tishri.
Steve Jacobson, director of KU Hillel, said that the days were a bit like New Year's Day.
"During Rosh Hashana, we begin to look back on the year past," he said.
Rosh Hashana, which will be celebrated Monday and Tuesday, represents a time of reflection, both for humans on their deeds and for God to judge their actions. The holiday also represents a chance to look to the current year.
Jacobson said that community was extremely important both to Jewish tradition in general and to Rosh Hashana specifically.
Rosh Hashana Services will be held at the Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Services will be held downstairs in the social hall at the following times:
7:30 p.m. Monday
9:30 a.m. Tuesday
7:30 p.m. Tuesday
9:30 a.m. Wednesday
An less traditional service for students will be held 7:30 p.m.
Monday in the sanctuary.
Nathan Olson / KANSAN
"My wife and I have 12 to
14 people coming over for dinner," Jacobson said. "Then we were going to head to the synagogue together."
For Jacobson, Rosh Hashana is also a day of contemplation.
"I'll read about Rosh Hashana," he said. "I won't watch TV but might out some Jewish music on."
susan Elkins, coordinator of KU Info, said that in addition to normal services at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, an alternative service would be conducted for students. The service, which was designed by Elkins and former Hillel director Daveen Litwin, is less traditional, Elkins said.
"Sometimes tradition and repetition are very good for remembering the past," Elkins said. "But sometimes tradition can be negative. We're trying to make it positive."
Eldkins said that the service, which would be be devoid of sexist language, would include music and more English translations of Hebrew prayers.
Fugitive believed in Lawrence area
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
One of two prisoners who escaped from an Fort Smith, Ark., jail Tuesday remained on the run yesterday, and authorities said they believed he was in the Lawrence area.
Although Scott Scanlon, 31, was arrested yesterday near Fredonia, police still are looking for Chad Beers, 24, of Lawrence. Sightings of the two have been reported to police between Lawrence and Arkansas.
A truck that police say Beers and Scanlon stole in Chouteau, Oklawa, was found yesterday in Lawrence. Lawrence police said that sometime between 8 p.m. Wednesday and 6 a.m. either on or both of the men also
A. P.
Chad Beers
stole a 1988 blue Chevrolet pickup from Quality Electric,
1011 E 31st. St.
Beers and Scanlon escaped from the Sebastian County
Jail in Fort Smith Tuesday night. Both men may have been
in Lawrence Wednesday night or yesterday morning,
police said.
Since their escape Tuesday, Beers' and Scanlon's jour-
See BEERS, Page 6A
INSIDE
INSIDE
Entering its 64th season, the Kansas rugby team looks to take on a difficult schedule.
Tackling the season
Page 18.
Youth center needs KU students as volunteers
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Fraser Hall is plainly visible if one stands in front of the new Lawrence Teen Center.
But according to Patrick Sumner, Lawrence junior and youth coordinator of Project Freedom of Lawrence, KU students need to be even more visible to area youths.
Sumner and city leaders are seeking KU students who have the time and desire to volunteer at the teen center, 1141 Massachusetts St. The center, which is designed to be an alternative to drugs and alcohol and to give Lawrence junior high and high school students a place to go, is long on ambition but short on able hands, Sumner said.
"So often, KU students think the Hill is their own little city," Summer said. "But I'm down here, and I see that that institution has vast resources that can be used."
Volunteers would interact directly with Lawrence teenagers and serve as role models. Sumner said.
"You've got to reach kids where they're at now," he said. "They wouldn't be hall monitors. They'd make it a creative, interactive environment."
Sumner said KU students tended to be closer in age to
the youths have the same generation we're talking about," he said. "We're at the other end, and we can show them our insight."
the youths and would provide them with an example.
In addition to a meeting place, the center provides video games, pool and a television room. He also said long-term plans included enlarging the outside area for controlled bonfires, poetry slams and live bands.
The center, which opened Aug. 23, now is open only in the afternoon. Sumner said the center could be open longer if it had more volunteers.
The center's idea came about when Jo Andersen, Lawrence mayor, spoke to youths hanging out in her neighborhood in East Lawrence. Andersen said the teenagers told her the town offered its young people nothing to do.
Summer said volunteering at the center would provide an
To advise the center, Andersen said, she created the Mayor's Youth Advisory Committee, which answers to Andersen and keeps the Lawrence City Commission abreast of youth issues.
"In listening to them say there was nothing to do, I heard cynicism." she said. "That was very distressing to me."
Andersen said the youth told her the answer was a teen center, a place where they had control.
Meghan Dougherty / KANSAN
Kem Foster, 15, spends the afternoon playing pool at the Lawrence Teen Center, 1141 Massachusetts St. The center, which is looking for KU students to volunteer their time, is an interactive environment for local teens that gives them a place to hang out with their friends.
"You can say to yourself, I made an impact with my work in college," he said. "That's an education."
3
experience beyond the KU classroom.
Interested students should call Sumner at the Project Freedom office at 842-5006.
%
-
2A
Friday, September 2, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
♥
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN HE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Rising popularity will bring you more invitations that you can accept. Make a dramatic break with the past. Beginning in November, you will feel more confident about the future. Handle financial matters with care. Patience and the passage of time will answer a difficult romantic question. A cash windfall is likely next summer. Spend it on travel or education.
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: actress Linda Purl,porter Keanu Reeves,former Baseball Commissioner Peter Uebere Roth.
T
8
♊
AREIES (March 21- April 10): A morning telephone call will jog your memory. Keep in touch with overseas clients. Strong rapport with an attractive newcomer sets you blood racing. If unattached, you could be ready for a new romance.
TAURUS (April 10 May 20) Today's events could keep you on the run. An active search could produce topnotch results. Your hard work pay off with a promotions or raise. Update your image by investing in some new clothes.
69
GEMINI (May 21-June 20). Thanks
q some well-timed business moves,
work is a pleasure instead of a chore.
Learn more about computers and
advanced technology. Wearing your
heart on your sleeve could make you
vulnerable. Go slowly.
A
CANCER (Jane 21 July 22). What you accomplish today could bring rewards for years to come. It pays to think things through. Do not be enticed by unusual investment proposals. Keep your long-term goals in sight at all times.
WP
5
π
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Although your day could start with private minglings, good luck allows you to make excellent job and financial progress. Thoughts of a secret rendezvous fill you with delightful anticipation. Tonight's events will not be disapoining.
↑
VS
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Although your ideas are excellent, you may not get an opportunity to act on them. A flexible schedule is important. You have always been a free spirit! Avoid saddling yourself with too many obligations.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Your popularity could skyrocket in the weeks ahead; be ready to capitalize on some very interesting opportunities. Coming on too strong could frighten a prospective mate. Take a light-hearted approach to romance.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Not a good day to pry into other people's affairs. The afternoon commences on a happy note, thanks to joyous news. Home life could be a bit unsettled tonight. Avoid noisy gatherings or parties.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Do not expect others to enthuse over your ideas without first asking questions. Fast-moving events tempt you to run for the money. An artistic endeavor cold boost your income. Read about investments.
Water
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Stop being afraid of change! it keeps things fresh and exciting! Be more innovative in the work place. Show higher-ups how well you can handle a group. A well-calculated risk will pay off nicely.
X
AQARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) A behind-the-scenes chat is interesting but may not lead anywhere right away. Be patient! Relationships require constant adjustment. Avoid quarrel with someone who feels under the weather. Romance will test your maturity.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Mixed trends affect domestic interests. Although there is some support for your plans, your spouse or another family member could have a problem. Do more listening than talking. A sympathetic approach will create new rapport.
ON CAMPUS
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel
Friends and family of Milton Steinhardt will have a reception in memory of Steinhardt, a former professor emeritus of fine arts who died June 30. The reception will begin at 3 p.m. today at Alvamar Country Club, 1800 Crossgate Drive. For more information, call Ise Steinhardt at 843-7833.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-4713.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a volleyball TGIF at 6 p.m. today at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
KU Cultural India Club is accepting nominations for organization president. To nominate yourself or someone else, please call Paul Bajaj at 842-7900.
Department of Communication Studies has set the Oral Communications Exemption Exam for Thursday, September 8. Interested students must register in 3090 Wescoe by September 2. A $10 nonrefundable deposit is required to register.
Academic Systems for the Training and Use of Technology in Education Center will sponsor a New Faculty/New GTA Open House from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Tuesday at room 2001D in Dole Building.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday in the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7317.
KU Water Polo Club will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Robinson Natatorium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a House/Hall Contacts meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will have swim practice at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Robinson Pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a Human Services Committee Meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
TODAY'S TEMPS
Weather
toroscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only
Lawrence
Kansas City
Topeka
Wichita
Omaha
Tulsa
Des Moines
St. Louis
Chicago
Atlanta
New York
Los Angeles
Seattle
TODAY
Partly cloudy and warmer with a chance for showers
7660
A KU student's mountain bicycle valued at $370 was stolen from the 1100 block of West Campus Road, Lawrence police reported. The 18-inch black Giant Iguana bicycle was stolen Wednesday afternoon, police said.
Power tools valued at $349.99 were stolen from the 1000 block of Heatherwood, Lawrence police reported. A Nakita power drill and a McCullock chainsaw were stolen Wednesday afternoon, police said.
A KU student's black Fuji Boulevard mountain bicycle was stolen Wednesday afternoon from the 2000 block of West 6th Street, Lawrence police reported. Police said the 10-speed bicycle had a broken left pedal and was valued at $200.
ON THE RECORD
Partly cloudy with a slight chance for rain
A Macintosh SE computer and keyboard valued at $1,239.30 was stolen from a Robinson Gymnasium office, KU police reported. The computer was reported stolen Wednesday at 10:53 p.m. from the Department of Health and Physical Education.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 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
L O W
76° • 60°
71° • 56°
71° • 56°
80° • 64°
70° • 54°
80° • 68°
68° • 53°
76° • 61°
71° • 52°
81° • 65°
77° • 69°
82° • 68°
69° • 52°
8566
8164
Mostly cloudy and warmer still with a 40 percent chance of showers
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
SUNDAY
HIGH LOW
We've got
Source: Matt Jezewski, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Grab one and save!
great heads for hair
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
REDKEN
THE POWER OF BRANDING BEAUTY, HIP-
PIE AND IMPORTER, 1984-1994
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
Fri. Sept. 2
Mountain Clyde
Slugworth
Sat. Sept. 3
Mountain Clyde
Bubbleboys
& Floating Men
Sun. Sept. 4
The BackDoors
18+over
Tix. on Sale Now
Shudder to Think
Reverend Horton Heat
Merl Saunders
September 1, 1994
$
great heads for hair
THE PROFESSIONAL DIFFERENCE
Professional maintenance Hot new services
keeps our skirts on the edge. Because the smarter we
With hot new products
We need to keep your skirts on today.
D
Stock market report
Dow Jones
3,901.44
11.98
Where the world is Beautiful through You.
15 and 7th + Lawrence, IA (Above the Jaw Break)
Bald Chater, rpa
(613) 749-7687
(613) 749-7684
salon REAU MONDE
NYSE
1.01
260.98
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence's Largest
Supplier of
Darkroom Materials
1610 West 23rd Street
841-7205
Nasdaq
LARGE PIZZA
SINGLE
TOPPING
$7.95
2 FOR $12.95
(extra toppings $1 each)
Expires 10-31-94
UDK
MEDIUM PIZZA
Single Topping
$5.95
2 for $9.95
(extra toppings 85¢ each)
Expires 10-31-94
UDK
Lasagna or Manicotti or
1 lb. Spaghetti
+ Garlic Toast
+ 32 oz. Coke
$5.95 +tax
(With Meatballs -add $1)
Expires 10-31-94
UDK
FREE DELIVERY
Bob's
PIZZA
Shoppe
Westridge Shopping Center
601 KASOLD
842-0600
VISA
AMERICAN EXPRESS
DISCOVER
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kiern 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
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizco Cummings
Eweles
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
Shares Traded: 282,830,000
759. 22
6.40
75922
↑
848
Advances
1,323
Declines
713
ASE
0.32
454. 02
Unchanged
cannondale
handbuilt meticulously designed outrageous performance
STREET BIKE
CANNONDALE mountain bikes start at $479.95
RICK'S BIKE SHOP inc
916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642
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,August30
L-R Wednesday,August31
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
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 2, 1994
3A
in
Daron Bennett/ KANSAN
U. S. Representative and Kansas gubernatorial candidate Jim Slattery speaks to a meeting of the KU Democrats about his candidacy. Slattery took the floor last night at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union to detail why he was more qualified for the job than his opponent, Republican Bill Graves.
Slattery addresses KU group
By Colleen McCain
Kansan staff writer
Jim Slatter believes he's fighting an uphill battle.
After all, Slattery says, he doesn't have the financial resources that Bill Graves does to spend on his campaign.
Slattery, the Democratic gubernatorial candidate, spoke to 75 students during the KU Democrats' meeting at 8 last night at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
"I have an enormous financial disadvantage to overcome because Bill Graves has unlimited money to spend on his campaign," Slattery said before the meeting. "But I'm confident that when the people of Kansas get to know both of us, they will see that I'm better prepared for the position of governor."
Slattery told the students that he was the better man for the job based on his life experiences.
"I spent the first years of my life on our family farm in Good Intent, Kan," he said. "I've had military experience. I've worked in the business world, and I'm a parent. Believe it or not, my opponent Bill Gravens has none of these experiences — none."
Slattery outlined his views on several issues and said he would focus on three basic areas as governor: education, health-care reform and making communities safer.
"I do not have all the answers to all the problems that we face in Kansas," he said in his 25-minute speech. "But it's the job of the governor to reach out to those who have the best ideas, and we have an enormous amount of
talent in Kansas."
Slattery, who represents the 2nd congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, has faced criticism for the years he spent in Washington and away from Kansas. But, Slattery said, those years provided him with the experience necessary to serve as governor.
"I've been in the arena, and I've had tough decisions to make," he said. "Bill Graves has only worked as the secretary of state, and the secretary of state does not make policy decisions. People don't seem to understand that."
Slattery repeatedly compared himself to Graves, portraying Graves as a wealthy politician who lacked experience and mocking Graves' statement to KU students in his campus visit Tuesday night.
"Bill Graves told students that he didn't want to discuss issues," he said. "But I do want to discuss policy issues, and we still will have fun, too."
Junction City law student Brett Godsey said Slattery was well-versed on campaign issues.
"He has a vision, and his duties in Washington only will help him as governor,"Godsey said.
Ted Miller, Bonner Springs junior and president of KU Democrats, said Slattery's effectiveness as a legislator made him the clear choice for governor. During his introduction of Slattery, Miller referred to Graves as "Dan Quayle with a slightly better vocabulary."
"Jim Slattery has a resume, and he has proven results," Miller said. "Bill Graves just wants to be governor."
Student Senate to vote on media funds
New bill would place funds in general account
By James Evans Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate Finance and Student Rights committees voted Wednesday night to move funding of the student media fee, which partially funds The University Daily Kansan and JKHK, back into the general activity fee.
If passed by Student Senate next week, all forms of media on campus would have to apply for funding every two years under revenue code status. This status would require student
media groups, like many other student groups, to make formal requests for funding to Senate and explain why the money was needed. The Senate then would decide how much funding should be allocated to the groups.
The legislation was introduced to the two committees by AruHizer, off-campus senator. She said the legislation was designed to put all campus media on the same footing for funding as other student groups.
She said that Student Senate's job was to oversee all organizations. By putting campus media under revenue code status, "it makes Student Senate ideology consistent," Hizer said.
"We think that The Pinch and Kiosk are just as much media as the Kansan and JKHK. "Hizer said.
"I don't feel that a governance organization should be distributing money to independent media organizations," said Kim Cocks, education senator. "Ethically, that is not right."
She said that if the money was under the control of the whole Senate, free speech violations could occur.
But the philosophy is not shared by all senators.
"The primary reason for the establishment of the media fee the way it is now was to eliminate the adversary relationship between the student media and the student government," said Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism and ex-officio member of the
In the current system, a $3 media fee is collected from each student's tuition. The fees that are collected are allocated to campus media by the Senate Media Board.
"It's just not a good precedent to set," Cocks said.
media board.
"The specific concern was that student government was in the position to censor student media by withholding funding." Kautsch said.
Student media was funded under revenue code prior to 1991. Kautsch said this had put a political dynamic in funding campus media.
During that time, he said the relationship between student media and Student Senate was not positive. Kautsch said that both sides were constantly trying to ruin each other's reputations.
Databases place info at fingertips
But in 1991, Mike Schreiner, then student body president, helped create the media fee. Kautsch said that the reform led to a better relationship between the student media and student government.
Libraries offer many reference options to campus
By Shannon Newton
Kansan staff writer
Cindy Bath was reading a psychology journal.
And even though she was in Watson Library last night, it wasn't a book that was in her hands. It was a computer keyboard.
"I am looking for psychology journals for preliminary research," Bath, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said. "I anticipate I'll be using this quite a bit."
Bath is taking an experimental psychology class this semester.
The libraries have been trying to keep up with the technical age by providing databases for students, said James Neeyle, head of reference at Watson Library.
Like many other KU students, Bath is learning how to use databases in campus libraries.
The index is a listing of over 1,500 academic magazines and journals. Neeley said 95 percent of the journals were available to students in one of the libraries at the KU campus.
"We have tried to maintain something for everyone at the University," he said.
"The other databases we have are beneficial to KU students," he said.
"But they can be frustrating to students because we do not have all the periodicals that are listed."
The newest addition to the campus databases is the Expanded Academic Index.
"We tried to make searching a subject on the index similar to the on-line catalog," Neeley said. "Most KU students are already familiar to that system so we wanted to make it relatively easy for users."
Lorrie Knox, assistant science
Atyourfingertips
At your fingertips
Databases that are available to KU students include:
-Lexis-Nexis
-Religion Data base
-PsyC Lit
-Business Dateline
-EconLit
-Dissertation Abstracts
-Eric (Education Abstracts)
-Social Sciences Index
-Humanities Abstracts
-Medicine and Health Abstracts
KANSAN research
librarian at Anshutz Science Library, said that there was a mixed response from students about the index.
"The students that are familiar with the system have no problems," Knox said. "But since the index is on the online computer, some students get confused about which system they are on."
The index is beneficial to students looking for general resources because the index provides a small citation about the article, Neeley said.
"If they know exactly what they're looking for and they need a lot of information, they are generally referred to the other databases," he said.
The databases that have been in existence include Lexis-Nexis, PsycLit and the Social Sciences Index.
A lot of general information is available to students on the databases, Neeyle said.
"Students can look up legislative agendas without driving to Topeka," he said.
Neeley said more students were becoming aware of the many options available to them at the campus libraries.
"They don't want to be passed on the Information Super Highway," he said.
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
Gunmen injure three at north Lawrence bar
An argument that started in a north Lawrence bar and continued outside the bar Wednesday night left three people injured from gunshot wounds.
Lawrence police said Samuel Spivey, 22, and Damon Guest, 21, both of Topeka, were shot around midnight at Los Amigos Saloon, 508 Locust St.
Police said Spivey was shot in the buttocks, and Guest was shot in the leg. They were treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Bruce Toineeta, a Haskell Indian Nations University student, was injured after a bullet ricocheted off the ground and hit him in the leg, police said. Toineeta refused treatment, police said.
"It appears the first shooter (Spivey) fired into the ground in an attempt to rescue his friend," said Lawrence police Sgt. Rick Nickell.
A friend of the Topeka men left the bar after an argument. Nickell said. A group of people followed him out and began chasing him down Locust Street.
Nickell said Spivey fired one shot from a 38-caliber, semi-automatic hand gun into the ground in an attempt to get the people to disperse. When the crowd started to run, an unidentified second shooter, who was also using a small-caliber handgun, fired into the crowd, hitting the two Topeka men, Nickell said.
No arrests have been made, and police are still trying to identify the second gunman.
KIEF'S AUDIO/V
COMPACT DISCS
• New • Used • Trade-ins
WE BUY & SELL USED CD's
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913·843·1811 913·842·1438 913·842·1544
4A
Friday, September 2, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
NAACP should review its past to lead today
MATT GOWEN
The NAACP will find the right leader if it follows the examples of its history.
Benjamin Chavis needs a history lesson.
"There's been a crucifixion," the recently ousted leader of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People declared after the group's board voted to dismiss him. In spite of the overwhelming margin, he cited "outsides outside our community" as responsible for his downfall.
He neglected to mention a few things.
His 16-month tenure with the group was rocky to say the least. In an effort to get the attention of Black youth, he sought help from Muslim minister Louis Farrakhan. He thought Farrakhan's fiery style would excite and attract young Blacks to the cause. The plan backfired when Chavis did nothing to distance himself from Farrakhan's militant and inflammatory rhetoric, which often angered more than it motivated. It made Chavis appear to be leaning toward a separatist stance, a position the board was clearly at odds with.
He began his leadership claiming to "redefine the NAACP" and to breathe life into the civil-rights fight. Instead he backed proposals the board clearly rejected, such as when he supported the North American Free Trade Agreement. He also had a habit of keeping secrets from the board. Chavis used NAACP funds to keep under wraps a sexual harassment charge brought by his former assistant, Mary E. Stansel, then neglected to mention the charges to the board.
He spent freely and had a free-wheeling style that made those loyal to the organization uncomfortable.
He combined the mistakes of an inexperienced administrator and a career politician.
Unfortunately, what will go unnoticed in the deluge of newspaper articles and TV packages about Chavis as a "loose cannon" is the fact that he increased both enthusiasm and membership dramatically during his brief time in office. He started with a myriad of good intentions but lost sight of the NAACP's need for direction.
We can all recall NAACP secretary Rosa Parks being arrested after refusing to move to the back of a city bus in Montgomery, Ala. Her stand motivated the eventual boycott of the Montgomery city transportation system, a big first step toward integration during the tumultuous and violent civil-rights years. Remember the nine Black students who in 1957 fought to get into Central High School in Little Rock, Ark., and the NAACP state president who protected them and helped them state their case? Or what about NAACP Field Secretary Medgar Evers, who was shot and killed in 1963 for leading a demonstration on the streets of Jackson, Miss? Or Roy Wilkins, who led the organization through the trouble on the streets of Mississippi and continued effective leadership for 22 years.
Granted, the issues of today's political climate are much more complex than segregation in public schools
and the right to vote, but the NAACP has always managed to adapt and survive. While Chavis caused problems for the organization, he was by no means the only problem, and his dismissal will not change the group overnight.
Benjamin Chavis may have given the NAACP a shot in the arm, but the group needs to refocus its energy on finding a leader who can move it in a clearer direction, using the positive activism of leaders past as an example. Addressing the violence, poverty and racism that still plagues not only the Black community but the entire nation requires a team effort.
Matt Gowen is a Lawrence senior in jour nallam.
VIEWPOINT
University should support more internship programs
The University of Kansas needs to continue to support and develop additional opportunities for
students to get experience for college credit.
Book and classroom learning is a well-accepted part of a college edu-
retain more of what they have learned by applying textbook information to real life.
In addition to valuable experience, students
INTERNSHIPS
Books and classes are tools for learning the skills needed in any job. But experience is a necessity in starting a career.
cation but should be balanced with learning how to apply them to a career.
Without practical experience, students could graduate ill-prepared.
Some schools — such as social welfare, nursing and pharmacy have avoided this problem by requiring students to participate in for-credit experiences as part of their graduation requirements.
Other departments have also succeeded at developing programs to enrich students' educations. The department of biology has programs on campus and also arranges opportunities at the Savannah River Ecology Lab, the Topeka Zoological Park and at the Organization for Tropical Studies in San Jose, Costa Rica.
While, many of these programs have financial costs to the University, many people learn by doing, and students will
Law dean
could also gain possible contacts especially if their work is done as part of a community project.
This will benefit KU students. And, either way, the students, the faculty and the University will improve by the continuation and development of for-credit practical experience on campus and in the community.
If a better community or education is not enough incentive for University officials to develop or continue these programs, administrators should take note that these type of activities could attract qualified and excited visiting or full-time faculty members.
Michael Hoeflich already has promised to develop more community-oriented opportunities for students to practice law. Hoeflich wants to develop a legislative research bureau, a legal service for the elderly and an agribusiness program or an international program on technology.
ROBERTA JOHNSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
JEN CARR Business manager
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
News ... Sara Bennett
Editorial ... Donnelley Hearns
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
Mellisa Lecey
Features ... Trial Care
Planning Editor ... Susan White
Design ... Nobuse Mann
Assistant to the editor .. Robbie Johnson
Editors
Ruainace Staff
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 Stiglic
Creative director ... John Carlton
Classified mgr ... Heather Nielsaus
**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 Michigan are required to submit a letter addressed to:
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-Flall Hall.
HOOD
UDK
1994
QUAYLE
FOR PRES. '96
CUBANS
" THIS CAN'T BE THE RIGHT PLACE!"
CUBANS
Matt Hood / KANSAN
"Moment of silence deserves to be ignored
Well, I don't believe he was being intentionally sacrilegious. Understand that we were children surrounded by elders who cleaned themselves with a "warshrag" (now "washcloth") and shipped at "Wal-Marts" (now singular).
But this lyric pledge of thanks to the heavenly father soon diminished from my scholarly regimen, as did the pledge of allegiance and daily announcements.
Maybe I was a little too young, but there was something invigorating about starting every day of my first few years of grade school with the Lord's Prayer — wait, or was it that the kid that sat next to me could never get the words right? Hollow be thy name?
It was not a prayer that sparked controversy in a suburban Atlanta school last Monday, but simply a "moment of silence" mandated by the Georgia legislature.
Yes, prayer is not the label, and the person responsible for the legislature isn't even one of the Two Crazy Pats (Robertson or Buchanan), but a state senator concerned about violence.
The law was put to test by one teacher who continued to lecture during the "brief period of quiet reflection."
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
Although the law is full of good intentions of dealing with children and violence, there are other measures that can be taken, and they don't have to be government-mandated to work.
DAVID JOHNSON
Ideally, it would be great if teachers could be trained to listen to students more. The formative years of grade
Georgia senator David Scott said this moment of silence "would go a long way in calming down, toning down, setting a mood" for students. The law even directly states that it is not to be used for religious purposes.
But as a member of the Paranoid Left, I agree that this is just a step in the wrong direction.
Because the years in grade school can often be the only interaction with the outside world for some e children, these years are most important but are often served an educational cold shoulder.
The teacher, Brian Bown, said that he was not trying to prevent his students from observing the moment of silence but instead was setting a good example for students to stand up for their beliefs.
school is where all of my so-called problems started; my teachers were somewhat understanding but failed to connect in important ways other teachers did.
This story will have a happy ending. Even though not directly related to the church-state decisions of the past, this is Supreme Court material.
The danger lies in the fact that it sets a precedent for the as-yet uninvolved religious right, which may attempt to clone measures such as this one to veil their true intentions of bringing religion back into the classroom.
I hope that even though Bown did break the law, the law will be declared flawed and unconstitutional.
David Johnson is a Coffeyville senior in magazine Journalism.
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
Serbs believe they call shots
— the United States, Britain,
France, Germany and Russia —
can easily convert the war
between Bosnia-Herzegovina's
Serbs and Muslims into a proxy
conflict between the Christian
West and the Islamic world.
So far, however, the Muslim countries have displayed commendable restraint in the face of provocative strategies, such as last weekend's farcical referendum that seem to be designed to allow Bosnian Serbs to consolidate what they have seized through violence and bloodshed.
But, there can be no lasting peace if Bosnian Serbs can so easily outgun the government. The United States has threatened to lift the arms embargo against Bosnia. It is time to act on that. Much of the trouble can be traced to the Bosnian Serbs' conviction that the government is at their mercy and that the Americans' bluff is easily called.
It may not yet be the feared clash of cultures, but the pussyfooting of the "contact group" countries
The Straits Times Singapore
World will have to control births
The World Conference on Population, which will be held in Cairo, is the third of a series of conferences on this subject. At the first conference, held in Bucharest in 1974, the Chinese Republic, speaking on behalf of the Third World countries, emphasized that the aim of the summit was to work on development issues and not on demographic ones.
Nowadays, the increasing birth rate has become a nightmare for all poor countries, countries that are aware of the fact that by 2010 there will be 7.2 billion people on planet Earth. Two-thirds of which will have to rely on the fragile and almost nonexistent Third World countries' economic structures.
How long will a peaceful coexistence be possible between that fifth of the global population controlling 84.7 percent of the global production with the other fifth that is in control of only 1.4 percent of it?
The countries participating at the Cairo conference have to deal with three main problems: how to feed the increasing number of starving people, how to plan a development project able to deal with this amount of people, and finally, how to educate this mass of people in terms of moral and rational principles.
There is, however, a more general moral question.
La Voce Milan, Italy
HUBIE
By Greg Hardin
LOOKING AT THE STARS MAKES ME THINK OF LONG
WHEN MEN WERE
MEN AND THE WOMEN
WERE OWNED.
A man looking at the moon.
BUT NOW GIRLS ARE FREE — CANDO AS THEY PLEASE!
60 WHY WITH
ME DO THEY ONLY
JUST TEASE?
TROMPETO
I'M A NICE GUY!
I DO GIRLS MANY
GOOD WORKS!
Girl
G4
A woman is screaming at a man who is holding her neck.
SO WHY ON WHY DO
THEY STILL GO OUT
JERKS??
?
TEDDY
5A
Friday, September 2,1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The image shows a group of soldiers standing in a line, facing forward. They are dressed in camouflage uniforms, which include a shirt, trousers, and boots. The soldiers appear to be part of an army or military training program. The background is indoor with artificial lighting, possibly inside a training facility or a building.
Changing of the guard
Julianne Peter/ KANSAN
If you don't need it,don't toss it Recycle
Horoscopes
Everyday in the Kansan!
A little more than a year after the University of Kansas enacted a policy prohibiting all smoking in campus buildings, smokers are beginning to accept their outdoor-only status.
Smokers accept ban
Year-old decision allows nonsmokers to breathe easier
Kansan Staff Writer
"I don't mind the smoking policy at KU," said Matt Weller, Lawrence senior. "I prefer to smoke outside. Besides, it's a drug with a disgusting smell. Someone who doesn't smoke can smell it more acutely. But, I have one friend that wants to smoke on campus wherever he damn well pleases."
Some students said that the policy was a good idea for both smokers and nonsmokers.
The alumni center, the Endowment Association and the Union have prohibited smoking in all areas. Residence halls allow smoking in certain areas.
The smoking policy was put into effect July 1, 1993. The formal policy, distributed by the executive vice chancellor's office, says that because of the harmful effects of secondhand smoke and poor ventilation in many campus buildings, smoking is prohibited in all buildings except the Adams Alumni Center, the Kansas University Endowment Association, the Kansas Union and facilities operated by the department of student housing, which may set their own smoking policies.
"I don't mind smoking outside," said
By Jennifer Freund
Smith, who was smoking in front of the Union yesterday, said that he wasn't concerned with the harm that nonsmokers encountered from secondhand smoke.
"I would rather smoke outside," said Chris Humphrey, Wichita senior. "I like to be courteous to other people."
Liz Agnew, Valley Center sophomore. "Secondhand smoke bothers nonsmokers, and I can't smoke inside because it burns my eyes. I'm not going through withdrawal or anything by not being allowed to smoke inside buildings."
"If they don't want to smell smoke, they shouldn't go near the smoking area," he said.
But other smokers were not as enthusiastic about the policy.
Some students said that although smoking was offensive and a bad habit, people still deserved the right to light up in buildings.
"I'm totally against smoking," said Mark Zumalt, Hutchinson senior. "But I think that individual rights supersede the policies of KU. They're just out of hand. The University is too eager to interfere with personal lives."
"We should be able to smoke at the Jaybowl and the cafeteria in the Union or even just in the job," said Joe Smith, Lawrence senior. "They sell cigarettes in the Union, so they should also let us smoke in there."
"I'm not a smoker, and that's my choice," said Sonia Garcia, Wichita senior. "I don't think that it's fair to have inhale someone else's choice."
But some nonsmokers said they were pleased with the policy.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
KU
Valid Through July 31, 1995
NCCS
Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can $ave Some Cash
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint
Available at these locations:
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
1116 W23rd
Jayhawk Bookstore
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
1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044
Restaurants
1819 W. 23rd* 842-1620
Get the daily special prices every day of the week
AMIGO'S
1819 W. 23rd • 842-1620
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¢
DOMINO'S PIZZA
832 Iowa St.·841-8002
25% OFF Any Delivery Order(not valid with any other offer)
DUS HUMBRES
815 New Hampshire 841-7286
BUY1 Menu Item, and get the Second One at 1/2 Price
DRAKE'S SNACK SHOP
1006 Massachusetts*843-0561
10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more
ESPRESS O'HOUSE
10 E. 9th St*843-3007
FULL MOON CAFE
$1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50 (Includes food and coffee drinks)
803 Massachusetts 862-4444
$1.00 Sandwiches and Dinners Before 6 P.M., Tuesday
803 Massachusetts-832-0444
Soho Jewish Dinner Before 6 P
624 W 12h+84h-2310-FREE Cup of Our House Coffee
Certified Organically Grown) with Any Meal Purchase
JOHNNY'S TAVERN
2907 W 6th·841-1688·FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills)
401 N 2nk+842-0377+BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg. price for $1.00 on Monday 10th Fri 4-9am
GLASS ONION
PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
1114 NW 980-2010
IMPERIALGARDEN
$1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day
PIZZA SHOPPE
601 Kasold·842-0600
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W 23rd*B42-1212
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 50e; Md.$6.00,
add.tips 75e; $8.00 Lg, add.tips 1.00; Carry Out Only
RUNZA
2700 Iowa*749-2615*FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of
TACOJOHN'S
1628 W 23rd/84-818-1150 W 8th/643-0936-2309 Haskell
Ave/Ba/852-533-3 Hardshell Tac's for i99 @ (NO LIMIT)
WEST CHEVROLET
2222 Iowa St.·841-2739
$1.50 OFF Any Sandwich
WEST COAST SALOON
Retail/Merchandise
ATHLETE'S FOOT
ATHLETE'S FOOT
914 Massachusetts-841-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE
20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals
BOBBI'S BEDROOM
731 Massachusetts-843-4191 15% OFF All Apparel +
FREE FREE T-Shirt w/purchase Over $25.00
745 New Hampshire+843-3282-$25.00 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor, System Cleaning on IBM Compatible
20% OFF Entire Inventory (excludes sale items and outlet priced items)
15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item
FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
CENTRAL DATA
743 Massachusetts749-4664
15% OFF Any Item (excludes sale items)
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
1428 3286
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
1420 Crescent Rd-843-3826
10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill
JAYNAWK TROPICAL FISH
846 Illinois, Suite D+842-5950-20% OFF Whisk Brand PowerFilters, All Other Brand Undergravel Filters
JOCKS NITCH
JOCKS NITCH
840 Massachusetts-842-2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
837 Massachusetts*842-2992
20% OFF KU Sweatshirts
20% OFF RU Sweatshirt
VIL BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640
Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book) 5¢
KU BOOKSTORE
KU BOOKSTORE
KANAS AND BURGE UNIONS-844-6404
$5.00 OFF Any Jawbak Clothing or Hat Over $20.00
KANASS AND BURGE UNIONS-684-4640
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 Vali
stn & New Hampshire*841-5324 10% OFF All Skin Care Products
MERLE NORMAN
MIRACLE VIDEO
910 N 2n/841-8903-1910 Haskell Ave. Suite 1/841-7504
$1.00 OFF Movie Rent(limit one per visit)
NATURAL WAY
820 Massachusetts-841-0100*20% OFF A11 Cotton T-Shirts Mens and Women's (Organic Green, Cotton, and Recycled Cotton)
OUTFITTER'S
740 Massachusetts 843-3933
15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
PRO SOUND
Photos
Lawrence, Ks+865-069z
10% OFF All Sales
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
716 Massachusetts 841-1762-200 OFF (CD: Tapes, Movies, Video
Games) Tuesday & 15% more (On credit) on Buy Backs
RECYCLED SOUNDS
622 W 12th St. 841-9457 $2.00 Offer Any One CD, Tape,
or LP Sleeve/Value Greater Than $5,000
RENTCO USA
1741 Massachusetts*749-1605
25% OFF All Monthly Rentals
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
704-821-9896
15% OFF Anv Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy)
SPRINGMAID/MAMSUTTA
1025 N. 3rd-832-1100
10% OFF Any Purchase
VIDEO BIZ
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
832 Iowa·749-3507*2 for 1 Video Rental Monday
Thursday (limit one offer per day)
1116W. 23rd*749-5206
20% OF all clothing (excluding sale items)
Services
BRADY OPTICAL
737 Massachusetts*842-0880
15% OFF Complete Eyeglass Purchase
UNDERGROUND HEALTH CENTER
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 6thh-841-6955
10% OFF All Parts
BRADY OPTICAL
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
210 Clinton Plaza 843-0367
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST
1019 Massachusetts*b84-3844*$25.00 OOFF All Fashion
Eglass Flames Valid with PRESENTATION Lenses Only
EUROPEAN TAN
1601 W23rd841-6232*2 F2 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
15th & Kasold832-0281+125% OFF Initial or Annual
R.C. $ ^{3} $STADIUM BARBERY
R.C. STATION DUBLER
1033 Massachusetts749-5363
Avn 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 Session Package (Save $5.50)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
119 Staircase-Flint-864-4358
20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Art
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 2, 1994
6A
Mulligan's
featuring DINE IN
or CARRY OUT
11am-3am
PUPS
Downtown Delivery Available
Great Food-Great Music
FRI
The Hearty
Vikings
With Guru’s
$1.50 Wells
SAT
Blues Head
Beggars
$1.50 Wells
All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged
1016 Massachusetts
Downtown Lawrence
865-4055
Mulligan's
featuring DINE IN or CARRY OUT 11am-3am Downtown Delivery Available
Great Food-Great Music
FRI The Hearty Vikings With Guru’s $1.50 Wells
SAT Blues Head Beggars $1.50 Wells
All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged
1016 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 865-4055
So you're on a date. He wants true love. You want.
BURRITOS. He wants commitment. You want TACOS. He wants to hold hands. You want to use your hands to eat NACHOS. He wants to take you back to his place and watch sparks fly. You want to go back to your place, alone, and watch VIDEOS. You're smart, you'll go to TACO BELL, and buy your favorite food for just 59.79 or 99. add a medium or large drink and you get a coupon good for a FREE VIDEO rental, with any rental. It's redeemable at your local BLOCKBUSTER. But this offer is only good for a limited time, so keep his phone number.
CROSS THE BORDER.
TACO BELL.
Prices exclude tax. Offer valid at participating locations while supplies last. Limit one offer per person per visit. Offer good for one free meal you may need to spend on equipment. Blockbuster® membership notes apply. Coupon expires 10/29/94. ©1994 Taco Bell Corp.
Mulligan's
featuring DINE IN or CARRY OUT 11am-3am Downtown Delivery Available
Great Food-Great Music
FRI The Hearty Vikings With Guru’s $1.50 Wells
SAT Blues Head Beggars $1.50 Wells
All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged
1016 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 865-4055
So you're on a date. He wants true love. You want.
BURRITOS. He wants commitment. You want TACOS. He wants to hold hands. You want to use your hands to eat NACHOS. He wants to take you back to his place and watch sparks fly. You want to go back to your place, alone, and watch VIDEOS. You're smart, you'll go to TACO BELL, and buy your favorite food for just 59.79 or 99 add a medium or large drink and you get a coupon good for a FREE VIDEO rental, with any rental. It's redeemable at your local BLOCKBUSTER.
But this offer is only good for a limited time, so keep his phone number.
CROSS THE BORDER!
TACO BELL.
Prices exclude tax. Offer valid at participating locations while supplies last. Limit one offer per person per visit. Offer good for one free rent when you save one. More details, just be of equal or higher value. Excludes video games and equipment. Showroom membership nets apply. Coupon expires 10/18/94 ©1994 Taco Bell Corp.
Juicers Showgirls
WELCOMES BACK THE STUDENTS OF KANSAS
Savannah
Totally N*de Dancers
18 + Admitted With Valid ID
913 N. Second
(Next to Riverfront Square)
841-4122
Watch Out For Student Specials and New Afternoon Specials
Brooke
So you're on a date. He wants true love. You want.
BURRITOS. He wants commitment. You want TACOS. He wants to hold hands. You want to use your hands to eat NACHOS.
He wants to take you back to his place and watch sparks fly. You want to go back to your place, alone, and watch VIDEOS. You're smart, you'll go to TACO BELL, and buy your favorite food for just 59¢, 79¢ or 99¢ add a medium or large drink and you get a coupon good for a FREE VIDEO rental, with any rental. It's redeemable at your local BLOCKBUSTER.
But this offer is only good for a limited time, so keep his phone number.
CROSS THE BORDER.
TACO BELL.
Prices exclude tax. Offer valid at participating locations while supplies last and cannot be combined with other offers. Good for rent when you rent one. More rental must be of equal or lower value. Blockbuster video games and equipment. Blockbuster membership makes apply. Coupons expire 10/16/84. ©1994 Taco Bell Corp.
TACO BELL
Savannah
Juicers Showgirls Featuring WELCOMES BACK THE STUDENTS OF
Totally N*de Dancers
18 + Admitted With Valid ID
913 N. Second
(Next to Riverfront Square)
841-4122
Watch Out For Student Specials and
New Afternoon Specials
Brooke
Robo-teacher in future?
Survey shows books preferred tool of instructors
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
好不好
Although the impact of computers on college campuses is growing, using computers to teach a class hasn't caught on yet.
A preliminary study released last month by the Association of American Publishers indicated that students might use computers to do homework, but they resist the idea of working in class on a computer.
The study found that only 19 percent of all students preferred reading their text on a computer screen rather than in a textbook. More than half of the students surveyed said they definitely would not want to use the computer as the primary teaching tool.
Eighty-eight percent of the faculty surveyed for the study agreed that textbooks were an effective way to teach a class.
The study found that faculty also did not prefer using a computer over a textbook.
The association is a trade group whose members publish books, classroom materials and software. The final results from the study will be released later this year.
assisted instruction in the department of English, said that using computers to teach a class without the aid of a textbook probably was not going to happen in the near future.
Jack Healy, director of computer-
"It depends on the availability of computers" he said.
Healy said the department had one English 101 class being taught with the help of computers right now. Students in the class type their papers into the computer, and it provides them with an analysis of their writing style. The computer program, designed by American Telephone & Telegraph Co., then suggests revisions that the students can consider with the teacher in a conference.
Healy said there wasn't enough funding to increase the number of computer-assisted classes offered at
KU right now.
"We are much further behind in using computers for writing than other colleges and universities," Healy said.
Healy said computer-assisted teaching was not a replacement for teachers.
"It's part of the teaching curriculum" he said. "It's a tool."
"I think it would be something different," she said.
Jeni Epstein, Denver freshman, said she would be interested in a computer-assisted class.
courtney Ryan, Kansas City, Mo,
freshman, said she thought computer-
assisted classes in subjects such as
foreign languages would not be benefic-
icial because the students needed
more personal interaction with
teachers in order to learn the material.
Computer-assisted classes would be feasible in some subjects, such as history or philosophy but not in some of professional fields such as journalism, said Bruce Swain, professor of journalism.
For example, if a history student needed to learn dates and facts, a computer could be used to teach the material. However, if a journalism student needed to learn what information was the most important for a news story, a computer would not get the job done, Swain said.
"There are too many other things you have to do in teaching journalism that involve the human element," he said.
BEERS: Truck found in town
Continued from Page 1A.
ney has taken them from northwest Arkansas, east to near Tulsa, Okla., north to Lawrence and, at least for Scanlon, south again to near Fredonia.
"Scanlon was arrested this morning for breaking into a farmhouse in Wilson County," said U.S. Marshall Chief Deputy Pete Nagumy. "We are concentrating our efforts to locate Beers in the Lawrence area."
The stolen truck Scanlon was driving broke down near Fredonia early yesterday morning, Nagurny said. After the truck broke down, Scanlon
walked to a farmhouse. When no one answered the door, Scanlon broke into the house, Nagurry said. But the couple, who was at home, surprised Scanlon.
Scanlon was arrested without incident.
"He told him he needed help with his truck," Nagumny said. "So when the farmer went to help him, his wife called the sheriff."
wired because no one entered the shop or office, McCullough. She said the truck was backed out of the lot through an 8-foot tall chainlink fence.
The truck Scanlon was driving had Douglas County license plates and Quality Electric markings on the side and tailgate, said Pat McCulough, Quality Electric office manager. The truck probably was hot-
Beers has a history of criminal convictions that includes the robbery of a Lawrence grocery store and an escape from a Douglas County Sheriff's deputy in October.
Last week, Beers was sentenced to 14 years in a federal penitentiary for kidnapping and driving a stolen car across state lines last September.
A $2,500 reward is being offered for information that leads to his arrest.
SAVING MONEY
IS IN THE BAG.
Get a fresh new look at Cost Cutters.
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
$8.95
Shampoo and Cut
regularly $10.95
expires:9/14/94
COST CUTTERS'
FAMILY HAIR CARE
We're your style:
$5.00 off
Any Hair Color
(we carry Redken shades)
COST CUTTERS
expires:9/14/94
FAMILY HAIR CARE
We're your style:
STREETSIDE RECORDS
HITS UNDER CONSTRUCTION
The DEVLINS
THE DEVLINS
Drift
Includes
I Know Thee • Turn You 'Round •
Almost Made You Smile • Someone To Talk To
Specially
Priced
The DEVLINS hail from Dublin, Ireland. They play subtle rock'n'roll driven by lyrical rhythms and easy-going melodies.
In fact, their music is an unpredictable ride filled with gentle flows and jagged edges.
Sale ends
9 26 94
1403 W. 23RD ST.
842-7173
Stay Streetsmart, Shop Streetside!
LOT YOUR
OARS DO
THE
BROWSING
ON THE
1 station
See store for details
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 2, 1994
7A
Irish peace needs a chance
Feelings of hostility historically die hard
By CHARLES J. HANLEY
AP Special Correspondent
In still one more bloody corner of the map, peace is getting a chance. It's too bad that, as the Irish can tell you, the habits of war die so hard.
The Irish Republican Army ceasefire that took yesterday in Ulster hit the front pages and airwaves like an inevitable headline in a five-year-long parade of peace, the next float in a procession of historic agreements and capitulations, handshakes and grand gestures.
Since 1989 when the Berlin Wall crumbled, the world has watched and cheered; Nelson Mandela's freedom in South Africa; peace in Nicaragua; the Soviet empire's collapse; peace in Lebanon and El Salvador; a nuclear arms treaty; peace in Ethiopia, Afghanistan and Cambodia; the Israel-Palestine Liberation Organization agreement; the United States-Vietnamese deal and the Israel-Jordan agreement.
ANALYSIS
And now, rolling into view, peace in Northern Ireland. Maybe.
Peace has a lot going for it in Belfast: The Catholic-Protestant conflict is small-scale; the extremist violence has no wide public support; moderates are working for a lasting settlement under the sponsorship of democratic, and well-healed, friends—the British and Americans.
But knowledgeable onlookers must wonder how far the bandwagon can go before it breaks down, such as all previous peace initiatives in Northern Ireland, on the hatreds and distrust of centuries.
And if peace loses its chance in Ulster's gentle green hills — where tens of thousands have not been "ethically cleansed," where mind-numbing atrocities are not the order of the day, every day — how can it win in Bosnia, where people are being shuffled across a map by faceless foreign bureaucrats or in Rwanda, steeped in the blood of a half-million neighbors?
But a missed chance for peace in Northern Ireland would fit a trend of the times. After all, a closer look at the march of peace in the post-Cold War world shows it has been turning into a rout:
In Cambodia, a peace agreement reached in Paris in 1991 evaporated on the killing fields of Cambodia by 1993, as the Kmmer Rouge renewed a 14-year-old guerrilla war.
In Afghanistan, peace had its moment in 1992. But a guerrilla victory against the Soviet-allied government quickly degenerated into civil war among ethnic factions.
In Angola, warring armies struck a deal for elections in 1992. But the faction that lost the vote then simply went back into its military mode. The 19-year-old civil war rages on.
Other international efforts at peacemaking have failed conspicuously in the former Yugoslavia, Somalia, Liberia and Rwanda.
OPEN LABOR DAY
BEAUTY WAREHOUSE &HAIRZONE of Lawrence
IMAGE
Brocato
KMS ABRA
S
OPI
SEBASTIAN
SCRUPLES
ranza
NEXUS
REDKEN
PAUL MITCHELL
Although Cuba wanted to broaden the agenda to discuss easing the U.S. economic embargo and other issues, the United States insisted on a limited agenda of migration issues.
Both sides made initial presentations and the United States focused on migration, U.S. law enforcement and returning Cuban criminals now
Cuba. United States find no accord
TIGI
The U.S. side described the talks as serious, professional and businesslike. The Cuban side did not comment immediately.
JOICO
SORBIE
Nucleic N.
HAIR ZONE
AT & BEAUTY WAREHOUSES
HAR
DO
LEIRI
BODY
DRENCH
NEW YORK — U.S. and Cuban officials reached no agreement yesterday in talks seeking to halt the flood of Cuban rafters trying to reach Florida.
The Associated Press
Rusk
$200 OFF
(15 purchase minimum, excludes sale items)
BEAUTY WAREHOUSE
Hours: M-F 9-8 Sat. 6-8 Sun Noon-6
530 West 23rd
exp. 9/30/94 841-5885 UDK
The sides decided to meet again today, changing the venue from the U.S. mission to the United Nations to Cuba's mission.
Cuban diplomats said their government had ordered them not to talk with reporters while the negotiations continued, but delegation leader Ricardo Alarcon appeared on U.S.
exp. 9/30/94 841-5865 UDK
After a working lunch, Johnson said the United States had discussed details of how to reach a mutual objective, "handling the desire to immigrate in an orderly, predictable and dependable process and stemming the uncontrollable outflow" of refugees.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
September 2-3
in U.S. jails, said David Johnson, a representative for the U.S. delegation after talks recessed yesterday.
Orson Welles' Classic
Criminals also are said to be among the 19,000 Cubans who fled their homeland last month
He did not elaborate about the criminals, but he apparently referred to the 1,397 Cubans in U.S. prisons and jails who arrived 14 years ago in the Mariel boat lift.
CITIZEN KANE Friday 8:00 p.m. Saturday 8:00 p.m.
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION
TICKETS $2 50, MIDNIGHTS $3 00
FREE WITH SUA MOVE CARD
CALL B64-5HOW FOR MORE INFO
BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES
Everything But Ice 936 Mass.
television.
A half-dozen Cuban protesters gathered outside the U.S. mission chanting "Liberty" and "The problem with Cuba is Fidel."
The talks focused on the flight of Cubans in the past month. The exodus began when President Fidel Castro responded to Aug. 5 riots in Havana by suggesting he would no longer stop Cubans trying to leave.
"A number of Cubans now feel compelled to get out of the country, which is suffering from many external factors," he said. "If we are seriously going to find a solution, we cannot ignore the specific circumstances in which this so-called exodus is taking place."
In an interview on NBC's Today show yesterday, Alarcon again said that ending the 32-year U.S. embargo against Cuba was crucial to ending the exodus.
AEROBICS with
CS
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
POPCORN
NOW PLAYING
---
Purchase 10 tans for $30 and get 5 tans FREE
WOODY HARRELSON JULIETTE LEWIS
ROBERT DOWNEY JR. and TOMMY LEE JONES
AN OLIVER STONE FILM
THE MEDIA MADE THEM SUPERSTARS.
NATURAL BORN KILLERS
WARNER BROS. PRESENTS
IN ASSOCIATION WITH REGENCY INTERPRASES AND ALEGRIA FILMS AND ITALIAN NEW RELEASE PRODUCTION IN ASSOCIATION WITH JO PRODUCTIONS BY OLIVER STONE FROM MOODY HARRELSON
JULIETTE LEWIS ROBERT DOWNEY JR. AND TOMMY LEE JONES NATURAL BORN KILLERS TOM SIZEMORE PRODUCTION IN ASSOCIATION WITH RAND VOSSLER PRODUCTION IN ASSOCIATION WITH ARNON MICCRAY AND TOM MOUNT
QUINTIN TABANTINO SCENE BY David Kirk Richard Brownman Oliver Stone PRODUCTION BY JANE HANSBERG DON MORRIT and CLAYTON TOWNSEN
DIRECTED BY OLIVER STONE!
- Nautilus & Freeweights
* Reebok Step
- Reebok Step *
* Stairmasters/Treadmill *
- Personal Fitness Training
- Full Spa Area
- Stairmasters/readmilr
* Lifecycle/Rowing Machine
- 60 Aerobic classes per week
* 2 Aerobic rooms
- 2 Aerobic rooms
FIRST VISIT FREE!
$19 PER MONTH 3 month Free for 50 members
749-2424 9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza
depeche mode~new order~erasure~soft cell~the cure~pet shop boys~enigma~snap~klf
franke roes to hollywood~2unlmsted- Utah saints~nitzer ebb~srouxsie & the banshees~the shamen~deeee-ite
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
?1 to drink $1 wells
GRANADA
1020 Massachusetts St.
Lawrence, KS (913)842-1390
ministry~tom club~the smiths~donna summer~biziare inc~bronski best~front 742~talking heads~U2~tkk
depeche mode~new order~erasure~soft cell~the cure~pet shop boys~enigma~snap~ki
8A
Friday. September 2, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown
strike
out.
$3.00/hr. lane rentals on weekends.
Jaybowl
kansas union • level 1 • 864-3545
Parking in the rear
KMS JOICO
NEX US BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HARDWARE
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FULL MTGELL REDKEN
genuine Kryptonite
On SALE!
$19.95
ends September 8, 1994
Lock It.
Keep It!
genuine Kryptonite
On SALE!
$19.95
ends September 8, 1994
RICK'S
BIKE SHOP
Inc.
916 Mass., (913)841-6642
SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts 843-5000
Woolnich.
EST. 1892
CITY OF NEW YORK
JG
HELD OVER!!
Fri. & Sat.
9:00am-6:00pm
MOONLIGHT
MADNESS
ALL REMAINING SUMMER SPORTS WEAR MENS AND WOMENS $9, $19, & $29
TOMMY HILFIGER
ALL REMAINING SUMMER ITEMS... $19 & $29
SHORTS & SHIRTS
TOMMY HILFIGER, SUPPLIES, COLOURS...$9, $19, $29
SKIRTS & TOPS
CALVIN KLEIN, CAMBRIDGE, WOOLRICH,
FRENCH CONNECTION, HENRY&HARVEY... $9, $19, $29
ALL SUMMER
SPORCOATS...$99
SELECTED BELTS
SELECTED BELTS...1/2 Price
BOXERS (Huge Selection)...$9
SILK TIES ...$19
SILK TIES...$19
SUITS (Selected Year Round)...From $129
BRITCHES CORNER
843 MASSACHUSETTS
843-0454
HELD OVER!!
GOMA, Zaire—Rwanda and Zaire pledged Thursday to help an estimated 1.2 million Hutu refugees return to their homeland in Rwanda from wretched camps in eastern Zaire.
Rwanda, Zaire to help refugees move home Associated Press
Filippo Grandi, the field chief for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees in Goma, said it was "a big achievement" that both countries had agreed to work together.
"The meeting does give a ray of hope that we can solve the refugee problem in the near future," Grandi said after Rwandan and Zairian government ministers cemented their pledge in a joint statement, their first on the refugee issue.
Earlier, Rwanda's new Tusli-led government invited Hutu refugee leaders to come home to help draw up plans to repatriate the refugees. There was no immediate reaction from refugee leaders or ministers of the ousted Hutu government.
Hutu soldiers in the camps have been warning the refugees that Tutsis will kill them if they go back, and the Rwandan government wants to work through moderate Hutus to debunk the extremist propaganda. The new government says Hutu refugees can return without fear but promises to punish anyone involved in the ethnic massacres. There has been no evidence that the Tutsis have ordered reprisals against Hutus.
WASHINGTON — The United States has agreed to talk to North Korea next week about establishing diplomatic offices in the two capitals. The development is a major step toward formal relations with the hard-line Communist government.
N. Korea may get liaison posts
Establishing diplomatic offices would depend, however, on reaching an overall agreement on North Korea's suspect nuclear program. After more than a year of quarrelling, the Pyongyang government pledged in July to partially open sites to international inspectors.
The Associated Press
Administration officials said yesterday the talks beginning Sept. 10, apparently the first ever in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang, would concern arrangements for setting up liaison offices there and in Washington. Establishing mail service, renting office space and real estate laws will be on the agenda.
The Berlin meeting also will deal with ways to safely store spent fuel from the North Korean reactor and to temporarily provide the country with energy during a period of conversion to light-water reactors. Berlin was chosen because of Germany's expertise in technology, officials said.
Technical experts from the two sides will meet the same day in Berlin on replacing a five-megawatt experimental reactor that is part of North Korea's nuclear program with new technology that is considered less dangerous.
On Sept. 23, senior negotiators will reconvene in Geneva to pursue North Korea's quest for recognition and economic ties with the West and the U.S. drive to halt a program considered a potential danger to South Korea, Japan and other Asian countries.
Liaison offices provide for diplomatic contact. The Nixon administration, for instance, established liaison offices to end decades of tension from China. Subsequently, the Carter administration established full ties with Beijing.
"We don't attach symbolic significance" to the Pyongyang meeting, said State Department official Michael McCurry. But, he said, he would acknowledge that North Korea might view the meeting in that light.
Also, McCurry said opening liaison offices was "conditional on an overall agreement" on North Korea's nuclear program.
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-6 M-th, 8-Fri, 9-Sat, 12-Aut, 843-3826
BUM STEER-
CATERING
CATERING
BBQ MEALS,WHOLE HOT ROAST GRILLED BURGERS,GRILLED CHICKEN FRIED CHICKEN,TACO BAR,SALAD BAR
BUM STEER WILL PROVIDE TABLEWARE, BREAD, SAUCES, DELIVERY& SET-UP
LARGE GROUP DISCOUNTS!
Most meals under $6 per person
841-7665
Magazines, Compact Discs, & Cassettes
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Available at the Kansas Union location.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
Biz says...
Come, and experience all that feathers, beads, and big hair have to offer this weekend...
106 North Park at 11th and Massachusetts streets 841-4966
Open Minds Welcome Nightly From 7pm-2am, Friday open at 6
Sunday Beer Bash September 4
Open at 3:00
Hip Hop
Come out and play...
Penguin
BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES Everything But Ice 936 Mass.
PARTY!
When it's party time, we've got the clothes and accessories you'll have fun wearing. From costumes to formal wear, you will look right when you get it from
The Etc.
Shop
TM
928
Massachusetts
Lawrence
(913) 843-0611
Our lunch menu will allow you to come back for dinner.
Costumes- Second Floor
Fifi's affordable lunches, prices as fine as the dining.
Grilled Chicken Salad Platter
Fillet of Sole w/ rice pilaf & salad
Boutine Vegetable Pasta
Cafun Reuben w/french fries & salad
5.50
4.95
5.50
5.50
fifis
925 louca 8/1-7226
THE MASK
Crown Cinema
THE CLIENT
SUSAN SARANDON
TOMMY LEE JONES
FC-31
THE MASK
STARRING
JIM CARREY
FG-13
WALT DISNEY
PICTURES PRESENTS
THE
LION
KING
9:45 Only
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
5:15 7:30 9:30
THE CLIENT
SUSAN SARANDON
TOMMY LEE JONES
FG-13
CHRISTOPHER LLOYD
No Rules!
CAMP NOWHERE
5:00
7:15 9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
5:15 7:30
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00 LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 ALL DAY
MELANIE GRIFFITH
ED HARRIS
MILK MONEY
FG-13
CLEAR PRESENT
DANGER
starring
HARRISON
FORD
5:00
7:15 9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
5:00 8:00
WAGONS EAST!
JOHN CANDY
RICHARD LEWIS
FG-13
IN THE ARMY NOW
PAULY SHORE
America,
sleep tight.
9:30
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS-841-5191
5:15 7:30
I Love TROUBLE
Julia ROBERTS
Nick NOLTE
FG
MAVERICK
MEL GIBSON
JODIE FOSTER
FG
CHRISTOPHER LLOYD
No Rules!
CAMP
NOWHERE
PG
WAGONS
EAST!
JOHN
CANDY
RICHARD
LEWIS
PG-D
9:30
WAGONS EAST!
JOHN CANDY
RICHARD LEWIS
PG-13
IN THE ARMY NOW
PAULY SHORE
America,
sleep tight.
9:30
VARSITY
5:15
1015 MASSACHUSETTS+841-5191
7:30
I Love TROUBLE
Julia ROBERTS
Nick NOLTE PG
I Love TROUBLE
Julia ROBERTS Nick NOLTE PG
MAVERICK
MEL GIBSON JODIE FOSTER PG
5:00
7:30 9:50
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA
841-5191
4:50
7:20 9:50
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
MAVERICK
MEL
GIBSON
JODIE
FOSTER
FC
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1994
Kansas hurts Cougars early for victory
SECTION B
Jayhawks take 35-13 conquest with dominating running game
20
Bv Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
Sophomore running back June Henley eludes the dive of Houston free safety Dedric Mathis. Henley finished the game with 114 rushing yards. With Henley's contribution, Kansas scored early with three unanswered touchdowns, eventually beating Houston 35-13.
Domination could be a word used to describe the way Kansas football teams lost before and during the early years of coach Glen Mason's era.
Now the word can be used to
describe a Kansas' victory.
After the game, Mason said that he wasn't impressed with his team and that neither were his players.
"There was a time when, if we won like that, we would come off the field screaming." Mason said.
After this game, his players came off the field with some somber looks on their faces. Mason said.
"At times, we played well, but there were some things we need to work on." Mason said.
In front of 18,150 fans in the Houston Astrodome, the Jayhawks beat an inexperienced team with a second-year head coach. A sparse Cougar crowd, whose team went 1-9-1 in 1993, saw its team fall behind 14-0 after the Jayhawks' first two drives and 21-0 at the end of the first half.
On the first drive of the game, the Jayhawks went 80 yards on 10 plays in little more than four minutes. Kansas scored on a four-yard pass to sophomore tight end Jim Moore. The drive's key play was a 23-yard run by sophomore June Henley on third and two from the Houston 28-yard line. Coming out of a timeout, Henley sprung loose on a pitch right, running around senior fullback Chris Powell and Moore.
"It started when the tight end got a good block on his man," Henley said.
Henley, who had 114 yards rushing on 16 carries, said that he felt his legs were fresh because of Mason's rotation of the running backs. Henley also said the line had a lot to do with it.
"Our line is good," Henley said. "We
werent clicking like we should have been during camp. Today everybody was clicking."
A glimmer of hope appeared when Houston's Jermaine Williams returned the Jayhawks' next kickoff out to the Kansas 43-yard line. The hope was extinguished by the Kansas defense, when senior linebacker Don Davis stopped all three plays.
"They ran a couple of plays in a row right at me," Davis said.
The Jayhawks followed their first drive with a nine-play, 90-yard drive lasting more than four minutes. Kansas scored on fourth and one from the 4-yard line on a run by junior running back LK. Levine.
Kansas was backed up before the drive even started when they received an illegal procedure penalty for five yards. Starting at the five, Henley ran the ball for an 8-yard gain. Then senior quarterback Asheki Preston threw an incomplete pass before throwing a third down pass to senior wide receiver Robert Reed. The 63-yard pass was Preston's career long.
The pass was set up by a failed out pattern on the play before.
"Yeah, the corner read it," Preston said. "I ran the pump and threw. I made the right read."
The only thing that seemed to be going well for the Cougars was their punting. Senior punter Jason Stoff pitched his first kick out-of-bounds at the 10-yard line, and his second, which followed a second failed Houston drive, went out-of-bounds at the 1-yard line.
The Jayhawks then went 99 yards on 14 plays in 5.49. Mark Sanders capped the drive with a 4-yard touchdown run.
Houston opened up the second half like the Jayhawks opened up the first half. The Cougars marched from their 20-yard line to the Jayhawks' 8-yard line before Kansas stopped Houston on four downs.
Mason said that he was pleased with his team's performance — both on offense and defense.
GAME STATS
"We didn't have good field position all night, and we still found a way to do something with it." Mason said.
Kansas Jayhawks
"I thought Asheli Preston did a good job," Mason said. "He's not in mid-season form but neither is our offense."
Mason said he wasn't totally pleased, though.
| Rushing | Att. | Yards | Long | TD | Team Statistics |
|---|
| First Downs | Kickoff returns... |
|---|
| Henley | 16 | 114 | 23 | 0 | 26 | Kickoff returns... |
| Levine | 10 | 72 | 35 | 2 | 57 | Possession time... |
| Sanders | 12 | 48 | 7 | 1 | 346 | Third-down conv... |
| Receiving | No. | Yards | Avg. | Long | Pass Attempts | 20 | Sacks (No, Yards) 2-14 |
| Reed | 3 | 76 | 25.3 | 63 | Pass Completions | 15 | Penalties... |
| White | 4 | 43 | 10.75 | 20 | Yards Passing | 172 | Fumbles (No, lost) 1-1 |
Kansas duo advances in Open
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
The women's doubles tennis team of Nora Koves and Rebecca Jensen triumphed in their first-round match at the U.S. Open in New York City yesterday.
Koves and Jensen won in straight sets, 6-4, 6-4 against Karin Kfchweld of Luxembourg and Andrea Strnadova of the Czech Republic.
I am not a lawyer. I am not a lawyer.
I am not a lawyer. I am not a lawyer.
PETER SCHULZMAN
.
"We just kept fighting and it turned out good." Koves said.
The team of Kfchwent and Strnadova was not completely foreign to Koves, who is from Budapest, Hungary.
The duo received their invitation to the U.S. Open by winning the NCAA Division I Women's Doubles Championship last spring. The victory marked the first national title Kansas has won in tennis.
"I'd seen them a long time ago when
Koves and Jensen have been doubles partners for the last two years at Kansas. Koves is returning for her senior season, while Jensen is forgoing her final year of eligibility to play professionally.
"It was pretty much packed," Koves said.
Rebecca Jensen Nora Koves
Koves and Jensen became accus
The Koves-Jensen fans included Koves' mother, Jensen's family, Kansas women's tennis coach Chuck Merzbach and Kansas men's tennis coach Michael Center.
"It sounded like everybody was cheering for us," she said. "Our opponents didn't have that. We had the plus."
I plaved at home," she said.
However, knowing the opponents was not the difference in the match. The crowd support the duo received was the telling component, Koves said.
tomed to the crowd support in college tennis.
However, it is not usually a component of the professional tour, Koves said.
"College tennis is a lot better in the sense that a lot of your teammates and a lot of people cheer for you," she said. "But in the professional tournaments everybody just does their own thing."
Kansas sophomore Amy Trytke, a teammate of Koves and Jensen last year, said she was not sure how the duo would do at the U.S. Open. In the past, she said they lacked a quick start in their matches, and they would have to avoid that roadblock against professional competition.
For being in their first-ever Grand Slam event, Koves said she and Jensen had a good time playing yesterday.
Their next match will be tomorrow against Karina Habsudova and Radka Zrubakova at a time yet to be determined.
"You have to start out right away strong." Trytek said.
"We were not nervous at all," she said. "I don't know what happened."
VOLLEYBALL
Kansas junior Tracie Walt sets in ball in practice yesterday. The volleyball team opens its season today.
Volleyball season to open in difficult tournament
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportwriter
New faces and a new coaching philosophy will be put to the test when the Kansas volleyball team opens in the Colorado State Volleyball Tournament
A 10 a.m. match against regionally-ranked Northern Arizona State marks the Jayhawks' season opener.
Kansas junior outside hitter Jenny Larson said the team was anxious to start its season.
"We haven't heard a lot about the other teams yet," said Larson, team co-captain. "that we really know is that they're young but good. We need to go in there ready to play."
The Kansas volleyball team follows the same mold as its opponents in this tournament — young but competitive.
Kansas starts three freshmen this year. Trisha Lindgren at setter and Maggie Mohrfeld and Leslie Pupkyle at the middle blocker positions.
Larson will take the right side of the Kansas court, while sophomore Katie Walsh and junior Tracie Walt, outside hitters, will combine to dominate the left side.
"They looked sharp this week," Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said of the players. "They're ready to play. It's time for them to put use all they've been working on in practices. Finally they get to compete."
This week in practice, the Jahayhaws devoted practice time to work on their transition game.
Larson, Walt and senior outside hitter Janet Uher will be in charge of leading the young team this season. Schonew said.
IRELAND
Senior John Colville works on a passing drill during an early morning practice at Shenk Complex.
Daron Bennett / KANGAN
Rugby club to open against Tigers
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas will start its 64th season of intercollegiate rugby Saturday. The team will battle Missouri at 1 a.m. at the Shenkai Complex on the corner of 23rd and Iowa.
Kansas hopes to continue the success it has enjoyed. In the past five years, the team has produced three collegiate All-American rugby players. Each year, 35 All Americans are named out of more than 10,000 collegiate players.
This comes in a sport in which most athletes don't pick up the game until they come to college. Rugby draws many former high school athletes who wish to continue competing athletically in college.
"Athletes usually take two to three years to pick up the sport and start looking confident," Kansas coach Dominic Barnao said.
"In New Zealand they start players very young," he said. "Here, players usually don't start playing seriously until at least high school or college."
Barnao, who is from New Zealand and has coached in England, sees a big difference between the players in the United States and those in other countries.
Ixexperience may be a problem for a Kansas team that has only two seniors. That fact hasn't diminished the team's
goals for this season.
"Every season we have the ultimate goal of winning a national championship," said Olin Gotham, a player and the team publicist. "It's a lofty goal, but we're disappointed if we don't achieve it."
"The other schools can't seem to meet collegiate eligibility for
However, only Kansas, Kansas State and Northeast Missouri State are currently eligible within the union to compete for the collegiate title.
The team finished last spring's season second to Northeast Missouri State University with a 5-3 record in the Heart of America Union. The Heart of America Union is a conference made up of six teams.
one reason or another," Barnao said.
The Heart of America champion advances to the Western Territorial Championships, one step from the national tournament.
"The Air Force Academy is usually the strongest team in the West," Barno said. "I think that by this spring we'll be able to compete at that level."
The first step in achieving the team's goal will come when Kansas takes on Missouri this weekend.
Matt Delargy, the team's captain, said it was important for the team to get off to a good start.
"We ended last spring really strongly so we want to continue that," Delargy said.
2B
Friday, September 2, 1994
SPORTS RSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NFL
NFL Week One Preview
A look at the top games this weekend
KANSAS CITY (11-5) AT
NEW ORLEANS (8-8)
Televised 1 p.m.. NBC
Televised 1 p.m., NBC
LINE—Chiefs by 3.
SERIES RECORD — Saintslead3.
?
LAST TIME MET — In 1991 at Arrowhead Stadium, Saints won 17-10.
Others brought in Steve Bono to backup-infured QB Joe Montana (2,144 yards, 13 TDs, seven INTS last season). Marcus Allen is 34, but has continued assault on record books. No. 1 pick RB Greg Hill is explosive runner. J.J. Birden and Willie Davis form exciting receiving duo.
CHIEFS OFFENSE — RUSH (No. 20), PASS (No. 15), OVERALL (No. 16)
SAINTS OFFENSE — RUSH (No. 14), PASS (No. 21), OVERALL (No. 21)
Jim Everett is latest in Saints' QB merry-go-round, with '93 starter Wade Wilson as backup. RB Derek Brown was sensational before injury cut '93 season short. Signed big-play
B3
-
WR Michael Haynes (72 receptions last year with Falcons). Lost strong run-blocker Derek Kennard.
NFL
CHIEFS DEFENSE — RUSH (No.
PASS, P14 (No. 10). OVERALL (No. 11)
DE Neil Smith led NFL with 15 sacks and forced four fumbles. DLs Dan Saleumma and Joe Phillips clog mid-drile. Derrick Thomas returns to LB after disappointing season at DE. CB Dale Carter anchors secondary that lost Kevin Ross (Falcons), Albert Lewis (Raiders) and Martin Bayless (Redskins)
SAINTS DEFENSE — RUSH (No.
25). PASS(No. 1), OVERALL (No. 7)
Pat Swilling trade to Detroit a season ago started movement in which two other starting LBs left. Sam Mills is last of original four to return. DE Wayne Martin is best lineman.
SAN DIEGO (8-8) AT DENVER (9.7)
Televised 8 p.m., TNT LINE — Broncos by 7
LAST TIME MET — In Week 14 at Jack Murphy Stadium, John Carney's 34-yard FG with three seconds left lifted Chargers to 13-10 win.
SERIES RECORD — Broncos
lead 35-32-1.
CHARGERS OFFENSE — RUSH (No. 10), PASS (No. 17), OVERALL (No. 14)
Coach Bobby Ross is counting on QB Stan Humphries regaining 1992 form that saw Chargers win 11 straight and advance to second round of playoffs. RB Natrone Means (645 yards, eight TDs last season) replaces Marion Butts. RB Ronnie Harmon (73 receptions last year) is one of NFL's best receivers amongst backs.
BRONCOS OFFENSE — RUSH (No. 18), PASS (No. 4), OVERALL (No.5)
F
One of NFL's best offenses got better. Anthony Miller (84接尝),
B
1,162 yards last year) and WR Mike Parchion join QB John Elway (4,030 yards, 25 TDs, 10 INTS last season)
coming off best season. Throw in H-back Shannon Sharpe and RBs Rod Bermstein and Glyn Milburn.
CHARGERS DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 2), PASS (No. 28), OVERALL (No. 18)
All-Pro LB Junior Seau (129 tackles, 19 for losses last year) has led Chargers in tackles last three seasons. DE Leslie O'Neal (12 sacks last year) and Chris Mims lead pass rush.
BRONCOS DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 4), PASS (No. 27), OVERALL (No. 19)
DE Dan Williams battled through injury-filled rookie season, but has strong potential. DE Simon Fletcher (13.5拿 last year) leads pass rush.
LOS ANGELES RAIDERS (10-6)
AT SAN FRANCISCO (10-6)
Televised Monday, 9 p.m., ABC
LINE 490s by 7
SERIES RECORD — Raiders lead
5.2
LAST TIME MET — In 1991 at Memorial Coliseum, Raiders won 12-6.
RAIDERS OFFENSE — RUSH (No. 26), PASS (No. 5), OVERALL (No. 13)
QB Jeff Hostelster (3,242 yards, 14 TDs, 10 INTs last year) is coming off career season and Raiders have one of best WR corps in NFL: Tim Brown (80 reception, 1,180 yards last year) made Pro Bowl. Tom Rathman gives Raiders FB in mold of Mark van Feeben.
49ERS OFFENSE — RUS (No.
PASS, PASS 2), OVERALL (No.1)
No need for improvement here with unit that averaged 30 points per game. Steve Young threw for single-season team record 4,023 yards, along with 29 TDs, WRsJerry Rice (98 receptions, 1503 yards, 15 TDs last
SF
year) and John Taylor are main reasons for Young's record. TE Brent Jones is one of NFL's best.
Rams
RAIDERS DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 20), PASS (No. 5), OVERALL (No.9)
With Howie Long retired, DT Chester McGlockton (team-high 78 tackles last year) and DE Anthony Smith (12.5 tackles last year) take over. CB Albert Lewis brings stellar stats to Los Angeles.
49ers, who allowed NFL worst 4.5 yards per rush, upgraded with DE Richard Dent. He joins No.1 pick Bryant Young and defensive rookie of year Dana Stubblefield (10.5 sacks last year) to form solid front.
49ERS DEFENSE — RUSH (No.
16), PASS (No. 16), OVERALL (No.
15)
DALLAS CITY
PENN STATE
DALLAS (12-4) AT
PITTSBURGH (9-7)
televised 4 p.m., FOX
Televised 4 p.m., FOX LINE — Cowboys bv.5.5
SERIES RECORD — Steelers lead 13-12
LAST TIME MET — In 1991 at
Tesla Stadium, cowboys won 10-10.
COBOYOBS OFFENSE — RUSH
(No. 2), PASS (No. 7), OVERALL (No.
4)
Nucleus of two-time champions still intact: regular season and Super Bowl MVP RB Emmit Smith (NFLhigh 1,486 yards, 10 TDs), QB Troy Alkman (3,100 yards, 15 TDs), WRs Michael Irvin (88 receptions, 1,330 yards) and Alvin Harper and TE Jay Novacek. Unit stacked with Pro Bowl linemen: C Mark Stepnski, G Nate Newton and T Erik Williams.
STEELERS OFFENSE — RUSH
(No. 6), PASS (No. 13), OVERALL
(No. 7)
If Barry Foster reverts to old form (AFC-leading 1,680 yards in 1992), the unit, which emphasizes ball control, will succeed. Rookie Bam Morris beat out Leroy Thompson to back up Foster. QB Neil O'Donnell (3,208 yards, 14 TDs, seven IBTs) had best his season despite painful elbow tendinitis. Charles Johnson was first WR taken in draft.
**COWBOYS DEFENSE** — RUSH
(No. 11), PASS (No. 10), OVERALL
(No. 10)
STEELERS DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 3), PASS (No. 15), OVERALL (No. 3)
Clearly, this is Rod Woodson's and Greg Lloyd's team. The All-Por cornerback and star linebacker are physical and emotional leaders.
This bend-but-not-break defense turned it on when it had to. Led by DFTs Russell Maryland and Leon Lett and LD Barrin Smith.
JETS
NEW YORK JETS (8-8) AT BUFFALO (12-4)
BUFFALO (12-4)
Televised 4 p.m., NBC
Televised 4 p.m., NB LINE — Bills by 6.5
SERIES RECORD — Bills lead 38-29
LAST TIME MET — In Week 17 at Rich Stadium, Steve Christie's 40-ward FG with 3:48 lft lifted Bills to 16-14 win in coldest regular-season NFL game in Buffalo history.
JETS OFFENSE — RUSH (No.9).
PASS (No. 10) OVERALL (No.9)
Much to anyone outside of Buffalo's dismay, Bills have talent to make it to fifth straight Super Bowl. Kyle (3,382 yards, 18 TDs, 18 INTS last year) and offense had good preseason. RB Thurman Thomas is one of NFL's top backs. Andre Reed, Bill Brooks, Don Beebe and Russell Copeland are WRs. C Kent Hull, T John Fina and G John Davis anchor line.
BILLS OFFENSE — RUSH (No.
No. 6)
PASS (No. 11), OVERALL (No.
2)
JETS DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 5).
PASS (No. 10), OVERALL (No. 8)
James Hasty, Ronnie Lott and Brian Washington and speedy No. 1 pick Aaron Glenn lead secondary. LB Mo Lewis is Pro Bowl material. Jeff Lageman (8.5 sacks last year) excelled at DE.
BILLS DEFENSE — RUSH (No.
21), PASS (No. 24), OVERALL (No.
27)
VOLLEYBALL HELMET
Unit tailed off some last season, but beared down when had to. Despite being double-teamed, All-Pro DE Bruce Smith (13.5 sacks last year) is one of NFL's best tackles.
GIANTS
PHILADELPHIA (8-8) AT NEW YORK GIANTS (11-5)
Televised 1 p.m., FOX
LINE — Giants by 3.
SERIES RECORD — Giants lead
62-54.2
LAST TIME MET — In Week 12 at Veterans Stadium, Phil Simms' '26-yard pass to Mark Jackson lifted Giants to 7-3 victory.
EAGLES OFFENSE — RUSH
(No. 15), PASS (No. 16), OVERALL
(No. 15)
Can Randall Cunnigham stay healthy for full season? After 4-0 start, went 4 after QB's Week 5 knee injuries. Herschel Walker (75 receptions, 610 yards rushing last season) finally found a home. Fred Barnett, Calvin Williams and Victor Bailey form solid receiving corps.
GIANTS OFFENSE — RUSH (No.
1) PASS (No.22) OVERFALL
1), PASS (No. 22), OVERALL (No. 10)
After 15 seasons, QB Phil Simmell fell victim to salary camp. Third-year QB Dave Brown takes over for Simms.
RB Rodney Hampton (1,077 yards in 12 games last season) will make transition easier. Kenyon Rasheed is new FB.
EAGLES DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 24), PASS (No. 8), OVERALL (No. 17)
Loss of DE Clyde Simmons and LB Seth Jeyner will hurt. Acquisition of ends Greg Townsend, fourth all-time with 107.5 career sacks, from Raiders and William Fuller (Oilers, 10 sacks last) will help. LB William Thomas is undersized, but active and tough. S Greg Jackson (Giants) joins one of NFL's best CBs Eric Allen.
GIANTS DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 5)
PASS, P(No. 10), OVERALL (No. 5)
Three-fourths of starting secondary took free-agent route. Despite salary cap constraints, fans and media criticize GM George Young for inactivity in market.
HYSTERICAL
"You're the Power You Imagine But We Don't"
Tear of a Black Hat
www.tahorent.com
$7C
FEAR OF ABLACKHAT (R)
FRI- 5:00, 7:30, 9:30
SAT-SUN- 9:30 ONLY
ONE WEEK ONLY
ADMIT 2-FOR 1 WITH
THIS AD MON-THUR
GO FISH (R)
FRI-4:30, 7:15, 9:15
SAT-SUN-
4:30, 7:15 ONLY
ENDS THURSDAY
542
Mass.
Liberty
Hall
749-
1912
Theatre #3 is accessible to all persons
nautica.
eyewear
Frames and Clip-ons
...the classic style, featuring function
& form to meet your highest standards.
Pohl & Dobbins
831 Vermont
843-5665
Pohl & Dobbins
831 Vermont
843-5665
MINNESOTA (9-7) AT
GREEN BAY (9-7)
Televised 1 p.m., FOX
LINE — Packers by 3.5
SERIES RECORD — Vikings lead
32:24
LAST TIME MET — In Week 16 at Metrodome, Jim McMahon threw three TD passes in Minnesota's 21-17 win.
VIKINGS OFFENSE — RUSH
(No. 21), PASS (No. 14), OVERALL
(No. 17)
After 10 seasons in Houston, Warren Moon (3,485 yards, 2 TDs, 2 INTs last season) hopes Vikings are answer to Super Bowl dream. Terry
H
G
Allen, who set team-record with 1,201 yards in 1992, returns from major surgery on both knees. RB Amp Lee (49ers) adds depth. Cris Carter (86 receptions, 1,071 yards, nine TDs) and TE Steve Jordan (56 receptions, 542 yards) lead receivers. Speedy WR Qadry Ismail should get increased role.
PACKERS OFFENSE — RUSH
(No. 22), PASS (No. 18), OVERALL
(No. 19)
QB Brett Favre, close to signing with Rams, instead inked long-term deal with Packers. Favre ranked second in NFL last season in competitions (318) and second in NFC in yards (324), but first in NFL in INTs (34). Sterling Sharpe became first player to record consecutive 100-catch seasons (108-11). Reggie Cobb brings running threat team hasn't had in years.
VIKINGS DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 6), PASS (No. 6), OVERALL (No. 1)
Suffocating defense was large part of success last season. Front of Roy Barker, John Randle and Pro Bowl NT Henry Thomas combined for 27.5 sacks, ILB Jack Del Rio, solid against run, also had four INTs.
PACKERS DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 8), PASS (No. 7), OVERALL (No. 2)
After slow start, Reggie White (NFC-high 13 sacks) proved worthy of $17 million contract. Teams won't be able to key on White as much with addition of Sean Jones (Oilers, 13 sacks last season) at other end. CB Terrell Buckley is talented but inconsistent.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
$\theta$ WordPerfect
Quattro Pro 5
WordPerfect
Quattro Pro 5
WordPerfect
WordPerfect
$99 WorlPerfect L0 DOS and Dictionary The most powerful DOS application ever!
$99
Big Deal.
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.
Workshop
PRESENTATIONS
$49 WordForIpad Presentation 2.8 for Windows or DOS
The ultimate test for graphics and presentations!
Student
ESSENTIALS
Walter J. Huffman
Cornell University Press
$99 Macintosh Student
Essentials MPCW 3.0,
electronic dictionary,
golf game, and more!
WordPerfect is a registered trademark of Novell, Inc. All other brand or product names are registered trademarks of their respective companies. © 1994 Novell.
WordPerfect Novell Applications Group
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 2, 1994
3B
If forced to choose, Cotton Bowl would want New Year's Day game
The Associated Press
DALLAS — Cotton Bowl officials say, if they can't do both, they would rather be hosts to a New Year's Day bowl than have a Big 12 Conference championship.
"We are trying to flow with the tide ... to the extent they elect to have a playoff game, we would sure like to be considered," John Scovell, head of the bowl's alliance committee, said Wednesday.
if they end up being mutually exclusive — that's not a decision we would make — but if the league determines it is not in their best interests to hold the two of them in the same city, then our first choice
would be a New Year's Day bowl."
The Cotton Bowl won't have an affiliation with the Southwest Conference after the Jan. 2, 1995, game. It failed to make the "Tier I" Bowl Alliance early last month.
The Cotton Bowl is now trying to secure tie-ins with two leagues, possibly for their runners-up.
The Cotton Ball all ready has proposed to the future Big 12 that it take its runner-up as host team starting with the league's inaugural 1996 season. The Big 12 champ is committed to the alliance.
Scovell said he will travel to Chicago to meet with Big Ten Conference commissioner James
Delany to discuss the future availability of that league's runner-up. Scovell already has met with Southeastern Conference commissioner Roy Kramer.
Future meetings are planned with commissioners Tom Hansen of the Pacific 10 Conference and Karl Benson of the Western Athletic Conference.
Scovell said the Cotton Bowl is waiting for the Big 12 to decide if it will have a championship game between North and South division winners beginning in 1996.
The league's next scheduled meeting of athletic directors and faculty representatives is Sept. 20-22 in Kansas City, Mo.
NEW YORK — They play different styles, Michael Chang using speed, Pete Sampras using power. Both work.
The Associated Press
Chang, seeded sixth, beat Washington 4-6, 6-2, 6-3, 7-6(7-3) to get into the third round. Earlier in the day, Sampras, top-seeded and the defending champion, overpowered South
Chang moved into the third round and Sampras into the second in the U.S. Open on Wednesday. Sampras had what for him was the perfect opponent, but Chang faced a familiar and dangerous combatant.
Old dream ends at U.S. Open
"We're not players who can really serve you off the court or blow you off the court," Chang said of opponent MaliVi Washington. "It's more or less a chess match. I tried not to take it into the fifth set because I knew he was not going to get tired."
African qualifier Kevin Ulyett 6-2, 6-2, 6-2 in a first-round match.
Defending women's champion Steffi Graf and fourth-seeded Mary Pierce, considered one of her strongest challengers, highlight today's matches.
Also seeking berkins in the third round were sixth-seeded Lindy Davenport and No. 10 Zina Garrison Jackson.
In other first-round action involving seeded players Wednesday, No. 8 Andrei Medvedev of Ukraine defeated Austrian Gilbert Schaller 6-3, 6-4, 6-2; No. 14 Veygeny Kafnikov of Russia stopped Jaco Eltingh of the Netherlands 7-6 (7-4), 7-5, 6-3, and South African Marcos Ondruska eliminated No. 10 Alberto Berasategui of Spain 6-1, 2-6, 6-3, 6-3.
Two seeded women's players were eliminated. Leila Meskhi of Georgia ousted No. 14 Anke Huber of Germany 6-2, 6-2 and Natalia Medvedeva,
Medvedev's sister, beat No. 16 Amy
Frazier 6-2, 6-7 (3-7), 6-4.
In other matches involving seeded women, No. 2 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, the French Open champion, downed Natalia Tauziat of France 6-2, 7-6 (7-5); No. 3 Conchita Martinez, the Wimbledon winner, stopped Nicole Arendt 6-3, 6-3; No. 5 Kimiko Date downed Yone Kamiro 6-0, 6-2 in a match of Japanese players; No. 8 Gabriela Sabatini, the 1990 U.S. Open champion, stopped Meredith McGraath 6-4, 6-7 (5-7), 6-1, and No. 9 Mary Joe Fernandez outlasted Patty Fendick 6-2, 2-6, 7-6 (7-4).
Unlike the game of power tennis, in which returns of serve are considered rallies, Chang and Washington provided a match made for the 20,529 fans who jammed into the National Tennis Center's Louis Armstrong Stadium.
Daily Specials Directory
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
SUN. $2.50 Cheeseburger,fries & beverage
Specials
MON. $3.00 pitchers
TUES. $3.00 pitchers
WEDS. $ .50 draws, $1.75 schooners-NO COVER
THURS. $1.50Domesticbottles
THURS. $1.50Domestic bottles
$1.25PITCHERSat the up & under
FRI. shotspecial
SAT. shotspecial
Dailyfoodspecials. Up&Underavailableforprivateparties (call for reservations) 842-0377
reggae
fest '94
sept. 16/17/18
KANSAS CITY'S 5TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL
ARTS & REGGAE WORLD MUSIC FESTIVAL
PRESENTED BY FRIENDS OF REGGAE
BOOTH INFORMATION, CALL: 816-746-9616 (AFTER 5 PM)
CELLULAR
MORE INFO: 816-756-2871
IN WESTPORT • 40TH & S.W. TRAFFICWAY
COME CELEBRATE
LABOR DAY
AT THE CAFE!
$1.50 FOR ANYTHING
ALL WEEKEND LONG
AND ON LABOR DAY
WED., SEPT. 7TH
BURNING SPEAR
TRUE., SEPT 8 SUNDAY CLUB
Grammy Chair
at the Ace of Diamonds
FRI., SEPT 9 MUSIC FEST
ATTENDEES TOCESTA AVAILABLE
AT THE CAFE OR GROUND
SAT., SEPT 10 COMMON GROUND
FRI., SEPT 23 SMITHEREENS
GREAT HITS
FRI., SEPT. 10, DIXIE DREGS
ADV-TICK
THE GROUND LOCK UP
ROCK CLUB
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence KS
For info and current concert
listings call 913-841-9111
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
Replay
lounge
Monday-
$1.25 Well drinks
Tuesday-
$1.25 Well drinks
( steak night-10oz, top
sirloin, baked potato &
salad $7.00)
Wednesday-
$1.75 Premium drafts
Thursday-
$1.75 POP cocktails
$1.75 T.B.A. cocktails
Sunday-
$1.75 T.B.A. cocktails
$1.75 T.B.A. cocktails (chicken, beef, or veggie shishkababs grilled outside)
Tuesday-
$1.75 T.B.A. cocktails
(special buffalo wings on the patio)
Saturday-
Friday-
Sand Bar
17 E. 8th
Lawrence, KS
913-842-0111
FLEETWOOD HOLIDAYS
Sunday: $1.75 Anything!
Monday: $1.25 Domestic Bottles
Tuesday: $1.00 Anything!
Wednesday: $1.50 Well Drinks
Thursday: $1.75 Anything!
Friday: $2.50 Jumbo Shrimp Bowls
(while they last!)
Saturday: $1.00 Draws
17 E. 8th St.
842-0111
"It's Always Happenin'at The Sandbar!"
The Jazzhaus
9261/2 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Daily Drink Specials
SUNDAY $1.50 Vodka tonic
MONDAY $1.50 Rolling Rock $ 1.25 Draw
$4.50 Pitchers Boulevard Tap
$25.00 Pitchers $10.00
TUESDAY $1.50 Everything
WEDNESDAY $1.25 Wells $.75 Draws
$3.00 Pitchers Miler Lite Tap
NO COVER
THURSDAY $1.50 Bud bottle or Gin & tonic
FRIDAY $1.50 Coors Light bottle or Rum & Coke
SATURDAY $1.50 Bud Light bottle or Bourbon drinks
4B
Friday, September 2, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Daily Specials Directory
1031 MASSACHUSETTS STREET, LAWRENCE, KS
841-1960
Monday
$1.00 Draws and $1.25 Premium Draws
Tuesday
THE HAWK
1031
Tuesday
$2.50 Premium Jam Jars
Wednesday
$1.50 Wells
LIVE JAZZ
Thursday
$1.50 Jam Jars
Friday
$1.50 Miller Highlife Bottles
Saturday
$2.95 Big Import Bottles
Sunday
$5.25 Pitchcha of premium Beer
NOW
OFFERING
9 BEERS
ON TAP
TRAFFIC DUI'S
Fake ID's & MIP's
divorce, criminal &
civil matters & other
student legal problems
WE WILL VIGOROUSLY
DEFEND YOUR RIGHTS
The law offices of
Donald G. Strole
Donald G. Strole • Sally G. Kelsey
FREE Consultation
842-1133
16 E. 13th • Lawrence
749-0055 Free Delivery
704 Mass.
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
Taste the Rudy's Difference
Our classic spicy, red wine sauce is deliciously unique. We offer a traditional white crust as well as our own honey whole wheat crust. Both are available in original thickness ar ultra thin. Now available authentic St. Louis style
Mon. Special
Tue.
Special
2 small pizzas
2 toppings/each
2 drinks
for $8.99 + tax
Med
2 topping
pizza +
2 drinks
$7.10 + tax
Wed. Special
Thur. Special
Carry out or dine in only small-$1.00
med-$5.00
large-$7.00
1 topping pizza
Large
2 topping pizza
2 drinks for
$8.99 + tax
Fri. Special
Buy a small next one $2
Buy a med. next one $3
Buy a large next one $4
of equal or lesser value
SALOON
WEDNESDAY
25 CENT DRAWS
ALL BEERS ON TAP
FRIDAY $1.50 32 OX DRAWS ALL BEERS ON TAP
$1.00 SHOTS COUNTRY EVERYDAY! AT ITS BEST! 729 NEW HAMPSHIRE OPEN 7PM-2AM 7 DAYS A WEEK
Henry T's
Bar&Grill
749-2999
6th & Kasold
Monday: $1.50 Wells
Tuesday: 2 for 1 Burgers
$2.00 33oz Gustos
(Bud, Bud Light, Coors Lite)
Wednesday: $1.50 Domestic Longnecks 15$ Wings
Thursday: 75¢ Domestic Draws $1.25 Import Bottles $9.95 - 3 Dozen Wings and Pitcher of Domestic Beer
Friday: $1.50 Black-n-Tan, Guiness, Pale Ale
Saturday: $2.00 33oz Gustos (Bud, Bud Lite, Coors Light) $6.95 Prime Rib Meal
Sunday: 75¢ Tacos
$3.00 Taco Salad
$1.50 Handmade Margaritas
Catch All Football HERE This Season! 10 Foot Projection Screen with Satellite
DINNER SPECIALS!!
Tuesday: $5.25 Hombres Choice Burritos
Monday: $4.25 all you can eat hard shell tacos $5.25 all you can eat soft shell tacos
Wednesday: $5.25 Mucho Chimi
Thursday:
$2.00 off the Dos Fajita
$4.00 off the Dos Fajita
$6.00 off the Border Blast
Sunday: .99 Kids Meal $2.00 off the Uno Fajita $4.00 off the Dos Fajita $6.00 off the Border Blast
COME PARTY ON THE PATIO!!
MasterCard DUS HUMBRES Personal Checks Accepted DISCOVER VISA
DOS
HUMBRES
RESTAURANT
RICKS Place
BAR and GRILL
Established 1992
Home of the BIG WEENIE!
Sunday $2.00
Monday $2.00
Tuesday $2.00
Wednesday $2.50
Thursday $2.00
Friday $2.00
Saturday $2.00
Schlitz $1.25 Everyday
Same as it ever was...
Bourbon Bash
Bloody Mary's
Woodchuck Bottles
(Amber, Dark & Dry)
Gin & Tonics
Big Weenies
Vodka Tonics
Dos Equis & Corona
Bottles
Bourbon Bash
Live Music Every Saturday Night
623 Vermont
molly mcgees
grill & bar
Monday
Special Priced Burgers
$1 Off our grilled burgers
$1 Dofts
Tuesday
$.59 Tacos
$2.25 Margaritas
Thursday
Steak Your Claim!
10oz, Top Sirloin, House Salad,
Choice of Vegetable or Fries
and Dinner Roll
$8.95 allday
Friday
Mr. Beer Day Mr. Beer Draws
$2.25
*domestic only
Chicken Fried Steak $4.95 Lunch
$6.45 Dinner
Saturday
$2.00 Import Beer Day
Sunday
Draw on our Resources Day
16oz, Drawn Beer $1.45
$1.25 Drafts
Nightly Specials
Sunday
Wing Dings $.15
Monday
1/2 Price Milano Sticks
Tuesday
1/2 Price Cheese McGees
Wednesday
1/2 Price Potato Dug Outs
9p.m. to Midnight
Sunday thru Wednesday
SWEETS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 2, 1994
5B
Daily Specials Directory
MARTINI COCKTAIL
---
Mosey on down to the
Cadillac RANCH
Country Western Bar
2515 West 6th 842-9845 open 4pm to 2 am 7 days a week! The Ranch has daily drink specials, & a great big dance floor!
Wednesday: Ladies Night/No cover 1$ cover for guys 2 for 1 anything
Thursday: 3$ cover
1$ anything
Saturday: 3$ cover
1$ anything
O
WE HAVE SAND VOLLEYBALL! SAND VOLLEYBALL!
WE HAVE SAND VOLLEYBALL! SAND VOLLEYBALL! WE HAVE SAND VOLLEYBALL!
9
18th AMENDMENT
1340 Ohio
843-9273
SANDVOLLEYBALL ts HERE!
Monday: MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
Tuesday: $1^{150}$ Domestic Longnecks
Wednesday: $1^{∞}$ ANYTHING!
Thursday: 70's/80's NIGHT
Disco Ain't dead yet.
$2⁵ Monster draws, Dj Scott & our dance
Friday & Saturday Ask about our featured sbot special --something new each week Sunday:Imports & Cocktails
Play all you want at the 18bI-
Pool tables, Air Hockey, Foosball, Pinball,
Electronic Darts, 100 CD Jukebox, outside patio,
© SAND VOLLEYBALL Court & Leagues.
0
WE HAVE SAND VOLLEYBALL! SAND VOLLEYBALL! WE HAVE SAND VOLLEYBALL!
WE HAVE SAND VOLLEYBALL! SAND VOLLEYBALL!
Zima &
Domestics
$1.25
Pancho's
THE STUMBLE UWN
LAWRENCE, KS
Sunday
MEXICAN RESTAURANT Welcome Back Jayhawks!
Monday
WEDNSDAY- $2.00 COVER
$2.00 PITCHERS
$2.00 BIG BEERS
COME CHECK
US OUT!
SATURDAY* $1.75 WELL DRINKS
$1.00 WELL SHOTS
SPECIALS:
•THE STUMBLE INN •
ST
Miller Lite & Genuine $1.00
THURSDAY- $2.00 BIG BEERS
$2.50 BIG PALE ALES
Modelos $1.75
704 NEW HAMPSHIRE • 749-1999
WEDNSDAY-SATURDAY 8PM-2AM
•NEW MANAGEMENT•
Coronas &
Pacificos
$2.00
Tuesday
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS
FRIDAY- $3.00 COVER
$1.00 ANYTHING
Margaritas $2.00
Wednesday
Friday
Draws $1.00
Thursday
Imports
$2.00
Saturday
23rd & Louisiana
843-4044
BULLWINKLE'S
1344 Tennessee
843-9726
Monday-Sunday 3pm-2am
Specials:
Sunday $100 BOTTLES FREE Burgers Friday Afternoons
Monday $2^{75}Pitchers
FREE Burgers Friday Afternoons
Hawks & Chiefs Games
Tuesday 25c DRAWS/$300 Cover
Thursday DOLLAR ANYTHING/$3^{300} Cover
Wednesday $1^{150} Big Beers,
75¢ 16 oz Medium Draws
$1^{75} Big 22oz Bottles Bud Light
Friday $1^{25} Cans
Saturday $100 KAMIS
PIZZA SHUTTLE
Carryout Special 10” Pizza With One Topping
Only
$2.60 plus tax
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
1601 West 23rd •Southern Hills Center
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
Not with valid discount. Coupon good on one or ten 100 pieces. No other coupon accepted with this offer. Additional toppings available on an additional charge. Exact size at 11.98 in.
NY 8th STREET TAPROOM 801 NEW HAMPSHIRE
MONDAYS
1.50 WELLS
1.50 ANY TWING TUESDAYS
WEDNESDAYS
3.00 PITCHERS
1.50 PETE'S LONGNECK THURSDAYS
FREE POOL*3-8 FRIDAYS
SATURDAYS
1.00 KAMI'S
3.00 BREGKEN RIDGE SUNDAYS
22.00
MONDAYS 1.50 WELLS
1.50 ANY THING
TUESDAYS
3.00
BREGKEN RIDGE
SUNDAYS
22.0Z
LOUISÉS DOWN TOWN
1909 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
MONDAYS 1.75 IMPORT BOTTLES
2.50 PETE'S,
PALE, KILLIAN'S TUESDAYS
WEDNESDAYS 1.50 DOMESTIC
1.50 DOMESTIC THURSDAYS
FRIDAYS 1.50 LONGNECK
PABST BLUE RIBBON
1.50 LONGNECK
PABST BLUE RIBBON SATURDAYS
SUNDAYS 2.00 PREMIUM
COCKTAILS
LAWRENCE FINEST DIVL
LD REQUIRED
SPORTS EMPORIUM
FUNDRINKERY
Sports Bar & Grill
6th and Kasold
865-4040
SPORTS EMPORIUM
FUNDRAISER
JOX
Sunday: $ .75 Draws $ 1.00 off Burgers
Monday: $1.50 Domestic Bottles $.15 Wings
Tuesday: $2.00 Imports $2.00 Catfish Strips
Wednesday: Two cheeseburger dinner and pitcher of margaritas $11.99.
Thursday: Double burgers and well drinks for the price of one!
Friday: 22 oz. Budweisers $2.25 22 oz.Hot Beef Sandwiches $4.95
Saturday: 1/2 price appetizers 'til 9 pm
NTN TRIVIA EXCLUSIVELY AT JOX!
6B
NATION/WORLD
Friday, September 2, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Patients ask for detector approval
The Associated Press
ROCKVILLE, Md. — Breast cancer patients pleaded with government regulators yesterday to allow the sale of a simple gadget that they contend will help thousands of women detect lumps in their breasts.
But a panel of outside scientists advised the Food and Drug Administration to force the inventor of the Sensor Pad to prove the device doesn't actually hide lumps that a woman might feel with her fingers alone.
"The American woman is not so stupid that she doesn't know whether it works," a bitter Earl Wright, who has been seeking FDA approval for his Sensor Pad for nine years, told the panel after its decision. "They'll return that pad in an minute if it doesn't work."
"I feel like it saved my life," said Mary Gorman of Chevy Chase, Md., whose doctor could hardly feel the lump she discovered using the Sensor Pad. one a mammogram four months earlier hadn't detected, either.
Breast cancer strikes 180,000 U.S. women every year and kills 46,000. All women are advised to examine their breasts every month for humps.
But the friction of dry skin makes tiny lumps difficult to detect, so many women examine their breasts in the shower, where soap and water ease the friction.
That's the premise behind Wright's Sensor Pad, silicone gel sealed between two sheets of plastic that he acts as acts a "dry lubricant."
"Whatever we can do to promote awareness and self-examination, coupled with mammograms, we must do," said Illinois state Sen. Penny Severn, who found a small lump in July. Her two sisters, one of whom died of the disease, had breast cancer.
Service will let public follow votes
WASHINGTON (AP) — Voters need only punch a few personal computer keys to learn if their representatives' rhetoric on spending cuts matches their votes in Congress, under a system unveiled Thursday by a conservative taxpayers' group.
Among the "Votetally" findings that will be available in mid-September to the estimated 2.3 million users of CompuServe: Many self-professed fiscally conservative Democrats often vote for spending; members elected since 1900 generally are the most frugal, and lawmakers are twice as likely to vote for spending increases as for cuts.
The information, which by next year will be updated frequently.
equals 30 megabytes of computer storage space. That's the equivalent of two Manhattan-size telephone books.
"This is a technology that will permanently change the relationship between the governed and their government," said Paul Hewitt, executive director of the National Taxpayers Union Foundation. "What we're going to be doing is giving the average member of the unsophisticated public better access to Congress than any lobbyist."
At a cost of $550,000 over the last 18 months, the taxpayer group added up results from 185 Senate votes and 341 House votes between January 23, 1993, and June 30 of this
The group ranked lawmakers by subtracting the amount of spending cuts they approved from the amount of spending they voted for.
Sen. J. Bennett Johnston, D-La., ranked highest in the Senate with a total of more than $70.3 billion, just ahead of Nevada's two senators — Democrats Richard Bryan and Harry Reid.
year. Lawmakers and their staff reviewed the data for two months.
"This group's numbers are a bunch of baloney," Johnston representative Scott Trahan said. "Sen. Johnston's votes last year against higher taxes weren't considered, nor were his votes to cut billions in waste."
More students paying back loans
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Defaults on student loans are declining as indebted graduates scramble to "do what's right" and the government uses new tools to dig into their wages and tax refunds.
"After years of rising defaults, it's going the other way," he said.
Taxpayers are expected to spend $2 billion this year paying off uncollected student loans, down from a peak of $3.6 billion in 1991, Education Secretary Richard Riley said yesterday.
"What it demonstrates is that the country is not made up of a bunch of people trying to con the federal gov-
The proportion of loans in default dropped to 15 percent in 1992 — the most recent year for which figures are available — from a high of 22.4 percent two years earlier.
The 1992 default rate for federally backed student loans at the University of Kansas was 6.2 percent. Statewide, the rate was 13.2 percent.
emment," said Leo Kornfeld, deputy assistant education secretary.
"The large majority of people are trying to do what's right."
As usual, federally backed loans for students of beauty, hair and cosmetology schools were among the hardest to recover.
The government took its biggest gamble in Nevada, where three gaming schools joined a long list of other institutions to drive up the state's default rate on student loans to 34 percent, by far the country's highest.
(20.9) and California (20.1) were the other states where more than one in five student loans was in default.
Louisiana (23.1 percent), Connecticut (22.3), Alaska (21.1), Florida
Borrowers in Montana, North Dakota and Vermont were the best at paying up. Less than 6 percent of students in those states defaulted on their loans — defined as going at least six months without a payment.
The government has toughened student loan rules in the last few years, lowering the benchmark for penalizing schools with high default rates, garnishing the wages and income-tax refunds of delinquent borrowers and making it harder for them to get credit cards and other loans.
"We can see substantial progress through the cooperative efforts of Congress, schools and the Education Department," Riley said in releasing the default rates. "Yet, more progress needs to be made."
CHICAGO — His nickname was "Yummy." In a short life filled with abuse, he was prosecuted at least eight times for felonies before police sought him in a shooting spree that left one teen-ager dead and two others wounded.
Child murder suspect found dead, possibly a victim of his own gang
The Associated Press
Officers found Robert Sandifur in a pool of blood beneath a railroad overpass yesterday. He was 11.
Sandifur's body, not yet 5 feet, not quite 70 pounds, lay about seven blocks from where police believe he opened fire Sunday at two different groups of boys, fatally hitting a 14-year-old girl, Shavon Dean, about 10 yards from her home.
He was suspected of having gang ties, and two gunshot wounds, one to the back of the head, one to the top, led police to suggest fellow gang members had killed him. Authorities had a suspect in the boy's slaying.
Solenn neighbors gathered around the pool of Sandifir's blood in the South Side neighborhood of neat yards and well-kept homes. Adults showed young children the still-wet blood, as a warning.
"This is our problem," Valerie Jordan said. "The authorities and the system have failed. This is our child. The young lady that was killed, that was our baby."
In the past two years, Sandifur was prosecuted for felonies including robbery, car theft, arson and burglary. He was convicted twice and received probation, although one judge sentenced him to three weeks of detention for probation violations.
The boy was no stranger to the state's child welfare agency, either.
A 1986 investigation by the Department of Children and Family Services found scars on Sandifter's face, cord-like marks on his abdomen and leg and cigarette burns on his buttocks.
He was taken from his mother and placed with his grandmother, who nicknamed him "Yummy" for his love of cookies. Complaints that she was not supervising the boy led to his placement in a juvenile facility in 1993, but he ran away.
In July, a judge returned Sandifu to his grandmother until the boy could be put in an out-of-state detention center that permits locking in or physically restraining children, both of which are forbidden in Illinois.
"This kid got missed a number of times in the system," said Dr. Elva Poznanski, chief of child psychiatry at Rush Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center in Chicago. "It points out the fact that there is just simply not enough placement available for kids."
Poznanski said she was seeing more violence among young children, many the products of abusive homes.
"If you don't provide some way to raise these kids to be useful citizens, you're going to spend a hell of a lot of money on the other end," she said.
Sandifur's grandmother, Janie Fields, became hysterical before she shut the door on reporters.
"I really can't say what I'm going through," she said. "But I know my baby's not here anymore, and I can't say 'I love you, Robert' anymore."
Police Superintendent Matt Rodriguez said the boy's death should send a message to other youths that "the promises of the gangs ... are not promises of things that are good."
ONE OF THE BEST WAYS TO ADVERTISE IS TO BUY NOTHING.
Want to catch the attention of students? Try using some white space in your next ad. Clever use of space can make your ad stand out and give you more for your money. Just be sure to place it where students look first for everything.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nothing works better.
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)
- Marketing Intern
- Photographer
- Assistant Section Editor
- Production Assistant
- -General Staff
- Reporter
Applications are available at 428 Kansas Union (in the Organizations & Activities Center) and are due Sept. 7 by 5 p.m. We will be conducting interviews from Sept. 7 to Sept. 10. If you have any questions, please call 864-3728.
STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE
DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS
FOR RENT
2 cu. ft. $45
4 cu. ft. $65
school year
929 Mass.
843-4170
FREE DELIVERY
fifiS
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
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 1st the Machine Clapton • Blind Me 2 Billie Holiday Stick • Beatles • Madonna • Beasties Led Zeppelin • Morrissey • Einstein Chillis • Depeche • Nirvana • Amos Pink Floyd • Taxi Driver • Marley Miles • Lush • Green Day • Movies
Friday. September 2
Kansas Union Gallery Level 4, Kansas Union 9am-5pm
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANABAS
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS ce bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
Help Heated
Professional Services
Services
Tuition Services
Classified Policy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are free to attend.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and is subject to discrimination, 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-
沪
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, religion, nationality or disability. The Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
100s Announcements
105 Personals
THE ETC. SHOP 328 Mass.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses
SUNGLASSES
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops
300s
Merchandis
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops
1's, Révo, Serengeti, and Vuarnet
110 Bus. Personals
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
400s Real Estate
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
120 Announcements
LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE Workshop. Help for students of any language. Improve reading, writing, listening comprehension and conversation skills. FREE! WEEK, Sep 7, 9-ppm. 4834 Wescow. Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
Pregnant-considering adoption $ ^{5} $
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
WTCs, the shelter in Lawrence for battered women and their children, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training. September 15 at 7:00 p.m. on the Lawrence campus; July 28, held at the Lawrence public Library, 70 Vermont Street, please contact, please call WTCs at 841-6887.
Loving families avail. You help select adoptive family. Confidential/legal Call A Dream Fulfilled Adoption Inc free 1-000-556-4529
Square Dance lessons. Dessert 12. Douglas County 4-H 19th and Harper. Building 21. 7:30pm. First lesson free. Square Delites. 542-2492
LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE WORKSHOP
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-1:30am
Presented by the
Help for students of any language. Improve reading, writing, listening comprehension and conversational skills.
FREE!!
Wednesday, September 7
7:00-8:00 pm 4048 Wescoe
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
CALCULUS: TAKING CONTROL Workshop. Are numbers getting you down? Tues, Sep. 7, 9pm, 120 Snow. FREE! Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
CASIH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAIL-
ABLE
IMMEDIATELY. 1-800-243-2242
QUALIFY
IMMEDIATELY. 1-800-243-2242
RECYCLING
Keep it clean.
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
NUDIE VOODOO
The Wuss-Rock experience
Wed. Sept. 7 The Bottleneck
140 Lost & Found
Found: One small car on Overland Drive in W. Lawrence last week. He was green on top and white his belts and paws. We would love to keep him, but he will not kick we out. Please call Robin at 749-8523.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7B
Looking to look away one year old puppy found one week ago in West Lawrence to good home. Potty trained and extremely lonely but we can't afford it. Call Kim or Stephenay. 748-7530.
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$ BILLIONS OF DOLLARS have been earned in the environmental industry. We are setting the place. Elite company seeks key individuals to staff our team and collaborate. For information call 913-287-2120 ext. 405.
NOW HIRING
For Little Caesars Pizza locations at 23rd and 15th or 18th and KASAR. EARN UP TO $0/HOUR! Applies in person. Drivers must have a valid driver's license and drives licence and be at least 18 years old.
$$$$$$$$$$
Adams Alumni Center
10 Watches on Wheels is hiring now! Delivery positions that have own car and can be able to prove insurance.
Mahmun Amini University
need m. & i need m. makes a m. p. m.
flexible hours, deserts person for Tues., Thurs.
& Sat. from 3-11 p. m. Positions available immediately.
Apply in person. 1268 Oread Ave.
ATTENTION E. J. and P.T. students. Female attendant needed for disabled woman. Mon., through Sat. mornings and 2 evenings per week. Bachelor's in Biology, Kansas Career Work Study, 101 Birch; 487-1794.
Babytiter needed for two delightful toddler girls in nice home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible days/evenings/weekends. Experience, own car, and references required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to Box 203, University Daily Kansan 191Staffer Flint.
Mornings 8:30-12:00 for friendly, bright 3 year old,
8419-367. Early 8:30 or after 7:30 m
Back at school and need extra money? Also want flexibility? Avon is for you. Get a 49% discount. Sell to friends or just yourself. Call Chris for more information 832-0925.
Beautician/Barber Part-time
Looking for two part time hair stylists who want to earn great money on weekends or evenings. 10 hours a week required. Applicants must be
Campus Manager.
National Marketing form 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 organizations a plus. Call Dan at (800) 596-2121
CITY OF LAWRENCE
Part-time positions as Lifeguard and Aquatic
Team Manager. Required for required. Applications are available at Admin
Services. Room 210, City Hall, 6th & Mass.
Lawrence KS 6044. Deadline: Sept. 9, 1994. EOE
COLLEGE STUDENTS $10.25-11.65 STARTING Local branch of nai'll CO. filling immediate entry level openings. Flex time schedules. 3-5 days, if needed. Qualify all majors. Accepted for inform 841-8696
CRUISER SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn up to
Tour companies. Travel season, Seasonal & Full-
Time employment available. No experience.
For more information call 1-800-763-4068
CUSTODIAL WORKER: Two (2) positions open for student hourly custodial workers at Watkins Elementary School. Must be a M.F with an occasional Saturday morning. Must be an enrolled K.U. student. Work schedule will vary. Attendance required.
Director, Junior & Senior High Jewish Youth Groups. Supervise about 25 high阶ness LawrenceIVATE students. About 30 hr/month Start with a free course $250/$300 required to qualify *required (to conclave) Jewish back
Some travel required (to concludes). Jewish back ground preferred but not required. Previous experience with English and/or Japanese is experienced, dedicated, 21 & over, have our own car and enjoy this type of work send letter of application including names & phone s & community drive, Lawrence KS 6904 7604 share please
Domino's Pizza is hiring 10 delivery positions available, two inside positions available. Apply after 4 p.m any day at Domino's Pizza 9th & Iowa. Benefits include: free meals, flexible schedule, driver takes home cash hush, discounted menu choices, travel per day. Should be willing to work nights & weekends.
DOORMEN NEEDED
Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation.
Call 749-5039 - Ask for ZAC
Easy Money $8/day 4 people needed on Call.
Ship to distribute coupons. Must be outgoing. Call
to confirm.
F, NS Babyssister wanted for 3 children. Week day
10/28, 8p./7r. 746-3927
Week Day 11/29, 8p./7r. 746-3927
Graduate Student Assistant. Half-time position available in the Student Assistance Center. Position for ongoing attention to the concerns of gay, lesbian and bisexual persons. Requirements include Fall 1994 and Spring 1995, demonstrated ability to work with a variety of practices and constitutions related to sexuality, including bisexual persons; the ability to work independently; and availability Thursday evenings. Required Application Form, available in the Student Assistance Center. Session hours: 12:00 p.m. (now), September 9, 133 strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60045, 913-894-6044. The University of Kansas is an
Handyman/Gardener needed Flexible hours.
Area must be experienced. 841
3097 days.
HELP WANTED! Intramural Flag Football official
Part time employment. No experience.
Email: info@intramuralflag.com
Hiring students to contact Alumni 5-45 8-49 m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays. $49.90 start, wring.
September 13 to December 6. Call please
Call Marie (866) 464-201). P-11 and 3-4 Monday
through Friday.
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
Need graphic artist for T shirt design. Rage Images. Call Jarrod Townsend, 841-7988.
NEED SPENDING CASH? B.P.T. Building Services. Call for information. Variety of permanent part-time custodial positions.
Call today for an appointment.
Rage Images.
Ask for Jeannie.
Internship Opportunities
The Kansas Technology Enterprise Corporation, a non-profit corporation which fosters technological innovation in the State of Kansas, seeks graduate students in the fields marketing, business engineering, and computer science to teach 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 attend. Send a letter of application and resume to:
a Technology Enterprise Corporation c/o/ Internship Coordinator 112 W. 8th, Suite 400 Topeka, KS 66033
Jon's Notes of Lawrence is anxious to hire quality note takers for the Fall semester. Preferred GPA of above 3.5. Pick up an application at Jon's Notes office at the Kansas Union.
KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for part-time banquet server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants with some daytime availability. Apply at 1268 Gread, KU Alumni Campus, Suite D-700.
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, please apply immediately. EOE
Laving宁ny required for 4 yr old boy in our dormitory. We have a private school at schoolall day. Near KKU.
Mass Street Dell is now hiring:
Mail Order Telephone Rep-New Home Improvement catalog has part-time weekday openings between 7am-5pm for inbound call and order札札. Great for people needing flexible schedules during the day. Good clerical skills required. Start $5.hr. Apply in person: H.I., 2001 Lakeview Blue Bibb, west of Lawrence Park, straight ahead to 2nd right or for calls for directions (865-3622).
Walk, bartenders, line cooks, prep cooks
All staff members, prep cooks and all positions. Please apply between 8am and 4pm at the Schumm Food Company business office, 719 Mass. (Upstairs against Buffalo B Bob's Smokehouse.)
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 subscription orders into a computer; and sorting computer disks for inventory; daily mail delivery to and pickup from the post office; inputting subscription orders into a computer; and sorting computer disks 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 team that works in the software industry, helps other areas of the company as needed.
R&D Publications, Inc. is an equal opportunity employee concerned with creating a pleasant and enjoyable work environment with a reliable company, please come by and fill out an application at 1601 West University Blvd.
R·D
Prentice time, evensing and sal - now hire contour
Prentice time, evensing and sal - now hire contour
Bachelor's degree in Business or related
Bachelor's degree in Business or related
Part time help needed for delivery work. After
part time help, Apply in person. Hanna's
Anilanes 923 Mass.
Part-time cleaning person for property management, good paid references and resume.
Part-time Jobs: The Kansa and Burge Union's
Food Book, Storebook, Catering, Wescoe, and
Custodial Departments are hiring. Variety of job
positions available. Job details: Level b, Kansa Union 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 (817) 765-5858.
Part-time fruit washer M F evenings. Approx.
Year round, in room call. Work: Call 800-554-6824.
Prefer 71, 10-35-0 or all day any weekday. Jr or
Graduate. Access all day at all areas of experience helpful
Avenue Acres Airline
Rainatre Montessori School located on thirteen acres with horses and a pot-bellied pig named Wilbur is looking for 62 classroom assistants. Hours are Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Transportation required; call 843-6800.
SPRING BREAK 19-56 SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE!!*Student Travel Services is now hire campgrounds.* Lowest rates. Daytona City to Cancun, Daytona and Panama City Beach. Call 1-800-648-4849.
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about!
"We Pile It On!" Now Taking Applications
Now Hiring:
DRIVERS
Apply in person 14th and Ohio (under the Wheel)
STUDENT CLEVERIAL ASSISTANT I: Deadline:
9/29% Salary: $4.35/hour. Duties include typing, filing, photocopying, distributing mail, and performing all assigned clerical duties with System Administrator. Job description for 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/AA EMPLOYER.
(HOURLY PLUS COMMISSION,
MUST HAVE OWN CAR AND
PROOF OF INSURANCE)
FULL AND PART TIME
Need extra money? Job bunt nowhere? Interested in health and fitness? Join a team of high-level caregivers to meet the expanding demand for our product / professional training available. Call K.C. Education (855) 742-7100.
STUDENTS
Terraver Construction Company has opening startings immediately for trim carpenters and laborers. Hardworking individuals who can work a minimum of 3 week days and be able to report to work by 8:00 a.m. They jobs involve some heavy lifting, bending, kneeling, digging (around back in the basement). For more info, call 842-8829 between the hours of 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
*teacher's Aide 1:00:30 pm 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 motion-activated occupants. For more information, call CNA day shift and opening positions. We offer flexible scheduling, competitive hourly wages and benefits. Apply in person at 2518 Ridge Court.
Wanted: Painter · Maintenance assistant part time for property management, good pay, resume and references to Morning Star 917 Teen.
Viva Restaurant is now taking applications for
full and part time. apply now at 1327 W. 8th.
Wanted! Photo/Darkroom worker to develop and
work with students in begging for sponser diyney
RETAIL
Wanted! Photo/Diarum相册 to develop and
widen abilities. Call Brian 846-282-1130
wilder abilities. Call Brian 846-282-1130
J.CREW FACTORYSTORE OPENING OCT. LAWRENCE, KS
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 newest Kansas factory store location.
SALESASSOCIATES
J. Crew will provide you with anexciting work environment, competitive salary and a great store discount.
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.
We will be
continuing on novem-
ber 8:00 a.m.
m. Tuesday, Sept. 6th
and
Wednesday, Sept. 7th
We will be
ELDRIDGEHOTEL 701 massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas
No appointments necessary
No phone calls, please
WILLIE C'S CAFE & BAR
If you are looking for a fun and challenging position with opportunity for career development within and entrepreneurial company, come join our team. We offer a progressive unconventional restaurant management team. Prior restaurant experience NOT necessary. Prefer individuals with a solid background in people and customer service. Prove good communication, attention to detail, high energy level, positive attitude, and the ability to manage multiple projects and people while run a restaurant. Learn the career for you, please send your resume to:
This Ain't Your Ordinary Ho-Hum Company!
Dawn Benson
1320 E. Kellogg Drive
Wichita KS 67211
I look forward to hearing from you.
WORK STUDY? The School of Business has many study positions available now. Please come to the Business Placement Center in 125 Summer-field to apply.
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 CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY AT-LAW
Call for a free consultation (818) 361-0944.
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature. ESL classes. Highly
qualified and experienced. Call Arnold 841-3313.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of -
DONALD G. STROLE
donald G. Strole
16 FEB
Female care care provider for individual who is mentally handicapped. Mon./Thursday, overnights starting at 3PM and two Sat' per month in the morning. Responds to individual who has experience work with disabled individuals. References required. Send reply to (613) 725-3888. Call (613) 725-3888.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
Traffic Tickets, Misdeem
Landlord/Tenant
OUI/DUJ Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Richard A. Frydman
ATTORNEY AT LAW
843-4023
1
BIKE SHOP
Tune-ups, overhaul up grades, free air. 304
Massachusetts State Parks
We carry Bianchi, Specialized and Trek. Plus accessories & a full service bike shop. Layaway available. 304 Massachusetts 843-5000
SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR SAILBOARD CLOSE-OUTS Mistral, HI, Fri. O'Brien. Get one cheap. 804 Massachusetts 843-5000
Free Consultation
235 Typing Services
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
701 Tennessee
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
1. der Women W Word Processing. Former editor transforms women W w
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Thee,
term-papers, Resumes, Business letters, etc.
Quality typing/word processing/indexing. Free estimate. Call 842-7271.
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK AT'S BEST?
Put it on your desk.
For anything you need at all,
MAKIN' THE GRADE
is the one to call.
862-6251
X
14 cubic ft. frontless space master refrigerator / automatic icemaker. Excellent condition, $250
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1979 Ford Granada, 4-door, automatic,
air conditioning, 89,000 miles. $650.
Call Frank at 864-2457.
For Sale: MC B.S jobs of loaded software, printer,
carrying case, bick 183-8124-1249 with best offer
Centurion Prism, Shimano comp. get, seat great,
condition. $170, 749-758, ask for Suzan.
For additional details, visit us at www.centurionprism.com.
1992 Stump Junior FS. FALL DX, Specialized
Smooth shock, low miles. Call 842-2890.
Giant Mountain Bike in excellent condition. Make offer.
749-9230.
Beds, Desks, Bookcases Everything But Ice 193 Mass
Honda 1989 Elite 50 red scooter, with 2 hatsets, 600cc and tune-up for $1,000. Ask for Lyma at 1-800-432-8777.
$300 841-3981
EARN CASH
$15
Today
$30
This Week
Plus a
$3
Bonus
Bonus
By donating your blood plasma
Walk-ins welcome
Hours:
M-F 9-6:30
Sat.10-4
Lawrence Donor Center
$
816 W.24th Behind Laid Noller Ford
749-5750
NABI
Honda Aero bcec scouter. Low miles excellent
moped tag (campus access)
1 1984-1986 2 1984-1985
King size waterated,bookcase;mirror head-
cord;matres;48,156,700;Wil delivery,
mattress
The Quality Source
King Waterbed mirrored, headboard $150,
17000 TU AC $200, Nintendo and joystick $100, Wood Hutch $36, Antique Round Coffee Table $150. Call 855-0699 At 6:00 m. table
Macintosh Plus with metro 201D and Image writer II printer in condition. $60 or best offer. 841-793-5650
Nikon F 1 High Eye point. New, in box. Cost $1200
Sell! Nikon F 137-913. 725-915
STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and
printer for $120 a semester. Call 1-800-950-6949 for
more information.
WORD PROCESSOR, 3400, full screen disk drive, grammar & spell check $200.
340 Auto Sales
1993 Pontiac Grand Am GT, GV, Loaded $4,150.00
Day: 74-9592 Evening: 1-863-3507
Need a Break from Classes?
Get credit having fun riding horses.
Enrol in HPER 108 HORSEMANSHIP
Call Joy I19846 for more info.
VAGABOND BOOKMAN
A
Buy & Sell Used
Rare & Collectables
842-BOOK 1113 Mass.
(602) 552-7965
Friday, September 2,1994
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Available now in Lawrence : 1 to 4 BDRM Home.
842-2288
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well
PETS WELCOME
No Sublease Fee
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great floor plan, 2 bath, on KU bus route, NO
NONE
House for rent. 2 or 3 bldm, convenient to downtown and on one block from the plus, pm. Call 748-2501, have message.
Lg 2 BDRM apt, off campus. Avail. immed.
lower level garden; new kitchen overlooking l.
iving room. Full carpet, fireplace,
wash/dry, A/C; Very clean! $400 + utilities. $41
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some_utilities_included_in_booking_costs.
- Sand Volleyball Court
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- Close to KU Bus Route
South Point
APARTMENTS
- Ample Private Parking
- 2 bedroom with study
- Available for fall.
- Swimming Pool
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Directly on bus route
- Call 843-4754
- Water & Trash Paid
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Outstanding New Staff!!!
TRAILRIDE APARTMENTS
One bedroom available immediately. Gas, water and trash pick up.
Two bedroom + 1/2 blocks from campus. $420 a month utilizes include. 842-7644.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 or 2 roommates need to find apt. close to campus. Call Jim in Topeka 379-6488
Non-smoking female $260/month plus utilities 3
Smoking Washier/dryer. For more info call
718-149-7347
1 roommate needed immediately! Beautiful 3 bdm agt 1 block from campus $25z price negro
One roommate wanted
Share four bedrooms off of loft, Orchard
Corners on bus route
ROOMMATE FINDER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A&S MANAGEMENT SERVICES
How to schedule an ad:
- By phone: 864-4358
NEED A ROOMMATE?
841-5454
on ORDERS of USE
* Re Mail: 110 Guafford Flint Lawrence KS 66045
ROOMMATE WANTED!! FE n/N.屋 w/o/n
Dogs allowed. quiet neigh. call please 817-695-2300.
pleased. quiet neigh. call please 817-695-2300.
Two females looking for a third to share three hens, town home. Starting immediately. Cable TV.
Classified Information and order form
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
1519 Sturfer Flat
Stop by the Kanan 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.
Wanted: Two neat, responsible, n/s rooms to share new house. Three dm, 2 baths. Quit neighbor. Grad students preferred. $225 + 1/3 utilities. Please call 843-8478
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 the expiration date.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by or check with us are not available.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
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
Classifications
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Please print your ad one word per box.
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Classifications
148 host & found 365 for sale
229 help wanted 340 auto sales
225 help wanted services 300 insurances
125 insurances
Date ad begins: Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification:
Address:
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Account number:
MasterCard
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
© 1994 ForWorks INC. Dts: by Universal Press Syndicate
Jerom
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FarWorks Inc. Dc. by Universal Press Syndicate
The often romanticized image of cowboys and aliens
8B
Friday, September 2, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE, BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH.
A worker cutting a board.
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.
2
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
sionals 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 ARTS
CENTER
parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative.
(1)
KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY
X
FEATURES
Burning Spear comes to Lawrence tomorrow. Page 5.
COMFORTABLE High 80° Low 52° Page2.
THE UNIVERSITY KANSAS KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612
Z
COMMON TABLE
VOL.104, NO.11
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6.1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Lawrence fugitive is still on the run
Police double reward, say Beers is armed and considered dangerous
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
After a weekend shooting that allegedly involved escaped prisoner Chad Beers, authorities have doubled the reward for information leading to his arrest.
"We have increased the reward to $5,000"
said U.S. Marshall Rand Rock, "We are doing all we can to get him locked up again."
Chad Beers
P. M. CALVIN
About 6 p.m. yesterday, Lawrence police set up a check point for Beers near 19th and Harper streets. Police said that they were checking the trunks of cars after they received a tip that Beers was in the
area. That search turned up nothing.
Beers was allegedly involved in a shooting
and attempted break-in at an East Lawrence mobile home about 4:30 a.m. Sunday, Rock said.
Rock said that a man, who lives at the Brookwood Mobile Home Park, 1908 E. 19th St., said he fired a shot at someone who was trying to climb in a window. The man might have known the intruder was Beers, Rock said.
"Beers may have been shot with a 20-gauge shotgun through the window," Rock said. "We don't know if he was hit, but it is possible he has an injury to one of his arms."
Rock said hospitals in the Kansas City and Lawrence areas had been given a description of Beers and were notified of his possible
Lawrence Memorial Hospital officials confirmed yesterday that Beers was not admitted to the hospital throughout the weekend.
injury.
Police said that they had had numerous sightings of Beers reported since his escape. The search for him is being concentrated in northeast Kansas, Rock said.
"My guess is that he is getting some help," he said. "He's got to eat and get money and stay
"Especially after the weekend incident, Beers should be considered armed and dangerous."Rock said.
Some of Beers' friends and acquaintances in Lawrence might have helped him, Rock said.
somewhere."
After the shooting Sunday, authorities said Beers' father called Kansas City, Kan., police to tell them he had been in contact with his son and tried to get him to surrender. Rock said.
Rock said he thought Beers took off in a semi-truck his father usually drove. That truck was later found in Coffee County.
On Aug. 30, Beers and another inmate, Scott Scanlon, 31, escaped from the Sebastian County jail in Fort Smith, Ark. Scanlon was arrested Thursday in Wilson County after the stolen truck he was driving broke down near Fredonia.
Cafeteria work overlooked by most students
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
Dining Services is having trouble filling part-time student positions at the Ekdahl Dish Commons this year.
Mindy Pendreigh, Dining Services manager, said that 49 students were working at the cafeteria — about 12 percent fewer than were needed to run the facility efficiently. Last year, about 80 students worked at the cafeteria.
Student employees restock and serve food, wipe tables and wash dishes.
"It's a real nain." he said.
Michael Beson, Derby sophomore and a student employee, said the decline in student employees made it hard to keep everything stocked.
Pendreigh said the decline in student employees had diminished the dish-washing staff, forcing the cafeteria to use plastic silverware and paper plates and cups. Pendreigh said this gave students a bad impression of the cafeteria's efficiency.
"The level of service isn't quite what you'd like it to be," she said.
Pendreigh also said that serving meals on paper was expensive.
However, Pendreigh said, the job paid $4.35 per hour, 10 cents above minimum wage.
She said she thought that students weren't applying for the open positions because they knew the jobs only paid once a month.
Barbara Quintero, assistant director of Dining Services, said she thought students weren't applying to work at the cafeteria because they didn't need to work. Parents now were more willing to give their children money, she said, so that they didn't have to work and could devote all of their time to studying.
Pendreigh said the cafeteria also lost some student employees because they did not realize they were required to work during mid-terms and finals. She said the students would quit when attending classes and working a few hours a week became too strenuous.
Most of them were freshmen or sophomores in the residence hall system and had not learned time management vet, she said.
rendreigh said about 25 percent of the work at the cafeteria was normally covered by students. Now, full-time employees are working overtime to cover the hours.
Pendreigh said some were putting in an extra three or four hours a day while others were putting in an extra days worth of work.
She said if more students did not apply, full-time employees probably would have to take the hours permanently.
"The full-time staff realize the needs of the organization, and they pull us through," she said.
Pendreigh said she had about seven positions open at dinner time on Tuesdays and Thursdays and three or four positions open at breakfast every day of the week. She said that there was no deadline for applications for the student employee positions.
INSIDE
College football
Page18.
Big Eight football coaches talk about this past weekend in which their teams went a combined 6-2.
Wells Overlook to be razed, rebuilt
THE VIEW POINT
Pete Moore, member of the Lawrence Board of Realtors, left, and Bill Bell, director of building and grounds, stand in front of the soon-to-be-demolished Overlook Tower. The men are spearheading a campaign to raise funds for a new tower, scheduled to open Oct. 20.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Tower memories to help raise funds for reconstruction
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Like many Lawrence residents, Pete Moore has stories about Wells Overlook.
Moore, a member of the Lawrence Board of Realtors, graduated from Lawrence High School in 1974, the year the viewing tower overlooking most of Douglas County was opened.
"I have a lot of fond memories about the overlook, none of which can be written up in "Tower Tales,"" he said.
"Tower Tales" is one of many ways Lawrence builders and Douglas County officials are funding and popularizing the rebuilding of the overlook. After two lightning strikes and 20 years of tornadoes, rain and vandalism, the overlook was condemned in March by the county for safety reasons. But public outcry for the reopening of the local landmark has spurred a fund raising effort that supporters hope will lead to its rebuilding.
And if all goes well, the tower — which is higher in elevation than Fraser Hall on KU's campus — will reopen Oct. 20, the anniversary of its original construction by the county.
The new tower will look much like the old tower, said Keith Browning, the county engineer who designed the structure. The highest platform will be two feet taller than the old 18-foot tower, and the guardrails around it will be taller and child-proof.
But the real improvements — thicker bolts, joint braces, more supports and better balance — aren't so obvious, Browning said.
"Most people won't notice a difference, but it's a big difference in the structural system," he said.
The Douglas County Commission balked at the estimated $10,000 cost of rebuilding the structure when it was
Wells Overcook
31st St.
Wells Overlook
Wekarusa River
Wells Overlook
County Park
Wells Overcook Road
Louisiana St.
presented last spring, Moore said. So the Lawrence Board of Realtors and the Lawrence Homebuilders Association decided to step in.
"It's difficult for us to find a project that benefits the entire community," Moore said. "We felt it was a community project everybody would like."
The cost of the rebuilding has since doubled to $20,000. Moore said, twice what the organizations already have. But the groups hope to fund the project through donations and benefit events, he said. The materials already have been ordered, and the demolition process on the old structure will begin by the end of September.
The old structure's bottom ladder has been removed to keep people from climbing it, but a barbed-wire fence erected in March was torn down by vandals days later.
One way of generating interest in the new overlook is the "Tower Tales" contest. Moore said people with fond memories or unique experiences on the old overlook should write them up and send them in. The one with the most interesting tale will be the first one to climb the new overlook, as well as receive a free dinner at Fifi's Restaurant, 925 Iowa St. and a weekend at the Bismarck Inn of Lawrence, 1100 North Third St.
"We had one girl who was proposed to there and ended up getting married," Moore said.
Entries in the "Tower Tales" contest may be sent to: Wells Overlook Project. P.O Box 761, Lawrence, KS 60444.
Haskell alumni attend school's 110th anniversary
Old faces, new buildings greet former students
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
Nearly 200 Haskell alumni from across the country swarmed the campus of Haskell Indian Nations University last weekend for a football game, tailgate party and other activities commemorating the 110th anniversary of the school.
The alumni, most of whom graduated before 1970 when Haskell was still a high school, strolled the campus, snapping pictures, slapping backs of old school chums and beaming proudly at the buildings that didn't exist when they were students. Most of the alumni were dressed in purple and yellow, the school's colors.
Nathan Buck, a 1955 graduate now living in Holdenville, Okla., stood in front of Haskell Auditorium and pointed to the few buildings he remembered.
"Everything has changed except for the stadium, the boys' gym, the girls' gym and Pocahontas Hall — that I recognize," he said.
Buck and his two brothers, who also are Haskell graduates, sang gospel songs in the auditorium Saturday afternoon for alumni and their families.
Maxine Wilson McCrary, a 1947 graduate now living in Dallas, stopped to take pictures of the snack bar and video games inside the student union.
She said that when she attended Haskell, the students had a less-impressive meeting place.
"We had a shack," she said. "We called it 'the shack.'"
McCrary said she hadn't been on campus since her brother graduated in 1956.
Many other alumni hadn't seen their classmates for that long or longer, which made for some awkward moments as classmates strained to remember faces from the past.
"Do you remember me?" one alumni dressed in a purple shirt asked Wes Creed, a 1954 graduate now living in Huntsville, Ala.
Iulianne Peter/ KANSAN
"I'm trying hard," Creed said as he shook the man's hand.
Robert Buck of the Buck Family Singers performed at the Haskell Auditorium Saturday as part of the Songfest, one event in a weekend celebration commemorating Haskell Indian Nations University's 110th anniversary.
After a few memory joggers that began with "I'm the guy that..." and "We used to...", the stories started to fly.
Creed's older brother, John Creed, a 1947 graduate now living in Baton Rouge, La., wasn't having as much success.
"I'm not meeting as many people as Wes is," he said. "I've only met three people I graduated with, and I don't remember any of them."
But neither brother had forgotten what Haskell had meant to their lives.
"Indian kids come here to put their lives together," John Creed said. "My brother and I agree that our life wouldn't be the same if it weren't for this place."
Stan Ross, a 1976 graduate and member
of the reunion steering committee, said that the graduates' attendance had proven their loyalty to Haskell.
we could have had it in Timbuktu," he said. "Whatever it took, they'd be there."
2A
Tuesday, September 6, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSA.N
圣
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. A financial situation takes a turn for the better. Focus on obtaining long term service for you and your loved ones. Your excellent managerial skills will win praise in late fall. Seek additional job training early in 1985. Business and travel will go hand-in-hand next spring. A prospective romantic partner could urge you to throw caution to the wind. Show good sense. Honor your commitment to family life.
CRELBITES BORN ON THIS DATE, country singer David Allen Coe, actress Jane Curtain, baseball player Vince DiMaggio, pioneering social worker Jane Addams.
T
8
II
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Do not give up on a missified friend. Eventually this person will return to the fold. Evening favors a discussion of personal finances. A television show gives you new insight regarding an old problem.
12
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Take charge of the budget; how you have the practical knowledge to make wise decisions. Consider behavior will show loved ones that your heart is full of love. Remember, true intimacy cannot be rushed.
69
π
GEMINI (May 21-June 20). A friend may arrange for you to meet VIPs in the near future. Show your appreciation in tangible ways. Job changes can be upsetting. Put more fun into your life by attending social events.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Our coworkers could be pretty tense today. Avoid bringing up touchy subjects if you want to avoid a fight. Complete a complicated, multipart project now in order to get it out of the way.
CANCER (June 21- July 22): Go along with your mate's plans and you will have a better time than anticipated. Write a letter to one away at college or in the military. A young child captures your heart.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Your powers of persuasion are at a peak-a big plus for your financial aspirations. Your ability to influence public opinion augurs well for the future.
♂
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Consult experts if thinking about expanding a business. A new partnership could bring tremendous success.
An out-of-town visitor is like a breath of fresh air.
VS
@
LEO (July 23-August 27): Wait and see what others want to do before offering suggestions. A newspaper or magazine article provides a terrific idea for turning a profit. Follow through; you could make a bundle.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Once you pass a financial hurdle, it should be smooth sailing or dating and other pleasurable pursuits. Live closer to your ideals. Happy romance depends on your finding a partner who shares your vision.
Water
WP
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Ease up on loved ones and communication will improve. A secret project deserves top priority. A friend offers to arrange a special introduction.
VIRGO (Aug. 23, Sept. 22) Wealth or job anxieties could have an adverse effect on your social life. Confid in you or two trusted friends. Your negotiating skills are better than you think. Try to get a more profitable deal.
X
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) News form those at a distance could put you in a traveling mood. A story about an old friend offers valuable inspiration. A change of lifestyle will put the spring back into your walk.
TODAY CHILDREN are thoughtful, trifly and ruled by logic. They expect a lot from their friends and relatives and will be deeply disappointed if these loved ones fail to measure up to their exacting standards. Emotional scenes and irrational behavior will shake these intellectual Virgos to the core. Polite and self-disciplined, they have little patience with those who are rude or out of control. A career as an engineer, mathematician or teacher will hold special appeal.
Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansan (UPSS 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
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
ON CAMPUS
Academic Systems for the Training and Use of Technology in Education will sponsor a New Faculty/New GTA Open House from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at Room 2001D in Dole Human Development Center. For more information, call Sue Nishikawa at 864-0456.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Students Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7317.
American Meteorological Society will meet at 4 p.m. today at 3092 Malott Hall. For more information, call Robyn Weeks at 864-4547.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a House/Hall Contacts Meeting at 7 tonight today at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
Water Polo Club will meet at 7 tonight today at Robinson Center Natatorium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873.
KU Triathlon Team and Swim Club will have swim practice at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Center Natatorium. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Human Services committee meeting at 8 tonight at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
KU Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about Spanish study abroad at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at 4006 Wesco Hall. A meeting for study abroad in French-speaking countries will be at 4 p.m. tomorrow at room 4058 Wesco Hall.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student was treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital Wednesday afternoon for back injuries after a car accident in the Corbin Hall parking lot, KU police reported. The student, who was a passenger in the back seat of a car that was backed into, was wearing a backpack when the car was hit, police said.
A KU student's purse, with contents valued at $90, was stolen in the 900 block of Emery Road Thursday afternoon, Lawrence police reported.
restroom in Oliver Hall, KU police reported.
Fourteen traveler's checks valued at $1,200 were stolen about 5 p.m. Aug. 30 from Summerfield Hall, KU police reported.
A yellow parking permit, valued at $35, was stolen Aug. 30 from the 9th floor women's
A K-Swiss sports bag and its contents, valued at $207, was stolen Thursday from a KU student's car that was parked in the south Robinson Gymnasium parking lot. KU police reported.
A 420MB Conner Hard Disk and 220 Conner Hard Drive, valued at $510, were stolen Wednesday from an office in Dole Center, KU police reported.
CORRECTIONS
■ The caption on the "Changing the monkey" photo, printed on page 1A in the Sept. 1 issue of the *Kansan*, was incorrect. It read that Chris Berneking collected $255 from the Natural History Museum donation box but should have read $2.55.
*Due to an editor's error, a culine on page 1B of the Sept. 2 Kansan misidentified a Kansas volleyball player. The player in the photo was sophomore outside hitter Lara Izokatis.*
TODAY'S TEMPS
Weather
Lawrence
Kansas City
Topeka
Wichita
Omaha
Tulsa
Des Moines
St. Louis
Chicago
Atlanta
New York
Los Angeles
Seattle
TODAY
Sunny and pleasant. North wind 10.m.p.h. Clear and cooler tonight
WEDNESDAY Mostly sunny
NIGH LOW
80° • • 52°
80° • • 53°
86° • • 63°
85° • • 55°
77° • • 51°
84° • • 61°
70° • • 63°
81° • • 58°
73° • • 53°
84° • • 68°
72° • • 54°
86° • • 68°
71° • • 54°
8052
THURSDAY
8457
Slight chance of showers
86 62
Source: Glenn Martin, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
September 2,1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
15.86
3,885.58
NYSE
1.05
259.93
Shares Traded: 264,812,700
Nasdaq
Advances
953
↓
Declines
.28
759.23
1,066
Unchanged
822
-
ASE
1.52
455.54
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Mass • 843-5000
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
The world's finest sunglasses™
928 Mass.
Downtown
The
Etc.
Shop
TM
Parking in the rea
"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
Learn to Fly 842-0000
Lock It.
Keep It!
genuine Kryptonite
On SALE!
$19.95
ends September 8, 1994
RICK'S
BIKE SHOP
Inc.
916 Mass., (913)841-6642
For More Information Call 864-3546
Mens, Womens and Co-ed Greek Open and Resident Halls $30 a Team!
Flag Football Manager Meeting
TONIGHT 7:00 p.m.115 Robinson
Snacks, Health & Beauty Aids, Greeting Cards, Calculators, Posters & more.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Available at both Union locations.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
Call Carol for college cash.
A. R.
MERCANTILE BANK
Member FDIC
Equal Opportunity Lender
- A personal commitment to you.
- More than 30 years of student loan experience.
- Professional Student Loan Specialists who will help you every step of the way.
- 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:
- In-house processing and servicing of all student loans until repayment.
Put Mercantile to work for you. Call Carol at 865-0278.
LANDSTAR
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 6, 1994
3A
Callers help crack down on drugs
Citizens join forces with police in fight against drug traffic
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
A toll-free drug task force phone number that has been established in Douglas, Jefferson and Franklin counties has already helped police make three drug-related arrests.
Tri-County drug unit established
Jefferson Leavenworth
Douglas Johnson
Franklin Miami
A tri-county anti-drug unit has been formed for Jefferson. Douglas and Franklin counties. Anyone with tips is encouraged to call 1-800-794-4802.
"Our main goal is to keep drugs out of the counties and off the streets," he said. "We are trying to keep the streets clean."
"Everything you can name from seeds to plants to crack is what we are out to get," said Lt. Bill Shepard of the Douglas County Sheriff's Office. "We are encouraging anyone to call no matter how small an amount they think've found."
The Tri-County Drug Unit, which was established a little more than two weeks ago, made arrests involving marijuana and drug paraphernalia, Shepard said.
The main function of the drug unit is law enforcement, but Shearp said if someone called about trying to get off an addiction, the unit would direct them to an appropriate resource.
Source; Kansan staff research
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Shepard said most of the calls had been about marijuana, but there had been calls received about crack and drug paranormalia, also.
The program is funded through a state grant and money from each of the three counties, Shepard said.
While Douglas County has had
some part in funding its drug unit for the past 12 years, Jefferson County has never had a drug unit, and Franklin County operated its program through the police department.
Shepard said the nine people involved were from the Lawrence police department, the Douglad
County Sheriff's Office, Ottawa police department, Franklin County Sheriff's Office, KU police department and Jefferson County Sheriff's Office.
He also said that while headquarters for the drug unit was at the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, there were offices in each county.
"We have officers in each county who are ready to respond to calls," Shepard said.
A toll-free phone number was set up so a cohesive unit would exist from Oskaloosa to Ottawa and beyond, he said.
"The purpose of the 1-800 number is to get tips from the community." Shepard said. "People should call whenever they suspect drugs are involved."
Some KU students are already aware of the task force.
"I think more people will get busted," said Adam Fogarty, Omaha, Neb., junior. "But I don't think fewer people will be involved with drugs."
Fogarty said he and some friends had heard of the toll-free phone number, but he said marijuana and other drugs were not a big concern of his.
The toll-free phone number people can call with tips about any drug related activity is 1-800-794-4802.
Awards fund student research projects
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Chosen topics range from Middle East foreign policy to women's labor history
While many students spent their summer days flipping hamburgers, Jon Pevehouse devoted much of his summer to completing a comparative study of foreign policy in the Middle East.
Pevehouse, Coffeilly senior, was one of 20 KU students who won an Undergraduate Research Award this summer. The awards, which are funded by the KU general research fund and distributed through the Honors Program, provide stipends to fund undergraduate research projects. Ten awards of $250 are given each spring, and 20 awards of $1,000 are given each summer.
A faculty committee selects the
award recipients based on written proposals, academic records and recommendations from faculty members. This summer, students completed research on topics ranging from "Mitochondrial DNA Gyrase and Quinolone Antibiotics" to "Women's Labor History in Kansas, 1865-1917."
"Pevesehue he selected his project, "Event Data as a Guide to Foreign Policy: Examining the Middle East," because little research had been done in that area.
"I've always been interested in the Middle East," said Pevehouse, a political science major. "I hope this research can serve as the basis for my master's thesis."
Pevhehouse said his research consisted of analyzing newspaper articles to determine whether actions taken by leaders in the Middle East were consistent with their countries' foreign policies.
Michael Young, director of the honors program, said 68 students competed for the 20 awards given this summer.
"We look primarily at the quality of the proposal and whether the research is feasible," Young said. "I also would hope that the research completed will find its way back into the student community so that other students can learn from these projects."
Young said students worked on the projects with the help of faculty advisers of their choosing. After completing their projects, students are required to submit a final report, detailing their findings. The reports from this summer's projects are due Feb.1.
Megan Hope, Garden City senior, said her final report on the "Effectiveness of English as a Second Language Education in Garden City, Kansas" would explain the methodology of
her research and offer suggestions for improving English education in Garden City.
"I also submitted a report to the Garden City school board," Hope said. "I hope that my report will solidify many of the concerns I heard from people and that the school board won't just throw my findings in a file drawer."
Akira Yamamoto, professor of anthropology and linguistics, served as Hope's adviser for the project. He said the project gave Hope the opportunity to apply knowledge gained from anthropology classes to the real world.
"The awards give students the opportunity to do field work in communities of their choosing," Yamamoto said. "As a teacher, it's a pleasure to see students grow intellectually. I think Hope came out of the project with more than she ever expected."
FAROEL
Yumi Chikamori / KANSAN
Practice makes perfect
ileana Perez, Panama City, Panama, senior, and Esther Vannucci, Lawrence high school student, dance to a traditional Panamanian tune in front of Kansas Union. They spent yesterday preparing for the upcoming Panamanian cultural presentation, which will be conducted in Kansas City, Mo., on Sept. 17.
Hoo Koo E Koo
$699.95
FISHER
save $78
with Rock Shox
RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc.
916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642
Buy 1 Large
PYRAMID PIZZA
With two toppings
for only $7.99
and get
1 liter of pop for
no buck$ no buck$ no buck$
TERRIFIC
TUESDAY
PYRAMID
PIZZA
842-3232
CARRY OUT, DELIVERY OF
EAT AT THE WHEEL
ONLY GOOD WITH THIS COUpon
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 CENTERS
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.
Expires 10/01/94
BBQ MEALS,WHOLE HOT ROAST GRILLED BURGERS,GRILLED CHICKEN FRIED CHICKEN,TACO BAR,SALAD BAR
BUM STEER
CATERING
BUM STEERWILL PROVIDE TABLEWARE,
BREAD, SAUCES, DELIVERY & SET-UP
LARGE GROUP DISCOUNTS!
Most meals under $6 per person
841-7665
FUTONS.
K. C. Based Manufacturer with 6 Retail Locations
R.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
COMPACT DISCS
- New
- Used
Trade-ins
WE BUY & SELL USED CD's
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 6604
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913•843•1811 913•842•1438 913•842•1544
4A
Tuesday, September 6, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Students lack focus during the college years
COLUMNIST
CARSON ELROD Students need to start thinking about the real world instead of watching
thinking about the real world instead of watching it
on MTV.
I sure am glad that I know exactly what I am doing after college. Yup. When I get out, all of the Fortune 400 folks are going to be at my graduation party. "Carson, great party! Can I get another beer? Oh, and by the way, would you like a job and starting salary of $100,000?"
I would respond, "Gee, I don't know. That guy from Snapple said he'd hook me up with a new Acura Legend, like in the commercial, but I'm sure we can negotiate."
OK, the future isn't that certain for any of us. I believe that this lack of certainty comes from the fact that we don't really take college that seriously anymore. For many of us, the primary
focus of college is on anything but our education. What is our primary focus? (Party! Party! Party!) It is hard to ascertain. I think this lack of focus is derived from a plethora of sources.
A primary factor is that college has become merely a high school away from home and without the prom. The job trends in the United States are demanding more than an undergraduate degree. The devaluation of the college degree has employers saying, "OK, I see here that you have a degree in aerospace engineering with a minor in ancient languages. That's nice, but how many of these rocks can you carry from the pit to the quarry every day?" It is no wonder that most
Another aspect is that we don't take ourselves seriously as students. Do you think the average college student in 1950 came to class with spandex shorts, "Big Johnson—Touch the Big Johnson" T-shirt and a "Super Squirter 2000" Nope.
students think, "the hell with it. Why study? I want to know who is getting kicked out on 'The Real World.'"
Another dishheartening fact is that the number of classes taught by teaching assistants seems to be growing at a rate that even surpasses the proliferation of pizza places and record stores in town. I am not criticizing teaching assistants. I almost was one this year. However, I doubt
that people my age and older would take me seriously. There is something about the age and experience of a college professor that seems to validate a class. That age and experience is becoming conspicuously absent.
The final reason is that as we become more diversified, we don't think we need a well-rounded education. What Socrates leaned over and whispered to his cronies before he asked the bartender to fix him a double shot of hemlock has little to do with downloading the memory of a 386XS to the new pentium processor. The point is, as students we look at half of our classes that same way we look at a Barney and Ursal special;
really annoying now and of absolutely no use later.
The consequence is that if we don't at least try to retain what we are learning, then we don't take anything but those particularly fascinating episodes of "The Real World" into the real world. And in that world the only one getting kicked out of the house is you for not being intelligent. My advice is to continue to have fun. However, just for kicks, sit down and ask yourself what college is really about. You might surprise yourself with the answer.
Carson Eirod is a Topeka Junior in history and theater.
VIEWPOINT
University better off without dean's stamp
Enrollment is one of the most hectic and stressful times in the semester.
Fortunately, the University recently announced
that the College of Liberal Arts will no longer require students to obtain a dean's stamp before they enroll.
pointless, unnecessary and nothing more than red tape.
In the future, other schools in the University such as the School of
DEAN'S STAMP
The elimination of the Liberal Arts and Sciences stamp requirement should be followed by other schools.
Journalism the Law School and the School of Engineering
This long-overdue decision will save students and faculty valuable time and effort in the enrollment process. The dean's stamp has proven throughout the years to be
— also will follow this course and eliminate the dean's stamp
requirement.
A counselor's signature, to be checked at the time of enrollment, should be the only requirement necessary.
CRYSTAL BURGESS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
Cancelled class should not make students suffer
But mistakes happen, as
Students assume that if they enroll in a course, there will actually be a teacher to teach it.
more than 80 st udents learned when they showed up for a music appreciation course section that did not have an instructor.
time students. Furthermore, many students need at least 12 hours so that they will be eligible for any scholarships they might have received.
CANCELLED CLASS
CANCELED CLASS Students enrolled in courses that are cancelled without sufficient notice should be allowed an extra add/drop day.
By itself, this wouldn't present much of a problem, but some students count on having a specific number of hours so that they are considered full-
The solution is simple. Allow those students an additional add/drop day and ensure that the scholarship committee knows
that it is through no fault of the students that they are not currently enrolled in the required number of hours.
MARK YONALLY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO
Editor
JENCARR Business manager
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing/adviser
ENTRIES
News ... Sara Bennett
Editorial ... Donella Heame
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
Melissa Lacey
Features ... Tracil Carson
Planning Editor ... Susan White
Design ... Noah Musser
Assistant to the editor .. Robbie Johnson
Business Staff
Editors
Business Center
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 Niehaus
**Letters** 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 permitted to use this format.
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.
What?!
OF course
not!
Oh...
Mom?
I'm getting really fat...
Can I go on a diet?
What?!
Of course not!
Oh...
Sweetheart, you are beautiful and special just the way you are! Now forget these silly ideas and go play or watch some t.v. Mommy's busy
NEXT!! The Ms. America Pageant! Brought to you by Revlon Cosmetics!
sigh
I guess I'll wait til bedtime to ask about the breast implants
BKT
O.K.
Well, what about plastic surgery?
My nose is way too big and my ears look funny...
I like you.
Well, what about plastic surgery?
My nose is way too big and my ears look funny...
NEXT!! The Ms. America Pageant! Brought to you by Revlon Cosmetics!
sigh
I guess I'll wait til bedtime to ask about the breast implants
BKT
Brian Thompson / KANSAN
Corporate America is not all that hostile
3. sigh
I guess I'll wait til bedtime to ask about the breast implants BKT
To tell you the truth, I wasn't exactly thrilled with my job at the beginning of the summer.
I was a tad intimidated, not by what I would be doing — I was quite certain that I could handle anything they tossed my way — but by whom I would be doing it for.
It so happens that I was fortunate enough to work as an intern for the esteemed offices of Rollins, Hudig, Hall of Illinois, Inc. in Chicago. RHIH, as I affectionately call it, is one of the world's leading insurance brokerages.
Sounds kind of big and impressive doesn't it? Well, that's what I thought when I received a letter saying that I was now a member of the McLean Team, Risk Management division. Here I was, clueless as usual, jumping head first into corporate America, the world of hard-core businessmen and women. It's where no one ever cracks a smile or slows down. It's where cooperation, organization and efficiency are the status quo. I was expecting a huge mahogany boardroom table with water pitchers and rolling chairs, business at its finest.
Well, I wasn't wrong about the mahogany table, we had one of those.
Boy, was I wrong.
COLUMNIST
CAROLINA CALDERON
KATHY KIPP
Well, I can if it meets my standards of the well-oiled, downtown, corporate machine that still has the pizzazz of the McLean Team.
But I was wrong about corporate men and women. I expected to find paragons of business at every corner, people who could convincingly pull off a Chrysler commercial. What I got was normal people who happened to work downtown.
Once I started working, it didn't take me too long to realize that the people I worked for were surprisingly normal. My fear of being intimidated was irrational. In fact, I once believed that I could never have an office job because I would never fit the role.
They threw pizza parties in the
If I only would have known this at the beginning of the summer, things would have gone so much differently. Instead of worrying about spending the rest of my summer with 14 corporate gurus, I just would have stepped off the elevator without a worry about whom I would be working for.
boardroom. They smiled. They took off work early for a team outing to the Cubs game. They gossiped. They got excited about doughnuts and cookies. They procrastinated. They shot rubber bands at each other. They had sloppy handwriting. They showed you pictures of their grandkids. They worked hard. They took you out for a two-hour lunch your first week of work and had a pizza party the last.
They were disorganized. They complained about their husbands and their air conditioners. They really liked yellow sticky notes. They apologized for giving you work. And, on occasion, they threw a Nerf football around the office.
Basically, they knew how to have fun and get some work done at the same time.
Well, there is next summer.
Kathy Klipa is a Woodridge, Ill., sophomore in English.
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
Late husband out uncovering cop corruption
The phone rang at about 5 p.m. The operator said it was a collect call from O'Brien.
In Chicago,"she said. I accepted.
"My name's O'Brien," he said. "You want a big story?"
I wasn't expecting a call from anybody named O'Brien. So I asked her where the call was being placed.
What is it about?
"Bribes. Corruption. Payoffs." Who what, where, how?
Got it. How big was the payoff?
"What happened was this. He came in here and told the bartender he wanted two packs of Winstones. The bartender gave him the Winstons, but the cop didn't give him any money. I was watching. Not a cent."
"Awright, take this down. I just got off work. I'm sitting in a bar. And I just saw a cop take a payoff. I don't like it. I hug his badge number. It's "~"
"Yeah. two nacks."
Cigarettes?
Sorry. But two packs of smokes isn't really that shocking.
"What ya mean? I pay for my smokes, let him pay for his. Are you condoning it?"
Absolutely not. Thank you for the information.
Don't mention it.
An hour later, he called again.
More cigarettes?
"Listen," O'Brien said, "it happened again. I just saw it. Except it was worsh."
"An' cigars. This time it was two packs Kools and one pack Luckies and two cigars. He didn't pay anything. The dirty crook, I got his badge number. It's -"
Thanks, O'Brien. But why don't you call it a night? Go home to your wife.
"To hell with the wife. I'm on to this thing now. I'm not going to quit just' when it's gettin' good."
But you sound tired, O'Brien. Your speech is even slurred.
HUBIE
"Don't worry 'bout me. Jus' you sit tight. I'm on these guys."
The last call came a half hour later,
O'Brien was shouting.
"Take down these badge numbers!"
"O'Brian, go home. It's late."
"No, sir. I'm goin' back in there. I'm not takin' this from chiselers. I'll call you back when I'm done with 'em."
So I'm writing this because I want Mrs. O'Brien to know why he was out late. She should know that he was trying to root out corruption.
I mean, in case she thought he was just goofing around.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
VALIUM-CHECK!
REN HOEK'S BOOK ON
"HOW TO RELIEVE
STRESS" — CHECK!
Ren Hoek's
BOOK
RELIEV
STRESS
CRASH HELMET
check!
BULLHORN — CHECK!
BULLHORN
CREW
WORKS
MODELS, INC.
By Greg Hardin
EXTRA BRIGHT HEADLIGHTS - check!
23RD STREET
HERE I COME!!!
Heh Heh Heh
Heh Heh Heh
Heh Heh Heh
Heh Heh Heh
Heh Heh Heh
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 6, 1994
5A
News of the weird
WRONG PLACE WRONG TIME
In July, a 32-year-old woman who works in the wardrobe department at Universal Studios in Hollywood got lost while driving on the lot and found herself following a tram. The tram, carrying visitors, proceeded down the middle of the "Red Sea" attraction, in which the waters are mechanically parted for the tram. However, at the instant the tram completes the trip, the water is released. The woman was trapped in the middle of the "sea" for about an hour until firefighters rescued her.
NEWS OF THE JUDGMENT-IMPAIRED
Reuters News Service reported in August that prisons in Rumania are experiencing a wave of inmates' hammering nails into their skulls in order to be transferred from overcrowded cells to prison hospitals. Nails that go an inch deep or less are removed without surgery, but several men have driven the nails into their brains.
In July, the town council in Peru, Vt., ordered Roland Williams out of his house for a
month while authorities cleaned the place up. Williams had been purchasing large quantities of dog food and cola every day to feed the hundreds of rats that had been gathering on his property. And in New York City, officials reported in May that a woman feeding cereal and singing to rats in her apartment also relinquished her bed to them while she slept in a chair.
In March, suspected drug dealer Anthony Mason, 21, took off running from police in Durham, N.C., as they attempted to question him. Mason was wearing fashionably droopy sweat pants. During the chase, they slipped down his legs and sent him sprawling, making for an easy arrest.
Police in Coldwater,
Police in Coldwater, Ontario, suspected that it was potential thieves who placed the bomb that exploded inside the night deposit box at the Toronto-Dominion Bank in June. However, Constable Doug Langlois said he doubted the culprits got any of the money because the blast sent the several thousand dollars flying through the air and brought neighbors out quickly to fight for whatever money had not been burned or shredded by the explosion. In June, in Morristown, N.J.
son, 34, for drug possession. Robinson had stopped his car to allow a parade with police escorts to pass. About a dozen officers were standing in front of Robinson's car when he decided to pass the time by counting the 10 vials of cocaine he had with him
In June, in Morristown, N.J., police arrested Stanley Robin-
Jill Mayfield, 21, accepted the marriage proposal of Doyle Kelley, 35, in June, in Joplin, Mo. It would be Kelley's third marriage; Joplin police have charges pending against him for strangling his first wife and drowning the second in a bathtub. And in April, Lilian Elease Lewis, 42, married Lucien Samuel Sherrod Jr., in Nashville, Tenn., despite Sherrod's present incarceration on charges that he killed his second wife and an indictment against him for attempted murder of his first wife.
In May 1993, Eric Jason Fann, then 21, was in jail in Kansas awaiting extradition to serve time in Texas for burglary. According to his later confession, Fann so feared Texas prisons that he deliberately threatened to kill President Clinton, figuring that such a threat would get him a federal prison sentence instead of the Texas time. In July 1994, he was convicted and indeed sentenced to 30 months in federal prison, but the sentence is to start at the end of his Texas sentence.
Robbery suspect Phillip Christopher Hines, 23, was shot by police in January in Odenton, Md., inside the grocery store he was accused of robbing. According to police, Hines charged at them while velling. "Bang! Bang!"
In July, officials at California Polytechnic Institute at San Luis Obispo set up a video camera to find out who was responsible for a rash of vending machine break-ins on campus. One man was caught on tape and arrested, and the police seized his truck. The Los Angeles Times reported that the man later paid the impound fee on the truck with 924 quarters.
Kissimmee, Fla., high school history teacher John Blumberg was suspended for five days recently for poor judgment for staging a reenactment of the assassination of President Kennedy for his class. Blumberg took the class out into a field and had a student fire a rifle, which was the same model as the one used by assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, three times at a target as far away as Kennedy was from Oswald, to demonstrate Oswald's firing pattern. Custom officials, aided by drug-sniffing dogs, arrested Mary Gray, 43, of Chicago at O'Hare Airport in June as she returned from Jamaica with 27 pounds of marijuana in her suitcase. She said she
thought the marijuana would be undetectable because it was sprinkled with a "magic voodoo potion" that she had bought from a witch doctor in Jamaica.
THE WEIRDO AMERICAN COMMUNITY
In April, in Rochester, N.Y., Jeffrey Watkins, 24, was convicted of breaking into five mausoleums and stealing the skull of a woman who died in 1933. Watkins, who refers to himself as "The Grinch," wrote in a confession that he had slept with remains inside coffins: "I'm a walker of both sides. What I mean is good and evil. I feel safe with the dead, and I can trust them. I need their company to make me peaceful inside."
LEAST JUSTIFIABLE HOMICIDE
On July 16, a 21-year-old man was fatally stabbed in the chest in a New York City subway train. Witnesses said he was stabbed because he was apparently victorious in a starring contest with the man who killed him.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
September 6,1994 PAGE 5A
KULife
music
Reggae legend Burning Spear will take a stab at Lawrence
By Jenny Brannan
Kansan staff writer
"I feel more in control of my performance and more mature," said Winston Rodney, known worldwide as Burning Spear.
After 25 years in the music business and five Grammy nominations for Reggae Album of the Year, Burning Spear is bringing a taste of Jamaica to Lawrence.
Rodney's stop in Lawrence tomorrow is part of his 25th anniversary tour, which is now in the United States. The tour started in Japan and then moved to Canada.
Rodney's world tour is important to him because of the opportunity to touch many kinds of listeners.
"It's good dealing with something not only for myself," Rodney said. "It involves all different races and colors."
Rodney said his music was a tribute to the African people who influenced the world.
"The message is in the music, and music is in
the message," Rodney said.
Rodney's musical name originated from the African freedom fighter and Kenya's head of state, Jomo Kenyatta, who was known as Burning Snear.
In 1969, Bob Marley helped Rodney discover the recording company, Studio One, where Rodney recorded his first hits.
He has made it through the past few decades of success on a worldwide scale without having formal musical training.
"It's a self-learning and a self-teaching." Rodnev said. "It's a self-experience."
Of all the experiences Rodney has had since the '60s, he said he was touched most by a trip to Africa in the early '80s.
"It was like I was born again," Rodnee said.
"Africa is where all Black people came from."
After winning awards such as the Jamaican Federation of Musicians 1900 Award for
With some 26 albums under his belt, Rodney awaits the release of his newest album, "Raspa Business," in the spring of 1995.
Album of the Year, putting out the 1933 album "The World Should Know" and touring with bands such as UB40, Talking Heads and Clash, Rodney couldn't be more satisfied with his work.
"I'm feeling great," Rodney said. "I'm feeling proud. I'm feeling outstanding. I'm feeling like me."
Chris Giordano, general manager of the River Valley Music Cafe,1601 W. 23rd St., said that it was a stroke of luck that brought Rodney to Lawrence.
"He just happened to be coming through, and we rolled him." Giordano said.
Rodney will be giving away free compact discs, concert tickets and posters at 5 p.m. tomorrow at Streetside Records,1403 W. 23rd St. He will perform with Urban Safari tomorrow night at River Valley Music Cafe. Tickets cost $11 and may be bought in advance at any Ticketmaster location or at the River Valley Music Cafe ticket office.
A
Winston Rodney, "Burning Spear"
...
AEROBICS with
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
- Lifecycles/Rowing Machine
- Personal Fitness Training
- Full Spa Area
- 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
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass. 832-8228
鱼
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.
6A
Tuesday, September 6, 1994
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Professionals! At the top of the Ninth Hill"
Bat: 8-6-M 10-24
Bat: 12-4-Dm
843-3288
843-3288
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts
843-5000
Woolrich.
SINCE 1920
ettis
Make an impression
Jaybowl
ENGRAVING
864-3545 • kansas union • level I
Jaybowl
UNIVERSITY OF
NEW YORK
plaques, awards, & gifts
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizer Cummings
jewels
749-4333
833 Mass*Lawrence, KS
KMS
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & MARTISHEM
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FULL MTU CELL REDKEN
---
S
DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs"
*Imports & Domestics*
*Machine Shop Service*
*Parts Departments*
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM: ADULTS $3.00
( LIMITED TO SEATING )
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191
Wagons East PC*13 9:30
In The Army Now PC* 5:15,7:30
HILLCREST
205 KING ST.
Milk Money PG-13 5:00,7:15,9:30
Lion King G 5:15,7:30,9:30
Camp Nowhere PG 5:15,7:30
The Mask PG-13 9:45
The Client PG-13 5:00,7:15,9:30
Clear & Present Danger PG-13 5:00,8:00
CINEMA TWIN
WEEKEND $29.99
$11.25
Maverick Pb-13 4:50,7:20,9:50
I Love Trouble P6 5:00,7:30,9:50
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Hey Big D !!!!!
Yeah You! The One With The Cool Shirt On!!
Big DG GIVEAWAY FRAIR - No cracks to Tree
To Buf To Pill - (739)
Big D's PETTNag ZOO - You Can Pet Our
Darkav ___ (732)
Big D's Driving School - We Can Teach You To Drive Like A Big D Tool (707)
Big D's Roadtrip - You Drug More than A Knee
When You Wear It With Eid (7381)
IF I can't Kill YA, YA Aint a Spout (701)
BALLS NOT MULLED (708)
DONT BRAKE TH. YOU SEE GOD (705)
DONT BRAKE TH. YOU SEE EVILS (706)
No Liquor. No Relief. The Only Parasite is
DEATH! (702)
The shirts are just $12.95 plus $2.50 SHIP
for a total of $16.45 each (THEAP)
Please by quantity, give (I or XL), and code
Mail check or money order to:
ENTREYTOO
PO BOX 381
OLAINE KS 66063
Code Size LXL Quantity Total
| | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | X $15.45 | |
| | | X $15.45 | |
| | | X $15.45 | |
| | | X $15.45 | |
| | | X $15.45 | |
| | | X $15.45 | |
Total of all items | | |
Learn to Fly 842-0000
928 Mass.
Downtown
The Etc. Shop
Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Red Lyon Tavern
T
Grilled Chicken Salad Platter
Filet of Sole w/ rice pâtel & salad
Boutine Vegetable Pasta
Cajun Reneb w/ french fries & salad
Fifi's affordable lunches, prices as fine as the dining.
Our lunch menu will allow you to come back for dinner.
5.50
4.95
5.50
5.50
fifi
925 loura 801-7226
SAA
MOUNTAIN SPORTSMAN
RUSSELL ATHLETIC
Student Alumni Association
CELEBRATE KU! KHP SIGN-UP Thursday, September 8 7p.m..
Adams Alumni Center
Prepare for celebrate KU! Festivities,
sign-ups for Kansas Keners Program,trips
and membership drive.
True Math.
your annual savings
AT&T True USA Savings
MCI Friends & Family® Basic
$25 $30 $40 $50 $60 $70 $80 $90 $100
your monthly phone bill
You don't have to be a calc professor to see you could save more with AT&T True USA $ ^{\mathrm {SM}} $ Savings.
It's true—if you live off campus, AT&T True USA Savings really could save you more. Just look up your average monthly long distance bill on the chart, and see for yourself.
Now here's why. AT&T's and MCI's basic rates start off about the same. Then, with Friends and Family, MCI advertises 20% off your long distance calls, but—here's the catch—only if they're to MCI users who are also on your calling circle list. Truth is, two-thirds of most Friends and Family members' calls aren't to those selected people. So the average discount you end up seeing on your bill is only 6%. $ ^ {*} $ Not the 20% you expected.
AT&T True USA Savings is a whole lot simpler. Spend $25 a month, and we'll subtract 20% off your bill.The full 20% not some conditional percentage. Spend $75 a month, and we'll take 30% off. You can save on calls to anyone, anytime anywhere in the good old U.S.of A** No restrictions. No calling circles. No disappointments.
So take a good look at the chart (you can ask a math major for help) and check out who's saving you what. We think you'll find you could be saving a lot more with AT&T.Call 1800-TRUE-USA. And get all the savings you expect.
1 800 - TRUE - USA $ ^{SM} $
A&T. Your True Voice.
AT&T
- **Discount off MCI basic rates.** Friends & Family provides an extra discount on qualifying calls.
* **Discount off ATRT basic residential rates.** Available in most areas. Certain exceptions apply.
© 1994 AT&T
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1994
U.S. Open serves up second-round action
SECTION B
Kansas' Jensen and Koves lose in two straight sets
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The women's doubles team of Rebecca Jensen and Nora Koves were defeated in the second round of the U.S. Open on Saturday.
Jensen and Koves lost in straight sets, 6-2, 6-2, to Nicole Arendt, Gainesville, Fla., and Kristine Radford of Australia. Arendt and Radford were the 13th-seeded doubles team in the tournament. The loss put Jensen and Koves out of the tournament.
Jensen and Koves have played the last three
years at Kansas and won the NCAA Division I Women's Doubles Championship last year. The team received their invitation to the U.S. Open by winning the collegiate title.
Koves is returning to Kansas for her senior year, while Jensen will pass up her final year of eligibility at Kansas to play on the professional tennis tour.
In other U.S. Open matches yesterday, Steffi Graf was in high gear and Zina Garrison Jackson just happened to be in the way.
Graf, her game primed for the year's final Grand Slam tournament, buried Jackson under a barrage of winners 6-1, 6-2 and grabbed her expected spot in the quarterfinals.
The top-seeded Graf is seeking her second
straight U.S. Open her singles title and her fourth overall. She also won in 1988-89.
Graf, who needed just 52 minutes to dispatch the 10th-seeded Jackson, still hasn't played an hour-long match in this year's Open. She beat Anne Mall in 45 minutes, Sandra Cacic in 55 and Radka Bobkova in 52.
There was nothing Jackson could do to disturb Graf's relentless march on the hard courts at the National Tennis Center. The Houston native's best move was staying out of the way of Graf's ferocious forehand.
On Sunday night, conversely, Stefan Edberg had only himself to blame.
For years, Swedish tennis players took their lead from Bjorn Borg, roaming the baseline and depending on heavy topspin to pull the
ball down into the court. Then along came Edberg and his serve-and-volley game, which helped him to No. 1 in the world and six Grand Slam titles, including two U.S. Opens.
Now, perhaps, Edberg has set the Swedish lead, and in the third round he more than met his match in the form of Jonas Bjorkman.
It wasn't even close. Bjorkman had the bigger serves, the crisper volleys and the more penetrating groundstrokes. And when it was over, he had a shocking 6-4, 6-4, 6-0 victory over the fifth-seeded Edberg — and a fourth-round berth.
In other third-round matches involving seeded players Sunday, top-seeded Pete Sampras overtook Roger Smith of the Bahamas 4-6, 2-4, 6-2; 4-3; and No. 4 Michael Stich defeat-
by Edyon Black of Zimbabwe 7-5, 7-5, 6-2, 6-1.
Sampras, seeking his third Grand Slam title of the year — his only loss was in the French Open — had a tough match.
Smith, the second qualifier Sampras has played in his three matches so far, gave the world's No. 1 player problems with his slice backhand, taking all of the pace off the ball.
"When I started, I didn't have the timing." Sampras said. "I felt a bit sluggish. I managed to get through somehow."
Smith fought back from 5-0 in the fourth set, winning three straight games before Sampras closed it out.
Kansan sportswriter Jenni Carlson contributed information to this story.
Strong first week for Big Eight, Jayhawks
Tigers, Cyclones keep Big Eight from 8-0 record
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — To relax or not to relax was the question in the Carriedome.
Oklahoma squandered a 24-0 half-time lead and blamed its troubles on too much relaxation.
Whatever the cause, it was one of the most memorable, pulsating dramas this or any other season-opening weekend ever saw.
Getting a last-second field goal from Scott Blanton to win 30-29 just seconds after a horrified Syracuse kicker missed an extra point, the Sooners moved up from No. 16 to 15.
"At halftime, we had that feeling that they couldn't with us," said Oklahoma's Darrius Johnson. "We just relaxed, we didn't have the spark in the second half."
Syracuse played one of its worst first halves and went to intermission with all the earmarks of a team getting routed. Quarterback Kevin Mason was 2-for-11 for 13 yards and two interceptions as the Orangemen managed just 68 yards.
"It was nerves," Mason said. "I told myself I needed to relax, to calm down and relax."
Oklahoma's miracle win allowed the Big Eight to post a 6-2 record in college football's first go-round of 1994, a week of huge highs and
pitiable lows for the conference.
The high point was Nebraska, which sat idle but moved from No. 2 to No. 1 in The Associated Press poll. The low points were Iowa State and Missouri.
The Tigers, in the first Saturday night game in Faurot Field history, disappointed a crowd of 55,263 bylosing to Tulsa 20-17 in Larry Smith's coaching debut.
The Cyclones lost to Division I-AA tormentor Northern Iowa 28-14. It's the second time in three years coach Jim Walden has had to explain to Cyclone fans an upset loss to the Panthers. After the 1992 setback to Northern Iowa, Walden called it the most devastating loss of his life.
Well, in that case, what was this?
"It's not the happiest day I've had lately," Walden said. "Because ultimately, I feel responsible for it. I feel there's something I've got to do, something I need to do."
Kansas State, coming off its breakthrough 9-2-1 campaign, drew 38,216 its biggest home-opening crowd ever. They were not disappointed as the Wildcats jumped on a mistake-prone Southwestern Louisiana 34-6.
No. 7 Colorado made it Big Eight 2,
Louisiana schools 0, with a 48-13
whipping of Northeast Louisiana. The
Buffs rolled up 649 yards of total
offense.Oklahoma State and Kansas
both opened with victories on Thursday
night.
in other games this week, Kansas will play Michigan State, Iowa State go to arch-rival Iowa, Missouri travels to Illinois and Oklahoma treks to Texas &M. Kansas State, Oklahoma State and Colorado are idle.
AP Top 25
The Associated Press Top 25 as of Sept. 3. Firstplace votes are in parentheses. Big Eight Conference teams are in bold. The conference ended the week with a 6-2 record.
rank team record pts. pr
1. Nebraska (23) 1-0-0 1,465 2
2. Florida (15) 1-0-0 1,438 1
3. Notre Dame (10) 1-0-0 1,413 3
4. Florida St. (8) 1-0-0 1,412 4
5. Miami (1) 1-0-0 1,229 6
6. Michigan (1) 1-0-0 1,205 5
7. Colorado 1-0-0 1,140 8
8. Penn St. (1) 1-0-0 1,112 9
9. Arizona (2) 1-0-0 1,053 7
10. Wisconsin 0-0-0 968 10
11. Alabama (1) 1-0-0 962 11
12. Auburn 1-0-0 878 12
13. UCLA 1-0-0 846 14
14. Southern Cal 1-0-0 702 17
15. Oklahoma 1-0-0 594 16
16. Texas & AM 1-0-0 593 15
17. North Carolina 1-0-0 512 18
18. Ohio St. 1-0-0 497 20
19. Tennessee 0-1-0 482 13
20. Texas 1-0-0 426 19
21. Virginia Tech 1-0-0 352 21
22. Clemson 1-0-0 183 24
23. Georgia 1-0-0 115 —
24. Stanford 0-0-0 111 25
25. Washington 0-1-0 92 23
Others receiving votes: Brigham Young 74,
Washington State 37, Boston College 36,
Kansas 32, Kansas State 32, Michigan
State 31, California 30, Mississippi State
25, Baylor 11, Illinois 10, Kentucky 8, Syracuse 8, Arizona State 6, Arkansas 6, West Virginia 6, Georgia Tech 5, Indiana 4, Utah 4, Iowa 2, Virginia 2, Western Michigan 1.
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
Notebook: Big Eight Conference coaches' briefing
Kansas coach Glen Mason on:
Asheikl Preston: "Asheikl's a very intelligent, very tough competitor. We like him leading our football team."
Kansas running backs: "We really consider Henley, Sanders, and Levine all starters. I told Vic Adamle (running backs coach) I really didn't care who was in there."
"We're going to try and feed them (Kansas linemen) a little more today at our Labor Davicnic."
Michigan State's offensive line and how the Jayhawks will prepare for them: "They might be the biggest offensive line in football, college or pro. We're sure outweighed.
Colorado coach Bill McCartney on
Quarterback Kordell Stewart's healed wrist. "He keeps fielding questions about whether we ran the option.
"We ran the option a lot last year. The news media must have been eating hot dogs or something. They're acting like we never ran it."
- playing 1993 Big Ten champion, Wisconsin, as well as Michigan in Ann Arbor and Texas in Austin: "It's really not 'have to' play — we get to, we want to. Our players are gearing up for those three now."
Oklahoma coach Gary Gibbs on:
the Sooners' comeback after falling behind 29-27 late in their
win over Syracuse: "When the game was on the line, I think Derrick McGee and the offensive unit showed a lot of courage. They brought us back and got us in a position to win in the last minute."
■ being ranked No. 1: "I've talked about these things lots of times. You certainly gain people's attention."
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne on:
■ his team's loss to Northern Iowa: "It was an offense screw-up day. When the plays were there, we didn't hit them. The enthusiasm turned into anxiety."
Iowa State coach Jim Walden
on:
Compiled by Kansan sportswriter Matt Irwin.
84
25
44
Houston freshman linebacker Mike Parker brings down Kansas sophomore running back Jen Henley as Kansas senior wide receiver Rodney Harries contains a Cougar defender. Kansas defeated Houston 35-13 last Thursday.
Jayhawks' domination lingers
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
In Kansas' defeat of Houston on Thursday, it was clear that one team was better than the other.
"There's a lot of anxiety opening on the road," Kansas coach Glen Mason said of his team's 35-13 victory over an inexperienced Cougar team in the Astrodome. "It was obvious we were ready to play at the start. We executed on offense pretty well, and our defense was very effective."
The Jayhawks opened the game by scoring three touchdowns on their first three drives. The Cougars did not even cross the 50-yard line on offense
in the first half.
Houston coach Kim Helton was impressed by Kansas.
"Defensively, I was disappointed," Helton said. "I thought we were better prepared to go against a big, tough team like Kansas. I don't remember being dominated by any team like like this one tonight."
"I was a little surprised that he said that," Mason said, adding that he was not totally pleased with the Jayhawks' performance.
"Some things happened later in the game, when our third team was in, that we were anxious about," Mason said after the game.
their first three drives, marching a longer distance on each drive.
After driving 80 yards and scoring on their first drive, Kansas started their second drive on the 5-yard line after receiving a 5-yard illegal procedure penalty. The Jayhawks drove 95 yards for a touchdown on a drive that included a 63-yard pass to senior wide receiver Robert Reed from senior quarterback Asheli Preston.
The Jayhawks were impressive on
The Jayhawks were pinned on the one-yard line on the next drive and marched 99 yards for a touchdown.
"We sure had some very long drives," Mason said. "We had absolute horrid field position, and we were still able to move the ball."
Rugby club opens season with a no-show
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Missouri was banned when checks written to the Union to cover dues from last season bounced. Missouri won't be able to play this season until they pay off the checks. Barnao said.
Kansas rugby players eagerly waited at 11 a.m. Saturday to play a game that would never happen.
Senior Joe Shannonhouse said Kansas was not informed of the problem because the Tigers' scheduling official was in the hospital undergoing shoulder surgery.
Missouri failed to show for the schedled match, which would have been Kansas' season opener.
Bama coach Dominic Barnao was informed by Missouri rugby officials Saturday night that the Tigers had been banned from competition by the Missouri Rugby Union, the team's governing body.
In place of the scheduled match, Kansas played an intra-squad scrimmage at the Shenk Complex, located at 23rd and Iowa streets, for two hours while still anticipating Missouri's arrival.
season.
Barnao said the game would not be made up this
Assistant coach Bill Mills said he was disappointed that the Tigers' were not able to come to Lawrence.
"We'll probably see them in a tournament somewhere, so we won't reschedule the game," he said.
At 11:30 a.m., the Kansas coaches decided to start the intra-squad scrimimage to salvage what was left of the day.
"In the time I've been here I've never seen this happen." Mills said.
"We decided that if Mizzou showed up we'd stop the scrimmae and plau them. "Mills said.
Shannonhouse said that playing a scrimmage instead of an actual game was disappointing to the team.
"We love to go out and play each other," Shannon-house said. "but that's not the primary reason we're out there."
At 2:00 p.m., more than three hours after the scheduled kickoff, the coaches gave up and told players to start taking down the goal posts.
"We got four solid quarters in, so the day wasn't a total loss," Mills said.
The missed game will not affect the teams' record. In figuring national rankings, only games called merit table matches are counted against a team's record.
There are two merit table matches during the fall season and two during the spring season.
"We're focusing on our two merit matches this fall," Barnao said. "One is at Northeast Missouri State and the other is here against Kansas State."
Shannonhouse said that the team's ultimate goal was to get to Houston for the Western Territorial Finals. Each of the four territorial champions advance to the national title tournament.
"The merit table matches are the ones we really shoot for because those are the ones that count against our record." Shannonhouse said.
Kansas' next competition will be next weekend at the Kaw Valley Cup in Topeka.
Both Barnao and Mills said that missing the game this weekend probably wouldn't hurt the team much.
"We just wanted to get the game in before next week," Barnao said. "It was also the first game of the season so we wanted to get it in."
11
Freshman Derek Scotttries to break freshman Adam Harris's tackle as sophomore Mike Schwartz moves in for support during a Kansas rugby scrimmage.
---
2R
Tuesday, September 6, 1994
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The end may be near for strike
Owners want deal secured by Friday
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Baseball officials, like the rest of the country, spent Sunday watching football.
Acting commissioner Bud Selig, who said the season probably will be canceled if there is no agreement by Friday, spent the day at home in Milwaukee watching the Green Bay Packers beat the Minnesota Vikings 16-10.
"It's strangely and sadly quiet," Selig said.
Management lawyers John West-
hoff and Lou Melendze watch the
shoot.
Ravitch said telephone conversations were taking place, but he didn't detail them. Union head Donald Fehr, who also spent the weekend at home in Westchester, said he didn't think anything important was occurring behind the scenes.
"Nothing significant is going on from which I am aware," he said. "There's nothing scheduled and I haven't talked to the mediators."
"Nothing's scheduled," management negotiator Richard Ravitch said from his home in Pound Ridge, N.Y.
New York Giants beat the Philadelphia Eagles 28-23 at Melendez's house in New Jersey.
Selig, the president and controlling owner of the Milwaukee Brewers, also is a director of the Packers.
Yesterday was the first Labor Day without major league baseball since the holiday was established 100 years ago.
"Let's hope," Selig said in a telephone interview. "That's all I can tell you. No sense in trying to be a prognosticator."
"The more I think about it, from a practical matter, it seems right," he said.
Selig said he was continuing to lean toward setting Friday as the last possible day for a settlement.
Fehr said he was more concerned about reaching a settlement than discussing the settlement deadline.
"I'm going to talk to them about it," Selig said. "If they have thoughts, I'll listen."
You are looking live — at Terry Bradshaw on horseback in the Hollywood hills?
By Hank Kurz Jr.
The Associated Press
Fox Television made its NFL regular-season debut Sunday, and the network used Bradshaw—and the horse—to introduce "a new day for the fan, a new day for Fox and a new day for this ol' country boy" during its hour-long pregame show.
Bradshaw, a cut-up in his studio days at CBS, apparently will have the same persona in his role as studio co-host. In the opening segment, it wasn't long before Bradshaw mounted his horse and galloped down Rodeo Drive to a Hollywood parking space equipped with a hitching post.
Fox trots through NFL debut
So began television's new era of NFL coverage. Fox, with a $1.58 billion, four-year bid last December, took NFC games away from CBS, which had them for 38 years.
"Time to go to work." he said.
"Time to go to work."
After quick, highlight-driven previews of the day's NFC games, Bradshaw continued the opening with a high-energy tour of the spacious studio: from the research area to introductions of co-host James Brown and analysts Howie Long and Jimmy Johnson, to the artificial football field just off the set.
day in its eight-year history.
On Sunday, while CBS aired paid programming from 12-12:30 p.m. then began its U.S. Open tennis coverage, many of its former employees helped Fox kick off the biggest
A look-ahead to a feature on Arizona Cardinals coach Buddy Ryan started with: "He's the head coach who's never won a playoff game." One on Joe Montana of Kansas City asked if this season would be "his best, or his last."
Art
Select from Ansel Adams,
Nagel, Ty Wilson, Talbot
Brandenberg, Monet,
Abstract Art, C.R. Lassen
& More!
8:00am-5:00pm Today Through Friday on the Lawn east of Wescoe
Framed
All 16" x 20" Pictures
$7.95
Sale! Sale! Sale! Sale! Sale! Sale! Sale! Sale!
Carlos O'Kelly's
MEXICAN CAFE
MARGARITAS AND FAJITAS FOR OVER 2 YEARS!
WEEKLY
MONDAY
750 Killians Red Draws
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 Off ALL Dinner Picados
TUESDAY
$2 All Imports
$5.95 Sancho/Monterry Combo
996 Kids Meals
WEDNESDAY
$2 Margaritas on the rocks
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
- CARRYOUT AVAILABLE!
8 3 2 - 0 5 5 0
SPECIALS
THURSDAY
$2 Bud Light 23 Oz. Tap
$1.50 Desserts
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
SUNDAY
SUNDAY
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 off Chimis
$2 Bloody Marys
Hours of Operation:
M-Th 11-11
Fri, Sat 11-12
Sun 11-10
- TASTE OF THE WORLD BEER CLUB!
707 W. 23rd Street
COUPON - $1.00 OFF ADMISSION PRICE - COUPON
25 BURNING SPEAR 25+
I am very happy.
TWENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY TOUR
LAWRENCE:
SEPTEMBER 7
RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE • 100 W. 25th St.
BIG UP
BURNING SPEAR
ORIGINAL WEGGAD MUSIC
COME CELEBRATE WITH US
& KEEP THE SPEAR BURNING
Nominated for FIVE
GRAMMY AWARDS
25$
COUPON - $1.00 OFF ADMISSION PRICE - COUPON
BIG UP
BURNING
SPEAK
ORIGINAL VEGGAF MUSIC
25°
We've just made this 6-pound computer even easier to pick up.
(Buy one now, and we'll throw in all this software to help you power through college.)
Shide
Wr
FOR MASTER
THE 81 CHOICE FOR BUSINESS EDUCATION AND NEW
ClarisWorks
INTERNET
The National Curriculum Statement Set included online resources for the year 2009 to the year 2018.
When you weigh the options, it's quite possibly the best deal available for college students. For a limited time, buy a select Apple PowerBook at a special student price and get a unique new student software set available only from Apple. It's all the software you're likely to need to breeze through 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
Investment
that are
Apple PowerBook 150 4/120.
Only $1,257.00.
Companion to help you tap into on-line research resources. Plus ClarisWorks, an integrated package with a word processor, database, spreadsheet and more. All with the portable computer you can use anytime, anywhere you happen to be. Apple PowerBook. And now, with an Apple Computer Loan, you can own one for less than a dollar a day. It's the power no student should be without. The power to be your best. Apple
Apple
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union technology center
union
technology
center
KU
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
KU Apple
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burree Union * Level 3 * 913/864-5690
POWER throughIt.
Offer expires October 17, 1994, available only late last. © 1994 Apple Computer Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the apple loan, PowerBook and "The power be your best" are required trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. Clarksville is a registered trademark of Clarksville Corporation. An estimate based on an Apple Computer Loan of $15.00 for the PowerBook 150 shown above. Price and loan amounts are subject to change without notice. Your Apple Computer lender or representative for current system price. A 5.5% loan origination will be added to the requested loan rate plus 5.35%. For the months of August 1994, the interest rate was 10.10%, with an APR of 11.36%. 8-year loan term with no prepayment penalty. The monthly payment shows assume no deferred or interest. Students may defer principal payments up to 4 years, or until graduation. Deferment will change your monthly payments. The Apple Computer Loan is not eligible for credit approval.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 6,1994
3B
NFL Standings
A
East Central West
W L PF PA W L PF PA W L PF PA
Indianapolis 1 0 45 21 Cleveland 1 0 28 20 Kansas City 1 0 30 17
Miami 1 0 39 35 Cincinnati 0 1 20 28 San Diego 1 0 37 34
N.Y. Jets 1 0 23 3 Houston 0 1 21 45 Seattle 1 0 28 7
Buffalo 0 1 3 23 Pittsburgh 0 1 9 26 L.A. Raiders 0 0 0 0
New England 0 1 35 39 Pittsburgh 0 1 9 26 Denver 0 1 34 37
Central
West
East
West
N
Central
BEARST
W L PF PA
Delias 1 0 26 9
N.Y. Giants 1 0 28 23
Arizona 0 1 12 14
Philadelphia 0 1 23 28
Washington 0 1 7 28
| | W | L | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Chicago | 1 | 0 | 21 | 9 |
| Detroit | 1 | 0 | 31 | 28 |
| Green Bay | 1 | 0 | 16 | 10 |
| Minnesota | 0 | 1 | 10 | 16 |
| Tampa Bay | 0 | 1 | 9 | 21 |
| | W | L | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| L.A. Rams | 1 | 0 | 14 | 12 |
| San Francisco | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Atlanta | 0 | 1 | 28 | 31 |
| New Orleans | 0 | 1 | 17 | 30 |
Note: Monday night's game is not included in these firgures.
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Source: Associated Press
Saints can't break Montana's jinx
By Mary Foster The Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS — Call it the Montana Dome.
Call it Joe's place.
Stake his claim to both end zones, the goal lines and the star shots on the replay screens.
The taxpayers in Louisiana may foot the bills for the Superdome, but Joe Montana owns it.
With the Kansas City Chiefs '30-17 victory over the New Orleans Saints on Sunday, Montana is 9-0 against New Orleans in the dome — 10-0 overall, adding in his Super Bowl victory over Denver after the 1989 season.
"The guy is unbelievable," said Saints defensive lineman Frank Warf.
ren. "He hasn't lost a thing. He comes here and waves his magic wand around, and we all fall down. It's unbelievable, except it keeps happening."
Montana passed for 315 yards and two touchdowns, dismantling New Orleans' defense, which included 40 different looks for Montana, none of which gave him any trouble.
It was the 36th 300-yard passing game for Montana, who completed 24 of 33, was not intercepted and was sacked only once.
"I think we got our confidence level up early in the game," Montana said. "We really played a lot as a unit together, something we hadn't done in the preseason."
Montana's dazzling display was complemented by the running and receiving of Marcus Allen, who start-
he his 14 NFL season with 82 yards on 17 carries and a touchdown.
"I don't buy the theory that once you get to a certain age, it's downhill," Allen said.
Kansas City totally dominated the first half, with two touchdowns and a field goal on its first three possessions.
The Chiefs had the ball for 18 minutes, 16 seconds, outrushed New Orleans 86 yards to 16 yards and held a passing advantage of 131-95.
Montana, 38, and Allen, 34, wasted no time displaying the value of experience.
"Joe and Marcus are both great players in their own right," said Kansas City Chiefs coach Marty Schottenhimer. "But they also have the ability to raise people around them to another level."
KICK-OFF WEEK '94
Tuesday, Sept. 6
Kansas Volleyball Home Opener vs.
U M K C
7:30pm
Allen Fieldhouse
Free Admission for Students w/KU ID
REACHING HIGH
Wednesday, Sept. 7 KICK-OFF '94
Kansas Football Pep Rall featuring Head Coach Glen Mason and The 1994 Kansas Jayhawks
7
6:30pm Anschutz Sports Pavillion Come early for Pre-game!
MAKE AN IMPACT
Saturday, Sept. 10 KU vs. Michigan State
7:00pm Memorial Stadium Student Season Tickets Only $35 Call Now 864-3141
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
Woolrich
925 IOWA
841-7226
fifi's
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS ice bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown
Please Recycle
The 125 Subject Notebook
OLYMPUS
PearlFinder S924
MECHAIC ASSEMBLY FUN. REGION
Becoming a Great Dictator
Marine Biology 234
Observing Human Anatomy
Pondering Your Future
The Poet in You
You Ruled The World
Physics 101
Intense French
The Inner Voice
Quoting Kerenac
Cafeteria Catharis
Geology 105
Muttering Obcities
Psychology 203
Capuring Your Coach
Getting Payched
Political Science 215
Coffee With The Rooster
You Roommate
The Mean Of Life
Phone Numbers
Hot Phone Numbers
Phone Numbers to Die For
Reminiciating with Yourself
Speech Communications
Outlining a Screenplay
Commisitering 101
Talking While Masticating
Professor Basking
and I are the Recordings Secretary
Shopping List Reminder
Ennunciation 301
Top 10 Answering Machine Greetings Chilling 405
Things You Should Tell Your Parents Confessions to Father Mock Interviewing Massacring Shakespeare Building Your Vocabulary Knowing the Reality and Reality Recalling Marmot, Lennon and McCarratt Soop Opera Analysis More Electives ...
OLYMPUS MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM
OLYMPUS MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM Never miss another pqprstuvwxyabcdefghijklmn.
If you can't find the Olympus Microcassette Recorder you want (the S294 is pictured here) please call 1-800-221-3000 for more information.
*
Children's Art Exhibit courtesy of Lawrence Art Center
FRESH ART
*
*
*
花
Tues. Sept. 6th-Sat. Sept. 17th
Kansas Union Level 4
Gallery Hours:
10-5 Mon.-Sat. and
12-4 Sun.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUK
INVESTMENT ASSOCIATION
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
4B
Tuesday, September 6, 1994
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Conference in conflict about options for women
The Associated Press
CAIRQ, Egypt — One of the few female heads of government struck back at the Vatican and Muslim fundamentalists yesterday by defending abortion and sex education and making a plea to curb the population boom "for Earth's sake."
The outspoken prime minister of
Norway, Gro Harlem Brundtland,
framed a key issue of the U.N. population conference: Giving power to women as the way to slow birth rates.
Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto of Pakistan, the only other female leader present, supported women's equality but took a far more conservative view on abortion and sexual issues.
control and abortion in all cases, while Muslim fundamentalists say the draft plan of action promotes promiscuity, homosexuality and a loosening of family ties.
The Vatican opposes artificial birth
ductive health and family planning services, reproductive rights, adolescent sex education and abortion.
In three preliminary meetings, delegates to the conference agreed to more than 90 percent of the plan of action. But the most contentious issues must still be resolved —repro-
Vice President Al Gore said yesterday that participants were "very day to" a consensus on the subjects still in dispute. But, he predicted, the Vatican would not accept the final document despite compromise Ian-
guage being worked out by the European Union.
Papal representative Joaquín Navarro reiterated the Roman Catholic Church's opposition to references in the draft to "reproductive health," calling the phrase implicit recognition of abortion accessible to all.
Buy your Kansan Card TODAY...only
Study examines range of sexual orientation
All KU Students are Invited KU School of Business CAREER FAIR
UT/2
FREE Transportation from campus every half hour at Watson Library and at Summerfield Hall.
are based on reported homosexual behavior or attraction since age 15. The lower estimates are based on reported same-sex sexual behavior during the previous five years.
THURSDAY, September 8 1994.
and a co-author of the study. "I think in most individuals there is some sort of range. You may be more heterosexual; you may be more homosexual."
- Investigate Internship Opportunity
1-6p.m. Lawrence Holidome *Explore Opportunities in Business
Research that might help define the size of the homosexual community plays directly into the debate about extending civil rights protections to this minority.
"Our perspective is that sexual orientation isn't just a yes-no, heterosexual-homosexual (question)," said David Wynnli, a Harvard statistician
- Match Career Goals with Available jobs.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Almost one-fifth of Americans have been attracted to someone of the same sex at some time since age 15, according to a new study that has been criticized by some statisticians but touched by gay rights activists.
The study, conducted by researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health and the Center for Health Policy Studies in Washington, found that between 6.2 percent and 20.8 percent of U.S. men and 3.3 percent and 17.8 percent of U.S. women could be considered "incidentally homosexual." The higher numbers
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?
Since
- Section Editor (Student Life, Greek Life,
Entertainment, Academics, Athletics,
Sports Organizations, News/Index)
WATKINS
1907
- Assistant Section Editor
- Reporter
- Photographer
"We Care For KU"
- Production Assistant
- Marketing Intern
Applications are available at 428 Kansas Union (in the Organizations & Activities Center) and are due Sept.7 by 5 p.m. We will be conducting interviews from Sept. 7 to Sept. 10. If you have any questions, please call 864-3728.
- General Staff
Busy days? Watkins Pharmacy is open Monday-Thursday nights.
Pharmacy Hours
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 SERVICE
864-9500
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
Learn to Fly
Lawrence Air Services Instruction·Charter Service·Rental 842-0000
PITT 1920
13 reasons to bank at Mercantile:
ming
- Twelve ATMs:
- 9th & Massachusetts
647 Massachusetts
3500 W. 6th
1807 W. 23rd
(drive-up & walk-up)
2701 Iowa
- Hillcrest (9th & Iowa)
(drive-up & walk-up)
- Checkers (25rd & Louisiana)
- Kansas University:
Memorial Union &
Burge Union
and a
LARGEST
coming real soon
- T-Shirt*
record store plus all this cool stuff:
MERCANTILE BANK Member FDIC
*("Attention Students. Now through Sept. 30, or when the supply lasts, receive a to-tall $1 when you open an account at any Merkshire Bank of America. Limit one shirt per customer.)*
128 listening stations for your private sampling Open late daily Separate room for jazz and classical music Coffeeshop and Espresso Bar by La Prima Tazza
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
Downtown Lawrence *Off 10th & Massachusetts*
913-843-3630
United Parcel Service Part time Jobs
Interviews will be held Wednesday, Sept. 7 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
ups $8 Hour ups
Sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union
E/O/Em/f
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 6, 1994
58
Classified Directory
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of people, except for nationality, nationalization or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
105 Personals
THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass.
STERILING SALWERY JEWELRY
Rhips, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purzes
Bauch and Lomb Revenge, Killer Loops,
I's, Revo, Sereneget, and Vuarnet
110 Bus. Personals
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Read Listen
Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Cera (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
120 Announcements
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
CALCULUS: TAKING CONTROL Workshop. Are numbers getting you down? Tues, Sep. 7, ppm 9,120. Snow FREE! Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
Recycled Soundtable
12th & Oread
841-9475
Aabis
Wish you had bought that Beatis
nestier last week in the Inion? Well come on down
poster last week in the Union? Well come on down!
Pay Cash for CD's
TRADE BUY SELL Cd's Lps & Tapes
CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAIL
QUALITY EMPLOYMENT QUALIFY
IMMEDIATELY 1-800-243-3232
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND
SPEED WORKSHOP (IN 3 PARTS)
Advanced registration and materials fee($20) required 133 Strong Hall
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
Improve your reading speed and retain more
Thursday, September 8, 15 and 22,
7:00-9:00 pm
LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE Workshop. Help for students to improve their comprehension and conversation skills. FREE Wed, Sep 7, 7 p.m. 404 Wacee. Sponsor by the Student Assistance Program.
LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE WORKSHOP
Help for students of any language. Improve reading, writing, listening comprehension and conversational skills.
FREE!!
Wednesday, September 7,
7:00-8:00 pm 4834 Wescon
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED Workshop. in 3 parts. Improve your reading speed and retain more. Thursdays, Sep. 15, & 22, 7:30 pm. Advanced registration and materials fee ($20.00) required. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
12TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2 - 16, 1800 • 4, B, OR 7, BURSTON
STREAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
168
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
"YA GOTTA BE THERE!"
FOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1-800-SUNCHASE
NOBODY DOES SKI BREAKS BETTER
WYCS, the shiiter in Lawrence for battered women and their children, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training; September 15 at 7:00 p.m. or October 2 at 6:30 p.m. Please visit Lawrence public Library, 707 Vermont. For information, please call WYCS at 841-6887.
Square Dance lessons. Sept 12, Douglas County
first free square dance. 462-748. First is non free Square Dance. 462-748.
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
NUDIE VOODOO
The Wuss-Rock experience
Wed. Sept. 7. The Bottleneck
Found: One small cat on Overland Drive in W. Lawrence last week. He is grey on top and white on his belly and paws. We would love to keep him, but our bandy willick wusk out. Please call Rob at 800-361-2455.
Looking to give away one year old puppy found a one week ago in West Lawrence to good home. Potty trained and extremely lovable but we can't
traiter et extremité de lave but we can keep him in our apartment!
Cik Lin Kim or Stephaney 798-343
Lost. Patricia L. Lam 798-343
Lambda. Public Adm. 823-919, 826-919
Male Female
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
For Little Caesars Pizza locations at 3rd &
Louisiana or 15th & KNAM, EARN IT for
the own reliable transportation, proof of
insurance and driver license and be at least 18 years
$$$$$$$$$$
90Walkers on Wheels is hiring now! Delivery positions avail. Must have own car and able to prove driving skills.
need a. m.p. & dishwasher, cooks a. m.p. &
flexible hours, desserts person for Tues., Thurs. &
Sat. from 3-11 p.m. Positions available immediate.
Aged in program. 1986 Old Age.
ATTENTION T. O. P. T. students. Female attendant needed for disabled woman. Mon. through Sat. mornings and 2 evenings per week. Some lifting required. Apply at Kansas Career Center.
Babysitter needed for two delightful toddler girls in nice home on the left, awakeness in a cute room. Own own car, and references required. Short drive from KU. University Daily Kansas 119 Sauffer Fint. 20. University Daily Kansas 119 Sauffer Fint. 20.
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
Bart time
Looking for two-part time hairstylists who want to grow more hair. Job number 30. Phone (911) 752-8711. Website: www.goldencoasthairstyles.com
COLLEGE STUDENTS $10.25 - 11.65 STARTING Local branch of nat'l ca. filling immediate entry level openings. Flex time schedules. 35 days, per week. Weekends opt. all majors accepted For
Computer tutor. Odd hours. Low Pay. Cool machine. Call Mark at 842-1069.
CRUISE Ships NOW HIRING - Earn up to $1000
Tour Companies, World travel. Seasonal & Pull-
time employment available. No experience neces-
sary. For more information call 1-800-624-6548.
Custodial
part-time positions available working at various school buildings in Lawrence. These hours will but usually will be late afternoon & evening. Please please contact our office immediately. FOR
Manpower
211 E. 8th
749-2800
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
**B. NS babystater** wanted for 3 children. Week day
45/11, fax: 749-782-3901. Early Child Major Pres-
ident 85/11, fax: 749-782-3901.
KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for part-time banquette server and host servers. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants with some daily availability. Apply at 1264 Oread, IL.
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Make up to
$2,000.+$4,000/+ teacher teaching basic conversational
English in Japan, Taiwan, and S Korea. No teach-
ing required.
电话: (280) 612-1467, j57851.
电话: (280) 612-1467, j57851.
HELP WANTED! Inturmural Flag Football off!
Help with training. No experience. No聘
Call 844-525-6100
Jon's Notes of Lawrence is anxious to hire quality note takers for the Fall semester. Preferred GPA of above 3.5. Pick up an application at Jon's Notes of Kentucky. Kansas Union Bookstore between 9.5-Mon. Pri-
Mail Order Telephone Rep-New Home Improvement catalog has part-time weekday openings between 7am-5pm for inbound call and order tasks. Great for people needing flexible schedules during the day. Good clerical skills required. Start $8.9r. In apply with H1: I. inc. 2901 Lakeview Rd (Blue blvd, west of Lawrence Paper, straight to 2nd right) or for calls for directions (865-382-9100).
Wait staff, bartenders, line cooks, prep cooks and kitchen staff. Prepare all positions. Please apply between 4 am and the Schumm Food Company business office, 719 Mass. (Upstairs against Buffalo Bbone's Smokehouse).
Loving Nanny required for 4 yr old boy in our school at school all day. Near KIRU 832-857-897
Non-smoking baby sister need for 6 and 14 years for occasional evening. Call 749 at 749-238-0838.
Mass Street Deli is now hiring:
Part-time delivery person needed. Primarily mornings only, apply in person at a local location. 1590 W. 3rd St. Kirkwood, IL 60942.
Part-time Jobs - The Kansas and Burge Union's,
Food Service, Bookstore, Catering, Wescoc, and
work schedules available. See job board.
Level 5, Kansas Union Personnel Office, EOE.
Rainforest Montessori School located on thirteen acres with horses and a pot-bellied pig named Wilbur is looking for 2elasmur assistants. Hours are Monday-Friday, 8am-6pm, trainTraint. Transportation required; call 843-6800.
Part-time truck whaler. M-F evenings. Approx.
$40 per week. Approx. 15 hours per week.
Per hour charge.
Sports Offices needed! The Laurence Parks and Recreation Dept. is looking for individuals interested in becoming official officials for adult baseball and softball, and please contact Bob Stannish at 843-7122.
Director, Junior & Senior High Jewish Youth Group. Supervise about 25 enthusiastic Lawrence teens. About 30 hr/month. Start ASAP. May 1985. $250/room per month depending on qualifications. We will provide a ground prepared 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 appraisal to us at name & phone # 911 center 817 highway drive, Lawrence KS 60044. Job share available.
DOORMEN NEEDED
Must be friendly, but able to handle
confrontation.
Call 749-5039 - Ask for ZAC
J.CREW FACTORY STORE 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 fills sales positions in ournewwest Kansas factory store location.
SALESASSOCIATES
J Crew will provide you with an exciting work environment, competitive salary and great store discount.
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.
Wewillbe conducting interviews 8.00 a.m.-6.00 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept 6th and Wednesday, Sept 7th.
Noappointmentsnecessary Nophonecalls,please
ELDRIDGEHOTEL 701massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas
SPRING BREAK 95- SELL TRIPS EARN CASH & GO FREE! **Travel Student Services in now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to Jamacu, Cancun, Dytonst, Panama City**
Terraverst Construction Company has opening starting immediately for trim carpenters and laborers. Hardworking individuals who can work a minimum of 3 week days and be able to report to work by 8:00 a.m.. These jobs involve some heavy lifting, etc. Apply in person at 4104 B Trail Road (around back and in the basement). For more info call 142 8829 between the hours of 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Vallis View Care Home is currently seeking moti-
cations for the position. We offer a CNDA day shift and evening positions. We offer flexible scheduling, competitive hourly wages and benefits. Apply in person at 2518 Ridge Court,
*Vista Restaurant is now taking applications for full part and use. Now apply at 1237 W. 4th. Wanted! Photo/Darkroom person to develop and print pictures. Also look for writer w/ diverse
Nanted! Photo/Darkroom person to develop and
develop a digital voice for w/ divers
sylvilites abilities Call Brian 846-227-9300
WILLIE C'S CAFE & 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 us. You will be involved in the implementation restaurant management team.
Prefer restaurant experience NOT necessary.
Prefer individuals with a solid background in people management. Requires a teamwork mentality, good communication, attention to detail, high level of customer service and ability to manage multiple projects and people while running high sales. If this sounds like the career for you
you, please send your resum
Dawn Benson
1320 E. Kellogg Drive
Wichita KS 67211
I look forward to hearing from you.
225 Professional Services
<*Driver Education* >served thru Midwest Driving School, served KU students for 20 years, drive its license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
RESUMES
DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAUND PARK KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
AWARDS LAW ENTRY
Call for a free consultation 381-904-6946
*Professional Writing
*Cover Letters
*Consultation
A Member of
PA
RW
Professional
Association
of
Resume Writers
842-4619 1012 Mass, Suite 201
TRANSCRIPTIONS
1
Linda Morton, C.P.R.W
Richard A. Frydman
ATTORNEY AT LAW
843-4023
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter quality type. Also transcriptions. 853-2683
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Theses, term-papers, Resumes, Business letters, etc...
Laser printing. 855-062
Free Consultation
701 Tennessee
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature, ESL classes. Highly
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3313
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
Donald G. Stroie Sally G. Kesley
16 East 13th 842-1133
305 For Sale
we carry Blanch, Specialized and Trek. Ipk
we carry Blanch, Specialized and Trek. Liaway
available. 340 Massachusetts 343-5000
UNFLOWER OUTDOOR SALBEOAR CLOSE-
JUTS M耐热, Hify O. Brien. Get one.804
massachusetts 343-5000
TRAFICF-DUI'S
Fake ID*& alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
the law offices of
X
Tune-up, overhaul, up grades, free air. 304 Masacusetta 845 5000
$A
$AVE with your Kansas Card TODAY!
14 cubic ft. frontspace master mount refrigerator /
automatic ice maker. Excellent condition, $250
235 Typing Services
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
300s Merchandise
1979 Ford Granada, 4-door, automatic,
air conditioning, 88,000 miles. $850.
Call Frank at 864-2467.
Centurion Frame, Shimano comp. get seat, great condition, $170, 749-3751, ask for Susan.
For Sale: 1980 Honda Civic
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.99
CLEANANCE $9.98
910 N, 2nd • 841-8903
19th & Haskell • 841-7504
4221
***
For Sale: Mac SE, lots of loaded software, printer,
carrying case, call 818-933-1249 with best offer
Giant Mountain Bike in excellent condition. Make offer.
749-9330
Honda 1989 Etile 50 red scooter, with 2 baskets, 40kW. It can be rented and tune-up for $1,000. Ask for Lymn at lymn@auburn.edu
for Lynn at 825-2600
King size waterbed, bookcase/mirror headboard,
six drawer pedestal base, heater, liner, and
new mattress. $125. 1-856-7099. Will deliver.
EARN CASH
ALL YOUR
MONEY GONE?
$15 Today
$30
This Week
By donating your blood plasma
Walk-ins welcome
Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center
NABI
816 W. 24th
Behind Laird Noller Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F 9-6:30
Sat. 10-4
Nikon F $1 High Eye point. New, in box. Cost $1200.
S790 871-937-2153.
Rollerbinders: Lightning $85 & Aeroblades $175 &
Trek 830 mountain bike for $249. 749-0441.
STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software,
and 830 mountain bike in a 10 acre.
Call 1-800-829-0494 for equipment
WORD PROCESSOR, brother 3400, full screen,
disk drive, grammar & spell check. $200.
www.cablesmart.com
VAGABONDBOOKMAN
360 Miscellaneous
Buy & Sell Used
Rare & Collectables
842-BOOK 1113 Mass.
(2066)
340 Auto Sales
PETS WELCOME
91 WV Jetta GL, 51K, 5-speed, surcoat, ACF, rimgreat, max shape, $800 (negotiable), 13-524-684-711
93 Mazda MX-8 & White/Taupe Leather. 5-speed.
600cc BRAKES, automatic rear door. BAKS,
brakes factory, alarm 28k, mice. Excellent
condition, all maintenance required. $18,000.
(316) 721-662. Can arrange a lease for low pay-
off.
No Sublease Fee
**81 Musta MX 6+ Wheeled laurel leather, 5 sp. pck. electric sunroof, CD, cassette, air bag, ABS brakes, factory alarm kit, miles excellent, condenser fan, GPS, Bluetooth 721-621-622. Can arrange a lease for low payments.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Heatherwood Valley
Apartments
- 3 bedroom apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- Available for fall.
- Sand Volleyball Court
South Pointe
- Directly on bus route
Two bedroom 1 & 1/2 blocks from campus. $420
monthly utilities. #842-7644.
*Call 843-4754
- Swimming Pool
- Close to KU Bus Route
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Outstanding New Staff!!!
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept older houses 841-STAR (78272
Lg. 3 BDRM brd. off campus. Avail. immed.
Lower level garden; new kitchen overlooking.
living room. Full carpet. fireplace,
dry./A, C very clean! $490 + utilities:
1489
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great place, bus route, no road,
PICKAWAY. Now Available. Call 789-426-1000
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street shopping. No pets. Call 841-5500.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 roommate need needed immediately. Beautiful 3
barm agt 1 block from campus. $255, price new
marble floor.
- Bv phone: 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BEAUTIFUL LUISHE ON TENNESSEE. Responsible people to share 2 rooms in house. $105 each per month + utl. Please call 641-4678.
Share four bedroom apartments and left. Orchard
Corners on bus route
How to schedule an ad:
Two females looking for a third to share three cable immediately. Cabable with paid £289. Call 843-8357
House mouse needed. 48RA. Close to campus. N/S, clean, quiet. Avail. Now Call 1-861-1989.
Stop by the Kansen office between 8 p.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
- By Mail: 191 Stuffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
NFS, Female Roommate needs to share fur-
niture on DVDS, on KU Bus Route. $200.
Utilities, 84144, #34
Ask phone in may be killed by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
*In person:* 119 Staffler Flat
Wanted: 'Two neat, responsible, n/a rooms to share new house. 3dm, 2baths, Quit邻居. Grad students preferred. $225 + 1' utilities. Please call 843-8478
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 Vise or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified Information and order form
Calculating Rates:
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day locations and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of times the ad is in use by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
Cost per line per day
DX 2X 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 1.05 .65 .60 .55 .35
Please print your ad one word per box:
CLASSIFIEDS
140 lon & found
205 hard water
240 auto sales
225 professional services
360 miscellaneous
393 remote services
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
Total ad cost:
Address:
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: ___ Classification: ___
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dally Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Account number:
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 11 Stauffer Fintt Hall, Lawrence, KS, 68445
---
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 FarWorks, Inc./Dit. by Universal Press Syndicate
Jason
© 1984 FarViron, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate
8-29
When the dust had settled, a lone figure was revealed standing on the small knoll. Yes, he, too, was a herd animal — but he was through runnin'.
6B
Tuesday, September 6, 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-
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
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
board certified emergency medical physi-cians.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.
1984
KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY
CAMPUS
The search continues for Lawrence fugitive Chad Beers.
FEATURES
Page 3A
Mark Mallouk, KU senior and comedian, is making his career into a joke. Page 4B
SUNNY High 83° Low 60° Weather: Page 2.
KAI
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.104,NO.12
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7,1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
---
Deborah Dautton, Salina junior, was crowned Miss Lawrence U.S.A. August 28. Dalton also is a member of Kansas ROTC.
Miss America in combat boots?
Shannon Newton
Kansan staff writer
Deborah Daulton holds two titles: Cadet Command Sgt. Maj. in the University of Kansas ROTC program and Miss Lawrence.
Daulton, Salina junior, was crowned Miss Lawrence U.S.A. on Aug. 28 at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts, and will go to the Miss Kansas U.S.A. pateant in Wichita on Oct. 15.
Daulton said her experience in the ROTC has benefited her in many ways and has helped out in her pageant training.
"I was nervous during the Miss Lawrence pageant," Daulton said. "But my officer training has taught me to be under control as well as to think and speak on my feet."
And Daulton said that her pageant training has helped her in her officer training.
Daulton said that she was encouraged by a friend to join her first pageant.
As a sergeant major, I have to speak in front of cadets," Daulton said. "My pageant experience has helped me out with that."
"After one of my labs, a friend stopped me and talked to me about it," Daulton said. "I thought about it and decided to give it a try."
Daulton competed and won her first pageant, Miss Emporia, in the spring of 1992. Miss Lawrence U.S.A. is the fourth pageant she has competed in. Daulton said the three areas that she had been judged in were an interview, a swimsuit competition and an evening gown competition.
Daulton enlisted in the Army after high school graduation in 1991. She attended Emporia State University on a ROTC Scholarship, but transferred to KU after a year there because of financial constraints.
"My sister attended KU, and it was cheaper for me to share expenses with her," Daulton said. "We live together, and we share everything."
Live in the Armed Forces is nothing new to Daulton. "I have grown up an army brat," Daulton said. "My dad has always been in the military."
Daulton said that her dad, who retired as a Command Sergeant Major after 26 years in the Army, was hesitant at first when she told him that she was enlisting.
"My dad knew that it was a lot of pressure," Daulton said. "But he also knew that the hard work paid off."
Daulton became a Sergeant Major in August. She is second-in-command of her battalion.
"As a Sergeant Major, Deborah works very hard," Lt. Kevin Admiral said. "She always has new ideas in helping out the cadets."
Daulton is majoring in Physical Therapy
Dautton is making his six-year helmet "After, I want to work in an airborne unit in the Army," Dautton said. "Then maybe go on to graduate school."
Committee sells KU by phone
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
Chancellors are like college athletes: The best ones have to be recruited.
To ensure the successful recruitment of the next chancellor of the University of Kansas, some of the 17 members of the chancellor search committee have been calling presidents and chancellors of other colleges and universities this month and asking them to apply.
former chancellor Gene Budig left KU this summer after 13 years to become president of baseball's American League. Del Shankel, professor of microbiology and former executive vice-chancellor, is serving as interim chancellor this year.
Calling high-level administrators to follow up on their nominations is standard procedure.
dure, said T.P. Srinivasan, head of Faculty Executive Committee and a member of the search committee.
"It's in line with what's usually done," he said. "We are interested in finding the best possible chancellor, so the initiative is on us. We have to sell KU."
Srinivasa said that so far, about 50 potential candidates from other colleges and universities had been nominated by their colleagues. Of those, about 20 are being called by committee members and encouraged to apply, he said.
In early August, the search committee ran an ad in the Chronicle of Higher Education asking for applicants for the chancellor position.
But running a want ad is only a small part of the battle, Srinivasan said.
He said that, often, the best potential candidates were satisfied with their current jobs and needed to be encouraged to consider coming to KU.
"People who would like to take charge aren't out there looking," he said. "We have to nudge them."
About eight of the 17 committee members were making calls to potential candidates, Srinivasan said.
Sherman Reeves, student body president and a member of the search committee, said making phone calls to potential candidates was a necessary part of the search process.
"With a position that's as important as the chancellor's, we have to take a more active, aggressive stance," he said. "A lot of times, a president is comfortable where he or she is, so we have to put on our white shoes, belt buckle and plaid pants and a used-car routine to show what KU has to offer."
CHANCELLOR
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
The Commission is the chief executive officer of the university and reports to the Board of Regiments
The Kansas Board of Governors, the governing board for the state public universities in Kansas, invites nominations and applications for the position of chancellor of the University of Kansas.
The Business seek an individual of integrity to lead the university into the twenty-first century.
Art student nabs chancellor's pad
Daron Bennett / KANSAN
SUCCESS CAREER BASED POSITION on ability to articulate a vision for the university *+ appropriate experiences in teaching and learning* and *+ group, such as a large, choreal group, a prestigious
The Chancellor's house is the ultimate bachelor pad for Randall Griffey, Norton graduate student. this year. Griffey was chosen to live in the house when former chancellor Gene Budig left to become president of baseball's American League.
When Shankel said no, KU sought new tenant
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
Randall Griffey has the ultimate bachelor's pad this year.
He lives in the chancellor's house.
Griffey, a Norton graduate student, has at his disposal a grand piano, a kitchen with a six-burner stove, two plush living rooms and covered porches galore.
The house, a three-story,
6,179 square-foot Neo-classical mansion tucked behind Blake Hall, was vacated when former Chancellor Gene Budig became president of baseball's American League on Aug. 1.
Chancellor Del Shankel and his wife — who were offered use of the house — didn't want to leave the house they were already living in.
And it would have been a shame to let those four-
star accommodations just sit there and gather dust.
To find an appropriate house sitter, KU's graduate studies departments were asked by the chancellor's office to nominate students interested in living in the house.
Five were selected and interviewed, and Griffey, who also is a graduate teaching assistant in art history, was handed the keys to the Taj Mahal of Oread Hill.
He moved in earlier this week and will live in the house for the school year.
Jim Scaly, assistant to the chancellor, said Griffey would not be paid to live in the house but would be expected to be there as often as possible.
The only inconvenience Griffey may face would be the occasional get-together for administrators, faculty or alumni on the first floor, Scaly said.
Chancellor's house boasts comforts of home
Six fireplaces warm up mansion's 26 rooms
By David Wilson Kansas staff writer
It's not likely that the heat in the chancellor's house will ever be shut off.
But if it ever were, its occupants would have six fireplaces — three on the first floor and three on the second floor — to heat the house.
And to get the entire house warm and toasty, all six fireplaces would be needed.
On the second floor, there is a study, a living room with a fireplace, two bathrooms and three bedrooms, two of which have fireplaces.
The three-story chancellor's house boasts 26 rooms. On the first floor, extending in all directions from the huge foyer and open staircase, there are two living rooms, each with a fireplace, a dining room with a fireplace, a sun porch, a kitchen, a breakfast area and a pantry.
The third floor, which is no longer in use, has a storage room, a living room, two bathrooms, two bedrooms and a small balcony.
The basement, which at one time was occupied by male students on work-study scholarships, has seven rooms.
The house was built in 1912 and was donated to the University by Elizabeth Miller Watkins, who lived in the house until she died in 1939.
The first chancellor to live in the house was Deane W. Malot, who was chancellor from 1939 until 1951.
Malott and his wife did most of the decorating and furnishing during their 12 years in the house.
Before 1939, the chancellor's house was a red brick house at 14th and Louisiana. It was later demolished to make room for Douthart Scholarship Hall.
INSIDE Hard hitting
The Kansas volleyball team spiked the UMKC Kangarooos last night in the Jayhawks' home opener at Allen Field House.
Yellow zone parking spaces are a hot commodity
Parking permits purposely oversold
--yellow zones across campus.
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
Tom Dulac, Mountain Lakes, N.J., junior, was trying to find a place to park. After 35 minutes of useless cruising, he settled for a spot in the lot adjacent to Memorial Stadium.
"I've never liked parking on campus," Dulac said. "I think it's always been a problem."
Students like Dulac may be forced to set aside time every day to look for parking snaces close to campus.
Permits for all parking lots, including the one behind the Kansas Union, are oversold again this year. Dulac and about 7,500 other students are competing for 5,000 parking spaces in
But Donna Hultine, assistant director of the parking department, said the lots were intentionally oversold each year.
"We oversell because we know people that park in lots don't stay in the lots all day," she said.
Permits for yellow zones, which are sold mainly to students, are oversold the most, Hulttine said.
"It's easier to oversell yellow because it's such a fluctuating population," she said.
She said the red zones, reserved for full-time faculty and staff, were over-sold by 130 permits. Blue zones also were oversold by 105 permits, she said. Blue zones are reserved for faculty whose age or age plus years of service to the University equal 60 years.
The policy is we will continue to sell as long as someone wants a permit."she said.
Hultine said she thought a limit could be placed on permit sales for a colored zone if it was consistently filled.
The permits went on sale Sept. 1, and Hultine also said the parking department began issuing parking tickets yesterday. Although the majority of cars ticketed were those without permits, Hultine said some cars were ticketed after their owners had left them parked illegally in full lots.
"I can usually find a space," Kruez said. "I must have to walk five miles."
Brian Krue, Rose Hill junior, said parking hadn't been a problem for him yet because he parked in a yellow zone behind Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
Krue said he thought the parking would get worse.
"I think it's going to be a problem during the winter months."
Daron Bennett / KANSAN
Parking lots are crowded again this year as many students compete for few spaces. Personnel at the parking department say the department intentionally oversells parking permits.
2A
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
★
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Exercise greater tact and your popularity will sour. If single, you could meet a potential mate while on a business trip. Keep in touch. The financial picture shows definite signs of improvement early in 1905. Be careful not to put all your eggs into one basket. Choosing your business associates with greater care will prevent headaches later on. Remember, many paths will take you to your goals.
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE famed heart surgeon Dr. Michael DeBakey, actor
Corin Bernisson, artist Grandma Moses, singer Christie Hynde
T
♒
15
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Heed your ESP when faced with a tough choice. An employment decision can no longer be postponed. People at a distance are enthusiastic about you long-range plans. Do not let petty comments rile you.
**GARURUS** (April 29-May 20) You may feel left to our own devices today. Get in touch with someone whose work you admire. A long-sought goal may not be out of reach as you think. Persevere!
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Refuse to be maneuvered into the middle of an emotional tug-of-war. Do your best to remain neutral. Concentrating on solo projects will bring excellent results at work.
II
♩
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Avoid biting off more than you can chew at work. Beneficial influences encourage you to put forth your best effort! Be careful not to show impatience with an older person's methods. Show respect.
69
Arrow
**SCORPIO** (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Be straightforward about what you expect form others. Loved ones at a distance have a lot to talk about. Be tactful if a close friend asks for guidance. Avoid pointing out every recent mistake.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): A good day to contact people in positions of power. You need to act promptly on new opportunities. Financial considerations seem less important than emotional factors.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Someone may not be as dependable or cooperative as you hoped. Tackle tough jobs by yourself. Your resourceful attitude will win you friends in high places. Postpone making major decisions until more data is available.
a
VS
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Recognize extravagance for what it is. Resist the temptation to siphage. Allow friends to intrude on family affairs would be a mistake. Develop a flexible mind-set and encourage open discussions.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22, Jan. 19):
Smarten up! Pulling rank could backfire.
Try gentle persuasion to get your way.
Use plenty of discretion when dealing with influential people. If they like your style and attitude, the sky is the limit.
VII
Water
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Your intuition plays a key role in your signing an agreement today. You are able to get through a mountain of work in no time at all! Turn your attention towards home tonight. Show affection.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22) Luck and timing are with you today. A lost object surfaces in an unusual place. For some, fame and fortune will arrive simultaneously. Do not get a swelled head! You still have much to accomplish.
X
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Do not take a unique financial opportunity slip b Being in the right place at the right trips big dividends. Keep up with the latest business trends. Influential people admire your on-target predictions.
TODAY'S CHILDREN are honest, hard-working and self-effacing. Their modest demeanor and sterling character make them well-liked and widely respected. Count on them to receive top marks in school, top pay in the business world. Tidy and well-organized, these Virgos are unable to do their best work in a messy or ugly environment. Wise employers will allow these diligent types to decorate their offices the way they like. They have excellent taste!
types to decorate their offices the way they like.
Heroses 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. 60045, 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. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions by mail are free. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan.
Vice President: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
ON CAMPUS
Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. today in front of Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Mark Wilson at 865-0066.
KU Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 11:30 a.m. today at 4006 Wescoe Hall.
OAKS-Non-Traditional Students Organization will hold a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove H in the Kansas Union.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a University forum, "Wealth, Development and Trafficway vs. Wetlands and the People," at noon today at 1204
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor Liturgical Ministry Training at 4 p.m. today at 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call843-0357.
Oread Ave.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Linda Bella at 865-2950.
Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Sarah at 842-7037.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center.
ON THE RECORD
Lawrence City Hall was broken into early Friday morning, Lawrence police reported. The burglaries pried open the west-side, ground-level door, broke into a safe and stole $3,500. Stolen money, and damage to the building and safe totaled $9,085.
A KU student's Giant mountain bicycle valued at $1,000 was stolen late Friday night from the 1100 block of Ohio, Lawrence police reported.
cling a light pole on the 2600 block of Sixth street at a high rate of speed. The search also turned up 370 stolen compact discs. Police said the goods were valued at $5,670.
■ Merchandise valued at $3,496,
including a stereo, telephone.
Caller ID box, and 120 compact
discs, were reported stolen from
a house on the 1100 block of Tennessee Friday afternoon.
Lawrence police reported.
A stereo, 125 compact discs, a compact disc rack and other items valued at $3,305 were stolen at 9 p.m. Sunday from a KU student's apartment on the 1300 block of Vermont, Lawrence police reported.
Lawrence police arrested a man from Greer, S.C., for DWI, possession of marijuana, and possession of cocaine and drug paraphernalia early Sunday morning. Police said they searched the car after noticing the driver was cir-
A blue 15-speed Mongoose mountain bicycle valued at $150 was stolen Saturday afternoon from the 1200 block of Louisiana, Lawrence police reported.
Two KU students were charged with battery Sunday night after a domestic dispute at the Jayhawk Tower, KU police said. The couple, who apparently were boyfriend and girlfriend, bit each other during an argument, police said.
CORRECTION
A story on page 4B in the Aug. 31 Kansas contained incorrect information. English 590 is called Tutoring for Literacy, not Students Tutoring for Literacy. Partners in Learning is not a student-run organization, but it is a University-funded organization. The University funded it three, not five, years ago. Diana Bolton, instructor of Tutoring for Literacy and coordinator of Partners in Learning, said she
Weather
thought the program helped KU employees' morale, not morals. Also, Chernobyl, which should have been identified as Three Mile Island, and several plane crashes were potentially, not partially, caused by people with low literacy skills. Bolton did not say this, she cited examples from Jonathan Kozol's "Illiterate America" to demonstrate the importance of literacy in the workplace.
TODAY'S HEARTS
Lawrence
Kansas City
Topeka
Wichita
Omaha
Tulsa
Des Moines
St. Louis
Chicago
Atlanta
New York
Los Angeles
Seattle
TODAY
SATURDAY
Sunny and warmer
Sunny, warm and dry
N I G H L O W
83° • • 60°
80° • • 62°
83° • • 57°
84° • • 63°
81° • • 59°
85° • • 66°
82° • • 58°
80° • • 64°
78° • • 57°
84° • • 66°
75° • • 54°
91° • • 71°
67° • • 55°
8360
8562
SUNDAY
Pleasant
87 65
8765
Source: Abby Walsh, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
September 6, 1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
13.12
3,898.70
NYSE
.18
260.11
Shares Traded: 250,599,220
Nasdaq
↑
Advances
Declines
Unchanged
.25
759.48
-
956
1,142
755
ASE
46
456.00
WOLF
COYOTE'S
Dance Hall & Saloon
1003 E.23rd St. ~ Phone (913) 842-2380 Lawrence's Newest & Largest Nightclub
Coyote's has a $150,000 Sound & Lighting System and Lawrence's Largest Dance Floor Plus, Today's Best Top 40 Country, Pop & Rock Music
Wednesday
UNITED STATES
Quarter Draws
D
JOIN ALL OF YOUR FRIENDS AT COYOTE'S EVERY WEDNESDAY FOR QUARTER BUD LIGHT & COORS LIGHT DRAWS
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
3
Beers continues to elude authorities
Local sightings prove futile in arrest of fugitive
The Associated Press
Authorities searching for an escapee from an Arkansas prison were still looking yesterday after someone called a Topeka police officer and said he wanted to surrender.
The person who called did not show up, and authorities were unsure whether the call was a hoax or whether it was really Chad Beers, and he was scared off for some reason, said Pete Nagurry of the U.S. Marshal Service.
Police have been searching with helicopters and dogs for Beers, 24, who was shot by a mobile homeowner about 4:30 a.m. Sunday while trying to break into the eastern Lawrence residence.
Someone called a Topea police officer Monday and offered to surrender. Nagurny said that the officer knows Beers and that Beers may have feared for his safety because of an extensive helicopter and dog search and wanted to give himself up to someone he knew.
The caller said he would turn himself in at Clinton Lake at 7:30 p.m. Monday. But no one showed up.
Beers has been seen repeatedly in the Lawrence area but has eluded authorities.
Beers was shot at a mobile home in east Lawrence Sunday, police Lt. Kevin Harmon said. Authorities did
not know how badly Beers was hurt but said Beers' father had called in about three hours later to report that his son was shot.
Harmon said Beers should be considered armed and dangerous.
"He poses a much greater danger to the general public under these types of circumstances," Harmon said.
Beers and another man escaped on the evening of Sept. 1 from the Sebastian County Jay in Fort Smith, Ark. The men apparently crawled through the roof of an exercise room of the county jail, jumped off the top.
of the building and met a woman who drove them to Chouteau, Okla., Sebastian County Sheriff Gary Grimes said.
The woman was arrested after dropping the men off, authorities said.
The other escapee, Scott Scanlon, was captured in Wilson County on Thursday.
Coffey County, Kan., authorities found beers' father in a semi-truck at a truck stop on Interstate 35 about 10:30 a.m. Sunday.
in the morning, in his front yard in Lawrence, "said a representative for the Coffey County sheriff's office.
"He said he'd last seen his son early
Beers was in Fort Smith awaiting transfer to federal prison after being sentenced in U.S. District Court to 14 years in prison for transporting a kidnapped victim across a state line, after he abducted a Clarksville, Ark., man last September.
He was sentenced on state charges in the same case to 25 years for aggravated robbery and 20 years for kidnapping.
President of Haskell speaks to group about assimilation
Minority students choose between home and society
By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer
Retaining a cultural identity is vital to surviving as a minority in the United States, the president of Haskell Indian Nations University said in a speech last night.
Bob Martin spoke to the 12 people who attended the speech in the Daisy Hill Room of the Burge Union. The speech was organized by the Minority Business Student Council, a group of minority students interested in business.
Martin said that Haskell had changed its views about American Indians assimilating into mainstream society.
"In older generations, American Indians were tracked into a vocational education," he said. "Haskell
administrations actually rewarded students for assimilation."
Assimilation does not always help minorities adapt to mainstream society, Martin said. At the University of New Mexico, the freshmen dropout rate among American Indians and Alaskan Natives is about 80 percent, largely because of cultural differences, a lack of academic preparation and financial problems, he said.
"If we increase the number of American Indian teachers, we will be more successful at educating American Indians," he said.
Martin said that minority students encountered difficulty when choosing between their home environments and mainstream society. At home, students are surrounded by people who share their cultures. But more opportunities often are available in mainstream society.
"Often, when American Indians leave home, they are not accepted when they come back because they are perceived as different," he said.
overcome this conflict if they felt comfortable with their cultural identities. Part of Haskell's philosophy is to help American Indians become successful in either the Indian world or the American world, he said.
Gayla Guess, Bonner Springs senior, said that she enjoyed Martin's speech.
Martin said that students could
“It’s important that we have exchanges with Haskell,” she said. "We learn a lot about other cultures that way."
Jacinta Carter, president of the group, said that it invited Martin to speak in an attempt to add diversity to the group. In the past, she said, the group had been looked upon as an organization for Black males.
Carter said the group also had invited Shirley Cooper, a black female and a system development project manager at Hallmark, to speak.
Carter said that in addition to speakers, the Council provided peer advising, tutoring and enrollment help for its members.
[Image of a man speaking emphatically, with one hand raised and the other hand on his chest.]
Julianne Peter / KANSAN
Bob Martin, president of Haskell Indian Nations University, speaks to the Minority Student Council about Haskell's role in American Indian community.
Degree helps graduates lend a helping hand in Peace Corps
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
KU graduates help begin environmental and health programs around the globe
For Sara Cullen, every day is Earth Day.
Cullen, a 1993 University of Kansas graduate and now a Peace Corps volunteer in Hungary, has spent a year working as an adviser on environmental education at a teacher's college in Esztergom, Hungary.
"As an adviser, I add a different perspective," said Cullen, who is back in the United States for a month before finishing her two-year commitment. "They use me as a resource."
Cullen, who earned her degree in environmental studies, said that when she returned to Hungary on
Sept. 15, she would begin working on a project called Eco Yard. This will be a series of projects showing environmentally beneficial ways people can live.
"I am working on a display to teach people about composting, gardening and recycling." Cullen said.
She said the most positive aspect of her work in Hungary was allowing her skills to benefit people of another culture.
"I am able to give Hungarians the skills that I have gained about the environment," Cullen said.
Cullen is not alone in working on environmental projects for the Peace Corps.
Corps Public Affairs Specialist.
Environmental programs have become the fastest growing area for the corps nationwide, with about 14 percent of the volunteers working on these programs in more than 60 countries, said Philip Lesniewski, Peace
Peace Corps environmental volunteers work with agencies in different countries on a wide level of environmental programs that include national park management, reforestation and environmental education, Lesniewski said.
Five KU Spring 1994 graduates are going into environmental programs this fall, he said. Lesniewski works in Kansas City, Kan., and oversees Peace Corps operations for Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri and Kansas. He said KU had the highest number of environmental volunteers from one school in the four-state region at this time.
The five graduates, all with degrees in environmental studies, are Meade McFarlane, Tim O'Brien, Karin McCoy, Holly Gobbler and Anne Seay.
mitment and others are preparing for their trip. McFarlane and O'Brien left for Costa Rica; McCoy will go to Guatemala, and Gribble will be going to Paraguay.
Ana Sey is leaving for the Ivory Coast on Jan. 5.
Some of these KU alumni have already left for their two-year com-
She will be working with the people of Ivory Coast on urban management.
"I will be working with the community's concerns on health and hygiene," she said.
Seay said that she wanted to go to the Ivory Coast because she speaks French, the country's primary language.
Once there, she said that she would work on projects to educate citizens about malaria and intestinal diseases. Seay said that she is both nervous
"I'm nervous about leaving by family," she said. "At the same time I am thirsty for change."
Seay said that she is both nervous and excited to go.
Peace Corps info
After the application is
Applicants are encouraged to apply nine months before they are available to work.
After the application's received, the applicant is interviewed to determine skills and qualifications.
Applicants then are matched with countries that need their skills.
Volunteers undergo an intense three-month training period after arriving at a site.
Volunteers are on assignment fortwo years
For more information, contact Barbara Hiltman at 1-800-424-8580
Source: Kansan staff research KANSAN
Committee gives advice to advisers
Keep it clean.
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
For Jared Harsin, finding an adviser in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has been a daunting task.
But the Topea sophomore says he hopes he can help make advising a more personalized experience for himself and other students.
Harsin is one of three student representatives on a newly-formed advising committee for the college. He said he could impart what students experienced during advising to the seven faculty members who served on the committee.
"The committee will first provide a systematic look at advising in the college," he said. "Advising is always difficult to do right, but I hope that the committee will come forth with workable improvements."
Students in the college are not assigned a specific adviser. Instead, each semester, students see faculty members in their departments during the advising period.
"I think that students should be assigned to specific advisers so that they can get to know a particular adviser and feel comfortable talking to them," Harsin said. "Right now students must find advisers in huge departments, and some of the advisers could care less."
The committee, which met for the first time Friday, was formed by James Muwksens, dean of the college. Muwksens said the committee was charged with improving the quality of advising in the college.
Muysksen said he wanted the committee to make its initial recommendations by Spring 1995. Ideally, some minor changes in the advising system could be implemented next fall, he said.
Training advisers is a priority for committee member John Michel. Michel, professor of speech, language and hearing, said he thought faculty advisers should be provided with a booklet detailing advising procedures.
Kathy Hall, head of the committee and director of the college's advising support center, said the committee's first task would be to prioritize its goals.
If you don't need it,don't toss it Recycle
✿
"I think that faculty members should receive credit for advising," Michel said. "Advising should be considered in giving tenure and promotions."
Horoscopes
"Advising is a very important function of the University, but right now it's just one of those things you're expected to do," Michel said.
Everyday in the Kansan!
KIEF'S AUDIO/V
COMPACT DISCS
• New • Used • Trade-ins
WE BUY & SELL USED CD's
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913-843-1811 913-842-1438 913-842-1544
4A
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Virgo columnist looks to the stars for advice
COLUMNIST
DAVID JOHNSON Horoscopes can apply to just about anyone so long as you solicit the help of an "important"
"expert."
Announcer: Good morning and welcome to "Star Talk," with your host, master astrologer Gene Dixon of the National Requirer." Gene's guest today is David Johnson, certified Virgo.
Gene: Welcome to the show, Dave.
David: That's David Gene.
G: Typical Virgo. Well, thank you for joining us today. Now, I understand that you're a Virgo.
D: Yes, I am. And I've got my card to prove it.
G: No need for that, I can tell. So, let's have a look at the Star Chart for your birthday. Hmmm, Aug. 23, very promising. Celebrities born on that date include actress Barbara Eden of "I Dream of Jeanne" fame and political satirist Mark Russell. Let's start
with a reading of your finances. I see that Jupiter is in your house this year, which means you can expect a major purchase to pay off in the long run. Well?
D: Oh jeez, that's so true! I just bought a new microwave.
G: And ...
G: Great! Let's move on to your family life. I see that a relative has shown unusual patience and understanding about something you have recently revealed.
D: Well, you know. ... I used my Discover card. So I'll get cash back, and I'm saving money with the variable rate!
G: It takes one to know one, and I'm an astrologer. OK, how about business. I see that you are moving up the corporate ladder. New responsibilities give you a better grasp on your career.
D: Hmmm, I can't think of anything right ... Oh, wait! I just came out to my parents! They were great. I mean, the
stresses and fears about having a son who's a "liberal." Yeah, they handled it great! How did you know that?
D. Well, I just made assistant manager six months ago. Hmmm, new responsibilities ... well, we just revamped our transaction engineering line, which I helped oversee.
G: Wow, impressive! And what does this line produce?
D: Transactions ... OK, it's just a cash register, all right!
G: I see. Let's move on to your love life. The letter "C" is giving me a very
strong reading. Anyone in particular?
D: Oh, that's close!
G: Glenn Close?
D: No, you're in near proximity:
Cuba.
G: Are you positive?
G: Cuba? You're husting after Cuba?
D: No, Pedro, on MTV's "The Real World." He's from Cuba.
G: Moving on, let's take a quick glance at your outlook for next year. You seem to have health concerns. But these will be eased by the resolution of a greater problem.
D: No. But he is.
D: What a coincidence! I had this nightmare last night that the health care plan passed Congress without a hitch. After everything was in place, I
G: OK, that's all of the time we have for today. Thanks for joining us on "Star Talk."
got my neat plastic card (with my name embossed in gold on it) and then, for some unknown reason, I happened to live in the part of the universe that isn't covered by universal coverage. So, I and the rest of the 5 percent of America went to protest. But before we left, Kurt Loder was on MTV News saying that Lisa Loeb and the members of her band, Nine Stories, were killed in a freak bus accident and now we were all covered ... [keeps rambling]
VIEWPOINT
David Johnson is a Coffeyville senior in magazine Journalism.
Universities need to cater programs to today's grads
In many cases, the first two years of university study are little more than a fifth and sixth year of high school.
This may be the result of our deteriorating secondary education system. It also may be the result of the outmoded concept that university graduates ought to have
market too competitive for this system. Today's programs ought to be more vocationally oriented. Course requirements not designed to promote the professional competence of a degree candidate ought to be eliminated.
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
Universities should stop educating in Renaissance Man mold and provide more vocationally oriented courses.
a well-rounded education Whatever the rationale, it is out of sync with the needs of the modern student.
No longer should prospective high school French teachers be
A university education is too expensive and the job
required to take biology with a lab, for example. The KU should take notice of the faults of the present system and take the steps necessary to change them.
ZACKARY STARBIRD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Canceling arms embargo is the best course for Bosnia
The recent Serbian referendum in Bosnia-Herzegovina, in which the Serbs rejected a peace proposal to partition Bosnia among
the Bosnians and themselves, leaves the international community no proper course of action except to lift the arms embar-
ty's naive and ineffectual policy of peace-at-all-costs should be scrapped. A more realistic policy should be implemented in which Bosnia has the
BOSNIAN ARMS EMBARGO
The international community should lift the Bosnian arms embargo to allow the Bosnians to defend themselves against the Serbs.
right to defend itself against a brutal aggressor through arms purchases. Rather than selling-out the Bosnians by dividing their country.
go against the Bosnians. After 28 months of war in which about 200,000 people have been killed, the international communi-
the international community should allow them the means to defend themselves by lifting the arms embargo.
MICHAEL PAUL FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
KANSAN STAFF
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
JEN CARR Business manager
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
News ... Sara Bennett
Editorial ... Helen Heinear
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
Mellissa Lacey
Features ... Tread Carl
Planning Editor ... Susan White
Design ... Noah Mueller
Assistant to the editor .. Robbie Johnson
Editora
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.
Business Staff
Campus mgr...Todd Winters
Regional mgr...Laura Guth
National mgr...Mark Mastro
Coop mgr...Emily Gibson
Special Sections mgr...Jen Perrier
Production mgr...Molly Boren
Regan Overy
Marketing director...Alan Stigle
Creative director...John Carlton
Closeted mgr...Heather Niahua
**Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the university signature, name, and contact information affiliated with the University of Kansas or a middle class and homestead, or faculty or staff name.**
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
LAST WEEK BOSNIANS VOTED "NO" ON A PEACE PLAN...
I VOTED
RIP I VOTED
VOTED
VOTED
Hood
UDK 1994
Matt Hood / KANSAN
Aliens" star would whip the University into shape
Why do we call the head of our university the chancellor? Is it a coincidence that the only elected position held by Adolph Hitler was that of chancellor?
Why did our own student body president, Sherman Reeves, use the term "uber" when referring to the qualifications of the chancellor? Was it a slip of the tongue or does it reveal the guiding principle under which the search committee is operating? Is this committee attempting to find a qualified candidate or are they engaged in a search to find that elusive, Nietzschean "ubermensch" who will lead the University through the twilight of the 20th century and into the dawn of the 21st?
Would this "uberchancellor" push for qualified admissions? Would the campus be overrun by hordes of blonde, blue-eyed Aryan youth?
I offer a dissenting opinion on the issue of the "ubercchancellor." I believe that the administration of the new chancellor should represent a total break with the previous course of the University. In addition, this new chancellor would break the stranglehold of male dominance that has characterized the position of chancellor at KU and in the university
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
NICOLAS SHUMP
Yes, I submit that instead of looking for an "ubermensch" the University would be better advised to find an "uberfrau" to lead the University into the next century. After careful deliberation, I offer for your consideration as the next chancellor of the University of Kansas: Sigourney Weaver.
system as a whole.
Now, before you dismiss her candidacy, let me enumerate the qualifications and advantages that her chancellorship would bring to KU.
As Gene Bucig demonstrated, one of the primary tasks of the chancellor will be to raise revenue for the University. As an actress, Ms. Weaver would be a perfect choice. She would be able to use her charm and acting ability to convince major boosters to
Another advantage to her ties to Hollywood would be the opportunities that it would open for students in the theater and film department. Weaver's pull in Hollywood would allow students to pursue internships that would not normally be open to students at a Midwestern university.
As for her administrative acumen, her performance in "Working Girl" shows that she can be hard-nosed if necessary. Also, it will be to the chancellor's advantage to be a person of strong will. Well, for anyone who watched her in "Gorillas in the Mist," it is obvious that Sigourney Weaver is no pushover. After spending a few months in the mountains of Rwanda with a bunch of 500 lb. primates, the Kansas Legislature will be a piece of cake. Come on folks, this is the woman that took on that mother of an alien and kicked some butt! I personally think Sigourney Weaver would wipe the floor with old Norman.
donate more money to the University. Furthermore, I am confident that she would be able to attract a new group of supporters through her Hollywood connections.
Nicolas Shump is a Lawrence senior in comparative literature
Recently I have been inundated by the ads for Oliver Stone's new film, "Natural Born Killers." From what I understand, the movie is about two people committing grisly murders and the press that follows them around. It is Stone's anti-utopian view of our future.
I can see where he gets his prediction. This summer, I, embarrassingly, was one of the millions who followed the O.J. Simpson case. I am embarrassed because I contributed to the reason so many reporters engaged in poor journalism to get "the scoop." Four news helicopters following a suicidal man down the LA freeways, endangering themselves and others in trying to outdo each other was vulgar. The empty speculation that went on throughout the summer (and continues today) makes me sick. I don't think our nation has seen such a case of "yellow journalism" since the Spanish-American war, which popularized the phrase.
However, it seems that Stone is preaching to the choir. The people who would be affected by the violence in the picture probably already agree with him. While the people who he needs to convince will be just as entertained as if they had seen "T2."
DAVID ZIMMERMAN Stone's film shows dark side of society
COLUMNIST
Couldn't Stone have created a movie with the same moral but without the graphic violence? It would be hard to be as creative, but the result would have been a better film, without violence.
This is only half of Stone's prediction. He also is drawing on the increasingly violent tendencies of our society. Not only is this violence infesting our neighborhoods (where violence is the leading cause of death for young males), but it infects our entertainment as well. When I was a freshman, I went to see "Terminator 2" at the Union midnight movie. As I left, my stomach was churning from the last two hours of constant violence. I can't believe so many people liked this movie.
Even though I find myself agreeing with Stone's premise, I don't want to see this movie. From what I have heard, "Killers" is an extremely graphic film. By using violence to criticize violence, Stone is shooting himself in the foot (pun intended).
Some have told me Stone is trying to use the graphic violence in his movie to create shock value. The shock value he creates would give people an emotional pull toward his moral — that we don't want to be like this.
David Zimmerman is a Wichita senior in communication studies
HUBIE
"TRUE DEATH: 400 HORSEPOWER OF MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE PLEURING THE NIGHT THIS IS BLACK SUNGHAZE."
R. Z.
-R.2.
"TRUE DEATH: 400 HORSEPOWER OF MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE PIERCING THE NIGHT--THIS IS BLACK SUNSHINE." -R.Z.
23RD STREET—THE LIFEBLOOD OF LAWRENCE. I'M FEELING FINE IN THIS BLACK BABY OF MINE.
PUTT PUTT
SPEED UP! GET OUT OF THE WAY!
CRASH!
THE SPEED LIMIT IS 35!!!! NOT 25! AAAARGH!!
23rd STREET—THE LIFEBLOOD OF LAWRENCE. I'M FEELING FINE IN THIS BLACK BABY OF MINE.
Putt Putt
SPEED UP! GET OUT OF THE WAY!
CRASH!
THE SPEED LIMIT IS 35!!!! NOT 25!! AAAARGH!!!
By Greg Hardin
CRASH!
THE SPEED LIMIT
IS 35!!!
NOT 25!!
AAAARGH!!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
5A
Lawrence term limits denied
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Technicalities may have killed an attempt to impose term limitations on Lawrence city commissioners.
The Lawrence City Commission last night failed to place on the November ballot a proposed referendum to impose a term limit of two consecutive four-year terms on commissioners. They did so after Gerald Cooley, city attorney, said the referendum would be illegal under state law.
"This is not something we dreamed up," he told the commissioners. "It's doubtful that the law would allow this to become law."
Cooley told the commissioners the 3,830 signatures compiled by Scot
Hill. Andover senior and the state director of Kansans for Term Limits, met the state requirement for number of signatures.
But, Cooley said, small flaws doomed the referendum. He said the referendum's second section, which called upon the Lawrence city clerk to lobby the state and national governments to impose term limitations, was an administrative ordinance. Under Kansas law, an administrative ordinance — which deals with personnel matters, defines a finite goal that can be met or has no definite penalty for noncompliance — can't be put on the ballot, he said.
And because the city cannot tamper with the language of the referendum, Cooley said, the second section can't be separated from the first section. The first section dealt with the com-
The commission decided not to place the referendum on the ballot in hopes that Kansans for Term Limits wouldn't bring legal action against them. Cooley said the city's case was strong enough that court action from the organization was unlikely, thus avoiding court costs. The commission rejected another option to oppose the referendum in court itself.
missioners'term limits.
During the meeting, Bob Schulte, city commissioner, questioned the seriousness of the referendum. He asked the audience whether any of them had come to support it.
Hill was unavailable for comment after the meeting.
"Bingo," he said when nobody raised a hand.
Bikes, cars collide in rash of accidents
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
Three separate bicycle accidents that took place within a 32-minute time span yesterday sent one KU student to the hospital and caused more than $600 damage to the cars and bicycles involved.
"Three accidents is quite a few for one given day," said Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek of the KU police. "Bicyclists have to obey all traffic requirements. They are required to yield and stop at signs the same as vehicles."
Yesterday's accidents, which occurred at 10:56 a.m., 11:23 a.m. and 11:28 a.m., were unrelated, but all happened on campus.
In one of yesterday's accidents, a KU student was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and treated for
minor injuries. He was hit by a driver who apparently failed to yield, Rozmiraek said. More than $500 in damage to the vehicle and bicycle was reported.
"I didn't see her until the last minute," said the bicyclist, George Foster, Independence, Kan., junior. "I couldn't have done anything to avoid the wreck."
Foster said he was riding his 12-speed bicycle to class at Robinson Gymnasium when the driver turned in front of him, causing him to hit his head on the windshield.
"My bike is kind of a mess," he said. "This is the first time I've had an accident this bad."
Another KU student was slightly injured after he collided with a 1985 Dodge near Ellsworth Residence Hall, Rozmiakre said. About $100
damage was done to the bicycle. The student was not taken to the hospital.
The third accident, which was handled by Lawrence police, occurred at the intersection of Naismith Drive and Crescent Road in front of the Jayawk bookstore. The student was not taken to the hospital.
Final police reports on the accidents were not available yesterday.
At any given time 5,000 to 10,000 bicycles could be on campus, Rozmiarek said.
"Drivers also need to be alert that there are now more bicycles on campus," she said.
Aside from obeying all traffic laws, bicyclists need to remember that riding a bicycle on campus sidewalks is illegal, Rozmiiarek said. She said people should walk their bicycles on the sidewalk.
DOUBLE SAVINGS DOUBLE SAVINGS
SAVE up to $100 when you purchase your College Ring
Get a Gift Certificate for up to '100 to use at the Bookstore*
A savings of up to $200!
Our Biggest Sale of the Year
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES!
ARTCARVED
*Cannot be used for the purchase of Textbooks or Sale items
Sept7-9 10:00-4:00 KANSAS UNION, LEVEL4
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
Available at these locations:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
1116W23rd
Jayhawk
Bookstore
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
1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044
AMIGO'S 1819 W.23rd·842-1620
BLIMPIE SUBS AND SALADS
Get the daily special prices everyday of the week
1019 W. 23rd A.D. 842-1020
BONANZA
BURANZA
2329 S. iowa St.*842-1200
$3.99 Freshstastes Food Bar
BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢
DOMINO'S PIZZA
822 Iowa St. 841, 8000
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
DRAVE'S SNACK SHOP
1006 Massachusetts*843-0561
10% off any purchase of$2.50 or more
ESPRESS O'NOUSE
10 E. 9th St; 842 3007
$1.00 OFF Anv 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 W12th-841-2310+FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Certified Organicly Grown) with Anv Meal Purchase
2907 W 6th-841-1688+FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills)
(Drink Refill)
401 N 2n+842-0377+BUTY a cheeseburger with fries at reg.
price, get price for $1.00 Mon thru Fri 4-9m
PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
JOHNNY'S TAVERN
IMPERIAL GARDEN
$1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W.23rd;842-1212
PIZZA SHOPPE
601 Knoeld:840 0800
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*$4.00Sm.add,adds 50e;Md.$0.50.
add,adts 75e;$8.00Lg.ad,adts 1.00; Carry Out Only
RUNZA
2700 Iowa·749-2615·FREE Medium Drink with Purchase o
TACOJOHN'S
1626 W 32/d/84 B-1851-110 W 6th/B43-0936-2309 Haskell
Ave./B42-5533-Hardshell Tuscella for 's9e for (NO LIMIT)
WEST COAST SALOON
2222 Iowa St.•841-2739
$1.50 OFF Any Sandwich
Retail/Merchandise
ATHLETE'S FOOT
ATLETHET'S FOOT
914 Massachusetts-841-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE
20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals
BOBBI'S BEDROOM
9400 Joyce 840 7070
745 New Hampshire@843-3282>$25.00 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Job, System Cleanup on IBM Compatibles
CENTRAL DATA
731 Massachusetts+843-4191+15% OFF All Apparel +
FRREF Friess T-Shirt w/ purchase $250
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET
FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS
743 Massachusetts*749-4664
15% OFF Anv Item (excludes sale items)
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
1420 Crescent Rd#3, 3826
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
JAYHAWK TROPICAL FISH
10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill
846 Illinois, Suite D+B42-5950-20% Off Whisper Brand PowerFilters, and All Other Brand Undergravel Filters
JOCKS NITCH
840 Massachusetts-842-2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
837 Massachusetts+842-2992
20% OFF KU Sweatshirts
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS864-4840
Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book)£5
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4840
$5.00 If Any Jawhack Clothing or Hat Over $20.00
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-8644-4640
10% OFF Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply
KIZER-CUMMINGS
LAWRENCE ONE HOUR PHOTO
833 Massachusetts*749-4350
15% OFF Non-Sale Gold Chains
2340 S. Iowa*842-8564*30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid
MERLE NORMAN
9th & New Hampshire*841-5324 10% OFF All Skin Care Products
MIRACLE VIDEO
910 N 2n/841-8903-1910 Haskell Ave. Suite 1/841-7504
*1 $OOF Rental (Mile limit one per visit)
NATURAL WAY
820 Massachusetts*841-0110*20% OFF All Cotton T-Shirts Mens and Women's (Organic Cotton, Green Cotton, and Recycled Cotton)
740 Massachusetts+843-3933
15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
PRO SOUND
PHOTO SOUND
Lawrence, Ks*865-0692
10% OFF All Sales
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
716 Massachusetts-841-1762-00% OFF (CD-Tapes, Movies, Video
Games) Tuesdays & 15% More on CDs on Buy Backs
RECYCLED SOUNDS
RENTCO USA
1741 Massachusetts*749-1605
25% OFF All Monthly Rentals
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
701 W 9th+841-8289
15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy)
622 W 12th St. @841-9475. $2.00 Offer Any One CD, Tape,
or LP (with Value Greater than $5.00)
15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy)
VIDEO BIZ
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
SPRINGMAID/WAMSUITTA
1025 N. 3rd+832-1100
%OFF Ann Purchase
832 lowa*749-5507+2 for 1 Video Rental Monday -
Tuesday (day of offer net day).
1116W. 23rD·749-5206
20% OFF of all clothing (excluding sale items)
Services
BRADY OPTICAL
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 6th h48-1-695
10% OFF All Parts
BRADY OPTICAL
Mississippi 842-6800
5% OFF Complete Eyeglass Purcha
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
3320 Clinton PKwww.843-0367
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST
1019 Massachusetts$>843-3844*$25 00 All Fashion
Everlast Passes Valid with ODP DESCRIPTIONs Lenses On
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
15th & Kasold*832-0281*25%.OFF Initial or Annual
R.C. $ STADIUM BARBERY
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
R.C. STADIUM BARNET
1033 Massachusetts>749-5363
Any Haircut or Hairstyle $5.50
$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 Session Package (Save $5.50)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
119 Staffer-Flint-8644-3458
20% OFF Any Private Classified Ad
6A
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
SINCE 1962
NATION/WORLD
NATURALWAY
The Largest and Oldest "green" store in the U.S.as nominated in Business Magazine
820-822 Mass. 841-0100
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
PSYCHI KU Psychology Club
1st annual Meeting Thursday, September 8th,6:30 pm 547 Ernest
547 Fraser
Everyone Welcome
For information contact:
Dr. Chris Crandall or Dr. Greg Simpson 864-4131
Vatican refuses to compromise on abortion
The Associated Press
CAIRO, Egypt — Delegates at the U.N. population conference made a breakthrough yesterday night on the heated issue of abortion, but the Vatican refused to go along with the compromise.
The abortion debate has entangled efforts to draft a 20-year plan to slow the world's population growth. The hard-fought negotiations yesterday dealt with a single paragraph in the 113-page draft report.
Delegates from the 182 nations
attending the conference were to give the section final consideration today.
The United States supports the compromise, while the European Union, Norway and Sweden said it was the "rock bottom" of what they would accept, U.S. delegate David Harwood said. Iran, Pakistan and Benin, which previously sided with the Vatican on abortion, accepted the language.
The compromise paragraph would urge all governments to deal with the health impact of unsafe abortion as a major public health concern. It would
also urge governments to reduce the need for abortion by expanding and improving family planning services. The revision adds that abortion should never be "promoted" as a "method of family planning."
Vice President Al Gore, head of the U.S. delegation, sought to put the best face on a meeting with the leader of the Vatican delegation.
"I think they're finally understanding what we've said all along," he told The Associated Press. "The misunderstandings they've had before have been significantly dispelled."
But he conceded the two sides would inevitably remain divided on contraception and "an American woman's right to choose" abortion.
Gore insisted the International Conference on Population and Development "is already an outstanding success."
"There will be a broader consensus than has ever come out of a conference of this kind in all of the history of this effort" with only about 1 percent of the report still in dispute, he said.
EARN CASH
EARN CASH
& HELP OUR COMMUNITY TOO!
$15 TODAY
& $30
This Week
Walk-ins
Welcome
BY DONATING YOUR
BLOOD PLASMA
CALL FOR INFORMATION
NABI BigMedical Center
816 W. 24th
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
749-5750
NABI The Quality Sources
Dance of Africa
reggae
fest '94 sept.16/17/18
KANSAS CITY'S 5TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL
ARTS & REGGAE WORLD MUSIC FESTIVAL
PRESENTED BY FRIENDS OF REGGAE
BOOTH INFORMATION, CALL: 816-756-9616 (AFTER 5 PM)
CELLULAR
MORE INFO: 816-756-2871
IN WESTPORT • 40TH & S.W. TRAFFICWAY
English101
HAWK NIGHT
$1 BIG BEERS!!
ALL YOUR FAVORITE CLUB AND PARTY HITS!
EVERY WEDNESDAY GRANADA
1020 MASS. ST.DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
913-842-1390
BRING YOUR KU ID AND GET $1 OFF COVER
GRANADA
Pearson
Pearson Collision Repair, Inc.
Collision
Repair,
Repair. Inc.
Working on foreign cars does not mean we speak a foreign language. The professionals at Pearson Collision Repair, Inc. won't try to dazzle you with shop talk. They take the time to explain what is wrong and what needs to be done to restore your car to its pre-accident condition.
- Car-O-Liner Precision Frame Repair System
- Computerized Damage Reports Done Easily
- Computer Wheel Alignment
MasterCard
VISA
- Insurance Claims Welcome
MasterCard
- Domestic Vehicles Repaired
749-4455 Import Specialists Michael Pearson, owner 646 Conn.
--BOB FREDERICK,
UNIVERSITY OF KANS.
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
s KU Athletic Director, Bob Frederick knows the importance of helmets to KU football players. As an avid cyclist, Bob experienced firsthand the necessity of a helmet to anyone riding a bike.
You see, Bob was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital in June with multiple injuries suffered in a cycling accident. Fortunately, he was wearing a helmet. "They say he would not have lived if he hadn't had a helmet on," says Margey Frederick, Bob's wife.
Without a helmet, Bob would have been one of the 50.000 bicyclists each year
Without a helmet, Bob would have been one of the 50,000 bicyclists each year who suffer head injuries. And though helmets greatly reduce the risk of head injury, only 5% of children wear bike helmets.
During LMH's Kids' Day '94 on September 17, you can help change that. At Kids' Day you can purchase a bicycle helmet for just $13, compliments of LMH and the Kansas SAFE KIDS Coalition. This one-day event at Pinckney
"FOOTBALL OR BICYCLING TAKE IT FROM ME.WEAR A HELMET."
LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Community Care—Community Pride
749-5800
(1-800-749-2226 Outside Lawrence)
325 Maine, Lawrence, KS 66044
Elementary School in Lawrence, will highlight children's health and safety, while delighting kids with the magic of the Wizard of Oz.
So, if your children are among the who bicycle without a helmet, there's never been a more affordable time to buy one. Then wear it. Always. After all, according to Bob Frederick, you'll be benched if you don't.
KIDS' DAY'94
95%
A CHILDREN'S HEALTH AND SAFETY FAIR FOR PRESCHOOL AND ELEMENTARY AGE CHILDREN AND THEIR PARENTS.
Saturday, September 17, from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Pinckney Elementary School, 6th and Mississippi
Immunizations - Available for a small fee from the Douglas County Health Department. You must bring the child's immunization record.
Bicycle Rodeo! - Kids can bring their bicycles and navigate a challenging obstacle course. Supervised by the Lawrence Police Department. Bike check-in service available while you visit other activities.
Bike Helmet Sale - Purchase a safety-approved bike helmet for only $13. Cash only. Oz characters will be on hand to entertain and educate the kids!
Children must be accompanied by an adult.
a member of
JAYHAWK HEALTH Alliance
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
7A
Talks with Cuba reach an impasse The Associated Press
NEW YORK—U.S. and Cuban negotiators met briefly yesterday, but Cuban negotiators didn't respond to a U.S. proposal to admit at least 20,000 legal Cuban immigrants each year. The two sides appeared far from an accord on halting the exodus of Cubans fleeing across the Straits of Florida on makeshift rafts and boats.
David Johnson, representative for the U.S. delegation, told reporters after 50 minutes of talks that the Cuban side hadn't responded to the U.S. offer made Monday. The United States previously had offered to admit a "ceiling" of 20,000 Cuban immigrants.
Cuban negotiators would not comment.
Refugees relocated to Panama
The Associated Press
GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba — The first Cuban refugees to be moved out of the overflowing tent city on this U.S. military base were put aboard planes yesterday for Panama. All 100 were volunteers.
"We approached the Cuban camp leaders and told them of our plans, and 100 came up immediately," said Marine Lt. Pete Mitchell, a representative for the joint military group running the Guantanamo refugee camp.
Cubans are being transferred to refugee camps in the jungles of Panama to make room at the naval base for more of their countrymen.
Many of the Cubans flown to Panama aboard two Air Force C-130s held hands and embraced as they waited to board. They said they were optimistic that conditions at the Panama refugee camp would be better than in Guantanamo and that it would be easier to stay in touch with their relatives
from Panama.
The Cubans going to Panama didn't make much of a dent in the numbers being held at this U.S. base, where Cuban boat people have been taken since mid-August, when the United States reversed its policy of automatically granting asylum to Cuban refugees.
More than 1,000 American troops are helping move refugees from Guantanamo to a jungle clearing seven miles west of Panama City, Panama.
Atroll call yesterday, 23,231 Cubans were being housed at Guantanamo, and 3,720 more were in route after being picked up from rafts and small boats in the Straits of Florida.
Make an impression
Four campsites are being built in Panama to accommodate up to 10,000 Cubans, Pentagon representative Dennis Boxx said. He said about $38 million would be required to shelter the Cubans in Panama.
Panama agreed to shelter the refugees for six months.
plaques, awards, & gifts
Jaybowl ENGRAVING
Learn to Fly
Lawrence Air Services
Instruction•Charter
Service•Rental
842-0000
VUAPNET
FRANCE
864-3545 • kausas union • level 1
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.
Downtown Park in the rear
"Your Book Professionals"
Jayhawk Bookstore
At the top of Naismith Hill
Hrs: 8-6 M-Th., 8-5 Fri.
9-5 Sat, 12-4 Sun.
843-3826
BUCENE TUITION ACTIVITIES
SUAX FILMS
FILMSFORSEPT.6-8
MEDITERRANEO
TUES. 7:00 PM THURS. 9:30 PM
SKYLINE
TUES. 9:30 PM
WED. 7:00 PM
ANNIE HALL
ANNOYABLE TIME
WED. 9:30 PM
THURS. 7:00 PM
ALL SHOWS IN WOODRUFF AUD.
TICKETS $2.50, MONTHINGS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE Info.
VOLLEYBALL
KANSAS WATER POLO CLUB
MEETING WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7
7:45 P.M. ROBINSON NATATORIUM
No water polo experience required Some swimming ability recommended BRING YOUR SWIMMING SUITS WE WILL PRACTICE FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: Nick Pivonka: 749-3804 or
The Etc. Shop
David Reynolds: 749-1873
928 Mass. Downtown
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We repair
Brass, Aluminum,
& Plastic Radiators
Heaters, water pumps, and
A/C service tool!
842-3333
DISCOVER
MARITIME
WALNUT VALLEY FESTIVAL 23RD NATIONAL FLAT-PICKING CHAMPIONSHIPS September 15,16,17,18,1994
WINFIELD, KANSAS
FEATURING IN PERSON:
- John McCutcheon
- California
- Mike Cross
* Nick A Good
- The New Tradition
- The New Tradition
- Aileen & Elkin Thoma
- Front Range
- Back Range
- Alsen & Eskin Thomas
- The Special Consensus
Ranch Romance
Marley's Ghost
- Marley's Ghost
- Stephen Bennett
- The Special Consensus
* Pfeiffer Brothers
- Art Thieme
- Pfeiffer Brothers
- The New Potatoes
- Mery Caitlin Smith
- Bos Brown
- The New Potatoes
- George Balderose
- Andy May
- Barry Patton
- Linda Tilton
- Makin' Memories
Lou Reid, Terry Baucom & Carolin*
- Barry Patton
wv
- Lou Reid, Terry Baucou & Car
• Cathy Fink & Maroy Marzer
• St. James's Gate
• Colm O'Moorelaiddle
Spontaneous Combustion
• Cooper, Nelson & Goels
Druhh Thkvs/Second Grass
• Duck Baker & Molly Andrews
Winfield Regional Symphony
• Crow Johnson
Sat./Sun.
Fri. or Sat.
Sun. (Gate only)
*Children ages 6-11...$3 each, payable
- Crow Johnson
- Bill Barwick
FESTIVAL DAYS AND
*Children under 6 admitted free with
No mail orders after Sept. 16.
Orders received after Sept. 1
will be held at Cata,
NO BOEBRIDES.
FESTIVAL GATE AND
CAMPROUNDS WILL OPEN
THURSDAY, JULY 10 AM
ONLY WEEKEND
TICKETSHOLDER ALLOWED
ON GROUNDS PRIOR TO
MIDNIGHT AT 11:35.
WORK SHOPS
ARTS & CRAFTS FAIR,
AUTO, WELL POLICED GROUNDS
NO ANIMALS, NO BEER OR
ALCOHOL, NO DRUGS
AND NO MOTORCYCLES
(DUE TO NOISE)
© CONTESTS
Please View the Rules and Rules
Contents are limited to 40
Contestants per Contact.
'42,192 IN CONTEST PRIZES
FOR MORE INFORMATION WRITE OR CALL
walnut
valley...
association, inc.
P. O. Box 245N 918 Main Phone (316) 221-3250
Dr Pepper Dr Pepper
Tailgate Party Time
Stop By Alvins Before The Game
B-B-Q Beef Sandwiches
Stop by for B-B-Q 11 A.M. TO 7 P.M.
"Kick The Season Off Right"
9th and IOWA
PEPSI
POKEW KOCH
New York
PEPSI
488
Limit 1 w/$10 in other purchases
Keg Beer
16 gal.
39'99
Lowest
Price in
Town!
Call
843-2313
Alvin's
Cost Kutter
IGA
HOMETOWN
PROUD
VISA
MasterCard
DIDCOVER
Accepted
•Check Cashing
•Post Office
•Carry Outs
•Deli
•Bakery
•Videos
843-2313
9th & Iowa
Alvin's
Cost Kutter
IGA
HOMETOWN
PROUD
VISA
Check Cashing
Post Office
Carry Duts
Doil
Bakery
Videos
DUCOVER
Accepted
843-2313
9th & Iowa
Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream 2/$300 pints
Doritos Chips
2/$500
pp.$2.99
Lays or Ruffles
Potato Chips
2/$500
COFFEE CUP
COFFEE CUP
This will be BEST FESTIVAL IN THE U.S. this year!!!
Thursday Sept. 8 through Friday Sept. 9 10am----4:30pm
Volunteer and Intern Placement Fair (USA,International,Lawrence)
at the ECM Center (1 bl. north of Kansas Union) Over 525 organizations
*Skills needed (depending on position): construction, ecology, computer programming, advocacy, agriculture, nursing, ophthalmology, physical therapy, recreation research, archeology, scuba diving, arts, teaching, social work, legal/paralegal, languages education, community service, engineering, service with disabled, health care, manual labor, ministry, nutrition, restoration, trail building, camp counseling business, clerical, carpentry, childcare, cross-cultural, and refugee assistance.
AND
The Praxis Project
Aunique way to volunteer in Lawrence/Douglas County
1. Choose from 48 organizations/groups in Lawrence/Douglas County.
2. Volunteer for at least 1-2 hrs./wk. in any of the following areas: aging, youth, crosscultural, education/tutoring, prison, mental/physical health, hunger, shelter, etc.
3. Do a "Praxis" meeting (reflect on your experience with other volunteers) twice a semester [1 hr./meeting]
The New 1994-1995 Kansan Card
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Valid Through July 31, 1994
NCCS
KU
C A R D
Valid Through July 31, 1995
NCCS
NCCS
New Offers! More Savings!
The Kansan Card can Save YOU Hundreds of Dollars on Your Daily Purchases! Watch for Tables and Displays on How to Receive the Ultimate Savings Card.
8A
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
You'll
Dillons FOOD STORES
*3000 W. 6th
*1015 W.23rd
KU Embroidered
Long Sleeve
Henley T-Shirt
With 3 Buttons. Ash Gray,
White or Red
FJKU
From Our Bakery...
*1740 Massachusetts
$2299
Dillons Homestyle Buns & Coneys
1
What We've Don
See Dillons For All Your Tailgate Party Needs!
In Lawrence
89
From Our Flower Shop...
"Hand-Tied Bokays"
Friday, Sept 9th at 7 p.m.
Sunday, Sept 11th at 2 p.m.
Dillon Floral Managers will be conducting demos on the art of making "Hand-Tied Bokays" in all three Lawrence stores at the following times: Thursday, Sept. 8th at 10 a.m.
Come to any Dillon Flower Shop at one of these times, pick out your favorite flowers and learn how to and arrange them in a beautiful "Hand-Ted Bakey"
A drawing will be held for the "demo bokay" and vase and will be given away at the end of each session.
Get A Free Turkey For Shopping Dillons!
For $50 or more in grocery purchases, you'll get a punch on your "Free Turkey Punch Card" at your Lawrence Dillon Stores. After 9 punches, you get a free 10-14 Ib. Food Club Grade A Frozen Turkey. After 12,a 14-20 Ib. turkey. After 15 punches,you'll receive a 20+ Ib. turkey free of charge and the first punch is on us!
the first punch is on us!
Your card may be redeemed between November 14th and 24th...just in time for Thanksgiving. So plan a big dinner and let Dillons provide the bird!
FoodClub
POPUP
BASTED
Young Turkey
WITH GIBLETS
CONTAINING UP TO 9% OF A SOLUTION
10 CHANGE, SOUSSESS
Limit 1 punch per store visit. See further details in our Lawrence stores.
Alamo Sweepers
11/30/2016
PASTA MADRE
Italian Sausage
160g
PASTA MADRE
Italian Sausage
160g
ALLERGIC
Italian Sauage
SAFT WORST
BILLE
Italian Sauage
BROWN BY BIRT
PAIN
BROWN WIRET
PAIN
BROWN WIRET
Dillons Bratwurst, Italian Sausage, Hot Italian Sausage or Brew & Brats
$189 lb.
Lay's
Taster & Crispier
Lay's
Taster & Crispier
Lay's
Taster & Crispier
Potato
Chips
Sour Cream
& Onion
Lay's/Wavy Lay's Potato Chips
PEPSI
PEPSI
PEPSI
MOUNTAIN DEW
PEPSI
PEPSI
MOUNTAIN DOWNEY
DEW PEPSI
2/$3
Pepsi,
Diet Pepsi,
Caffeine
Free Diet,
or Mt. Dew
12 Pack, 12 oz. Cans
$275
2 Liter Bottle...$1.19
ROCKY TOP COLA
ROCKY TOP COLA
ROCKY TOP COLA
ROCKY TOP COLA
Rocky Top Pop 6 Pack 12 oz. Cans Asst. Varieties
KEYSTONE
LIGHT
KEYSTONE
KEYSTONE
99¢
Keystone Beer 6 Pack 12 oz. Cans Regular, Light, or Dry
$299
TOMBSTONE
Original
Lupom pizza
Tombstone Frozen Pizza 18.25-23.6 oz. Asst. Varieties
$299
Jolly Time
LITTLE BLUE MILK
PLUMP WEST POPCORN
MICROWAVE
POP CORN
Quickly Churned Peanut
SHOOT OUT!
Jolly Time
Natural Dietary Fiber
MICROWAVE
POP CORN
Liberty Gold
INFUSED WOOL
Liberty Gold
INFUSED WOOL
Liberty Gold
INFUSED WOOL
Jolly Time Popcorn Selected Varieties 3 pack...
Liberty Gold Pineapple
20 oz. Asst. Varieties
57¢
Puffs
Puffs
DONUTS & MILK
Puffs Facial Tissues
175 Ct. White, Assorted, Pop Up,
108 Ct. Pius, or Extra Strength
89¢
Buy One Get One FREE!
89¢
1
From Our Seafood Department...
From our Deli...
Farmland Wafered Ham Water Added $199 lb.
Prime Cuts Frozen Halibut Or Swordfish Steaks... $599 Lb.
$599 Lb.
-Full Service Catering: For one stop planning- ordering and delivery call 843-7648.
-Be sure to stop by our new cappuccino and espresso bars in our stores at 3000 W. 6th & 1015 W. 23rd.
Combination Plate Kung Pao Chicken, 2 Chicken Rangoes, Choice of Fried Bice
CHINESE KITCHEN!
Luncheon
Special $349
Available 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily...
$349
...
$339
Available only in our stores at 3000 W. 6th & 1015 W. 23rd
Photofinishing...
-For Your Tailgate Party-
-Deli Coupon-
$2.00 OFF
(Available only at our 3000 W. 6th and 1015 W. 23rd locations.)
Any 3 Foot Hero Sandwich Regular, Italian, or Deluxe
Dellbus FOOD STORE
Limit One Coupon Per Sandwich.
Coupon Good Sept 7-13, 1994.
Not Included In Double Coupon Program.
New 1 Hour Photofinishing 2nd Set FREE! Every Wed. & Sat.
-Pharmacy Coupon-
$5.00 OFF
Any New Or Transferred Prescription
DILLON'S PHARMACY
Wild with other prescription offers.
Limit one coupon per prescription.
Prescriptions less than $5.00 are free.
Not included.
Coupon expires 10/31/14.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7,1994
SECTION
Michigan to take on the Irish
'Vintage rhetoric part of mental edge
Jayhawks spike 'Roos in opener
By Ron Lesko The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Let the games begin.
Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz rolled out some of his best "we're-worse-than-they are" material yesterday as his No. 3 Fighting Irish prepare for their critical second-week game against No. 6 Michigan in South Bend on Saturday.
Even with Michigan running back Tyrone Wheatley doubtful with a separated shoulder and two other key Wolverines expected to miss the game, Holtz slathered on the hyperbole.
"This Michigan team is the most talented, best football team they've had since I've been here," he said. "... Right now, I worry about Michigan embarrassing us."
Typical Holtz.
For his part, Michigan's Gary Moeller quivers at the thought of Fighting Irish quarterback Ron Powlus, even though Notre Dame could neither run the ball nor stop the run against Northwestern in last weekend's 42-15 victory.
The Wolverines also lost linebacker Matt Dyson in that game.
Michigan struggled at times in a 34-26 victory over Boston College without Wheatley and receiver Walter Smith, both preseason casualties.
It is vintage coaching rhetoric: don't give the opponent any extra incentive before the big game.
But one team will solidify its place as a legitimate national championship contender Saturday, the other will need lots of help to get back in the race. It has been this way between these traditional rivals for more than a decade.
8
"You're never going to be able to handle something like this," Moeller said of the injuries, "whether it's the beginning of the season or the end of the season."
These games make a season, and that one dream season can make a coach's career. Holtz and Moeller know that, and their griping comes more from pure anxiety than a desire to gain a mental edge.
Holtz has beaten Michigan five of eight times since he came to South Bend in 1986, with a 17-17 tie two years ago.
Moeller only has beaten the Irish once in four tries. That 1991 victory at Michigan Stadium propelled Desmond Howard to the Heisman Trophy and made the Wolverines a national title front-runner, until they lost at home to Florida State the following week.
This year is the last time Michigan and Notre Dame will play until 1997.
Kansas junior outside hitter Jitter Larson stretches to spike the ball past UMKC's Kelly Wempe last night at Allen Field House. Kansas defeated the Kangaroos in five games.
Kansas coach finds effective lineup with freshmen help
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
Ayoung, Kansas volleyball team displayed the character of a group of veteran players last night in defeating a more experienced UMKC team.
Kansas won its home-opener last night in Allen Field House, taking the match in five games. 11-15,15-11,15-4,11-15,15-11.
Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said the match gave her an opportunity to find a consistent starting lineup.
"Right now we're still working on finding six players to mesh out on the court," Schonewise said. "We have talent and athletes. It's just a matter of finding the right team to put out on the court."
Kansas started three freshmen, including Trisha Lindgren at setter and Maggie Mohrfeld and Leslie Purkeypile at the middle-blocker positions.
Junior outside hitter Jenny Larson had 11 kills for the night, starting at the right side of the court, while sophomore outside hitter Katie Walsh led all attackers with 13 kills.
Walsh and sophomore Lara Izokaitis combined for 24 kills on the night to make for a strong left side.
Shonewise said they were smart players with the ability to read the court.
"Katie and Lara hit great shots," she said.
"They know where the players are and where to find the holes. They were hitting the corners tonight."
Kansas lost the first game 15-11. But the Jayhawks came back strong in the second game to win 15-11.
Schonewise tried different player combinations during the match, seeking an effective sixplayer lineup.
Kansas won its second game when Schonewise put four freshmen out on the court: middle blockers Kendra Kahler, Leslie Purkeypile and setter Trisha Lindgren. That
Upcoming games
Sept. 9-10 Southwest Missouri St.
at Springfield, Mo.
Sept. 18-17 Virginia Tech Tournament
at Blacksburg, Va.
Sept. 20 Wichita State
at Wichita
Sept. 23-24 Nebraska Tournament
at Lincoln, Neb.
Sept. 28 Iowa State
at Ames
group, teamed with Walsh and Isokaitis, seemed to play with confidence, Schonewise said.
"We had a huddle in the beginning and told ourselves we couldn't slack off," Purkeypile said. "We weren't nervous tonight. It was great to be playing at home with a crowd."
Purkepyile and Mohrfeld led the team in blocks, combining for 11.
Larson said it was good to have two dependable freshmen as middle-blockers.
"I feel very confident with their blocking," she said. "It's a big relief knowing we have two strong middle blockers in the game."
Kangaroo coach Dawn Bunting said the Kansas team showed character coming back in the second game without flinching.
"They came back and played really hard and they didn't falter that second game. They showed some real character out there." Bunting said. "They're a young team, but they showed they have the talent. They didn't give up."
MICHIGAN STATE PREVIEW
Kansas showed signs of inexperience in the match with mental breakdowns, committing serving and passing errors at crucial times.
Starting the home season with a victory, the team can only improve with time and experience. Schonewise said.
"They did some very good things tonight," Schonewise said. "It's everyone's job to better the ball out on the court."
Larson said she was glad to be back at Kansas.
"Having a home crowd was nice," she said.
It's good to be back — there's just something about playing at home."
Spartans rely on intelligence
Larson said she was glad to be back at Kansas.
After a tournament at Colorado State last weekend, Kansas has a record of 2-3.
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
When the Kansas football team faces the Michigan State Spartans at 7 p.m. Saturday, the Jayhawks will be up against more than an athletic and skilled Big Ten Conference foe.
Kansas will play a team led by intelligence.
Michigan State senior flanker Mill Coleman returns as the Spartans' flashiest and most studious player.
Coleman's stats and awards speak for his abilities on the field.
After being named Michigan State's most valuable player in 1992, Coleman had his best year receiving in 1993 with 48 catches, finishing third on the Michigan State all-time list for catches in a season.
Coleman was selected to the 1992 and 1993 Honorable Mention All-Big Ten team. This year, he needs 46 catches to break the school record of 146 held by Atlanta Falcon wide receiver Adrean Rison.
Coleman's awards off the field speak for his academic ability and reflect on his football ability.
He was selected to the Academic All-Big Ten team his first three seasons and was selected to the CoSIDA District IV Academic All-American Team in 1992 and 1993. Because Coleman was redshirted as a freshman, he graduated in four years with a business administration degree and is now studying for a master's in finance.
player will do on any given play, said Michigan State wide receiver's coach Skip Pete.
Coleman doesn't leave his intelligence in the classroom. He has knowledge of what each
"The strongest asset Mill Coleman has is a great understanding of our offense." Peeled said. "He used to be a quarterback.
"When you have an understanding of what the defense is going to do on each play, that is a huge asset." Peete said.
Coleman said that he agreed experience was important and that he was still learning. In the learning process, Coleman stressed repetition. He said he spent this summer and every summer working out and running routes.
After a summer spent trying to improve his game, Coleman will start his senior season playing the team he had his best game against last year.
passes in 11 of 12 games, and against Kansas had eight receptions for 112 yards. Both were career highs.
"The coaches called some pretty good plays to get me in the open." Coleman said.
Last season, Coleman caught
"If we win and we're successful, all the individual stuff will come with it," Coleman said. "I'm only one part of the team."
Despite this humility, Coleman could break the school record for receptions and receive All-Big Ten honors.
The coaches will look to Mill Coleman to defeat Kansas.
"We've been concentrating on designing plays to go against the Kansas defense," Peete said of Coleman's adversaries in the secondary.
"He'll have the opportunity to play against a lot of different guys."
Jayhawks to kick up spirit at tonight's kickoff rally
Kansanstaffreport
The Kansas football team is hoping to see large crowds this season at Memorial Stadium. The Jayhawks will begin their season with the third annual Kick off pep rally at 6:30 tonight at the Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
After performances by Kansas' spirit squads and the Marching Jayhawks, Coach Glen Mason and selected players will speak about the Jayhawks' home opener against Michigan State.
1985
The entire team will meet fans and sign autographs after the speeches. Posters and senior team photos will be distributed to fans.
Meghan Dougherty / KANSAN
Kansas sophomore runner Eric Richard(left) and senior runner Kevan Long stretch on the Memorial Stadium field prior to cross country practice yesterday. The Kansas men's and women's cross country teams open the 1994 season Saturday and play host to six teams in the Jayhawk Invitational at Rim Rock Farm. The Kansas men's team returns its top two runners from 1992, All-Big Eight performers Michael Cox and David Johnston, who both sat out last season.
Tennis partners earn respect
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
For the last two years, they've been perfecting their show at Kansas. Last week, they took it to Broadway.
Well, it wasn't exactly Broadway, but the women's doubles tennis team of Nora Koves and Rebecca Jensen competed in New York at the U.S. Open. Koves-Jensen won their first-round match Thursday in straight sets 6-4, 6-4 but were defeated in the second round Saturday 6-2, 6-2.
"The first match they played was probably one of the best matches I've ever seen them play," Kansas women's tennis coach Chuck Merzbacher said.
Koves and Jensen have been members of the Kansas tennis team for the last three years and have been doubles partners for two years. They won the NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Doubles Championship last spring to earn their U.S. Open invitation.
When Merzbacher put Koves and Jensen together, he was looking for complementary players, one outgoing and one quiet. This is normally the
"You need the power, but you also need somebody that's going to be consistent," Merzbacher said.
Koves and Jensen were unique because each could play both the role of aggressor and the role of stabilizer, Merzbacher said.
formula that equals doubles success
"With Rebecca and Nora, I think when one is more aggressive, the other one backs off," he said. "I wouldn't say one is definitely one way."
Much of the success Koves-Jensen has experienced is a direct result of their friendship.
Something Merzbacher could not have planned when he paired them up was how Koves and Jensen would get along. However, the team has been quite compatible.
"We understand each other on and off the court," Koves said. "We are very good friends, too."
Since all of the pieces have fallen into place, Koves and Jensen have experienced success never seen before at Kansas. Merzbacher attempted to put their success into perspective.
"To win an NCAA Championship and go the U.S. Open and win a round, we may never ever, ever see that again here," he said.
Koves is returning to Kansas for her senior year, while Jensen is foregoing her final year of eligibility to play professionally.
Even though they may have played their last doubles match together for awhile, Koves said she would like to join her partner on the pro tour.
V
Merzbacher said the team should be highly regarded in the collegiate tennis.
"I wouldn't say they're the greatest team that ever played collegiate tennis, but they're one of the greatest teams that have passed through the college ranks," Merzbacher said. "You've got to give them that much credit."
By winning the college championship, Koves and Jensen accomplished a first in Kansas tennis history.
V
"The University should take pride in it because we don't see those things everyday," Merzbacher said.
$ \angle k $
1
2B
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
804 Mass
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizzy Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass* Lawrence, KS
SUNFLOWER
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HASSIMINE
520 West 23rd
B41-5885
FULL MTO ZELL REDKEN
---
5
843-5000
Crown Cinema
BEFORE & PM. ADULTS $3.00
( LIMITED TO SEATING )
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
IOWA MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191
Wagons East PB-13 9:30
In The Army Now PB 5:15,7:30
HILLGREST
925 IOWA 841 5191
Milk Money PB-13 5:00,7:15,9:30
Lion King PB 5:15,7:30,9:30
Camp Nowhere PB 5:15,7:30
The Mask PB-13 9:45
The Client PB-13 5:00,7:15,9:30
Clear & Present Danger PB-13 5:00,8:00
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 841 5191 $1.25
Maverick PB-13 4:50,7:20,9:50
I Love Trouble PB 5:00,7:30,9:50
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence's Largest
Supplier of
Darkroom Materials
1610 West 23rd Street
841-7205
Lock It. Keep It!
genuine Kryptonite
On SALE!
$19.95
ends September 8, 1994
T
RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc.
916 Mass., (913)841-6642
VOWELS ARE FATE IN ALL
The Associated Press
There were mixed feelings among NHL players as training camps opened with the threat of a lockout looming.
NHL players wary of lockout
Wayne Gretzky, the league's career leader in goals, assists and points, was worried about upsetting the fans.
"We're not as powerful and we don't have the history that baseball does, especially in areas like Florida and California, so we're just gaining momentum in those areas," Gretzky said before the Los Angeles Kings' first practice Monday.
The 1994-95 regular season is due to begin Oct. 1, but there is no collective bargaining agreement and a lockout is a possibility.
"It would be tough to lose a lot of those fans at this point in time
"With baseball on strike, fans that used to turn to baseball will be turning to other sports. It's a very big year for hockey and I know both sides understand that and that's why I think negotiations will roll along and the season will start as usual."
Teammate Rob Blake, a defenseman and player representative who agreed to a four-year contract with the Kings on Monday, was more confident that matters would be resolved.
because fans are fed up with sports in general, not just jockey. I just think the timing is negative for our sport and it would be unfortunate for us."
GOLF Unlimited
SIMPLY OFFERABLE
WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
601 Kasold Drive, Suite B-103,
Lawrence, Ks. 66049
913-832-2582
10% off any
purchase with KUID
(excludes golfballs)
Monday-Saturday 10-7
Sunday 12-5
"It's always exciting to be starting a new season — even after 15 years," Gartner said. "I guess when I get to the point I'm not excited about coming to camp, I should hang 'em up."
NHL Players Association president Mike Gartner, while happy to be in camp with the Toronto Maple Leafs, was wary of the possibility of a work stoppage.
Mark Recchi, the Philadelphia Flyers' player representative, acknowledged that camps could close any time if negotiations stall.
"It's a subject (lockout) that's on everybody's mind," Gartner said. "Everybody is concerned that the season might not start on time."
"It's going to be day-by-day," Recci said. "I think we've just got to go at it like we've got to get ready for Oct. 1. I think Oct. 1 will really tell what's going to happen."
There are no formal negotiations planned this week between the NHL and the players'union.
Spice it up every night!
Monday: $6.95 Pitchers of Margaritas $4.25 Pitchers of Beer
Tuesday: $1.50 Strawberry Margaritas $.95 Well Drinks $1.50 Amaretto Sours
$1.50 Amaretto Sours
Wednesday: $.25 Draws
$1.25 Margaritae
$1.25 Guillem
Thursday :$1.00 Draws
Friday: $8.95 Pitchers of Margaritas
$1.25 Margaritae
DOS
HOMBRES
RESTAURANTE
Saturday: 2 for 1 Well Drinks
Sunday: $4.25 Pitchere of Beer
Come Party on the Patio!
815 New Hampshire 841-7287
OLYMPUS
Pearsoner S924
Never miss another •pqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmn.
"Power is knowledge." (Batteries not included)
Keep your brain charged. Start talking into an Olympus Microcassette recorder. It gives you more power to memorize, summarize, analyze, fantasize, and fully realize your own brilliance. It also takes notes five times faster than you can write them, read them, correct them, and rewrite them. Inside the classroom or out, an Olympus Microcassette™ Recorder helps keep your mind on.
Available on Camera America 1610 West 21st Street, Lawrence, Kansas 60464 • Wolf's Camera Shop 615 Kansas Avenue, Topeka, Kansas 66061.
And Other Fine Photos. You can't find the Olympus Meteorux. Recount you want (the 2012 film is here) call 1-822-100-3400 for information.
OLYMPUS
MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM
THE PIRATE
AEROBICS with
CS
////
The Women's Fitness Facility
BODY BOUTIQUE
Purchase 10 tans for $30 and get 5 tans FREE
- Nautilus & Freeweights
- Stairmasters/Treadmill
- Lifecycles/Rowing Machine
- Full Spa Area
- Personal Fitness Training
- Full Sea Area
- 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
FARMER
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
WEDNESDAYSPECIALS NO COVER $ . 50 DRAWS,$1.75 SCHOONERS
THURSDAYSPECIALS $1.50 Domestic bottles, 1.25 pitchers at the Up & Under
Dailyfoodspecials
Up & Under available for private parties (call for reservations) 842-0377
---
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
3B
- Osborne ignores polls, again
The Associated Press
LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska coach Tom Osborne would just as soon have the polls go away.
Nebraska is just one game into the season. But the Cornhuskers jumped around Florida and into the No.1 spot in this week's Associated Press and CNN-USA Today nolls.
Osborne said yesterday even he doesn't know how good his team is at this stage.
"I think too much is made of the polls right now," Osborne said. "And even at the end of the season."
He would be in favor of a computerized system that would make use of what he calls pertinent information on teams to produce an objective rating, but the longtime coach isn't sold on opinion polls.
Osborne wasn't happy with the ratings game a year ago, when teams jumped around his unbeaten Cornhuskers late in the year as bowl assignments were being set up.
But he has always said that he can't do anything about what people think,
so he'd just as soon coach and let other people worry about it.
That will be the case this week when he tries for another victory on national television. The initial test for Nebraska went well in a 31-0 whipping of then-No. 25 West Virginia in the Kickoff Classic on Aug. 28.
Nebraska plays at Texas Tech tomorrow night on ESPN.
Osborne said he won't be playing that game with one eye on how the polls might react, considering Nebraska jumped around Florida despite the Gators' 70-21 opening victory.
"I'd be very happy with a win, and that's what we're going down there for," he said. "We don't play for the polls here."
Osborne said there was much room for improvement for his team, particularly in the area of turnovers. Nebraska had five against West Virginia.
Quarterback Tommie Frazier, who had two interceptions and a lost fumble, said he wasn't satisfied with his performance. Still, he ran for three
touchdowns and threw for another.
The junior said people who thought he played well only looked at the touchdowns and statistics (100 yards passing, 130 rushing) and not the rest of his game.
"The coaches dissect how we play and tell us when we do something wrong," he said. But he said he had learned from the experience and had his mind set on doing better this time around.
Texas Tech (1-0) also will help keep his mind on his game, Frazier said. A year ago, in Lincoln, the Red Raiders had the Cornhuskers on the ropes through three quarters.
Frazier, who had severely sprained an ankle the week before, played, but the coaches called fewer options. It wasn't until the fourth quarter that Nebraska was able to wear down Texas Tech on the way to a 50-21 win.
Frazier said the No. 1 ranking won't make any difference to Texas Tech tomorrow.
"We expect a good effort from everyone we play," he said.
NFL BRIEFS
Troubled Steelers guard reported missing by wife
The Associated Press
PITTSBURGH — Pittsburgh Steelers guard Carlton Haselrig's wife has filed a missing persons report on him.
Haslinger, a 1992 All-Pro with a history of substance abuse, left the Steelers' training camp Aug. 15 without explanation. The Steelers later scratched him from the 1994 roster by placing him on the "left camp" list.
Haseligi's wife, Sarah, recently filed the missing persons report with police in Monroeville, Pa. where the couple and their two children live.
Haselrig's agent, Steve Weinberg, also wants to speak to him.
"I'd like to find out what he's thinking," he said. One of the last reported Haselrig sightings was Aug. 18, when police, a bartender and bar patrons said Haselrig punched out the window of his sport vehicle after locking his keys in his car in East Liverpool, Ohio.
Former Dolphin defenseman dies at 49
The Associated Press
DURHAM, N.C. — Bob Matheson, a key member of the "53 Defense" that led the Miami Dolphins to three straight Super Bows in the early 1970s, has died after a long battle with Hodgkin's disease. He was 49.
Matheson died Monday at Duke University Hospital. A first-team All-American for Duke in 1966, Matheson was a first-round draft pick of the Cleveland Browns.
was a first draft pick of the Cleveland Browns. He joined the Dolphins in 1971 and was a key member of the "53 Defense," named for his uniform number, which helped Miami get to three straight Super Bowls, winning against Washington in 1973 and Minnesota in 1974.
Matheson stayed with Miami through the 1979 season, then returned to Duke as an assistant coach.
He continued coaching even after he was diagnosed with cancer, working for John Gutenkut at Minnesota from 1988 to 1990, but then returned to Durham to work for the cancer research center there.
Rice touchdown record
San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Jerry Rice set the all-time touchdown record Monday night when he scored his 127th career touchdown. Year-by-year comparison of touchdown receptions with hall of fame receiver Steve Largent:
Steve Largent Jerry Rice
'76 4
'77 10
'78 8
'79 9
'80 6
'81 9
'82 3
'83 11
'84 12
'85 6 3
'86 9 15
'87 8 22
'88 2 9
'89 3 17
'90 13
'91 14
'92 7*
*Through 12 games
SOURCE: Seattle Seahawks,
San Francisco 49ers
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Record-setting Rice to meet KC's Montana
The Associated Press
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Jerry Rice had little time to savor the record-setting effort that made him the NFL's all-time touchdown leader.
No sooner had he scored his 127th career touchdown Monday night in San Francisco's 44-14 rout of the Los Angeles Raiders than the 49ers wide receiver was caught up again in the Joe Montana-Steve Young rivalry.
The 49ers travel to Kansas City next Sunday for their first confrontation ever with Montana. He led San Francisco to four Super Bowl wins in the 1980s before losing his job to Young and joining the Chiefs in a 1992 trade.
"We've got a big game coming up, and I'm not going to have a lot of time to enjoy it," said Rice, who surpassed Hall of Fame fullback Jim Brown's previous mark when he scored his third touchdown of the game.
"But it'll be nice to see Joe again. He helped me get this record," Rice said.
He's right about that. Montana and Rice connected on 55 touchdown passes. Young and Rice have hooked up for scores 49 times, including two against the Raiders.
The first came on a 69-yard bomb from Young. Rice then made like a running back to pull into a tie with Brown, scoring on a 23-yard reverse and set the record with 4:05 to go when he' out jumped Albert Lewis for the ball and tumbled into the end zone.
"He made a great play," said Lewis, who played with Montana last year in Kansas City. "I was grabbing at his arm, grabbing at the ball, but somehow he managed to hang onto it."
Young nearly didn't get the pass off.
"I'm embarrassed it was a little short," said Young, who threw under pressure. "I had someone on my back and that's all I had."
"He was crying; he deserved to cry," running back Ricky Watters said. "He worked so hard for this."
Teammates rushed to congratulate Rice, and fittedly the celebration took place in the end zone. Rice was overcome with emotion.
Rice actually thought he was done for the night after scoring his second touchdown but was called back to the field by coaches to go for the record-breaker.
With the record taken care of, the attention shifts to the Montana-Young saga.
So, did the 49ers make the right decision in keeping Young and trading Montana? Rice may have an opinion, but he's keeping it to himself.
"I'm not going to put myself on the spot by saying, what if or what, you know. It's up to the organization," he said.
Rice said he likes the way he and Young have developed as a tandem and thinks they'll get even better. But there's also a lot of memories and big plays he shares with Montana.
"I watch Joe play during the season. I watch him throw those balls. I watch him place those balls right in receivers hands," Rice said.
"It brings back a lot of memories to me. But you know. One thing I never told Joe. I never told Joe he was the greatest to ever play the game. It's weird because you get caught up at times and you don't think about situations like that until something happens. And he was the best to ever play the game."
Henry T's
Bar&Grill
6th & Kasold
749-2999
REVO Sunglasses
Wednesday 15¢ Wings! $1.50 Domestic Longnecks We are your NFL ticket so don't miss a game!!!
IN MANY COMPANIES
IT TAKES YEARS TO PROVE YOU'RE
MANAGEMENT MASTER
WE'LL GIVE YOU C
FRESHMEN, SOPHOMORES AND JUNIORS
Full-time students train during the summer only.
Summer Pay — $1,600 to $2,700.
Disenroll from the program anytime after training.
Summer Pay — $1,600 to $2,700.
Guaranteed Pilot Positions.
College Financial Aid - $100 a month.
Starting Salary — $24,680 to $29,620.
Interview with the Marine Officer Selection Team
10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Wednesday, Sept. 7
in the Kansas Union
M M
Call us in Kansas City at 1-800-S311-1885
Women and Minorities are encouraged to apply.
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
The Etc. Shop
cannondale
handbuilt meticulously designed outrageous performance
i r
OL
CANNONDALE mountain bikes start at $479.95
RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc
916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642
All KU Students are Invited! KU School of Business CAREER FAIR
928 Mass.
Downtown
FREE Transportation from campus every half hour at Watson Library and at Summerfield Hall.
UTC
THURSDAY, September 8 1994. 1-6p.m.Lawrence Holidome
- Investigate Internship Opportunity
- Match Career Goals with Available jobs.
*Explore Opportunities in Business
We Buy Textbooks Daily
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Available at both Union locations.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
COMPAQ
PRESARIO
486SX/25 microprocessor
3. 5" HD Floppy Drive
4mb RAM
200mb Hard Drive
COMPAQ
FAX Modem/Answering Machine combo
DOS, Windows 3.1 and much more
$999.00 Limited Availability
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
the bookstore alternative at the top of Naismith Hill
1420 Crescent RoadLIlawrence, KS 66044
843-3826
lifestyles
But seriously folks
Mark Mallouk is trying to make a living out of making people laugh
Mark Mallouk, Prairie Village senior,
practices his comedy routine in the mirror.
Photo by Julianna Peter
I knew my parents didn't like me when my twin brother's birthday cake said "We love you very much." My cake said, "You're a tax deduction."
By Casey Barnes Kansan staff writer
Mark Mallouk would not mind making a living as a regular guest on "Saturday Night Live," but his real aspirations are much higher.
He wants to star in a Mentos commercial.
Mallouk, Prairie Village senior and stand up comic, is joking about plugging the mint known as Mentos.
Even when talking about his future in comedy, Mallouk is a comedian. He makes jokes about jokes and says he has had a sense of humor as long as he can remember.
"In kindergarten I was the class clown," Mallouk said. "I remember peeing on myself during recess just to get attention."
Today he doesn't have to try so hard to be in the spotlight.
His act, which started receiving recognition when he was a sophomore at the University of Kansas, now has flourished into a professional career. Last spring, a talent agent arranged for him to tour in Colorado and the Kansas City area during the summer. This fall he plans to travel to Las Vegas to work at The Improv and Catch a Rising Star and to San Francisco to work the Punch Line. All three are major clubs in the comedy scene, Mallouk said.
He attributes his success to his favorite comedian, Nick Griffin. Griffin, the older brother of a childhood friend, now is a professional comic working in Los Angeles. It was Griffin who wrote Malkouk's first act, which Malkouk performed on stage when he was 14 years old. Griffin also recommended Malkouk to the agent
In his second year at KU Mallouk decided to give comedy another try, performing on open-mike nights at Stanford and Sons in Westport in Kansas City. Mo.
Although he progressively improved, he said, life as a novice wasn't easy.
"the first 10 or so times, no one laughed," Mallouk said. "it sucked. I would drive 45 minutes to Kansas City and then back again, and no one laughed at my act."
All jokes aside, Mallouk takes his comical side seriously and has planned his academic life around it.
Mallouk's first big break came in the spring of 1993 when he found out he was going to perform an in-between act for Rock Chalk Revue. He decided he had better get funny.
He is graduating in May with a triple degree in economics, psychology, and human development and family life. He plans to earn a masters degree in business
I remember peeing on myself during recess just to get attention
"There I was, wearing a tuxedo in a high school gym on a Friday night without a date," Mallouk said. "It reminded me of my high school prom."
administration at Pepperdine
University in Manila, Canl,
Santa Clara University
in Santa Clara, Calif.
or the University of
Las Vegas in Las
Vegas. All three
schools are close to
Los Angeles, Las
Vegas and San Francisco
— three of the biggest
— traveling 40 hours a week to get their start."
"Getting an MBA is the avenue I'm going to take right now," Mallouk said. "I want to be a professional comedian, but I don't want to start how other comics do it."
While Mallouk seems ahead of the game in comedy, he isn't missing out on the life of a college student.
Mallouk, whose parents originally are from Egypt, explained why his three Sigma Chi roommates adored him.
not as cool as the other guys in the house." Mallouk said. "But they've always accepted me because they thought I'd be good at building beer-can pyramids."
Whether he is telling a joke or just watching television, his best friends say that when Mallouk is around there is never a dull moment.
"He's the best person to talk to about a problem," said Jason O'Brien, Prairie Village senior and friend of Mouluk's.
"I'm first generation from Egvdt. so I'm
"He can make the whole situation seem lighter than it is. His best quality off-stage is that he can make anybody feel good."
Casey Matile, Emporia senior, said Mallouk was like comedian Jerry Seinfeld but dirtier.
Although Mallouk has many talents and is on the road to success in all of them, his real aspiration is to be on television, a goal he partially has achieved already.
His act, which he describes as suggestive but clean, can be seen on the show "Stand-up Stand-up" on Comedy Central, a comedy channel found on Sunflower Cablevision's channel 12.
He also performs for Student Union Activities frequently and can be seen in October and November performing at Stanford and Sons.
AIDS patient claims traditional Chinese herbs and acupuncture have kept him healthy and strong for nine years
The Associated Press
At three he was diagnosed with asthma. From then until his late teens, he would spend six to nine months of the year pumped full of pills that would speed up his system, only to send it crashing down later.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — "Mike" was always a sickly child.
So when he found out in 1985 that he had AIDS, he decided to forego the doctors, the hospitals and the drugs. Instead, he looked East for an answer.
"I haven't used any Western medicine at all," the 41-year-old said of his AIDS treatment. Mike asked that his real name not be used because his parents don't know he has the disease.
Although he has never touched AZT or any of the Western drugs commonly used to treat AIDS, Mike said he's healthy and strong nine years after being diagnosed with AIDS. And he gives much of the credit to Chinese herbs and acupuncture.
He's just one of thousands of people in the United States who have faith in traditional
Dr. Kuo-Hsiung Lee, a professor of medicinal chemistry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, is working on that. He recently won the Lifu Academic Award for Chinese Medicine — considered the Asian Nobel Prize — for using Western technology to find active compounds in Chinese herbal remedies.
Eastern remedies. But without proper testing, it's unlikely those remedies will ever be accepted by the mainstream.
His discoveries include an anti-cancer drug extracted from the mayapple plant that's now undergoing clinical trials at the University of Texas. He also has found an anti-HIV agent that has been shown to be more effective and less toxic than AZT in the test tube.
Lee believes that the American health care system has much to learn from such countries as Japan, where he says more than 200 traditional Chinese herbs are approved for use.
Safety and economics are the issues that have the Food and Drug Administration and other agencies worried.
But for people like Mike, time is too precious to spend waiting around for clinical trials that typically take years.
He said very little was known about AZT when he found out he had AIDS, although he had read that it was very toxic. He also had little faith in the studies because he knew patient participants who had shared their AZT doses with friends or otherwise ignored doctors' instructions.
Mike started looking through libraries for alternative therapies. These days he gets monthly acupuncture treatments and daily herbs in the form of teas or tablets.
Mike acknowledges the dangers of unproven treatments. However, he says adults should be allowed to make their own decisions and take their own precautions.
The bill, including massage therapy, exercises and vitamins, is $200 to $300 a month much cheaper than AZT.
"I don't really care to have my hand held by the government," he said. "I think we need to take charge of our own health care."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 7.1994 PAGE 4R
SEPTEMBER 7,1994 PAGE 4B KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES
Exhibition-Shuttlecocks: The Making of a Sculpture, July 8-Oct. 16 at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo.
Lecture-Double Jeopardy: As Artist and Critic by Charles Cowdrick, sponsored by Lawrence Photo Alliance, 8 tonight at Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St.
Exhibition-Mixed Media Works by Marcel Miller Gross and Kristen Miller, 1:30-4:30 p.m. Sunday at the Art and Design Building Gallery.
Exhibition-Jennifer Bartlett: A Print Retrospective, Aug. 21-Oct. 16 at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo.
Exhibition-Architecture Graduate Student Exhibition, today through Friday at the Art and Design Building Gallery.
Lecture-Sandy Winters, Massachusetts artist and former KU student, on her work, 7 p.m. tomorrow at Spencer Museum Auditorium.
Exhibition-Latter Days of the Law: Images of Chinese Buddhism, 850-1850, Aug. 27-Oct. 9 at Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibition-Land and Its Uses: Photographs from the Collection, Sept. 3-Nov. 13 at Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibition-Native American Ceramics from the Southwest Pueblos, Sept. 10-Oct. 23 at Spencer Museum of Art.
Lecture-Allison Saar, Ideas and experiences influencing her art, 1:15 p.m. Sunday at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo.
Exhibition-works of artist Susan C. Ax, opens today at DeMattais Gallery at Kansas Newman College, 3100 McCormick Ave., Wichita.
PERFORMANCES
Doctoral Recital-Timothy Deighton, viola, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Swarthout Recital Hall.
Renegade Theatre presents "East Side Comedy Shop XIX," 8 p.m. Fridays, 7 and 10 p.m. Saturdays at the Renegade Theatre, 518 East 8th St. Tickets $6.
Missouri Repertory Theatre presents "Dancing at Lughnasa," Aug. 29-Sept. 18 in Spencer Theatre at the Center for the Performing Arts, 50th and Cherry streets. Tickets for Tuesday-Sunday performances, $24. Friday and Saturday evening performances, $30.
Topeka Performing Arts Center presents The Everly Brothers with Kris Kristofferson, 8 p.m. Friday at Topeka Performing Arts Center, 214 Southeast 8th St., Topeka. Tickets $27.50, $25 and $22.50.
Helen Hocker Center for the Performing Arts presents "Fiddler on the Root," Sept. 9-11 and 16-18 in the Gage Park Ampitheater, Topeka.
Advanced tickets $6 (adults) and $4 (12 and under), $7 and $5 at the gate.
Lighten Up Improvisational Company presents "Play It By Ear" and "Outside the Lines," 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 10 p.m. Sundays in Lucas Place, 323 West 8th St., Kansas City, Mo. Tickets $4-6.
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5B
THE NEWS in brief
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-6 M-th. 8-5 fr. 9-6 Sat. 12-4 sun. 843-3826
SANTA FE, N.M.
An ex-convict and a teen-ager who allegedly made their way across the country by killing people and stealing their cars were captured by police yesterday as they slept under a bridge, weapons at their side.
Tri-state killing spree over, suspects caught
Acting on a tip from a Santa Fe man who had given the suspects a ride Monday night, eight state police officers wielding 20-shot assault rifles arrested the pair in a concrete culvert in the high desert country just outside Santa Fe.
Eric A. Elliott, 16, and Lewis E. Gilbert, 22, both of Newcomerstown, Ohio, are suspected of killing four people in Ohio, Missouri and Oklahoma and using each victim's car to get to their next crime.
"The nightmare is over," said Bob Hawk, representative for the FBI office in Cleveland.
The men appeared in court yesterday on federal charges of unlawful flight from prosecution and were ordered held pending further hearings tomorrow. Both also face state charges of burglary and kidnapping in Ohio.
The men were found about 9:30 a.m. sleeping on blankets next to the remains of a campfire in the culvert, which is in a dry gully. Two high-powered rifles, a shotgun and a handgun were found nearby.
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina
Pope cancels trip to Bosnia due to danger
Bosnian Serbs fired nearly a dozen artillery rounds near Sarajevo yesterday in the most serious violation to date of NATO's ban on heavy weapons around the capital.
U. N. officials also reported heavy shooting at the airport and said two United Nations military planes had been hit by ground fire in the last 48 hours.
The fighting prompted Pope John Paul II to call off his planned trip tomorrow to the Bosnian capital, after he failed to win assurances of safety for the crowds expected to turn out to see him. His visit to neighboring Croatia was still scheduled for Saturday.
WASHINGTON
Report suggests defense cut is possible
In a broad array of military activities, from pilot training to commissaries to the management of spare parts, the military could get along with less than President Clinton requested, said the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress.
The Pentagon's operating budget could be cut by $4.5 billion next year without harming overall military readiness, a congressional report concluded yesterday.
Jayhawk Bookstore
As military spending continues to gradually decline, Republicans and moderate Democrats are warning that the nation's
Ireland and IRA commit to peace
The Associated Press
DUBLIN, Ireland — After their first face-to-face meeting, Ireland's prime minister and the leader of the Irish Republican Army's political partner made a joint commitment yesterday to "peaceful methods of resolving our political problems."
Compiled from The Associated Press
The two sessions mirrored divisions over bringing peace to Northern Ireland despite a cease-fire declared by the IRA, which has been fighting to end British rule of the province.
The talks angered Protestants and got a cool response from Britain, where Prime Minister John Major also had a run-in with hard-line Protestant leader Ian Paisley. Paisley accused Major of "shouting and interrupting" him during the 10-minute meeting.
In Dublin, Prime Minister Albert Reynolds and Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams said they were committed to democratic and peaceful methods of resolving political problems. They stopped short of stipulating a permanent cease-fire, as demanded by Major.
$200
OFF AN AT&T
COMPUTER!
Get $200 back by mail when you
purchase any one of 12 select
New Product:
AT&T Communicator
Multi-Media System
AT&T
*486SX, 33MHz*
*4Mb, Mouse*
*Sound Card*
*Fax/Modem*
*CD-ROM*
*DOS, Windows*
*Multimedia Software*
*Stereo Speakers*
*Monitor not included*
only
$1,097
w/rebate
ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER 813 Mass • Downtown Lawrence • 843-7584
Religion in Guatemala: Oppression or Liberation?
Thursday, Sept. 8, 5:30-6:45 Karen Davis, Peace Corp Volunteer in Guatemala '92-'94
ECM Center (across from Yellow Sub) at 1204 Oread
This event in conjunction with volunteer-intern fair being held at ECM on Sept. 8-9
Information on U.S., International and Lawrence positions...Information 843-4933
The Lowest CD Prices in Town
Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5or more CDs for $4.95 Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! For the Best Values in Town Visit
Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire
COUPON - $1.00 OFF ADMISSION PRICE - COUPON
CATERING
25¢ BURNING SPEAR 25¢
TWENTY-FIFTH
ANNIVERSARY
TOUR
LAWRENCE:
SEPTEMBER 7
RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE • 1601 W.23rd St.
BIG UP
BURNING
SPEAR
ORIGINAL SEGGAR MUSIC
COME CELEBRATE WITH US
& KEEP THE SPEAR BURNING
Nominated for FIVE
GRAMMY AWARDS
25¢
COUPON - $1.00 OFF ADMISSION PRICE - COUPON
BUM STEER
BBQ MEALS,WHOLE HOT ROAST, GRILLED BURGERS,GRILLED CHICKEN, FRIED CHICKEN,TACO BAR,SALAD BAR
BUM STEER WILL PROVIDE TABLEWARE, BREAD, SAUCES, DELIVERY & SET-UP
LARGE GROUP DISCOUNTS!
Most meals under $6 per person
THE total look!
841-7665
Make That First Impression a Lasting One This Fall!
9th & Mississippi 842-5921
IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... CALL
Quality Professional Services for Men And Women!
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
843-4821 Thursdays
1246 Kentucky Fridays
BIRTHRIGHT
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you
FREE PREGNANCY
Monday 1-3, & 6-8
Tuesday 1-3, & 6-8
TESTING...
Wednesday 1-4
Thursday 6-8
Friday 1-4
843-4821 Thursday 6-8
1246 Kentucky Friday 1-4
Fantastic Fall Special!
South Pointe APTMENTS
2166 W.26th St.
843-6446
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
- Swimming Pool
* On KU Bus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid
Outstanding New Staff!!!
See the Future. Performa 6364/250
with an Apple Color Plus 14" Display, P4/250 Software StyleWriter II Printer, an Apple Design Keyboard and a Mouse Pad all for only
$1676^{95} POWER through it.
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union technology center
KU
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
River Union * Level 3 * 913-864-5608
KU Apple
VISA
MasterCard
信用卡网
6B
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
fifiS
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs"
*Imports & Domestics*
*Machine Shop Service*
*Parts Departments*
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
UNITY
Class on METAPHYSICS
"THE NATURE OF REALITY"
starts WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.
September 14
to
November 30
(12 week class)
Unity Church of Lawrence
416 Lincoln St. • 841-1447
"love offering"
--child care by reservation-changing, Quality doesn't. Classic styles by Woolrich backed by 160 years of experience. Shop Sunflower.
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Mass • 843-5000
Thinking of drinking alcohol on the hill...
Thinkagain!
Legal Services for Students
148 Burge • 864-5665
STUDENT
ENSIENCE FOR FAMILY
SENATE
--changing, Quality doesn't. Classic styles by Woolrich backed by 160 years of experience. Shop Sunflower.
32 Toppings to choose from!!!
.357 Special
Wednesday carry out only
$3 small 1topping
$5 medium 1topping
$7 large 1 topping
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Open 7 days a week
Since 1972 Lawrence's foremost name in outdoor clothing.
--changing, Quality doesn't. Classic styles by Woolrich backed by 160 years of experience. Shop Sunflower.
SUNFLOWER
FLANNEI
Fashion has a way of
Woolrich
SINCE 1830
CHICAGO — White men score higher than women of all races on the science exam medical students must take to become licensed doctors, and a researcher said cultural obstacles faced by women may help explain why.
Medical exam may show bias
Women may not approach the test as competitively as men, the researcher said.
The Associated Press
White men also did better than men from other racial groups, with Asian-Pacific Islanders being the only group where the difference was not explained by differences in prior education, researchers reported in yesterday's issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association.
In a study of more than 10,000 medical students, white men generally did better on the test than all women, even after discounting for differences in their undergraduate education and in scores on medical entrance exams.
The findings suggest three possibilities: the test is flawed in some way; the students had some prior educational differences that researchers couldn't detect or the lower-scoring groups were in fact deficient in the subjects on which they were tested, said an editorial
Beth Dawson, a biostatistics professor at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine and the study's lead author, said she believes women may face cultural disadvantages.
"What kind of family support do they have?" she asked, adding that fewer men than women are expected to handle tasks around the house while in school. "They have to get home and ... do their own laundry and housecleaning. And THEN they have to study."
accompanying the studv.
A third possibility is that women may not strive as hard on the test because they are less likely to seek competitive residencies such as orthopedics and ophthalmology, for which the test is a screening tool, she said.
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
Women also have fewer teachers and role models of their gender helping them succeed, Dawson said.
The exam — Part 1 of the National Board of Medical Examiners test — deals with sciences such as physiology, biochemistry and microbiology. Doctors must pass all three parts of the test to obtain a license to practice.
Johnson County in top 25
WASHINGTON — To find the most-expanding, most-educated, highest-earning population in Kansas, look no further than Johnson County.
The Associated Press
The Kansas City suburb also boasts the largest female work force in the state, according to the Census Bureau.
The data is part of the bureau's just-released 1994 "County and City Data Book," which is full of statistics on communities nationwide.
Johnson County, which includes the cities of Olathe and Overland Park, grew by 104,878 people between 1980 and 1992.
— Most adults with at least a high school diploma, 92.9 percent. That ranks eighth nationally.
Johnson County topped several other Census Bureau lists in Kansas. The county also made the Census Bureau's top 25 list in some categories. Among them:
— Highest per-capita income, $20,592.
— Most adults with a bachelor's degree or higher, 40.5 percent. Ranks 21st nationally.
— Top median value of owner-occupied houses,
$91,500.
Lawrence
Brewer'S
Supply
- Most women in civilian labor force, 66.8 percent.
Call us and start making your own BEER! 305 E.7th St. (913) 74- YEAST
WATKINS
1907
"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 SERVICE
864-9500
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
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
Don't you want a job
The Jayhawker Yearbook is still going to wait (till 5 p.m.) for interested (and enthusiastic, of course) individuals to hand in their applications. Remember, the following positions are open to all students (from first year to graduate students) in any major.
you can put on your resume? Well...if you do,you better hurry because Applications are due today!!! (al 5 p.m.)
- Section Editor
- (student life, greek life, entertainment, academics,
- Assistant Section Editor
- Reporter
- Photographer
- Photographer
- Marketing Inten
- Production Assistant
- General Staff
Applications are available at 428 Kansas Union (in the Organizations & Activities Center). If you have any questions, please, don't hesitate to call 864-3728.
YARNBARN
Beginning and Intermediate Knitting Classes Starting Soon!
Beginning Knitting: Learn by making a sweater! $20.00 for 8 weeks. 20% off class yarns
*Sept.19
(Mon)
(Tue)
(Wed)
- Oct.4
- Oct.26
Oct 4
YARNBARN
7-9 p.m.
7-9 p.m.
7-9 p.m.
BONANZA.
Steak. Chicken. Seafood. Salad
Complete schedule of all classes available at Yarn Barn 842-4333·918 Mass. St.
Tired of Pizza and Tacos? Try the...
Sunday Night Student Special
$4.99 for any sandwich (includes Freshtastics bar & drink) 10% Student Discount every day on any regularly priced menu item
2329 Iowa · 842-1200
CINEMAS VISA BANNERS
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
7B
Wednesdays Only! As Easy as 1-2-3!
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
Buy a large, get a second of equal value for $3! Buy a medium, get a second of equal value for $2! Buy a small, get a second of equal value for $1!
Classified Directory
100s
200s Employment
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
Services
205 Help Wanted
235 Professional
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of people, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any property, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation of dis-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
I
Kings, Troops, Brackets, & Purses
LEATHER
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses
105 Personals
100s Announcements
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses
SUNGLASSES
THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass.
STERLING ALSO JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
LEATHER
300s
Merchandise
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops
Us. Röve, Serengeti, and Vuarnet
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
CASH FOR COLLEGE $90,000 GRANTS AVAIL-
ABLE
IMMEDIATELY. 1-800-234-5678
QUALITY
IMMEDIATELY. 1-800-234-5678
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
120 Announcements
LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE Workshop. Help for students of any language. Improve reading, listening, comprehension and conversation skills. FREED! Wed, Sept 7, 9pm. 403 Wescue. Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Pregnant considering adoption help select adoptive family. Confidential/legal help dream Fulfilled
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND
TRAINING with RETURN. Thursdays, Sep. 15
& 22. 7 pm. Advanced registration and materials
($20.00 required). Presented by the Student
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE WORKSHOP
Help for students of any language, Improve reading, writing, listening comprehension and conversational skills.
FREE!!
Wednesday, September 7,
7:08-8:00 pm 484 Wascar
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
WYTC, the shelter in Lawrence for battered women and their children, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training; September 15 at 7:00 p.m. on campus, 200 Church Street, Lawrence public Library, 707 Vermont. For information, please call WYTC at 841-6887.
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOP (3 IN PARTS)
Improve your reading speed and retain more
Advanced registration and materials fee($20) required 133 Strong Hall
Thursday, September 8,15 and 22, 7:00-9:00 pm
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
T I T M A N N U A L
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2. 16, 1986 • 4. 5, 9 OR 7 MIGRITIES
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
168
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND ASSOCIATE
CIA
NOBODY DUE. SHE HEREBY RETURNS.
NON-DISTRIBUTED.
YA GOTTA BE THERE!"
130 Entertainment
Beautician/Barber Part-time
'FREE POOL DAILY
-8pm Bottleneck
27 Newburyshire S
NUDIEV00D00
The Wuss-Rock experience
Wed. Sent. 7. The Bottleneck
Found: One small cup on Overland Drive in W Lawrence last week. He was green on top and his belly and paws. We would love to keep him, but we would still kick will lick us. Please call Robin at 749-8523.
COLLEGE STUDENTS $13.25-11.85 STARTING Local branch of nai! cal. Flock immediate entry level openings. Flex time schedules. 3 days, ever. Classes incl. majors all. Opts accepted. for info 841-9096.
140 Lost & Found
Looking for two-part hairstylists who want to earn great money on weekends or evenings; 10-25 hours a week.
Looking to keep one year old pup puppy one week go in West Lawrence, MO. If you want the puppy but can not,
Computer tutor. Odd hours. Low Pay. Cool machine. Call Mark at 842-1098.
Men and Women
keep him in our apartment!
Call Kim or Stephanie. 749-7530
$100/hr. possible mailing our circulars for info call (232) 928-9065
205 Help Wanted
CRUISER NOW HIRING - Earn up to $2,000 / month working on Cruise and Travel & Full-time Employment available. No experiences necessary. For more information call 1-800-634-6889
200s Employment
ATTENTION O.T. and P.T. students. Female attendant needed for disabled woman. Mon. through S. mornings and 2 evenses per week. Bachelor's in Humanities, Kansas Career Work Study. 119 Birch. B2-1794.
Need a m. & 4 p.m. dishwasher, cooks a m. & p.m.
flexible hours, desserts desper for Tues., Thurs. &
Sat. from 3-11 p.m. positions available immediately.
Apply in person. 1268 Orcad Ave.
Baby-sitter needed for two delightful toddler girls in nice home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible with child care, ability to work and references required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to box #20. University Daily
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.
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
Custodial
Part-time positions available working at various school buildings in Lawrence. These hours will vary but usually will be late afternoon & evening. If interested please contact our office immediate.
Manpower
211 E. 8th
ברוח רישומי
Director, Junior & Senior High Jewish Youth Groups. Supervise about 28 enth�suprius Lawrence Teen. About 30 hr/month. Start ASAP. May 1995. $50/30 per month/per month on qualifications. Some travel required to conclave JUH. Requires knowledge of Jewish 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 including names & phone & s community center 91 Highland drive. Lawrence RS 6904. Job name
DOORMEN NEEDED
Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation.
Call 749-5039 - Ask for ZAC
F. NS, Babysitter wanted for 3 children. Week day afternoons in our home. Early Child Major preschool.
HELP WANTED! Intramural Flag Football off-ice.
Need a flag bearer. No experience. Need
CALL 844-5959
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT. Make up to $2,000.44/mo +/mo, teaching basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S Korea. No teach- ing experience needed. (309) 621-146. ext JST576. (309) 621-146. ext JST576.
KU Adams Alumini Center is now hiring for part-time banquet server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants with a bachelor's degree in Hospitality 1269 Gred, cadder room 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 up an application at Jon's Notes of Lawrence. Kansas University Bookstore between 9, 5. Mon.-Fri.
Mail Order Telephone Rep-New Home improvement catalog has part-time weekday openings between 7am-5pm for inbound and order call tasks. Great for people needing flexible schedules during the day, good clerical skills required. Start $3/hr. Apply to person: H.I., 2011 Lakeview Rd. (Blue bldg, west Lawrence Paper, straight ahead, to 2nd right) or call for directions (805-
Living Nanny required for 4 yr old boy in our home. Mon-Fri, occasional Weekend. Other chil- dren available.
NEEDS SPENDING CASH? B.P.I. Building Ser-
ior
for a variety of
performance partitions for a variety of
needs.
842-6264 Ask for Jeannie
Non-smoking babyaffair needed for 8 and 11 year old for occasional evening Call Emily at 748
Office clerical position. Must have experience w/
office administration and computer management. Student monthly position, $500-
625/month. 20 hrs/week. Pick up an application at
www.mariston.edu. For education. For more
contact Mariston Marmorins.
Part-time cleaning person for property management, good position with references and resumes 1017 Terry Street
Part-time delivery person needed. Primarily in person at Larry's Auto Supply 1050 W. Zerra St.
*Part-time Jobs.* The Kansas and Burge Union's,
Food Service, Bookservice, Catering, Wescoc,
and Custodial Departments are hiring. *Variety of jobs*
Level 5, Kansas Union Personnel Office. EOE
Part-time truck worker. M-F evenings. Approx.
weekly round in work, call 1-800-456-7890.
Indoor inside, work: cbd 1-800-456-7890.
Prefer 7-11; 11:30-30; or all day any weekday. Jr.
or S in child related field. Center experience.
Rainier Montessori School located on thirteen acres with horses and a pot-bellied pig named Wilber is looking for a classroom in the children's train. Transportation required, call 843-6800.
Terravest Construction Company has opening starting immediately for trim carpenters and laborers. Hardworking individuals who can work a minimum of 3 week days and be able to report to work by 8 a.m. m. These jobs involve some heavy lifting, etc. Apply in person at 410 B I Trail Road (around back and in the basement). For more info, call 242-8382 between the hours of 9 a.m. m. 10 a.m.
Teacher A Side 7:22-8:00 p.m. weekdays Classroom experience with preschool children preferred but not required. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 208 N. Michigan EOE
**SPRING BREAK 96- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE!!!!! Student Travel Services in now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to Camp City Beach, Call: 800-444-4444
Sports Officials needed! The LaWrese Parks and Recreation Dept. is looking for individuals interested in becoming official for adult football and basketball at 843-7122, please contact Bob Stancille at 843-7122
If you are looking for a fun and challenging position with opportunity for career development within and entrepreneurial company, come join us at the Unconventional restaurant management team. Prior restaurant experience NOT necessary. Prefer individuals with a solid background in people management, good communication, attention to detail, high energy level, positive attitude, and the ability to manage multiple projects and people while run an enterprise. Use the care for you, please send your resume to:
Vista Restaurant is now taking applications for full and part time. Apply now at 1537 W. 4th. Wanted: Painter - Maintenance assistant part time for property management, good pay, resume and salary.
< Driver Education > offered thru Midwinter Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 641-7748
DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
college work, and study abroad.
qualified and experienced. Call 843-3131.
225 Professional Services
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer.
Call Anna Lorania at 181-1587.
1
I look forward to hearing from you
Dawn Benson
1320 E. Kellogg Drive
Wichita KS 75211
This Ain't Your Ordinary Ho-Hum Company!
Relieve pain and stress with massage therapy!
Student discounts available.
729 1/2 Massachusetts Suite 216.
Call Anna Lunaria and Laura Pace at BAYCITY.
Richard A. Frydman
ATTORNEY AT LAW
843-4023
Tune-ups, overhauls, upgrades, free air. 304 Masse-
saucer 843-500
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
*Professional Writing*
*Cover Letters*
*Consultation*
Call Anna Lunaria and Laura Pace at 941-1587.
Cardt reading cards.
RESUMES
A Member of
PA RW
Professional Association of Requme Writers
701 Tennessee
Free Consultation
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRANSCRIPTIONS
842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite 201
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
The law offices of
We carry Bianchi, Specialized and Trek. Plus
accessories & a full service bike shop. Layaway
SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR SAILBOARD BEACHED
Homes. 843-912-6010. Briden. Get one blower.
Masachusetts 843-754-6222.
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
235 Typing Services
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms transcripts into accurate pages of letter writing.
Quality typing/word processing/indexing. Free estimate. Call 842-7271.
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Theses,
Bachelor's degree books, business letters, etc.
Laser printing 855-002-862
X
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
I need a job.
For anything you need at all,
MAKIN' THE GRATE
is the one to call.
add me.
305 For Sale
14 cubic ft. froidless master refrigerator w/
automatic icemaker. Excellent condition. $250.
Centurion Frame, Shimano comp., gel seat, great
comfort.
condition, 170.749-3751, ask for Susan.
For Sale: 1980 Honda Civic
Giant Mountain Bike in excellent condition. Make
offer. 749-9230
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N 2nd • 841-8903
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N. 2nd • 841-8903
19th & Haskell • 841-7504
*******
King size waterbed, bookcase/mirror head
box, rear-entry pedestal base, hinge, line,
and new matte finish.
4221
Ronda 1889 Ellie 16 red scorer, with baskets, 364
scoring and tune-up for $100. Ask for
Lynn at lynn@22.com for $350.
Mac Classic, 4/80-Printer, Caller Case, word
5.1 Quicken and more. Call 843-367 with best
price.
Nikon EM35mm, Nikon Motor Drive 70-120 zoom,
Lowe pro 550.00 $B.O. 813-927-9115.
Killerblades: Lightning bikes & Aeroblades $175
and Trek Mountain bike for $309. 749-6041.
WORD PROCESSOR, brother 3000, full screen
disk drive, grammar & spel check. $200.
$499.
VAGABONDBOOKMAN
360 Miscellaneous
Buy & Sell Used
Rare & Collectables
842-BOOK 1113 Mass.
(2568)
340 Auto Sales
**93 Mazda MX-6 Wagon/Tapeu Leather.** 5-speed, 6-speed. **100 Series:** AWD, DUAL. **ABS brakes, factory alarm, 208km.** Excellent condition, all maintenance current, $18,000. **316** | **711-262**. Can arrange a lease for low payoff.
**93 Mazda MX 6 white/tape leather, 5 sided, 6 cil.**
electric sunroof, D.C., cassette air, bag ABS
brakes, factory alarm cable,显微镜 excellent cond.
toys, safety mirror, LCD monitor 781-721-
6672. Can arrange a lease for low payments.
400s Real Estate
Pets Welcome No Sublease Fee
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept older homes 841-STAR (72827)
*On KUBus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
2166 W.26th St.
843-6446
- Swimming Pool
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
South Point
AQUARIUMS
- Water and Trash Paid
- 3 bedroom apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
- Directly on bus route
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
- Available for fall.
- Call 843-4754
"Don't get left out in the cold."
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Lg. 3 BDRM sp. off campus. Avail. imm-
lower level garden. new kitchen overlooking lg.
room. Full carpet, fireplace, livefire,
wash dry, /A/C Very clean $400 + utilities.
81-264-9250
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pet. Call 841-580-6350. Attendance center 843-7844. monthly utilties include 843-7844.
430 Roommate Wanted
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE ON TENNESSEE. Response
per month to 8 rooms in house, $10 each per
month + $2 per room.
Share four bedroom apartments and loft, Orchard Corners on bus route
Need Pemba to share large 2 Bdmr. 1 Bhm挺
ap on telecom. Call am 84-15185
Call am 59:10. Call am 84-15185
- By phone: 864-4358
One roommate wanted.
Fanners on bus route Call 832-9683
1 roommate needed immediately. Beautiful 3
table $25,981-36
table $25,981-36
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wanted: Two neap, responsible, n/s roommates to share new house. 3dm, 2baths. Quit bedroom. Grad students preferred. $225+ '+' utilities.
Please call 843-8478
Housemate needed. 4 Bros. Close to campus. N/S, clean. quiet. Avail. Now Call -181-196-100
- By Mail: 119 Stuffer Flint, Lawrence, KS 66045
How to schedule an ad:
N/S, p female冕晤mate to snare 800
N/S, p female冕晡mate to snare 800
841-914-94
ke phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Stop by the Kaiser office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or VISA.
When canceling a cancelled 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 agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Classified Information and order form
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Number of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5 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.
Rates
Cost per line per day
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
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 1.95 .65 .60 .55 .35
Classifications
140 loss & fund 305 for sale
20 help wanted 340 auto sales
222 professional services 360 miscellaneous
224 promotions
105 personal
110 business personah
120 announcements
130 entertainment
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Date ad begins: Total days in paper
Total days: Classification
1
2
3
4
5
VISA
Classification:
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:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit cards:
Signature
The University Daily Kansan. 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
9-7
"It's no good, Dawson! We're being sucked in by the sun's gravitational field and there's nothing we can do!... And let me add those are my sunglasses you're wearing!"
8B
Wednesday, September 7, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE, BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH.
木材加工
在木材加工过程中,通常会使用一些工具和设备来完成各种工作。例如,可以用锯子进行切割、打磨和抛光;可以用榫头和榫槽进行拼接;也可以用压板和模板进行折叠和堆叠等。这些工具和设备的出现大大简化了木材加工的工作流程,提高了生产效率。
P
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-
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 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
sionals at the new Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre are there to lend a hand with expanded services.
certified emergency medical physi cians. 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
PATIENTS PRESENTING FOR EXAMINATION OF BALLOWED TRACTION IN THE HIP.
parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative.
KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY
SPORTS
Liz Berg, Kansas assistant coach, brings youth and playing experience to Jayhawk volleyball. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Members of Delta Upsilon are living in Meadowbrook Apartments while their house is renovated. Page 3A
SHADY High 87° Low 63° Weather: Page 2.
THE UNIVER TOPEKA, KS 66612 KANSAN
VOL.104.NO.13
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8. 1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Beers captured in Nebraska
By Manny Lopez Kansan staff writer
Chad Beers has seen more of the country in the last week than he might see for quite some time.
"We are now 100 percent sure we have Chad Beers in custody," said Pete Nagurry, chief deputy with the U.S. Marshal's office in Topeka.
Beers, 24, of Lawrence, was captured early yesterday morning in Lincoln, Neb. after a week-long run from authorities.
After being spotted in Lawrence several times during the weekend, Beers apparently fled the area in a Lawrence city-owned truck that was stolen from the backyard of a house. He then drove to Nebraska early yesterday morning Nagurny said.
Chad Beers
PETER
In Lincoln, he robbed a convenience store at about 1 a.m. yesterday and hit a cashier over the head with a wrench. A television news crew later spotted the truck and called police. Nagumyv
police, Nagurny said.
"There was a high-speed chase involving two cars and the stolen truck," Nagurny said. "Beers totaled the truck."
An off-duty Lincoln police officer and a Lincoln resident grabbed Beers after the car chase, Nagumy said.
Around the same time Beers was being captured, U.S. Marshals in Kansas were raiding an abandoned farmhouse near Holton in rural Jackson County, that he had been using as his hideout. Nauruvir said.
The Marshals and the Potta-watatole Sheriff's office found food, false identification cards and clothing that fit the description of outfits people had sighted Beers wearing.
On Sunday, Beers was shot after trying to break into an East Lawrence mobile home. Contrary to previous reports, he was shot in the ankle, not the shoulder.
Nagurry said Beers would face additional time in prison for escaping and, depending on local authorities, he could be charged with robbery.
auto theft, assault and other charges.
Beers will be sent to a more secure facility after all new charges are sorted out.
Before his escape Sept. 30, Beers had been sentenced to 14 years in prison for the kidnapping of an Arkansas man and the theft of his car. He was also being held in custody for robbing Checkers Foods, 2300 Louisiana St., last October. Shortly after that robbery, he escaped from authorities and spent 21 days on the run.
For now, Beers is being held by Marshall's in Lincoln. Nagury said Beers could be sent back to Arkansas next week, depending on the condition of his injuries and status of any additional charges.
The running man
Chad Beers was captured in Lincoln, Neb., early yesterday morning after a week on the run. His journey took him from Arkansas through Oklahoma, Kansas and finally Nebraska.
Nebraska
Lincoln
Hottest
Havensville
Toppea
Kansas
Lawrence
Fredonia
Missouri
Chouteau
Tulsa
Oidahome
Arkansas
Fr. Smith
Fredonia, Kan. Scott Scanlon is captured.
1 Fort Smith, Ark. Beers escaped from prison.
2 Chouteau, Oda. Beers stole a truck.
Lawrence, Ken. Beers' home.
Source: U.S. Marshal Service
Havensville, Kan.
Beers is sighted.
Topoka, Kan. Beers is sighted.
Students, faculty differ on views of Jon's notes
Holton, Kan. Beers' reported hideout.
5 Lincoln, Neb. Beers is captured.
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Micab Leaker/KANSAN
P. J. Wagner plans to sit back and enjoy the lectures during his sociology class. After all, Warner said, he no longer has to worry about taking copious notes during class.
Wagner, Hays freshman, purchased a subscription to Jon's Notes for his Elements of Sociology class. With the subscription, Wagner will receive typed copies of each day's lecture notes.
"I like to absorb the lecture during the class." Wagner said. "I'm probably a little bit lazy, but I like the idea of being able to buy effective notes that I can study from."
Jon's Notes, a commercial note-taking business, sells class notes from ten classes at the University of Kansas. Benjamin C. Fehrmann, St. Louis senior and manager of the Lawrence branch of Jon's Notes, said the company hired students to take lecture notes for the company.
"We hire some undergraduates, but mostly we hire graduate students," Fehrmann said. "The minimum grade point average for our note takers is 3.5."
After each day's lecture, the note taker types out the class notes that are sold at the KU Bookstore in the Kansas Union. Students can buy the notes for an individual lecture for $1.50 or buy a subscription for the entire semester for $23.50. Fehrmann said notes usually were available two days after each lecture.
"The courses we offer notes for are entry-level classes or classes that cover technical material," Fehrmann said. "We generally choose classes that have at least 150 students so that our business is profitable, and we never go into a class without the professor's permission."
Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the administration had taken a hands-off policy regarding Jon's Notes.
"It's up to each professor whether he or she wants to allow Jon's Notes into the classroom," she said. "I don't think legally we could prohibit them from selling notes with professors' permission."
On Aug. 10, McCluskey-Fawcett issued a memo to all faculty members explaining the instructors' right to prohibit the company from selling their class notes. Citing the Faculty Senate Rules and Regulations and the Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct, she said in the memo that each instructor could deny the company permission to attend lectures.
"This university has strongly encouraged students to attend classes," McCluskey-Fawcett wrote. "The availability of commercial notes might serve to reduce the incentive of students to do so."
Jon's Notes, which was founded in 1881 at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, currently sells notes to students at Nebraska, the University of Missouri, Kansas State University, the University of Arizona and KU.
Liz Grobsmith, associate vice chancellor for academic
See JON'S NOTES. Page 7A.
INSIDE
Got a hankerin' for okra?
With the fruits of the fall harvest, the Downtown Lawrence Farmers' Market is in full swing. Everything from cinnamon rolls to tomatoes are available fresh.
Page 8A.
Mini Sweet Bell Peppers
5 for 1.00
HUZ
Matt Hood / KANSAN
Thinking ahead could prevent a rape
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
She is unaware of the attacker hiding in the bushes waiting to assault her. Not even the lights on campus or the emergency phone hanging 15 feet away will help her.
A woman walks across campus listening to music through her headphones and congratulates herself about the project she just completed.
Scenarios such as this one have become a reality at the University of Kansas over the past year. Four reported rapes since January and three reported sexual assaults this semester have increased the need for women to be aware of their surroundings, police said.
While the reported rapes and sexual assaults may have made people more aware of their surroundings, they should not drop their guards, said Officer Vicki Moore, crime prevention specialist at the Lawrence police department.
Moore said that if women tell themselves that they going to fight off an attacker, they are more likely to do so and not panic as much. "But we all use some fear in order to protect ourselves," she said.
One of the best things a woman can do is to decide ahead of time if she is going to be a fighter. Moore said.
"People should plan ahead and think about how they would handle a situation before it occurs." she said.
Moore said men and women should make
eye contact with people they meet on the street, walk with confidence and get a good look at their surroundings.
She said that people should be aware and not take anything for granted, no matter how familiar with a person or place they are.
Last year, no rapes were reported on campus, according to statistics compiled by the KU police department. In 1992, one rape was reported on campus.
In 1992, 23 rapes were reported in Lawrence, according to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. Statistics for 1993 and 1994 were not available because the information was being entered into a new computer system.
In August, Lawrence police and the KU police issued a notice about a man in northwest Lawrence who, on three occasions, climbed through windows and sexually assaulted women. He still has not been caught.
According to KU police, rape is one of the most under-reported crimes on campus. Officials said it was difficult to determine if the actual number of rapes had recently increased or if more people were gaining the courage to report incidents.
"There is a growing movement on the part of survivors," said Sarah Jane Russell, executive director of Rape Victim/Survivor Service. "There is a heightened awareness in the community. More people might be reporting, but it is not any easier. There are still all the difficulties with all the emotional dynamics about reporting rape and sexual assaults."
But the fact that the number of rapes report-
Safety tips
To report a crime, call: Emergency 011
KU police at 864-5572
Lawrence police (for off-campus
Lawrence police (for off-campus
boundaries) 750-7900
attacks) at 822-7005
KU Crimestoppers at 864-8888
Sexual assault counselors and contacts:
Rape Victim/Survivor Service 864-3506
24 hours at 841-2345
KU Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 864-3552
KU Counseling and Psychological Services 842-277
Awareness suggestions:
Take a friend along whenever you go out.
At night, designate someone to be the look-out—similar to a designated driver.
Lock doors and windows in cars and at home.
Get to know neighbors.
Don't open the door to strangers or let
you in your house. Don't use the phone,
the number and call for them.
phone, get the number and call for them.
Caualian The Associated Dress KANGAN
ed on campus has increased 400 percent since last year has some women concerned.
"The only time I really think about it is at night when it is dark," said Leigh Taylor, Gerring. Neb., sophomore. "It really worries my parents, so I carry mace and a flashlight with me."
Women patrol in response to recent unsolved rapes
By Khristina Fassett Special to the Kansan
Students Against Violence Against Womyn will be organizing women's patrols in Northwest Lawrence this weekend in response to a series of unsolved sexual assaults within the last month.
The volunteers will walk through the area where most of the assaults have occurred in groups of four from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. Friday and Saturday.
"I do not think the patrols will literally stop a
rapist, but the point is to draw attention to the situation," said Connie Burk, president of the group. "There has been a real lack of discussion, and this is the first action to bring accountability to the community."
Burk said there possibly would be more patrols in the future if interest was high. She would not reveal the exact route that would be patrolled, but she said students interested in participating in the patrols could contact the group through the University Information Center at 864-3506.
Although this is the first formal women's patrol that the group has organized, Burk said
it was something women actually did everyday.
"We all watch out for each other informally all the time," she said. "We walk each other to our cars, to our doors, to our homes."
Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said she thought the patrols were a good idea.
"Anything we can do to draw attention to this are good efforts," she said. "Rape is one of the most unreported crimes. I know police officers are working diligently to solve this, but you have to try lots of things to draw attention to it."
4
2A
Thursday, September 8, 1994
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
☆
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE: Success is certain once you get out of a rat and make constructive changes. Business accelerates in November, triggering increased profits before the end of the year. A romantic relationship take on a rosy glow. An important new beginning is possible next spring. Combine business with pleasure if taking an overseas vacation in the summer of 1995.
LECERTIBLES BORN ON THIS DATE: Comedian Sid Caesar, basketball player Maurice Cheeks, actress Heather Thomas, country music legend Saty Kline.
T
♊
II
AMES (March 21-April 19) Keep your ambition under wraps if you want to win a co-worker's cooperation. Focus your attention on constructive aims and stick to projects underway. End a relationship that is going nowhere. You deserve better!
15
TAUIRUS (April 20-May 20): do not allow outside pressures to hamper your progress at work. Your efforts to deepen an understanding will break down any barriers to an agreement. Take advantage of educational opportunities which could boost your income.
69
GEMINI (May 21 June 20). Procrastination could be your down fall. Once you decide what must be done, do it direct action will a sense of potential opponent. Staying close to home will save you money.
m
♌
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A sensible schedule will keep you on track even if unexpected problems crop up. Add special events to your social calendar. Signing up for lively workshops will introduce you to interesting people.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Taking care of unfinished business today will prevent a troublesome situation from developing. Be extra careful when driving or playing sports.
Otherwise you could end up paying for someone else's mistake. Keep mate's secrets.
ℓ
**SCORPIO** (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): A recent business or financial triumph prompt others to say good things about you. Take advantage of a highly favourable financial or domestic development. Do not let arguments wreak havoc with your life love.
LIBAE (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). An unpromising situation could put you in a blue mood. Resist an urge to avoid people. Talking shop at lunch proves productive. Influential people become eager to have you on their team.
VS
II
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A wonderful time to launch a new sales or advertising campaign. Break away from your regular work routine and get organized. A romance now could prove unusually glamorous. Have fun Make new contacts.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Check up on a credit or tax matter you could find a puzzling situation. The afternoon presents you with an interesting dilemma. This is not the right time to experiment with new accounting methods!
Water
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept. 22) Continue to capitalize on yesterday's activities. As the day wears on, you are likely to stumble onto an awkward domestic situation. Let sensitivity and empathy be your hallmark when dealing with troubled individuals.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A new romantic attraction could lead you into deep waters. Look before you dive into a secret alliance. There is more at stake than your peace of mind. Send healing thought to loved ones.
X
TODAY'S CHILDREN are affectionate, practical and surprisingly shrewd about other people's motives. They enjoy school and will do their homework without parental prompting. Rarely pretentious, these Virgos prefer classic clothing to more trendy antee. An eye for detail and love of precision would make them wonderful statisticians for computer technicians. Employers will be impressed by their devotion to duty. They will stay after hours to put the finishing touches on an important project.
Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansaan (USPS 550-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairway-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 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.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, Kan. 68045.
ON CAMPUS
Student Political Awareness Task Force will hold a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Wilson at 865-0066.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a Volunteer Fair for Lawrence, U.S. and International Placements from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today at 1204 Oread Ave.
Canterbury House (Episcopal/Anglican) will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today at Danforth Chapel.
Retiree's Club will sponsor a Founder's Day History in collecting of Retiree's Club and a Tribute to Paul Endicott at 3p.m. today at the Summerfield Room in Adams Alumni Center. For more information, call Evelyn Swartz at 841-4065.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor "Religion in Guatemala: Oppression or Liberation?" at 5:30 p.m. today at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
KU Literary Club will meet at 5:15 p.m. today at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jack Lerner at 749-5225.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Parlors in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585
- Psi Chi will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at room 647 Fraser Hall. For more information, call Greg Simpson at 864-4131.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a C.A.R.E. meeting at 7 tonight at 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357.
Student Alumni Association will meet at 7 tonight at Adams Alumni Center. For more information, call Michael Weishaar at 832-9327.
KU Phi Alpha Delta, Pre-Law Society, will meet at 7 tonight at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Shawna Hilleary at 749-5861.
Campus Crusade for Christ will sponsor "College Life," at 7:30 tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kent McDonald at 749-0343.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-9529.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet for swim practice at 7:30 onight at Robinson Pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
LesBlaySOK will hold a business meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Eric Moore at 864-3091.
Amnesty International will meet at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at room 158 Strong Hall. For more information, call John Dale at 749-5666.
TODAY'S TEMPS
Weather
Atlanta Chicago Des Moines Kansas City Lawrence Los Angeles New York Omaha Seattle St. Louis Topeka Tulsa Wichita
TODAY
H I G H L O W
85° • 66°
75° • 59°
79° • 54°
84° • 61°
87° • 63°
91° • 71°
78° • 59°
84° • 59°
63° • 56°
82° • 62°
81° • 56°
85° • 64°
84° • 62°
Partly cloudy, slight chance of morning thunderstorms
FRIDAY
Partly cloudy,
warm
8861
8763
8861
A Female KU student reported aman, who had his pants unzipped and was exposing himself, approached her while she was looking for a book Tuesday in the west Watson Library stacks, KU police said. The woman walked away, and the man left the library before police arrived, police said.
SATURDAY
Sunny,
very warm
9165
9165
Source: Dennis Fraker, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
ON THE RECORD
September 7,1994
$870 were stolen Sunday from the 1200 block of Rhode Island St., Lawrence police reported.
$
Stock market report
A KU student's car was broken into while parked in the east Jayhawker Towers parking lot, KU police reported. Police said damage to the car and a stolen Alpine compact disc car stereo totaled $1,200.
A Kenwood car stereo, Motorola car phone and a purse valued together at $660 were stolen Tuesday from a KU student's car parked on the 1300 block of 24th St., Lawrence police reported.
Dow Jones
12.45
3,886.25
NYSE .33 259.78
A Jensen car stereo amplifier valued at $130 was stolen Tuesday from a KU student's car parked on the 2500 block of W. Sixth St., Lawrence police reported.
Nasdaq
An 11-week-old rottweiler puppy valued at $400 was stolen Tuesday from Quinton's Bar & Deli, 615 Massachusetts St., Lawrence police said.
Two Specialized Rockhopper mountain bikes valued together at
Shares Traded: 290,030,000
>
4.62
764.10
Advances
1,036
↓
Declines
1,116
-
Unchanged
727
ASE
.68
455.32
WOLF
COYOTE'S
Dance Hall & Saloon
A
1003 East 23rd Street (913)842-2380 Lawrence's Newest and Largest Nightclub
Coyote's has a $150,000 Sound & Lighting System and Lawrence's Largest Dance Floor Plus, Today's Best Top 40 Country, Pop, & Rock Music.
All New
Ladies Night
All New
$1 Anything!!!
No Cover Charge for Ladies You must be 21 to get in free!
Plus Some Lucky Lady will win $100 in Cash!
So join all of your friends tonight at Coyote's Where Men are Men, Women are Women and everybody gets along just fine.
If you have to wait in line more than five minutes you 're in free!! You must be 18 years of age to enter and 21 to drink.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 8,1994
3A
Multicultural unity aim of KU Coalition
By Nathan Olson
Kansan staff writer
The importance of multiculturalism at the University of Kansas is the subject of an open meeting tonight.
The KU Coalition Against Racism and Discrimination will begin its Diversity Dialogue Series at 7 tonight at 100 Smith Hall. The discussion is titled "Finding the Common Ground: Prejudice, Racism and the Multicultural Environment at KU."
Ann Weick, co-chairwoman of the coalition, said the dialogue would include members from many student organizations, including Black Student Union, Hillel and LesBiGay Services of Kansas.
"There will be an opening panel for the students from the organizations to give their impressions on how well KU is doing as a multicultural institution." Weick said.
After the opening panel, smaller groups will be formed to discuss issues students might have, she said.
"We want students to share, to come together," she said. "We want students to see that even though there are things that divide us, there are things that bind us, too."
The coalition is a part of Lawrence Alliance, an organization dedicated to creating a discrimination-free environment in Lawrence. The coalition was founded three years ago.
One member who has been with the coalition since its inception, Richard Orr, said that the group helped KU take a multicultural agenda seriously.
"Students will see what the groups are about and what they're trying to do about diversity and multiculturalism," he said.
Tonight's program would give students a chance to see some campus organizations, he said.
"The unique appeal of this group is that it draws faculty, staff and students together," said Orr, a staff member in the department of human resources.
That appeal is felt by Kellie Harmon-Lowick, Lawrence graduate student, who joined the group a year and a half ago.
"I have learned a lot from my mentors," she said. Hammond-Lodwick mentioned Maurice Bryan, director of the Office of Affirmative Action, and Robert Shelton, university ombudsman.
"I joined because I felt like it's important to be educated and aware of the opportunities for minority students," she said.
Harmon-Lodwick said that she would have liked to have participated more fully in the group but that her class schedule precluded more involvement.
"Other faculty members are incorporating multiculturalism into their curricula," she said.
The dialogue is the first in a series of monthly discussion groups this year sponsored by the coalition.
Members of the Delta Uplifon fraternity aren't living in their house this year because there isn't much of a house to live in. It's being renovated.
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
Renovations underway for fraternity
Renovations began a few months ago, said John Esau, president of the Corporation Board, a group of alumni whose responsibilities include organizing the renovations. The interior of the house at 1025 Emery Road has been gutted and only the stud walls are standing inside the house.
"Basically, what you have standing is just a shell." Ewan said.
The 60 men scheduled to live in the house are living at the Meadowbrook Apartments this year. Members should be able to live in the house again in August 1995.
"We looked at several options, and the house members opted to go with Meadowbrook" Esam said.
Esaud said the fraternity needed a large room for chapter meetings and meals. Meadowbrook had a room available for both.
Esaul said fraternities that had renovated in the past used the residence halls and Jayhawk Towers as a temporary living space. But John Hansen, Delta Upsilon president, said the men did not consider them this year.
"We wanted to stay away from the dorms because it hadn't worked out in the past," Hansen said. He said the fraternity needed more room than was available in the halls and Jayhawk Tower.
Hansen said fraternity members were not upset about living in Meadowbrook this year. He said visiting friends was harder now, but members were too excited about the renovation to worry
Esaud said renovation of the fraternity house was necessary to keep up with the needs of the residents. Better studying facilities were important, he said.
"Technology has changed so much with computers and VCRs," he said. "We needed more capacity for the technological end of it."
Esaud said the fraternity hoped to replicate the quality the house had when it was first built in 1929. It had several amenities that were considered fancy at the time, including a slate roof and oak woodwork.
The planned renovations include upgraded lighting, handicap-accessible restrooms, an elevator and larger bedrooms that would house two men instead of three.
"Guys bring so much more stuff than they used to," he said.
Esau said the addition of two climate-controlled sleeping dorms was another part of the renovation. The dorms will house a total of 75 men.
Eausa said the renovation also would give the fraternity an 800 square-foot library, a computer room, a group study room, a conference room and a larger parking lot.
Renovations will cost more than $2 million, Esau said. Money for the renovations came from Delta Upsilon alumni or from families of former Delta Upsilon members.
Esaul said the largest contribution came from Keith Bunnel, class of 1946. He donated $345,000 for the Delta Upsilon renovation.
"We didn't do formal rush because we didn't have a place to put anymore guys," he said.
Hansen said the renovation affected Delta Upsilon's fall rush this year.
Hansen said new members pledged during informal rush last spring.
4
Kevin Powell, of McPherson Wrecking Co., cuts a hole in the brick facade of the Delta Upsilon house, 1025 Emery Road. The house is undergoing renovations, which are planned to be completed by the end of the fall semester.
A. S. Browne
Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student life and director of Emily Taylor Resource Center, is running unopposed for the state legislature seat in the 44th district.
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
Running unopposed, Ballard to campaign for seat anyway
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence,
probably won't have any trouble getting
re-elected to the Kansas House of Representatives
this November.
She's the only one on the ballot.
Ballard is not the only person running for the Kansas Legislature unopposed. At least 25
other people, both Republicans and Democrats, are running unopposed in other districts.
Ballard, who is also director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, isn't taking time to ponder why others did not file to run for the seat — she's just glad they didn't.
"I'd like to think it was because of hard work," she said.
Or, she said, it could have been because nobody else stepped forward.
But Russell Getter, associate professor of political science, said he was surprised that Republicans didn't find someone to run against Ballard.
"It's a fairly common occurrence to have a number of seats that are held by one party, where the incumbent has no opponents," he said. "But that's not the case in Barbara Ballard's district."
That's the explanation favored by State Sen. Sandy
"I don't have to have an opponent to keep constituents informed..."
Getter said the increase in the number of
"This is across the board, both parties." Praeger said.
Praeger said unopposed candidates were likely to run in Ballard's district, which includes the areas west of Iowa Street and north of Clinton Parkway.
Barbara Ballard State Rep. from Lawrence
Praeger, R-Lawrence, who said it was becoming harder and harder to find people willing to run for the Legislature because of the time sacrifices state legislators had to make.
"The 44th district is fairly affluent," she said. "These people don't have the time."
run against her.
unopposed candidates was due in part to the cost of running a campaign and the public abuse faced by those who enter the political arena.
Ballard hasn't had to worry too much about public abuse. Instead of diving into a frenzied primary race after filing on June 2, she was off to Florida and later to Rutgers University in New Jersey. Her only concession to politics was making a phone call to her campaign manager to find out if anyone had filed to
Use Kansan Classifieds
But Ballard, who has represented the 44th district since 1992, said she would be pounding the pavement, knocking on doors and handing out fliers just as if she were in a hotly contested race. She also plans to mail a campaign letter to residents of her district later in the fall. She expects the mailing to cost about $3,000.
"I don't have to have an opponent to keep constituents informed," she said. "I may not spend as much, but I will work just as hard."
Please Don't Toss Your Inserts - Recycle!
Use Kansan Classifieds
COMPACT DISCS
• New • Used • Trade-ins
WE BUY & SELL USED CD's
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913-843-1811 913-842-1438 913-842-1544
4A
Thursday, September 8, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
Postal Service gains at businesses expense
Mike Royko
A bureaucrat's mind is not
easy to figure out.
easy to figure out,
especially when it does
things that make no sense.
Let us once again consider the strange workings of the bureaucratic mind.
There are many businesses, big and small, that require prompt mail delivery. Some live or die by it.
One such company is Iroquois Industries, on Chicago's South Side, a label printing firm.
It advertises in catalogs, promising 24-hour order filling, and most of its business comes through the mail or by fax.
"If mail is delivered late or it is lost, we lose the order. If a customer sends an order and he doesn't get the merchandise promptly, he cancels the order," said Marvin Gordon, who started the company 40 years ago. "So slow mail could ruin us."
Considering the bleak reputation of Chicago's mail delivery, it's surprising that Gordon hasn't been eaten by ulcers or been plunged into poverty.
"No, I saw what the problem might be from day one, or at least 10 days after I opened.
"Right in the beginning, I saw how the mail delivery didn't work very well. It was being delivered late or not at all. We found some mail all burned up under a viaduct.
"Well, I couldn't survive that for long, having our employees sitting around all day and twiddling their thumbs until 3 o'clock when the mail and our business orders might or might not arrive."
So, to prevent the early collapse of his business, Gordon quickly started
This means that as mail is being sorted at his local post office, his mail is put aside, and he has it picked up in the morning.
using something called "Firm Hold- out Service."
"We pay a messenger service to pick it up at the post office and bring it in every day. We've been doing this since we started about 40 years ago."
Currently, it costs Gordon about $4,000 a year in messenger fees to get his mail. So in today's dollars, he's probably spent about $160,000 to get prompt mail delivery throughout four decades.
A few weeks ago, Gordon found himself reading a letter and sputtering as his blood pressure jumped.
The letter was from the Postal Service. It was notifying Gordon that if he wanted to continue picking up his own mail, he would have to pay an annual fee of about $400.
Gordon's reaction was shared by businessmen all across the United States, since it was a new national policy. Thousands of businesses that pick up their own mail were being told they would have to pay to do so.
"What is incredible about this," Gordon fumed, "it that we make their job easier. They don't have to deliver our mail because we deliver it ourselves. You would think they would thank us. Instead, they want to charge us."
The Postal Service representative said, "Actually, when businesses pick up their own mail, it is less work for us. It lightens the load for the carrier. We
can shorten the routes if there's a significant volume of businesses picking up their own mail."
Nobody could tell us which bureaucrat's daffy idea it was to charge people for delivering their own mail."
Uh-huh. Then why in the heck are you going to charge them for making your job easier.
The representative said, "It is now a moot point since the status quo remains."
Actually, it should not be a moot point. If we are to survive in society, we should try to understand the weird thought processes of the bureaucratic noggin.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
VIEWPOINT
State drug rehabilitation could lessen taxpayer costs
Crime, health care and climbing taxes are all problems that concern Americans. But one action by the states could help solve
them all: subsididrug treatment programs.
Last week, the California Department of Alcohol and Drug Pro-
ing or one-half addicts stopped using cocaine, as the study found, fewer people would commit crimes to obtain drugs or end up in the hospital.
DRUG TREATMENT
A California study shows that one year of supporting drug programs can save taxpayers $1.5 billion in other costs.
grams released a one-year study estimating that state-supported treatment programs saved the state $1.5 billion.
Yes, taxpayers would be the ones paying for the drug rehabilitation. But don't we also pay for their unpaid hospital bills or time in jail?
Even if only one-third of alcoholics stopped drink-
The other 49 states should follow California's lead and begin direct steps to curb crime and rising costs by subsidizing these programs.
ROBERTA JOHNSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Ireland's cease-fire is only a step to ending terrorism
aglimmer of hope shot across Ireland last week with the announced cease-fire by the Irish Republican Army. While this is a
We do not mean to say that the cease-fire is bad.
momentous occasion for peace, we should not praise a ruthless terrorist organization for halting its bloody activities.
have been tragically lost, a vast majority of which had been ended by the notorious terrorist group.
IRISH REPUBLICAN ARMY While the cease-fire announced by the IRA is a positive step, we should limit praise to terrorist groups that announce they will stop killing people.
The stoppage of violence will pay immediate dividends.
For decades, an unofficial war has been waged all across Great Britain. During this war, thousands of innocent lives, from London to Belfast,
However, praising the IRA for its recent action is like thanking the Ku Klux Klan for ending lynchings. This is a good step forward for peace, but we must remain tempered in our thanks.
RICHARD BOYD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRISTOPH FUIRMANS Managing editor
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
JEN CARR Business manager
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
News Sara Bennett
Editorial Donella Heame
Planning Editor Susan White
Campus Mark Martin
Sports Brian James
Photo Daron Bennett
Mellissa Lacey
Features Trael Carl
Design Noah Muuss
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 mgr ... Holly Boren
Regan Overy
Marketing director ... Alan Stiglie
Creative director .. John Carton
Classified mgr .. Heather Niehaus
The Kauai reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kauai newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Guest columns should be typed, double spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photogranched.
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 Florida are required to type their letters on separate lines.
REGARDING GANG VIOLENCE,
KANSAS TEEN ROGER T.
WANNABE STATED "I WISH I
WAS A GANGSTA: THEY GOT THE
JUICE! IF I WAS IN THE
"HOOD----'D BLAST!"
BLAM!
BLAM!
BLAM!
COOL, MAN...
GANGSTA RAPE
NO DOGGY DOG
To your mey
1923
11-YEAR OLD CHICAGOAN ROBERT SANDIFER WAS UNAVAILABLE FOR COMMENT ON THE SUBJECT.
Sean Finn / KANSAN
Scott MacWilliams Graduate student
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Everyone can be a star
I was intrigued by Erika Rasmuson's column on the standards that society sets for those who become famous. I agree with her contention that "famous" folks are not always given the same latitude for making mistakes as us regular Joe's, but I think there is a larger idea that needs to be offered for discussion.
I have a real problem with the entire concept of "stardom" and all that it entails. The problem has many facets, but I feel that the most damaging one is the socially accepted notion that if you are not of "star quality" then you are little more than a hump of clay. Each time we tell ourselves, "Oh, he or she is so great! I wish I could be just one-tenth as good!" we give ourselves a negative message.
The truth is we each have heroic qualities within us, and it is up to us to find our own strength. We can't all pull a baby from a burning building or sack the quarterback, but there is something that we can affect. We can be a hero in our own way.
The real heroes are our friends and neighbors. It always strikes me how the ordinary citizen-heroes respond when they have been involved in some sort of emergency. "I didn't really think about it. Anybody else would have done the same thing."
Letters to the editor may be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Where, Mr. Vargas, does the Second Amendment speak of hunters? Indeed, current gun control measures are not even a threat to hunters. Your editorial viewpoint "Guns should be banned despite hunter opposition," fails to recognize that the movement to restrict and eventually end firearm ownership is not about hunting.
As you dangerously stereotype gun owners as backwater hicks who prefer not to "sacrifice the hobby of killing animals to saving human lives," we will maintain our position on firearms ownership precisely because we value human life.
It is about repealing a specific freedom that would alter the entire relationship between the state and the individual — a freedom that the founding fathers recognized was important enough to write into the Constitution.
gun rights benefit all
We're not all hunters, Mr. Vargas. Many members of organizations, such as the National Rifle Association and Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership, are simply concerned citizens who fear a government that fears our guns.
Darin Nugent Overland Park junior
Mindy Pendreigh, dining services manager, said that students weren't applying for jobs because they had not learned time management yet. Or, maybe, it's because the jobs pay only once a month.
Residence hall dining services are having trouble filling part-time positions, and the manager and assistant director think they know the reason.
Dining work doesn't pay
Barbara Quintero, assistant director of dining services, has a grasp of the real reason that students aren't applying to work there. Obviously, it's because they simply don't need the money. Everyone knows that all parents give their children money so that they don't have to work.
Why don't students want to work for dining services? It can't be the money; it pays 10 cents above minimum wage. If a student works four hours a day, that's an extra 40 cents!
Those lazy, spoiled students don't deserve more money. It's obviously much more economical to pay the full-time staff overtime and continue using paper and plastic products.
It can't be that there are hundreds of other jobs where students don't have to slop food. It can't be that there are restaurants in town willing to pay more than $4.35 an hour.
David Day
Special Projects Coordinator
KU Bookstores
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
ERIKA RASMUSSON
One of the hardest parts about going away to college is saying goodbye to the people you leave behind. Whether you are a freshman or a fifth-year senior, leaving your friends and family behind can be hard.
As a senior, I've had four years of experience in saying goodbye. Every summer I have gone home to my family and old friends, and as every summer ends, I find myself sad at the prospect of saying "see you at Thanksgiving" once again. And as excited as I always am to come back to KU, I have to wonder if this will be the year that I lose touch will some high school friends.
But to be honest, I don't think that will happen.
If there's one thing I have learned from going to an out-of-state university, it is that long-distance friendships can last. It just takes a little extra effort and understanding on everyone's part.
Some of the people I consider my best friends in the world are the ones I went to high school with. The fact that most of us are hundreds of miles apart nine months out of the year only makes us realize that the time we do spend together is more precious.
Another thing I've learned is that it is not just high school friends you sometimes have to say goodbye to. College friends leave, too. In fact, I started this year without two of the best friends I've made in my years at KU. Although both made decisions for their future that required them to leave Lawrence, that doesn't mean our friendships have ended. It just makes them more complicated.
However, if a friendship is special enough, it will survive both time and distance.
One of the best parts about coming to college is, of course, the opportunity to make new friends. The relationships you make while at school are the best part about it.
College, as we are all finding out, is a place to grow up and mature, find out who you are and who you want to become, and most importantly, a place to learn the significant lessons of life.
But making new friends doesn't mean you have to give up your old ones. The key, I've found, is to strike a balance between the two groups. You don't have to sacrifice one group for the other.
Keeping old friends and making new ones is one of those lessons.
Erika Rasmussen is a Mimetonka, Minn., senior in magazine Journalism.
HUBIE
WHOA-WHERE AM I?
YOU ARE IN HELL, MY FRIEND.
WHAT?
WHOA—WHERE AM I?
YOU ARE IN HELL, MY FRIEND.
WHAT?
YOU WERE INVOLVED IN A CAR CRASH BECAUSE NOBODY KNOWS HOW TO DRIVE ON 23RD STREET.
OH, YEAH.
SO WHO ARE YOU?
I AM YOUR GUIDE THROUGH YOUR TEMPORARY VISIT TO HELL.
I AM YOUR GUIDE
THROUGH YOUR
TEMPORARY VISIT
TO HELL.
YOU WERE INVOLVED IN A CAR CRASH BECAUSE NOBODY KNOWS HOW TO DRIVE ON 23RD STREET.
OH, YEAH.
By Greg Hardin
SO WHO ARE YOU?
I AM YOUR GUIDE THROUGH YOUR TEMPORARY VISIT TO HELL.
I AM HERE TO ATTEMB FOR
MY GREAT SIN OF CREATING
UNLISTENABLE MUSIC THAT
CREATED A GIGANTIC FAD
COMPARABLE TO DISCO AND
MADE NORMAL PEOPLE LIKE
YOU SUFFER BECAUSE YOU HAD
TO LISTEN TO IT IN RESTAUR-
ANTS, MUSIC
STORES, AND
CAR RADIOS
GARTH BROOKS!
WHAT'S UP??
NOT MAN.
GARTH BROOKS!
WHAT'S UP??
NOT MUCH,
MAN.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 8, 1994
5A
KU student decries city's decision
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
The executive director of Kansans for Term Limits condemned the Lawrence City Commission yesterday for not placing a term ballot referendum on the November ballot.
Scot Hill, Andover senior, said the commission's decision at a meeting Tuesday night was unfair. He said the ordinance was legal and the city was looking for an easy way to put commissioner term limits to death.
"Iam amazed at the lengths at which the commission will go," he said. "They won't let people vote on term limits."
Hill also said the organization had legal representation and could take the city to court over the referendum.
Hill had submitted a petition signed by more than 3,800 people — more than enough to qualify it for a referendum — calling for limiting city commissioners to two four-year terms. The referendum, if passed, also would require the city clerk to lobby state and national governments until both passed term limitation laws of their own.
But the commission declined to put the proposed ordinance on the ballot when it was presented at a commission meeting Tuesday night. The commissioners acted on the advice of Gerald Cooley, city attorney, who told the commission the proposed ordinance would not meet with state law.
Cooley said the most glaring problem was the second section, which dealt with the city clerk's lobbying effort. He said that section was an administrative ordinance — an ordinance that dealt with personnel matters, defined a finite goal that could be met, or had no definite penalty for noncompliance — and was prohibited by state law from being put up to referendum.
Because state law also prohibits the city from changing the content of a proposed ordinance, he said, the first section of Hill's proposal has to be considered with the second section. Therefore, the whole ordinance is illegal, he said.
Hill blasted the commission for the action. He said it was an easy way for the city to kill commissioner term limits.
"They've decided that they're above the laws and that they don't have to comply with the laws," he said.
If the issue went to court, Hill said, a decision might not be reached until after the November election. In that case, he said, the city would have to call a special election, which would cost the city a lot of money.
Hill also said the city had no jurisdiction over a proposed ordinance up for referendum. He said the referendum already had cleared its legal hurdles through the Douglas County election and voter registration office.
But Cooley said yesterday that Hill was mistaken about jurisdiction. While the petition itself must be cleared by the county, the proposed ordinance must meet with state law, he said. The city is within its rights to refuse to place an illegal ordinance on the ballot, he said.
Cooley also said the analysis had nothing to do with the content of the ordinance.
"It makes no difference to me whether they put it on," he said. "It's my opinion that it's just not legally sufficient."
ference to explore Hispanic literature
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Michael Doudouroff hopes to learn about the poetry of the Dominican Republic this week.
But to do it, all he has to do is drive across town. "It's a chance for me to hear one of the great people in the field talk about it," said Doudoroff, professor of Spanish and Portuguese.
Starting today, Douldoorf and about 100 other KU professors and graduate students will participate in the Mid-America Conference on Hispanic Literature, which will take place today through Saturday at the Holiday Inn Holdmein, 200 McDonald Drive. The conference is sponsored by the University of Kansas, the University of Missouri, the University of Colorado, the
Doudoroff said the conference, for which more than 260 people have registered to attend, gave instructors and researchers a chance to old texts in a new light. "We become aware of things we hadn't seen before."
University of Nebraska and Washington University in St. Louis, and draws academics from around the world to discuss Hispanic literature.
"We become aware of things we hadn't seen before," he said. "It's very exciting."
Doudoroff said the presentations, which sometimes will occur simultaneously and will last about 20 minutes, will keep attendees running from room to room.
"This conference makes room for discussion on the topics that teachers, students and academics work with every day," said Harriet Turner, head of the modern languages and literatures department at the University of Nebraska.
HUCGIES DIAPERS
1¢ PER DIAPER OVER CHECKER'S INVOICE COST EVERYDAY!
DAILY BREAKFAST
Banana Soda Thirty, Kirkland, 18, 20, 7am & 8pm Fri. Sept. 16, 7am
BANANAS 9¢ LA.
KEYSTONE LIGHT OR KEYSTONE
BEER
920
24 PACK
12OZ
CANS
LIMIT 1
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
KEYSTONE BEER
24 PM 12OZ. CANS
$970
BONELESS TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
198
LB.
ECOONOMY PACK
FRESH MUSHROOMS
80Z. PRG.
88¢ LA.
RED, BLACK OR THOMPSON SEEDLESS GRAPES
78¢ LB.
70% LEAN FRESH GROUND BEEF
5LB. OR LARGER JUMBO PACK
88¢ LB.
FRESH COLORADO CARROTS
98¢
5 LB. BAG
MILD MEDIUM YELLOW ONIONS
18¢ LA.
LEAN BONE-JN PORK STEAK
108
LB.
ECOONOMY PACK
FRESH CRISP BROCCOLI
68¢
EACH LARGE BUNCH
TYSON GRADE “A” FRYERS WHOLE FROZEN
48¢
LB. LIMIT 3 PLEASE
CUCUMBER, GREEN ONIONS, OR GREEN BELL PEPPERS
22¢ EA.
BONELESS LEAN ROAST OR PORK CHOPS
288
LB.
ECOONOMY PACK
ALL PURPOSE RUSSET POTATOES
188
EACH
20 LB. BAG
BONELESS BEEF CHUCK ARM ROAST
108
LB.
ECOONOMY PACK
FRESH BAKED CHERRY PIE
2½¢
8", 26 OZ.
BLUE BELL ICE CREAM
245
EACH
ASST. FLAVORS
1/2 GALLOON CTN.
FROM THE DELI SLICED OR SHredded SMOKED TURKEN BREASTS
199
LB.
ECOONOMY PACK
MOOSE BROTHERS PEPPERON PIZZA
388
LARGE SIZE
SNOW WHITE CAULIFLOWER
78¢
FACILITY SIZE
PARKAY REG. OR LIGHT
99¢
3LB. TUB
DELI PARTY TRAVS
100
24 OZ. GALLOON REQUIRED
IMPORTED FROM HOLLAND LEYDEN CHEESE
$499
LB.
FRESH BAKED WHITE BREAD REQUEST
5¢ 450
S.
FRESH BAGS
ALL NATIONAL BRAND DOG & CAN FOOD
18LB.
1£ LB. OVER INVOICE COST!
OPEN AT HOURS FREE ORDER
Checkers
LOW FOOD PRICES
23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
GRade "AA"
Eggs 1/4 OR Per Checker's Invoice Cost
FEATURING J. P. GOLDBURGH CENTER FOR IMPORT OF INVOICE LUNES
FRESH KANSAS RAISED BUFFALO DAILY
WE WANT YOU!
(And your next printing job!)
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
Quality Lithography Design
Lock It.
Keep It!
genuine Kryptonite
On SALE!
$19.95
ends September 8, 1994
RICK'S
BIKE SHOP
Inc.
916 Mass., (913)841-6642
genuine Kryptonite
On SALE!
$19.95
ends September 8, 1994
SONY MUSIC
Sony Music is looking for students to join its college marketing representative program. Spend your days and nights working to promote and market alternative and developing artists signed with Sony Music through college radio, college newspapers, record stores, clubs, and student activity groups. This is a paid, part-time position requiring a time commitment of approximately twenty hours per week.
A Sony representative will be in your area soon to conduct interviews. If you are interested in applying have at least one and a half years left in college, and have a car, send or fax your resume to: Sony Music/College Marketing Department 550 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10022
fax: 212-833-5780
RM 3174
©1984 Sassy Music Entertainment Inc. An equal opportunity employer.
STUDENTS
KANSAS FOOTBALL VS. MICHIGAN STATE 7p.m. SATURDAY NIGHT!!
$7 for Students $35 Season tickets CALL TODAY!!864-3141
NOTE: Each season ticket package for students contains a complimentary ticket for the Michigan State game. ANYONE MAY USE THE TICKET. Please distribute to a friend or relative!
6A
Thursday, September 8, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Halls begin fire awareness programs
By Ashley Miller
Kansan staff writer
Residents in Ellsworth Hall watched Hoch Auditorium go up in smoke last night.
Video tape of the 1991 fire that gutted Hoch was shown as part of a fire safety awareness program presented to residents by student housing and the Lawrence Fire Department.
James Parker, assistant complex director of Ellsworth Hall, said student housing was working with the department to inform students of fire policies for residence halls.
Yumi Chikamori/KANSAN
"We really want them to understand the importance of fire safety, especially in a 10-story building." Parker said.
Parker said last night's presentation included the Hoch video, a video of a burning chair to show how rapidly a fire develops, a review of residence hall fire policies and a question and answer session.
WHEREVER IT IS WE ARE ALWAYS IN UNDER THE STANDARD OF CONDUCT AND PROTECTION FOR OUR FAMILIES.
Rich Barr, Lawrence fire marshal,
said the video of the burning chair
was an important part of the presentation because the setting in the video was similar to a residence hall room.
"What fuels a fire is the furnishings, not the structure," he said.
Jason May, Peabody senior and residence assistant at Ellsworth Hall, dresses like a firefighter as part of a fire safety meeting at Ellsworth. About 200 students attended the meeting yesterday.
Barr also discussed false alarms in
the presentation. He said residents needed to know the social cost of false alarms.
"They take resources from the rest of the citizens," Barr said.
Both Parker and Barr said each residence hall and scholarship hall would have its own program this month to increase safety awareness. Parker said Ellsworth was the first hall to organize a program.
He said the residence halls would compete for the highest attendance at each program. Staff members in the winning hall will receive sweat-shirts from the fire department.
Parker said he paid special attention to getting prizes for residents in order to draw residents to the presentation.
Parker said the first 200 students in the door received a free shoe rental from the Kansas Union Jaybowl. Students also signed up at the door to win prizes.
Parker said the most popular prize was a "The Late Show" T-shirt signed by David Letterman. He tried to get a signed script of the show, but Letterman's office sent the T-shirt instead.
Other prizes included a basketball signed by KU coach Roy Williams, a football signed by KU coach Glen Mason and the football coaching
staff, Student Union Activities movie passes and massages.
Parker said about $2,000 worth of gift certificates for food also were
given away. Joe's Bakery, 616 W. Ninth St., donated 100 free doughnuts as a prize.
United Way seeks volunteers for 'Day of Caring'
By Amanda Traughber Special to the Kansan
Marcia Epstein pointed to the cracked, peeling walls of a bedroom that temporarily houses suicidal people and others who need counseling.
"This room really needs to be repainted," said Epstein, director of Headquarters, a personal crisis and short-term counseling center at 1419 Massachusetts St.
She will get her wish when volunteers, many from the University of Kansas, participate in "A Day of Caring," a community service program sponsored by the United Way. The event will be Saturday, Sept. 17, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. The United Way is a nation-wide agency that encompasses and provides services to 30 nonprofit health and human service groups.
Although 250 people have already registered to help, the agency is seeking more volunteers. The last day to sign up as a volunteer is Monday, Sept. 12 at the Roger Hill Volunteer Center, 212E, 9th St.
The painting project at Headquarters is one of about 30 projects United Way has planned for the day. This is the first "Day of Caring" in Douglas County, said Rick Bellinger, United Way volunteer and coordinator of the event. Bellinger said the projects would be finalized after the number of volunteers was known.
April Broussard, Denver sophorm and the Sigma Kappa sorority's
community service chair, said that Sigma Kappa will participate in "A Day of Caring," but the sorority didn't know what its project would be yet. Broussard said the sorority members would probably work on a project organized by the United Way instead of planning one of their own. Groups who volunteer can plan their own project or be assigned one by United Way.
Lanaea Heine, coordinator at United Way's Roger Hill Volunteer Center, said, "The event is designed to be a community-wide celebration of volunteering."
itive experience for volunteers so they would become involved in future projects. Spurgin works at the Lawrence Indian Center, 1423 Haskell St.
Dan Spurgin, a member of Volunteers In Service To America (VISTA), a federal volunteer program, said he hoped the event would provide a pos-
"It's easy to ask a volunteer to come in, burn them out and never see them again." Spurgin said.
He said volunteers were needed at the Lawrence Indian Center to help plant their fall garden.
While the event is designed to better the community through volunteering, he said that the day should also provide a chance to bring people together to discover common ground.
Anyone who wishes to volunteer should call the Roger Hill Volunteer Center at 865-5030.
Senate defeats media fund bill
KJHK, Kansan only KU media affected by bill
Ami Hizer, off-campus senator who sponsored the defeated bill, had a hard time finding support for the bill, which would have put the $3 media fee back into the general activity fee account. This would have required the Kansan and KJHK to make formal requests for funding to Senate every two years.
By James Evans
Kansan staff writer
The full Student Senate voted overwhelmingly last night to leave the current media fee, which partially funds The University Daily Kansan and KJHK, in place.
In her speech for the bill, Hilzer said the purpose of the bill was to change the definition of media on campus and make the "ideology" of Senate funding consistent. She said that alternative media such as Kiosk, Pinch and Whosinations should be considered media.
In the current system, Student Senate has a media board that requires groups to meet five standards to be considered media. The Kansan and JHK are the only campus media that meet the criteria that is set by board. Many alternative media, such as The Pinch and Kiosk, are not able to gain funding because they can't make the publication requirement, said Mark Galus, Liberal Arts and Science senator.
Hizer said that she also wanted to put the media fee into the general activity fee, so Student Senate would fund all student groups consistently.
Many senators expressed concern that if the media fee was put
Senate action
A list of legislation Senate voted on last night:
PASSED
bill to finance the 8th Annual Blueprints Student Leadership Conference
resolution to create the community service initiative
PASSED
PASSED
resolution to increase student input to the chancellor search committee
KANSAN
bill to finance a lecture by Kurt Vonnegut, sponsored by SUA FAILED
into the general activity fund the Kansan and KJHK would feel a perception of censorship.
"It's implicit censorship," said Todd Lasala, law senator. He said that it would be dangerous if a student government had power over the funding of a student newspaper.
"Every time they have to write an article about Student Senate, they'll have to think about their funding." Lasala said.
David Ambler, vice chancellor of student affairs, said at the meeting that the media fee was designed to get rid of the politics between JHKJ and the Kansan and Senate.
After the hour-long debate, Hizer's proposal was voted down.
In other actions Student Senate voted to give Hispanic American Leadership Organization $4000 to help fund a lecture by Linda Alvarado.
Alvarado, who is a limited owner of the Colorado Rockies and the president of Alvarado Construction in Denver, is being scheduled to speak Oct. 21, said Sandra Olivas, Liberal Arts and Science senator.
For once, a cut in educational spending that actually helps students.
Macintosh® Performance 6368250
with CD-ROM, Apple Color Plus 14" Display,
AppleDesign® Keyboard and mouse. Only $1,699.00.
investment that are
Apple" PowerBook" 150 4/120. Only $1,257.00
With Apple's special low student pricing, you can get a terrific deal on Macintosh $ ^{ \circ} $ the best-selling personal computer on college campuses today. You can choose the affordable Macintosh Performa $ ^{\circ} $ which comes complete with lots of powerful software to help get you through college. You can also choose the portable Apple $ ^{\circ} $ PowerBook $ ^{\circ} $ or the Power
Macintosh® Performax 636 4/250,
Apple Color Plus 14" Display, AppleDesign"
Keyboard and mouse. Only $1,399.00.
Macintosh"—the world's fastest Mac." And because Macintosh is still the easiest personal computer, you won't have to dig through complex manuals. Plus, with low student pricing, a Mac is as easy to afford as it is to use. All of which makes it the ideal time to discover the power all college students need. The power to be your best. Apple
POWER through it.
POWER
through it.
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union
technology
center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
VISA
MASS.CARD
BIC CARD
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burge Union * Level 3 * 913/834-569*
are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. AppleDesign, Mac and Power Macintosh are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 8, 1994
7A
Jon's notes create difference of opinion between faculty, students
Continued from Page 1A.
affairs at Nebraska, said Nebraska administrators viewed Jon's Notes as a "necessary evil."
"The attitude here is that this is inevitable, and we might as well work with the system so that the notes are accurate," Grobsmith said.
Daryl Evans, associate professor of sociology, has allowed Jon's Notes to sell lecture notes for his Elements of Sociology class since the Lawrence branch of the company was established in Fall 1991.
"Many students simply aren't good note takers, and I thought that this would be an opportunity for students to see what good notes look like," he said. "Anything we can do to help students learn the material should be utilized."
Evans said he had seen no large decrease in attendance since Jon's Notes began selling his class notes.
"There will always be some students who don't come to class," said Evans. "I think it's my job to create an environment so that students want to come to class."
Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, disagreed, saying that the notes were contrary to the educational process. Loomis denied Jon's Notes permission to sell his class notes in Fall 1992.
NOTES FOR SALE
"I am unalterably opposed to Jon's Notes," he said. "I'm not a crazed person about this, but Jon's Notes diminish what you're doing when you're up there teaching."
After purchasing Jon's Notes subscriptions for Elements of Sociology and Introduction to Archaeology, Noel Graham said the notes could increase the temptation to skip class.
"I've already missed one archaeology class," Graham, Overland Park senior, said. "But the notes will allow me to concentrate on other classes."
cram a lot more as a result of having the notes.
Graham said he would probably
"I'll probably wait until the night before the test to look at all of the notes," he said. "Having the notes probably will hurt the amount of information I retain, but I really don't think it will hurt my grades."
William Staples, associate professor of sociology, said he had seen the negative effects of commercial note taking when he taught at the University of California-Los Angeles.
UCLA offers a note-taking service called Associated Students of UCLA
Lecture Notes. Andy Amamoto, Lecture Notes production manager, said the company offered notes for about 110 classes.
Staples said the effects of such a company were blatantly negative.
"You're trying to teach a class to students who think they simply can buy the notes and do nothing more," Staples said. "It seems like a really easy way to blow off the class."
Staples, who allowed Lecture Notes to sell his class notes at UCLA, said he would not allow Jon's Notes to attend his classes now. Each day, 30 to 35 of Staple's 120 students were absent from his class at UCLA, he said.
"Selling notes reduces the whole educational experience to a commodities exchange," Staples said. "A lot of us would like to believe that education actually happens in the classroom. Otherwise, why don't we close the University and do it all by mail?"
Notes about notes
Jon's Notes, a commercial note taking business, sells lecture notes at five universities, including the University of Kansas. The notes, which can be purchased at the KU Bookstore in the Kansas Union, cost $1.50 for one lecture and $23.50 for a semester-long subscription. Notes are available for the following classes this semester:
Class Instructor
Anthropology 110 JackHofman
Anthropology 310 JackHofman
Biology 104 Sally Frost-Mason
Biology 104 William Dentler
Biology 300 Christophe Bennett
Chemistry 184 Grover Everett
Classics 148 Michael Shaw
Psychology 104 David Holmes
Psychology 570 Chris Crandall
Sociology 104 DarylEvans
This Offer Is Cut & Dried.
At Great Clips, our stylists give you the look you want. every time. Every Great Clips stylist is specially trained to give you a salon-quality cut or perm, without the salon price. So come to Great Clips, and let our stylists give you your style.
NANA BERGER
Great Clips for hair:
OUR STYLISTS WORKING HOME
Source: Kansan staff research
Great Clips for hair.
HAIRCUT AND BLOW DRY $3.99 Reg. $9
OUR STYLISTS YOUR STYLE $ ^{ \textcircled{8}} $
Not Valid With Other Offers.
Offer good through September 24.
GRAND OPENING
September 10 Located at 6th and Minnesota 832-2424 M-F9-9 • Sat 9-6 • Sun 12-5
The Lowest CD Prices in Town
Current, Popular CDs for $5.95!
Buy 5or more CDs for $4.95
Also available, special selection CDs $3.95!
For the Best Values in Town Visit
Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire
Life Is Easier In Eastlands.
EASTLAND
Made In Freeport, Maine USA.
McCall's
Cambridge
Orono
Woodstock
Boothbay
CHOOSE FROM OVER 20 STYLES!
McCall's
SHOES SPORTSWEAR ACCESSORIES
829 Massachusetts • Downtown Lawrence • MTWFS 9 to 5:30 • TH till 8:30 • Sun 1-5 • Visa, MC, Discover, AmEx
Life Is Easier In Eastlands.
EASTLAND
Made In Freeport, Maine USA.
McCall's
Cambridge
Orono
Woodstock
Boothbay
CHOOSE FROM OVER 20 STYLES!
McCall's
SHOES - SPORTSWEAR ACCESSORIES
829 Massachusetts • Downtown Lawrence • MTWFS 9 to 5:30 • TH till 8:30 • Sun 1-5 • Visa, MC, Discover, AmEx
2108 W. 27th • Park Plaza • 843-8467
THUR., SEPT 8
SUNDAY CLUB
GREAT MUSIC FOOD TIMES!
FRI., SEPT 9 MUNKAFUST
SAT., SEPT 10 COMMON GROUND
MON., SEPT 12 Fat Tuesday doll face
WED., SEPT 14 THE PRAYERS SOLE-FISH
FRI., SEPT 23 SMITHEREENS
FRI., SEPT 16 DIXIE-DREGS
ROCK CLUB
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
Becky's HAIRSTYLING
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. Manager; Kelly Hate; Holly Green; Am Schultz; Susanne Smith; Susie LaRue. 3rd row: Krissy Hadl; Dolly Puckett; Fardeh Pirzaac Gina Sharp; Lisa Stuart, Manager; Lauren Sims. 2nd row: Kristi Wicks; Kristen Lockwood Becky Isaac, Owner; Karrie Bontrager; Stefanie Lockwood. Front row: Pam Nace; Courtne Eberle; Amy Albertson, Asst. Manager; Nancy Griffin.
HAIR CUTS
$10'00
(with coupon)
NOT VALID W/OFFER OFFERS
exp. 1/1/95
PERMS
$42'00
(with coupon)
(includes cut & style, long hair slightly higher)
exp. 1/1/95
Full Service Salon
• hair weavings
• hair integrations/wigs
• full head massage
• sculptured & gel nails
• pedicures
• waxing
The staff of the new building.
full body massage
- waxina
TORR., SEPT 8
Torrance, Ghent
of an Armadillo
SUNDAY CLUB
ADMINISTRY TOTAL AVAILABLE
AT THE LARGE OF THIRD STREET
GREAT MUSIC FOOD TIMES!
FRI., SEPT 9 MUNKAFUST
SAT., SEPT 10 COMMON GROUND
MON., SEPT 12 Fat Tuesday doll face
WED., SEPT 14 THE PRAYERS SOLE-FISH
FRI., SEPT 23 SMITHEREENS
FRI., SEPT. 16 DIXIE DREGS
ADV-TIX
ROCK CLUB
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
For info and current concert
listings call 913-841-9111
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
lyric opera of kansas city
OTHELLO
BY GILLIELPPI VERDI
DON'T MISS THIS PASSIONATE PRODUCTION BASED ON SHAKESPEARE'S CLASSIC TRAAGLDY. PERFORMED IN ENGLISH
SEPTEMBER 9 AT 5 PM
SEPTEMBER 11 AM - 4 PM PERFORMANCE MALL DESIGNED
SEPTEMBER 11 AM - 30 PM
SEPTEMBER 11 AM - 10 PM SPONSORED BY BLACK & WHITE
SEPTEMBER 11 AM - 30 PM
SEPTEMBER 12 AM - 4 PM, 30 MIN. PRIOR TO CURTAIN
LOUISVILLE N.Y.C. • CAST (851) 671-7301 • FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
PROVIDED BY FIREFIGHTER Missouri Arts Council LC and NYC
SHOWCASES AT THE ART GALLERY IN LOUISVILLE
THE INSTRUCTORS USM
lifestyles
(1)
Ken Snow, Lawrence resident, sells pears, tomatoes and preserves at the Downtown Lawrence Farmers' Market, corner of 1.1th and Vermont streets. He has sold his produce at the market for two years.
The Farmers' Market
Mama always said to eat your vegetables. Now it's easy to find healthy alternatives to pizza and beer.
Story by Casey Barnes Photos by Jay Thornton
The talk is mostly produce, with an occasional joke about tomatoes. It's the Downtown Lawrence Farmers' Market, and this season cantaloupe and watermelon are ripe for the picking. Next month, it will be apple cider and pumplins.
Floyd and Becky Ott have been selling their home-grown products at the market for about 15 to 20 years. Becky is a retired registered nurse, and Floyd rents out his farm and sells produce as a hobby.
The market is the oldest of its kind in Kansas, but even the veteran farmers can't remember exactly when it started.
"We've been doing it for a long time," Becky Ott said. "It's always been our dream to do this when we retire. It's a nice supplement to our
income, and it keeps us healthy."
the Otts are one of about 65 vendors that set up their
Mixed
HOT Sweet
Mini
Sweet
Bell
Peppers
5 for $1.00
displays from 4 to 6:30 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday and from 6:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. on Saturday. The market opens on a regular basis the second Saturday in May and closes on the second Saturday in November. But
there are occasional holiday markets around Christmas and Easter.
The market is located in a parking lot at the corner of 11th and Vermont streets, and vendors sell everything from fruits and vegetables to Mexican food and cinnamon rolls.
The small lot is a cramped place for the growing event, which has become family to the vendors and a weekly routine for the many faithful shoppers. The prices are comparable
to grocery markets' prices, but the atmosphere is more authentic.
"We have a lot of nice, repeat customers who come back because we give them a nice product," Floyd Ott said. "The stuff may not be as pretty as it is in the grocery store, but it's fresher and just as safe."
Floyd said safe products were not a concern to his customers in the past. It was taken for granted that the food was safely grown. These days, most customers at the farmers' market insist on food that is organically produced.
To be organic, the food must be grown with fertilizers consisting only of natural animal or vegetable matter, said Mary Joe Mensie, chairwoman for the vendors' group.
Only a few of the vendors are certified to sell organic products, but many follow the guidelines and do not use inorganic pesticides or fertilizers.
To say that food is organically certified, vendors must pay at least $1,500 in fees and have their crops tested.
Nuria Lucas, Lawrence graduate student and a local farmer, sells her crops at the market. Although she is not certified to sell organic food, she posts signs on her tables stating that her food is organically grown.
"It's outrageously expensive to be certified to sell organic products," Lucas said. "I guess if people want proof, then certification would be necessary, but a lot of regulars come to my booth because I pick it fresh everyday."
Freshness is what draws the crowds. And this fall some of the biggest sellers are broccoli, apples and tomatoes.
White duce, first-time sn
see cajun-smoked sausage,
cake and raspberry coolers for s.
Terry Weber, Lawrence resident,
said he normally goes to the mark
ket to buy produce, but he often
gets his dinner there too.
"Ilike the Mideastern food they
sell here, but Isettled for Mexican
food today," he said.
---
...
Bringing Chinese Buddhism to Lawrence
An exhibit of Chinese Buddhist pictorial art at the Spencer Museum of Art tries to take the spectator across the seas to a Chinese monastery.
By Eduardo A. Molina Kansan correspondent
"Latter Days of the Law: Images of Chinese Buddhism, 185-1850," is the title of the first exhibition outside Asia to examine Chinese Buddhist pictorial art from the mid-ninth century to the mid-19th century.
Bong! Bong! Images take visitors to the halls of a Chinese monastery. But spectators are not inside the tall walls that surround the monastery's interconnected buildings and courtyards. They are at the Spencer Museum of Art.
"There is a Buddhist notion that the Buddha's teachings pass through three phases: an early phase when the teachings were perfectly understood, a middle phase when only a semblance of the law or teachings remained and the latter days of the law when the teachings entered a period of decline and ultimately disappeared," she said.
Marsha Weidner, curator of the exhibition and associate professor of art history, said this period was the last phase in Budda's teachings.
The exhibition has 83 works, which include paintings, rubbings, wood-block prints and pictorial textiles.
Paintings of Buddhas and hanging scrolls of the top deities, or Bodhisattas, welcome people as if they were visiting the Great Buddha hall,
called "The Temple: Ritual, Devotion and Study."
Religious themes are introduced in the first section of the exhibition
MULA - GENERATION - HISTORY - DESCIPHERY - REVISION - UPDATE
One hall contains meditating lohans, or Buddhist saints, and paintings of hell. Another part represents the Water-Land ritual.
the most important hall in a monastery.
"Green Tara," early 13th century
The museum has tried to replicate the halls, each of which demonstrate a specific function of the monastery.
"This was a mortuary ritual to improve the conditions of reborn ancestors and relatives," Weidner said. "The images of spirits and divine beings were used to create a ritual space, a ritual arena during the sevent-day ceremony."
Julianne Peter/KANSAN
The second section, "Beyond the Monastery Walls: Professional Painters and Popular Themes," shows that Buddhism was followed by all people.
"It was not something just confined to monks, nuns and monasteries," she said.
One of the most popular images for Chinese Buddhism was Guanayin, the Bodhisattva of compassion. A very flexible deity, Guanayin can assume any appearance she wishes to help people.
"If she needs to appear as a beautiful woman or like a spiritual man, she will do that to save people," she said.
One painting has Guanyin riding
"The first two sections are characterized by the use of colors in a decorative sense," she said. "In this section, the style changes. This is the scholars' world where images are restrained and quiet."
The last section is called "From the Monks' Quarters to the Scholars' Studio." The purpose of this section is to present images produced from the interaction between Buddhist clergy and Chinese scholars, Weir said.
down the clouds on a mythological animal and holding a male child, which is a response to the desire for a son to carry on the family name.
Chinese scholars read poetry, practiced calligraphy and painted.
This section includes paintings of parties where monks and scholars shared the arts and the teachings of Buddhism.
"It was a gentlemanly thing to do," Weidner said.
Mike Bultena, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, said anyone could enjoy the exhibit.
"It is a fantastic and interesting exhibition," he said. "It doesn't matter what your major is because one can learn a lot about this culture."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Weidner will give a tour of the exhibit at 12:15 p.m. Sept. 15. The exhibition runs through Oct.9.
SEPTEMBER 8, 1994 PAGE 8A
KU Life
Lawrence Nightlife Calendar
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Sinister Dane with Motherwell, 10 tonight, $4
(18 and over)
The Millions, walking on Einstein, Rex Daisy, 10
p.m. tomorrow, $5 (18 and over)
Blig Gloat with The Skeletones and Power and Fear, 10 p.m. Saturday, $6 (over 21), $7 (18-20)
Open Mike Night, 9:15 p.m. Monday, no cover charge
Shudder to Think with Stanford Prison Experiment, 10 p.m. Tuesday, advanced tickets $6 (18 and over)
Mercy Rule with Dali-Automatic and Six Penny,
10 p.m. Wednesday, $4 (18 and over)
Grither and Amputatee (after the Reverend Horton Heat show at Liberty Hall on Thursday), no cover charge (18 and over)
Full Moon Cafe
803 Massachusetts St.
The Winfield Bluegrass Festival Kickoff Preview Review featuring White Trash Express with Lou's Revenge, Creek Bank Ghetto Boyz and Julia Henderson. 8 p.m. tomorrow, free
Bluegrass Festival Review featuring White Trash Express with Sister Sue and the Bad Habits, Biggs & Bennett and Mo' Better Bluegrass Boys, 8 p.m. Saturday, free
North Indian Music with Theen Tal, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, free
River Valley Music Cafe
1601 West 23rd St.
Sunday Club, 9 tonight, cover charge
Munkafest, 9 p.m. tomorrow, cover charge
Common Ground, 9 p.m. Saturday, cover charge Fat Tuesday with doll face, 9 p.m. Monday, cover charge
The Prayers with Sole-fish, 9 p.m. Wednesday, cover charge
642 Massachusetts St.
The Reverend Horton Heat with Paw and Tenderloin, 8 p.m. Thursday, advanced tickets $12.50
If you would like to submit a weekend performance for the nightlife calendar, you may fax it to the Kansan at 864-5261, call the Kansan at 864-4810 or stop by Room 111 in Stauffer-Flint Hall. All applications should be directed to Teresa Veazey. The nightlife calendar is printed every Thursday, and all applications must be received a week before.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1994
SECTION B
Kansas to face Spartans' 'Doctor of Defense'
Bv Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
When the Kansas Jayhawks play the Michigan State Spartans on Saturday, they will be facing a team with an offensive line that could be the largest in any football league and a defense with a new look designed by a "doctor."
Michigan State coach George Perles, who was a defensive coach for the Pittsburgh Steelers during their four Superbowl appearances during the 1970s, recruited Bullough to become his new defensive coordinator this season.
Since 1970, Bullough has coached for several different professional teams. In one year with the Detroit Lions, Bullough took the defense from 20th in overall defense in 1992, to 6th in 1993 in the National Football League.
The Spartans finished 6-6 last season, including a 31-14 victory against Kansas. But after finishing seventh in the Big Ten Conference with a 4-4 record last season, the Spartans hired Hank Bullock, nicknamed the "Doctor of Defense," to help cure their problems on defense.
Bullough has helped to implement a new Spartan defense that Kansas coach Glen Mason said would give the Jayhawks different looks.
"They do a lot of different things to try to confuse offenses," Mason said. "We don't know what to expect, except that there will be 11 guys out there."
Mason said that Michigan State tradition- ally has emphasized strong team defense.
Mason said Perles had helped invent the stunt 4-3 and had made it famous when he coached for Pittsburgh. Perles became the Spartans head coach in 1983 and has compiled a 68-56-4 record.
Besides a new defensive system, the Jayhawks will be facing one of the biggest lines in both college football and the NFL, Mason said.
Anytime you play a team with that type of size there is concern," Mason said. "And when you take into account that I've been fielding questions all along that our
defense is on the small side, obviously we don't want to get in a dancing contest with those people."
The Jayhawks defensive front includes two defensive ends who played linebacker last season. Not only will the Jayhawks have to deal with the offensive line's size, but their skill as well.
"I read where George Perles rates them the best offensive line ever at Michigan State," Mason said. "We had our problems last year with them, and those guys are a year older."
The Jayhawks are not the only team that must play against a skilled offensive line. The Spartans will face a Kansas offensive ground attack that rushed for 346 yards in a 35-13 victory against Houston last week.
"Michigan State is a much bigger test for us than Houston," Mason said. "The thing I'm interested in is our players play as hard as they can, and we do a good job coaching. If we do those two things and we're good enough, we should win the game."
Mason said he was more impressed by his running backs than his offensive line. Four backs and senior quarterback Ashkei Preston carried the ball to gain the 346
yards.
yards.
"Those guys are tremendous athletes," Mason said, adding that he was even more impressed by the way they practiced.
"There isn't a group that goes out and practices better than our running back position, which includes the fullback"
Mason preaches to his running backs on the importance of the team concept.
"We are going to put team success ahead of individual success," Mason said. "If we get a guy too worried about that, the other guy is going to play more."
guy is going to play Mason used Kansas all-time leading rusher and graduate assistant football coach Tony Sands as an example.
Mason told his players that Sands would have traded his NCAA record for yards in a game, 396 against Missouri in 1991, for an extra win in that season.
Sands would have traded that record for a win because it probably would have meant that the Jayhawks, who went 6-5 that year, would have gone to a bowl game, Mason said.
"Team success will last a lot longer in their minds than any individual success," he said.
Iv Thornton / KANSAN
Kansas defensive back Gerald McBurrows answered questions during a press conference at Hadi Auditorium in the Parrrot Athletic Center yesterday. McBurrows commented on the upcoming game against Michigan State on Saturday.
Kansas assistant 'gives back to sport'
I will provide a short description of the image, focusing on the main subjects and any notable details.
The image depicts two individuals in motion, likely engaged in a martial arts training session. The person in front is wearing a white gi, which is a traditional uniform for martial arts. They are captured mid-action, possibly executing a technique or preparing to strike an opponent. The individual behind them appears to be a trainer or instructor, also dressed in a white gi, who is closely observing the foreground figure.
In the background, there is a blurred wall with no distinct features, suggesting that the focus of the image is on the athletes rather than the surroundings. There are no visible texts or logos that can be identified from this angle.
Given the context of martial arts training, it is plausible that these individuals are practicing a technique such as a throw, grappling, or self-defense move. However, without additional context, it is difficult to determine the exact nature of their activity.
Jay Thornton/ KANSAN
Kansas volleyball assistant coach Liz Berg watches junior outside hitter Tracie Walt for technique during a passing exercise. This is Berg's first year at Kansas. As a player at North Carolina, Berg set seven records in her four-year career that still stand.
Liz Berg shows love of volleyball
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
Liz Berg began working on her resume when she was in high school. And not even ten years later, she has exactly the job she wants.
This summer, the 25-year-old was named Kansas assistant volleyball coach.
"All along I think I knew I wanted to get into coaching," Berg said. "I was always fortunate to have influential coaches who made an impact in my life. I wanted to give back in the same way to the sport."
Her volleyball coaching and playing experience, coupled with her ability to communicate, make her a popular coach, said Kansas coach Karen Schonewise.
"She has a lot of enthusiasm for the sport, for life and for people," Schonewise said. "She really enjoys people. She's a good person. I knew the team would like her, and recruits would respond to her."
Berg became interested in sports in junior high and decided early in her athletic career to invest her time and talent in one sport.
Her choice was volleyball.
"I started playing club volleyball at our high school and that was a year-round sport," Berg said. "It was time consuming, so I decided to put all my eggs in one basket and go with it."
Berg spent many weekends and summer vacations during high school and college in the gym assisting coaches with volleyball camps and clinics. It wasn't long before the name Liz Berg became common place with the North Carolina volleyball program.
Berg had decided to stay in the Midwest to continue her collegiate athletic career. But a recruiting trip to North Carolina was the ticket
that sold her on Tar Heels volleyball.
"On a whim I took a recruiting trip to North Carolina," she said. "I fell in love with the university and the program. It all felt right with me."
Berg was an effective outside hitter for the Tar Heels in her four years of collegiate competition, earning Atlantic Coast Conference and All-South Region honors. She holds nine records for kills, digs and service aces with North Carolina and the ACC.
Berg graduated from North Carolina in 1991 with a degree in speech communications. But her heart remained with volleyball. So when an assistant coaching position opened up at Auburn, Berg applied and got the job. From there, Berg coached for two years at Iowa.
In the spring of 1994, Berg heard about the Kansas volleyball program, the changes and support it was receiving. She wanted to become a part of it.
As assistant coach at Kansas, one of Berg's main responsibilities is recruiting players for the upcoming season. Berg said her communications degree was serving its purpose.
"My whole job as a recruiter is communicating and effectively selling the program," she said. "One of Karen's philosophies is the importance of communication — communicating goals and objectives to players and potential players. In that respect, my degree has paid off."
Senior outside hitter Janet Uher said that Schonewise and Berg were the perfect coaching match.
"She knows the game very well and she has competed at it," Uher said. "You have to respect her, her abilities and her talents. She works so well with our team."
Berg will graduate from Kansas with a masters in sports administration this fall and is engaged to be married this summer.
"I'm enjoying my role. I couldn't be in any better of a situation than I am right now," she said. "I enjoy interacting with players. I feel like I may be making an impact, teaching the game and even teaching about life."
Texas Tech prepares to battle No.1 'Huskers
The Associated Press
LUBBOCK, Texas — A short work week has lengthened the odds against Texas Tech in its early-season battle with top-ranked Nebraska.
"We will have to take out the run," Texas Tech linebacker Zach Thomas said as the Red Raiders prepared for today's game. "It's going to be a big challenge, and I respect them for their tradition."
The Red Raiders will have to make a quick turnaround following their season-opening 37-31 victory Saturday over New Mexico. The Cornhuskers have been idle since beating West Virginia 31-0 in the Kickoff Classic on Aug. 28.
Thomas pointed out a further challenge: "We've only had four days to prepare; Nebraska's had a week and a half."
The Red Raiders enter the game remembering their 50-27 defeat last year in Lincoln. Tech held a brief 21-20 edge in the third quarter. But none of those scorers, other than kicker Jon Davis, are back for Tech.
It is the first time in 15 years that a No.1 team has visited Texas Tech.
Nebraska, meanwhile, returns many of its key players from 1993's 11-1 team, including quarterback Tommie Frazier, who threw for 206 yards against Tech.
Frazier ran for three touchdowns and threw for another on Aug. 28 as the Cornhuskers opened their season by blowing out West Virginia. Nebraska moved into the top ranking even though it didn't play last weekend.
It's the first time that Nebraska's been ranked at the top since November of 1897. Texas Tech coach Spike Dykes has acknowledged the game will be tough for his team.
"Our guys know that the chance to play Nebraska is thrilling, and they know that to beat Nebraska will be extremely difficult," Dykes said.
"I think too much is made of the polls right now," coach Tom Osborne said earlier this week.
Redshirt freshmen Tony Darden (7 of 13 for 92 yards) and Zebbie Lethridge (16 of 22 for 190 yards) helped Tec rally from a 17-0 gap and lead New Mexico by as much as 13 points in the fourth quarter.
Texas Tech's season-opening win over New Mexico no doubt surprised some pessimists who were troubled by the Red Raiders' novice offense and lack of a dominant quarterback.
Tech's mascot, a black quarterhorse named Double T, died Saturday after its saddle and rider fell off and it ran into a concrete wall during the third quarter. The pregame ceremony today will include a moment of silence for Double T.
Today's game, televised on ESPN, will be the first in recent memory played without a mounted horse galloping along the sidelines at Jones Stadium.
BRIEFS
Kish suggested that students who purchased and picked up their season football tickets give their complimentary tickets to friends or parents. A complimentary ticket admits anyone to a sit in the general admission seating areas in the stadium.
Bernie Kish, director of Kansas ticket sales and operations, said that plenty of tickets remain for Kansas football fans who want to attend Saturday night's game at Memorial Stadium. Kish said those who did not have tickets yet had several options for obtaining them:
Tickets still available for football opener
For $7, a student can purchase an additional ticket to sit in the student section.
Reserved seats are available to faculty and staff for $10 apiece.
"It's our hope that we can make the stadium a hostile environment for Michigan State on Saturday night," Kish said. "We're hoping the faus can really come through for the team and make a big difference. The night should bring out the Jayhawk in all of us."
No.1 seed loses at U.S.Open
Pete Sampras, the world's No. 1-ranked tennis player, lost Tuesday to unseeded Jaime Yzaga at the U.S. Open. Sampras's early exit means that six of the top 10 seeds in the open are gone.
In action Wednesday, Andre Agassi defeated No. 13 Thomas Muster 7-6, 3-1, 6-0.
Compiled from The Associated Press and Kansan staff reports.
Seven other players were cited for misdemeanor trespassing in the disturbance police said involved at least 20 football players.
Missouri Southern players charged with felony burglary
The Associated Press
JOPLIN, Mo. — Thirteen Missouri Southern State College football players, including nine starters and the team's backup quarterback, have been charged in a melee last week at a house occupied by members of a fraternity.
Missouri Southern is scheduled to open its season Saturday at Conway, Ark., against the University of Central Arkansas.
Six players were charged Tuesday with felony burglary in the Aug. 31 incident at the residential home, where several members of the Sigma Pi fraternity lived.
the playing status of the 13 players remains clouded.
In a brief statement Tuesday, Missouri Southern coach Jon Eantz wrote that "the responsible parties will be placed on probation and will be disciplined within the framework of regular team policies."
He added that "further punitive measures are possible" against some
of the players, pending outcomes of the criminal cases."
Lantz declined yesterday to say whether any of the players would be barred from Saturday's game.
"We're not discussing individual cases."he said.
Police have said the incident took place after various Missouri Southern football players went uninvited to the house.
Those charged with first-degree burglary include both starting outside linebackers at Missouri Southern, plus a first-team tackle.
They went to seek retribution for being asked to leave a party there several nights earlier, police said.
The remaining seven players identified as being at the house weren't charged because "they were somewhere in the entryway and played a passive role," Police Chief David Neibur said.
Glenn Dolence, vice president of student affairs at the college, said he was unfamiliar with Tuesday's charges.
He couldn't specify whether disciplinary action by the college was pending against the accused players.
2B
Thursday, September 8, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports world wary of business tycoon
Florida family has market on teams interest in arenas
The Associated Press
MIAMI — Wayne Huizenga's family has cornered the market on professional sports in South Florida, leaving fans to wonder what his unprecedented monopoly will mean.
The billionaire chairman of Blockbuster Entertainment Corp. became a local hero when he brought the expansion Florida Marlins and Florida Panthers to Miami in 1993. This year, he purchased the Miami Dolphins, and his brother-in-law completed the family grand slam in August by acquiring control of the Miami Heat.
ruzenga, one of the most influential men in professional sports, remains popular with local fans. But they should be wary of the power he has accumulated, several sports business warns.
"The theing that would concern me the most is that here is a man who is one of the wealthiest men in the United States, and who already has an enormous amount of economic
power and political influence," said Andrew Zimbaliist, an economist at Smith College and the author of "Baseball and Billions."
"When you can have such an impact, it's in the interest of local officials and executives to cooperate with you," he said. "The more such power you gain, the more you can manipulate public policy to your interest. That can ultimately hurt taxpayers."
Zimbalist cited Huizenga's successful bid to create a special taxing district for Blockbuster Park, his planned entertainment complex that would include a stadium for the Martins and an arena for the Panthers and perhaps the Heat.
There appears to be nothing illegal about Huizenga's sports empire, says Jerome Hoffman, chief of the Florida attorney general's Antitrust Section in Tallahassee. But Huizenga's dominance of one market is less than ideal, Hoffman said.
"I think you'd like to see diversity in ownership," Hoffman said. "That removes any doubt that one person is controlling all of the franchises and allowing one to suffer in favor of another, for example, putting more money into the baseball team than into the football team."
Author Gerald Scully can also envision such a scenario for Huizeng.
"If his baseball team is not doing well and his basketball team is, he might pull resources out of one for the other and weaken his ability to field a good basketball team," said Scully, who wrote "The Business of Major League Baseball."
"You'd want to have a sense of how he keeps his books. But I assume he wishes to make money with all four entities and is not going to do anything to harm any of them," he said.
Huizeng said his primary goal for each sports franchise is the same as for each Blockbuster video rental franchise: to make money.
However, the denies widespread speculation that he'll be involved in the operation of the Heat. Huizenga's brother-in-law, Harris Hudson, said the team would be his to run.
But negotiations are certain to be amiable regarding a lease for the Heat once the team's current agreement with Miami Arena expires in 1998. In July, Huizenga bought half of the company that runs the arena, but he also may want the Heat to play some games in his new arena at Blockbuster Park.
Huizenga also owns Joe Robbie Stadium, where the Dolphins and Marriott.
His ownership of multiple teams permits efficiency in operation. Consolidation of front office staffs is expected.
lins play.
Smiley said shared resources among Huizenga's teams will help him make customers happy.
"If those savings are passed on to the consumer or put back into the product, then everybody benefits," Hoffman said.
"Because this market is not a huge market, we can really get to know the fans," Smiley said. "In many cases a Panther fan is a Marlin fan, and vice versa. We respond to suggestions, ideas, critiques and complaints, and we pass information along among the teams."
Purists, however, worry that Huizenga, in his Disney-style approach to attracting the broadest possible audience, may sacrifice each sport's tradition. Critics complain of seemingly endless advertisements, promotions and gimmicks for entertaining fans at Marlins and Panthers games.
"It's easy to wrap yourself in the cloak of purity when it's not your money that's invested," Smiley said. "We want to maintain the tradition of the game and create one of our own.
Pro golfers hit the jackpot on putt-putt courses
The Asssociated Press
SOUTH CHARLESTON, W.Va. — An unexpected hole-in-one is the thrill of a miniature golf outing. But Andy Coradini once shot 15 consecutive holes-in-one, and 16 in all, for an 18-hole score of 20.
The guy should be a pro. In fact, he is.
Then there's Mark Portugal, who recently made 36 holes-in-one in 72 holes to capture the 1994 Professional Putters Association Medalist Title at the Rock Lake Family Fun Center in South Charleston.
"I play because I'm hooked," Coradini said. "When you put that patter in my hand, it might as well be a cigarette. I'm addicted."
The 1983 Champion, Coradini, 31, a purchasing manager from Lithonia, Ga., has won $15,000 playing Putt-Putt golf. And Portugal, 32, a sales and marketing manager from Plano, Texas, has won $70,000 playing Putt-Putt golf since he turned pro at 16.
Miniature golf, once just for kids, is one of the fastest growing sports in the country. Skip Laun, executive director for the Miniature Golf Association of America in Jacksonville, Fla., said family entertainment centers with miniature golf have become lucrative new businesses.
According to the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions in Alexandria, Va., 41.3 million people visited 2,000 U.S. miniature golf courses in 1963.
"The way the world is today, it's sort of like an oasis. That's why I like my kids to go there and that's why I like to go there," said Bryan Boyd, 36, the 1992 putting champion.
"An oasis" is what golfers get at the $13 million, 30-acre Scotty's Golf Park in Dallas, which offers a par-3 and three 18-hole miniature golf courses outdoors, a 9-hole course indoors, a game room, driving range, baseball batting cage, restaurant, pingpong and pool amid begonias and 21 waterfalls.
"People love the concept because it's a family park. There's something for everyone," said manager Danny Johnson,
guage you speak, when you make a hole-in-one, you feel great," said Joe Aboid, commissioner of the Professional Putters Association in Fayetteville, N.C.
"It doesn't matter how old you are,
what country you live in or what lan-
Putt-Putt, which the pros say is more skilful, is a trademark for the oldest and largest miniature golf chain, which generally uses hills and geometric obstacles to challenge putters.
There are no windmills or pirates in Putt-Putt. Players use a white, steel-center ball that does not ricochet.
"Par is 2 on every hole and you have a chance to make a hole-in-one on every hole," Portugal said. "It's like pool because you have to bank off the rails and negotiate the shots. It takes skill."
Notre Dame favored against Wolverines
By Rick Warner
The Associated Press
The Michigan-Notre Dame game often is decided by great players making great plays.
In 1989, it was Rocket Ismail returning two kickoffs for touchdowns.
In 1980, it was Rick Mirer leading a Montana-like drive in the closing minutes. In 1991, it was "The Catch" by Desmond Howard.
Unfortunately for Michigan, the Wolverines must play this year's game without their greatest player.
Running back Tyrone Wheatley, the preseason Heisman Trophy favorite, will be sidelined with a separated shoulder Saturday when the sixth-ranked Wolverines meet the No. 3 Fighting Irish at South Bend.
Notre Dame is 1-0 with Ron Powhus as starting quarterback. After missing last season with injuries, the ballyhooded sophomore made an impressive debut last week, throwing four touchdown passes in a 42-15 win over Northwestern.
ESPN's Beano Cook has already predicted that Powlus will win two Heisman Trophies.
Notre Dame holds a 5-1-1 edge over Michigan since 1987, although most of the games have been close. The trend will continue Saturday. ... NOTRE DAME 28-24
THURSDAY
No. 1 Nebraska (minus 24) at Texas Tech
Cornhuskers No. 1 for first time since 1987 ... NEBRASKA 35-10.
SATURDAY
Kentucky (plus 241/2) at No. 2 Florida
Billy Curry 0-7 vs. Gators ..
FLORIDA 44-17.
No. 4 Florida St. (minus 33)
at Maryland
Terps were blown out by Duke ...
FLORIDA ST. 61-7.
No. 5 Miami (minus 111/2) at Arizona St.
Hurricanes 0-3 at Sun Devil Stadium ... MIAMI 24-10.
No. 14 Southern Cal (plus
51/2) at No. 8 Penn St.
Lions won 21-20 thriller last year at Beaver Stadium ... PENN ST. 28-21.
New Mexico St. (plus 37) at No. 9 Arizona
Eastern Michigan (plus 37) at No. 10 Wisconsin
Aggies haven't beaten Wildcats since 1938 ... ARIZONA 42-0.
Badgers return 15 starters from Rose Bowl team ... WISCONSIN 48-0
Vanderbilt (plus 19) at No.11 Alabama
Tide has won nine straight over Commodores ... ALABAMA 34-10.
Northeast Louisiana (plus 36) at No.12 Auburn
Terry Bowden still perfect in I-A
AJBURN 41-7.
SMU (plus 24) at No.13 UCLA First meeting since 1947 ... UCLA 45-14.
No. 15 Oklahoma (plus 2) at No. 16 Texas A&M
Sooners handed Aggies only regular-season loss in '93 ... OKLA-HOMA 27-24.
No. 18 Ohio St. (plus 4) at No. 25 Washington
Huskies rebound from loss to Southern Cal ... WASHINGTON 28-21.
No. 19 Tennessee (even) at No. 23 Georgia
Vols off to rough start ... GEORGIA 39:28
Louisville (plus 101/2) at No. 20 Texas
No. 21 Virginia Tech (minus
81/2) at Southern Mississippi
Longhorns looked shaky against Pitt. LOUISVILLE 27-24.
Tech's DeShazo one of nation's top QBs ... VIRGINIA TECH 24-17.
North Carolina St. (plus 6) at No. 22 Clemson
Tigers wins defensive struggle ... CLEMSON 14-7.
No. 24 Stanford (minus
131/2) at northwestern
The Cardinal wins Brain Bowl ... STANFORD 31-21.
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
THURSDAYSPECIALS $1.50DOMESTICBOTTLES $1.25PITCHERSATTHEUP&UNDER
*Live music every Friday and Saturday nights THIS WK: Smith Brothers
Dailyfood specials Up & Under available for private parties (call for reservations) 842-0377
YOU'RE LOOKING AT TWO COMPLETELY OPPOSITE, FUNDAMENTALLY DIFFERENT WAYS TO INVEST IN STOCKS. WE RECOMMEND BOTH.
Introducing the CREF Growth Account and the CREF Equity Index Account.
Whether you want a fund that
Whether you want a fund that selects specific stocks or one that covers the market, we're on the same page. Our new CREF Growth and CREF Equity Index Accounts use two distinct strategies for investing in the stock market, but both aim to provide what every smart investor looks for: long-term growth that outpaces inflation?
The CREF Growth Account searches for individual companies that are poised for superior growth. In contrast, the Equity Index Account looks for more diversification, with a portfolio encompassing almost the entire range of U.S. stock investments. It will invest in stocks
TIAA
CREF
Like our CREF Stock Account, which combines active, indexed, and foreign investing, and our Global Equities Account, which actively seeks opportunities worldwide, the new funds are managed by experienced investment professionals. They're the same experts who have helped make TIAA-CREF the largest pension system in the U.S., managing over $130 billion in assets.
To find out more about our new stock funds, and building your portfolio with TIAA-CREF just call 1800-842-2776. And take your pick.
in the Russell 3000***a broad index of U.S. stocks.
Ensuring the future for those who shape it. $ ^{ \mathrm{m}} $
- **The new funds are available for Retirement Annuities subject to the terms of your institution's plan. They are available for all Supplemental Retirement Annuities.**
**The Russell 3000 is a registered trademark of the Frank Russell Company. Russell is not a member of the CREF Index, Account and is not affiliated in any way. For more information, including charges and expenses, call 1-800-642-7333, ex. 5699 for CREF prospectus. Read the prospectus carefully before you leave or send money.**
**CREF are distributed by TIAA-CIFRA Institutional and Institutional Services, Inc.**
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 8, 1994
3B
Players, owners to play hard ball as the Friday strike deadline nears
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Signaling that serious bargaining may soon begin, several baseball owners and the players' negotiating committee made plans to travel to New York late yesterday.
No talks were set but management officials said several owners would be arriving, so a session could be called on short notice. The sides were negotiating against a tentative Friday deadline for canceling the season, which acting commissioner Bud Selig announced last week.
The officials did not know which owners would be arriving, but they speculated that among them would be Colorado Rockies owner Jerry McMorris, Boston Red Sox chief executive officer John Harrington and Atlanta Braves president Stan Kasten. Those three were involved in a Monday conference call with officials from the players' association.
The union, according to several sources speaking on the condition of anonymity, asked players on its negotiating committee to go to New York.
Since the strike began Aug. 12, the sides have met just twice. But informal conversations have taken place since an Aug. 31 meeting that included McMorris and union head Donald Fehr.
Discussion appears centered on a taxation plan in which owners would drop their demand for a salary cap in exchange for having clubs share a larger percentage of their revenue if they go over certain thresholds. The
plan could be based on payrolls, revenue or various revenue streams.
On Tuesday, the players' association filed an unfair labor practice complaint with the National Labor Relations Board.
"We actually thought they'd file it sooner," said Lou Melendez, management lawyer.
The union is contesting management's failure to make a $7.8 million payment to the players' benefit plan following the All-Star game. The money was due Aug. 1.
Otherwise, not much took place on the 26th day of the strike. Acting commissioner Bud Selig, owners' negotiator Richard Ravitch and players' union head Donald Fehr took off most of the day to observe the first day of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.
Meanwhile, the Minnesota Twins front office voted to take a one-week unpaid vacation in order to ensure that no full-time employees will be laid off in September. Between 15 and 20 workers were facing layoffs later this month.
Tuesday was the midpoint between the start of the strike on Aug. 12 and the scheduled end of the regular season Oct. 2. Fourteen more games were called off, bringing the total to 338.
Yesterday was the second anniversary of the date baseball last had a commissioner. On Sept. 1, 792, Fay Vincent was forced to resign by owners, who have delayed hiring another commissioner until there is a new
"Baseball's a good lesson in what I would call 'cooperative vs. non-cooperative bargaining.'"
Gerry Meehan Sabres executive vice president
labor agreement.
The lack of movement between players and owners is being noticed by other sports that are facing similar problems. The National Hockey League did not have a labor contract last season and still does not have one. Hockey training camps opened this week.
"Baseball's a good lesson, I think, for all of us in what I would call 'cooperative vs. non-cooperative bargaining,'" said Gerry Meehan, executive vice president of the Buffalo Sabres, an NHL team.
"It doesn't seem like they're making any progress. And I would hope that our people who are negotiating on behalf of both players and management are paying attention to that," he said.
Baseball strike a blessing for Braves' father
The Associated Press
"To be honest, I haven't really followed the strike," the Atlanta Braves left-hander said. "I've treated it as the off-season and just relaxed. I wouldn't be ready to go back right now."
MARIETTA, Ga. — Steve Avery has paid little attention to the baseball strike. He's been busy getting to know his son, who was born three months prematurely on April 10.
Evan Avery weighed less than 3 pounds at birth, but is getting healthier every day. He now weighs 9 pounds, and the oxygen tube he wears in his nose to help accelerate his lung growth will soon be removed.
Now Avery, 24, is learning to be a dad.
From April to June, Avery commuted to the hospital between starts, and that took a toll on his pitching. But when Evan came home after the All-Star break in July, Avery's pitching improved.
Since Evan was born at the start of the baseball season, Avery didn't see much of him until the strike began Aug. 12. The child spent his first three months in a Dearborn, Mich., hospital.
"He's been good (with Evan)," said Avery's wife, Heather. "No, make that real good."
There are still numerous visits to doctors, but the long-term prognosis is good.
"He smiles at you and lights up every time you call his name," Avery said. "It's good to spend as much time as we have together. He needs it after not getting a whole lot of attention his first three months."
The Averys have settled into a home in Cobb County, northwest of Atlanta. They still don't have much furniture, and there are no curtains on the windows.
For now, all their attention has been on Evan.
"It's different than I thought, that's for sure." Avery said.
"I guess you just figure you're going to have a tote bag, you just throw him on your shoulder and walk around with him.
"The situation we're in is a little different because he can't be around people right now. I'm just looking forward to the time I can walk around and hold his hand and take him everywhere I go."
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!
Jaybowl KANSAS UNION
Located on level one • Kansas Union • 864-3545
Fall Leagues Are Forming Now!
Monday Mixer
Tuesday Varsity Mixer
Wednesday Mixer
Thursday Mixer
BODY
BOUTIQUE
AEROBICS with
Purchase 10 tans for $30 and get 5 tans FREE
The Women's Fitness Facility
- Personal Fitness Training
- Full Spa Area
- 60 Aerobic classes per week
- 2 Aerobic rooms
- Nautilus & Freeweights
* Reebok Step
* Stairmasters/Treadmill
* Lifecycle/Rowing Machine
FIRST VISIT FREE!
$19 PER MONTH
3 month Free for 50 members
749-2424
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza
SUNFLOWER
804Mass
---
Sex and Dating Relationships Sexuality in a dating relationship can be confusing and ambiguous. Join this discussion for ways to clarify dating roles and communicate in social and intimate situations. Tuesday, September 13, 1994 Pine Room, Kansas Union 7:p.m.-9:00 p.m. Facilitators:
843-5000
Barbara W.Ballard, Director
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Renee Speicher
Graduate Center and Center for Sexual Health Education
sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall.
'or more information, contact Neesha Speicher at 864-352-3951
Electricity
All KU Students are Invited! KU School of Business CAREER FAIR
UT/2
FREE Transportation from campus every half hour at Watson Library and at Summerfield Hall.
THURSDAY, September 8 1994 1-6p.m. Lawrence Holidome
- Investigate Internship Opportunity
- Match Career Goals with Available jobs.
Work-Study Students
Community Service
Interschools Available
$5/hr
Center for Comm. Outreach
Applications in Student Senate
Office 864-3710
State Radiator
Mr. 1426798
Student Friendly We repair Brass, Aluminum, & Plastic Radiators
Heaters, water pumps, and
Heaters, water pr
A/C service tool
842-3333
MY TRI COVER
DUCOVER
VISA
Mulligan's
featuring DINE IN or CARRY OUT PUPS GIRL 11am-3am
featuring
PUPS
Grill
Downtown Delivery Available
Great Food-Great Music
THURS
Wakeland
$1 Sam Adams
Draws
FRI
Uncle Dirty
Toes
$1.50 Wells
SAL
Jack Timberfish
$1.50 Wells
All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged
1016 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 865-4055
SUNFLOWER ALL WEATHER ALL LEATHER
See how comfortable an all leather, Gor-Tex lined, water proof boot can be.
Rain or Shine
Vasque 304 Massach
SUNDOWNER
You asked for it,
We've got it!
Dive Into Shark's
Jumping
Lawrence's only Stussy dealer
SHARKS SUNFISH SHOP
Kansas City
Bannister Mall
(913)763-6208
Lawrence 701 W 9th
(9th and Indiana)
841-8289
---
Mission,KS 6518 Martway (913)432-0707
4B
Thursday, September 8, 1994
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
U.S. Marines prepare for possible invasion
The Associated Press
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — U.S. Marines assigned to a potential Hawaii invasion force began training yesterday as Secretary of State Warren Christopher warned Haiti's army rulers that "their days are definitely numbered."
LA. Elizabeth Jones, spokeswoman for the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station in Puerto Rico said 1,800 Marines were practicing on a Puerto Rican island to evacuate the estimated 3,500 American civilians in Haiti.
Speaking in Washington, Christopher warned that Haiti's military leaders must step down voluntarily or be forced out by a U.S.-led invasion.
"One way or the other, the de facto government is going to be leaving," Christopher said.
In Haiti, a key supporter of the military warned the United States that Haitians would join together to fight U.S. troops.
"President Clinton must realize that an intervention will not be an invasion of army headquarters but of the entire country," Haitian Sen. Thomas Eddy Dupont told The Associated
Press in Port-au-Prince, the Haitian capital.
The Marines have been deployed on two U.S. combat ships in waters off Haiti since mid-August.
Many Republicans in Congress oppose military intervention, and many of the Americans in Haiti insist they do not want to be evacuated.
"I think it's the same old story—they're creating a situation whereby they're going to rescue Americans," said Don Weaver, 62, a Protestant minister whose wife left Hain in May at the U.S. government's suggestion. "My contention is, the house isn't on fire, don't throw the match."
Vieues residents have been protesting the U.S. military presence on their island for two decades. Two-thirds of the island belongs to the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station and the Navy frequently uses the property for target practice.
Suit filed citing reverse discrimination
In another development, the United States postponed plans to send a group of Haitian refugees yesterday from a U.S. Navy base in Cuba to the South American nation of Suriname. It was unclear when the transfer would begin.
The Associated Press
The government helped Sharon
Taxamuse and win $144,000 in 1992.
But now the government has switched sides and is backing the Piscataway Board of Education in its appeal. The Clinton Justice Department contends the board had the right to retain Debra Williams for the sake of racial diversity.
Taxman's lawyer, Stephen E. Klaus
ner, called the switch "unethical and reprehensible" and said yesterday that he will fight it.
Deval L. Patrick, assistant attorney general for civil rights, said the government switched sides because the ruling was wrong.
Patrick said the case does not involve quotas, which the Clinton administration opposes, but affirmative action—"a different animal."
In a friend-of-the-court brief filed Tuesday with the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia, the Justice Department argued that workplace diversity can be taken into consideration in voluntary affirmative action plans.
NEW YORK — Many U.S. emergency rooms are staffed by doctors who were never taught how to treat a heart attack, resuscitate a child or treat bleeding, and patients may be dying as a result.
ER doctors not properly trained
The Associated Press
"It would be fair to say that lives could be saved ... if all emergency departments were staffed by appropriately trained individuals," said Dr. L. Thompson Bowles, president of the National Board of Medical Examiners and the chairman of a group of 38 health care authorities who studied the issue.
The panel, which convened in April, included a number of experts who were not emergency medicine
The report strongly condemns a practice in which medical residents supplement their modest incomes by working part time at night in emergency rooms.
specialists. Their report is to be released Monday.
"Many 'moonlighters' lack training and adequate experience in any aspect of primary health care," the report said.
Only about half the nation's 25,000 jobs in emergency medicine are filled by doctors certified to provide emergency care. In many hospitals, doctors don't need certification to work in the emergency room.
"When people ask if there's a doctor in the house, they have reason to expect that every physician can do
"When a young person finishes medical school, they might not know how to treat these things as well as a paramedic," Goldfrank, director of emergency medicine at Bellevue Hospital in New York City, said in a telephone interview.
the minimum to save a person's life in an emergency. This is not the case today." Dr. Lewis Goldfrank said in a statement.
He said a better question might be,
"Is there a paramedic in the house?"
"I think the public would be shocked if they knew how few physicians are competent to provide CPR," said Dr. Thomas Mekle, president of the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation of New York, which commissioned the report.
Health care reform still ailing
Session may end without resolution
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Five days into his presidency, Bill Clinton put his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, in charge of making good on a bedrock campaign promise: send Congress a plan to reform health care within 100 days.
"If it were 101 days, I wouldn't have a heart attack," Clinton conceded good-natured. "But I want it done now."
The president and his health reform task missed the deadline, and it wasn't until late September before Clinton outlined his plan. The final White House product — a 1,342-page bill — was unveiled on Oct. 27.
tions, and the issue is what incremental changes Congress will make. If a bill is passed, Clinton will have to decide whether to abandon his veto threat and sign the legislation.
Looking back, friends and foes of Clinton's drive for major health reform agree that the battle was lost during months wasted on a widely ridiculed search for the perfect plan.
Last year's delay "was an enormous advantage to us," said John J. Motley, vice president for government affairs for the National Federation of Independent Business, which rallied opposition against forced employer contributions.
As the Clinton administration worked on its plan, the health industry and business groups launched a $100 million-plus lobbying effort against the president's reforms.
The U.S. House of Representatives and Senate have barely a month before lawmakers break for elec-
The administration also decided that health reform had to take a back seat to winning congressional approval of its budget. But Clinton's slim budget victory in August 1993 made health reform even harder.
The financial plan tapped $55 billion of savings from Medicare and Medicaid over five years to reduce the deficit and stiffened Congress' resistance to any additional tax increases.
their health insurance went down.
That made it tougher for Clinton and his allies to convince middle-class Americans that their health benefits were not safe. Fifteen percent of Americans — almost 39 million people — are uninsured.
Back on Sept. 22, 1993, expectations were high for Clinton's health reform address to the nation.
And as the economy picked up,
Americans' anxieties about losing
reform issues in the background were genuine philosophical disagreements about what to do and major political obstacles," said Drew Altman, president of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit group.
The private health insurance industry poured $12 million into its "Harry and Louise" ads that showed a middle-class couple voicing their fears about bureaucrats restricting health choices and rationing care.
Ira C. Magazine, the senior White House adviser who oversaw the preparation of Clinton's plan, said, "Never in the history of this country have modern technology and scare tactics combined to produce the degree and tone of misinformation that was spewed out so quickly about health care reform."
Beach trash still a problem
Washington — More than 158,000 volunteers scouring 4,500 miles of shoreline collected 7.3 million pieces of trash in three hours, illustrating that beaches and waterways continue to be polluted despite the heightened concern about protecting the environment.
The Associated Press
A report released yesterday by the Center for Marine Conservation said a broad array of debris littered coastal America and the shores of its rivers and lakes.
Among the items collected in the 1993 cleanup: 1.7 million cigarette butts, 344,502 pieces of glass, 203,330 straws, 339,996 bottles, 210,554 cups, 134,547 cups, 40,508 balloons, 30,326 light bulbs and fluorescent tubes, 10,166 syringes, 55,470 plastic trash bags, and 6,636 condoms.
A volunteer in Louisiana found a $2 lottery ticket, and another one in Texas discovered a 5-pound bag of cocaine labeled "radioactive." A skeleton turned up on a Mississippi shoreline.
The cleanup crews at various times last September and October covered ocean beaches and inland shorelines in 32 states, as well as Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
"This report," said Roger McManus, president of the Center for Marine Conservation, "is not about trash, it's about people. People are the ones who pollute the ocean waters."
There were fewer plastic items than in previous years, suggesting an impact from recycling and state bottle-deposit laws. Plastic items accounted, nevertheless, for 53 percent of the debris.
More significantly, said Kathy O'Hara, director of the collection program, is that less of the trash seems to be coming from boats and ships.
"Cruise ships and other offshore sources are no longer the major contributors to the problem," O'Hara said. She attributed the improvement to new treaties against waste being dumped overboard.
MARGARITAS AND FAJITAS FOR OVER 2 YEARS!
Carlos O'Kelly's
MEXICAN CAFE
MONDAY
WEEKLY
75¢ Killians Red Draws
$1 Small Chili ConQueso
$1 Off ALL Dinner Picados
TUESDAY
SPECIALS
$2 All Imports
$5.95 Sancho/Monterrey Combo
996 Kids Meals
SPECIALS
THURSDAY
$2 Bud Light 23 Oz. Tap
$1.50 Desserts
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
$2 Margaritas on the rocks
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
WEDNESDAY
- CARRYOUT AVAILABLE!
SUNDAY
8 3 2 - 0 5 5 0
Hours of Operation:
M-Th 11-11
Fri,Set 11-12
Sun 11-10
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 off Chimis
$2 Bloody Marys
- TASTE OF THE WORLD BEER CLUBI
707 W. 23rd STreet
Remember that white space can be an irresistible attraction to a pair of inquisitive eyes. Use it to your advantage when you place your next ad where students look first.
STUDENTS LOOK FOR NOTHING IN THE PAPER.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nothing works better.
Special Game Hours..Special Sirloin Stockade Hours...
SPECIAL SIRLOIN STOCKADE OFFER
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT PRIME RIB
Dinner includes choice of potato, homemade rolls and a trip to our dessert bar
3:30pm-Midnight Saturday, September 10
$9.99 Add our terrific Buffet for only $2 more
Dine with us on your way to the game or stop by after the game and celebrate the Win!
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
1015 Iowa This offer good only at the Lawrence Sirloin Stockade
FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREF
Smiley
FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREF
Don't be just another number!
September 12-30
Monday, Wednesday thru Friday:
9a.m.-noon & 1-5p.m.
Tuesday: 1-5p.m. & 6-9p.m.
STUDENT PORTRAITS
Rotunda of Strong Hall
Free with your KUID
1995 yearbooks available for purchase!
Appointments available, starting Sept. 12-23
Appointments available, starting Sept. 12-23
Walk-ins welcome.
}
Questions? (Before Sept. 12) 864-3728
(Beginning Sept. 12) 864-7357
FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE
(USA, International, Lawrence)
Volunteer and Intern Placement Fair
Thursday Sept. 8 through Friday Sept. 9 10am-4:30pm at the ECM Center Over 525 organizations
AND The Praxis Project
A unique way to volunteer in Lawrence/Douglas County
MUSIC ON THE CUTTING EDGE!
Qwest/Warner Bros.
GODS CHILD
Everybody
$699/$999
CS CD
DINOSAUR JR
Without A Sound
$799/$1099
CS CD
D
DINOSAUR JR
Without
A
Sound
Featuring Feel The Pain + I Don't
Thank You + Yeah Right
Slim/Bandee
Sale Prices Good Thru September 30th
Sire/Reprise
hastings
books • music • video
Southwest Plaza - Lawrence • 21st & Fairlawn - Topeka
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 8, 1994
5B
Diseases prevalent years after Vietnam
Agent Orange effects still felt
The Associated Press
HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam – Long after lush growth masked the scars of Agent Orange on the landscape, doctors here blame the deadly defoliant for a second-generation wave of cancers and birth defects.
Vietnamese specialists are seeking support from retired U.S. Adm. Elmo Zumwalt, who commanded naval forces during the Vietnam War.
"Many, many friends of mine die," said one of the specialists, Dr. Nguyen Thi Ngoc Phuong of Tu Du Hospital.
Zumwalt was among officers who ordered the spraying to deny cover to Vietnamese troops. He blames Agent Orange for the 1988 cancer death of his son, who served under his command, and for brain damage to his grandson.
He is expected to arrive tomorrow for a weeklong tour of Vietnam to
assess what might be done to counter the aftereffects.
Phuong said surveys show that dioxin from Agent Orange lingering in body tissue affects young mothers as well as men exposed decades ago.
"We must carry out long-term studies, but we can't," she said. "After we concentrate on schools, housing, family planning, it costs too much for us."
Dr. Arnold $chester, a dioxin specialist at the State University of New York at Binghamton, who is coming to Vietnam with Zumwalt, declined to draw conclusions from studies done so far.
"We just don't know yet," he said. "We hope to convince the U.S.govment to fund its own scientists to do dioxin research, in cooperation with the Vietnamese, for the profit of everyone."
Until 1971, U.S. planes sprayed 12 million gallons of Agent Orange, containing 374 pounds of dioxin. Researchers say dioxin can remain in humans for decades, triggering cancers after long dormant periods.
Its use in the war remains controversial, exposing U.S. commanders to charges of chemical warfare. Zumwalt said recently he would spray Agent Orange again if it was the only means of protecting his forces from jungle ambush.
After the war, impoverished and isolated Vietnamese officials did only sketch research into contamination. They found many presumed victims had died undiagnosed in remote mountain areas.
At Tu Du Hospital, Phuong makes her point with visits to a grim ward where young women who were breast-fed from mothers sprayed by Agent Orange are treated for cancers of the placenta during pregnancy.
-
Nearby, 50 deformed children play listlessly in a few rooms, their permanent home. Grotesque skull shapes, missing limbs and cleft palates all suggest Agent Orange.
Dr. Lennart Hardell, a Swedish specialist, has linked cases of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, Hodgkin's lymphoma and sarcoma to dioxin remaining for years in body tissue.
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804Mass * 843-5000
Learn to Fly 842-0000
PROFESSOR UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES
SUAC FILMS
SKYLINE
FILMSFORSEPT.8&10
SKYLINE
SAT. 2:00 PM
The Etc. Shop
MEDITERRANEO THURS. 9:30 PM
ANNIE HALL
THURS. 7:00 PM
ALL SHOWS IN WOODRUFF AUD.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-3-SHOW For MOREINFO.
925 IOWA
841-7226
fifi's
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
SEPTEMBER 8TH AT 7:00PM IN THE WALNUT ROOM IN THE KANSAS UNION
KU PHI ALPHA DELTA PRE-LAWSOCIETY MEETING
Speaker: Carla Stovall Criminal Attorney and former Special Asst. Attorney General for the State of Kansas
For more information call
Shawna Hilleary 749-5861
Brandy Sutton 841-0113
Paid for by Student Senate
928 Mass. Downtown
Murdered boy would have begun school yesterday
--merchandise
Instead he was buried, a murder suspect who himself was shot to death when fellow gang members got to him before police could.
CHICAGO — Robert Sandifer should have been starting sixth grade yesterday, scampering across the schoolyard with other 11-year-olds, lugging a backpack or chafing in a new shirt.
Robert was hunted by police for three days last week for allegedly firing a pistol into a cluster of people on
UNITY
Robert's mother, Lorina Sandifer, an admitted former drug addict in whose custody authorities said the boy suffered cigarette burns and other abuse, sat quietly through most of the service, her emotions masked behind dark glasses.
Aug. 28. The shots killed a 14-year-old girl, Shavon Dean, 10 yards from the front door of her South Side home.
Robert's body was found in a dank railroad underpass. He shot twice in the head and died. Two brothers, ages 14 and 16, are charged with his killing, allegedly planned to curtail the police attention Robert drew.
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!!
ONLY
$8.99
plus tax
Large Pizza
2 toppings
2 drinks
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Open 7 days a week
September14 to November30 (12 week class)
Short of 5 feet tall, not quite 70 pounds, Robert had 12 felony arrests and was prosecuted at least eight times in the past two years on charges including robbery and arson. Twice convicted, he received probation.
Eleven-year-old Marcus Harris proclaimed that he would meet the same fate, "Cause I ain't in no gang, and I don't want to be in no gang."
Unity Church of Lawrence
416 Lincoln St. *841-1447*
"love offering"
--child care by reservation-merchandise
There were no uniformed police on hand, no sign of the gang members who became Robert's companions as his life descended into violence.
Class on METAPHYSICS "THE NATURE OF REALITY" starts WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.
BEFORE & PM ADULTS $3.00
(UNLIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS. SAF 519
Wagons East P613 9:30
In The Army Now P514 5:15,7:30
Crown Cinema
--merchandise
ONLY
$899
plus tax
Milk Money Pg-13 5:00; 7:15; 9:30
Lion King® 5:15; 7:30; 9:30
Camp Nowhere® 5:15; 7:30
The Mask Pg-12 9:45
The Client Pg-13 5:00; 7:15; 9:30
Clear & P present Danger Pg-13 5:00; 8:00
CINEMA TWIN AVE. 3418
3110 IOWA 641-5191 $1.25
Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can $ave Some Cash
Maverick PG-13 4:50,7:20,9:50
I Love Trouble PG 5:00,7:30,9:50
SHOW TIMES FOR IODAY ONLY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
KU
Valid Through July 31, 1995
NCCS
KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Available at these locations:
1116 W23rd
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
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
AMIGO'S
1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044
AMIGO'S
1819 W. 23rd • 842-1620
BLIMPIE SUBS AND SALADS
Get the daily special prices everyday of the week
BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢
Dunlap
2329 S. Iowa St.*842-1200
$3.99 Freshstastes Food Bar
DOMINO'S PIZZA
822 Iowa St. 841-8002
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-b43-0561
10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more
DRAKE'S SNACK SHOP
Missauga, GA 843-0561
$1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50(Includes food and coffee drinks)
ESPRESS O'HOUSE
$1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners Before 6 P.M., Tuesday
FULL MOON CAFE
624 W 12h-84H-2310-FREE Cup of Our House Coffee
(Certified Organically Grown) with Avn Meal Purchase
2907 W 6th·841-1688·FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills)
GLASS ONION
401 N2nbd-8423-7877-BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg.
price, rent cost for $1.00 Mon thru Fri 4-9pm
JOHNNY'S TAVERN
IMPERIAL GARDEN
$1.00 OFF Avn Entree, Anvtime, 24 hours a day
PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
4111 NW 108TH, 2016
PIZZA SHOPPE
601 Kesold-842 0600
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
PIZZA SHUTTLE
PYRAMID PIZZA
14th & Ohio & 842-3232-$4.00 Sm, add, tops 50c; Md.$6.00,
add tgs 75z; $8.00 Lg, add tgs 1.100; Car Out Only
RUNZA
2700 Iowa·749-2615*FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of
1628 W 23rd/84 B-8158-1101 W 6th/B43-0936-2036 Haskell
A/w/E84-5533-3Hardshell Tso'c's for 99 (NO LIMIT)
TACO JOHN'S
WEST COAST SALOON
2222 Iowa St. 841-2739
$1.50 OFF Anv Sandwich
ATHLETE'S FOOT
BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE
ATHLETE'S FOOT
914 Massachusetts+841-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
745 New Hampshire+843-3282$+25.00 Discount for Diac-
sage, Upgrade Labor, System Support on IBM Compati-
bles
BOBI'S BEDROOM
0409 Junction 810, 7270
FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS
731 Massachusetts 843-419-1*15% OFF All Apparel +
FREIF Frere T-Shirt w/ purchase Over $2.50
20% OFF Entire Inventory (excludes sale items and outlet priced items)
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET
Mahogany 710 A.4
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals
CENTRAL DATA
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
743 Massachusetts*749-4664
15% OFF Item (excludes sale items)
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
1420 Crescent RD-843-3826
10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid
15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item
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 Massachusetts-842-2442
15% Off All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
KARSA SPORTS CO. 837 Massachusetts 842-2992
20% OFF KU Sweatshirts
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640
Any Size Book (Blue Book) $£
KU BOOKSTORE
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640
$5.00 Off Anj Avwahl clothing or Hat Over $20.00
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAST AND BURGE UNIONS*864-6440
10%OFF Anv Art. Engineering or Drafting Supply
KIZER-CUMMINGS
833 Massachusetts+749-4333
15% OFF Non-Sale Gold Chains
ONLINE ON YOUR BACK
MERLE NORMAN
2340 S. Iowa842-8564·30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid
9th & New Hampshire*841-5324
10% OFF All Skin Care Products
MIRACLE VIDEO
910 I 2n/841-8930-1913 Haskell Ave. Suite 1/841-7504
$1.00 OFF Movie Rent(limit one per visit)
NATURAL WAY
820 Massachusetts-841-0100-20% OFF All Cotton T-Shirts Mens and Women's (Organic Cotton, Green Cotton, and Recycled Cotton)
OUTFITTER'S
740 Massachusetts·843-3933 15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
PRO SOUND
PRO SOURCE
Lawrence, Ks+865-0692
10% OFF All Sales
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
716 Massachusetts+841-1762-20% OFF (CD: Tapes, Movies, Video Games) Tuesdays & 1/5% (in Cents or Cash) on Buy Backs
RECYCLED SOUNDS
RENTCO USA
622 W 12th St. *841-9475* $2.00 OFF Any One CD, Tape,
Value Greater than $5.00
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
701 W. 5th St. 941-8080
1741 Massachusetts* 749-1605
25% OFF All Monthly Rentals
15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy)
832 lowe*749-3507*2 for 1 Video Rental Monday - (www.lowe.com)
(affordable)
20% OFF of all clothing (excluding sale items)
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
SPRINGMAID/MAMSUTAIT
1025 N. Srdt3-832-110
10%OFF Any Purchase
WINDOW.PNYL
Services
BRADY OPTICAL
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 6thH-841-6955
10% OFF All Parts
BRADY OPTICAL
737 Massachussetts+842-0880
15% OFF Complete Eyeglass Purchase
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
CINEMA PLATINUM 914-3267
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST
1019 Massachusetts=643-3844*$25.00 Off All Fashion
Eyglass Frames或643-3844*$249 Overseas Lenses On
EUROPEAN TAN
1801 W 23w43H 62323-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
15th & Kasold*832-0281*25% OFF Initial or Annual
B.C. 15 STADIUM BARBERY
R.C. STATION BANKER
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 Package with the Purchase of a 9 Session Package (Save $5.50)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
119 Staffer-Flint-8644-358
20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad
6B
Thursday, September 8, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence's Largest
Supplier of
Darkroom Materials
1610 West 23rd Street
841-7205
KMS JOICO
NEXUS LOBSTERIAN
BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HANDIESTORE
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FELL MIDDLE REDKEN
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
"DELECTABLE!"
MOVING?
EAT DRINK MAN WOMAN
© 1994 The Boulder Company
Theater 17 is accessible to all persons
EAT DRINK: Brew 'n View
PREMIRE TONIGHT!
Bar opens 9:00/Feature @ 9:30
GO FISH! (R) Today! 9:15, 9:15.
Fri-Sun (4:45/7:15)
LIBERTY HALL
642
Mass
749-
1912
Let
Solve your moving hassles.
Lawrence Paper Company
Sturdy boxes for moving and storage Boxes with handles for easier moving Large quantities at discount prices Small quantities walk-in convenience
Call 843-8111 Ask for Sales/Service Dept.
PSYCHI KU PSYCHOLOGY CLUB
1st Annual Meeting Tomorrow, Sept. 8th, 6:30 pm 547 Fraser
Everyone Welcome
For information contact:
Dr. Chris Crandall or Dr. Greg Simpson 864-4131
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"EVERYDAY
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PARTY "10" CARRY-OUT
2-PIZZAIS 3-PIZZAIS 10-PIZZAIS 1-PIZZA
2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING
2-COKEES 4-COKEES 1-COKE
THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBODIA
$9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50
DELIVERY HOURS
842-1212
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
KANSAS
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence
DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
K. C. Based Manufactures with Retail Locations
Retail Locations
This Complete Futon & Frame $269
Twin Futon & Frame $99
Abdiiana
Futon
Exclusively Hardwood Frames:
1023 Mass. St. Lawrence, KS 843-8222
"THRIFTY THURSDAY!" SAVE BIG BUCKS!
Pyramid Pizza (of course!)
From Your Friends at
Thrifty Thursday
雷电预警
Thrifty Thursday
Fast & Friendly Delivery Now During Lunch! (limited area)
Thirty Thursday
Special
Only $3.75
tax included
(carry out only)
For a small
pizza
(add. tops only .75)
order 2 or more
for free delivery
Good
Thursday
Only!
PYRAMID
THE NATION OF CHRIST
clip me
842-3232
Fast & Friendly
Recycle.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
NCGS
Keep our campus clean.
Great Savings.
Kansan Correspondents
---
EVERY WEDNESDAY
14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL)
4:30 PM R00M 100 STAUFFER FLINT
---
THE NEWS in brief
BELFAST. Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland calm, Britain relaxes security
Despite continuing doubts that the Irish Republican Army has laid down arms forever, Britain said yesterday it was relaxing security in Northern Ireland.
On the seventh day of the IRA cease-fire, British Prime Minister John Major said, "Gradually, it is being made a little clearer that perhaps this is not just a temporary ceasefire. But, it isn't clear yet."
In Shannon, Ireland, Vice President Al Gore met with Irish Prime Minister Albert Reynolds and then indicated he accepted Reynold's judgment that the IRA's 24-year war against British rule in Northern Ireland was over.
In launching a new effort to find a peaceful solution, Reynolds and Major pledged last December that they would not implement any settlement unless it was acceptable to a majority of Northern Ireland's people.
Once Major is satisfied that the IRA cease-fire is permanent, Britain has promised to meet with the guerrillas' political allies in the Sinn Fein party to discuss terms for joining all-party negotiations.
There has been no IRA violence since the group announced its cease-fire. But outlawed Protestant paramilitary groups have bombed a Shnn Fein building and shot a Catholic man to death.
While Major has temperized about accepting IRA assurances, he has become embroiled with militants on the Protestant side.
TOTSK, Russia
Russia. United States plan exercises
Defense Minister Pavel Grachev pledged yesterday to double Russia's contingent next year and criticized opponents of the joint exercises as short-sighted.
Slamming nationalists who have decried joint peacekeeping exercises as a violation of sovereignty, Russia's top general gave a resounding endorsement to training with the U.S. military.
Critics of the exercises — most notably ultra-nationalists who picked outside the front gate for several days — had gotten a boost from a well-placed ally earlier yesterday when the Russian co-mander, Col. Gen. Edward Vorobyye, questioned whether the nine-day exercises would prepare the troops for peacekeeping missions.
Vorobyev also indicated the exercises had come at a bad time for the cash-strapped Russian military, which spent an estimated several million dollars to hold them, and said he would rather conduct them by computer simulation next year in order to cut costs.
But during his one-day visit, Grachev voiced a strong commitment to continue the maneuvers that have renewed the old slogan "Yankee go home" among hardliners.
The delay in the talks, which began one week ago, indicates there will be no quick or easy solution to the refugee crisis that has bevelled the United States but strengthened Cuba's bargaining position.
After a brief meeting yesterday, the United States and Cuba temporarily suspended talks on stemming the Cuban refugee exodus, and Cuba's chief delegate flew back to Hayana for consultations.
U. S. officials want to end the flow of more than 30,000 Cubans who have fled their island since early August. But diplomats say Cuba may be trying to prolong the talks to pressure the United States into tackling U.S.-Cuban relations.
Negotiations are expected to resume in New York, possibly Friday.
NEW YORK
CHICAGO
United States, Cuba suspend talks
Men sue because of alleged FAA harassment
The training, designed to turn the tables on men in an effort to sensitize agency employees to race and gender bias, went too far, according to employees pursuing legal action against the federal government.
The Federal Aviation Administration paid for cultural diversity training in which men had to walk past women co-workers who fondled their private parts and made remarks about them, agency employees said yesterday.
"This thing went way off course," said Douglas P. Hartman, an air traffic controller who is suing the Transportation Department.
Hartman said that in June 1992, he and other male controllers were pressured to walk through a line of female controllers who fondled their private parts and rated their sexual attributes.
Hartman sued the Transportation Department last week, seeking an end to the retaliation and $300,000, the maximum allowed.
LONDON
Prince's crown jewels caught on film
Grilled Chicken Salad Platter
File of Sole w/ rice piled® salad
Boutine Vegetable Pasta
Cream Booklet®
A German newspaper published a photograph yesterday of Prince Charles in the nude.
Buckingham Palace was not amused.
The daily tabloid *Bild* said the color photo was taken while Charles was vacationing at a friend's villa in southern France. The heir to the British throne is seen inside the villa wearing only a folded white bathrobe draped over his left shoulder.
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
"We think it is completely unjustifiable for anybody to suffer this sort of intrusion," a representative said.
lef shoulder.
The picture stops short of full frontal nudity only because it is very grainy, apparently made with a lens that wasn't long enough, then blown up.
Our lunch menu will allow you to come back for dinner.
Bowte Vegetable Pasta
Cajun Renuben wl French fries & salad
The 4.9-million circulation tabloid did not reveal how the photograph was taken.
5.50
4.95
5.50
5.50
Fifi's affordable lunches.
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
prices as fine as the dining.
925 Iowa
fifi's
841-7226
Fantastic Fall Special!
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
2166 W.26th St.
843-6446
South Pointe AFABILITIES
*2 bedrooms $450 per month
- Ample Private Parking
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Water and Trash Paid
Outstanding New Staff!!!
Get 10% off Art, Engineering & Drafting Supplies with the Kansan Card
The only store that offers rebates to KU students
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Kansas and Burge Unions
The Kansan Card is available from the Customer Service counters of both KU Bookstores in the Unions.
KU Bookstores
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAFILMS
September 7-11
THE PIANO
Friday 7:00 and 9:30 pm
Saturday 7:00 and 9:30 pm
Sunday 2:00 pm
DELIVERANCE
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.
September 9-11
I will help you find the text in the image. The text appears to be a quote or statement that reads: "I will help you find the text in the image." This phrase is often used as a placeholder or an example in online content, but it does not contain any specific words or phrases. If you need more precise information about the text, please provide additional details.
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
300s
Merchandise
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against persons with disabilities, race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
100s Announcements
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it advertisable 'any property on the race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or disconti-
I
105 Personals
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in the newspaper are subject to change.
Sweetie, birthday, hope you're having an absolutely fabulous birthday. Later, we'll have some wonderful little nibby things, then smash up the house and snag a bag! Hmmm? Hmmm?
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass.
THE ETU CALENDAR
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
LEATHER
LEATHER
Backpacks, Backs, Jackets, & Purses
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses SUNGLASSES
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops i's, Révo, Serengeti, and Vuarnet
110 Bus. Personals
HAIA/LPN
Explore the possibilities of
HOME CARE
where you can give
one-on-one attention
to your client without interruption.
Hours are:
Saturday & Sunday * 8 a.m.-10 p.m.
Monday Friday * 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Excellent benefits possible.
Must have reliable transportation.
Douglas County Visiting Nurses Assoc. EOE
Call 843-3738-ask for Monica.
uth & Kids Discount Floral. Dozen arrange-
ances in vase $19.95. Accept all major credit card
and checken. Open 7 W-MP, 9 S-MP. Suit closed Sun. 38
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen
Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're here
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 8,1994
7B
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
Square Dance lessons. Sept 12, Douglas County 4-7
Dance lessons. Sep 18, Douglas County 4-7
free square Dance. Deloitte. #38-242
free square Dance. Deloitte. #38-242
CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAIL-
ABLE
IMMEDIATELY. 1-866-433-2433
QUALITY
IMMEDIATELY. 1-866-433-2433
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOP. In 3 parts. Improve your reading speed and retain more. Thursdays, 8 p.m., 12:5, 7:9 pm. Advanced registration and materials fee ($20.00) required. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
WTCs, the shelter in Lawrence for battered women and their children, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training. September 15 at 7:00 p.m. on the Lawrence public library, 707 Vermont behind the Lawrence public Library, 707 Vermont, please call WTCs at 841-6887.
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOP (IN 3 PARTS)
Improve your reading speed and retain more
Advanced registration and materials fee($20) required 133 Strong Hall
Thursday, September 8, 15 and 22,
7:00-9:00 pm
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
13TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2 - 15, 1986 • 4.5, 9 OR 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
YA GOTTA
BE THERE!
1.800.SUNCHASE
MORROD OOOK SKIRS REFFER
HAPPY DAYS
Get Noticed
Unlimited Tans!
1 Month $39
2 Month $59
Packages
5 @ $15
10 @ $25
2 fly FREE
to Hawaii or Mexico
with purchase of 6- mo.
unlimited tans for $189
(While supplies last.)
Southern Hills
Center
(behind Perkins)
23rd & Ousdahl
EUROPEAN
TAN HEALTH & HAIR SALON
841-6232
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
NUDIE VOODOO
The Wuss-Rock experience
Wed. Sept. 7 The bottleneck
140 Lost & Found
Found: One small cat on Overland Drive in W. Lawrence last week. He was green on top and on his belly and paws. We would love to keep him, but Lawrence will lick us off. Please call Robat at 789-9332.
Lost cat, gray female. Gray with white paws.
Black cat, gray female. Gray and 10 indi-
and 14th hands. 748-249 Leave message
Lost keys. 7 keys on black Camel flashlight key chain. Lost on Wescue Beach on 8/31. Call 769-2349 and leave message.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$100/hr. possible mailing our circulars, for info call
202 298-9065
Keep it clean.
ATTENTION O.T. and P.T. students. Female attendant needed for disabled woman. Mon, through Sat; mornings and 2 evenings per week. Some lifting requirements. Kansas Career Center Bldg. 842-1794 Bjrch. 842-1794
Babysitter needed for two delightful toddler girls in nice home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible days/evenings/weekends. Experience, own car, and references required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to Box #20, University Daily Kansan #119 Stauffer Flint.
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
Beautician/Barber
Bed time
Looking for two part-time hair stylists who want to earn great money on weekends or evenings. 100% satisfaction guaranteed.
Bucky's Drive is in now taking applications for
their mobile app. There are 2 prices on
apples. Apply in person between 10-5.
Cater Caters, Kansas Union catering Dept. Hiring for Friday, Sept. 10th 9 a.m. 3 p.m., Saturday, September 10th 1p. to 8:30 p.m. $25 per hour in paid cash day following employment. Previous food service experience preferred. Apply Kansas and Burton Hospital Applicated Office, Level 3. http://www.eoefo.com/
COLLEGE STUDENTS $10.25-11.65 STARTING
Local branch of ni! t.co. Fill immediately entry
level openings. Flex time schedules. 3-5 days, eve-
ral days. Opt all majors. Accept for
info 841-8069.
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
Custodial
Part-time positions available working at various school buildings in Lawrence. These hours will vary but usually will be late afternoon & evening. If interested please contact our office immediate-
Manpower
211 E. 8th
749-3800
Director, Junior & Senior High Jewish Youth Groups. Supervise about 28 enthusiastic Lawrence teens. About 30 hr/month. Start ASAP! May 1995 $250/30 per month/permission on qualifications. Some travel required but not required. Previous experience in Jewish Youth Groups desired. If you are experienced, dedicated, 21 & over, have our own car and enjoy any type of work send letter of application including names & phone & driving, Lawrence HR #6644 Job share possible.
DOORMEN NEEDED
DOORMEN NEEDED
Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation.
Enhancastic HDLF/Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for 2hrs. Thurs. evening and occasionally 4hrs. Sunday mornings. Call 842-8820.
Female vocalist wanted for variety dance band. All styles. High, strong chest voice, good performer. Avail. immediately. This is a working band, serious impurities only 749-3649
Insurance agency needs part-timely clerical help,
10-20 hours after. Aftonnoons preferred, he
said.
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT Make up to
$20,000+/mo /+ on teaching basic conversational
English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No
teaching background or Asian languages required.
For more information, visit www.oef.edu.au.
Jon's Notes of Lawrence is anxious to hire quality note takers for the Fall semester. Preferred GPA of above 3.5. Pick up an application at Jon's Notes office in the Kansas University Bookstore between 9.5
KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for parttime banquette server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants with some daytime availability. Apply at 1266 Grec.
Loving Nanny required for 4 yr old boy in our home. Mon-Thu, 10am - 5pm. Other staff: Wed-Fri, 9am - 5pm. near KU 8241
Mail Order Telephone Rep-New Home Improvement catalog has part-time weekday openings between 7am-5pm for inbound call and order tasks. Great for people needing flexible schedules during the day. Good clerical skills required. Start $19.hr / apply in person: H.I.L. 2011 Lakeview Rd #4. Blue big window of Lawrence Paper, straight to, to 2nd right) or call for directions (6832) 3623.
Office clerical position. Must have experience w/
supervision of work activities in student
management. Student monthly position, $500
625/month. 20 hr/wks. Pick up an application at
500 Dollars per week. For more information
about Mary Morningstar.
Non-smoking babyisher for 6, 8 and 1 year(s) for occasional calls. Call Emily at 748-320
NEEP SPEENDING CSMF* B P T. Building Ses-
now receive applications for a variety of
software and services.
Part-time cleaning person for property management, good paper references and resume.
a久特 temporary Extension 4 H Assistant.
4H assist AH with the promotion of the 4H Enrichment program and related work.
4H assist students in working with people. B.S. preferred $2.55 per hour, plus mileage. 20 hours per week. October 3, 1994 June 9, 1995. Send resume and 3 letters of reference by September 16 to: Dennis Beifol, County Extension Director, 2119 Harper, Lawrence. KS 80646
842-6264 Ask for Jeannie
Part-time delivery person needed. Primarily in Larry's Office Supply Store, apply in person at Larry's Office Supply Store.
**SPRING BREAK 95-SELT TRIPS, EARN CASH**
& GO FREE !!! *Student Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to*
& Pamela Gainy and Panama Gainy. Beach. Call-180-648-4849.
Sports Officers need!' The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Corps is looking for individuals interested in becoming official for adult volleyball and basketball at 843-7122. Please contact Bob Stanfield at 843-7122.
Part-time truck washer. M-F evenings. Approx.
60% per week. Appl. 800-555-6232
www.carwash.com
Prefer 71.1; 11:38:30; or all day any weekday. Jr or Sr in child-related field. Center experience.
Computer tutor, Odd hours, Low Pay, Cool machine, Call Mark at 482-1698.
**STUDENT APPLICATION PROGRAMMER**
Date: 09/16; Salary $450/month; 30 his per week. Duties include Program coding, maintenance and insuring programs to specifications, programming in C, PASCAL, FOXPRO and/or other languages in AIX O/S, VIMS C and/or LAN. Currently enrolled in 6 hours at the job site. Computer lab is available. To apply, submit a cover letter and resume to Ann Ratt at Computing Services.
EO/AAEMOYLER
courses 8 Adele 7:302 00 pm weekdays. Classroom experience with preschool children precluded but not required. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 N. Michigan EOE
STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER
Deadline: 09/14, $59.99 Salary $650/year, 20hrs per week. Duties include designing and writing programs, maintaining, or enhancing existing programs. Participate in currently assigned projects. Provide demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programming languages including Pascal or C, good oral and written com-
munication skills, ability to perform software testing. Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Complete job description available. To apply. Send resume to Job Director, 802 of the Computer Center EO/AA EMPLOYER
Terraver Construction Company has opening starting immediately for trim carpenters and laborers. Hardworking individuals who can work a minimum of 3 weekdays and be able to report to work by 8:04 a.m. They jobs involve some heavy lifting, etc. Apply in person at 410 B. Trail Road (around back and in the basement) for more information call 842-8928 between the hours of 9 a.m. to 3:00.
Wanted: Painter - Maintenance assistant part time for property management, good pay, resume and references to Morning Star 912 Tenn.
WHILE CARE & CAFE BAR
If you are looking for a fun and challenging position with opportunity for career development within and entrepreneurial company, come join our team. Our job requires an unconventional restaurant management team. Prior restaurant experience NOT necessary. Prefer individuals with a solid background in hospitality, menu creation, mentally, good communication, attention to detail, energy level, positive attitude, and the ability to manage multiple projects and people while running your business. You will be the career you please, send your resume to:
Dawn Benson
1320 E. Kellogg Drive
Wichita KS 67211
This Ain't Your Ordinary Ho-Hum Company!
I look forward to hearing from you.
225 Professional Services
< *Driver Education* : offered thru midWinter Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841.7749
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
HARTFIELD-DUI'S
Fake DUI' & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
the law offices of
Relieve pain and stress with massage therapy*
*student discounts available.*
Call Anna Lunaria and Laura Pace at 841-1587.
Cardt reading tables.
Student discounts available
799 1/2 Massachusetts Suite 216
840 1/2 Massachusetts Place at 841-1587
DUI/TRAP/FAR
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R GREEN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105 The Lazer.
Call Anna Lunaria at 814-1857.
F
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964.
701 Tennessee
Richard A. Frydman
ATTORNEY AT LAW
843-4023
Free Consultation
ENGLISH TUTOR English courses, writing, reading, literature, ESL classes. Highly qualified and experienced Call Arthur 411-3313 Mother of two starting registered daycare. Full and part time openings. Infants and up. Many learning activities. Reasonable rates. 841-7427
Having Trouble Locating that hard to find CD?
call or come by
Junior's Farm Records
924½ Mass St. • 842-3344
We specialize in hard-to-find CD's
SUNFLOWER BIKE SHOP
SUNFLOWER
BIKE SHOP
BREK SHOP
Tuppe-up, over-age, upgrades, free air. 304 Masi
sauteens 843-5000
We carry Bianchi, Specialized and Trek. Plus We carry Cairn, Specialized and Layaway available. 394 Massachusetts 343-800-7255 SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR SAILBOARD CLOSEOUT MUSTSIM, IiH Fly, O'Brien. Get one cheap $169. Price $17
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter quality type. Also transcriptions 843-2063
235 Typing Services
X
Quality Word Processing Distortions, Theses,
business letters, letter printing, laser printing 865-002
www.westword.com
EARN CASH
ALL YOUR
MONEY GONE?
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
Put my service to the test.
For everything else, MAKIN' THE GRADE
is the one to call
862-5475
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
Giant Mountain Bike in excellent condition. Make offer. 749-9230
Honda 1880 Eclipse red scooter, with 2 baskets. 460
Acura TL at laminated and tune-up for $100. Ask
Lunar at laminated at 188-223.
Blue padded carpet cup to cut furniture room. Bought last semester for $12, sell for $9.GBO. Call Mike
$15
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N. 2nd • 841-8903
19th & Haskell • 841-7504
MADANTOSI Computer. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Chris at 802-898-5685.
Nikon EM 500, Nikon Motor Drive, 70-210 mm,
Love pro bag $35.00 or $0.00, B 91-237-9315.
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
building large computer, complete set Bauhaus china, two desk, sofa, twin mattress and springs. The room is filled with decorated ice cream cake mould, many quality picture frames, posters, luggage, large rolodex, camping equipment, A/R stereo speakers, and insuring more, like new auxiliary (size 4), and much more.
$30
This Week
Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center
Sat. 7-12. 2005 Westdale
By donating your blood plasma
NABI
Quality Sale
The Quality Source
816 W.24th
Behind Laird Noller Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F9-6:30
Sat.10-4
Rollerblades: Lightnings $80 & Aeroblades $175
and Trek 830 mountain bike for $259-749-0641.
STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and
puffer for $120 a semester. Call 1-800-309-0494 for
inquiries.
WORD PROCESSOR 3400, full screen,
disk drive, grammar & spell check $200.
word processor
"QUALITY GOODS FOR HOME BREWING
LAWRENCE BREVER'S SUPPLY
305 E.7TH LAWRENCE, KANSAS 80044 ph.(913) 74-YEAST
- Equipment kits starting at $32.00 5 gallon batches for .30c a beer
King size waterbed,bookcase/mirror headboard,six driver pedestal base,headster,liner,and new mattress.$125 1-856-7099 Will deliver.
newmatress $125. 1-800-734-2222
Mac Classic, 4/80-Printer, Carrying Case, word
5.1, Quicken and more. Call 843-3075 with best
offer c.
Yamaha stereo receiver, still in stock, model XRX780, K594. Ask for T91 931-451-7135.
340 Auto Sales
**93 Mazda MX-6 W/Black/Taupe Leather, 5-speed**
**2015 Nissan GT-R (RWD)**
AIRBAG brakes, factory alarm, 28 hours. Excellent
condition, all maintenance current; **$18,000**.
(316) 712-6672. Can arrange a lease for low pay-
ment.
60 Mazda MX-4 white, uvac leather, 5 pdp. 61, electric sunroof, CD, cassette, air bag, ABS brakes, factory alarm, 29 k miles, excellent cond, all maintenance current, 221-721-8121 for low payments.
1933 Nissan Z802X Z5P *Tops fully loaded AM/FM/cass. ACNrort, digital display, Nice1900 Also 178 Chv. Camaro, drives very good, $850.749. 79
1992 Nissan 2000XH XIK with sunroof, power
windows, and lowers. 8100/1100. Call Mike at
8100/1100.
VAGABONDBOOKMAN
Buy & Sell Used
Rare & Collectables
842-BOOK 1113Mass.
(2665)
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
- On KU Bus Route
400s Real Estate
2166 W.26th St.
843-6446
- Swimming Pool
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- Ample Private Parking
- Sand Volleyball Court
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well equipped accommodations STAR (2023)
405 For Rent
1 Bedroom, very nice, quiet, lots of space, ceiling fan and pool. On KU bus route 864. mo/ 185-882
- Water and Trash Paid
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
- Directly on bus route
Outstanding New Staff!!!
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Available for fall.
- *Call 843-4754
- 2 bedroom with study
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Lg. 3 B1BM apt. off campus. Avail. immed.
lower level garden, new kitchen overlooking
living room. Full carpet. fireplace,
wash/ dry, A/C. Very clean. $400 + utilities.
Hillcrest
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
floor plan 2 bath on KU be
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500. Room for rent in house with 2 male students. $3 block from campus. Laundry facilities available. B232-1655 or 843-0984.
430 Roommate Wanted
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE ON TENNESSEE. Responsible people to house 110 each room. Phone 1-841-841-6952. Email bhouser@yahoo.com
1 roommate needed ASAP, non-smoking 2 br apt
1 walk-in rack from campus, fully furnished 3
roommates
I roommate needed immediately. Beautiful 3
packs back from auction. $25, price negle-
gible. 850-911-4657
Two share two bedroom apartment old West Lawrence $190 plus month 1/2 utilities. Call 843-9227
Corners on bus ro
Call 832-9683
Share four bedroom apartments and lot. Orchard Corners on bus route
House mate needed. 48Bs. Close to campus. N/S, clean, quiet. Avail Now. Call 1-891-1050
How to schedule an ad:
Need Female to share large 2 Bdrm. 1 Bth furn
up on ground, smoker 84-01518
Call now. Call皂皂皂皂皂皂皂皂皂皂
N/S, Female Roammate needed to share furnished w/D) W/on KU Bus Route $260 + taxes 841-735-9161
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
on MasterCredit or visa.
* By Mail: 119 Suffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Wanted. Two seat, responsible n/a rooms to share new house. 3 baths, 2 baths. Quite hotelroom. Grad students preferred. $225+ / 1^st utilities.
Please call 843-8478
by phone: 844-528-4100
its phone number may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Stop by the Kansas offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Classified Information and order form
Calculating Rates:
- By Mail: 1191 Sauroff Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60405
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 hiked to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard quality for a refund on unused days when cancelled before your expiration date.
Calculating Rates:
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. 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.
BINDING NUMBER:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Rates
Deadlines:
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of insertions:
Classifications
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 1.95 .65 .60 .55 .35
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
130 entertainment
140 list & fund
300 high wanted
225 professional services
225 typing services
Please print your ad one word per box
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Total ad cost:___ Classification:___
Phone:___
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper;
VISA
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:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
LUGGAGE CLAIM
GATES 12-20
Beep Beep Beep
9-8
"Whoa whoa whoa! ... You'll have to go back and walk through again."
8B
Thursday, September 8, 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.
I
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
A
parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative.
& CLINTON PARKWAY
CAMPUS
Students get a backstage look at the Lied Center, Page 3A.
PLEASANT High 88° Low 64° Page 2A.
---
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.104.NO.14
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9,1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
USAir jetliner crashes, leaves no survivors
Pilot showed no signs of trouble
The Associated Press
ALIQUIPA, Pa. — A USAir jetliner nose-dive into a rainy while trying to land near Pittsburgh yesterday, killing all 131 people on board. It was the deadliest crash in the United States in seven years.
Flight 427 originated in Chicago and was to stop in Pittsburgh before continuing to West Palm Beach, Fla.
"I looked up, and there it was," said Tom Michel, who was at a gas station near the crash site. "It was just coming straight down. I was screaming for everybody to run. It looked like it was under full power, and he just went straight in."
Air traffic controllers said they lost contact with the plane when it was about seven miles from the airport, said Pat Boyle, a representative for the Allegheny County Department of Aviation. There were no indications of any problems on the flight, and a report of an explosion before the crash could not be confirmed.
Michel said there had been a "big boom, and the sky lit up. There was black smoke everywhere, and that was it."
Witnesses reported a gruesome carnage in a clearing on a heavily wooded ravine.
"All we saw was body parts hanging from the trees," said Denise Godich, a nurse who was one of the first at the scene. "There were people everywhere. You could just see parts of them."
Another eyewitness said pieces of plane and baggage were scattered throughout the area.
"We have done a fairly extensive search of the area, and there are no survivors," said Jim Eichenlaub, manager of Hopewell Township and coordinator of emergency services at the scene.
The plane's black box, which records flight data, was recovered, he said.
Emergency crews put out the fire, and the search was called off about two hours after the crash. The area was sealed off for the night, but offroad vehicles were spotted heading to the crash site.
The Boeing 737, which was carrying
126 passengers and a crew of five, went down shortly after 7 p.m. in a field about seven miles from the airport. The airport is 20 miles northwest of Pittsburgh.
"The engines just went dead," eye-witness Sandra Zuback told CNN. "It just blew up."
The weather was clear, and USAir representative Susan Young said the pilot had contacted the airport tower as usual on final approach. "There was no indication of any problem," she said.
No damage to homes in the area was reported.
USAIR jet, carrying 132 passengers,
crashes 20 miles northeast of city
Ohio Pa.
Pittsburgh Philadelphia
Md.
Views differ on U.N. conference
Knight-Ridder Tribune
By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer
A single paragraph referring to abortion in a 113-page document is threatening to overshadow an international conference.
The U.N. population conference has been mired in controversy since it began Monday in Cairo, Egypt. The conference, the third of its kind, is being attended by delegates from more than 170 nations. The purpose of the conference is to address issues of overpopulation. The result of the conference will be a nonbinding agreement, which is being debated this week.
Paragraph 8.25 in the conference's agreement reads, in part, "In circumstances in which abortion is legal, such abortion should be safe." Wednesday, the Vatican refused to sign the agreement because of the paragraph on abortion.
The paragraph also offended some local residents, including Father Vince Krische, director of St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center. Krische said that the term "safe abortion" was inaccurate because there was nothing safe about killing.
"The central question to ask is who has the power over life?" he said. "We believe only God has that authority."
Krische said he was grateful for the Vatican's insistence that all references to abortion be stricken from the document.
"Without the Vatican, human life could easily be disregarded," he said.
Krische said respecting the dignity for all human life was the cornerstone of the church's solution to the population problem.
That respect begins with educating people, Krische said. Although education includes schooling, more important is educating people about their bodies.
"The church recommends natural family planning built upon the dignity and nature of women," he said.
Too many people?
Estimated population growth through the year 2100:
Year Population
Birth of Christ 250 million
1492 500 million
1800 1 billion
1950 2.5 billion
1994 5.7 billion
2030 8.5 billion
2100 11.5 billion
Source: Knight-Ridder Tribune
Not everyone agreed with the church's decision: Christy Morris, Englewood, Colo., senior, said the Vatican's position proved how much power the church had.
"I grew up Catholic," she said. "One reason I left is because I didn't feel Catholicism is inclusive of women in any way.
"The church doesn't give you information about sex because it doesn't think you need it until you're married."
Alice Lieberman, associate professor of social welfare, said many issues concerning overpopulation needed addressing.
"We have to look beyond abortion and look at other issues," she said.
Lieberman said family planning, including birth control, education, abortion and abstinence, was a major factor in reducing population.
Krische agreed that other issues were important.
Other conferences have had some measure of controversy. During the first one, held in August 1974 in Bucharest, Romania, the Vatican disassociated itself from the conference's plan of action because it felt that not enough attention was given to family values and respect for life, and a sanctioned birth control plan.
"A big problem with the document is that it has said very little about development," he said. "The governments in the United Nations have approached the population issue by denying spiritual and religious perspectives."
Julianne Peter/ KANSAN
Sunny-side up
The only life at Hoch Auditorium these days is sunflowers. Hoch was gutted by fire in June 1991 when it was struck by lightning. Reconstruction is scheduled to begin next month.
Compromise sought on abortion issue
The Associated Press
CAIRO, Egypt — With anger growing about the Vatican's hard-line stance on abortion, negotiators at the U.N. population conference yesterday hammered out what they called a last-chance compromise on the explosive issue.
A special committee assigned to write the provision on unsafe abortions agreed on a compromise text last night. The main negotiating committee is expected to consider the new language today.
ceeus, the controversy at the conference won't end because negotiators still face other contentious provisions in the meeting's 20-year action plan.
But even if the compromise suc-
The main committee is expected to consider sections on reproductive and sexual health today that refer to "fertility regulation" — a phrase the Vatican views as a code word for abortion — and adolescent sexuality.
To address the concerns of some nations yesterday, the World Health Organization's definition of unsafe abortion was added to the section on abortion as a health issue. That definition says abortion is unsafe if carried out by unqualified people in inappropriate settings.
To show how minutely the wording has been worked over, a new draft of the proposed compromise changes "legal" abortion, which the Vatican opposed, to abortion that "is not against the law."
Earlier yesterday, Nicolaas Biegman, vice-chairman of the overall negotiations, said he was confident the special committee on unsafe abortion would "very, very quickly" arrive at a final compromise text.
"As far as I am concerned, (this) will be the end of the discussion in the
committee because anything which could possibly be accommodated has been accommodated," he said.
Timothy Wirth, the U.S. undersecretary of state for global affairs, told reporters last night: "We're very close to getting finished. I expect we will get through the abortion issue tomorrow morning, and it will be downhill from there."
The Vatican delegation said it was pondering how to react to the compromise but suggested it may have a problem with the phrase "safe abortion" because abortion is "unsafe" for the fetus.
INSIDE
INSIDE
---
Let there be light
ROTC program celebrates 75 years
The Kansas football team will meet a tough Michigan State team under the lights of Memorial Stadium Saturday night.
Page 1B
In 1969, a small device blew up in in the Military Science Building, damaging the walls of an office. The explosion marked a time when KU's Army ROTC program was the object of widespread student protest.
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
But the years during the Vietnam War were not the first time KU's Army ROTC program was held in contempt, said Steve Singleton, a 1931 graduate of the program and one of the more than 100 people who attended the 75th anniversary ceremony of KU's army ROTC yesterday afternoon at the Military Science Building.
Singleton said the United States in the late 1920s had been going through a post-World War I denial of growing military threats in Europe. At the time, many people saw no need for military programs.
But the protests Army ROTC has faced in its 75 years, from the Vietnam War years to the more recent issue of exclusion of homosexuals, has not tarnished Singleton's opinion of ROTC.
"This was a pacifist period in the United States," he said. "We didn't enjoy the status that ROTC deserved."
"We should have compulsory ROTC training," he said. "That would be the greatest thing for America."
James Ferrell, a 1963 graduate of Army ROTC and keynote speaker for the ceremony, was just as enthusiastic about ROTC, which he called "a program that encourages people to be their best."
Ferrell said that unlike the late 1960s, ROTC was well-received in the early 1960s.
"I remember those as popular days for ROTC," he said. "Those were patriotic days."
After the ceremony, Col. Ronald Nicholl, head of military science, said that despite the program's recurring notoriety, it has been supported by the University.
Ferrell, CEO of Ferrall Gas Co. in Liber-
ferry. Mo. said ROTC taught him the
touch.
killer instinct needed for success in business.
"I've been very pleased with the support we've gotten from the University of Kansas," he said.
tellyourrightnow,firingapersonis a lot like killing a person. It takes courage,"he told the audience.
Nicholl said ROTC programs should not be considered separate from the University.
"Courses we teach are open to all students," he said. "A lot of things we do mesh well with problem solving and leadership."
KU
ARMY ROAD
Army ROTC cadets receive two, three or four-year scholarships in exchange for a period of service in the Army after college graduation.
Sean Crosier/ KANBAN
Sean Crosier/KARAH McKinney, Cadet Deborah Dauton and Drill Team Commander Joe Wilson recognize a new special team commander.
2A
Friday, September 9, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
★★★
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Romance will probably take a back seat to career and business interests. Count on relatives to extend a helping hand when you need it most. New financial gains are featured as 1904 draws to a close. Employment or investment moves you make early in 1905 could bring both fame and fortune! Use greater diplomacy when expressing your views to influential people. Avoid sounding obsessed about a pet project.
CLEARBILTS BORN ON THIS DATE actor Michael Keaton, football player Joe Theissmann,
actress Sylvia Miles, singer Otis Redding.
T
♘
Θ
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Although you will not feel like rushing today, you must meet all deadlines. If trying to save money, limit purchases to necessities only. You may have to cool your heels in romance tonight.
TALURIS (April 20-May 20) A wonderful day for those engaged in creative and artistic pursuits. Sales should increase. Keep your guard up when around a member of the opposite sex who wants your job. Watch that sweet tooth.
69
5
GEMINI (May 21-June 20). A friend's suggestion is worth exploring. Your chances for making new financial gains are excellent. An interesting offer could be in the works. Remember lessons learned in the past.
(2)
m
CANCER (June 21- July 22) A sense of accomplishment belongs to those who have achieved something out of the ordinary. This feeling encourages you to aim even higher! You move nearer and nearer to a long-cherished career-goal.
↑
P
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): An associate may have less influence than you think. Rely on your own efforts to get ahead. A valuable clue is furnished regarding someone's motives. Late-night snacks are taboo if trying to lose weight.
LEO (July 23-August 22). Some news may be to your liking. Allow for changes n a previously-agreed-to plan. Turn to science, music and literature for inspiration. Socializing with a new crowd will boost your spirits.
VS
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): A) Legal roadblock or barrier may stand in your way now. This is not a good evening to seek a friend's advice. Avoid a showdown with loved one by curbing your everyday spending.
SAGTITARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Tighten up any financial procedures that seem lax. An ounce of prevention can save time and money. You need to fill in certain gaps in your knowledge. Take a greater interest in world affairs.
VIRGO (Aug 29, Sept. 22) Be "all business" this morning. Find more about a situation before committing yourself further. The afternoon hours should be highly productive. Strengthen bonds with a colleague by lending a helping hand.
CAPICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Stop fretting! Your intuition will tell you the right thing to say when the chips are down. Mail cover packages and letters. Changing your eating habits will give you more energy. Get some exercise.
Water
AQI/ARUI S (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Look into ways to improve security at your home or office. Collective action is required. Make an appointment for an overdue medical examination. Romance could be a guessing game this weekend. Stay alert.
X
PISCES (Feb. 19- March 20): Improving your surroundings could boost your productivity. Welcome an opportunity to do some truly outstanding work. Family members need kind words and reassurance. Be asympathetic listener if romantic partner expresses job dissatisfaction.
TODAY CHILDREN are reliable, self-sufficient and honest to a fault. They pride themselves on being direct and may confuse subtlety with subterfuge. Concerned parents will point out the benefits of using tact. Although these Virgos have thrifty habits, they can be a soft touch for anyone with a sob story. They have a strong sense of fair play and always root for the underdog.
Ocropses are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hail, Lawrence, Kan. 60645, 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. 60644. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
ON CAMPUS
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a volunteer fair for Lawrence, United States and international placements from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today at 1204 Oread Ave.
Latin American Solidarity and the Hispanic American Leadership Organization will sponsor a lecture, "Mexico in Crisis: Mexican and Chicano Issues," by Guillermo Hernandaz, head of Chicano studies at UCLA, at 5:30 p.m. today at 1204 Oread Ave.
Mystery Science Theater 3000 will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. For more information, call Shawn at 842-7998.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-4713.
Phi Alpha Delta, a pre-law society, will meet at 7 tonight in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Shawna Hilleary at 749-5861.
KLZR Radio, Cycleworks,
Sunflower Bike Shop and Amigos
will sponsor the Lazer River
Cup Mountain Bike Race at 9
a.m. Sunday at Lawrence River
Trails, Eighth and Locust
streets. For more information,
call Jeff Kress at 842-5306.
Lutheran Campus Ministry will sponsor a supper and worship at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call pastor Brian Johnson at
K-Unity will sponsor Sunday readings and silent meditation at 7 p.m. Sunday at Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Scott Mac Williams at 843-2847.
Water Polo Club will meet at 7 p.m. Sunday at Robinson Natorium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873.
843-4948.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic Law Students meeting at 12:30 p.m. Monday at Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. Monday at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-4713.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. Monday at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 832-8199.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. Monday at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jason Anishslin at 843-7973.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor "Fundamentals of Catholicism," at 7 p.m. Monday at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0557.
Yoga Club will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Michele Risdal at 841-8818.
was broken into in the 1600 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage and stolen items were valued at $680.
A yellow parking permit valued at $35 was stolen Wednesday afternoon from the Stouffer Place parking lot, KU police reported.
ON THE RECORD
The car windshield was broken about 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in the west Ellsworth parkinglot, KU police reported. Damage was valued at $600 police reported.
TODAY'S TEMPS
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
A mobile phone valued at $100 was taken from a car about 11 p.m. Tuesday in the 1300 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police reported.
Weather
TODAY
Sunny and warm with southerly winds at 5 m.p.h.
SATURDAY
About 10 p.m. Tuesday, a car
A mountain bicycle valued at $550 was stolen Monday night in the 500 block of Eldridge Street, Lawrence police reported.
8864
Cash and checks valued at $1,100 were stolen from an apartment Wednesday afternoon in the 900 block of Vermont Street, Lawrence police said.
Sunny and a little warmer with southerly winds at 5 m.p.h.
9265
H I G N L O W
81° • 67°
80° • 58°
80° • 58°
87° • 63°
88° • 64°
88° • 67°
80° • 62°
90° • 59°
75° • 59°
84° • 63°
77° • 55°
87° • 63°
89° • 63°
SUNDAY
91 65
Summerlike with clear skies
Source: Paul Shallberg, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
September 9,1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
22.21
3,908.46
NYSE
1.04
260.82
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 294,019,916
↑
Advances 1,319
Declines 837
Unchanged 715
5.02
769.30
一
ASE
.19
455.51
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Tired of Pizza and Tacos? Try the... Sunday Night Student Special
---
BONANZA.
Steach. Chichon. Soapbowl. Salad
$4.99 for any sandwich (includes Freshtastics bar & drink) 10% Student Discount every day on any regularly priced menu item
2329 Iowa · 842-1200
DECORVIEW
BANQUETS
VISA
BNNN
the Photos Anthor Eight
be the voice of your generation
Mademoiselle magazine invites you to voice your opinion as a member of the College Marketing Board. Mademoiselle is actively seeking interested college students to share thoughts and opinions on fashion and beauty products. Career ambitions. Relationships. Money. And more! As an active member of Mademoiselle's College Marketing Board, you'll not only answer questionnaires about your buying and lifestyle habits – you'll be eligible to receive product samples and information from a variety of Mademoiselle advertisers. You may even have the opportunity to test new products and to list Mademoiselle in coordinating an event on your campus.
If you would like to be considered for membership on Mademoiselle's College Marketing Board, please complete this form and return to: Daria Fabian, College Marketing Board, Mademoiselle, 350 Madison Avenue, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10017. Fax: (212) 880-8165.
don't miss out on this exciting opportunity.
class graduation date
how often do you read magazines?
class graduation date
how often do you read mademoiselle?
date of birth www.
□ every month □ 6-12 issues □ 3-5 issues □ less than 3 issues
If you have access to e-mail, could we contact you using your address?
□ newstand □ subscriptions □ other
$ x-mail address
Call Carol for college cash.
BEST MEMBER
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:
MERCANTILE BANK
Member FDIC
Equal Opportunity Lender
- More than 30 years of student loan experience.
- 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.
HOME
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 9, 1994
3A
Football traffic inevitable
Leaving game Saturday might take some time, pedestrians top priority
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
There is bound to be traffic after the Kansas vs. Michigan State football game Saturday night.
But that does not mean getting home from the game has to be a problem, KU police said.
"The one big difference from last year is that we will be placing a lot of priority to the pedestrians," said Officer Cindy Alliss of the KU police. "Especially at night, it's sometimes hard to see people, and there might be a lot of people."
While the traffic plan is the same as last year, Alliss said, drivers should expect to spend a little more time in their cars after the game because of the added importance given to pedestrians. Officers will be stopping traffic more often to allow pedestrian crossing, Alliss said. But, she said, a steady traffic flow should still be possible.
Before the game, streets will be open as usual. Police officers will be at entrances to the parking lots before the game. Alliss said.
Drivers should be aware that some streets will be closed, and others will be converted into one-way streets after the game. Campus will be closed to all vehicles after the game.
Post-game street closures will be:
Jayhawk Boulevard from the Chi Omega Fountain to Sunflower Drive.
Mississippi Street from 11th Street to where Mississippi becomes Memorial Drive.
11th Street from Maine to Mississippi streets.
Post-game streets converted to one-way streets will be:
Sunnyside Drive going east.
Sunflower Road going south, two lanes.
■ West Campus Road on the west side of the stadium going south, two lanes.
Post-game traffic will be directed through special routes on Saturday. Some streets will be closed completely and others will be converted into one-way streets.
Roads closed
Illinois, Alabama, Maine and Missouri streets from 11th Street heading north.
Parking Lot One Way Traffic (One Lane) Two Way Traffic
One Way Traffic (Two Lane)
11th St. closed to traffic
Missouri St.
Maine St.
Alabama St.
Illinois St.
West Hills Terrace
Stratford Road
University Drive
West Campus Road
Memorial Stadium
N
Memorial Drive
Crescent Road
15th Street
Irving Hill
Naismith Drive
Sunnflower Road
Sannyside Avenue
Indiana St.
Source: KU Police Micah Laeker/KANBAF
Stratford Road, University and Crescent drives from West Campus Road heading west.
Memorial Drive heading west, one lane.
Those changes will be in effect until the football game traffic clears, which should take 30 to 45 minutes, Alliss said.
About 70 officers from the KU police department, Lawrence police department, Douglas County Sheriff's office and Kansas Highway Patrol will be involved in routing post-game traffic.
THEATER
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
Lied offers backstage tours
Amy Solt / KANSAN
Seats at the Lied Center often go unused because they are tickets reserved for students, and students don't know about them. The center has formed a committee to inform students about these special tickets.
The Lied Center is taking students on a backstage tour.
The behind-the-scenes look at the facility is an effort to get students involved in what goes on at the center. The tour is part of the center's campaign directed toward University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Nations University students, said Jacqueline Davis, director of the center.
"We want the student population involved in the Lied Series," Davis said.
The Lied Series is a series of events that fall under different headings, including the Concert series, the New Directions series, the Swarthout Chamber Music series, the Broadway series and special events.
Students will be able to take a tour of the facility from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. Wednesday.
"We're anxious to hear from them, and we want to know what they want," said Nancy Kaiser-Caplan, director of public relations. "We want them to feel that the Lied Center is a part of their life at KU."
"They've been there, but they haven't been backstage," Kaiser said.
Kaiser said students could get involved with the center in several ways, including ushering, working at the administrative and box offices, working on the technical crew and attending the shows.
Students will be able to see the 1,200-square-foot dance studio, dressing rooms, warm-up rooms and the Greenroom — a room set aside for visiting visitors to relax that includes an antique piano, a kitchen and several couches and
Kaiser said this would be the first time students were allowed to tour the facility.
chairs.
Davis said the campaign also would allow students to get tickets for performances before the general public. Students can purchase their tickets now for any Lied Series event this year. Tickets go on sale to the general Sept. 19.
Davis said more than one-third of the tickets for each of last year's shows were set aside for students. The tickets that students did not buy went on sale to both the student body and the general public 14 working days prior to a performance. She said that not all of the tickets set aside for students were used.
Kaiser said events in the New Directions series, such as performance artist Laurie Anderson, were more popular with students. Tickets set aside for events in the Concert series usually did not sell out because students were unaware of them.
"We're selling them tickets because we want students here," Davis said. "We're letting students come first."
Up and coming
Upcoming Lied Center events:
Principal dancers of the New York City Ballet
8:00 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 28
Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson
Trio
3:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 9
■ "Evita"
8:00 p.m. Monday, Oct. 17
The Boys Choir of Harlem
8:00 p.m. Friday, Oct. 28
Oleanna
8:00 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5
* Carol Wincenc, Flute, and
Heidi Lehalwer, Harp*
3:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 13
H.T. Chen and Dancers
8:00 p.m. Friday, Nov 18
Tickets are available at the Lied Center box office, 864-ARTS.
Season tickets for all shows are available now. Tickets for individual shows are available to students now and will go on sale to the general public Sept. 19.
Prices vary.
Special Game Hours..Special Sirloin Stockade Hours...
SPECIAL SIRLOIN STOCKADE OFFER
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT PRIME RIB $9.99 Add our terrific Buffet for only $2 more
Dinner includes choice of potato, homemade rolls and a trip to our dessert bar
Dine with us on your way to the game or stop by after the game and celebrate the Win!
3:30pm-Midnight Saturday, September 10
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
1015 Iowa This offer good only at the Lawrence Sirloin Stockade
GREAT MUSIC FOOD TIMES
ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE CAFE OR THROUGH
FRI., SEPT.9 MUNKAFUST
SAT., SEPT 10 COMMON GROUND
MON., SEPT 12 Fat Tuesday doll face
WED., SEPT 14 THE PRAYERS SOLE-
FISH
THURS., SEPT 15 LIMBO CAFE WITH SHALLOW
FRI., SEPT 23 SMITHEREENS FADT 17
FRI., SEPT.16 DIXIE-DREGS
THE ORIGINAL USE CAP
ROCK CLUB 1601 W.23rd
Lawrence, KS
For info and current concert
listings call 913.841.9111
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
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.
837 Massachusetts
COMPACT DISCS
- New
- Used
WE BUY & SELL USED CD's
Trade-ins
4th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 6604
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913·843·1811 913·842·1438 913·842·1544
4A
Friday, September 9, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
School system does not deserve failing grade
HEATHER KIRKWOOD
Those quick to condemn American education often overlook the positives.
We have become so accustomed to listening to the litany of what is wrong with U.S. education that we have forgotten what is right with it.
Undoubtedly, you have read the statistics about how kids from other countries, such as Germany and Japan, outperform U.S. students on academic tests designed to compare educational systems. The problem is some of the greatest features of our educational system cannot be expressed in multiple choice form.
One of the greatest things about our system of public education is that it is inclusive, not exclusive. This has not been easy to achieve, and indeed many strides will have to be made to improve the inclusive nature of our schools. Why would we want to run
the risk of undoing something our society has worked so hard to achieve?
In our public schools, all sorts of students sit in the same desks, with the same teachers, the same tests and suffer through the same homework. It doesn't matter if the student is Christian or Jewish, Black or White, brilliant or slow, blind or deaf.
For those of you who are running to get your pens and paper to jot notes to the editor, hold it. I know that studies show all sorts of disparities between suburban and inner-city schools.
Part of the immeasurable success of our system is that our kids have to learn to live in the real world, which includes all sorts of people from all walks of life.
Think then what will happen if, in the rush to find a quick fix, we begin to separate children according to religious affiliations or academic abilities? All of a sudden disparities that we now know to be a result of social problems will be blamed on educational programs.
School choice is the buzz word making the rounds these days. I don't have any problem with the concept of choice, but I have deep reservations about how choice in education might be carried out. What does it really mean?
Competition to attract students and freedom for education to create innovative learning strategies can be good, but only if all children have access to the same choices. Achieving this will require much more than handing parents a school tuition voucher.
Cost becomes a factor when low income families want to consider sending their children to the best schools. Even if families are given vouchers, what would prevent private schools from simply raising their tuition?
Transportation is another problem. If low income parents want to choose a school on the other side of town, will taxpayers be willing to fund transportation as well?
If school choice is going to be the savior of education, then it must consist of school choice between public schools. Public schools are required to serve everyone. They will not be
able to price themselves out of the range of "undesireables" or promote a set of values that one group thinks are the best. Transportation should be provided that would allow families to realistically consider all the options, and geographic zoning should be relaxed so families don't feel obligated to only choose from magnet programs.
And as parents evaluate choices in education, they should remember the best education, the best motivation to learn, starts with them. Even in the worst of school situations, parents can make an incredible difference.
Heather Kirkwool is a Wichita junior in magazine Journalism
VIEWPOINT
Getting people back on job should be goal of welfare
Following the resolution of the healthcare debate,the next major item on the agenda for the president is welfare reform.
Many states have been making their own initiatives for quite some time. Ohio, for example only offers
are smaller, the chances of the parents or parent returning to the work force are much greater than with larger families, where the need for child
WELFARE LIMITS
Ohio system limits the amount of aid to two children, encouraging
parents to keep families small and go back to work.
care eats up the parents' time and the family's budget. The results from Ohio are confirming this correlation.
money for two children when providing welfare assistance for families. This encourages assisted families to keep families small. And when families
Programs like the one in Ohio encourage people to return to the work force and should form the bulk of Clinton's upcoming proposal.
LOU MULLIGAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Fans are held hostage by greedy ball players
The Major League Baseball Players Association continues to hold sports fans hostage because it feels that a $1 billion salary cap is unfair. The players' fear
is founded or understanding of what a salary cap is.
competitive and at the same time benefit the players by raising the average player's salary to $1.4 million from the current $1.2 million.
The proposed salary cap will still enable players to sign multi-million
BASEBALL STRIKE
In a study paid for by owners and players, it
Players should stop accusing owners of being greedy in asking for a salary cap and look in the mirror. Play ball, gentlemen.
was found that in 1991, the players' union made 78 percent more money than the net profits claimed by all
dollar contracts but also will give owners a form of cost certainty enjoyed by almost every other industry. This will allow small market clubs to remain
26 professional teams. It's time for players to look in the mirror and ask who the greedy ones really are, then give back our national past time.
LANCE HAMBY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
JEN CARR Business manager
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
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 Perrier
Production mgrs Holly Barn
Regan Overy
Marketing director Alan Stigle
Creative director John Carlton
Classified mgr Heather Niahus
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Illinois should also include their email address.
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.
IF NO ONE ANSWERS, IT'S ME.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Bible doesn't tell him so
In an article by David Zimmerman, Christianity is presented as a means of satisfying one's need for finding a meaning in life. Nothing shocking here, the majority of mankind has turned to some form of religion since the beginning of recorded history. I would like to offer another alternative, a life of introspection coupled with an intense aversion to the path of least resistance.
Pay particular attention to the word "toward." I am not suggesting any concrete answers exist. Contrary to the scenario Christianity presents, life is not a series of situations with right or wrong answers, 10 commandments and a book are insufficient to create peace on earth.
Put another way, I believe the meaning of life may lie in the searching one does. Spending time every day, trying to figure out who you are and what you want out of life, which differs for every person, inevitably leads an individual toward self-acceptance.
My main objection to Mr. Zimmerman's suggestion is that in turning over one's life to religion it seems commonplace to also relinquish one's thought and reason; I am not satisfied with my questions being
answered by the statement, "The bible told me so." Accepting religion as the answer to all is the equivalent of cheating on a test. No studying is necessary because you already have the answers, but the one who studies is knowledgeable, while the other is blind to his ignorance.
Andy Carter
Topeka junior
More than 90 percent of the student kitchen employees are foreign students, mostly nonwhite from Asia, China, Africa and South America.
Their visa forces them to campus employment, with off-campus employment requiring a special permit from immigration, both hard and risky to seek.
A front page article in the Sept. 6 Kansas quoted that parents' willingness "to give their children money" reducing their need to work, students' not having "learned time management" to fit work with studies and students' reluctance to work during mid-terms and finals as reasons for the shortage of part-time student employees in residence hall cafeterias, making their service less efficient and more expensive.
This picture by management is either ignorance or unwillingness to face unpleasant facts.
Halls at fault in lost jobs
And they pay $4.75 to $5.25 per hour for the same jobs residence hall kitchens speak so positively of paying "$4.35 per hour, 10 cents above minimum wage."
They were given hard split hours of a few hours at a time, like clock-in at 6 a.m. and clock-out at 8 a.m. for breakfast, again from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. for lunch and similar for dinner; hours most American students won't care to wake up for.
About two and a half years ago, immigration started an experiment for the next three years to let foreign students work off-campus with a lenient permit to be given directly by the school (KU), as different from getting one from the immigration.
This slowly led to a shortage of residence hall student kitchen help, which, as noted, is more than 90 percent foreign students, caused by their plight of visa conditions.
Off-campus restaurant jobs let you have blocks of hours, even eight or 12 hours at a stretch, enabling you to get your job over with and attend to studies.
T. S. David Graduate student
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
But it is important to remember that Americans still live in a dangerous society armed with tens of millions of largely unregistered weapons.
Supporters of gun control should not take excessive comfort from the inclusion of a limited ban on assault weapons in the 1994 crime bill. The ban covers only 19 kinds of rapid-fire weapons. There are 600 similar weapons still on the market. The road to firearms sanity is a long one, and the partial ban was worth passing for tactical and symbolic reasons. It was another step in getting Congress in the habit of responding to the broad public demand for gun-free streets.
So what are the next logical steps to keep Congress on its cautious but encouraging path? Opinion polls indicate that after the Brady Bill, the most popular gun-control measures are a ban on cheap handguns and a one-gun-amoum limit on gun purchases.
Gun control can go on
The New York Times New York
NAFTA's looking good
How has the North American Free Trade Agreement worked out for the United States? Quite well, thank you.
Latest Commerce Department statistics show U.S. exports mushroomed 16.4 percent in the first half of 1994. And Mexico passed Japan as the second largest consumer of U.S. products. Only Canada consumes more U.S. goods. ...
Remember Ross Perot's "giant sucking sound" as he predicted NAPTA would destroy American jobs? Sounds more like jangling cash registers lighting up all across North America.
During the NAFTA debate last year, this newspaper predicted that NAFTA might be the only way the domestic economy could grow itself out of the new taxes and regulatory mandates Bill Clinton had put in place. All Americans, including the president, can take comfort in the results of its passage.
Meanwhile, the economy and stability of Mexico continue to improve.
Sunday Oklahoma
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Among the legislation that will be considered when Congress returns from its Labor Day recess is the Employment Non-Discrimination Act. The bill, which protects homosexuals from job discrimination, should be passed.
It corrects possible injunctions in the marketplace; yet it creates no special rights or quota systems.
Americans profess that anyone can get a job and that careers hinge on ambition, talent, education and hard work.
Labor bill smart move
American Statesman Austin, Texas
HUBIE
TO YOUR RIGHT WE HAVE THE
FIRST CIRCLE OF HELL,
THE GENERATION X
HELL.
REALITY BITES
ALL I AM PRISONED
HERE ARE GUARDED
BY THEIR PARENTS.
BE A WARNER!
BE A DOCTOR!
By Greg Hardin
TO YOUR RIGHT WE HAVE THE FIRST CIRCLE OF HELL, THE GENERATION X HELL.
REALITY BITES
ALL IMPRISONED HERE MUST HAVE SHORT HAIR AND WEAR POLY SHIRTS, IRONED SHORTS, AND DRESS SHOES WITH NO SOCKS.
ALL IMPRISONED HERE ARE FORGOT TO LISTEN TO EXCEELLENT GROUPS LIKE PEARL JAM AND BILL AFTER THEY BECOME POPULAR.
NO! STOP! IT DOES NOT COOL!
THOSE WHO ACTUALLY HAD A HAPPY CHILDHOOD HAVE A HIGHER RANK IN HELL, AND GET TO REMIND THose WHO DIDN'T AS OFTEN AS THEY LIKE.
MY MOM LIKED ME!
SHUT UP!
THOSE WHO THOUGHT THAT THEIR "PROBLEM" WAS THE BIGGEST OF ANYONE ALIVE ARE ALL PUT TOGETHER IN ONE ROOM.
I HAD THE BIGGEST PROBLEM!
NO!! DIP!!
No!
No!
NO! STOP!
IT'S NOT COOL!
THOSE WHO ACTUALLY
HAD A HAPPY CHILD-
HOOD HAVE A HIGHER
RANK WHEEL, AND
GET TO REMIND THOSE
WHO DIDN'T AS OFTEN
AS THEY LIKE.
MY MOM
LIKED ME!
SHUT UP!
I HAD THE BIGGEST PROBLEM!
No! I DID!!
ALL ETERNITY!!!
BILLIONAIRE AT 30
MORE SPIT,
BOY!
MICROSOFT
AND FINALLY, THOSE WHO GAVE UP ON LIFE AND MADE NOTHING OF IT, ARE FORCED TO SPIT-SHINE BILL GATES' SHOES FOR ALL ETERNITY!!!
BILLMAIRE AT 10
MICROSOFT
MORE SPIT,
BOY!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 9, 1994
5A
Hi-tech PCs travel in a semi
AT&T
AT&T is taking its computers on the highway
ilianne Peter /
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Steve David, right. Connecting Point Computer Center representative, explains the uses of an AT&T computer to Michael Bacaloz, left. Lawrence senior. The AT&T PC Road Show came to Lawrence Thursday to demonstrate AT&T computer innovations.
AT&T came Thursday to Lawrence in a 48-foot semitrailer to showoff its latest line of technology. But instead of the usual telephone products, a new line of computers was being displaced.
The semitrailer, home of The AT&T PC Road Show, gave customers walking by Eighth Street between Vermont and Massachusetts streets a chance to see AT&T's newest products. The promotion was sponsored by Connecting Point Computer Center, 813 Massachusetts St., and ran from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
The multicolored truck, with paintings of computers, phones and other electronic equipment on the trailer, is the brainchild of Windows Magazine and AT&T. They developed the truck to promote AT&T Global Information Solutions, the new line of computers from AT&T
AT&T bought out National Cash Registers 6 months ago and entered the personal computer market
Eric Siley, sales representative for Connecting Point, said they picked up AT&T products because of the assertiveness of the company.
"No other PC company has done anything like this to let customers know about the products," Siley said.
Brian Deep, AT&T sales representative, said the traveling promotion was on a five-month, 60-city national tour.
"We just came from St. Paul, Minn., and after Lawrence we are going to Dallas." Deen said.
He said the promotional tour had boosted sales.
"After the display, one store's AT&T computer sales exceeded in two days what they usually sell in a month," Deen said.
AT&T is ninth in computer sales worldwide he said.
The truck offered consumers a look at the latest in computer technology and demonstrated what this technology could do. Deep said. Video conferencing and wire communication, which allows computer users to work on and transfer documents from computers throughout the world, was examples of this technology.
A demonstration by one of the AT&T sales representatives showed
how to use a multimedia CD-ROM and explained how the latest technology allowed one person to communicate to another person through a wireless remote.
"The traveling promotion has been very successful," said Randy Shields, sales manager for Connecting Point. "It's making people aware firsthand of the new products that are available to them."
Scott Tichenor, marketing manager for Connecting Point, said the demonstration was beneficial not only to people who were interested in buying a personal computer but also to people who already had purchased an AT&T personal computer.
"A lot of people have come in to see a demonstration on equipment that they have already bought," Tichenor said.
Ray-Ban
DESIGNED BY
BAUSCH & LORI
The world's first sunglasses.
928 Mass. 843-0611
Sunglasses
@ Ray-Ban
The Etc. Shop
FRI. SEP. 9
MONDO DISCO WITH DJ RAY VELASQUEZ
SAT. SEPT. 10 LA RAMBLERS
EVERY SUNDAY
CLUB 7
CLASSIC AND CURRENT CLUB
AND ALTERNATIVE HITS
&
S I WELLS
18 TO ENIER / 2 ITO DRINK
GRANADA
LOGO MASS ST DOWNSIW LAWRENCE
605-432-1397
CONGRATULATIONS
New AXΩ Member
Amy Goodman
Love; The Actives
P.S. Sorry about the mistake
- new cottons
- accessories and costumes
Vintage clothes for guys and gals -1900-1970-
927 Massachusetts / 841-2451 Mon-Sat 11-5
Barb's
Vintage
C Rose
"The most deleterable food-related hit this side of 'LIKE WATER FOR CHILD COLATE?'
EAT DRINK MAN WOMAN
2004 The Terminal Grabber Company. All rights reserved.
EAT-Daily (4:30), 7:00, 9:30
GO FISH-Daily (4:45), 7:15/Ends Soon
FEAR OF A BLACK HAT-
Daily 9:15
Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can Save Some Cash
642
Mass.
Liberty
HALL
749-
1912
Theatre #1 is accessible to all persons
KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Valid Through July 31, 1995
NCCS
Available at these locations:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
119 Stauffer-Flint
UNIVERSITY
BOOK
SHOP
1116 W23rd
Jayhawk Bookstore
I420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044
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
AMIGO'S 1819 W.23rd·842-1620
BLIMPIE SUBS AND SALADS
1819 W. 23rd • 842-1620
Get the daily special prices every day of the week
AMIGO'S
2329 S. Iowa St • 842-1200
£3.99 Freshastes Food Bar
BONANZA
BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79e
DOMINO'S PIZZA
822 Iowa St. 841 8002
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
DRAKE'S SNACK SHOP
ESPRESS O'HOUSE
10F 9th St843-2007
1006 Massachusetts*B43-056
10% off your purchase of$2.50 or more
FULL MOON CAFE
$1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50(includes food and coffee drinks)
624 W 12h-841 2310-FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Certified Ornically Grown) with Anv Meal Purchase
401 N 2nd-842-0377*BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg-
price, get one for $1.00 Mon thru Fri 9-4pm
2907 W 6th*841-1688-FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills)
with Purchase of Daily Buffet Refills
GLASS ONION
PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
JOHNNY'S TAVERN
IMPERIAL GARDEN
$1.00 OFF Anv Entree, Anvtime, 24 hours a day
PIZZA SHOPPE
601 Knold-842 0600
Med Pizza $5.95.2 for $9.95; Lg Pizza $7.95.2 for $13.95
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W 22rd-842 1212
One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only
PYRAMID PIZZA
14th & Ohio:842-3232*$4.00 Mm, add.tops 50c; Md.$6.00;
add.tags 75c; $8.00 Lg, ad.tops 1.00; Carry Out Only
RUNZA
2700 Iowa*749-2615*FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of
TACOJOHN'S
1628 W 3rd/84 B-8158-1101 W 9th/84B-0936-2390 Haskell
Ave./84E-5533-3Hard Shell Tosca's for $9 (NO LIMIT)
WEST COAST SALOON
2002 Iowa St. 841.976
Retail/Merchandise
ATHLETE'S FOOT
AIRLLE'S FOOT
914 Massachusetts+841-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE
20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals
BOBBI'S BEDROOM
0400 house 840 7070
FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS
731 Massachusetts@843-4194-15% OFF All Apparel +
FRRF FRRE Fashion T-Shirt w/ purchase Over $25.00
745 New Hampshire-843-3282-$2.50 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor, System Cleaning on IBM Compaq
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
CENTRAL DATA
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
743 Massachusetts-749-4664
15% OFF Any item (excludes sale items)
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 to 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 Whisper Brander PowerFilters, and All Other Brand Undergravel Filters
JOCKS NITCH
840 Massachussetts:842-2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
837 Massachusetts*842-2992
20% OFF! Swimwear
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640
Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book) 5¢
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640
$5.00 OFF Anv Jawhaving Clothing or Hat Over $20.00
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSASE AND BURGE UNIONS-664-4640
0% OFF AVP, Engineering or Drafting Supply
KIZER-CUMMINGS
LAWRENCE ONE HOUR PHOTO
2340 S. Iowa*842-8564*30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid
MERLE NORMAN
MIRACLE VIDEO
9th & Wear Hampshire-841-5324
10% OFF All Skin Care Products
NATURAL WAY
¥10 N 2nnd/841-8903-1891 Haskell Ave. Suite /1841-7504
$1.00 OFF Movie Invite (limit one per person)
OUTFITTER'S
740 Massachusetts·843-3933
15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
Lawrence, Ks*865-0692 10% OFF All Sales
REGYCLED MUSIC CENTER
716 Massachusetts-841-1762-20% OFF (CD: Tapes, Movies, Video Games) Tuesday & 15% Less on CD Credit on Buy Backs
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
15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy)
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
VIDEO BIZ
832 Iowa*749-3507*2 for a Video Rental Monday
1116W. 23rd-749-5206
20% OF all clothing (excluding sale items)
SPRINGMAID/WASMUSETTA
1025 N. 3rd-832-1100
10% OFF Any Purchase
Services
13% OFF Massachusetts-842-0880
15% OFF Complete Elevator Purchase
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 6thh-841 -6955
10% OFF All Parts
BRADY OPTICAL
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST
1019 Massachusetts$843-3844*$25.00 OFF All Fashion
Fewer Flames Valid With DESCRIPTION Lenses Only
EUROPEAN TAN
1601 W23rd-841-6232-FREE 2 Tans with Purchase of 7 Tans For $20 and FREE Trials 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
R.O.C.'S STADIUM BARBERY
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
NO. 1033 Massachusetts*749-5363
Any Haircut or Hairstyle $5.50
$35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames w/FREE Adjustment
TWIN OAKS GOLF COURSE
K-10 & County Rd. 1057-(913)542-1747
Buy One SmallBucket of Balls. Get One SmallBucket
ULTIMATE TAN
2449 Iowa St. &842-4949+1FREE 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
Friday, September 9, 1994
13 reasons to bank at Mercantile:
*Twelve ATMs:
*9th & Massachusetts
*647 Massachusetts
*3500 W. 6th
*1807 W. 23rd
(drive-up & walk-up)
*210a Iowa
- Hillcrest (9th & Iowa)
(drive-up & walk-up)
- Checkers (23rd & Louisiana)
- Kansas University:
Memorial Union &
Burge Union
and a
- T-Shirt*
MERCANTILE BANK
ANTILE BANK Member FDC
*{*Atenuation Students*: Now through Sept. 30, or when the supply lasts, receive a T-shirt when you open an account at any Merchant Bank of Ohio. Limit one shirt per customer.) Limit one shirt per customer.)
"A DISTINCTLY VICTORIAN SHOPPE"
Unique Gifts, Home Decor,
Cards, Jewelry
VICTORIAN SAMPLER
HISTORIC ELDRIDGE HOTEL
7th & Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas
(913) 841-7587
Mulligan's
PUPS
DINE IN or CARRY OUT 11am-3am
Great Food-Great Music
FRI
Uncle
Dirty
Toes
SAT
Jack Timberfish
$1.50 Wells
$1.50 Wells
All shows Acoustic/gr Unplugged
1016 Massachusetts
Downtown Lawrence
865-4055
the i's have it.
a stylish temptation. serious value. a timely investment. a nice price for anyone. the i's have it...all.
(for only $34.95)
iS sunplassee
by BAUSCH & LOMB
928 Mass.
Hours: Mon-Sat 10-5:30
Thurs 'til 6 Sun 12-5
(open till 7 p.m. on Game Days)
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Etc. Shop
TM
TM
Pilot charged in shootdown over Iraq
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Air Force has brought 26 charges of negligent homicide against an F-15 fighter pilot involved in last spring's shootout of two U.S. helicopters over Iraq, the Pentagon announced yesterday.
In addition, five officers on board the AWACS radar plane that oversaw the action will face dereliction of duty charges, the announcement said. Twenty-six people were killed April 14.
Lt. Col. Randy W. May of the 53rd Fighter Squadron based in Spangdahlem, Germany, was charged with dereliction of duty in addition to the negligent homicide charges. If May is found guilty of the negligent
homicide counts, he could be sent to prison for up to 26 years, a Pentagon official said.
May was the most senior of the two fighter pilots involved in the incident. No announcement of charges was made against the other pilot, nor against more-senior officers who were in charge of the operation in northern Iraq. The second pilot has not been identified by the Air Force.
Officials said more charges still could be brought.
Gen. John Shalikashvili, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in July there were "a shocking number of instances where individuals failed to do their jobs properly."
Fifteen U.S. citizens were killed in the downing of the two Army Black
Hawk helicopters. In addition, military officers from Britain, France and Turkey and five Kurdish workers employed by the United States were killed.
Maj. Douglas L. Martin of the Air Combat Command Air Operations Squadron at Langley Air Force Base in Virginia. His duty was to interpret the rules of engagement that govern activities in a potentially hostile area. Martin faces three counts of dereliction of duty, officials said.
The identities of those on board the AWACS and their charges include:
Capt. Jim Wang, the senior director of the mission crew, five counts of dereliction of duty. The senior director is in charge of the crew working a certain shift on the radar
plane.
Maj. Lawrence M. Tracey, the mission crew commander, four counts of dereliction of duty. The mission crew commander has overall responsibility for the officers conducting the radar mission on the plane.
1st Lt. Joseph M. Halci, an en route controller, four counts of dereliction of duty. An en route controller directs certain aircraft that the AWACS can see.
2nd Lt. Ricky L. Wilson, the tactical area of responsibility controller, four counts of dereliction of duty. The tactical area controller finds and then identifies aircraft in a certain portion of the area the AWACS can see.
Search teams in Vietnam find Marine's remains
The Associated Press
HANOI, Vietnam — U.S. search teams apparently have made a significant breakthrough in accounting for Americans missing in action from the Vietnam War, a U.S. official said yesterday.
American search teams recovered remains believed to belong to a U.S. Marine who died in captivity in Quang Ngai Province, once part of South Vietnam, 325 miles northeast of Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon.
through by U.S. officials in Hanoi, who are investigating 84 cases of Americans missing in action from the war.
the discovery was seen as a break-
"I'm excited by it," said Army Lt. Col. Melvin E. Richmond Jr., head of the U.S. MIA Office in Hanoi. "I'm hopeful. It's an important step."
The United States handed over the 84 "special remains cases" to the Vietnamese a year ago, but not one had been solved up to now.
In each case, the Vietnamese photographed the dead American servicemen or the sites where prisoners of war died in captivity and their
remains were buried.
President Clinton has made Vietnam's cooperation in the fullest possible accounting of MLAs a condition for establishing full diplomatic relations.
Richmond said that Vietnamese cooperation was still "strong" in the latest field operation that began Aug. 18 and would end Sept. 20. He said other remains believed to be those of Americans were either recovered or turned over by villagers, but he declined to say how many.
U. S. investigators were led to the gravesite by a former soldier who
survived the POW camp and was released in 1973 when all American forces withdrew from Vietnam.
Thomas Davis, a 20-year-old draftee private from Eufaula, Ala., said a prayer and buried his buddy nearly 25 years ago. He returned to Vietnam last January to help pinpoint the burial site.
Davis said as many as 10 Americans died in the camp. One was killed trying to escape, and others, like his buddy, died from malnutrition and lack of medical care, he said.
"His body just gave out," he said. "I watched him die."
This Offer Is Cut & Dried.
At Great Clips, our stylists give you the look you want, every time. Every Great Clips stylist is specially trained to give you a salon-quality cut or perm, without the salon price. So come to Great Clips, and let our stylists give you your style.
MARGARET HENDERSON AND KENNETH WILLIAMS
Great Clips for hair: OUR STYLISTS YOUR STYLE
HAIRCUT AND BLOW DRY
$3.99
Reg.59
Not Valid With Other Offers.
Offer good through September 24.
GRAND OPENING
September 10
Located at
6th and Minnesota
832-2424
F-9-9 • Sat 9-6 • Sun 12-5
WOODY HARRELSON JULIETTE LEWIS
ROBERT DOWNEY JR. and TOMMY LEE JONES
AN OLIVER STONE FILM
MADE THEM SUPERSTARS.
THE MEDIA MADE THEM SUPERSTARS. NATURAL BORN KILLERS
WARNER BROS. PRESENTS
IN ASSOCIATION WITH ORGANIZE INTERPASSIVE AND ALCOHOL FILMS IN LILLALEY NEW REVENUE PRODUCTION IN ASSOCIATION WITH L.O. PRODUCTIONS AND DIVER STORE FROM MOOD HARRISON
JULIE TEMMIS, DOBERT DOWNNIS, J.N. WIMMEL, LEE JOBS, NARAEL DON MILLERS, DUM SITSWORE, J.A.R. DOSSEER, ASSOCIATED WITH AARON WILLEMAN AND JOHN MOUNT
FESTIVAL, BARRIAN KERNING, SEBASTIAN DAVENPORT, ARCHARD NOTWALT, BUITTER STONE, JAMIE RAMSEY, DON MUPPY, CANDIDAT LOWESEND
DISTributed by LIVERY STORE
NOW PLAYING
STREETSIDE RECORDS
Let's all go back to school!
LIVE IN PERSON
Liberty Hall at 9:30PM on Wednesday, Sept.14
JUNIOR
TRAINING
GUIT WITH IT
JUNIOR BROWN
On Sale!
1403 W.23rd·842-7173 Stay Streetsmart Shop Streetside
CURB
RECORDS
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9. 1994
JAYHAWK FOOTBALL
SECTION B
Under the lights
KU
Kansas opens its home season at night against a tough Big Ten Conference foe
QUAST
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Kansas football players raise their helmets as they watch from the sidelines in a kickoff against Houston last week. The Jayhawks defeated the Cougars 35-13 in the Astrodome and seek to continue their success under the lights when they meet Michigan State tomorrow night at 7 in Memorial Stadium.
Kansas Memorial Stadium
Richard Devicki / KANSAN
Two lighting banks have been set up on top of Memorial Stadium's press box for Saturday night's game.
Jayhawk Football Listed are the starters for Kansas' offense and defense
32, Chris Powell #20, June Henley
Offense #9, Ashoke Preston #2, George White
84. Rodney Harris Allison Jones Smith Hempstead Whitteker Willeford #7. Robert Reed
84, Rodney Harris Allison Jordan Jones Smith Hempstead Whitaker Willeford #7, Robert Reed
29, Harold Harris #29, Tony Blevins #52, Steve Harvey #17, Dorian Brow
97, Sylvester Wright #94, Darnell Britt
Defense
8, Kwamie Lassiter #39, Don Davis #19, Keith Rodgers #3, Gerald McBurrows
29, Harold Harris
52, Steve Harvey
28, Tony Blevins
27, Sidney Hearn
17, Dorian Brew
Defense Wright Britt
8, Kwamie Lasater
39, Don Davis
46, Keith Rodgers
46, Rennie Ward
3, Gerald McBurrows
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
No, the Kansas football team is not going to Broadway. But it will have plenty of chances to be in the spotlight this season.
The Jayhawks play four of their first five games under the lights, including their home opener at 7p.m. Saturday against Michigan State.
S
The Jayhawks opened their season by defeating Houston 35-13 last Thursday night. Kansas also will play night games Sept. 17 at Texas Christian and Oct. 6 at home against Kansas State. The Kansas State game will be televised on ESPN.
The last night game the Jayhawks played was during the 1992 season against California, an idea Kansas coach Glen Mason said he liked.
"I thought it was a great setting, and it was very positive," Mason said.
Micah Laaker/KANBAR
Tomorrow night, the Jayhawks will play a Big Ten Conference team that only finished seventh in their conference last season but played in the Liberty Bowl.
The Spartans ended last season 6-6 overall and 4-4 in the conference. They defeated Kansas 31-14.
The Spartans are 5-0 against the Javahawks all-time.
"I don't think we played very well last year," Mason said. "The story of the game was five turnovers. That really hurt us."
Mason said the Jayhawks did not capitalize on opportunities during that game.
One change from last season is that senior quarterback Asheil Preston has more than half a season of experience now. He did not play in the game a season ago.
Mason said he was impressed by Preston.
"Asheiki is a much improved quarterback," Mason said. "He got better last year as he had the opportunity to play. He was improved during spring practice, and he's improved now."
Mason said that already having played a game had helped his quarterback and the rest of the team.
"As a coach you worry about what happens in first games," Mason said. "You see mistakes from teams that you never would see."
Getting that first game under their belt would be an advantage for the Javhawks. Mason said.
However, he said that it could also help the Spartans.
"They get a chance to sit and watch some film, evaluate the players we have and figure out where they're going to attack us," Mason said.
Michigan State's new starting quarterback will be 6-foot-6-inch junior Tony Banks.
The Spartans' base defense will be a 3-4 instead of the 4-3 that Michigan State coach George Perles helped make famous as a defensive coach with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
While Perles was with the Steelers, he helped form the "Steel Curtain" defense that led to four Super Bowl victories during the 1970s.
"My first look at their defense is going to be your first look when you see them come out there," Mason said.
Despite Perles' reputation for having good defensive teams, Michigan State hired a new defensive coordinator, Hank Bullough, to change the defensive system.
Bullough, nicknamed the "Doctor of Defense," has coached professional teams since 1970. His experience with National Football League teams included a stint with the Cincinnati Bengals where he took the league's worst defense in 1979 and transformed it into the No. I defense in 1983.
Michigan State's passing attack features All-Big Ten candidate Mill Coleman who had 48 receptions last season.
Along with this new look, the Jay-hawks will face an offensive line that may be the biggest in any league, professional or college.
Coleman said Kansas would be a challenge for him.
"They have a good secondary," Coleman said of the Jayhawks. "We expect a hard-hitting game."
Turn on the lights, Kansas is home
Tough Road Schedule: The lights are being set up by Musco Mobile Lighting. Crew chief Mike DeMeyer said the crane-truck was at a Western Michigan game on Thursday and would travel to Kansas today. DeMeyer said that those lights had spent the two weekends before that in Los Angeles and Victoria, British Columbia.
The Spotlight: The Jayhawks will have three banks of lights set up for Saturday's 7 p.m. game against Michigan State. Two banks have been set up on top of the press box and another bank will be on a crane-truck on the east side of the stadium.
Packing heat: Each bank contains 15 lamps. DeMeyer said each is a 6,000 Watt lamp. DeMeyer said he and his crew have to stand 15 to 20 feet from the lights because of the heat the bulbs created. DeMeyer said he has had nylon baseball jackets burnt because of standing too close.
Easy road schedule: The two banks of lights on the press box, will remain there for the Kansas State game, DeMeyer said.
Weekend tournament allows 'Hawks no time to regroup
Kansas junior outside hitter Jenny Larson spikes a ball past two defenders in a match Tuesday against UMKC. The Jawhaws won that match and will play in a tournament today and tomorrow.
Sean Crosier / KANSAN
Young volleyball team 'concentrated on basics in practice to prepare
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
They will compete in the Southwest Missouri State Tournament this weekend, opening with a game against Southwest Missouri State at 3 p.m. today. Kansas will round out the tournament tomorrow with matches against Montana and Tulsa.
Although a young Kansas volleyball team gained experience in its season opener last weekend, today's match may not give the Javahigha chance to catch their breath.
The Jayhawks are 2-3 entering the tournament.
Last weekend, Kansas competed in the Colorado State Volleyball Tournament. The team left Colorado with a 1-3 record, winning a match against regionally-ranked
This weekend's tournament will be very similar, except the competition will be a level higher, Kansas volleyball coach Karen Schonewise said.
"There will be a stronger overall level of play at the Southwest Tournament," Schonwise said. "Southwest Missouri has a very strong team returning. They have a great coach who continually holds one of the top winning percentages in the nation."
After facing the Bears, Kansas will still have two tough matches to follow on Saturday. Schonewise said Montana was returning from a very strong season last year, and Tula would not be easy either.
Santa Clara. However, the Jayhawks failed to defeat Colorado State, Wichita State, Northwestern Illinois and Northern Arizona.
To prepare for the tournament,
Schonewise said the team had gone back to concentrating on the basics in practice this week.
Freshmen Kendra Kahler and Maggie Mohrfeld will start in the middle blocker positions, along with Leslie Purkeypile, and setter Trisha Lindgren.
1
"We're still undisciplined in the basics," she said. "The fundamentals we're doing on
The lineup might change for Kansas today. Schonewise said tournament play would begin with the four freshman who played well in Tuesday's home opener against UMKC.
the court are not precise yet. We need to go back to the beginning until we're disciplined in that phase of the game."
。
Sophomore middle blocker Kaie Walsh and junior outside hitter Jenny Larson will direct the freshmart on the court.
Schonewise said the team would use this tournament to emphasize the importance of fundamentals.
Larson said that the Jayhawks would work on their attitude going into each match.
"We're still up and down," she said. "We need to find consistency. We need to start playing with more intensity. That's hard to do in the game of volleyball."
---
山
---
SPORTS R SITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 9, 1994
2B
NFL
NFL Week Two Preview
A look at the top games this weekend
NFL
CHEESE
San Francisco at Kansas City
He acknowledges he left his heart in San Francisco.
CG
He acknowledges he left his heart in San Francisco.
He also acknowledges that his head, his arm and the rest of his body are in Kansas City.
That's just so everyone knows Joe Montana will give nothing but his best Sunday when he faces the team he led to four Super Bowl wins for the first time since the 48ers traded him to the Chiefs after the 1992 season.
"I'm sure I'm going to be excited and nervous," he said. "All the people back home will be watching, and so will everyone else."
There are, of course, several subplots, including Montana vs. Steve Young, his feast-forward left-handed quar
terback and the man who effectively ran him out of San Francisco. (Young is not held in the same regard as Montana, even in the Bay Area. Although he's won an MVP and three passing titles, he has lost two NFC title games.)
Montana also faces Jerry Rice, his favorite receiver, whose three touchdowns Monday night gave him a new career record of 127. Fifty-five of those TDs came on passes from Montana, and 49 came from Young.
"It brings back a lot of memories to me," Rice says. "But you know. One thing I never told Joe. I never told Joe he was the greatest to ever play the game. And he was the best to ever play the game."
In the Chiefs' 30-17 win in New Orleans, Montana was in his mid-1980s form, 24 of 33 for 315 yards and two touchdowns. Young reciprocated Monday night, 19 of 32 for 308 yards and four TDs in a 44-14 rout of the Los Angeles Raiders.
Two of those touchdowns were to Rice, including the 38-yarder that set the record and cleared away any sideshow from Sunday's game.
Miami at Green Bay
G
These are playoff-bound teams that need to take another step.
"I hope Dan's arm got tired last week," says Green Bay's Mike Holmgren.
Miami showed offense last week (Dan Marino: 473 yards and five TDs). Green Bay showed defense, holding Minnesota to 194 total yards and shutting down Warren Moon. "I hope Dan's arm got tired last week," says Green Bay's Mike Holmgren.
Brett Favre, who led the league last year with 24 interceptions, is learning to throw the ball away, but the same offensive problems remain for the Packers: little running and no real receiving alternative to Sterling Sharpe.
Denver at New York Jets
JETS
A funny thing happened to John Elway in Denver's 37-34 loss to San Diego. He couldn't close.
About to score at the end of the first half, Elway had an interception returned 99 yards for a touchdown, then fumbled the ball away on a potential game-winning drive at the end.
In addition, the Broncos' questionable defense is banged up.
PITTSBURG
Their best hope is the offense and the Jets' history. After a win like the one they had in Buffalo (Jets' coach Petra Carroll's debut), they tend to slump, particularly at home.
Pittsburgh at Cleveland
The bad news for the Steelers is that they've won only one of the last dozen games they've played on the lakefront.
The good news is the law of averages and that they started 0-2 last season and still made the playoffs.
Bill Belichick used to be a defensive
coordinator and a special teams coach, which is why the Browns beat the Bengals last week: returns by Eric Metcalf (punt) and Randy Baldwin (kickoff) for touchdowns a surprise two-point conversion and an endzone interception by Antonio Langham, the No.1 draft choice.
Chicago at Philadelphia Monday night
C
Monday night
So look out for the "Philly boo-birds" if the Bears jump off quickly Monday night. Erik Kramer gave Chicago the semblance of an offense against Tampa Bay last week.
Randall Cunningham threw for 344 yards but was sacked five times and seemed quite tentative in his first real game back from last year's broken leg.
On the other hand, what does it prove to beat the Bucs at home?
The Eagles went into the Meadowlands still thinking about the pay cuts some of them were forced to take, fell behind the Giants 21-3 and never quite recovered.
Minnesota lost 16-10 in Green Bay, and the offense didn't score a touchdown. Plus Warren Moon had three passes intercepted, including two that bounced off the hands of receivers.
Yet a third important game for the home team — a loss here would leave the Vikings 0-2 against the two teams that figure to challenge them for the NFC Central title.
Detroit at Minnesota
"They'll get another chance, but only one," Dennis Green said of the young culprits, Qadry Ismail and Jake Reed.
Houston at Dallas
A
A
They dropped half-a-dozen Moon balls.
Barry Switzer's getting a chance to say the same elches he used to utter when his Oklahoma teams were 70-point favorites over Kansas or Iowa State: "On any given day ..."
That could be true if the Oliers' 45-21 loss last week in Indianapolis was just one of those things.
But it doesn't help that Cody Carlson was hurt and that Bucky Richardson might start this week, although Richardson did well enough in garbage time last week.
The Cowboys looked no different under Switzer than they did under Jimmy Johnson in their 26-9 win in Pittsburgh last week.
So much for exhibitions.
Seattle at LA Raiders
Pittsburgh
PARKS
Where is Bo Jackson, who had such a great game against the Seahawks seven years ago? Where is Marcus Allen?
The fact is the Raiders' Super Bowl hopes looked very overblown Monday night without a running game to go with Jeff Hostetler and his track team.
Now they try to run against a pretty good front line led by Cortez Kennedy.
GIANTS
New York Giants
This game could answer some questions about the Sea hawks that the 28-7 win in Washington didn't. Are they building nicely, or did they just beat a bad team on a bad team's bad day?
w york Gla at Arizona
The Cardinals' 14-12 loss to the Rams in Anaheim last week makes this a critical game for them, even this early.
"I think we have a great chance to beat the Giants," Ryan says. "We're as
An 0-2 start with a home loss on national television would destroy much of the credibility that Buddy Ryan brought to Bill Bidwill's operation in the desert.
good as they are."
Actually, the Cardinals were supposed to be better. Ryan used to beat better New York teams with less-talented Eagles.
But Dan Reeves has squeezed a lot from youngsters, and he's spent the week working on the blitzes that Ryan is sure to throw at Dave Brown, an ultra-green quarterback.
Fantastic Fall Special!
South Pointe AFFILIATE
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
South Pointe
AFARTMENTS
2166 W. 26th St.
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
Trash Rei
Outstanding New Staff!!!
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
- Water and Trash Paid
"NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY
842-1212
TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PARTY "10" CARRY-OUT
2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS 1-PIZZA
2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING
2-COKES 4-COKES 1-COKE
$9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
KANNY
EARN CASH
& HELP OUR COMMUNITY TOO!
$15 TODAY
& $30
This WEEK
Walk-Ins
Welcome
BY DONATING YOUR
BLOOD PLASMA
CALL FOR INFORMATION
NABI
The Quality Service
NABI BioMedical Center
816 W. 24th
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
749-5750
A
PowerPoint
PowerPC
The Power is here!
The Power Macintosh 7100/66 8/250
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
$279790
POWER
through it.
JRVING HILL RD.
MISSFATH.DS
LEVEL 3 BURGE UNION
Macbook. The Power to be your Best at KI.
union technology center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burgle Lounge * Level 3 * 913-864-5000
IRVING HILL RD.
WASHTOWN DR.
LEVEL 3 BURGE UNION
Macintosh The Power to be your Best at KU
union technology center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Sales Team 1st Floor 101 W. 9th St. 800-735-6200
Friday, September 9, 1994
3B
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Runners to face challenging teams
'Hawks' to meet defending champs
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
This weekend is the first step in a long climb for the Kansas men's and women's cross country teams. It's a climb that both teams hope will end on Nov. 21 in Fayetteville, Ark., the site of this year's NCAA championships.
The first test of Kansas' ability to reach that goal will be Saturday at the Jayhawk Invitational at Rim Rock Farm,northeast of Lawrence.
"This will be a good measuring stick of where we are as a team," said senior David Johnston, men's co-captain.
That test will include competing against the defending men's national champion Arkansas Razorbacks, a fact that has scared some teams from competing in the meet. Arkansas will
join Missouri and the Air Force Academy as the Jayhawks' strongest competition in the 12-team field.
"Some teams won't even run here because Arkansas has such a strong team," Kansas assistant coach Steve Guymon said.
This will be the first of two meetings between the teams. Kansas will run against Arkansas for the second time Oct. 1, when the Jayhawks compete in the Arkansas Invitational.
"Arkansas is at a national level that we want to build to," Guymon said. "This will also give us a chance to evaluate our strength and conditioning."
To reach the Razorbacks' level, the Kansas men will have to rebound from a season in which they finished eighth in the Big Eight and failed to make the NCAA championships.
Bolstering that effort will be the return of Johnston and senior co-captain Michael Cox.
The two were redshirted last year to save a season of eligibility while giving younger runners a chance to gain
experience.
"I think we're a little farther along than usual at this point," Johnston said. "We need to work on running as a pack better than we have."
Like the men's squad, the women's team is looking at the meet as one step toward its ultimate goal of reaching the national meet.
Last season the women's team won the District V meet and advanced to the NCAA championships for the first time in the team's history. Kansas finished 22nd in the meet.
Hampering the effort to repeat that performance will be the loss of three top runners. Julia Saul, Daniella Daggy and Ashley Ace graduated from last year's team.
The team will have to depend on senior co-captains Swartz and Kristi Kloster to help fill those spots.
"I think our expectations for the team are higher this year than they were last year," Swartz said.
"Being the first team to go to nationals, we really have a strong desire to return."
Volunteer and Intern Placement Fair
(USA, International, Lawrence) Friday, Sept. 9, 10am-4:30pm At the ECM Center, over 525 organizations
AND
The Praxis Project
A unique way to volunteer in Lawrence/Douglas County, especially inviting volunteers for Jubilee Cafe, "breakfast by menu" for the hungry in Lawrence.
1. Choose from 48 organizations/groups in Lawrence/Douglas County.
1. Choose from 40 organization groups in Lawrence/Douglas County.
2. Volunteer for at least 1-2hrs./wk, in any of the following areas: aging, youth, cross-cultural, education/tutoring, prison, mental/physical health, hunger, shelter, etc.
cross-cultural, education/futuring, prison, mental/physical health, hunger, shelter, etc. 3. Do a "Praxis" meeting (reflect on your experience with other volunteers) twice a semester(1 hr./meeting)
all new fall
EASTON'S
sportswear
$5 to $50 off
LIMITED
839 Mass. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 843-5755
AEROBICS with
...
BODY BOUTIQUE
Purchase 10 tans for $30 and get 5 tans FREE
- Personal Fitness Training
- Nautilus & Freeweights
- Reebok Step
- Stairmasters/Treadmill
- Lifecycles/Rowing Machine
- 60 Aerobic classes per week
* 2 Aerobic rooms
- Full Spa Area
- 2 Aerobic rooms
FIRST VISIT FREE!
$19 PER MONTH 3 month Free for 50 members
749-2424
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza
n
*Transmission Specialist
A-1 AUTOMOTIVE 21 YEARS EXPERIENCE
*High Quality work
*Excellent Prices
1501 W.6th
842-0865
BUM STEER
BUM STEER
D
DELIVERY
BBQ Sandwiches, Cheese Burgers Grilled Chicken, French Fries, BBQ Ribs MORE MORE MORE
call 841-SMOK(E)
11:00 to 2:00 & 5:00 to Close Daily
THE RUM STEER
$10FF
any delivery with coupon
THE RUM STEER
$7 min
1
NATURALWAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
Let the Rhythm of the City
fill your soul in Natural Fiber Clothing
Downtown Lawrence
820-822 Mass. 9100
n 1
BE LATE TO CLASS IN STYLE!
O
TREK.USA
SPECIALIZED.
cannonclale
KLEIN
GIANT
Rollerblade
SAVE BIG BUCKS! On closeout bikes and Rollerblades!
N.10
Milton
Laborama
234
IN
241
Cust.
1198
Even YOU can find us!
TOLL FREE 1-800-728-8792
OVERLAND PARK
119th & Qulvira
(913) 451-1615
$25 FREE ACCESSORIES!
w/ the purchase of any bike priced at $299 or above.
Expire 9/19/94
2 OTHER LOCATIONS:
Lee's Bummits.
(816) 525-8000
Westport.
(816) 525-8000
BIKESOURCE
fifiS
15' off! in stock, regularly priced parts, accessories & clothing your wild college ID: 10
- Westport ·
(816) 756-3400
fifi's 925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
"Your Book Professionals"
G
Jayhawk Bookstore
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-6 M-Th., 8-5 Fri.
9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun.
843-3826
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HARIZONE
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FILLMICELL REDKEN
V
---
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
Work-Study Students
Community Service
Interships Available
$5/hr
Center for Comm. Outreach
Applications in Student Senate
Office 864-3710
O
out.
strike out.
strike out.
$5.00/hr. lane rentals on weekends.
Jaybowl
kansas union • level 1 • 864-3545
Jaybowl
WEST BEND
HairExperts DesignTeam
2
$5 Off
Hair Design
Not valid with any other offer
EXPIRES 10/9/94
Discover
Our
Difference
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa
841-6886
A.
Lock It. Keep It!
genuine Kryptonite
On SALE!
$19.95
ends September 8,1994
T
RICK'S BIKE SHOP In
916 Mass..(913)841-6642
4B
Friday, September 9, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports Bar & Grill Westridge Shopping Center 6th&Kasold 865-4040
Sports B
Westridge Sh
6th &
865-
JOY
1994
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
Ball
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
September 9-11
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
September 9-11
THE PIANO
Friday 7:00 and 9:30 pm
Saturday 7:00 and 9:30 pm
Sunday 2:00 pm
DELIVERANCE
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.
MIRIAM SMITH
THE
COMPAQ
PRESARIO
486SX/25 microprocessor
3.5" HD Floppy Drive
4mb RAM
200mb Hard Drive
COMPAQ
EVO SATEJ
FAX Modem/Answering Machine combo
928 Mass.
Downtown
DOS, Windows 3.1 and much more
$995.00 Limited Availability
Jayhawk Bookstore
the bookstore alternative at the top of Naismith Hill 1420 Crescent RoadLawrence, KS 66044
BXE
843-3826
SUNFLOWER
804 Mass
NEW LOWER CD PRICES All CD'S $5 Each Great Selection!!
The Etc.
Shop
NEW LOWER CD PRICES
All CD'S $5 Each
Great Selection!!
Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry
1804 W. 6th 2 Blocks East of Iowa
7 49 - 1 91 9
843-5000
Hoo Koo E Koo
$699.95
save $78
with Rock Shox
RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc
916 Massachusetts (913)841-6642
FISHER $699.95 save $78 with Rock Shox
FISHER
MasterCard
VISA
Saturday September 10
Dream World
A Pajama Party
HIDEAWAY Open Minds Over 21 Welcome
Dress or Undress Appropriately
Open Nightly From 4pm-2am Saturday & Sunday 3pm-2am 106 North Park at 11th and Massachusetts streets 841-4966
DISCOVER
Personal
Checks
Don't forget the weekly Sunday Beer Bash!
GUMBYS Pizza
1445 W. 23rd
841-5000
FAST FREE DELIVERY
STARVING JAYHAWK 2 Large 2-Item Pizzas $9.99 only
- Get a medium pizza for $1.89 when you buy any Gumby's Pizza at our already incredibly low coupon price. Please mention ad when ordering (limit one per order).
- Additional toppings .94¢ each
- Choice of crust. Original or Whole Wheat
STARVING JAYHAWK
2 Small 2-Item Pizzas & 2 Sodas $7.99 only
Cannot be used for the purchase of firearms.
H X K
GUMBY MADNESS
Our Biggest Sale of the Year
1
huge up to $900
when you
purchase your
Collegiate Ring
Add one
certificate for
up to "1000
units at the
Bookstore"
A savings of
us to 1200!
DOUBLE SAVINGS DOUBLE SAVINGS
Our Biggest Sale of the Year
ARTCARVED College Jewelry Sept 7-9 10:00 - 4:00 KANSAS UNION, LEVEL 4
- Choice of crust, Original or Whole Wheat
KU
KU
Savannah
Watch Out For Student Specials and New Afternoon Specials
Juicers Showgirls
Juicers
Showgirls
Savannah
WELCOMES
BACK THE
STUDENTS
OF
KANSAS
Featuring
Featuring
Totally N*de
Brooke
Totally N*de
Dancers
18 + Admitted
With Valid ID
913 N. Second
(Next to Riverfront Square)
841-4122
FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREI
D
-
MICHIGAN ST. vs.KANSAS SATURDAY
---
Come early and enjoy a great meal before the game!
After the game come in for an appetizer or dessert with
Scott's Bruss Apple GRILL & BAR
your favorite beverage GO JAYHAWKS!!!
HotDogs$.50
49'ers vs. CHIEFS SUNDAY
Questions? (Before Sept. 12) 864-3728
(Beginning Sept. 12) 864-7357
G
Hours:
11:00am-1:30am
Game Time 12:00pm
Big Draws $2.00 Watch It Here! on our 10 T.V.'s
Chili Dogs $1.00
Seckk's
Bruss Apple
GRILL & BAR
7
3300 W.15th St.
841-0033
FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREF
$\textcircled{2}$ Appointments available, starting Sept. 12-23
Walk-ins welcome.
FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREY
Smiley face
Don't be just another number!
September 12-30
Monday, Wednesday thru Friday:
9a.m.-noon & 1-5p.m.
Tuesday: 1-5p.m. & 6-9p.m.
STUDENT PORTRAITS
1995 yearbooks available for purchase!
Rotunda of Strong Hall
Free with your KUID
842-2442
For
Raking Leaves, Hayrack Rides Playing in the Woods and all of your Outdoor Adventures!
2
Wigwam
Wool Socks, Hats,
& Gloves
Jackets, Sweaters & Parkas
&Gloves
JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today!
25 Styles of Boots
• Nike • Adidas,
• K-Gwies, • Hi-Tech
• F. Fabok
840 Massachusetts
Hand with rose
GRAND OPENING Kim NAILS
GRAND OPENING
Your Complete Nail Care Salon
913-832-9397
1410 Kasold Dr. #A5 Lawrence, Ks. 66049
- Sculptured Nails Silk Nails Gel Nails
- Touch-Up Manicure
- Touch-Up * Manicure
- Nail Design
- Pedicure
Mon.-Fri.:9:30 am-7pm Saturday:9:30 am-6pm
$28.00
Nails (Acrylic or Gel)
Regular $35.00
Valid W/ Present Coupon.
Not Combined
W/ Other Coupon
Walk-ins or Appointments Welcome!
Manicure... $10.00
Pedicure...$20.00
Manicu/Pedi Combination
$25.00 Regular $30.00
Valid W/Present Coupon.
Not Combined W/Other Coupon
$18.00
TOUCH-UP Regular $20.00
Valid W/Present Coupon. Not Combined W/Other Coupon.
山
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. September 9.1994
5B
To place a classified ad call 864-4358.
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
105 Personal
110 Businesses
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
130 Lost and Found
Classified Policy
200s Employment
**208 Help Wanted**
**209 Professional Services**
**210 Typing Services**
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against people of a particular 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
1
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertisements in this newspaper are available.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and therefore, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
100s Announcements
105 Personals
THE ETC. SHOP 218 Mass.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
Backpacks, Backs, Jackets, & Purres
SUNGLASSES
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops,
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops i's, Révo, Serengeti, and Vuarnet
110 Bus. Personals
HIHALEP
Use the opportunities of
HOME CARE
where you can give
one-on-one attention
to your client without interruption.
Saturday & Sunday x hours per day
Monday Friday late afternoons/evenings
Excellent benefits possible
Must have reliable transportation
Doug's location: Assisted by EOE
Call 645-378-ask for Monica
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8.30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
Ruah & Rish 2 Discount Floral. Dozen arranged roses in rose wax 19.95. Accept all major credit cards and checks. Open 9-7 MF, 9-5 Sat, closed Sun. 933 E. 423 bd 8230 6742
CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAIL
QUALITY OR EMPLOYMENT QUALIFY
IMMEDIATELY. 1-800-243-1234
120 Announcements
ALBAT
Recycled Sourced
12th & Oread 841-9475
TRADE BUY SELL Cd's Lp's & Tapes
Catch Billy Goat at the Bottleneck sat, night and pick up their CDs "live at the swimmers' hall" here.
Pregnant-considering adoption?
Loving families await. You help select adoptive
children. Confident parents. Dream Fulfilled
Families. 800-745-1692 800-745-1692
Square dance lessons. Sept 12 Douglas County 4-7
Square Dance lessons. Sept 34-39. First free
Square Dance lesson. Dulce 432. Lesson 640.
WYTCs, the shelter in Lawrence for battleside women and their children, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training; September 15 at 7:00 p.m. o'clock. For information contact Lawrence public library, 707 Vermont. For information, please call WYTCs at 841-6887.
13TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2. 16. 1988 • 4. 5. 8 OR 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
YA GOTTA BE THERE!
TOLL PRISE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
"NOBODY GOES SHI BREAKS BETTER!"
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
140 Lost & Found
Found: One small cat on Overland Drive in W. Lawrence last week. He is greeted on top and white on his belly and paws. We would love to keep him, but Lawrence will lock us inside. Please call Robin at 740-8752.
Last cat, gray female. Gray with white paws.
Last kitten, gray female. Gray with white 2nd and 4th indiana.
Cali 748-249. Leave me alone.
Last keys. 7 keys on black Camel flashlight key
button. Beach on #3/1. Key 749-2549
and love message.
男 女
200s Employmen
205 Help Wanted
$100/hr possible mailing our circulars for info call
202 298 9065
Babysitter needed for two delightful toddler girls in newborn on West side of Lawrence. Flexible with patience and ability to work and reference required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to Box #20. University Daily
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/Bart Part-time
Looking for two part-time hairstylists who want to earn great money on weekends or evenings. 100% Satisfaction Guarantee.
CO. locations Contact Sally (913) 457-2000
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.
Caterers, Katherens Uian Catering Dept.
Hiring for Friday, September 9th, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday,
September 10th- tp m. 3 p.m. $42 per hour in paid cash day following employment. Previous food service experience preferred. Appkans and Burgeums' personnel Office. Level 5
Computer tutor. Odd hours. Low Pay. Cool machine. Call Mark at 842-1698.
COLLEGE STUDENTS $10.25-11.65 STARTING
Local branch of nat'l ca.illing Enterprise entry
level openings Flex time schedules 3-5 days,逸
offices only. opt all majors accepted. For
info 841-8606
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING Earn up to $2,000+ / month working in a hospitality setting. Seasonal & Full Time employment available. No experience needed. For more information call 1-262-634-6868
DOORMEN NEeded Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation
DOORMEN NEEDED
communication
Call 749-5038 - Ask for ZAC
Enhusiatic IDPF/L Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for 2 hrs. Thurs, evenings and occasionally 4 hrs. Sunday mornings *Mall 84-8280*.
Female vocalist wanted for variety dance band.
All styles, high, strong-chest voice, good performer. Avail immediately This is a working voice and only 749-3649.
Jasperconcert.com
insurance agency needs part-time clinical help.
10-20 hours per week. Aftermornings preferred,
either on a Friday or Sunday.
will work with class schedule *Call 414-8088*
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Make up
hours required by the job description.
English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No teaching.
No teaching in China. Asian languages required. For
English, please contact us at info@chinajobs.com.
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 on the Kansas University Bookstore between 9:55, Mon., 10:30.
KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for part-time banquet server and host servers. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants with a Bachelor's degree in Hospitality 1362nd Orred, cadry corner from the Kansas Union.
Mail Order Telephone Rep - New Home Improvement catalog has part-time weekday openings between 7am-5pm for inbound call and order tasks. Great for people needing flexible schedules during the day. Good clerical skills required. Start $1.98 / hr. Apply in person. H.I. Inc. 2001 Lakeview Rd • Blue bldg of Lawrence Paper, straight to 2nd right) or call for directions (885-362-8322)
Needed N/S person to babyst 2 girls age 6 and 9
Oc. Tues. & Thurs. evenings and some Sat mornings. Must have car and be experienced.
$5/Or, Call [8] 4-5PM. 855-5938
Office clerical position. Must have experience w/
career management. Student monthly position, $990/62/
month, 20 hr/week. Pick up an application at
301 Dole, Dept of Special Education. For more
information, visit www.doleschool.com.
NEED SPENDING CAM18? B.P.T. Building Serenity now accepting application for a variety of services.
*rartime temporary Extension 4-H Assistant.* Assist 4-H agent with the promotion of the 4-H Enrichment program and related work. required experience, at least two years with people B.S. preferential $25 per hour, plus mileage, 20 hours per week. October 3, 1994 June 9, 1995. Send resume and 3 letters of reference by September 16 to: Dennis Beijot, County Extension Directive 2110 Harper, Lawrence, KS 60564
Part time and full time positions available. Prefer mornings and daytime, some evenings & weekends. Call (850) 234-6789.
Part-time cleaning person for property management, good paid references and resume.
Ask for Jeannie.
Part-time truck waiver. M-F evenings. Approx.
800 per person. Call: Appl 108-542-6023.
Sports Officials needed! 'The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Depot is looking for individuals in becoming official officials for adult football and basketball players. Please please p
SPRING BREAK "95" SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE!!"! Student Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to Campus and Panama City Beach. Call 800-488-4849.
Prefer 7.1, 11-30, 30; or all day any weekday. Jr or Sr in child-related field. Center experience.
Stepping Stones is hireing part-time teacher's aides at 9am, 12pm, 3pm, infant and toddler rooms. Apply at 1100 Wakarau.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER.
Deadline: 09/15/94, Salary $550-650 per month. 20 bursar per week. Duties include designing and writing programs, maintaining, or enhancing existing computer systems, and providing hours at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programming languages, ability to design and implement munications skills, experience and/or ability in software testing. Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Complete job description available as a app. Job location in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EO/AE EMLOYER
STUDENT APPLICATION PROGRAMMER
Deadline: 09/16/14. Salary $530/week. 20 his per week, including program coding, maintenance and insuring programs, and programming in C. FASPOL, FOXPRO and/or other languages on AIXs. Participate in a course for 6 hours at the University of Kansas. A complete job description is available. To apply, submit a cover letter and resume to Ann Hlat at Computing Services.
WE'RE GROWING!
Mc Jobs Open Interviews Sat., Sept. 17th 11a.m.-2 p.m.
Golden Opprotunities under the Golden Arches
locations and to answer any questions about how you can be a part of our team.
at McDonalds on 6th St. Now Hiring for our 2 new
McDonald's
TerraFest Construction Company has opening starting immediately for trim carpenters and laborers. Hardworking individuals who can work a minimum of 5 weekdays and be able to report to work by 8 a.m. to m. They jobs involve some heavy lifting, etc. Apply in person at 410 Birk Trail Road (around back and in the basement). For more info, call 842-8828 between the hours of 9 a.m. to 3 o.m.
Teacher's Aide 7:30.20 p.m weekdays. Classroom experience with preschool children preferred but not required. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 N. Michigan EOE
Wanted - Painter - Maintenance assistant part time for property management position, pay resume $200-$300 per week.
What you want is what you opt.
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 irreverent, dedicated, crazy, hard working,
Prior restaurant experience NOT necessary
Prefer individuals with a solid background in people management. Requires a teamwork mentality, ability to maintain 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, please send your resume
Dawn Benson
1320 E. Kellogg Drive
Wichita KS 67211
I look forward to hearing from you.
225 Professional Services
offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841,7240
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defens
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
R
Giant Mountain Bike in excellent condition. Make offer. 792-9230
701 Tennessee
Free Consultation
King size waterbed, bookcase/mirror head
Bunk bed with slide in front of new mattress,
nails 1.85x1.85x709. Will deliver
DUL/TRAFFIC ICICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-9044.
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature, ESL classes. Highly
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3331.
235 Typing Services
Mac Classic, 48/0-Printer, Carrying Case, word
Quicken and more. Call 845-3875 with best
offer.
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST!
Put my service to the test.
Finding what you need, call,
MAKIN' THE GRATE
is the one call
850-2329
TRAFFIC-DUIT'S
Fake ID$&$ & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
Mother of two starting registered daycare. Full and part time openings. Infants and up age 3 years. Phone 800-642-5291.
1-der Women Word Processing. Former edition transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter formats.
Honda 1989 Elite 50 red scooter, with 2 baskets, 40 miles with new battery and tune-up for $100. Ask
Quality typing/word processing/indexing. Free estimate. Call 842-7271.
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
X
Quality Word Processing Dissertations. Theses.
Master's and Bachelors' letter,
easily printing 865-002-
CLIP THIS AD
Nikon EM Nimm, Nikon Motor Drive 78-210 zoom,
Lowe pro Bicycle $150.00 OR $91.03 - 913.15.
www.nikondrive.com
300s Merchandise
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Christ at 800-299-6885.
Macintosh computer with MIDI TSO, with SCSI ware and carrying case. Apple Silste II printer $750. 941-821-9128.
Leading Edge computer, complete set Bauhaus
china, two desks, sofa, twin matress and springs
fabricated into panels for easy ice cream maker, many quality picture
frames, posters, luggage, large loredo, camping
equipment, A/R stereo speakers, and answering
more, like new fuxia (size 3) and much more.
305 For Sale
**Leather** sleeper sofa for sale. Good condition.
Two ripped cushions. $100.
Fax 759-2689.
Phone 759-2689.
STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and
printer for 10 a semester. Call 1-800-900-6949 or
www.students.org
ROLLING STONES TIX Two for sale for Sunday's show. Call 841-8250.
Blue padded carpet fit to cut down room. Bought last semester for $12, sell for $92.OBO. Call Mike
Sat. 7-12. 2905 Westdale
EARNCASH
ALL YOUR MONEYGONE?
$15 Today
$30
This Week
By donating your blood plasma
Walk-ins welcome
Lawrence Donor Center
NABI The Quality Source
816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F9-6:30
Sat,10-4
WORD PROCESSOR, Brother 4300, full screen,
disk drive, grammar & spell check $200
$200
Yamaha stereo receiver, new in stick, Model *RXV870, RXV850, Ask for T91 935-411.735.
340 Auto Sales
**83 Mazda MX-6 White/Taupe Leather 5-speed,**
electric, elec. sunroof, **120 mi/h**, **29k miles**, **Excellent** condition, all maintenance current, **18,000**
cal. **721-6672** Can arrange a lease for low payable
1833 Nissan 2602X Spp t Tops fully loaded AM/FM/cass AC NoURst, dglt display, Nice1980 Also 1978 Chv Camaro, drives very good, $850 749-291, leave mssg
1992 Nissan 2008XH XSM with, sunwheel, power windows, and louver $110/000 Call Mike at MK.com
MUST SELL.TODAY!!
87 Ultass 2 Door 134K Asking $1,900 Call 749-
9226
360 Miscellaneous
Corrugated boxes, moving and storage boxes.
Large quantity pricing & small quantity walk-ins
welcome. Call 843-8111 and ask for the Sales Service Department. Carry and cash.
VAGABONDBOOKMAN
Buy & Sell Used Rare & Collectables
MAISON D'ASSISTANCE
842-BOOK 1113 Mass.
(2665)
400s Real Estate
Pets Welcome No Sublease Fee
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept older homes 841-7827 (7827)
4 BEDROOM
- Sand Volleyball Court
- On KUBus Route
South Pointe
AFTERMORES
- Ample Private Parking
1 Bedroom, ver, nice, quiet, lots of space, ceiling and pool. On KU bus route 85. *mn* 185-382.
- Swimming Pool
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
ORCHARD CORNERS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
4 BEDROOM
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great room on the route, NO PETS.
Available, Room 5, Call 794-3128
- 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
- Water and Trash Paid
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
- Call 843-4754
- Available for fall.
- Directly on bus route
- 2 bedroom with study
- 3 bedroom apartments
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Lower 1B dBMR *off*. off campus. Avail. immel. Lower 1E level garden; new kitchen overlooking lg. living room. Pull carpet. fireplace, dry. A/C. Very clean! $400 + utilities. 614 1389
430 Roommate Wanted
1 roommate needed immediately. Beautiful
bedroom back from campus; $225, price negla-
tion. #891-8011
2 females looking for 3rd roommate to live in townhome. $258 rent cable paid. Available immediately. 842-8357
Housemates needed 4BRA. Close to campus: N/S, clean, quiet. Avail. Now Call 1-881-1959.
WANTED A.S.A.P.!
Share four bedroom apartments and loft, Orchard Corners on bus route
- By phone: 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
Two share two bedroom apartment old West Lawrence $110 a month plus 4½ cents. Call 842-9272
Need Female to share large 2 Bdrm. 1 Bib furn
ap on bedside, 1 smoker, 1 smoke柜 -8451851
3 Bib furn.
N/S, Pemale Roommate need to share fur-
niture on DK, on KU DVD Host $260
8114 9414 2944
on mastercard or visa
*By Mail* 119 Swoffer Flint, Lawrence, KS 66045
1 female n/waisted 2 barm 1t floor of
house 2 minutes from Union $240 = 1 t util. 84I
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
**Introduction:** 510 Staff Flat
Wanted: Two neat, responsible, n/5 rooms to share new house. Dorm, 2 baths. Quit neighbor. Grad students preferred. $225+ 1^s utilities.
Please call 843-8478
Stop by the Kansas offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on masterCard or VISA.
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 dates when cancelled before the due date.
Classified Information and order form
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by 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 agile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Perform the calculations as follows:
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.
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
COSF per 1/6 per day
IX 2X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30-6X
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
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Classifications
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
140 lbs fund & bond 305 fs sale
25 help wanted 340 auto sales
222 professional services 360 miscellaneous
259 onsite services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
Phone:
Date ad begins: Total days in paper:
Total ad cost: Classification:
Address:
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:
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Signature:
The University Dataly Kauan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60042
*The University Dataly Kauan, 119 StauFFER Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS.* 60042
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
mannah
"Bootsy! ... Booooooootsy! !... We are calling you from the world of the living! !... Are you there, Bootsy? Give us a sign, Bootsy! Give us a sign!"
6B
Friday, September 9, 1994
Edmondson-Berger LIQUOR
Let's Celebrate
the FirstHome Victory
for our Hawks!
- Selection 842-8700
- Service
- Competitive Prices 600 Lawrence Avenue
lyric opera of kansas city
OTHELLO
BY GIUSEPPE AIRDI
lyric opera of kansas city
OTHELLO
BY GIUSEPPI AVRDI
DON'T MISS THIS
PASSIONATE PRODUCTION
BASED ON SHAKESPEARE'S
CLASSIC TRAGEDY PERFORMED IN ENGLISIL
SEPTEMBER 9 AM 5 PM
SEPTEMBER 10 AT 4 PM (PERFORMANCE WILL BE SIGNED)
SEPTEMBER 11 AT 7:30 PM
SEPTEMBER 12 AT 9:30 PM (SPONSORD BY BLACK & MATCH)
SEPTEMBER 13 AT 7:30 PM
SEPTEMBER 14 AT 10:30 AM (PRIME TO CURTAIN)
LEASURE STAGE • CINEMA STORE • 717-744 • JINANM ASSISTANCE
RESOURCE DEVICE • MICHAEL K. COUNSEL • LANDING NATIONAL
RESOURCE AGENCY • DO NOT THRIVE US MARK
Crown Cinema
COLIN FRIELS
SEAN CONNERY
A GOOD
in MAN
AFRICA
R
5:15
7:30 9:45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
5:15
7:30 9:30
WALT DISNEY
PICTURES PRESENTS
THE
LION
KING
G
CLEAR AND PRESENT
DANGER
terring
HARRISON
FORD
PC-B
5:00 7:35
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
5:00
7:15 9:30
MELANIE GRIFFITH
ED HARRIS
MILK
MONEY
PC-B
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM: ADULTS $3.00 LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 ALL DAY
THE CLIENT
SUSAN
SARANDON
TOMMY Lee
JONES
PC-B
5:00 7:15 9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
SPEED
KEANU
REEVES
DENNIS
HOPPER
R
5:00 7:15 9:30
VARSITY
925 IOWA
841-5191
I Love TROUBLE
Julia
ROBERTS
Nick
NOLTE
PC-B
5:00
7:30 9:50
MAVERICK
MEL
GIBSON
JODIE
FOSTER
PG
CINEMA TWIN
$1.25
1710 IOWA
841-5191
4:50
7:20 9:50
SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
COLIN FRIELS
SEAN CONNERY
A GOOD
in MAN
AFRICA
WALT DISNEY
PICTURES PRESENTS
THE
LION
KING
5:15
5:15
HILLCREST
7:30 9:45
925 IOWA
841-5191
7:30 9:30
COLIN FRIELS
SEAN CONNERY
A GOOD
in MAN
AFRICA
R
5:15
7:30 9:45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
5:15
7:30 9:30
WALT DISNEY
PICTURES PRESENTS
THE
LION
KING
G
CLEAR PRESENT
DANGER
starring
HARRISON
FORD
PCB
5:00 7:35
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
5:00
7:15 9:30
MELANIE GRIFITH
ED HARRIS
MILK
MONEY
PCB
5:00
7:15 9:30
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00 LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 ALL DAY
THE CLIENT
SUSAN
SARANDON
TOMMY LEE
JONES
PCB
5:00 7:15 9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
SPEED
KEANU
REEVES
DENNIS
HOPPER
R
5:00 7:15 9:30
VARSITY
925 IOWA
841-5191
I Love TROUBLE
Julia ROBERTS
Nick NOLTE
PCB
5:00
7:30 9:50
CINEMA TWIN
925 IOWA
841-5191
4:50
7:20 9:50
CLEAR PRESENT DANGER
starring HARRISON FORD
FCB1
MELANIE GRIFFITH
ED HARRIS
MILK MONEY
FCB1
5:00 7:35
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
5:00
7:15 9:30
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00 LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 ALL
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE CLIENT
SUSAN SARANDON
TOMMY LEE
JONES FC-B
5:00 7:15 9:30
HILLCREST
WESTERN FLORIDA
841-6284
SPEED
KEANU REEVES
DENNIS HOPPER
R
5:00 7:15 9:30
VARSITY
WESTERN FLORIDA
841-6284
I Love TROUBLE
Julia ROBERTS
Nick NOLTE FC-B
5:00
7:30 9:50
CINEMA TWIN
WESTERN FLORIDA
$1.25
8:41-5191
MAVERICK
MEL GIBSON
JODIE FOSTER
FC-B
4:50
7:20 9:50
NATION/WORLD
I Love TROUBLE
Julia ROBERTS
Nick NOLTE PG
MAVERICK
MEL GIBSON
JODIE FOSTER
PG
5:00
7:30 9:50
CINEMA TWIN $1.25
STUDIO WA 841-5191
4:50
7:20 9:50
For Germany's army, which took symbolic control of Berlin after 49 years of protection by foreign armies, it was a day of promise for the future. For young leftists, the display was an echo of a shameful past.
"We came to Berlin as occupying forces; we stayed as protecting forces, and we leave as friends," Maior said.
BERLIN — Germany closed the book on the Cold War yesterday, bidding this once-divided city's Allied protectors goodbye with a grand military ceremony on a scale not seen in Berlin since World War II.
The German chancellor warmly thanked his "dear friends," the Western Allies, for establishing, then guaranteeing German democracy through the Cold War's most dangerous days.
The 77-year-old Mitterrand, who is battling prostate cancer, skipped the Tempelhof ceremony but called yesterday "a moving moment" in a speech at the orate Schauspielhaus theater.
The Associated Press
The Napoleonic Society of America, a group based in Clearwater, Fla., will release the results of the FBI tests and debate their significance Sunday.
Using a few strands of his hair, the feds are trying to determine whether Napoleon's body was full of poison.
Occupation now history for Berlin
The ceremony began with dignitaries walking across the once offlimits Pariser Platz in the Soviet-
The Associated Press
Napoleon poisoned? FBI tests will answer
Chancellor Helmut Kohl, in a speech commemorating the 1948-49 airlift that broke a Soviet blockade of Berlin, pledged that Germany is ready to share the military burden of keeping the world's peace.
CHICAGO — Was Napoleon murdered in exile? More than 170 years after the emperor's death, the FBI is on the case.
occupied section of the city and ended with helmeted soldiers marching by torchlight before the Brandenburg Gate.
British Prime Minister John Major, French President Francois Mitterrand of France and U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher led their country's delegations for the sentimental send off.
The history books say Napoleon died of stomach cancer. But some say the British murdered the deposed
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Tearful and angry faithful gathered at Sarajevo's cathedral yesterday for a Mass left hollow by the absence of the pope, as John Paul II, grounded in Italy by security fears, called on Serbs, Croats and Muslims to fordive.
The Vatican this week called off a one-day visit to the Bosnian capital planned for yesterday, saying the pope feared for the safety of the crowds that would have turned out to see him and worried that his pilgrimage could aggravate tensions in the besieged city.
Napoleon was exiled by the British to the remote island of St. Helena off southern Africa in 1815. He died in 1821 at 51.
During his exile, the British feared Napoleon might make another comeback, as he had from the Mediterranean island of Elba earlier in 1815 — an adventure that the British barely stowed at Wotadec.
But if Napoleon's hair contains arsenic, it won't necessarily indicate foul play, said Michael La Vean, a society board member.
He said arsenic was commonly found in licorice in Napoleon's day, and Napoleon was a licorice addict.
The pope addressed the people of Sarajevo on radio and television and delivered the same sermon he had planned to give if he had been present in the Bosnian capital.
French royalists also wanted to get
"The spiral of 'wrongs' and 'punishments' will never stop if forgiveness does not come at a certain point," he said. "To forgive does not mean to forget. If memory is the law of history, forgiveness is the power of God."
rid of Napoleon, regarding him as a threat to Louis XVIII's hold on the throne.
The society decided to pay the FBI to test for poison and DNA after the hair's owner, Dr. Jean Fichou of Rennes, France, agreed to sacrifice a few strands.
Pope cancels Sarajevo visit The Associated Press
O2-L
FLORAL PRINT SKIRT
Floral print rayon/wool skirt. $88 Button front v-neck ribbed sweater. $68
SERIES-11 FALL '94 ATTITUDE NOT AGE
HAROLD'S
LIGHTS OUT:
KU FOOTBALL
Kansas defeated Michigan State Saturday 17-10 under the lights at Memorial Stadium. Page 1B.
BREEZY & SUNNY
High 87° Low 65°
Weather: Page 2A.
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPE
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.104,NO.15
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 1994
(USPS650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Statewide settlement awards $4.2 million
KU employees receive lost wages
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
Three current and two former University of Kansas employees recently received a combined total of more than $90,000 in back pay as part of a $4.2 million settlement of a statewide lawsuit filed against the state of
Kansas by 220 state employees.
The suit, filed in 1900 in U.S. District Court in Topeka, said that because salaried employees' pay had been deducted for missing partial days, the workers should be considered hourly employees and were entitled to back pay for working more than 40 hours a week.
More than 20 state agencies, including the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and the Kansas Highway Patrol, were listed in the suit. All employees received back pay.
Patty Riley, a private attorney, said that under the Fair Labor Standards Act of the 1940s, employees whose pay was deducted for working partial
days should be considered hourly employees.
"You don't have to punch a clock to be considered an hourly employee," she said.
But Rarrick said most states had accountability clauses which allowed managers to deduct pay when salaried employees worked partial days.
Rarrick said some employees did not want their names listed on the suit because they had not expected to be paid for overtime.
"I personally believe that many chose not to participate when they were solicited by KAPE because they had the personal integrity not to hold out their hand for money they didn't expect," he said.
Richard Mann, University director of administration, said he did not know specifics of the case but did say the University was not currently in violation of any labor laws.
"The procedures we use are in compliance with the Fair Labor Standards Act," he said.
Current KU employees who received settlements were Lt.s. John Mullens and Vic Strnad of the KU police, and Colleen Strnad, an accountant with the comptroller's office.
Former KU employees who received settlements were Jeanne Longaker, a lieutenant with the KU police, and Lyle Wellman, a parking security chief.
The Strnds and Longaker declined to comment about the case. Mullens and Wellman could not be reached.
1981
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
Jaime Mann, Naperville, Ill., freshman, her mother, Julie Mann, Diane Woods, and Jamie's sister, Jennifer, who both Michigan State University students, react to the Kansas vs. Michigan State game. Jaime Mann's family, including her mother, sister, and Woods, watched the game Saturday.
Football family bets on a rivalry
By Colleen McCain
Kansan staff writer
For Jaime Mann, Saturday night meant more than a football game. It meant a family feud.
Although Jaime Mann, Naperville, Ill., freshman, is a loyal Jayhawk fan, her sister Jennifer Mann is a junior at Michigan State University. So Saturday's contest meant a long-awaited showdown for the sisters' teams.
"This is war," Jennifer Mann said before the game.
Jaime and Jennifer Mann attended the game with their parents, Frank and Julie Mann, and Jennifer Mann's roommate from Michigan State. Diane Woods.
Frank Mann said that as a parent, it was his responsibility to remain neutral.
"I'll be cheering every time anyone scores," he said. "No matter what, I'll be on the side of the winning team."
His daughters, however, were anything but neutral.
In the spirit of fairness, Frank Mann wore an "MSU Dad" T-shirt and a Kansas Jayhawks hat to the game.
Jaime Mann wore a bright blue Jayhawks T-shirt, while Jennifer Mann and Woods wore Michigan State T-shirts adorned with Michigan State buttons and green decals on their faces.
As the group walked to the game, Jennifer Mann and Woods screamed, "Go State! Michigan State!" each time they spotted other Michigan State fans.
"I don't know who she is," Jame Mann said, as her sister yelled
"We've been getting death threats all day," Jennifer Mann said.
again. "I've never seen her before."
"When Michigan State wins, Jaime will have to clean my room over Christmas vacation," she said. "She'll have to make it spotless."
To ensure that victory would be even sweeter for the supporter of the winning team, Jennifer Mann said she and her sister had bet on the game's outcome.
Although Frank Mann maintained his neutrality in the presence of his daughters, he said quietly when Jaime and Jennifer Mann were out of earshot that he thought Michigan State would win.
Jaime Mann said that she was sure her sister would do a thorough job after KU won. Before the game, she predicted KU would win, 22-19.
As the game wore on, Jennifer Mann's cheers of, "Go State!" became half-hearted, while her sister gleefully cheered for KU.
"I think it will be close, but I think Michigan State will win in the end," he said.
"I guess it's probably over," Jennifer Mann said as freshman placekicker Jeff McCord put KU up, 17-10, with a field goal.
Jaime Mann smiled and hugged her father.
Sunflower and Fox are together again
As the final seconds ticked off the clock, Jaime Mann was quick to remind her sister of their wager.
"I called it," she said. "I knew it all along."
"Do you want to start with the mirrors in my room?" she asked. "Jennifer will have to vacuum, dust, clean the mirrors and maybe even do my laundry. My room is very messy."
'The Simpsons' 'Melrose Place' return to cable
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Beginning today, Lawrence cable subscribers will be able to see the Fox Network again.
Sunflower Cablevision began showing the Fox Network at 6 a.m. on cable channel four, which is WDAF out of Kansas City. WDAF announced in July that it would drop NBC and become a Fox affiliate. Because of an existing contract that Sunflower had with WDAF, the cable company will continue carrying the station as a Fox affiliate.
The contract, which is similar to contracts Sunflower has with all its channels, is a three-year agreement to carry WDAF as channel four and at no charge to Sunflower. After WDAF became a Fox affiliate, Sunflower decided that the contract still was valid.
Fox has not been seen on Sunflower since October, which is when Kansas City's KSHB channel 41, then a Fox affiliate, refused to sign a similar contract with Sunflower. At that time, Fox had demanded that all stations carrying the network add another Fox channel, called the FX Network. Sunflower was unwilling to agree to carry the additional channel, and Fox was dropped.
Since then, KSHB has become an NBC affiliate. Dennis Krupfer, general manager for Sunflower, said KSHB would be re-added to Sunflower's line-up, but that an official agreement had not yet been reached.
"But I'm hopeful that we will have a signed agreement soon," he said.
When Sunflower Cablevision gets the KSHB-NBC station, Lawrence cable viewers will be able to see all of the current stations, Knipfer said.
"We don't intend to lose any of our current programming," Knipfer said, "We might have to do some rearranging of channels, but no station will be eliminated."
For now, Lawrence viewers will be able to see NBC programming only
Fun and foxy
Kansas City's WDAF channel four, also channel four on Sunflower Cablevision, will carry:
all prime-time Fox programming, such as "Melrose Place" and "The Simpsons." NFC football.
New talk shows and late-night programming
Kansas City's KSMO channel 62, channel three on Sunflower, will carry some programs dropped by KSHB channel 41 when it
switched from a Fox affiliate to an NBC affiliate:
Children's shows, such as "Mighty Morphin Power Rangers" and "Animaniacs."
Syndicated reruns, such as "Growing Pains" and "Who's the Boss."
KSHB, formerly a Fox affiliate,
will be added to Sunflower's line-
up as an NBC affiliate at a later
date.
n The Comedy Channel, which replaced KSHB on channel 12 on Sunflower, will remain on Sun-
on channel eight, which is Topeka's KSNT channel 27.
Tellye Spears, Lawrence junior said that she was excited to watch some of her favorite shows again.
"It was such a hassle to unplug the cable and hook up an antenna," Spears said. "Most of the time I didn't bother. Now I can watch 'Melrose Place' and 'The Simpsons.'"
Having Fox back has been a longawaited event for some KU students.
"Myroommates and I are very excited about being able to watch 'Melrose Place' without hooking up rabbit ears," said Elise Beltram, Overland Park senior. "It's a happy occasion for us."
Dustin Denning, Salina senior, said that hooking up an antenna to receive Fox would not have been a problem for him, but he is glad he would not have to do it.
"I was talking to my roommates about buying an antenna last week," Denning said. "But now I won't have to."
INSIDE
An estimated 15,000 to 20,000 people descended on Lawrence this weekend for the Haskell Indian Art Market at Haskell Indian Nations University.
Page3A.
Dyche Hall to undergo construction for extension
Bv David Wilson
Kansan staffwriter
Thousands of frog, lizard and fish specimens floating in ethanol-filled jars stored at Dyche Hall are more than just a threat to someone's appetite. They are a fire hazard.
To lessen the fire hazard and comply with state and local fire codes, the University today will begin building a four-story, 10,000-square foot storage facility for the specimens onto the west side of Dyche. The limestone exterior of Dyche will act as a fire wall between the facility and the rest of the building, which houses the Museum of Natural History.
Phil Humphrey, director of the museum, said the ethanol was a fire hazard because it was a form of alcohol. Alcohol is highly flammable and creates flames invisible to firefighters.
Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain once called Dyche the most hazardous building in Lawrence, Humphrey said.
"He told me that if this place ever caught on fire, he wouldn't send his men in to fight it."
Humphrey said.
Because Dyche is on the state register of historical places, architects for the project consulted with the Kansas State Historical Society to make the sure the expansion matched the style of the rest of the building.
"It'll have a limestone face and brick decoration at the top, much like the top of Dyche," said Allen Wiechert. University Architect.
Until the facility is built, close to 50,000 jars of varying sizes will sit on row after row of shelves on the fourth and fifth floors of Dyche.
The specimens, some of which are more than 100 years old, come from as far away as Latin America and are labeled with scientific names like caripodes carpio and astyanax fasciatus. The specimens are collected by scientists and studied by graduate students.
Ed Wiley, curator of ichthyology at the museum, said the fourth and fifth floors of Dyche probably would be used for research and office space.
[Blurred image with indistinct figures]
The new storage facility will cost $1.5 million and is expected to be finished by April 1996.
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
Dan Meinhardt, St. Louis graduate student, holds a Conrau goliath bullfrog that is being stored in an ethanol-filled jar in Dyche Hall.
2A
1.
Monday, September 12, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE: The wheels of progress will turn more rapidly. Continue to work hard. Patience and preparation are key to moving forward. Privacy becomes more important than ever. You would be wise to share fewer secrets. A stroke of good help helps you triumph over an adversary. Emphasize harmony both at work and at home. A second marriage is a distinct possibility for someone who divorced reluctantly.
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: Olympic legend Jessie Owens, actress Linda Gray, actor Peter Scolari, singer Maria Moulder.
T
T
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Take full advantage of the unexpected cooperation you find at home and work. Get out and about more! Social encounters could lead to helpful business contacts.
69
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If you set the example, others will follow. Those who are willing to work long hours will prosper. Go back to school or attending career seminars will enhance your employment prospects.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ideas flow freely and frequently when nothing happens to disrupt your concentration. Postpone a purely social encounter until you are less busy.
8
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Those in charge could be more demanding and less concerned with your feel.
and less concerned with your meetings today. Lean on associates for support. A home improvement project should go smoothly. Young adults need freedom to come and go.
U
II
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22): Trust your own ideas when deciding what must be done to protect your long-term interests. Obtaining support from your allies will be easy if you make intelligent concessions. Eliminate all luxury-spending.
π
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Too much meddling by self-appointed authorities could mess up a clever plan. Keep your own counsel. Romance is intriguing! Make sure your car is in good working order before starting on a trip.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Let loved ones take over tasks you may not feel up to doing. Otherwise, you risk making a serious mistake. Some one may try to talk back to you. It is wiser not to debate.
VS
Arrow
SAGTTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Close relationships are strengthened by devotion and sincerity. You can be a tower of strength to your loved ones! Handle legal documents and office purchases like an expert. Sympathize with a teen-ager's concerns.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Constructive criticism from close associates should not be taken amiss. Put away those credit cards and pay cash for routine purchases. Move ahead full throttle on the social front. Issue invitations to interesting newcomers.
WATER
X
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Thanks to persuasion and caidemone, you have a splendid chance of getting friends and loved ones to abide by your wishes. You are making great strides towards a career milestone. Honor mate's family traditions.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Stay in close contact with valued business associates. Otherwise, they may not be there when you really need their services. Good luck on your side in financial affairs. The Midas touch returns!
ON CAMPUS
TODAY'S CHILDREN have truly inquiring minds. They want to know not only what people are saying and doing but what they really think. Honest and just, this virtues Virgos will never forget a slight or deceitful act. Their careful attention to detail makes them highly skilled engineers or doctors. Count on them to detect flaws and symptoms that less-observant types overlook. They have the memory of an elephant and will never forget an important date. Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kanaan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Strauf-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. 68045.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate daily Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic Law Students' group at 12:30 p.m. today at Green Hall. 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 842-4713.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 832-8199.
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.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor "Fundamentals of Catholicism, at 7 tonight at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
Yoga Club will meet at 7 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Michele Risdal at 841-8818.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor "Exploring the Faith," 8 tonight at 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357.
OAKS-Non-Traditional Stu
dent Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7317.
International Studies, Phi Beta Delta and Latin American Studies will sponsor a Worldview, "Crisis in Cuba," at noon tomorrow at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
American Meteorological Society will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow at 3092 Malott Hall. For more information, call Robyn Weeks at 864-4547.
KU Study Abroad will have an informational meeting about studying abroad in French-speaking countries at 4 p.m. tomorrow at 4001 Wescoe Hall.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove Aint the Kansas Union. For more information, call Simone Webe at 832-1229.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Jacqueline at 864-8219.
Asian American Student Union will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at 100 Smith Hall. For more information, call Melanie Ignacio at 864-6500.
KU Triathlon Team and Swim Club will meet for swim practice at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Robinson Pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
ON THE RECORD
A groundskeeper who was mowing Wednesday afternoon on a hill east of the Carruth-O'Leary parking lot ran over a manhole cover, breaking it into pieces, KU police reported. Pieces of the cover hit a silver mini van, damaging the right front fender and right-side rear view mirror.
A female KU student who apparently had a seizure Thursday in front of Wescoe Hall was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, KU police reported.
A KU student was injured Thursday while playing basketball on the courts north of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, KU police reported. Lawrence Memorial Hospital officials said the student was treated for back injuries.
A radar detector, citizens band radio and compact disc player valued at $630 were stolen Thursday from a KU student's car parked in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported.
Weather
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
A KU student fainted Thursday afternoon in Fraser Hall, KU police reported. The man was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
H I G H L O W
TODAY
Breezy and sunny with southerly winds at 15 to 20 m.p.h.
TUESDAY Dry and warm.
TIGH LOW
88° • * 66°
89° • * 63°
85° • * 64°
88° • * 68°
87° • * 65°
77° • * 62°
75° • * 61°
85° • * 64°
72° • * 48°
87° • * 69°
87° • * 66°
86° • * 68°
90° • * 68°
87 65
8765
8757
The Associated Press
WEDNESDAY
A chance for thunderstorms.
Stock market report
$
Dow Jones
33.65
3,874.81
NYSE
2.44
285.38
Shares Traded: 360,387,740
Advances
Declines
Unchange
⬆
DOWN
584
Nasdaq
5.57
763.73
1,635
-
630
ASE
.97
454.54
HairExperts Design Team
$5 Off
Hair Design
Not valid with any other offer
EXPIRES 10/9/94
40
Discover
Our
Difference
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa
841-6886
S. M. M. A.
Hey Big D !!!!!
Yeah You! The One With The
Cool Shirt On!
Big D's DRIVEWAY REPAIR - No Crack is Too Big To Fail — (739)
Big D's PETTING ZOO - You Can Put Our Darkness — (732)
Big D's Driving School - We Can Touch You to Drive Like a Big D Tool (707)
Big D's RoadRacing - You Drug More Than A军阀 When You Rule With Big D (738)
If I Can't Kill You I Am A Sport (701)
BALLS NOT INCLUDED (708)
DONT BRAZE THY YOU SEE GOD (703)
DONT BRAZE THY YOU SEE ELVIS (705)
No Lives No Relief Only Parental is DEATH! (702)
The glovery are just $12.95 plus $2.50 SHIP
for a total of $16.45 each (CHEAP)
Please log quantity, size (in XL or XL), and code
Mail check or money order to:
ENTREY.TOO
PO BOX 3081
OLATNE.KS 66063
Code Size L/DL Quantity Total
X $115.45
X $115.45
X $115.45
X $115.45
X $115.45
Total of all Items
---
Tau Kappa Epsilon Kappa Delta
Benefiting:
Special Olympics & Child Abuse Prevention
MID
volleyball
SUNDAY,SEPTEMBER18th
Prizes given away every hour! Co-ed Double Elimination Entry Deadline: Wednesday, September 14th For more information contact Andy at 841-9294 or Nicky at 842-2157.
MUSIC,FOOD & FUN!
IKI KV IKI KV IKI KV IKI KV IKI KV IKI
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. Mercantile is the right choice for student loans, offering:
MERCANTILE BANK
Member FDIC
Equal Opportunity Lender
- More than 30 years of student loan experience.
- 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.
LENDER
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 12, 1994
3A
193
Jennie Zeiner/ KANSAN
Competitors in the first River Cup Mountain Bike race ride over logs on the Lawrence River Trails. Jeff Kress, co-organizer of the point-based event, said he thought attendance would increase as the series continued.
Amateur mountain bikers compete in race series
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
After a 30-mile bike ride yesterday,
Ian Kirby hurt all over.
But Kirby, Lenexa junior, was not riding for recreation. He was competing in the first River Cup Mountain Bike Race Series at the Lawrence River Trails in North Lawrence. Kirby won the highlighted race, finishing the course in 1 hour and 52 minutes.
"The constant speed is a challenge," Kirby said, "The course looks easier than it actually is."
Jeff Kress, Orange, Calif., graduate student, and Jan Schroeder, Huntington Beach, Calif., graduate student, organized the races. Kress and Schroeder drew their inspiration from California races in which they had participated.
"I was a participant in an amateur race series in California," Kress said, "When I moved to Lawrence a year ago, I thought Kansas needed a race based on points."
Yesterday's race was the first in a series that will continue Oct. 2 and Oct. 23.
The series is based on points earned at each race. The top 20 finishers of each race will earn points. The first-place winner receives 20 points, and the 20th-place winner receives one point. The final race will be worth double points to break ties or to allow bikers to make up for missed races.
After the three races, the top five winners in each category will win cash prizes, Kress said. The categories include beginners, masters, veterans and experts.
The event was sponsored by KLZR. Warner Lester, sales manager for the radio station, said that the station was excited to sponsor the event.
"We are expecting more for the next two races," Kress said, "I think the Chiefs game hurt attendance."
yesterday's race.
Kress said about 175 people entered
"Jeff Kress came to us and asked the Lazer to co-present the event with him," Lewis said. "We've had a good response so far."
Lewis said that the Lazer decided to sponsor the event because of the growing popularity of mountain bike racing.
"Mountain bikes have always had a sort of cult following," Lewis said, "And that interest is growing."
Anyone interested in entering the series can call Kress or Schroeder at 842-5306.
Student Senate pushes service
Student Senate passed a resolution Wednesday night that will encourage student organizations to get out in the community and participate in community service work.
By James Evans
Kansan staff writer
A resolution asks for public works
The resolution, which was written by Ken Martin, holdover senator, was designed to get student groups more involved in the Lawrence community. He said that he hoped the resolution would show the importance of service work.
"It's important for every student to
Martin said the resolution holds closely with the Student Senate preamble. It states that the role of senate is to enhance the learning experience of KU students in and out of the classroom and strengthen the ties between the University and the community.
try to better the community," Martin said. "There are so many different things students can do to help Lawrence."
Many community groups find it important that student groups assist in programs.
"It's essential," said Steve Anderson, unit director of the Lawrence Boys and Girls Club.
He said student groups had helped the Boys and Girls Club in the last year with sports tournaments, an alcohol awareness seminar, and helping celebrate Kwanzaa, an annual celebration of the African-American family.
"Ithelps kids see the community in a different light when students help us," he said. Anderson said that kids at the club benefit a lot by getting to interact with college students.
But the pay-off for community service work is not only for the community, said Kisa Wheaton, co-director of the Center for Community Outreach, a program run by Student Senate.
"Volunteer programs bring student
organizations together," Wheaton said. The projects teach organizations to work effectively in reaching a common goal. She said that it also helps organizations in problem solving and improving internal communication.
The original version of the resolution, which was voted down, would have required that all student organizations that receive financial support from student senate perform community service. For every $100 an organization received, the organization would have had to perform one hour of community service.
The idea behind the original resolution was that student organizations would be able to guarantee to the Senate that some sort of benefit would be gained by their financing.
Martin said often times events and programs that were funded by Student Senate didn't give as much beneficial value to the student and local community.
Groups that volunteer for public service projects will be directed by the Center for Community Outreach.
DANCE OF THE KISKU WALAM
Native-American art sold at market
Indian art market weaves education with work, fun
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Amy Solt / KANRAN
Before Walter Alhaita played his flute song, he told the crowd a story about a Kiwanan man wandering in the woods, wondering how he could win the heart of the most beautiful woman in the village.
The Kiowan, who was too poor to pay the woman's dowry, found his answer in the form of a hollowed-out branch. As the wind blew, it moved through the branch, creating a musical note. He broke off the branch and took it back to his village, where he used the newly created flute to charm the woman.
A dancer performs at the Haskell Indian Craft Market at Haskell Indian Nations University. Dancing was just one of the activities offered Saturday afternoon at the market, which also included included craft booths and food.
Ahhaity, Haskell student senate president, said the Kiowans have used the flute in courtship since then.
"Sure enough, that woman became his first wife," Ahahtaytie said, then smiled as the crowd laughed at the mention of Kiowans' polygamy. "You know how Kiowans are."
The crowd was part of the estimated 15,000 to 20,000 who attended this weekend's Haskell Indian Art Market at Haskell Indian Nations University. About 130 Native-American artists from around the nation came to sell their paintings, weavings, blankets and sculptures. There were also shows with flutes, traditional singing and dancing from different nations and plays acted out by Haskell students.
No single theme dominated the market. In one booth, an artist worked turquoise and opal into jewelry in a Zuni Pueblo nation technique called channel inlay. In the next, an artist displayed ceremonial tomahawks and arrow quivers made from beaver fur. And if customers at either booth had turned around, they might have seen performers painted black and white demonstrating an Apache spirit dance.
The art market is part of the Lawrence Indian Arts Show, a sixweek, Lawrence event that begins
with the market and features displays at the KU Museum of Anthropology and the Spencer Museum of Art, said Maria Martin, co-coordinator of the show. She said the show was designed to demonstrate the culture of Midwestern Native Americans.
"We realized we had this wealth right here," said Martin, assistant director of the museum of anthropology.
The market came about as an afterthought, Martin said. She said it was first held six years ago to give Native-American artists who came to Lawrence a chance to make money while displaying their exhibits. The first market had 45 booths and drew 3,000 people.
Now it draws such artists as Mavis Doering, whose woven baskets can be seen in the Smithsonian National Gallery of Art.
"I like to shape my baskets like pottery shapes," said Doering, a Cherokee whose baskets sell between $200 and $1,000. "With the Cherokee, the shape indicates the purpose. But I like to shape them in individual styles."
Barbara McKinney-Elston, who is also known by the Kickapoo name Pahponee, or Snow Woman, displayed glazed pottery with amber hues and pictographs etched into their surfaces nearby.
"I like to know where my pottery goes," said Pahponee, who handed out her telephone number to customers. "I like to know what they think of it and whether they're pleased by it."
Maurus Chino, an Acoma Pueblo whose art ranged from eggshell thin pottery to oil landscapes of northern New Mexico, said the education he received from Haskell more than 20 years ago helped his art. The school was called Haskell Indian Junior College when he was graduated in 1971 as a technical craftsman.
Chino said interest in Native-American art and culture had picked up in the past 20 years, but that could change
"It goes in cycles," Chino said. "In the '60s and '70s, it wasn't cool to be Indian. Now everybody wants to claim Indian blood. It'll probably switch back sometime soon."
CLASSICAL MUSIC ON CD
Kief's has Lawrence's Largest and Best Collection of Classical Music This Week ... Take $2.00 Off (ea.) Kief's Everyday Low Price on Classical CD's!!
Bring in this ad or the coupon in this Tuesday's UDK. Not valid with other offers Excludes orange-tag items Good thru 9-19-94
KIEF'S CDs & TAPES
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913·843·1811 913·842·1438 913·842·1544
4A
Monday, September 12, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
Bus system has out-polluted its welcome here
CHRIS STONG
KU on Wheels is a waste of students' money and harmful to the campus environment.
Anvone like the Replacements?
Anyone like the Replacements?
"On the bus, that's where we ride,
hurry, hurry, here comes my ... stop."
It's not really where we ride. Enrollment for Fall 1993 was 28,862 and 27,131 for Spring 1994. And KU on Wheels sold a total of 6,161 bus passes that fall and 7,470 passes that spring.
Want to guess how much it costs to run the whole system? Remember,
it's a government operation costing $1,046,844.35. That's a lot of money,
especially since you didn't ask to spend it.
I am not sure whether there was ever any more than tacit approval for the bus system. Though the bus system was a student idea, the system came about through the Student Senate. Nobody votes in those elections,
and no one knows that as well as I. We live in a democracy, with the decisions made by voters and those elected by them. But that same process can be reversed. The bus system has outlived the problems it tried to solve.
The KU police reports that at any one time there are between 5,000 and 10,000 bikes on campus. So at any given second, there are at least as many, if not more, bike riders on campus as people who buy bus passes for the entire semester.
The bus system must have had grandiose goals at one time: Reduce gasoline consumption, reduce parking by increasing mass transit, provide transportation in bad weather and decrease pollution. It still hasn't worked out like they planned.
If you are one of those bike riders or a pedestrian, you might agree that the bus system is a failure. Test the emissions by riding a bike uphill behind one of the behemoths blocking the road. Hang out on campus and listen to the squealing brakes and, dare I say, the "low" hum of the finely-tuned engines. If you are a pedestrian, you can conduct a similar test by crossing the street, even at a crosswalk: You will hear both sounds in succession. Well maybe not the squealing.
Amy Trainer, president of Environs, a campus environmental group, has similar complaints. The group believes the Lawrence Bus Co. could use its money to at least purchase less polluting engines and better exhaust systems to reduce noise and air pollution. I say eliminate pollution altogether on campus. Start by eliminating buses and then eliminate parking.
Environs also supports restricting all traffic from campus to promote safety for cyclists and pedestrians: A nice beginning for my somewhat more radical solution. The only campus that I know no traffic is allowed is the Arizona University. I lived in Tucson for six months. I registered my bike with the university's Department of Alternative Modes, a whole department devoted to getting people to walk, ride, skate or blade to class. I heard birds on campus when I rode there. They have one more thing we don't: grass right where the street could have been.
I would be the first person to volunteer to swing a 14 pound sledge hammer to break up Jayhawk Boulevard, if someone promises to plant grass. And yes, that will force the next chancellor to walk from her house to Strong Hall.
I know that the bus system employs many people, but more important is the system itself. Our administration would rather have people sitting on their backsides than being active. Students should make an effort sometime while they are here, and getting up the hill independently is a good place to start.
Another is changing the bus system.
Chris Stong is a Lawrence senior in philosophy.
VIEWPOINT
Population solutions found in knowledge of all cultures
The recent summit on the world's population missed the point.
The answer is not limiting the number of children women can bear or increasing the availability of contraceptive i v g
children and family and learns to accept them, we will be better equipped to manage population.
WORLD POPULATION Efforts to curb the earth's population must include attempts to understand cultures where control is needed most.
t i v e
devices or abortion facilities. None of these "solutions" will have any effect on the basis for population rates: culture.
Until the world learns to examine, accept and work within the various cultures of the world, it cannot even begin to understand what drives people to have as many or as few children as they do.
Many have decided the ultimate question and only point of the summit is the liberation of women and a push for their right to control their bodies.
But what we really are seeing is a power struggle in which the most influential nations are trying to force their views and societal conditions on cultures they do not understand.
After the world recognizes the factors that influence choices about
Managing population does not mean controlling birth rates, but learning to live together in a way that allows us to
make the most of our resources.
By concentrating on whether Iraqi women should have access to condoms or whether we need to build abortion clinics in Somalia, we defeat the purpose of an effort to understand the reasons for and consequences of our growing world population.
Arguments over religious teachings or women's rights are better left to the religious and political sects.
Delegates at this meeting of leaders, need to be concentrating on how to gain a better knowledge base of those areas where overpopulation truly endangers the welfare of the people as a whole.
After all, knowledge not politics or money is the true solution to creating a better and more harmonious world for us all.
DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
JEN CARR Business manager
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
News...Sara Bennett
Editorial...Donella Hearne
Campus...Mark Martin
Sports...Brian James
Photo...Daron Bennett
Mellasa 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 ... Luda Guth
National mgr ... Mark Masto
Coop mgr ... Emily Gibson
Special Sections mgr ... Jen Pierne
Production mgr ... Holly Boren
... Regan Overy
Marketing director ... Alan Stiglio
Creative director ... John Carton
Classified mgr ... Heather Niahou
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must address writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Oklahoma have special rights to use the letters.
Guest columnas 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.
AS THE BASEBALL STRIKE DRAGS ON, MILLIONS OF SPORTS FANS SINK FURTHER INTO DEPRESSION:
SPORTS FANS SINK FURTHER INTO DEPRESSION
...HE'S AT THE TWENTY...
...THE TEN...
...FIVE...
...TOUCH-DOWN!
Sean Finn / KANSAN
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Rape illustration wrong
The Matt Hood cartoon accompanying a *Kansan*'s cover story on rape prevention depicts a phallic male symbol bolting from the sky, a la the traditional Western male God fantasy, over a diminutive female symbol cowering in its shadow. This cliched fantasy pervades Western culture, structuring most images of sports and politics (although Hillary Clinton has clearly threatened this paradigm, just listen to Limbaugh), as well as rape and religion and need not be reiterated by a university newspaper whose job should be to challenge such dangerously comfortable versions of reality, particularly in connection with a discussion of ways women should empower themselves against rape. (Never suggest that men like your cartoonist should do anything to change the social paradigms that tacitly support male brutality.)
As any good tabloid editor can attest, the real power lies in the image, and the real message of this ugly image is: Ladies, the "safety tips" of crime prevention specialists and women's advocates - make eye contact, walk with confidence, choose to be a fighter - offer but a futile defense against the overwhelming nature of male power, and following these steps may make people mistake you for that huxy in the White House. No, your only hope is a super phallus bolting from the sky to save you.
Lori Askeland
Lawrence Graduate Student
ence Graduate Student
This article, with its irresponsible title and its callous contents, reeks of victim blaming. The condescending tone describes many preventative steps towards hindering rapes. What happens if a victim follows all of these steps but still gets raped? What about date or acquaintance rape?
Women are not accountable for the actions of a rapist. When are we going to start reading articles aimed towards men, stating how they can change their behavior? Or aimed towards rapists, stating how they can
Article offends student
How about the timing? Given the recent rape conviction of Jeffrey Shanks, the insensitivity of this article amazes me. Obviously, not all rapes can be prevented, and to insinuate that they can be, is to add guilt to the victim's feelings. Because I'm sure she's not feeling guilty, or ashamed, or humiliated, or dirty enough.
"Thinking Ahead Could Prevent A Rape," (Manny Lopez, *Kansas* p. 1, 9/8/84) could be the most offensive article I've ever read in the *Kansas*.
The article assumes that most rapes are preventable, and that with a little planning or convenient scheduling, a victim should be able to keep this violent crime from happening to her. Gee, I keep forgetting that it's the women's responsibility to prevent rape.
Suzanne Steel Lawrence senior
stop raping? When are we going to stop reading articles placing the responsibility of rape prevention on women?
David Shulenburger Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs
Zachary Starbird's editorial (7 September 1994) in which he condemns as "outmoded" the "concept that University graduates ought to have a well-rounded education," is a very naive piece. I hope that Mr. Starbird will discover that the most important knowledge that can be acquired at this university will be those skills that can be applied to all professions and vocations. Without the ability to analyze, to examine thoughtfully, to communicate and to make ethical choices, a person is not prepared to take advantage of future opportunities. He is, instead, equipped to step into a prepared slot and to perform tasks as assigned. In an increasingly complex and fast-changing world, the narrow and "vocationally oriented" training advocated by Mr. Starbird is outdated quickly. A true education prepares an individual for a full and thoughtful life, not for a specific job or profession. If such an education is outmoded, the future is dim indeed.
Education not outmoded
Recalling the death of peer brings tears
It was a Tuesday. I was in the eighth grade and sitting in English class. Our spelling lesson was due.
fracticating the art of procrastination at an early age, my pages were blank. Sophia was in the same predicament. Our only hope was that the teacher wouldn't make us turn them in, only exchange the books so they would be graded by a classmate — in this case each other. As luck would have it the old bag didn't feel like collecting them. I smiled.
KATHY KIPP
Feeling pretty smug, I turned back toward the teacher. At that moment the kid in front of me turned around. His name was Matt Brile. Everyone thought he was a dork.
COLUMNIST
"Kathy, will you exchange books with me, please. No one will exchange with me."
I should have seen something in the look he gave me, but I didn't. He turned around and started to cry.
What was I supposed to do? I had certain loyalties. "Sorry, but no. I am grading Sophia's."
It was a Monday. It was my senior year, and I was sitting in Calculus class. My homework was done. I turned to see if Jeremy had done his.
"Yeah, I did it. Did you hear yet?"
"Hear what?"
"Well, I guess you didn't. Do you remember Matt Brile? He went to South. The one you made cry. Well, him and his father were headed to Nebraska and he fell asleep at the wheel. They crashed into an embankment. They've both dead."
I saw Matt, that look he gave me. I turned around and I started to cry.
I was searching for claims over $50,000. The Total Experience (Payment) for one claim was one dollar. Astonished I looked to see what the summary said.
Matthew Brile, age: 17, sex: male,
vehicle: truck, source: ran off roadway
(driver), description: FATAL
ACCIDENT-one vehicle.
It was a Thursday. It was this past summer and I was sitting in my cubicle at the office. The Penksen Truck Leasing Co. claims were due.
If I would have done my homework,
if I would have told him why I couldn't
exchange, would I have cried?
I started to cry.
One dollar. That's all.
Sometimes I wonder why I cried. I never really knew Matt. The only thing that ever tied us together was that day when he walked away humiliated and I walked away guilty.
I don't know. That's what scares me.
Kathy Kipp is a Woodridge, Ill., sophomore in English.
Mixed Media
THE GOATEE AND BLACK CLOTHES...
ONE YOUNG PERSON'S STATEMENT
AGAINST THE RAMPANT ROBOTIC
CONFORMITY OF OUR TIME...
By Jack Ohman
© 1984 Tiburon Media Services, Inc.
As Rights Reserved
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 12, 1994
5A
KU welcomes diversity
By Nathan Olson
Kansan staff writer
For Nina Luchterhand, Hamburg,
Germany, graduate student, leaving
Hamburg for a year means seeing the
sun.
"I've been at KU a month, and since that time, I don't think it's stopped raining in Hamburg," said Luchter-hand, whose Fulbright scholarship will allow her to study at the University of Kansas this year.
Luchterhand was one of approximately 150 people who attended a reception for visiting international scholars yesterday at the Central Court of the Spencer Museum of Art.
The reception, which has taken place each year for the past nine years, was sponsored by the Office of International Studies and Phi Beta Delta, the honorary society for international students.
The reception is held for visiting faculty, researchers and special graduate students, such as Fulbright
scholarship recipients.
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, attended the reception. He said the event was designed to introduce international scholars to the University and the University of Kansas Medical Center.
"The reception gives scholars the chance to meet faculty from other disciplines," he said.
Interaction between permanent KU faculty members and visiting international scholars is important, said Michael Doudoroff, professor of Spanish and Portuguese.
"There are so many international activities on campus which have been growing steadily over the years that some point of contact is extremely useful," he said.
The purpose of the reception was two-fold, said Terry Weidner, acting dean of international studies.
"First, we want to welcome international folks to KU," he said. "Second, we want to let them become aware of the cultural opportunities at KU."
The scholars were welcomed by Chancellor Del Shankel. Shankel told them that they had a rich diversity of opportunities available to them at KU.
Some cultural opportunities were presented in short speeches. The directors of the art museum, the Lied Center and the University Theatre spoke about current and forthcoming events.
Hodgie Bricke, assistant director of international studies, said the reception gave the administrators a chance to meet international students.
"This reception is the only time the University recognizes in one place that there are more than 200 international students at KU," she said.
For Nina Luchterhand, who is studying art theory this year, the reception made her feel more comfortable about being at KU.
"In Germany, I feel pretty anonymous," she said. "Here, I'm more familiar to people."
Homeless will eat free at cafe
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
In October, a new restaurant will open in Lawrence — a restaurant that will serve free breakfast every week.
But not just anybody can eat in the Jubilee Cafe, which is scheduled to open Oct. 11. The cafe will serve free breakfast Tuesday mornings to Lawrence's homeless and destitute. And the organizers need KU student volunteers to serve and interact with the customers.
The idea comes from a former chapain of the Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana St., said the Rev. Joe Alford, current chapain, Julia Easley, the former chapain, started a service in Iowa City, Iowa, which served free breakfast to the homeless once each week. Instead of the long lines in soup kitchens, customers could sit down at a table and select from a menu.
So Alford and Neya Koury, Iowa City, Iowa, senior who worked at Easley's restaurant in Summer 1993, decided to start one of their own in Lawrence. About 30 homeless people
would be issued free membership cards through various social service offices in Lawrence that allowed them to eat free at the cafe.
"It was such a different approach to helping people in need of a meal," Koury said. "It's a way to serve people with a little more dignity."
Koury said the cafe would serve an important function. In soup kitchens, the homeless sometimes can feel like they are part of a mass, she said. In the cafe, they can feel like individuals.
"We're not trying to put down soup kitchens, Koury said. "They're doing a good deed. But they're just not personal. It's more of a human, personal approach to getting a free meal."
Koury also said the food would be better than the peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwiches the homeless often eat — sandwiches the homeless call "choke sandwiches" because they are difficult to eat.
Alford said the cafe would benefit both the volunteers and those who eat there. Servers would learn that homeless are individuals, not a mass of faceless people.
with the guests and get involved with them," Alford said.
The cafe would allow students to get directly involved in their volunteer work, not work in an office or do menial tasks. Alford said.
"One of the things I fight against is adults ignoring college students," he said. "We want the students to be the servers. We don't want to be a church project."
"We want the students to sit down
The cafe, which will be in the Trinity Episcopal Church, 1101 Vermont St., will be sponsored by the Canterbury House and through a $500 grant from the Episcopal Diocese of Kansas, Alford said.
Jenny Baker, Lawrence senior and a volunteer for the cafe, said something as simple as a nice environment for breakfast and a choice of food could affect the cafe's guests.
"If they are helped and treated well, it could be a springboard to gaining empowerment, so they can do something else and get on track," she said.
Students interested in volunteering can contact Alford at the Canterbury House, 843-8202.
Accepted at more schools than you were.
It's everywhere you want to be.
BUY ONE & GET ONE FREE! From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza
FREE PIZZA
Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area) 842-3232
VISA
321472054109056
PLUS VISA
(of course!)
TURN
SPECIAL COUPON
14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL)
SPECIAL COUPON
PYRAMID PIZZA
MONDAY MANIA
Buy Any PYRAMID PIZZA & Get
The Second Pizza (of equal value)
FREE!
PYRAMID
"We Pale Is Our"
THE HARBOUR
LIGHTS
Featuring
the original
32 oz. Jam Jar
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
Reach KU
Reach KU advertise in the University Daily Kansan
YOU CAN BE ANYTHING YOU WANT TO BE
AEROBICS with
AEROBICS with BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility
- Nautilus & Freeweights
- Reebok Step
- Personal Fitness Training
- Reebok Step
* Stairmasters/Treadmill
- Stairmasters/Treadmill * 60 Aerobic classes per week
* Presidents' Workshop * 2 Aerobics classes
FIRST VISIT FREE!
Buy 1 Year, Get 1 Year FREE
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
You asked for it,
We've got it!
Dive Into Shark's
Lawrence's only Stussy dealer
SHARK'S
SURF SHOP
Kansas City
Bannister Mall
(913) 763 - 6208
Lawrence
701 W 9th
(9th and Indiana)
841-8289
Mission,KS
6518 Martway
(913) 432-0707
Jumping
You asked for it,
We've got it!
SHARK'S
JUICE SHOP
Last Day for
Full Bus Pass Refunds
September 12th
4th Floor Kansas Union
KU on Wheels Office
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
K
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
6A
Monday, September 12, 1994
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Crash site clean-up takes toll on workers
Crews rotate duties to alleviate stress
The Associated Press
ALIQUIPPA, Pa. — The physical rigors are only part of the demands shouldered by recovery crewstoiling at the site of a catastrophic plane crash.
Inoculations against hepatitis and tetanus are required before putting on protective body suits, rubber boots, gloves and face masks.
There's also the psychological strain of sifting through the disintegrated airliner to find what fragments remain scattered over a two-square-mile area.
"We deal with death and injury on a day-to-day basis. But when it gets to a scale like this, it definitely comes into focus. Unless you've been there or seen it, it's hard to describe," said Steve Bailey, a Beaver County paramedic who has assisted in the recovery work since USAir Flight 427 crashed Thursday night.
"Most of us have a mechanism to deal with it. We'll probably talk about this one for a while," he said.
Talking about it is one of the best ways to defuse the time bomb of stress, according to mental health experts.
Psychological debriefings at a makeshift center inside a mall restaurant are as much a part of
the daily routine for recovery workers as a water break or a hot meal.
Recovery worker Mike New with Medic Rescue of Beaver County unwinds at the end of the day by talking with his wife, also a paramedic, or his mother, a firefighter.
"As long as you talk about it, it helps people cope," New said.
Recovery of the remains is expected to be completed tonight. They are placed in body bags and stored in refrigerated trucks for transport to a temporary morgue.
There are three 20-person crews retrieving remains from a wooded hillside six miles northwest of the Pittsburgh International Airport, the destination of the doomed flight.
Crews are rotated every two hours to give them water and rest, and a respite from what is a dirty, smelly task. Some of them smear fragrant balm on their upper lip to mask the.
The hills are so steep that crews rappel into two ravines to lift remains by baskets attached to ropes.
"It takes a special breed," said John Kaus, the Allegheny County fire marshal who supervises the work crews and helped in the recovery of bodies from the Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas. "They're caring people, but they have that toughness, that extra layer."
CRASH OF FLIGHT 427
Crash causes investigated
Areas Investigators are checking:
Rudder:
Turned four to six inches to the right
Thrust reversers: One right engine thruster found to have deployed, possibly throwing into reverse
What are they?:
Pilot uses thrust reversers to slow plane for landing
SOURCE: AP
"McDonnell Commercial Aircraft."
Cause of USAir plane crash remains under speculation
The Associated Press
ALIQUIPPA, Pa. — The possibility that a jet engine thrust reverser or a misfunctioning rudder caused the deadly crash of USAir Flight 427 is merely speculation, investigators cautioned yesterday.
National Transportation Safety Board member Carl Vogt urged people not to read too much into the discovery that one of six devices that activate thrust reversers on the right engine of the Boeing 737 was found in a deployed position.
"In the event of an inadvertent deployment of the thrust reversers you would expect to see some reaction in the engine, and we don't see that," Vogt said.
Thrust reversers are used to slow a plane after it lands and can only be deplowed by the pilot.
A cautionary note also was sounded by John Nance, an air safety analyst in Seattle and 20-year commercial airline pilot.
"Anyone ... who jumps to a conclusion or even a preliminary conclusion based on early evidence is going to be embarrassed later." Nance said, "I've been there."
Nance said the possibility of a problem with the right engine's thrust reverser didn't make sense because witnesses said the plane dipped left.
The jet crashed Thursday night six miles from Pittsburgh International Airport as it was preparing to land. The plane plunged 6,000 feet in 23 seconds, hit the ground at more than 300 mph and killed all 132 people aboard.
Boeing representative Steve Thieme said no problems ever have been reported with thrust reversers on Boeing 737s.
"We'll assist the NTSB in any way we can to help determine the cause of this crash," he said.
Violence breaks out in Rwandan camps
The Associated Press
GOMA, Zaire — The United Nations issued emergency safety guidelines yesterday to all foreign aid workers in eastern Zaire after violent clashes in Rwandan refugee camps left up to 10 people dead and scores injured.
"We are reaching a very critical security situation," said Albert J. Kuiper, the security adviser to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees in Goma. About 1.2 million Rwandan Hutu refugees have taken shelter in eastern Zaire.
The strict new regulations call for aid workers to travel only in groups, keep the radio security channel always open, park vehicles for quick departure and not run in panic.
Kuiper said he was against bringing in U.N. protection.
"I don't want to bring an army here. In a situation like this, they are bound to open fire, and if that happens, it will be our end," he said. "This place is so lawless that our own soldiers will be killed the moment they empty their ammunition."
"I saw lots of soldiers firing and a mob of refugees attacking them with stones," said Wendy Driscoll, one of 12 aid workers stranded by the violence. They spent the night in a Swedish-run shelter 21/2 miles from the Kibumba camp, which now holds
On Saturday evening, thousands of Rwandan refugees clashed with Zairian soldiers in Kibumba, the largest camp in eastern Zaire. Witnesses and U.N. radio reported seeing up to 10 bodies.
340,000 Rwandan refugees.
"It looked like a running battle between the refugees and the soldiers," said Driscoll, a CARE-USA aid worker from Atlanta.
The trouble in Kibamba, 13 miles northwest of Goma, started Saturday afternoon when some Zairian soldiers tried to seize a Rwandan-owned car.
Infuriated refugees drove soldiers away with sticks and stones and took one of the soldiers hostage.
The soldiers returned with reinforcements. Witnesses said the soldiers first had fired in the air and then into the crowd.
"Our field staff saw at least two bodies and lots of patches of blood," said an aid official of the World Food Program. "A 1-kilometer stretch of road was littered with stones," he said, speaking condition of anonymity.
But U.N. radio reports from field staff, monitored by The Associated Press, spoke of up to 10 bodies of refugees in the camp.
Another refugee mob detained a Reuters television news crew in the camp for several hours yesterday and accused them of spying.
Cuba prepares to curb tide of boat people
"We were very near to death," said Reuter cameraman Andrew Njorge. "The mob chanted death threats after accusing us of being spies."
Njorge and soundman Antony Njuguna, both Kenyans, were asked by a group of Hutu militiamen to show their passports. "For two hours it was like facing death," Njuguna said. They were later released.
The Associated Press
metal into the surf.
HAVANA — The ranks of boat people fleeing Cuba dwindled yesterday as police banned the building of homemade rafts and prepared to halt the exodus altogether.
"We're lucky, we're the last," said Maria Rodriguez, munching bread while her fellow rafters hauled their vessel of inner tubes and welded
Cuba and the United States settled their differences last week over the thousands of Cubans who have fled hunger and poverty in their communist country this year.
Under the deal reached Friday, the U.S. administration will admit at least 20,000 Cubans a year. In return, Cuba promised to halt the flight of boat people and gave rafters until tomorrow to remove their crafts.
They ignored vessels already on the rocky beach, and rafts were still being launched into the ocean.
S&Ls still lobbying to break into piggy bank
But police stepped up patrols yesterday near Cojimar, a Havana neighborhood that has been one of the main departure sites for the raffers. A few officers strolled along the shore to make sure no one brought more boats onto the beach.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Just as the savings and loan industry is enjoying its most robust health in years, its lobbyists have begun quietly campaigning for one more multibillion-dollar installment of taxpayer aid.
the Depression, is scheduled to finish by the end of next year. It will have spent $92 billion.
The Resolution Trust Corp., the agency created in 1989 to clean up the nation's worst financial mess since
According to the congressional General Accounting Office, that it is $13 billion less than the $105 billion it was given.
But Rep. Jim Leach, R-Iowa, said the bad news that was S&Ls want a sizable portion of the leftover money — even though only one had failed so
far this year and the industry so far had earned $2 billion in profits.
After the RTC is history, a new Savings Association Insurance Fund, financed by S&L-paid premiums and managed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., will be responsible for paying for failures.
At midyear, it had $1.7 billion, but that is only about one-fifth of what it ought to have by law.
Pope preaches in Croatia
The Associated Press
ZAGREB, Croatia — A frail but determined Pope John Paul II pushed ahead yesterday on his pilgrimage of reconciliation to the former Yugoslavia, urging Croatians to make peace with Muslims and Serbs.
A crowd of at least 800,000 people turned out for an open-air Mass at a race track in Zagreb, capital of predominantly Roman Catholic Croatia. It was the only stop on what the pope had planned as a wider tour to help heal the wounds of three years of bloodshed in the former Yugoslavia.
But he repeated a promise to visit Sarajevo, a trip he hoped to make last Thursday, "as soon as circumstances allow." The pope spoke briefly with Sarajevo Archbishop Vinko Pulicj at the Zagreb airport yesterday evening before boarding
the jetliner that returned him to Rome.
Walking with a cane since breaking his leg in a fall in April, the 74-year-old pontifit appeared haggard during a morning meeting with President Franjo Tudjman and the three-hour Mass that followed.
"He's in good spirits, but his leg is bothering him," said the Rev. Roberto Tucci, chief organizer of papal trips.
The pope used an elevator to reach the altar, avoiding the 27 stairs the other celebrants climbed. State television said nearly 1 million faithful were on hand for the Mass held under a blazing sun, though organizers said the figure was closer to 800,000.
About 3,000 of them were handicapped, most of them young men who had lost limbs or been seriously wounded during Croatia's 1991 civil war.
Award given in Kennedy's name
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, who led investigations into the faltering savings and loan industry and U.A.S. aid to Iraq, received the Profile in Courage Award yesterday at the John F. Kennedy Library.
"He and I came from different worlds, but we traveled a common path; we shared the same goals," said Gonzalez, the Texas Democrat who entered Congress the same year Kennedy became president.
"For me to receive any recognition in his name is a greater honor than I could have ever dreamed."
the president's children, John F. Kennedy Jr. and Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg, presented the silver lantern award, which honors people who have shown political courage. The annual ceremony was postponed from May 23 — the day former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was buried.
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
bounce
off the
walls.
Jaybowl ARCADE
pinball, pool hall,
video games galore!
864-3545 • kansas union • level 1
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 P.M. ADULTS $3.00
(UNTED FOR SSAINTING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
RAY-BAN
BY HARDWARE BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
MAINTENANCE AND GUILD
Sunglasses
for DRIVING
928 Mass. 843-0611
The Etc. Shop
Maverick P0-13 9:45, 7:20, 9:50
I Love Trouble P6 5:00, 7:30, 9:50
NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing
A woman in white dress stands on the beach. She holds a plate in her hands and looks at the camera.
fill your soul in Natural Fiber Clothing
Downtown Lawrence
820-822 Mass. 841-0100
Natural Fiber Clothing
Let the Rhythm of the City
Stitch On Needlework Shop
FALL CLASSES
Beginning Quilting-7 weeks
Monday 10am-12, $31 plus supplies
Beginning Quilting-7 weeks
Monday 7-9pm, $31 plus supplies
Beginning Quilting-7 weeks
Tuesday 7-9pm, $31 plus supplies
926 Mass St.
842-1101
Choosing Colors for your qt. lit-
Oct. 26, 7-9pm, $8 plus supplies
Water Color Workshop- Oct. 1,
10:30-4:30 pm, $25 plus supplies
Machine Applique Pillow- 3 weeks,
Wed 7-9pm, $19 plus supplies
MORE CLASSES AVAILABLE-CALLORSTOP IN FOR INFORMATION OR TO SIGN UP
--edition
WALNUT VALLEY FESTIVAL 23RD NATIONAL FLAT-PICKING CHAMPIONSHIPS September 15,16,17,18,1994
WINFIELD, KANSAS
FEATURING IN PERSON:
- John McCutcheon
* California
- PLATFORME
John McCutcheon
- Tom Chapin
* Frost Range
- Front Range
- Ranch Romance
Marley's Ghost
Stephen Bennett
Art Thieme
Andy Max
- Nonesuch
- Barry Patton
- Linda Tilton
**MARKET PRICES**
Weekend (4-day) $55
2-day Fri./Sat. $40
Sat./Sun. $30
Fri. or Sat. $20
Sun. (Gate only) $10
- Lou Held, Terry Baucon & Caroli
* Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer
* St. James's Gate
* Colm O'Moiseleigh
* Spontaneous Combustion
* Cooper, Nelson & Goek
* Druuh Träva/Second Grass
* Duck Baker & Molly Andrews
* Winfield Regional Symphony
* Crow Johnson
*Children ages 6-11…83 each, payable to age onset早期的 NOTET.
*Children under 6 admitted free with
FESTIVAL GATE AND
CAMPOUNDS WILL OPEN
THURS, SEPT. 8 AT 6:00 A.M.
TICKETHOLDERS ALLOWED
ON GROUNDS PRIOR TO
MIDNIGHT THURS, SEPT. 18.
ADVANCE TICKETS
GUARANTEE ADMISSION
No mail orders on Sept. 16th.
Orders received after Sept. 1
will be held at Gate.
NO REFUNDS.
WV
OUR SKIP'S
ARTS &
STUDIES
4 STAGES IN OPERATION,
WELL, POLICED GROUNDS
NO ANIMALS, NO REER OR
ALCOHOL, NO DRUGS
AND NO MOTORCYCLES
(DUE TO NOISE)
SETTINGS
Please Write Here to Control Rates
Contents are Limited to 40
Contestants per Contest.
42,192 IN CONTEST PRIZES
FOR MORE INFORMATION WRITE OR CALL
walnut valley association, inc.
P.O. Box 245N 918 Main Phone (316) 221-3250
Winfield, Kansas 67156
This will be BEST FESTIVAL IN THE U.S. this year!!!
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1994
SECTION B
'Hawks turn out the lights on Spartans
S
Damian Manson, Michigan State strong safety, tackles Kansas junior wide receiver Ashuahel Smith in the first quarter of Saturday night's game. Smith, who missed the season opener against Houston because of a shoulder injury, started the game and led all Kansas receivers with 5 receptions for 51 yards.
A
Kansas senior quarterback Asheikh Presti emulates a Michigan State defender. In using the option play, Preston compiled 72 yards on 13 attempts.
Run or pitch? Option effective for Preston
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
The Spartans could not stop it.
Sometimes they could not even see it.
In Kansas 17-10 victory over the Michigan State Spartans on Saturday, nothing dominated the Michigan State defense more than the Jayhawks' use of the option, Michigan State coach George Perles said.
"The option hurt us." he said.
"We couldn't contain them on the option," Spartan strong safety Damian Manson said.
The Jayhawks used the option successfully to open the second half and score what became the game-winning touchdown. Quarterback Asheli Preston capped the 74-yard scoring drive with a quarterback keeper from the one-yard line. Kansas took a 14-10 lead over the Spartans with 9:33 left in the third quarter and never looked back.
In running the option, Preston compiled 72 yards on 13 attempts, 36 yards of which were compiled during the opening drive of the second half.
The Michigan State defense had problems not only containing Preston on the option but finding him, Spartan outside linebacker Ike Reese said. The Spartan linebackers said they had difficulty seeing over the tall linemen on both teams to pick up the progression of the play.
Reese said Michigan State got its signals crossed several times on defensive coverage.
"We got a little confused out there," he said. "We didn't know who had the quarterback or the pitch man."
The Spartans were playing their season opener on Saturday, but the Jayhawks opened their season more than a week ago. Perles said the lack of actual game experience might have resulted in some of the Spartans' confusion.
"It looked like first-game jitters," Perles said.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said he knew early in the game that the option would be an important element if the Jawhaws were to win.
"I told them this week the option would be the key," Mason said.
Kansas' extensive use of the option was in stark contrast to its offensive philosophy in the game against Houston Sept. 1.
The benefits of option were nearly overshadowed by a head injury that
knocked Preston out of the game. The injury came as Preston was scrambling down field during an option play in the fourth quarter.
In their 35-13 victory over the Cougars, the Jayhawks used their running game and four different running backs to overpower the hapless Houston defense.
Preston did not return for the remainder of the game but was cleared to return after the trainers examined him. In the end, Mason had the final say.
"He's OK," Mason said. "He just got his bell rung a little bit."
Kansas overcomes mistakes outlasts Michigan State 17-10
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
a bigger test. A bigger victory. Nine more games to go.
"We have to deal with success," Kansas coach Glen Mason said of his team's 2-0 start. "We have to play in one week. I live for 11 Saturdays each fall."
The Kansas football team defeated Big Ten conference foe Michigan State 17-10 Saturday night in front of 48,100 in Memorial Stadium — the largest crowd to watch a home opener since 1988.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said this game would be a much bigger test, and it was.
The Kansas defense rose to the challenge, stopping the Spartans on their last drive to sustain the seven-point lead.
In defeating Michigan State, Kansas captured its first-ever victory against the Spartans, snapping a string of five losses.
The victory also marked the Jayhawks' first defeat of a Big Ten conference team since 1976, when they defeated Wisconsin.
After giving up 361 total yards to an inexperienced Houston team two weeks ago, the Kansas defense returned Saturday and made key stops after Jayhawk turnovers. The defense did not allow the Spartans to score in the second half.
"It was evident we came to play once again," Mason said. "Our defense came out strong."
The first of two important Kansas
scoring drives began with 2:24 left in the first half. Down 10-0, Kansas marched 70 yards on 4 rushes and 4 passes. The Jayhawks opened the second half by rushing 74 yards on 12 plays. On these two drives, senior fullback Costello Good ran for 53 of his 66 shots and scored over half
he 30 yards
Asheli Preston
ran for 45 of his
72 rushing yards.
Statistically, the performance was Good's best ever as a Jayhawk.
"I was surprised myself," Good said of how much he got to run the ball.
"I just tried to run hard," he said. "We have some of the best
INSIDE
A roundup of highlights from other Big Eight football games this weekend — Page 2B
Summary of the key plays and events in the Hawks' victory over the Spartans — Page 2B
linemen in the country."
As a whole, the Jayhawks gained 243 yards on the ground, including 86 yards on 24 carries by sophomore running back June Henley. Henley moved to 19th on the Kansas all-time career rushing list with the performance.
Before the two drives, both teams committed mistakes and turnovers.
Mason said he was proud of how Kansas did not give up after turning over the ball three times in the first quarter.
"We didn't beat ourselves," Mason said. "We were able to overcome those mistakes."
The Associated Press Top 25 College Football Poll
First place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 10, total points based on 25 points for a first place vote through one point for a 25th place vote, and ranking in previous poll:
rank team record pts. prev
1. Florida (27) 2-0-0 1492 2
2. Nebraska (22) 2-0-0 1483 1
3. Florida St. (5) 2-0-0 1384 4
4. Michigan (2) 2-0-0 1370 6
5. Miami (1) 2-0-0 1283 5
6. Pern St. (2) 2-0-0 1239 8
7. Colorado 2-0-0 1239 8
8. Notre Dame 1-1-0 1195 7
9. Arizona (2) 2-0-0 1091 9
10. Wisconsin 2-0-0 1091 10
11. Auburn 2-0-0 918 12
12. Alabama (1) 2-0-0 877 11
13. UCLA 2-0-0 792 13
14. Texas A&M 2-0-0 785 16
15. Tennessee 1-1-0 649 19
16. N. Carolina 1-0-0 582 17
17. Texas 2-0-0 575 20
18. Virginia Tech 2-0-0 473 21
19. Washington 1-1-0 346 25
20. Southern Cal 1-1-0 335 14
21. Oklahoma 1-1-0 233 15
22. BYU 2-1-0 197 —
23. Ohio St. 2-1-0 158 —
24. Wash. St. 2-1-0 130 —
25. N. Car. St. 2-0-0 128 —
Others receiving votes: Kansas
109, Kansas State 53, Boston
College 43, Baylor 40, Illinois 32,
Indiana 26, Georgia 20,
Syracuse 16, Georgia Tech 12, Iowa
11, San Diego State 11, Virginia
11, Rutgers 8, Worthville 8, LSU
7, Utah 5, Stanford 4, Clemson
3, Pittsburgh 1, Western Michigan 1.
Volleyball team takes loss; players value experience
By Chesley Dohl Kansan sportswriter
Katie Walsh is just one Kansas volleyball player who says she would trade a few losses early in the season for the experience of playing tough opponents.
"We're taking steps forward but we have a long way to go," said Walsh, sophomore outside hitter. "Hopefully by conference play, we'll have put the whole thing together when it really counts."
Kansas competed in the the Southwest Missouri State Tournament Friday and Saturday, leaving Springfield, Mo., with a 3-5 overall record. Kansas netted its only victory against Tulsa and finished the tournament in third place behind Montana and SMSU respectively.
But come conference play, Walsh and the rest of the Jayhawks hope to put that experience to the test.
Kansas opened with a match against Montana on Friday. Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said the Jayhawks were unfocused.
"We were a little shaky and started out slow," Schonewise said. "We didn't communicate very well and we weren't playing very aggressive."
Walsh and freshman setter Tiffany Sennett, Kansas came back to test Montana in the second and third matches, 10-15, 10-15.
Kansas struggled in the first match against Montana and lost, 1,15. But thanks to intense play from
Walsh said she felt good about the tournament and although the team is making strides forward, Walsh said the major obstacle in winning consistently was the lack of knowing each other's abilities on the court.
"We have all the physical ability.
We just need to work on playing well together as a team," she said.
"It's going to take some time until we start clicking."
Blocking was the key to the victory against Tulsa as Kansas defeated Tulsa in three straight games, 15-5, 15-11, and 15-4.
Junior outside hitter Jenny Larson was named to the All-Tournament team, her second All-Tournament honor of the season including the Colorado State Tournament Sept. 2-3.
After a slow start Friday, Kansas regrouped and went into Saturday's play against Tulsa and SMSU with confidence and noise.
Chonewise said net play from Walsh and freshman Maggie Mohrfeld, who combined for 13 blocks, cemented the Kansas victory.
Kansas ended the tournament against Southwest Missouri State and dropped three straight games, 13-15, 9-15, 9-15.
Cox ran one of his best races ever in defeating Eric Mark of the Air Force Academy by more than 10 seconds for the championship.
Kansas runners defeat defending champs
Cox said the meet had a special, personal significance.
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
Both liked what they saw as the Kansas men's team defeated the defending national champion Arkansas Razorbacks, 52-54.
Kansas coaches and athletes said they wanted to test the team's fitness level Saturday at the Jayhawk Invitational at Rim Rock Farm.
"Some teams like to start off slow," said senior runner and meet champion Michael Cox. "We jump in with both feet."
"It was the last time I'll race here," Cox said. "I got a little choked up about it."
The Air Force Academy, Southern Illinois and Missouri rounded out the top five places in the men's race.
The women's team came in second to Arkansas, scoring 54 points, 18 points in front of the Razorbacks. Rounding out the top five schools were Southern Illinois, Missouri and the Air Force Academy.
The lowest score wins in cross country, with points awarded to the top five runners. Points are given according to the place the runner finishes. For example, a first-place runner gets one point while second place gets two points.
"I was impressed with the way the teams kept fighting
Both Cox and Johnston said they were pleased with the team's performance and that they thought the race would give them some national recognition.
"I think it says a lot about our team that when I hurt my foot, Brian was able to step up and take over for me," Johnston said. "That way it didn't hurt when I fell off a little."
The men's team benefited from Arkansas' decision to hold three top runners out of Saturday's competition to give younger runners a chance to compete. That helped three Kansas runners place in the top 10.
"The competition was a little less than I expected," said David Johnston, team co-captain, who finished seventh. "But I think we ran a little better than I expected."
Johnston, who injured his right foot on a rock on the course, finished behind teammates Brian Schultz, who finished fourth, and Cox.
"Beating Arkansas might help us get into the national rankings." Cox said.
Assistant coach Steve Guyon said that he liked the way both of his teams competed.
back," Guymon said. "It's a tough course. I'm very pleased with how we ran against Arkansas."
This year, Arkansas had more of a struggle to repeat as meet champions.
Last year Arkansas dominated the women's meet with four of the top five runners crossing the finish line all at the same time.
↑
Senior co-captain Melissa Swartz was Kansas' top runner, finishing fifth behind meet champion Meghan Flowers from Arkansas. Flowers finished more than 40 seconds ahead of her closest competitor.
Kansas and Southern Illinois each had three top-10 finishers, Arkansas had two. Arkansas was able to put enough runners in the top 20 places to win the meet, however.
"This was the best race I've had on this course," Swartz said. "I think I'm capable of running better though."
She said she was very pleased with the team's progress to this point in the season. Swartz said that the times weren't as important in this race because of the difficulty of the course.
"We placed our top three runners in fifth, sixth and seventh," she said. "We're just going to get stronger as the season goes on."
V
Sean Crosier / KANSAN
HAPPY HUNTER
Sophomore runner Josh Weber checks his watch as he crosses the finish line at the Jayhawk Invitational. The men's team defeated the defending national champion Arkansas Razorbacks Saturday at Rim Rock Farm.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 12, 1994
2B
BIG EIGHT FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
KU
Jayhawks use speed, pride to overcome early errors
S
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
The first half was full of missed opportunities for both teams, but the Jayhawk defense kept the Spartans from capitalizing on multile Kansas turnovers.
After forcing Michigan State to punt after three plays on the first possession of the game, the Jayhawks marched down the field. Kansas moved the ball from its own 44 yard line to the Spartan's 10 where senior wide receiver Rodney Harris fumbled. Michigan State recovered the ball on its own 8-yard line.
Starting with good field position, the Spartans went 51 yards on 9 plays, settling for a field goal.
The Kansas defense stopped the Spartans' on three plays and then junior cornerback Dorian Brew fumbled the Spartans' punt and Michigan State recovered at its own 41.
Two plays later, Kansas senior quarterback Ashlei Preston was intercepted at the Jayhawk 37-yard line by Spartan senior strong safety Damian Manson. Manson returned the ball to the Kansas 25.
Michigan State could not get past the Jayhawk 18-yard line and missed a 37-ward goal goal attempt.
"When you get the ball down there, you've got to get seven," Michigan State offensive coordinator Morris Watts said. "That's a moral victory."
The Jayhawks also had trouble capitalizing on offense. After turning the ball over three times in the first quarter, the Jayhawks failed to convert a fourth-and-two at the Spartans 36-yard line and then missed a 34-yard field goal in the second quarter.
Coming off Michigan State's missed field goal, the Jayhawks marched to the Spartans' 36-yard line and came up about one foot short on fourth down. After a penalty against Michigan State on the next play, the Spartans' junior quarterback Tony Banks was intercepted by Kansas senior strong safety Gerald McBurrows at the Spartans' 38-yard line. McBurrows returned the ball to the Spartans' 21.
Kansas only moved the ball four yards before freshman place kicker Jeff McCord missed his first career field goal attempt — a 34-yard effort.
Late in the half, both teams finally began to capitalize on their opportunities.
On a 47-yard punt by the Jayhawks, Spartan senior wide receiver Mill Coleman returned the ball 63 yards to the Kansas 18-yard line.
Michigan State junior running back Duane Goulbourne scored a touchdown after three running plays, and the Spartans took a 10-10 lead. Goulbourne rushed for 109 yards on 25 carries.
"When they scored on us, it made us mad," Kansas senior linebacker Don Davis said. "From the media all we heard all week was that they were going to manhandle us."
The Spartans did not score the rest of the game.
Michigan State passed the 50-yard line on offense only twice in the second half. The first drive ended when Kansas senior free safety Kwame Lassiter intercepted the ball at the Jayhawk 31. The second drive ended when Michigan State failed to get a first down on its last possession of the game. The drive ended at the Jayhawk 32-yard line.
The Kansas defense used its speed to counter the Spartans' size on offense.
"I thought they hung in there tremendously," Mason said of the Kansas defense. "We aren't very big, but our Hawks are fast."
The Jayhawks used their speed and routinely moved McBurrows up to the line of scrimmage to help with the run.
"We were just trying to get a little more weight up there," Mason said with a smile.
Most of Mason's post-game comments were said with a smile. Michigan State coach George Perless said he was also impressed by Kansas.
"KU is going to be something to be reckoned with in the Big Eight," Perles said. "I think Kansas did well, especially when they got the lead."
The Jayhawks took the lead when they marched 74 yards on the opening drive of the second half.
Perles also thought his team could have played better.
"It looked like first-game jitters," Perles said. "When you complete a shot of sixteen points, you don't expect to play well."
The Spartans' Banks completed only 8 of 22 passes for 71 yards and had two interceptions.
The Jayhawks scored their last points on a 43-yard field goal by McCord. After missing two earlier field goal attempts, McCord hit a final try with 3:57 left in the game. The Jayhawks stalled the Spartans' following drive and ran the clock out to end the game.
Big Eight teams flounder face must-win situations
MU, Iowa State and OU lose big; KU,NU enjoy wins
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Disasters are in progress in Columbia, Mo., and Ames, Iowa.
It could cost the Big Eight a coach in Ames.
Missouri, meanwhile, went up to Illinois and could not make a first down for 56 minutes in a 42-0 loss.
Iowa State lost its annual big game to Iowa 37-9, and fans weren't shy about what they thought of coach Jim Walden, who had predicted a turnaround year in his eighth season after succeeding Jim Criner.
“It's time he opened a bait shop next to Criner's place out in Iowa,” said Kirk Vander Leese of Winfield, Iowa, a 1987 alum.
"It's all talk and no play," said Howard Heckes of Iowa City. "I'd like to see him go."
In other Big Eight games, Kansas rallied to beat Michigan State 17-10 and No. 21 Oklahoma fell apart in the fourth quarter to drop a 36-14 decision to No. 14 Texas A&M.
The rest of the league was
idle. No. 2. Nebraska beat Texas Tech 42-16 on Thursday.
Missouri now faces a must-win situation at Houston on Saturday. The Tigers can't win on the road, and have games with West Virginia and Colorado staring them in the face after the game with the Cougars.
Missouri (0-2) got its initial first down with 3:39 left in the game, and was only able to cross midfield by recovering a fumble. The Illini (1-1) had 540 yards in offense, scoring three touchdowns in the final nine minutes of the second quarter and on their first possession of the third period.
"I was hoping they would line up and run at us and they did," said Missouri coach Larry Smith, who appears to have miscalculated the talent of his team. "But they ran right through us."
"When you give up 42 points and over 500 yards, you are missing a lot of tackles," Smith said.
Walden could only throw his hands in the air, scratch his head and otherwise search for a solution. "You just go, 'Wow, why is this happening to me?"
Illinois made 30 first downs and had 359 yards rushing.
Walden had been telling Cyclones fans that it would take time to bring Iowa State
BIG8 CONFERENCE
CONFERENCE
back because of scholarship sanctions imposed by the NCAA for violations under Criner's tenure.
People seem to be tired of waiting, especially after consecutive losses to Northern Iowa and the Hawkeves.
Iowa (2-0) committed three turnovers, but Iowa State (0-2) was worse with four.
Oklahoma had beaten A&M by 30 points last year, and the Aggies were out for blood this year.
"Revenge is a bad emotion, but respect is a much more positive emotion and we had respect for Oklahoma because they beat us convincingly last year," said coach R.C. Slocum.
The Aggies (2-0) had three sacks, three interceptions and recovered two fumbles in winning its 21st straight game at home.
"I was amazed how we stopped their running game with only 85 yards," said defensive coordinator Tommy Tuberville, in his first season. "This game was for Slocum after what happened last year."
Michigan wins with last-second field goal
The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — There was another miracle come under the Golden Dome on Saturday. Only this time, Notre Dame was the victim instead of the victor.
Reny Hamilton kicked four field goals, including a 42-yarder with 2 seconds left, to give sixth-ranked Michigan a 26-24 victory over No. 3 Notre Dame in a sensational seesaw game.
"Every kicker thinks about making a winning field goal," said Hamilton, a redshirt sophomore from Boca Raton, Fla., who had attempted only one field goal in his career prior to Saturday. "I'm a hero now. I could be a goat next week."
"It seems like Notre Dame does it to us every time," said Michigan senior quarterback Todd Collins. "When we
had an opportunity to get the ball back. I said, 'Ok, let's to them.'
- Michigan has been victimized by several Notre Dame comebacks since the series resumed in 1978, including a late touchdown pass by Rick Mirer in 1990 and Reggie Ho's winning field goal in 1988. But this time it was the Wolverines (2-0) staging an amazing rally to beat the Irish (1-1) for only the second time since 1987.
"I thought we had won it," said Powlus, who was 15-of-27 for 187 yards and two touchdowns.
Ron Powhus, Notre Dame's highly touted sophomore quarterback, looked like he would be the hero after throwing a 7-yard touchdown pass to Derrick Mayes with 52 se. onds left to put the Irish ahead 24-23.
But Collins, who was 21-of-29 for 224 yards and one touchdown, came up with some heroes of his own. He opened the winning drive with a 15-yard scramble, then completed three passes as Michigan drove to the Notre Dame 24 before Hamilton booted his final goal.
Collins was in the grasp of an Irish defender when he threw the last pass, a 9-yarder to Seth Smith, who dove out of bounds with 7 seconds left.
Notre Dame then called a timeout as the play clock was about to expire because the Irish thought they had an extra man on the field. The delay didn't bother Hamilton.
"I was out there stretching, trying not to think about what this kick meant," he said. "Coach (Gary Moeller) just told me to go out there and make the kick."
As he was about to go on the field to attempt the kick, Hamilton got encouragement from Mike Gillette, a former Michigan kicker whose last-second miss of a 49-yard field goal allowed Notre Dame to escape with a 19-17 victory in 1988.
"Right before the kick, he came up to me and said, 'Come on, Remy, you can do it,'" said Hamilton, who made two 32-yarders and a 35-yarder against Notre Dame before his game-winning attempt.
Michigan fans stormed the field after the kick, but the game wasn't over until the Wolverines squibbed a kickoff and tackled Notre Dame's Pete Chryplewicz as time expired.
"This hurts," said Irish coach Lou Holtz. "It was a great comeback by Notre Dame, followed by a great comeback by Michigan."
Two of Hamilton's field goals were set up by fumbles in Irish tailback Lee Becton, who hadn't lost a fumble in 233 carries since the third game of the 1992 season.
Michigan's touchdows came on a 10-yard run by Tim Biakabutuka and a 3-yard pass from Collins to Jay Riemsma.
Aided by a pass interference call against Michigan's Tyrone Noble.
Notre Dame took a 17-10 lead in the third quarter on an 8-yard touchdown run by Marc Edwards. But Michigan rallied to take a 20-17 lead later in the period on the TD catch by Riemersma and Hamilton's 35-vard field goal.
Notre Dame took the opening kickoff and drove to the Michigan 15, where Stefan Schroffner booted a 32-vard field goal.
Michigan, playing without injured star running back Tyrone Wheatey, scored a touchdown on its first drive with the help of a freak play.
Facing a fourth-and-1 at the Notre Dame 12, Hamilton attempted a 29-vard field goal.
The kick was blocked by Irish cornerback Bobby Taylor, but Michigan's Che Foster caught the ball in the air behind the line of scrimmage and ran for a first down.
Two plays later, Biakabutuka burst up the middle for a TD that put the Wolverines ahead 7-3.
Notre Dame responded with an 80-yard, 14-play scoring drive that ended with a 1-yard pass from Powlus to Becton.
Powls rolled left and found a wide-
beacon Becton just over the goal line to
give the Irish a 10-7 lead with 1:11 left in
the first quarter.
By Steve Wilstein The Associated Press
Agassi batters Stich captures Open title
NEW YORK — Andre Agassi, navigating the most perilous path to the U.S. Open championship in history, battered Michael Stich from the start in yesterday's title match.
Agassi never lost his serve in his 6-1, 7-6(2) 7-5 victory, putting on a commanding show and beating the former Wimbledon champion in every phase of the game.
"I'm still in a state of shock," Agassi said after receiving the $550,000 winner's check and the silver trophy. Girlfriend Brooke Shields stood by, snapping photos of the moment.
"It it's quite amazing what I pulled off, 'Assagi said. "I can't believe it. It's been an incredible two weeks for me."
No unseeded player had ever run a gauntlet of five seeded players as Agassi did.
To win this title, Agassi had to beat, in order, No. 12 Wayne Ferreira, No. 6 Michael Chang, No. 13 Thomas Muster, No. 9 Todd Martin and No. 4 Stich.
The only other champion to beat five seeds was Vic Seixas in 1954, when 20 players were seeded.
No player ever won a Grand Slam tournament dressed like Agassi with his black cap, black shorts and black socks, nor did any other champion have his shoulder-length hair and gold earrings.
But the image is-everything Andre Boy once again proved there is substance behind his style, and it came in the form of rocketing returns of serve, compact ground strokes and all-court pressure.
He played better in this match than he did even in winning Wimbledon two years ago in five sets.
Agassi tossed away his racket and dropped to his knees when his last backhand into an open court sealed the match.
Agassi, 24, won Wimbledon in 1992 and reached the final of Grand Slam events two other times.
UNITY
Class on METAPHYSICS
"THE NATURE OF REALITY"
starts WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.
September 14
to
November 30
(12 week class)
Unity Church of Lawrence
416 Lincoln St. • 841-1447
"love offering"
--child care by reservation-changing, Quality doesn't. Classic styles by Woolrich backed by 160 years of experience. Shop Sunflower.
DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs"
*Unbarred since 1993*
*Imports & Domestics*
*Machine Shop Service*
*Parts Departments*
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
Since 1972 Lawrence's foremost name in outdoor clothing.
SUNFLOWER
Fashion has a way of
FLANNEL
MADE IN USA
Woolrich
SINCE 1870
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
YARNBARN
Beginning and Intermediate Knitting Classes Starting Soon!
Beginning Knitting: Learn by making a sweater! $20.00 for 8 weeks. 20% off class yarns.
*Sept.19
Oct.4
*Oct. 26*
(Mon)
(Tue)
(Wed)
7-9 p.m.
7-9 p.m.
7-9 p.m.
Complete schedule of all classes available at Yarn t
842-4333 • 918 Mass. St.
YARN BARN
TUNE IN
to
KU Faculty...
Meet A Professor Program
Tuesday, September 13 - KU Residence Halls, Scholarship Halls & Fraternities. 7:00p.m.or after dinner in your living community. Check with you RA or Organization President for information.
Snonsored by the office of New Student Orientation & the Department of Student Housing. Stop by 45 Strong Hall or call 864-4270 for details.
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 12, 1994
3B
'Driving Miss Daisy' star dies
Jessica Tandy loses battle with cancer
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Jessica Tandy, who won an Academy Award at age 80 for her portrait of a spirited Southern matriarch in "Driving Miss Daisy," died yesterday at her Connecticut home after a four-year battle with ovarian cancer. She was 85.
Her husband, actor Hume Cronyn,
was by her side when she died about 6 a.m.
Leslie Dart, the couple's press agent, said in announcing the death.
Tandy's acting career spanned more than 60 years, mostly on stage in New York and London. She was Broadway's original Blanche DuBois in the memorable 1947 production of Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar Named Desire" that co-starred Marlon Brando as Stanley Kowalski.
Some of her best-known stage
appearances were with Cronyn, her second husband. Together they starred on Broadway in such plays as "The Gin Game," "Foxfire" and "The Petition."
Both were nolinemes in yesterday's Emmy awards for their performances in "Hallmark Mark of Fame: To Dance With the White Dog." The CBS made-for-TV movie is about an elderly man who loses his wife and is comforted when her spirit returns to him in the form of a white dog.
The actress won three Tony awards, Broadway's highest honor — first for "Streetcar" in 1948, then "The Gin Game" in 1978 and "Foxfire" in 1983.
Tandy and Cronyn celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in 1992. Dart said it was "hard to imagine one without the other."
But it was as Daisy Werthan, the independent, crotchet widow who forms a deep friendship with her black chauffeur, that Tandy scored her biggest popular success. "Driving Miss Daisy," adapted from Alfred
Uhry's Pulitzer Prize-winning play, was a box-office and artistic hit, grossing more than $100 million and winning a best-picture Oscar in 1990 as well as the top acting award for Tandy.
"I'm not a big movie name, and I knew they needed someone who was bankable," Tandy said at the time. "Certainly, in films, I've played small supporting roles for the most part. What has been happening to the film is remarkable, but there is something about the story that has allowed the play to run for years."
EASTERN AFRICA
Karl Malden, who starred with Tandy and Brando in "Streetcar" in 1947 and remained a friend of Tandy and Cronyn for 47 years, said she had a gentle way of keeping the other actors in line in "Streetcar."
"We weed to kid about it but we meant it — she was like the mother hen, she was the real pro in that company," Malden said.
Health care debate resumes today
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell says he still hopes a good health care reform bill can be passed when Congress returns to work today but discounted an idea from his Republican counterpart for a leadership summit on the issue.
Sen. Minority leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., has suggested that leaders of the two parties negotiate a very limited package including measures barring insurance companies from refusing coverage to those with pre-existing conditions or seeking to
switch jobs. The leaders would each have power to veto any part of the package they opposed.
Dole, appearing on CBS "Face the Nation" said there are about 20 areas of agreement on health care reform, but each leader "would have to have a veto" in working out the package.
lute veto power over anything that passes in Congress," the Maine Democrat said. "That gives individual members of Congress even greater power than the president has. It's akin really to monarchy."
Mitchell, speaking after Dole on CBS, said he was willing to talk to Dole, who has led the opposition that has frustrated the sweeping health care reform envisioned by the Clinton administration.
'But I don't like the idea of saying that four or five people have an abso-
Many lawmakers on both sides of the aisle say it is futile to take up health care now, with only weeks remaining before Congress recesses for November elections and a full slate of other major bills to consider. Dole said he would keep trying, but given a proposal that Congress recess for the year on Oct. 7, "I don't see how we need in health wars."
Spielberg ranks first in Forbes' 'Top 40'
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Steven Spielberg, whose dino-thriller "Jurassic Park" grossed more than $800 million at the box office, bumped Oprah Winfrey from the highest-paid entertainer spot. *Forbes* reported yesterday.
The 46-year-old director-producer will make an estimated 1993-94 total of $335 million, the magazine said in its Sept. 26 issue.
That's a record for the eight years *Forbes* has been compiling the list of the top 40 best-paid entertainers. The previous record of $200 million was set by Michael Jackson in 1988-89.
Television talk-show hostess Winfrey, who became the first woman to head the list last year, came in at No. 2 with a combined estimated 1993-94 take of $105 million.
Wintrey was followed by another Jurassic-era phenom, Barney, the purple dinosaur who delights 3-year-olds and ricks some adults with his syrup public television show. When 1993-94 sales are calculated, Barnley will amuse $84 million for creator Sheryl Leach and her father-in-law publisher, Richard Leach.
"In Hollywood it's the year of the dinosaur," Forbes said in its cover story.
Top-dollar entertainers
The 15 highest-paid entertainers, as compiled by Forbes magazine. Names are followed by the change from last year and combined 1993-94 estimated gross income.
1. Steven Spielberg, up from 2nd, $335 million.
2. Oprah Winfrey, down from 1st, $105 million.
3. Barney (Richard Leach, publisher, Sheryl Leach,
creator), new to list, $84 million.
4. Pink Floyd, new to list, $62 million.
5. Bill Cosby, down from 3rd, $60 million.
6. Barbra Streisand, new to list, $57 million.
7. Eagles, new to list, $56 million.
8. David Copperfield, up from 10th, $55 million.
9. Rolling Stones, new to list, $53 million.
10. Harrison Ford, up from 29th, $44 million.
11. Garth Brooks, down from 9th, $41 million.
12. Billy Joel, new to list, $40 million.
13. Michael Jackson, down from 12th, $38 million.
14. Charles Schulz, down from 6th, $37 million.
15. Sylvester Stallone, up from 23rd, $37 million.
THE NEWS in brief
Principles doubted in poll by some Christians
NEW YORK
Significant minorities of American Christians do not believe in such tenets of their religion as the virgin birth, the devil or hell, the Harris Poll reported yesterday.
Belief in the devil and hell drop off among Christians to 78 percent and 77 percent, respectively. Also surprising, according to Humphrey Taylor, chairman of Louis Harris and Associates, is that many non-Christians in the poll ascribe to uniquely Christian beliefs, including 52 percent who believe in the resurrection and 49 percent in the virgin birth.
As in past polls, vast majorities of Americans said they believe in God (95 percent) and heaven (90 percent). Of the four in five Americans who describe themselves as Christian, 99 percent believe in God, 89 percent in the survival of the soul after death, 87 percent in miracles and 85 percent in the virgin birth of Jesus.
Belief in other supernatural phenomena is less widespread among Americans, the poll found. Among Christians and non-Christians alike, 36 percent believe in ghosts. Non-Christians are a little more likely to be among the 37 percent of Americans who believe in astrology.
WASHINGTON Nigerian conflict possible
The United States should impose tougher sanctions against Nigeria's military junta, or civil war could erupt in the country. Nigerian community leaders say.
"When it explodes, the Nigerian conflict will be of such magnitude that the world will permanently be numbed," said Chief Ralph Obioha, a founder of his country's National Democratic Coalition. "It is incumbent on the Western World to call theunta to its senses."
Tromullo in Nigeria, a country of 90 million, will make the Rwanda situation seem like child's play, others said. They addressed a forum Saturday sponsored by the Nigerian Democratic Awareness Committee.
The dissident group supports Moshood K.O. Abiola's claim to Nigeria's presidency. Abiola was the apparent winner of the June 1983 election before the previous military regime nullified the results.
Arrested after proclaiming himself president on the election's first anniversary, Abiola, a billionaire businessman and publisher, is awaiting trial on treason charges.
SIMFEROPOL, Ukraine Tension mounts in Crimea
Crimea's president disbanded parliament yesterday, claiming all power on the restive peninsula for himself. Outraged lawmakers accused him of engineering a coup.
The specter of two rival government branches claiming ultimate authority renewed fears of violence in the volatile Black Sea province, home of the powerful Black Sea Fleet and important Russian military bases.
Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma refused to take sides and called for a "civilized solution" to a dispute he said could destabilize the nation.
Police stayed out of the dispute, and the general prosecutor, the interior minister and the security service said they would try to keep forces out of the political battle.
In a speech, Crimean President Yuri Meshkov said he was imposing emergency rule and would use "full power" until an April 9 referendum to resolve the deadlock.
WASHINGTON Assasination idea arevealed
Former national security adviser Robert McFarlane says an Israeli official proposed assassinating Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini in mid-1985 — a period when the Reagan administration made the fateful decision to engage in arms-for-hostages deals with Iran.
"We cannot engage with you in an enterprise in which anyone's purpose is to assassinate the Ayatollah," McFarlane says he told Kimche. McFarlane writes of the meeting in his newly released memoirs, "Special Trust."
In a new book, McFarlane asserts that David Kimche, the director general of the Israeli foreign ministry, urged that Khomeini be killed as part of a plan to have more moderate forces take control in Iran.
Kimche has denied McFarlane's assertion, telling CBS' "60 Minutes" that the subject of killing the Ayatollah "never came up" in the July 1985 discussion at the White House.
ABERDEEN, Maryland AmeriCorps program begins
President Clinton, worshiping in a military chapel yesterday, thanked the first recruits to his national service program for fulfilling "our God-given responsibility to serve our fellow human beings."
The president and first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton attended services at the Aberdeen Proving Ground, a weapons facility in central Maryland. The visit was designed to promote the president's AmeriCorps initiative, a sweeping collection of old and new community service programs offering college education to its workers.
The program formally commences today when Clinton plans to swear in nearly 15,000 AmeriCorps recruits, capping his 2-year campaign for the service.
The national service program, which fulfills a cornerstone pledge of Clinton's presidential campaign, is a $360 million effort to put 20,000 mostly young Americans to work in four areas: education, health and human needs, the environment and public safety.
Clinton spoke from the pulpit to about 300 people.
The workers will receive minimum-wage, free health care and a $4,725 educational voucher for one year of work. The $4,725 can be used for college, vocational education or to pay off college loans.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida Shuttle records pollutants
"It's an awesome sight," astronaut Susan Helms said of the 82-foot舟 suspended over the shuttle cargo bay.
Discovery's astronauts fired their steering jets yesterday at an eight-story-tall arm used to measure damage from engine exhaust.
Instruments at the end of the the longest boom ever extended from a space shuttle measured the pressure and heat of the jet exhaust as well as contaminants, any of which could ruin solar panels, radiators and other large structures on a space station.
Helms attached a 32-foot extension to Discovery's mechanical arm to reach the jets on the nose and tail.
Working from the cockpit, Helms swung the boom so the instruments at the tip were in the direct path of the jets' exhaust. At one point, the end of the hung 22 feet in front of Discovery's nose.
The experiment was interrupted when Helms lost computer contact with the boom instruments and had to reset a circuit breaker.
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence's Largest
Supplier of
Darkroom Materials
1610 West 23rd Street
841-7205
KMS
KMS JOICO
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HARDWARE
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FULL MTO HELL REDKEN
STRASSTO
$2 off for
50 p.c. box.
with this ad
`+3.5` HD IBM Formatted 48&
`-3.5` HD 48&
`+5.25` HD or DD IBM Formatted 40&
`-5.25` HD or DD IBM Formatted 34&
SAVE BIG on DISKS & PC'S
...the classic style, featuring function & form to meet your highest standards.
Pohl & Dobbins
831 Vermont
843-5665
---
1234567890
Pohl & Dobbins
831 Vermont
843-5665
DISKETTES CENTER
2201 W. 25th Street, Lawrence, Tel (913) 832-2744
(at Business World behind Fool 4 less on lawn St.)
Business Hours: M-F 9:00-6:00, Sat 1:00-5:00
nautica.
eyewear
Frames
and
Clio-ons
DISKETTES CENTER
*MCC* **4880X-33** $750.00
*MCC* **4880X-33w/Color Monitor** $1248.00
*MCC* **4880X-28** Complete system w/B RAM, BAM
4208M HD, 14" SVGA Color Monitor 1024X768, 0.28
4208M HD, 14" SVGA Color Monitor 1024X768, 0.28
Drive Hot, Holder, Doc, Window, Keyboard
Mouse/Pad $1998.00
电脑
ConnectingPoint. XXI
COMPUTER CENTER
813 Massachusetts
Lawrence, KS
842-7526
ConnectingPoint. COMPUTER CENTER
813 Massachusetts
Lawrence, KS
842-7526
Lawrence Parks and Recreation
present
SAND SCULPTURE DAY
Saturday, October 1 at 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
AT THE KANSAS RIVER SANDDEAR BY THE BRIDGE
OVER $800 IN PRIZES!
(WITH ASSOCIATION FOR OLD TOWN SANDDEAR)
Registration to be completed the day before the event begins. Ground
laying will begin on Friday and time will be determined.
Call 777 to register and for additional information.
NEW LOWER CD PRICES
All CD'S $5 Each
Great Selection!!
Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry
1804 W. 6th 2 Blocks East of Iowa
7 49 - 1 91 9
VISA
DUCVER
MasterCard
All CD'S $5 Each Great Selection!!
MasterCard
Since 1907
WATKIN
"We Care For KU"
CPR can
save a life.
To sign up:
864-9570.
Since WATKINS 1
Since 1907
"We Care For KU"
CPR can save a life.
To sign up:
864-9570.
Sept. 19 & 20 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Sept. 26 & 27 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Oct. 10 & 11 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Oct. 17 & 18 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Oct. 22 Sa 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
Oct. 24 & 25 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Saturday class includes a 30-min. break. Classes cover adult/child/infant CPR using American Heart Association materials. $5 fee for training.
CIDENT HEALTH SERVIC
864-9500
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
4B
Monday, September 12, 1994
804 Mass
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass. 832-8228
fifiS
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
FILMS FOR SEPT. 12-14
843-5000
Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown
Mon. 9:30 PM
Tues. 7:00 PM
FEARLESS
Tues. 9:30 PM
Wed. 7:00 PM
SUNFLOWER
Interested in Environmental Job Opportunities?
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ALL SHOWS IN WOODRUFF AUD.
TICKETS $2.50, MONTHAGES $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
JULESCOHEN
The Jayhawk Association of Environmental Professionals (JAEP) presents the Senior Vice President and Senior Environmental Consultant
"Job Opportunities in Environmental Consulting"
Monday, September 12, 6:00pm
Walnut Room of the Kansas Union
EVERYONE IS WELCOME!
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.
STUDENT SENATE
Century School, a non-profit private school, is hiring assistant teachers.
Want a Great Part-time Job?
If you would like to teach some great kids,
Chiefs celebrate 'Joe's Day' with 24-17 victory over 49ers
call Michelle, 832-0101.
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Even Steve Young knows that Joe Montana is still the man.
In his first game against the team he led to four Super Bowl victories, Montana threw two touchdown passes and went 19 of 31 for 203 yards.
After he and the 49ers lost 24-17 yesterday to Montana and the Kansas City Chiefs, Young, who ran his predecessor out of the Bay Area, put it: "In a lot of ways, it shows the master still had some more to teach the student."
On any other day, the star would have been Derrick Thomas.
As a defensive end last year, he had just eight sacks, only one more than he had in setting a single-game record of seven against Seattle in 1990. As a linebacker yesterday, he had three sacks, one for a safety that turnered
around the game. He had a fourth sack taken away when Young was called for grounding.
"One of these games has been waiting for me for a year," Thomas said. "But it was MY day. Defensively we understood that this was JOE's Day. We just had to show up and play so we could make it Joe's Day."
After the sack, the Chiefs went on a 17-point run over a 10-minute span of the second and third quarters. David Whitmore, traded from the 49ers in the deal with Montana, got in the act, too, making a touchdown-saving tackle on Young with under six minutes to go, forcing San Francisco to kick a field goal.
But overall, it was Montana's victory as the Chiefs moved to 2-0. He had a 1-ardy TD pass to Joe Valerio and an 8-varder to Keith Cash.
Montana was just relieved.
"For both teams, it's good to have
this behind us," Montana said of the game, for which more than 500 media credentials were issued. "It's special because there are a lot of old friends of mine on that team. There was no feeling of vindication."
Some of his teammates were awed.
"Believe in Joe?" asked Valerio, a backup offensive lineman who, like Montana, grew up in Pennsylvania. "I've been believing in Joe since I was 10 years old."
In fact, that's true — Valerio was 10 years old in Montana's rookie season with the Niners in 1979.
Young was in high school in Greenwich, Conn., then. And while he hardly looked like a high school quarterback. Young still was not the master.
His stats were bigger than Montana's, whose job he took in 1991 when Montana injured his elbow. That forced the Montana trade to Kansas City 16 months ago.
ADULT DANCE CLASS
Classes Beginning Now
COME BY AND ENROLL TODAY!
- Five Levels of Ballet
* Modern舞系
- Western Dance
- Tap
• Jazz
• Ballroom
CENTER
843-ARTS
Arts
Our lunch menu will allow you to come back for dinner.
Grilled Chicken Salad Platter
Fillet of Sole / wi rice pilaf® salad
Bowie Vegetable Pasta
Caiun Reuben w/ french fries® salad
5.50
4.95
5.50
5.50
Fifi's affordable lunches, prices as fine as the dining.
925 Iowa
fifi's
841-7226
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
"NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY
842-1212
TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PARTY "10" CARRY-OUT
2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS 1-PIZZA
2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING
2-COKES 4-COKES 1-COKE
60.98 61.50 62.00 62.50
DELIVERY HOURS
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
$9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am Fri-Sat 11am-3am
KANSAS
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center · Lawrence DINE-IN AVAILABLE · WE ACCEPT CHECKS
- CARRYOUT AVAILABLE!
$2 Margaritas on the rocks
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
8 3 2 - 0 5 5 0
WEDNESDAY
MONDAY
Carlos O'Kelly's
MEXICAN CAFE
MARGARITAS AND FAJITAS FOR OVER 2 YEARS!
SPECIALS
75¢ Killians Red Draws
$1 Small Chili Con Quezo
$1 Off All Dinner Pieces
TUESDAY
$2 All Imports
$5.95 Sancho/Monterrey Combo
990 Kids Meals
THURSDAY
$2 Bud Light 23 Oz. Tap
$1.50 Desserts
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
SUNDAY
The first class of the semester is this Wednesday, September 14, 9-11:30 a.m.
To sign up: ≡ 864-9570. There is a $6 fee.
Hours of Operation:
M-Th 11-11
Fri,Sat 11-12
Sun 11-10
$1 Small Chili Con
$1 off Chili Con
$2 Bloody Marys
- TASTE OF THE WORLD BEER CLUB!
Maybe you should try the "No-Nag, No-Guilt, Do-It-Your-Own-Way" Guide to Quitting Smoking. It's a positive-approach, two-and-a-half-hour class based on what smokers said would help them out.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500
"We Care For KU"
1907
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
Want to stop smoking?
Since VATKIN 190
Fantastic Fall Special!
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
BUM STEER
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
D
any delivery
THE RUN STEER
DELIVERY
$7 min!
BBQ Sandwiches, Cheese Burgers Grilled Chicken, French Fries, BBQ Ribs MORE MORE MORE
with coupon
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
call 841-SMOK(E)
11:00 to 2:00 & 5:00 to Close Daily
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
Receipts (period 95) from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 7% rebate at the Customer Service counter of the KU Bookstores until the end of December, 1994.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Ks. Union 864-4640
Burge Un. 864-5697
$10FF
Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
KU student I.D. required.
- Water and Trash Paid
THE BUM STEER
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
Now accepting receipts from the Spring '94 semester for rebate payments.
Over $2,400,000 returned to date.
KU Bookstore REBATE
Now Available!
Outstanding New Staff!!!
CD
The Lowest CD Prices in Town
Also available, special selection CDs $3.95
Current, Popular CDs for $5.95!
Buy 5or more CDs for $4.95
For the Best Values in Town Visit
Lawrence Pawn
843-4344 718 New Hampshire
Da Beer Machine
BEER MACHINE
Why Buy when you can Brew!
Da Beer Machine and ingredients now available at
Cottin's Coast to Coast HARDWARE
1832 Massachusetts (913) 843-2981
Mon-Fri 8-8
Sat 8-6
Sun10-5
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 12, 1994
5B
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
108 Personal
110 Business
116 Announcements
120 Announcements
128 Entertainment
134 Sports
200s Employment
208 Help Wanted
228 Professional Services
Services
238 Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertisinng in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and requires a discrimination on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
400s Real Estate
江
300s
Merchandise
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
100s Announcements
THE ETC. SHOP 292 Mass.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
LEATHER
105 Personals
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses
SUNGLASSES
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops
'Le Reve Serenati and Vuarnet
HHA/LPN
Explore the possibilities of
HOME CARE
where you can give
one-on-one attention
to your client without interruption.
Harvey
Saturday & Sunday-8 hours per day
Monday-Friday-late afternoons/evenings
Excellent benefits possible.
Must have reliable transportation.
Douglas County Nassau Assoc. EOE
Call 843-738-ask for Monica
308 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen
110 Bus. Personals
New Dance Classes
Country Ballroom
Latin and Swing
Call 914-266-5914
Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358 -
918 S. Kansas Avenue Topeka
Pat Kerr instructor
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also Insurance for US citizens abroad Osladli Insurance Service 411/1 S Main Ottawa Ka6607 180-600-695.
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
120 Announcements
CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAIL-
ABLE
QUALIFYMENT IMEDIATELY. 1-800-432-3456
Pregnant-co-conserving adoption?
Loving families avail. You help select adoptive family.
Confidential/铁ical Call A Dream Fulfilled Adoption inc toll free 1-800-550-4529
School of Education Students
Students in School of Education, GUILIN UNIVERSITY
School of Education Students
Students who plan to STUDENT TEACH the SPRING IN CLASS (must attend) must attend the student teacher meeting on Monday.
September 19th 13:30 p.m. in 300 Bailey This meeting is mandatory. Preliminary information is available in 117 Bailey.
WTCS, the shelter in Lawrence for battered women and their children, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training in September, p. 30 or September 12, both will be held at Lawrence public Library, 707 Vermont. For information, please call WTCS at 841-887-888.
11TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2. 10, 1986 • 4, 5, 8 OR 7 HIGHER
STREAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
YA GOTTA
BE THERE!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1-800-SUNCHASE
NOBODY DOES SHE CREATE THE FUTURE
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
140 Lost & Found
Found on Jayhawk Boulevard in Front of Weeco-
set of keyed on a black shirting.
749-872 to 782
Lost cat, gray female. Gray with white paws.
Girl, dark brown. Gray with 4th and Indiana.
Call-749-248. Leave message.
Phone number not provided.
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$100.hr, possible mailing our circulars for info call
(302) 398-905
Babyshatter needed for two delightful toddler girls in nice home on weekends, or two babies in weekend and references required. Short drive from KU. University F12. 20, University Dairy Kanan K119 Snaffle Flat. 20.
Bucky's drive in-lay is now taking applications for time employment (flexible hours, 1/2 price per hour) at HCBC.
Computer tutor. Odd hours. Low Pay. Cool machine. Call Mark at 842-1089-603
CRUISE SHIP JOBS !!! Up to 900 weekly. Free room/board. Now hiring skilleted/unskilled men and women. No experience necessary. Call 1-899-3827 ext. CS04124 hrs.
CRUISER SHIPS NOW HIRING Earn up to $2,000/-/month working on Cruise ships Job offers at CRUISER SHIPS & Full-Time employment available. No experience needed. For more information call 123-684-6586 or www.cruiserships.com
Division of Continuing Education, Public Services is accepting applications for a student Mail Assistant to work in the Mail Center/Binder at an off campus site. Duties include preparing brochures for bulk mailing, operating mailling & printing services, assisting with outgaiting mail & using various methods of binding manuals. Starting salary is $4.50 per hr. must be a currently enrolled student. Must be able to work daytime hours. Applications open until Sept 16. Call 841-778 for appointment. Continuing Education
DOORMEN NEEDED
Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation.
Call 748-5039 - Ask for ZAC
Enthusiastic HDLF/Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for 2 hrs. Thurs. evenings and occasionally 4 hrs. Sunday mornings. Call 842-8820.
Female vocalist wanted for variety dance band. All styles. High, strong-chee voice, good performer. Aval immediately. This is a working voice coach (body position). Insurance agency needs part.
- agency needs part-time clerical help.
10-20 hours
will work with class schedule. Call 844-800-6358
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
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Make up to $2,000-$4,000 + / mo. teach basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S.Korea. No teacher required. For information call: (62) 612-1146 ext. J7851.
KU Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for part-time banquet server and host positions. Looking for responsible, hard working applicants with experience in the following: 2654 Bread, caddy corner from the Kansas Union
Part-time temporary Extension 4-H Assistant. Assist 4-H agent with the promotion of the 4-H Entrenchment program and related work. Coordinate project activities with work people; B.S. preferred, $25 per hour, plus mileage, 20 hours per week. October 3, 1994 June 9, 1995. Send resume and 3 letters of reference by September 16 to Dennis Beijot, County Extention Director, 2110 Harper, Lawrence, KS 86048 EOE
**SPRING BREAK!!** 95% SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE! **Travel Student Services in now hiring campus representation.** Lowest rates to Camp City, Panama City and Pamanga City. Beach. Call-1-800-448-4494.
Sports Officers needed! The Lawrence Parks and Recreations Dept. is looking for individuals interested in becoming officials for adult volleyball and basketball leagues. If interested please contact
Prefer 7-1, 11: 30-30; or all day any week. Jr. or Sr in child field-related. Center experience.
Preschool Sub
Stepping Stones is hiring part-time teacher's aides to work 6-10. Woman in the infant and toddler classroom.
Required Qualifications: Previous office experience. Typing speed of 50 wpm, with a high degree of accuracy, may be available to work 3-4 hour blocks of time and be able to work with various perseverance skills. Must have an understanding of word processing, be detailed oriented and able to follow instructions.
Student assistant to work approximately 20 hours a week in the Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology. Duties include processing graduate level pharmaceuticals, running errands and other duties as assigned.
**STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER.**
Duty: 09/16. Salary $550/month. 20 per week. Duties include programming, creating programs to perform to specifications, programming in GASOLIN, PASCAL, FOXPRO and/or other languages on GAOLIN or 6 hours at the University of Kansas. A complete job description is available. To apply, submit a cover letter and resume. Job duties include Computing Services: EOAA EMPLOYER.
Bute/word/instructions.
Preferred Qualifications. Computer experience with knowledge of word processing (Word Perfect and/or Macintosh). Available to work additional
Salary: $4.50 • $8.50 per hour depending on experience
Apply to Pat Stratton, Dept. of Pharmacology &
Health Services, 1-3 or 2-4 Monday/
Friday for applications.
Mail Order Telephone Rep-New Home Improvement catalog has part-time weekday openings between 7am-5pm for inbound call and order takers. Great for people needing flexible schedules during the day. Good clerical skills required. Start $5/hr. Apply in person. H.i., Inc., 2010 Lakeview Rd. (BL bluebk, west of Wearstone Paper, straight ahead, to 2m right) or call for directions (855-234-6780).
Needed: Experienced, stable individual to watch my child in home from my 3:00 to 3:30. M.R.F's required. Please call Laura 832-3211 between ta.m -5m.m.
NEED SPENDING CASH? B.P.I. Building Services now accepting applications for a variety of permanent part-time custodial positions.
Office clerical position. Must have experience w/
Macintosh computers, word processing and data
management. Student monthly position, $500-
625/month. 20 hr/wk. Pick up an application at
301 Dole. Dept. of Special Education. For more info:
Contact Mary Morningstar.
842-6264
Ask for Jeannie.
Contact Marymorning.
Part time and full time positions available. Prefer mornings and daytime, some evenings & weekends. Apply in person. Sept. 8-14 at pet World
WE'RE GROWING! Golden Opprotunities under the Golden Arches
Mc Jobs Open Interviews Sat., Sept. 17th 11a.m.-2 p.m.
*part-time cleaning person for property manage-
ment and reference references and resum*
*Morning Star, 917-2678*
Now Hiring for our locations and to answer any questions about how you can be a part of our team.
at McDonalds on 6th St. Now Hiring for our 2 new
STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER
Date: 09/15/14, Salary $450-600/month; 20 hr per week. Duties include designing and writing programs, maintaining, or enhancing existing applications, and working with students at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programming languages including Pascal or C, good oral and written compilers, and proficiency in software testing. Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Complete job description available. To apply visit www.studentsystem.com. For information about the Computer Center EOE AA EMPLOYER
**STUDENT TRAVEL SALES!** Sunshine Tours is seeking ambitious sales repts to promote aak and create awareness of candle craft. Call today: 1-800-SUNSHACT Teacher's Aide: 7:36 20:00 pm classes. Classroom experience with preschool children preferred but not required. Apply at Children's Art Studio.
UNIQUE MENTIMAL HEALTH OPPORTUNITY Needed immediately male roommate to provide emotional support, adult supervision to an 18 yr old child, and social support in community after psychiatric hospitalization Roommate will be contracted by the young man's family in conjunction with the Menninger Supplemental Health Program. Nurse, nursing and social work staff. Room, board, stipend provided, Reference and BKI check required. Please call Nancy Parker (ext. 329) 5232 at (911) 723-7500 or Annette Bartel (ext. 3223) at (911) 723-7500.
McDonald's
What you want
is what you're
235 Typing Services
WANTED!
WANTED!
A few great women...
who like to talk
* who are friendly
* who are fashionable
- and who enjoy great clothes at a fantastic dis-
Join one of the country's fastest growing retail companies. MANAGEMENT & SALES *Full and Part time positions now available*. Apply in person. WESTPORT LTD. Lakeville Riverfront Factory Outlet Mall, third level. 841-4234
Wanted: Painter - Maintenance assistant part time for property management, good pay, resume and references to Morning Star 917Teen.
This Ain't Your Ordinary Ho-Hum Company!
Prior restaurant experience NOT necessary
Prefer individuals with a solid background in people management. Requires a teamwork mentality, good communication, attention to detail, high level of computer skills and ability to manage multiple projects and people while running high sales. If this sounds like the career for you
I look forward to hearing from you
If you are looking for a fun and challenging position with opportunity for career development within and entrepreneurial company, come join us. We have many opportunities in unconventional restaurant management team
< Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
225 Professional Services
Dawn Benson
1320 E. Kellogg Drive
Wichita KS 67211
ichard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
Be healthier and happier!
Relieve pain and stress with massage therapy!
Student discounts available.
729° Massachusetts Suite 216.
SALUTA DE LA JUSTICIA
Free Consultation
OUI/PUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defens
701 Tennessee
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
of DOWNSIDE
DOWNSETS
Call Anna Lunaria and Laura Pace at 841-1587.
card reading tests
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer.
Call Anna Lumaria at 841-1857.
G. Sally
Donald G. Strobe
16 East 13th
842-1133
DUL/TRAFFICICKETS
OVERLAUND PARK-KANSASITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
ENGLISH TUPOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature, ELS classes. Highly
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3313.
International Video Conversions PAL/SCA/MO/
NTSC. $25 for up to 2 hours. Includes return
postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer
(USD). Call Rachel at 841-3313.
BC Design Studio; Growing creative studio
searching for professional, talented artist. Must be
experienced in humorous illustration and cartoony.
Graphic illustration and Macintosh experience
a plus. Send 10 samples of work with SASE-to:
STUDIO, PO Box 2269, Kansas City, MO
64113
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor of letter quality type. Also transcripts 64-58%. Quality Word Processing Distortions, Theses. term-papers, Resumes, Business letters, etc.
Mother of two starting registered daycare. Full
learning activities. Responsable rates 841-7627.
www.nursery.org
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT IS BEST?
Put my service to the test.
For example, you might want
MARKIN THE GRADE
is the one to call.
want to work
X
Call for a free consultation (816) 301-0964.
305 For Sale
*Lather* **sweeper sofa** for sale. Good condition.
The sweeper ripped cushions. $100.
Call 749-8230.
300s Merchandise
off everything with KU ID, Booth 218 (downstairs next to men's room). Antique Mall, Downtown Lawrence, Thru Oct. Lots of jeans!
poured carpet cut to fit dorm room. Bought
for $14.90 for $14.90. OBJ Call Mike
AL872-8979
Giant Mountain Bike in excellent condition. Make
$fer.749-920.
MACINTYSON Computer. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Chris at 828-269-585.
Macintosh SE, 30, M B Ram. 40 MB Hd, with Software and carrying case. Apple Stylewriter II
ALL YOUR MONEYGONE?
EARNCASH
$15 Today
$30
By donating your blood plasma
ThisWeek
Lawrence Donor Center
NABI The Ocean Science
816 W. 24th Behind Laird Noller Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F 9-6:30
Sat.10-4
New 50% FC Minitower with new CD ROM multi-media package, $49.10 or best offer, 95%,33%
STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and
print for $120 a semester. Call 1-800-956-6049 for
more information.
Vintage table and 2 chairs for sale. All three are in pretty good condition. 1100 or best offer for set.
Yamaha stereo receiver, still in stock, Model *XR780, XR750, Ask for T91 431-7135.
340 Auto Sales
1982 Nissan 2005XH XENON, with sunroof, power,
and louver, $110/800. Call Mike at
617-343-3920.
1933 Nissan 280X 25k T-ops fully loaded AM/FM/cass ACN no rust, dglt display, Nice1900. Also 1789 Chv. Camaro, drives very good,$850.79-29.12 leave msg.
360 Miscellaneous
Corrugated boxes, moving and storage boxes.
Large quantity price & small quantity walk-ins welcome.
Call 843-8111 and ask for the Sales Service Department. Cash and carry.
VAGABONDBOOKMAN
400s Real Estate
Buy & Sell Used Rare & Collectables 842-BOOK 1113Mass. (2665)
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept older homes 841-STAR (7827)
ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED ABBEDROOM
- On KUB Bus Route
• Close to Campus
• Swimming Pool
• Stop By Today!
Equal Hounding 749-4226 M-F9-5
15h & Kasold Set 10.4
Pets Welcome No Sublease Fee
1 Bedroom, very nice, quiet, lots of space, ceiling fan and on Pool KUB route bus, #85, am-1382
**
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great Apt. 422
Great Apt. 422
Avalon NOW Cal. 749-422
*On KUBus Route
- Swimming Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
South Point Apartments
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
- Available for fall.
- Directly on bus route
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Call 843-4754
- 2 bedroom with studv
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-7540. Room for rent in house with two male students, $1 block from campus. Laundry facilities available. Call 832-1655 or 843-9094.
430 Roommate Wanted
bdmpr apl 1 group from campus; $25; price in team-
tail; $36-801.
apl 4 for 2nd roommate in team-tail.
2 Females looking for 3rd roommate to live in townhome. $258 rent cable paid. Available immediately. 942-8357
House mates needed. 48Abs. Close to campus. N/S, clean. quiet. Avail. Now Call 1-691-1895
NFS, Female Roommate needed to share furn-
ishings, DWL on KU Bus Ticket $260 +
Burlington 841-9144
Share four bedroom apartments and loft. Orchard Corners on bus route
Two bedroom apartment old West Lawrence
$190 month plus $150. Utilities Call 843-9227
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Need Female to share large 2 Barm, 1 Bbh furn.
apt. on bus route. $250^{+1}$ util. smoker OK-8415181.
Avail now. Call Nm to 1pm.
How to schedule an ad:
Roommate needed for two bedroom apt. on Edinburgh Dr. $25/㎡ + utilities. On the KU bus rd, and close to Dilons on 28th St. Please call 1-800-743-3964 and leave message.
- By Mail: 119 Stuffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
ROOMMATE WANTED! To share a duplex, own
Roommate? Pets allow. Pets allow.
quiet neighborhood. Call 841-6911
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.
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* Inquiries from 111 First Flat
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it hiked 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 expiration date.
When canceling a onboard 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.
Calculating Rates
Calculate based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of aglue lines the ad jumps to). To calculate cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Num. of insertions:
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
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
Classifications
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
105 personal
110 business personalis
120 announcement>
130 entertainment
1
2
3
4
5
ADS MUST FLOW KANSAN POLICY
classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Please print your ad one word per box
Name
Address
Total ad cost: Classification:
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper_
Phone: ___-
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Vis
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Copyright Dawn Browne, Inc. Illustration by National Center for Children's Humor
1912
"And so, as you enter the adult phase of your life, you will thank God that these past 17 years of being stuck in the ground and unable to move are over. .. Congratulations, cicadas of '94!"
6B
LAKE MENDOTA.THE PROJECT CONSUMED HALF THE STUDENT BUDGET FOR THE YEAR AND CAUSED A CAMPUS FUROR.
Monday, September 12, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A RADICAL GROUP CALLED THE PAIL AND SHOVEL PARTY TOOK OVER THE
You see some weird things on college
You see some weird things on college campuses.
Like the COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint. The late night MOONLIGHT MADNESS rate it offers is certainly unusual. So unusual, only Sprint offers it. Gab all night long from 11pm-6am
MORNING
Medtronic
Sprint.
COLLEGIATE
FONCARD™
816 854 1193 1234
Dial 1-800-877-8000. At Tone, Dial 0 + Area Code + Number
At Tone, Enter FONCARD Number.
THIS COLLEGIATE FONCARD IS SO EASY,IT'S WEIRD.
Stranger yet, the Sprint Booth on campus is giving away groovy T-shirts just for signing up. The COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint Totally weird. Check it out at
ht long from 11pm-6am at 9¢ a minute. the Sprint Booth on campus.
Sprint.
9¢ A MINUTE RATE, 30 FREE MINUTES AND A FREE T-SHIRT? WEIRDNESS AT THE SPRINT BOOTH.
SIGN UP! AT OUR BOOTH! MONDAY & TUESDAY, SEPT. 12 & 13 AT THE MAIN LOBBY, KANSAS UNION. 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
9¢ a minute rate applies to domestic calls made between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. In addition to the 9¢ a minute rate, surcharges will apply to COLLEGIATE FÖNCARD calls. ©1994 Sprint Communications Company L.P.
ERECTED A STYROFOAM REPLICA OF THE STATUE OF LIBERTY ON FROZEN
STUDENT GOVERNMENT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN. DEDICATED TO THE PURSUIT OF SILLINESS,THEY IMMEDIATELY
CAMPUS Sex and dating will be the focus of a discussion tonight. Page 3A.
SPORTS SUNNY Former Kansas player Dana Stubblefield talks about life in the NFL. Page 1B High 87° Low 69° Weather: Page 3.
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.104,NO.16
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING 864-4358
TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 13, 1994
(USPS650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Beers could face charges in four states
60 more years are possible for former fugitive
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
Law enforcement officials said Chad Beers' eight-day journey from Arkansas to Nebraska could cost taxpayers $100,000, but they said he too would pay.
"He could face up to 50 or 60 years on the charges in Nebraska alone," said Gary Lacey, lawyer for Lancaster
County. Nebraska. "He will definitely be held for the next six months or more while he's tried on those charges."
Last week,
Nebraska prosecutes charged
B e e r s ,
Lawrence, with
M. G. KHAN
Chad Beers
attempted robbery, assault, flight to avoid arrest, theft and using a weapon to commit a felony.
Beers, 24, was captured Sept. 7 in Lincoln, Neb., after a high-speed chase that involved a stolen Lawrence
The truck was valued at about $14,000. That, combined with about $60,000 in overtime hours and fixed costs, such as gas, salaries and cars, could add up to as much as $100,000, said Pete Nagurny, a U.S. Marshal in Topeka.
public works truck.
Nagurny said about 100 various officers from agencies stretching from Fort Smith, Ark., to Lancaster County, Neb., were involved in the search. He said Beers could face additional criminal charges from five different jurisdictions.
"He will probably be locked up until after I retire." Nagirrey said.
But Nagurry say if Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Nebraska and federal officials decide to press charges, he could be locked up much longer.
For now, Nebraska officials have the authority to hold Beers or release him to federal officials, Naguny said.
"Possession is nine-tenths of the law, so Nebraska can do what they want," he said.
If Nebraska pursues charges against Beers, the state might be required to pay for any medical attention Beers might need while he is in custody, Nagumry said. Beers was shot in the ankle, and he cut his leg while on the run.
A preliminary hearing time for Beers is to be scheduled Sept. 9, Lacey said If convicted in Nebraska, Beers would have to serve that time before being released to other authorities. Nagumay said Beers already had a federal detainer against him and a detainer from Arkansas. That means is that once Beers has served his time in Nebraska, he would become custody of the next jurisdiction that held the next detainer.
"With his track record in the federal system, he's going to be in a serious maximum security facility for some time." Nagurny said.
On Aug. 30, two days before Beers was scheduled to begin a 14-year sentence at a federal penitentiary for the
1993 kidnapping of an Arkansas man, he escaped from the Sebastian County Jail in Fort Smith.
Beers' journey took him from Arkansas to near Tulsa, Okla., where he stole a truck with another escaped prisoner, Scott Scanlon. Scanlon was later captured in Wilson County near Fredonia. Then Beers was seen numerous times in Lawrence, Topeka and at his hideout near Hollot.
KU administrators list University priorities
Despite Beers' history of escaping from authorities, which includes a 21-day run from Douglas County officials last October, Lacey said he was not worried that Beers would escape.
"He's in jail after all." Lacey said. "We're not worried he'll escape from here."
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
University administrators have come up with a list of 30 ways to improve the University of Kansas.
The ideas are nothing new, administrators admit. But the absence of a permanent chancellor doesn't mean that nothing will be done this year, said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor. Administrators will continue with initiatives to improve KU, he said.
"They're not surprises," Meyen said. "What we've done is to bring them into focus, even though it's a transitional year."
The following five improvements were listed as top priorities by the administrators:
The list comes after an 18-month review by administrators of problems facing the University, Meyen said.
Increase public understanding of the University.
"These are institution-wide initiatives," he said.
"A lot of people don't understand what a research university is," he said.
Tom Hutton, director of University Relations, said that research he directed this summer showed that many Kansans did not know about the research KU professors and graduate students did in addition to teaching.
Increasing public understanding of KU was named as a priority because of that and other misunderstandings, Hutton said.
"It's a realization that we haven't done a good job of telling Kansans about the impact that the University has on their lives," he said. "The theory is that if people understand the University, they'll be more likely to support it."
Provide a more diverse faculty, staff and student body.
Sherwood Thompson, director of Minority Affairs, said he was pleased to see a diversity priority on the list.
"This is a statement of commitment from the administration," he said.
Meyen said that commitment included changing KU's climate.
"It's far more than recruiting and retaining minority students," he said. "We're talking about building a climate. We're looking at it from a much broader perspective."
Provide University research for private industry.
The federal government's call for the United States to become more competitive in the global market means that University researchers will have to have work more closely with industry, said Howard Mossbier director of technology transfer
Mossberg said the plan to build a medical research facility on West Campus would help achieve this goal.
"The upshot is, if we succeed in the game to keep laboratories, products will flow." he said.
Find out what problems face freshmen and sophomores and address the problems.
Allan Cigler, professor of political science, said that this was a priority because faculty members had noticed that their expectations about new students did not match some new students' expectations of college.
Administrators hope to find solutions to problems defined by a freshman-sophomore experience committee, headed by Cigler. The committee was formed in 1993 and will report its findings to administrators next year.
But funding for a more expanded MBA program and more courses in health services administration are pending approval from the Kansas Legislature, he said.
Robert Stark, dean of the Regents Center, said some of the expansion already had happened and cited more courses in engineering management as an example.
Offer more graduate courses at the KU Regents Center in Overland Park and at the Capitol Center in Topeka.
The other 25 items on the list ranged from improving campus signs and gateway entrances to creating a new computerized payroll system for employees.
STOP
PERMIT REQUIRED
WELCOME TO THE
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Maggie Sieber, 5 year KU employee, stops a car at the traffic booth located near the Chi Omega Fountain.
Bv Jennifer Freund
Sneaking on campus is a risky move
By Jennifer Freund
Kansan staff writer
Jerel Harris admits that he conned a KU traffic booth attendant so that he could drive on campus one weekday afternoon.
"My friend told me that he drove up and told the lady that she was a visitor and needed to go to Strong, and she let him go even though he was really a student," said Harris, Grambling, La, sophomore. "One time I lied to get on campus by saying that I had a large load of equipment to pick up at Strong, and she let me go."
Although unauthorized vehicles are not allowed on campus during the weekdays from 7:45 a.m. to 5 p.m., some students still attempt to drive on campus.
Tom Spencer, Dodge City senior and traffic booth attendant, said that when students drove past the booth he reported them to the KU police department.
"I take down the license plate numbers and turn them over to the KU police," he said. "I've seen the police pull someone over and give them a ticket for reckless driving."
Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking, said that driving through campus was not an illegal offense but a parking violation.
"There is no set fine," she said. "If they drive through and we can catch them, we let them know that they have to have a permit. If they do it again, they are written a ticket."
Hultine said that sometimes police would stop offenders and let them know that they were not supposed to drive on campus. She said the police issued tickets if the person was speeding or didn't stop at a stop sign. No ticket can be issued by the police for just driving through campus during the restricted hours.
"Most people do it by accident," she said.
"When the person is driving past the booth, and the attendant is trying to stop them by putting their hand, the drivers think that they are just waving at them to go by."
Most students said they had never driven through campus during restricted hours, while some students said they had driven by or at least had friends who had.
"I did it once," said Cullen Dalton, Fort Worth junior. "It was accidental, so I turned around.
There should be a folding stop there like they have at weigh stations."
Travis Daisie, Goodland junior, said that that the police had caught his friend when he drove by the booth.
"He did it once on accident and didn't get stopped, so he did it again, and the KU police got him," he said.
Unauthorized vehicles are allowed on campus at the traffic booth employee's discretion. Hultine said that they were allowed on campus if the driver had to pick up or drop off a large package or if the driver was dropping off a person with a handicap.
During restricted hours, only campus vehicles, KU busses and vehicles with blue parking permits are permitted to drive on campus.
To obtain a blue permit, a person's age or age plus years of service to the University must equal 60, and they must work in the area and pay a $40 fee.
The three booths are located near the Chi Omega fountain, Watson Library and Memorial Drive.
INSIDE Stopping the stress
The pressures of college life can lead to a buildup of stress. However, several location options give students, faculty and staff a way to defeat tension.
A
Page 48.
Program to allow KU students to teach local kids
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
To accomplish this, the Lawrence senior and two other KU students are beginning Teach for America KU. Ford, Brynn Edmonds, Lawrence senior, and Chris Reedy, Topeka junior, hope the new program will allow KU students to assist in Lawrence classrooms.
Jennifer Ford believes KU students should give something back to the Lawrence community.
"We are always seeking ways to improve our relationship with the community," said Ford, director of the Center for Community Outreach. "We hope that this will get people who are educated interested in education."
Teach for America KU is a spinoff of Teach for America, a five-year-old national program that places recent college graduates in under-resourced urban and rural public schools for two-year teaching assignments.
Unlike the national program, Ford said the KU chapter would require students to donate a small amount of their time each week working in Lawrence schools.
Teach for America KU will have an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday at Alcove I in the Kansas Union.
Edmonds, who is president of the School of Education Student Organization, said she hoped students from a diverse cross-section of majors would attend the meeting.
"Like the national program, we are aiming to attract noneducation majors," she said. "We assume that education majors already have the interest in promoting education. Students from all majors can provide role models and inspire younger students."
Edmonds said the chapter first would obtain approval for the program from the superintendent of Lawrence public schools. Then students would be placed in classrooms.
Reedy said ultimately the KU chapter would foster interest in the national program.
"The idea is to attract people who are young, energetic and skilled," he said.
"We want the KU students to interact with the students and eventually help teach lessons," she said. "We don't want this to be a program where the KU students just sit and cut out construction paper."
Reedy, a philosophy and English major, hopes to spend the first two years after he graduates as a teacher for Teach for America.
Cathy
Julianae Peter/ KAMSAM
Chris Reedy, Topeka junior, Jennifer Ford, Lawrence senior, and Bryn Edmonds, Lawrence senior, are starting a Teach for America Chapter at KU.
E
"A lot of students would like to teach, but they don't want to do it for the rest of their lives," Reedy said. "The national program and the local program give students a chance to give something back."
2A
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
☆
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE! The wheels of progress will turn more rapidly. Continue to work hard. Painting and preparation are key to moving forward. Privacy becomes more important than ever. You would be wise to share fewer secrets. A stroke of the pen can help you create a beautiful book and at home. A second marriage is a distressing possibility for someone who doubts reluctantly.
CLEBEINTRYS BORN ON THIS DATE: Olympic legend Jesse Owens, actress Linda Gray, actor Peter Scolari, sinister Maria Muldaur.
T
♒
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Take full advantage of the unexpected cooperation you find at home and work. Get out and about more! Social encounters could lead to helpful business contacts.
Ψ
15
M
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If you set the example, others will follow Those who are willing to work long hours will prosper. Back going to college and finding career seminars will change your employment prospects.
GEMINI (May 21- June 20): Ideas flow freely and frequently when nothing happens to disrupt your concentration. Postpone a purely social encounter until you are less busy.
69
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Too much medding by self-appointed authorities could mess up a clever plan. Keep your own counsel. Romance is intriguing! Make sure your car is in good working order before starting on a trip.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Let loved ones take over tasks you may not feel up to doing. Otherwise, you risk making a serious mistake. Some one may try to talk back to you. It is wiser not to debate.
箭
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
Close relationships are strengthened by devotion and sincerity. You can be a tower of strength to your loved ones! legal documents and office purchases express your sympathize with a teen-ager's concerns.
V8
8
CANCER (June 21 July 22): Those in charge could be more demanding and less concerned with your feelings today. Lean on associates for support. A home improvement project should go smoothy. Young adults need freedom to come and go.
II
LEO (July 23-Aug. 23) All eyes are focused on you; put your best foot forward. An ego battle could develop with a supervisor; keep a low profile. Secret communications could affect your personal as well as professional life. Guard your reputation.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Jan. 19): Constructive criticism from close associates should not be taken amiss. Put away these credit cards and pay cash for them, and take the phone throttle on the social front. Issue invitations to interesting new comers.
Water
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 27) Trust your own ideas when deciding what must be done to protect your long-term interests. Obtaining support of a client is essential if you make intelligent concessions. Eliminate all luxury-having
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Thanks to persuasion and cajolement, you have a splendid chance of getting friends and loved ones to abide by her dreams. Your marriage strides towards a career milestone. Honor mate's family traditions.
X
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Stay in close contact with valued business associates. Otherwise, they may not be there when you really need their help. Good luck on your side in financial affairs. The Middletown returns!
TODAY'S CHILDREN have truly inquiring minds. They want to know not only what people are saying and doing but what they really think. Honest and just, these Virgos will never forget a slight or deceitful act. Their careful attention to detail makes them highly skillful engineers or doctors. Count on them to detect flaws and symptoms that less-observant types overlook. They have the memory of an elephant and will never forget an important date.)
lorsocopes 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 final 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.
Student Alumni Association will sponsor "Athletic Day" as part of Celebrate KU! from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. today in front of Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Kristin Hoyne at 864-6429.
OAKS— Non-Traditional Students Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call 843-7317.
ON CAMPUS
International Studies, Phi Beta Delta and Latin American Studies will sponsor a Worldview lecture, "Crisis in Cuba," by Dr. Orlando Perez at noon today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Carine Ullom at 864-1414.
American Meteorological Society will meet at 4 p.m. today at 3092 Malott Hall. For more information, call Robyn Weeks at 864-4547
KU Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about studying in French-speaking countries at 4 p.m. today at 4001 Wescoe.
Japan Karate-Do Ryobu-Kai Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call Dan Blood at 864-7029.
KU Advertising Club will sponsor a free picnic between 5 and 8 tonight at Holcom Park. If interested, call 864-4358.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Simone Wehbe at 832-1229.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Jacqueline Flannigan at 864-8219.
Water Polo Club will meet at 7 tonight at Robinson Natoratiorum. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873.
Asian American Student Union will meet at 7:30 tonight at 100 Smith Hall. For more information, call Melanie Ignacio at 844-6500.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Natatorium. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731
Ecumenical Christian Ministries and Lutheran Campus Ministries will sponsor Taize Evening Prayer at 8:30 tonight at Danforth Chapel. Formore information, call Ellen at 841-5424.
Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. tomorrow in front of Wescoe. For more information, call Mark Wilson at 865-0066.
Student Alumni Association will sponsor "Alumni Day," as part of Celebrate KU! from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. tomorrow in front of Wescoe.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate daily Mass at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow at Danforth Chapel.
School of Education Student Organization will sponsor a picnic at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at Holcom Park, 27th and Lawrence Avenue. For more information, call Bryn Edmonds at 841-567-561.
ON THE RECORD
A 1990 Mazda pickup truck was broken into Sunday afternoon on the 2400 block of Oussahl Street, Lawrence police reported. Police said a black cassette case and cassette tapes were taken from the KU student's vehicle. Damage to the car totaled $460.
the phone and coin box and change stolen were valued together at $775.
A Southwestern Bell paytelephone was broken Thursday afternoon near the parking lot of the Shenk Complex, KU police reported. Police said damage to
A purple and black Connondale Delta men's mountain bicycle valued at $2,000 was stolen Sunday morning from the 1000 block of Missouri Street, Lawrence police reported.
About 9 a.m. Saturday someone spray painted graffiti on a retaining wall of Spencer Library, KU police reported. Police said damage was valued at $300.
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
TODAY'S TEMPS
86° • • 64°
86° • • 66°
86° • • 68°
87° • • 69°
87° • • 59°
72° • • 59°
84° • • 67°
89° • • 66°
66° • • 54°
89° • • 69°
87° • • 69°
89° • • 71°
88° • • 70°
$
Stock market report
14.47
Dow Jones
3,860.34
NEW LOWER CD PRICES
All CD'S $5 Each Great Selection!
Nasdaq
Weather
Mostly sunny and warm.
South wind, 15-
25 m.p.h. Clear
tonight.
September 12, 1994
NYSE
1.06
257.32
THURSDAY
Source: KU Weather Service: 864-3300
8565
A chance for thunderstorms.
Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry
1804 W. 6th 2 Blocks East of Iowa
7 49 - 1 91 9
MasterCard
TODAY
Sunny and warm, chance of storms at night.
8769
↑
8869
VISA DAKOVB
WEDNESDAY
Shares Traded: 299,774,320
0
→
Advances 735
3.72
760.01
SAVE BIG on DISKS & PC'S
HIGH LOW
-
Declines 1,404
486SX-25
486SX-33
486DX-33
928 Mass. 843-0611
The Etc. Shop
TM
HDIBM Formatted
$2 off for
50 pc. box
with this ad
Unchanged 757
ASE
0.52
455.06
x803~J3X Color Monitor $1249.0
*HCC 456 HD, 4* $1249.0
*HCC 456 HD, 14* $1249.0
*HDC 456 HD, 14* $1249.0
*VGA Color Monitor 1024/128, 0/28
Non-interlaced, 312^2, 412^2 & 514^2 *2MB Floppy
Hard Drive, D, Windows, K14, K19
MousePad $199.0
*3.5" DDIBM Formatted 38¢
*5.25" HD or DD IBM Formatted 40¢
*5.25" DD or DD IBM Formatted 34¢
928 648 0611
SKIN
2 for 1 Wells $1 Pabst Blue Ribbon Longnecks
Ray-Ban
BRAUZ & LOMB
Sunglasses
for DRIVING
DISKETTES CENTER
2201 W. 25th Street, Lawrence. Tel (913) 832-2744
(at Business World behind Food 4 Less on Iowa St.)
Business Hours: M-F 9:00-10:00, Sat 1:00-5:00
1016 Massachusetts
Downtown Lawrence 865-4055
CHIEFS SUNDAY!
$3.50 Domestic Pitchers
$2.00 Bloody Marys
$2.99 Burger Baskets
Ricky Dean Sinatra
$1 Pabst Blue Ribbon Longnecks $1.50 Wells
$1 Dogs $1 Burgers (on the patio)
SAT SKIN
ADULT DANCE CLASS
SUN
Classes Beginning Now COME BY AND ENROLL TODAY!
- Five Levels of Ballet
Dine In or Carry Out 11 a.m.-3 a.m.
Live Levels of Ballet
• Modern Dance
• Western Dance
FRI
Mulligan's
WED
ACOUSTIC OPEN MIC
(musicians interchange)
$1.50 Boulevard Pints
featuring
- Tap
• Jazz
• Ballroom
PUPS
Girl
THURS Darrell Lea & Megan Hurt $1 Samuel Adams Draws
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL!
No Cover $1.50 Longnecks (including Rolling Rock)
TUES LIVE JAZZ!!! No Cover $1 off all imports
THE LAWRENCE 200 West 9TH
WED
CENTER
843-ARTS
Arts
2108 W.27th·Park Plaza·843-8467
Becky's HAIRSTYLING
Becky's
HAIRSTYLING
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. Manager; Kelly Hale; Holly Green; Amy Schultz; Susanne Smith; SusieLaRue. 3rd row: Krisny Hadi; Dolly Puckett; Faridah Zirad; Gina Sharp; Lisa Stuart, Manager; Lauren Sims. 2nd row: Kristi Wicks; Kristen Lockwood; Becka Isaac, Owner; Kame Bontrage; Stefanie Lockwood. Front row: Pam Nace; Courtney Eberle; Alamy Aberston, Asst. Manager; Nancy Griffin.
Irene L. Doyle
---
HAIR CUTS
$10.00
NOT VALID W/OTHER OFFERS exp. 1/1/95
PERMS
$42.00
(with coupon)
(includes cut & style, long hair
slightly higher)
exp. 1/1/95
- hair
integrations/wigs
Full Service Salon
- hair weavings
nails
- full body massage
- sculptured & gel
- ear piercing
- pedicures
- scalp treatments
- scalp treatments
- waxing
- grycolic treatments
- facials
- facials
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
3A
Student leads pack for more recycling
By James Evans Kansan staff writer
Eric Medill is pushing for more campus recycling.
Medill, Student Senate vice-president, has some novel plans to increase recycling efforts on campus. And Medill said he would like to see KU administration follow his lead.
Medill said that Student Senate is planning to do is a week-long recycling campaign this fall that is designed to show the administration that students are doing something about recycling on campus. He said that he hoped the campaign would encourage the administration to take a more active role with recycling efforts.
Another effort that Medill said he is looking into is the book buy-back program. He said that often students bring books to the buy-back and decide not to sell the books because they don't get enough money for them. He said he would like to set up bins so that students could have the option to donate the books to charity instead of throwing them away or keeping them packed away.
In addition to Medill's ideas, Sherman Reeves, student body president, said that he would like to see campus recycling of newspaper expanded. Right now, the University of Kansas only collects newsprint in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. He said the newspaper recycling effort hasn't been
expanded because of financing.
Medill said that he was frustrated with the help from administration in the recycling push.
"Paper is not a money-making venture," Reeves said. He said that aluminum can recycling is feasible on campus because it pays for itself.
"Recycling is up for grabs," he said.
"Right now we're getting little support from the administration on the issue of recycling." Medill said. He said that part of the problem with getting assistance from the University is that the position of Environmental Ombudsmen was eliminated last spring.
Recycling is up for grabs, he said. Now the office of Environmental, Health and Safety is responsible for what the Environmental Ombudsmen office formally resided over, said Mike Russell, an officer in the department.
He said that there is a lot of discussion at the administrative level about what direction the University should be taking in recycling.
"There's been a lot of programs in place in the last years, but there has never been a centralized effort," Russell said. "There isn't any particular unit that is actually responsible for recycling on campus."
He said that it might be time to look into a centralized effort. With a centralized effort, he said, the University could have more pickup spots for different types of recycling.
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
Mastering Mozart
Tim Deighton, Wellington, New Zealand, graduate student, and Kathy Haid, Lenene, practice a Mozart duet in Swarthout Recital Hall. Deighton played his viola for several hours yesterday in preparation for his doctoral recital, which he will perform at 7:30 p.m. on Swarthout.
Program to focus on healthy relationships
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Renee Speicher thinks college students' reversed dating patterns might lead to doomed relationships.
"It used to be that courtship led to sex, but now sex leads to courtship," she said. "It's hard for KU students to have a healthy relationship that starts off this way."
Speicher, coordinator of the Center for Sexual Health Education at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
will be a facilitator at a workshop tonight titled "Sex and Dating Relationships."
Speicher and Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, will lead a discussion about ways to clarify dating roles and develop communication strategies in relationships.
"The scope of the program is the physical and emotional aspects of sexual issues." Speicher said.
Sex becomes the premise of relationships for many students, she said.
"We want to teach students how sex can facilitate a healthy relationship," she said. "Sex and dating are more than social issues. They are health issues, and we'll discuss that."
The workshop also will include a discussion on how alcohol can affect sexual relationships.
"When drinking, some people will sleep with someone that they wouldn't otherwise have lunch with," Speicher said.
Ballard said that the workshop was one of many that the center was sponsoring this semester.
Other programs, which will take place throughout the semester, will include discussions about self-defense, sexual assault and self-esteem.
questions about intimacy," Ballard said.
Ballard said the discussions were important because most students did not have any classes about sex or a facilitated discussion in high school on relationships and behaviors.
"Many students have questions about such things, from establishing and maintaining relationships, to
Tonight's workshop will feature a presentation by Ballard and Speicher and then will be open for discussion. Ballard said that the workshops had a dual purpose.
"We want people to be aware about additional and confidential services they can receive at the Women's Health Center," she said. "Our goal is to work with men and women to educate and bring about change."
Sex and Dating Relationships:
What: A discussion sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center When: From 7 to 9 tonight Where: Pine Room, Kansas Union For more information call 864-3552.
Naked man runs from KU police
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
According to police, the following series of events occurred Saturday:
a naked KU student, who was apparently under the influence of drugs, was chased Saturday night by KU police.
About 7:20 p.m., a woman called KU police to report that a friend of hers had taken two hits of LSD, was naked and was running around campus near Templin Hall. After a short search, police found the naked 19-year-old Prairie Village man laying in the grass on the 1600 block of Louisiana Street.
Police said the man was confused and uncooperative throughout the incident. He would not answer any questions and made strange hand signs when police talked to him. He then turned and made an obscene gesture to a dog who had been barking at him from a nearby porch. The
man then began pulling grass and throwing it at the police.
man with a neckpain running south on Louisiana Street. During the chase, an officer fell and was injured. That officer was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital for scrapes and bruises to his knees and elbows.
After the chase, the man fell to the ground and laid on his stomach until police arrived. He was handcuffed and carried back up the hill to where Douglas County Ambulance Service employees were waiting.
Because the man was fighting with police, he was tied to a cot with seat belts and flexicuffs. He was taken to the hospital for observation, but not until he had to have a pillow placed over his head to keep him from spitting on people in the ambulance.
The student later was released to a Grace Pearson Scholarship hall resident, and no charges were filed by the police.
CAMPUS BRIEF
By Manny Lopez
Acquaintance rape reported on Sunday
Kansan staff writer
A KU student reported Sunday morning that, after going out with friends, she was raped by a fellow student. Lawrence police reported.
awakened in her room by an acquaintance of hers.
The 19-year-old Overland Park woman told police she and a group of friends had gone to a party Saturday night. The group later decided to continue the party at the woman's apartment on the 800 block of Mississippi, police said. Alcohol might have been involved, but police said they were still investigating the case.
The woman told her friends she was tired and went to bed. Police said that a short time later, she was
a waked herself in terror by a large quantity of herls.
She described herself to police as being confused because she had just awoken up. The man began kissing the woman, and when the two began to have intercourse, she said no, police said.
Shortly thereafter, the woman heard someone walking in the hallway, so she made noise to try and get that person's attention. When someone walked into the room, the attack stopped, police said.
The woman told her friends what happened. She was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Police said the woman told them she knew the suspect before they had gone out that night. Police are still trying to locate the suspect.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW
KANSAN
C A R D
Use your Kansan Card!
THE UNIVERSITY CAMPUS
KANSAN
CARD
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Use your Kansan Card!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
CLASSICAL MUSIC ON CD
Kief's has Lawrence's Largest and Best Collection of Classical Music This Week ... Take $2.00 Off (ea.) Kief's Everyday Low Price on Classical CD's!!
Bring in this ad or the coupon in this Tuesday's UDK. Not valid with other offers Excludes orange-tag items Good thru 9-19-94
KIEF'S CDs & TAPES
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913·843·1811 913·842·1438 913·842·1544
4A
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
Faith, not fear, should be a reason to convert.
DAVID ZIMMERMAN History, Bible show that Christian zealots predicting exact date of doomsday have missed the point.
What were you doing last Tuesday?
Going to classes? Going to work?
Having a couple of beers at The Crossing? Did you know that last Tuesday was supposed to be the beginning of the end of the world?
Christian radio talk show host Harold Camping figured out that the beginning of the end would start last Tuesday. From what he thinks is the fulfillment of biblical end of time prophecies and a strange form of numerology based upon the Bible, Camping also predicts that Jesus will return the 27th of this month.
Now it is basic, orthodox Christian doctrine that Jesus will return some time in the future. Only a few fringe groups have ever taken a stand to specific dates. Among these are William
Miller, who predicted the end to come in 1843 and from whom came the Seventh-day Adventist Church. From the Adventists came the Branch Davidian sect of popular fame.
Joseph Smith, the founder of the Mormon religion, also decided the world would end in 1890. Unfortunately for him, his world was violently ended in 1844, and ours is still going on.
I even remember a group passing out fliers my sophomore year claiming the end to come Sept. 28, 1992.
With all these missed dates, it is hard to take Camping's seriously — I was extremely cynical the first time I heard about this. However, I find Camping's predictions erred on more than my cynical attitude.
The Bible is clear that no one will know when the end will come. It continuously describes the end of time as coming "like a thief in the night." Jesus even says, "No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, not the Son, but only the Father" (Matthew 24:36).
This idea scares a lot of people. Some of the people who believe Camping have quit their jobs to spread the message. They hope to get even a few more people to repeat and acknowledge Jesus as their Lord and savior before the end comes. This also scares a few people who aren't Christians to make hasty conversions in fear of their own judgment.
I have found some Christians who don't agree with Camping's predictions but say this rush for converts is good.
They seem to think the ends justify the means — that, even though Camping will be wrong, it is good that people are turning their lives around to Jesus.
I disagree. This is falling into one of the major criticisms of Christianity (and religion in general) — that all we are doing is offering some metaphysical "fire insurance." These critics say the Christian message is only about fear of hell and punishment.
However, this is not what Christianity is all about. Christianity preaches a message of a God who loves the whole world. 1 John 4:9, 10 says, "This is how God showed his love among us: He sent his one and only Son into
the world that we might live through him. This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins."
If you find the prospect of judgment for your sins in a couple of weeks frightening, and are considering repentance, ask yourself, "Would I be doing the same thing if I didn't know when the world was going to end?" Come to Jesus from a genuine faith that he paid the penalty for your sins, not the fear of what would happen if he didn't.
VIEWPOINT
David Zimmerman is a Wichita sonor In communications studies.
Enrollment advising solution involves student volunteers
Everyone has horror stories about enrollment. But students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences have the added difficulty
of inconsistent, often inadequate, advising.
An advising committee has been formed to evaluate the situation and
should be established for two weeks each semester during the enrollment period to help younger students decide which classes to take and why.
PEER ADVISING
A volunteer corps of students would guide new students through enrollment when the inconsistent system now in place fails.
should make its initial report by next spring. Meanwhile, students continue to struggle.
The committee could be formed by Student Senate with the help of the advising support center. It will be cheap and easy to
A volunteer squad of juniors and seniors
create, and most important, it will fill — at least temporarily—the gap in advising that exists for students when enrollment time comes around.
JACK LERNER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
Alternatives to jail time could alleviate crowding
The recent banishment of two teens to an uninhabited Alaskan island should not be dismissed as an arcane example of tribal justice.
It should be seen as an alternative to today's overcrowded prisons.
victs to prison for minor offenses. Prison is all-too often the place where the cycle of crime is perpetuated, and these minor offenders become hard-
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
Alternatives to imprisonment should
Justice is better served by teaching discipline and skills to minor offenders through alternative punishment.
be seriously considered. Sending juveniles to juvenile hall where the point of their confinement is often lost is just as improper as sending con-
W or k camps, where minor offenders can be put to work on building projects beneficial to the community, or boot camps, where discipline is stressed, should be considered by the federal and state governments.
MICHAEL PAUL FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
JEN CARR Business manager
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
News ... Sara Bannett
Editorial ... Donella Heene
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
Mellassie Lecey
Features ... Tread 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 Mastro
Coop mgr ... Emily Gibson
Special Sections mgr ... Jen Perrier
Production mgrs ... Holly Boren
Regan Overy
Marketing director ... Alan Stiglic
Creative director ... John Carlton
Classified mgr ... Heather Nahuaus
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 North Carolina at Chapel Hill may also use this format.
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.
CANDIDATES FOR GOVERNOR RACE TO FILL JOAN FINNEY'S SHOES
S HOON
2
GRAVES
SLATTERY
HOOD
UDK
1994
LEFT
LEFT
GRAVES SLATT HOOD
Matt Hood / KANSAN
LEFT
LEFT LEFT
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Slattery is only as good as his word
Congressman Jim Slattery is always trying to prove that he is what every voter wants. He demonstrated this again Sept. 1 during his campus visit.
However, Slattery has powerful connections in Washington. He can tell the people of Kansas the exact code to the men's restroom on the second floor of the Capitol. With his terms in Congress, he has also acquired the knowledge that, to get a bill from committee onto the floor and then vote against it. So the people of Kansas can expect a governor who backs a bill and then vetoes the bill once it gets to his desk.
On one side Slattery is a poor lost soul. He only wants to help the people of Kansas. If that means he has to become governor, then so be it. Although, he really can't afford to run. Thank God he was part of a Congress that voted itself several raises. Otherwise, he would have to depend solely on the political action committees and out-of-town businesses that have consistently funded his campaigns.
Deborah Thompson
Wichita sophomore
Slattery can indeed be what every voter wants. After all, he is a man of his word. Too bad that word is always changing.
Letters to the Editor may be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
Liberal arts meant to teach learning
The September 7th editorial, "Universities need to cater programs to today's grad," contains the assumption that the University is some sort of vocational school.
To propose the elimination of all course requirements "not designed to promote professional competence" is to argue for the narrowest kind of ignorance.
Surely the purpose of education isn't just to prepare one for a job but to prepare one for life.
Given the changing demands of the job market, students should welcome the opportunity to enhance their lifelong learning capacities and dismiss the notion that time-bound, job specific training is in anyway higher learning that prepares them for a productive life.
A narrow vocational education may help one get a job, but it won't help one advance to a new job or adapt to changing technologies and a changing world.
Can a French teacher — faced with genetic engineering, AIDS, etc. really afford to be ignorant of biology,
as the Kansan suggests?
Undergraduate general education requirements are designed to provide students with intellectual skills and habits of mind that will enable them to continue to learn as they come to make choices among the myriad possibilities of the University curriculum and beyond.
The editorial assumes that all students know from the beginning precisely what they want to do and should become immediate specialists.
A university is a place where minds are permitted and encouraged to change.
James Mukeskens
Dean, Liberal Arts and Sciences
Peter J. Casagrande Associate Dean, Humanities
Beverly Davenport Sypher Associate Dean, Social Sciences
J. Michael Young Associate Dean/Director, K.U Honors Program
James B. Carothers Associate Dean, Humanities
Sally Frost-Mason Associate Dean, Natural Sciences and Mathematics
COLUMNIST
ERIKA RASMUSSON
This week, while all of you are sweating through a full week of classes, I'll be spending four days in sunny Tennessee.
Campus clubs can provide fun and experience
I'm not going to visit Graceland, the Grand Ole Orpy or to listen to country music. It's not even a vacation, really.
The Society of Professional Journalists is the organization, and Nashville is the site of this year's national convention. Instead of learning about my major in classes, this week I'll be learning about it from professionals and famous journalists from all across the country.
I'm going to Nashville because I have the opportunity through an organization I'm involved with at KU.
I think it will be a great opportunity for me to learn about the business of journalism and bring that information back to the club so those who didn't go can benefit from the experience as well. Of course, I think it will be fun, too.
Regardless of what you are looking for in a student organization, it makes sense to check them out. You are bound to find at least one that interests you, and once involved, the opportunities are endless.
Aside from being fun and informative, it brings up an important point, and that is the fact that I wouldn't be going on this trip if I hadn't decided to get involved in the group.
According to KU Information, there are more than 300 student organizations at KU, from political and religious, to academic and social. Whether your interest is in legalizing marjuana, working on Rock Chalk Revue or reading Dr. Seuss books, there is an organization for you on this campus.
You might even get to go to Nashville.
Getting involved can be more rewarding than you think. Besides the obvious, such as meeting great people, having fun and getting experience, being active in a campus group looks good on a resume. It shows future employers that you did more with your four or five years in college than struggle through Western Civilization and drink a lot of beer.
And if you join an organization designed to help you with your major, such as the Pre Med club or the KU Advertising club, you can get extremely valuable information that might not be available in your classes.
Erika Rasmussen is a Minnetonka, Minn., senior in magazine journalism.
HUBIE
HERE IN THE SECOND CIRCLE OF HEIL RESIDES THE 22-YEAR-OLD MAN-CHILD, SHAQUILLE O'NEAL.
LOVE SHAD
AMONG HIS MANY SINS:
THE SHoot / PASS / SLAM
REEBOK COMMERCIAL
DO YOU WANT
ME TO SHoot
IT?
NO!
DO YOU WANT
ME TO PASS
IT?
NO!
DO YOU WANT
ME TO SLAM
IT?
NO!
"I know I got skillz"
THE "SHAR VEGER-" RAP
ALBUM - WITH SONG
TITLES LIKE,
"I'm outstanding" —and—
"I hate to brag"
FOR HAVING A NAME THAT
BEGS ANNOUNCERS AND
WRITERS TO SAY TRUGS
HIKE "JOUN THE SHAQ"
"FUTURE SHAQ," OR
"SHAQ ATTACK."
By Greg Hardin
THERE GOES THE SHAQ DADDY!
...FOR SAYING THINGS IN PRINT LIKE,
"I HAVE NICE TEETH AND I'M VERY HANDSOME."
AND LAST BUT NOT LEAST,
THOSE SIDEBURNS !!!
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED APR2594
AND LAST BUT NOT LESS,
THOSE SIDEBURNS !!!!
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
5A
Five false fires 'alarm' McCollum Hall residents
Is it worth it?
Penalties for pulling fire alarms with no cause can be severe. Here's what happen
1. Person working front desk will call
911 to report fire alarm.
2. Police and Fire Department arrive and suspect is turned over to authorities.
3. Police will file a criminal report for "Making a false alarm," which is sent to the district attorney's office
4. Possibly sentenced to a maximum $2,500 fine and one year imprisonment.
FIRE
PULL DOWN
Source: University Housing and KU Police
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
By Ashley Miller
Kansan staff writer
Most students dread hearing the incessant buzzing of a fire alarm at 3 a.m., but Patrick Koehler, McCollum Hall resident, looks forward to it.
"The housing department takes fire alarms very seriously," Schmaedek said.
Jim Schmaedeke, complex director of McCollum, said the hall had five fire alarms between Aug. 28 and Sept. 8 this semester.
"It's good," the Peru, Ill., junior, said. "We get to associate with our friends outside."
According to Lawrence Fire Department reports, a fire extinguisher in the abandoned cafeteria set off the first alarm on Aug. 28. The second alarm was caused by the smoke from candles on a birthday cake, and firecrackers set off the third alarm. The fourth fire alarm was pulled intentionally on the second floor.
KU Crime Stoppers posters were hung in McColium to find out who pulled the false alarm, said Fred McElhenie, assistant director of student housing.
"People get real tired of this, real quick," he said.
He said three of the five fire alarms were set off between 2 and 4 in the morning. The other two alarms were set between 8 and 11 at night.
Chaya Wittman, Quinter freshman, said she hated fire alarms in the middle of the night, especially if they were pulled for no reason.
The most recent alarm, on Sept. 8, was caused by cigarette smoke in a resident's room. The call to the fire department was cancelled by KU police. Schmaekde said that this had been the only case in which student housing knew who set off the alarm.
"It wakes me up in the middle of a dream, and it makes me mad," Wittman said. "It's disgusting that people have to lower themselves like this to have fun."
Both McElhenie and Schmaedeke said the time of the alarm determined the length of the wait
Schmaedeke said it usually took about 30 minutes from the time the alarm went off until residents were allowed to enter the building.
"Basically, we have to make sure the residents have evacuated the building," he said. "The resident assistants try to knock on all of the doors on the way down."
Schmaedeke said he thought residents in the halls pulled fire alarms in cycles. A residence hall might have several alarms intentionally pulled in one year and have only a handful pulled the next year.
According to an article in the Nov. 11, 1922 issue of the University Daily Kansan, Oliver Hall had six false fire alarms between Oct. 29 and Nov. 11. A resident in Naismith Hall was caught and prosecuted for all six alarms.
McElhene said intentional false alarms occurred at certain times of the year, too.
"If we have a lot of false alarm pulls, they occur in the fall," McEllenie said.
Hosts help guide new students
By Heather Kirkwood Special to the Kansan
When Poon Kin, a graduate student from Hong Kong, first came to the United States, he expected to find a country full of gang mobsters and drug abuse. But when he arrived in Lawrence last year and met his host family, he discovered something different.
Through the Lawrence Host Family Program, a citywide program which uses KU's International Student Services as a liaison, Kin was able to meet a traditional American family, see what their home was like, and participate in typical American holidays.
"When I came a year ago, I felt like a newcomer, and they told me what to do and what I should not do," Kin said. "It's like a guideline for international students." Kin stayed with Bill and Margaret Feay, 3027 Longhorn Dr.
This community program matches international students with host families for the purpose of building friendships. Students are told about the program at an international student orientation at the beginning of each school year. Host families are not responsible for housing, health care, or any legal difficulties. While there is an organized picnic in September and a Halloween Square Dance, it is up to the family and student to coordinate other activities throughout the year.
This year the program has paired more than 100 students with local families, but there are still several students in need of a family, according to Diane Sanders, co-chair of the program's steering committee. If the program cannot find host families for them in the next week, the students will have to do without the service, she said.
Families need not be stereotypical to get involved.
"We have traditional families and then the empty-nesters," she said. "We have older couples and senior citizens. We also find young singles that participate." KU students are also welcome. Sanders said.
Gene and Jo Ann Van Hoesen, 1312 W. 21st Terrace, have sponsored from 50 to 60 students from approximately 26 countries in their 18 years of involvement.
"I feel almost selfish sometimes because I wonder what our life would have been like without our students." Jo Ann Van Hoesen said.
The Van Hoesens recently returned from a trip to Europe where they visited several former students.
Jo Ann Van Hoesen's face lights up when she talks about her students, whom she thinks of as if they were her own children. Van Hoesen, a mother of two and grandmother of four, became interested in the program after her own kids left home.
it was my way of re-feathering the nest." she said.
Jo Ann Van Hoesen said she believes the program has helped to keep her young, has introduced her to different political ideas and has made her more tolerant of other cultures.
Sometimes people think that they will be too busy or that they won't be able to understand the students, she said, but she believes it is good to take time out, even just to share a yogurt cone with a foreign student. As far as understanding, Jo Ann VanHoesen said she gets used to the accents.
Mike Muder, graduate assistant in the International Student Services Office, helps coordinate the Host Family Program. Anyone wishing to get involved, either as a student or host family, should get in touch with him at 864-3617.
Extend a helping hand
Suggestions for meeting international students:
BE YOURSELF. Informality makes everyone feel more at ease. Speak more slowly, and try to avoid slog. Ask your new friend to repeat things several times if you don't understand.
n LEARN ABOUT YOUR STUDENTS COUNTRY.
Respect that country's religion, national customs and dietary preferences. Don't try to "Americanize" your friend.
- KEEP IN TOUCH. Send a note at the beginning of your acquaintance to clarify invitations and information. Please remember that punctuality may be important in the culture where your your friend has been living.
City working to meet housing needs
STUDENTS FIRST. Don't forget that the student's academic responsibilities must always come first, if your invitation to an activity is refused, try again later.
■ INCLUDE THE STUDENT'S FRIENDS IN SOME ACTIVITIES. Your hospitality will be appreciated and your horizons expanded.
Source: Lawrence Host Family Program
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
A Lawrence family applying for government-subsidized affordable housing could wait two years to get a home.
And according to city officials, the line won't get any shorter. Since the mid-1980s, the number of people on the waiting list for affordable housing has risen due to national trends and the city's growth.
The problem has sent officials of the Lawrence Housing Authority, the city agency responsible for overseeing federal housing funds, looking for a solution. And the officials say they may have found one. Next month, they formally will ask the Lawrence City Commission for permission to change from a government agency to a non-profit corporation.
Housing help The number of Lawrence families applying for some kind of federal housing assistance from the Lawrence Housing Authority has climbed since 1987.
Families applying for aid
526
560
561
608
702
716
839
497*
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
Year
* Since August
The move, they say, is the only way to get badly needed funds to create more affordable housing.
Source: Lawrence Housing Authority
Demand for affordable housing already is three times larger than the number of units available, said Barbara Huppee, executive director of the Lawrence Housing Authority. The authority, whose leadership is appointed by the mayor, maintains 740 housing units subsidized in some way by the federal government, she said.
Huppe said the solution was to transform the authority into a non-profit corporation. As a government agency, she said, the authority couldn't own land, take out loans or sell bonds. But as a non-profit corporation, it would have fewer restrictions on fund raising and would be eligible for private-sector government aid.
But according to the 1990 Census, almost 3,000 families in Lawrence live at or below the poverty level of $17,000 in gross annual income. And so far this year, 497 of them were on the waiting list for some kind of housing assistance.
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
"Money is very tight," Huppe said. "So if we keep our current role, it's not likely we'll be able to raise enough funds."
To live in the low-income housing units, such as the ones at Edgewood Home Apartments, 1600 Haskell Ave, at Babcock Place Apartments, 1700 Massachusetts St., and other places in Lawrence, the family must live below the poverty level, Huppee said. Once there, the family pays 30 percent of its income on rent and utilities. For a family living on $6,000 a year, Huppee said, 30 percent is the only affordable rent in Lawrence.
Lawrence's affordable-housing squeeze partially is a symptom of being a growing university town, said Jay Leipzig. Lawrence housing coordinator. Leipzig said KU students took up much of the available family housing by living three or four to an apartment. Landlords then could jack up prices, keeping Lawrence rental
rates high, he said.
Leipzig also said the high cost of land in Lawrence discouraged the building of cheaper housing.
Jo Andersen, Lawrence mayor, said national trends also contributed to the problem. She said during the 1980s, federal cutbacks forced local governments to take up the slack. But local governments couldn't keep up, she said, and the result was cutbacks in programs such as unemployment and education.
"This created this massive underculture of people who couldn't afford housing and didn't make much from their jobs," she said.
Andersen said the commission would be receptive to the idea of a non-profit corporation when it came before the commission in October. However, details, such as who would appoint the head of the authority, still had to be ironed out, she said.
"We believe they do a really good job with what they have," Andersen said. "We just have to see what affect this could have."
Horoscopes
Everyday in the Kansan!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Grab one and save!
Keep it clean.
IT'S ALL HAPPEN
K
ARTS
PATIORAL
ACMUSEUM
FOR THE
ARTS
STUDENT
SENATE
MAGA
Get your Kansan Card today!
IT'S ALL HAPPENING AT THE LIED CENTER!
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Lied Series presents
Behind the Scenes
for KU and Haskell Students at the Lied Center
Wednesday, September 14
4:30 - 6:00 p.m.
GET FIRST DIBS ON INDIVIDUAL TICKETS TO YOUR FAVORATE LIED SERIES EVENTS!
(Check out the Lied Center...from the dressing rooms to the orchestra pit! (PLUS...Where else can you get free popcorn and Coca Cola from 4:30 to 6:00!)
BECOME A CAMPUS CELEBRITY...GET INTERVIEWED on KJHK!
Register to win season tickets to the 1994-95 New Directions Series!
CATCH THE NIGHLIGHTS OF THE UPCOMING SEASON!
Stretch your money!
Use Kansan coupons
MATRIX MODEL OF THE EARTH
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
Bottlenecks
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
Tues. Sept. 13
Shudder to Think
Stanford Prison Experiment
18 + over
Weds. Sept. 14
Mercy Rule
Dali Automatic
Skpenny
18 + over
Thurs. Sept. 15
Grither
Amputatoe
Free Show after Rev. Horton Beat
Fri. Sept. 16
Salty Iquanas
Bottlerockets
6A
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
CHAINS 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
South Point
Apartments
2166 W. 26th St.
Fantastic Fall Special!
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
- Swimming Pool Sand Volleyball Court
- On KU Bus Route Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid
Outstanding New Staff!!!
THE KU HILLEL FOUNDATION PRESENTS:
SHABBATDINNER
Friday, September 16, 6:00 Hillel House (940 Mississippi)
RESERVATIONS MUST BE IN BY THURSDAY AT NOON!
Those without reservations may be turned away Free for Hillel members $3 for non-members 864-3948 for more information
ROLLER SKATING
AEROBICS with BODY BOUTIQUE
AEROBICS with
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
• Nautilus & Freeweights • Personal Fitness Training
• Reebok Step • Full Spa Area
• Stairmasters/Treadmill • 60 Aerobic classes per week
• Lifecycles/Rowing Machine • 2 Aerobic rooms
FIRST VISIT FREE!
Buy 1 Year, Get 1 Year FREE
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
The Spirits Come Alive Homecoming '94
KU
OSU
The Spirits Come Alive Homecoming '04 KU vs. OSU
KU vs. OSU
HOMECOMING PARADE APPLICATIONS
Entry Categories
• Float-competitive
• Marching Bands-non-competitive
• Banner Signs-non-competitive
Entry Applications and Deadlines
• Float-Deadline for entry applications is September 30, at 5:00pm.
• Marching Bands and Banners-Deadline for entry applications is September 30, at 5:00pm.
• All entry applications should be submitted to the SUA office, Level 4, Kansas Union.
For more information contact SUA at 864-3477.
Required Parade Meetings
• Wednesday, October 5, 5:00pm in the Kansas Union. All FLOAT carries must have a representative present for rules and safety review by the KU Police. An absence from this meeting could result in disqualification from the parade or loss of points.
Ex.C.E.L. Award
$500.00 Scholarship
Nominations are now being accepted for the EXcellence in Community, Education, and Leadership Award
One male and one female will be chosen on the basis of their capacity for leadership, effective communication skills, involvement in the KU community, academics and their ability to work with a wide variety of students and student organizations. Each recipient of the EX.C.E.L. Award will receive a $500 scholarship. All applicants must be nominated. Nomination forms are available at the Organizations and Activities Office or the SUA Office, both offices are located on the 4th Floor of the Kansas Union
Nomination forms are due by September 30, 5:00pm
Application forms are due by October 6, 5:00pm
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
For more information call SUA
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
at 864-3477
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Plane wreck raises doubts
South Lawn doubles as pilot's landing pad
If so, there apparently was no time to reach for those missiles early yesterday morning as the stolen plane slammed into the South Lawn, without a single Secret Service shot being fired at it. The pilot was killed.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Everyone agrees it shouldn't have happened. Security should be good enough to prevent someone from flying a plane onto the White House grounds.
But security experts say there are limits to what can be done to protect the White House against all contingencies, especially threats like that posed by the low-flying Cessna 150 that wound up in a pile of tangled metal alongside the White House early yesterday.
The Secret Service doesn't discuss what it has in place for protection. But it is known that agency sharphooters are stationed on the roof during daylight hours. And security forces have been reported to be equipped with shoulder-fired Stinger missiles.
How much time was there between when the Secret Service knew aplane was headed their way and the impact?
"I think time enough to run for cover," Carl Meyer, a Secret Service representative, told reporters at the White House. "I don't think there was all that much time, to be quite honest with you."
An intensive investigation was quickly begun, and not just by the Secret Service. The crash simply should not have happened, said Transportation Secretary Federico Pena. "This is a secure airspace. It is constantly under surveillance."
But the plane appeared to fly at treetop level, apparently evading radar, authorities said. And it may not have had in operation a transponder that is supposed to help air controllers pinpoint the location of all aircraft.
of plane in
House crash
According to eyewitness accounts,
the Cessna 172 that crashed on
White House grounds Monday
followed this approximate path:
1 Plane flies past
White House from north
Blair House
White House
2 Plane flies
near
Washington Monument
3 Plane flies down
Mall,
makes left turn into
White House grounds
Kennedy Center
Lincoln Memorial
Potomac River
The Mall
Washington Monument
0 2 mi
Miles
Wash.,
D.C.
Map area
Va.
Md.
Total Basin
0
1/2
Mile
Ron Coddington / Knight-Ridder Tribune
Plane crashes at White House
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — In a bizarre breach of security, a stolen plane darted unchallenged over the White House fence yesterday, slammed down on the South Lawn and cartwheeled against the mansion just below President Clinton's private quarters.
The pilot, killed in the crash, was identified as Maryland truck driver Frank Corder, said to have a history of mental illness. Clinton and his family were not in the White House when the small, single-engine plane hit at 1:49 a.m. They were staying in a government guest house across the street because of White House repairs.
Security agents spotted the incoming plane only at the last second, with just "enough time to run for cover," Secret Service representative Carl Meyer said.
Avenue, which Clinton had been crossing each day between Blair House and the White House, was closed for most of the day.
White House security was immediately tightened. Pennsylvania
"This has been quite an unusual day here at the White House," Hillary Rodham Clinton told a group of guests. Before the wreckage was carted off, she was seen peering at it from a balcony.
The plane was stolen Sunday evening from a small airfield in Harford County near Baltimore. Witnesses said it flew into Washington from the north, heading down 17th Street toward the Potomac River.
PYRAMID PIZZA
PYRAMID PIZZA "TO THE RESCUE"
PRICE•BUSTER
VALUE MENU
Saves You Money
WITH PYRAMID PIZZA'S EVERYDAY SUPER SAVERS
A WHOLE
LOT MORE
FOR A WHOLE
LOT LESS –
WHAT A DEAL!
We've created these
special 10" pizza values for
special people like you...
our campus customers.
So hurry on down and
pick one up or give us a call
for Free Delivery. Why not?
Now they're both delicious
and affordable!
WE WANT TO
PUT OUR PIZZA
WHERE YOUR MOUTH IS!
P.S. This ain't no
Cardboard Pizza
249-3232
over the Wheel"
MAY 10" PYRAMID PIZZA SUPER SAVER
PYRAMID PIZZA "TO THE RESCUE"
PYRAMID
PIZZA
PRICE·BUSTER
VALUE MENU
Saves You Money
WITH PYRAMID PIZZA'S EVERYDAY SUPER SAVERS
Pizza
HAPPY
"
Laughing
OneZee
1 10" Pizza
2 Toppings
TwoZee
1 Pepsi
2 10" Pizzas
2 Toppings
$5.42
2 Pepsi
ThreeZee
3 10" Pizza
1 Topping
4 Pepsi
$9.89
$12.97
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
7A
Suicide cause of plane crash
The Associated Press
PERRY POINT, Md. — His marriage had just fallen apart, his father had died of cancer, he had problems with drugs and alcohol, and he had talked of suicide.
It all caused Frank Corder's relatives to say it was not politics but a determination to end his life that motivated him to steal a small plane in the middle of the night, fly it to Washington and crash it on the White House lawn.
"He did this to destroy himself," said an aunt, Edith Dishman.
Corder, 38, who worked as a self-employed freight-truck driver and had a student pilot license, died in the crash.
The Secret Service reached the same preliminary conclusion as Corder's family. Political considerations were not in play.
"It does not appear to be directed toward the president," said special agent Carl Meyer of the Secret Service.
"Frank has never said anything against this country or anyone else," said Mrs. Dishman.
"It was the drugs," she said. "That's the only problem that I know of that Frank had. It was just like the devil will get ashold of you and won't let go."
Corder had no criminal record, state police said, but he was convicted of drunken driving last year and lost his commercial driver's license for 90 days.
His father died of cancer at 64 in April 1993, Mrs. Dishman said.
USAir victims mourned
PITTSBURGH — Hymns echoed softly through a crowded downtown square yesterday as 2,000 people gathered at lunchtime to mourn the victims of USAir Flight 427.
The Associated Press
"Maybe God will give me some answers to what happened," said Pam Kastelmeyer, whose neighbor's daughter was among 132 people killed when the jet crashed Thursday in a wooded ravine.
Some of the victims' loved ones were stolc through several prayers, but they broke down and sobbed when a priest read the names of the dead. A wreath adorned with red carnations and tiny white flowers stood alone in front of a stage set up on Market Square, in the city's business district.
About 20 miles away at the crash site, investigators continued their search for clues. They were trying to determine whether the right engine of the Boeing 737-300 inadvertently went into reverse before the plane nose-dived six miles short of the Pittsburgh International Airport.
A flight crew reported problems with the engine's reverse thrust 21/2 months ago.
When activated, the reverser closes across the rear of the engine so hot exhaust is deflected to counteract the plane's forward motion. Passengers can hear the roar from the engines just after the plane touches the ground.
Four actuators, which control the
position of an engine's thrust reverser, were recovered from the right engine. Three were in the deployed position, but it wasn't clear whether they were in that position before the plane hit the ground at 300 mph. The fourth wasn't deployed.
The actuators are controlled by levers usually arranged on the same console as the plane's throttle. Donald Ward, an aeronautical engineering professor at Texas A&M University, said the controls were designed so they can not be moved accidentally. The devices can not control just one engine at a time.
All actuators recovered from the left engine were in proper position.
Engine were in proper position Records show that a crew flying the 7-year-old plane reported difficulty 21/2 months ago in putting the right engine into reverse, said National Transportation Safety Board member Carl Vogt. Part of the reverser was replaced July 3 and the device was lubricated, Vogt said. There had been no complaints since then.
Witnesses told investigators the jet rolled to the left before it crashed. John Nance, an air safety analyst in Seattle, said that if the right engine's thrust was reversed, the plane would have moved to the right.
He cautioned that "this impact was so horrendous and the scattered parts so thoroughly hashed up that no conclusion right now, no matter how obvious it might seem, can be relied on."
AmeriCorps service programs begins
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Surrounded by hundreds of youths on the front steps of the White House, President Clinton swore in the first recruits to his national service program yesterday and urged all young Americans to join the cause.
"You are no generation of slackers," he declared.
lection of old and new community service programs.
AmeriCorps, approved easily by Congress a year ago, gives Americans a chance to earn tuition or work off college loans by participating in a col-
Drawing a comparison between AmeriCorps and President Kennedy's Peace Corps, Clinton said, "The people of AmeriCorps are the next generation of heroes."
AmeriCorps is a $360 million program paying 20,000 Americans to work in education, health and human needs, the environment, and public safety. If Congress extends the program, the White House hopes to spend $1.5 billion during three years to pay for 100,000 workers.
Some in Congress have questioned the cost of the program. Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, accused Clinton of creating "a large and costly bureaucracy."
The workers, many of whom are in their late teens and early 20s, will receive minimum-wage pay, free health care and a $4,725 educational voucher for one year of work. The money can be used for college, vocational education or to pay off college loans. The recruits can work up to two years.
The Lied Center Needs You! Volunteer Meeting
Tuesday, September 13th at 7:00 pm
The Lied Center All past volunteerers and all interested persons are invited to attend.
If you are interested in being an Usher or Ticket Taker If you would like to see dozens of great performances for free, Come join us for this informational meeting. For more information, call 913-864-3469
to be placed on the volunteer list Fill out the volunteer form below.
LIED CENTER VOLUNTEER SIGN-UP FORM
Name ___
Address___
City___ State___ Zip ___
Phone(day)___(eve)___
Mail to: Lied Center Volunteer Coordinator University of Kansas, West Campus Lawrence KS 66045-0501
THE LIED CENTER
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HARDWARE
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FELL MT/OFF REDREN
Make an impression
plaques, awards, & gifts
Jaybowl
CENTER UNION
ENGRAVING
864-3545 • kansas union • level 1
Jaybowl
KANSAS UNION
ENGRAVING
4-3545 • kansas union • level 1
Just a few days
LAWRENCE'S LARGEST
record store
plus all this cool stuff:
128 listening stations for your private sampling Open late daily Separate room for jazz and classical music Coffeeshop and Espresso Bar by La Prima Tazza
Downtown Lawrence * Off 10th & Massachusetts
913-843-3630
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
FILMS FOR SEPT. 12-14
Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown
Mon. 9:30 PM
Tues. 7:00 PM
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
FEARLESS
Tues. 9:30 PM
Wed. 7:00 PM
ALL SHOWS IN WOODRUFF AUD.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CAR
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
Crown Cinema
BEFORE & PM. ADULTS $3.00
(limited to seating)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
Speed $ ^{R} $ 5:00,7:15,9:30
A Good Man in Africa® 5·15, 7·30, 9·45
The Lion King® 5·15, 7·30, 9·45
The Client P6-13 5·00, 7·15, 9·30
Milk Money P6-13 5·00, 7·15, 9·30
Clear & Present Danger 5·00, 7·30, 9·30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
CINEMA TWIN ALL SEATS
1110/OWA 841-5191 $1.25
Maverick PG-13 9:45; 7:20; 9:50
I Love Trouble PG 5:00; 7:30; 9:50
the UNDERCOVER answer to the wonder bra!
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
10
Lilyette's la' difference comes in red, candle, frost peach, white and black
UNDERCOVER The pink building 21 W.9th
Liloyette
YOMKIPPURSERVICES
KOLNIDRE
Wednesday, September 14, 7:30 pm Kansas Union Ballroom
Thursday, September 15, 9:30 am Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive
YOM KIPPUR
for more information, call 864-3948
HenryT's Bar&Grill
WEDNESDAYS AT HENRY T'S
15¢ WINGS (AFTER 6PM)
$1.50 DOMESTIC LONGNECKS
2-4-1 BURGERS
$2.00 33OZ GUSTOS
(BUD,BUD LITE,COORS :LITE)
WE ARE YOUR NFL TICKET
SO DON'T MISS A GAME!!
749-2999 6th & Kasold
8A
PORTESYOF THE PAIL AND SHOVEL PARTY,THE LEGENDARY STUDENT POLITICAL GROUP DEDICATED TO ALL THINGS SILLY.
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WHEN STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN WENT TO CLASS ONE
What are those strange plastic things all over campus?
They are COLLEGIATE FONCARDS $ ^{ \mathrm{SM}} $ from Sprint. The late night MOONLIGHT MADNESS rate they offer is certainly unusual. So unusual, only Sprint offers it. Gab all night long from 11pm-6am
MOONLIGHT
Machines
Sprint®
COLLEGIATE
FONCARD™
816 854 1139 1234
Dial 1-800-877-B000. At Tone, Dial 0 + Area Code + Number
At Tone, Enter FONCARD Number.
THIS COLLEGIATE FONCARD IS SO EASY,IT'S WEIRD.
Stranger yet, the Sprint Booth on campus is giving away groovy T-shirts just for signing up. The COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint Totally weird. Check it out at
night long from 11pm-6am at 9¢ a minute. the Sprint Booth on campus.
Sprint.
9C A MINUTE RATE, 30 FREE MINUTES AND A FREE T-SHIRT? WEIRDNESS AT THE SPRINT BOOTH. SIGN UP! AT OUR BOOTH! MONDAY & TUESDAY, SEPT. 12 & 13 AT THE MAIN LOBBY, KANSAS UNION. 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
9¢ a minute rate applies to domestic calls made between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m.In addition to the 9¢ a minute rate, surcharges will apply to COLLEGIATE FONCARD calls. ©1994 Sprint Communications Company L.P.
BASCOM HILL. IT WAS ANOTHER VERY ELABORATE,VERY EXPENSIVE PRANK,
MORNING, THEY WERE GREETED BY A SPECTACULAR SIGHT: OVER A THOUSAND PINK FLAMINGOS LOUNGING ON THE LAWN.
2B
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
Learn to Fly 842-0000
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
fifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
The Etc. Shop
Ray-Ban
Sunglasses for DRIVING
The Power of Babble
External Jacks are the Black Holes for accessories. They're where your earphone and microphone go.
HI/LOW MIC
The great equalizer.
As sensitive to your word of wisdom up close as th prof's distant rambling.
OLYMPUS
Audible Cue
Mark Button
Helps you find where you changed the subject.
Dual tape speeds Lets you sleep through three hours of lectures without having to change a single XZZZZZZZZZZZ-90 tape.
Tape Counter Keeps notes, classes and even your days numbered.
Hands-free Recording.
XOVA
(Variable control voice actuation)
Ready for class before you are.
Pearlcorder S924
MICROCASSETTE RECORDER
(Actual Size)
OLYMPUS
MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM
Never miss another oqprstuwxyabcdefghijklmn.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Available at: Camera America 1610 West 32nd Street, Lawrence, Kansas 66246 • Wolf's Camera Shop 615 Kansas Avenue, Topeka, Kansas 66601
And Other Fine Stores. If you can't find the Microscope Microscope® 60646 or your (9824 is pictured here) I can 1-802-2812 for information
Players' eligibility still in doubt
Seminoles need state law changed to play Saturday The Associated Press
The Associated Press
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — An attorney for the state Board of Regents will ask a federal judge today to overturn a state law that has kept the NCAA from ruling on the eligibility of five Florida State football players.
Three players, including All-American linebacker Derrick Brooks, are due back for Saturday's game at Wake Forest after serving two-game suspensions handed out by the university. But only the NCAA can restore eligibility with member institutions.
"From our standpoint, we hope the NCAA winds up in a position where it can rule on what we've done." Florida State President Talbot "Sandy" D'Almebertia said yesterday. "We want a good, clear procedure to allow
Tallahassee attorney Ken Hart, representing the regents, will ask Judge William Stafford to declare the state law unconstitutional, clearing the way for the NCAA to rule on the players' eligibility.
usto go forward."
"That's what we hope to achieve," said Hart. "We will ask him to rule as quickly as he's comfortable doing it."
The regents, while not taking a position on the law, in effect agree with the NCAA, which sued last month to have the state law ruled unconstitutional.
The state law requires the NCAA to follow due process protections, provided to all residents, and prohibits the NCAA from operating in Florida under its own rules with member institutions.
But the NCAA, in no uncertain terms, reminded Florida State on Thursday that it is the only body that can restore an athlete's eligibility.
"I don't want players taking the field having any doubt what their status is," D'Alemberte said yesterday. "They ought to have their minds on the game."
Florida State would risk further sanctions at a later date if they allow the players to compete without NCAA approval.
Although the NCAA prevailed in similar court action last year in Nevada, the Florida attorney general's office will file briefs with its obligatory position standing behind the law which took effect in 1992 after being passed by the 1991 Legislature.
Brooks, tailback Tiger McMillon and offensive guard Marecus Long were suspended by Florida State for two games for accepting gifts last November from prospective agents.
Two others, guard Patrick McNeil and offensive tackle Forrest Conoly, are serving four-game suspensions.
SPORTS in brief
KU
'Hawks place ninth in New Mexico tourney
The Kansas women's golf team competed in the Diet Coke-Roadrunner Invitational over the weekend in Las Cruces, N.M.
The Jayhawks placed ninth in the 17-team field with a three-day total of 968 stokes. They competed on the par 74 New Mexico State University Golf Course.
hawks'scoring.
Sophomore Missy Russell paced the Jayhawks by carding a total of 237 over the three days. She placed 22nd. Senior Michelle Uher followed in 26th with a total of 238.
Coach Jerry Waugh said he was pleased with Jay-
Despite Russell's effort, the Arizona State Sun Devils took the title. They had a three-day total of 878.
Soccer wins season openers
The Kansas men's soccer club team opened the season by winning both of its games.
On Saturday, the team traveled to Wichita and defeated the Shockers 5-1. On Sunday, the Jayhawks defeated the Oklahoma soccer club 4-0 in Norman, Okla.
The team will play its home opener against Wichita State next Sunday at 2 p.m. at the YSI Complex, 25th and Wakarusa.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports
For less than a dollar a day both will give you the power you need to survive this semester.
One java, pitting bot, no sugar and bold the moo juice.
With an Apple Computer Loan, it's now easier than ever to buy a Macintosh personal computer. In fact, with Apple's special low interest and easy terms, you can own a Mac for as little as $23 per month! Buy any select Macintosh now, and you'll also get something no other computer offers: the Apple student software set. It includes a program designed to help you with all aspects of writing papers. A personal organizer/calendar created specifically for
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.
students (the only one of its kind). And the Internet Companion to help you tap into on-line resources for researching your papers. It even includes ClarisWorks, an integrated package complete with database, spreadsheet, word processing software and more. All at special low student pricing. With an offer this good, it's the best time ever to discover the power every student needs. The power to be your best. Apple
Apple
POWER
through it.
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union technology center
KU
VISA
MasterCard
Discover
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Bruno Union *e* Jessel *a* 013/064-5690
Offer expires October 17, 1994; available only while supplies last. © 1994 Apple Computer, Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh, Performa, and "The power to your best" are registered trademarks of Apple Computer Inc. AppleDesign and Mac are trademarks of Apple Computer Inc. CardWizard is a registered trademark of Clarity Corporation. $12 per month is an estimate based on an Apple Computer Loan of $1485.71 for a Performa 363 system. Price and loan amounts are subject to change without notice. See your Apple Computer Builder or representative for current system price. A 5.5% loan fee will be added to the required loan amount. The interest rate is variable, based on the commercial paper rate plus 5.5%. For the month of August of 1994, the interest rate is 10.07%, with an APR of 11.36%. A 8-year loan term with no prepayment penalty. The monthly payment shown assumes no difference of principal or interest. Students may refine payments up to 4 years, or until graduation. Deferred will change your monthly payments. The Apple Computer Loan is subject to credit approval.
》
}
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
3B
The taste of victory still sweet for Chiefs
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Still aglow over their 24-17 victory over San Francisco, the Kansas City Chiefs had trouble yesterday with coach Marty Schottenheimer's "12 o'clock Rule."
It was even troubling Schottenheimer, who usually insists that everyone put every game out of their minds by midnight Sunday and pour all concentration into the next week's challenge.
"I'm sure my memory doesn't always serve me well," Schottenheimer said yesterday after practice. "But I cannot recall a game I've been involved with in a long, long time where two teams played as hard as the 49ers and the Chiefs. It was quite a contest."
Joe Montana, who threw two touchdown passes and a twopoint conversion pass against his old teammates, was happy to put the confrontation against the 49ers and Steve Young behind him.
"But it still feels pretty good."
"You enjoy it a little bit when you get to watch the game film," he said yesterday. "Other than that, you look at all your mistakes, and you wonder how we played like that and won.
But it still feels pretty good.
After viewing the film yesterday morning, Schottenheimer said he had even greater respect for the 49ers, who were plagued by injuries.
Some might say it was hardly a
fair fight. Not only did the 49ers have to contend with nearly 80,000 full-voiced fans in one of the NFL's noisest stadiums, they were crippled in the offensive line.
On three straight possessions during the decisive stretch in the second half, Young was intercepted twice and fumbled away another scoring opportunity.
The ugly purple bruises on Young's shoulder and his suffering four sacks testified to the fact that for a while the 49ers were reduced to two second-teamers and a third-tier on the offensive line.
The Chiefs' line, in the meantime, was perfectly healthy and intact from last season. And Montana was sacked only once.
"I don't usually use the word gallant in connection with a football game," Schottenheimer said. "But it was a gallant effort by our football team.
"I think for the most part our offensive line was pretty good. You have to look awhile to find better young prospects than the two the 49ers have inside. Dana Stubblefield is playing great."
But even a day later, Montana was still slightly bugged by one thing — the way so many fans and media representatives boiled the contest down to a battle between two quarterbacks and nothing else.
"This is a team, and it took a team effort to do it," he said. "They deserve all the credit."
Call by Big Ten officials is ruled an error
CHICAGO — The Big Ten said yesterday that officials mistakenly awarded a touchdown to Stanford in the Cardinal's 41-41 tie with Northwestern, but the error won't change the outcome of the game.
The Associated Press
Mistake altered the outcome of Saturday's Stanford game
It was the third time in a year that the conference acknowledged that mistakes by Big Ten officials altered the result of a football game.
"We don't have an instant replay or access to go upstairs and look at a monitor and reconsider the call," David Parry, the league's supervisor of officials, said from his Michigan City, Ind., home. "There is not much to do but live with the judgment."
On Saturday, Stanford's Mike Mitchell fumbled as he was about to cross the goal line, and Northwest-recovered the ball in the end zone for an apparent touchback. But officials conferred and decided that Mitchell had crossed the goal line before losing the ball.
After reviewing ESPN replays, however, the conference said yesterday that "game officials were not in position to see Mike Mitchell's fumble between the 2- and 1-yard lines." The league said that resulted in "an obvious error in judgment" and "the Wildcats should have been awarded possession."
The Big Ten said decisions of game officials are final, but "when obvious errors of judgment or rules application have a significant affect on the outcome of the game, the conference believes public acknowledgement of the error is appropriate."
The officials might eventually be disciplined.
Parry said, but the league wouldn't make such action public.
"The officials are rated and graded, and records are kent. I can assure you of that." he said.
On two occasions last year, Illinois lost because of bad calls.
In Arizona's 16-14 win Sept. 18, two Illinois fumbles that were picked up and run back for touchdowns should have been ruled dead at the points of recovery.
Illinois lost to Oregon 13-7 the following week, but the Big Ten said officials should have let stand linebacker Simeon Rice's TOUCHDOWN after he stripped the ball from a Ducks' running back. Instead, they ruled that the Oregon player's forward progress had been stopped..
Illinois got an apology in both cases, but the losses were not reversed.
Drug use suspected in swimming world records
By Robert Millward The Associated Press
ROME — A World Championship that produced 10 world records has left swimming in a daze. With the suspicion of doping looming large again, the sport doesn't know whether to celebrate or hide in shame.
"I have never seen a situation where, if you win, you are tarred with doing something crooked," Australian coach Don Talbot said.
Describing performance-enhancing drugs as "the single greatest threat to the progress and integrity of the sport,"18 coaches signed a declaration calling on swimming's governing body, FINA, to act now to clean up the sport.
tion China by name, most of the doping accusations have been pointed at China's women swimmers, who won 12 of the 16 events and broke five world records at the Championships, which ended Sunday.
He said there was a danger of clean athletes following the same course as the cheats, simply to keep up with them.
Dennis Pursley, national swimming director of the United States team, was among the 18 who called on FINA to institute testing on 24 hours' notice.
Although the coaches didn't men-
"They would rather accept losing or getting out of the sport than cheat to win.
"It's a huge concern," Pursley said. "I think the majority of athletes won't be drawn into that.
"But I am not naive to think that there aren't a few of those who would possibly resort to that.
"At the same time, we have seen that clean athletes can win whether it's a level playing field or not."
The non-Chinese who broke world records at the Championships were Germany's Franzi Van Almsick, 200 freestyle.
American Tom Dolan won the 400 individual medley
Other non-Chinese world-record setters were Australians Samantha Riley, 100 breaststroke; and Kieren Perkins, 400 freestyle; and Finland's Jani Sievinen, 200 medley.
Of the Chinese, Le Jingji set records in the 50 and 100 freestyle. He Chiong broke the 100 backstroke record, and the relay teams won the 400 freestyle
and medley in world record times.Le Jingyi won five gold medals,including three in relays.
Chinese divers surprisingly won four of the six events, but the first gold went to Zimbabwe's Evan Stewart, the first medalist from his country.
Yu Zhuocheng was the only male Chinese diver to win, collecting gold in the 3-meter event.
In synchronized swimming, American Becky Dyroen-Lancer became the third swimmer to earn three golds at one World Championships, winning the solo, duet and team events.
World record-holder and defending champion Jeff Rouse of the United States was upset by Spain's Martin Lopez-Zubero in the 100 backstroke.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
BOWEN & MURPHY
COUPONS
5
ONE CENT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ERICON
ONE
10
FREE Regular 6" BLIMPIE Sub Sandwich with the Purchase of Any Sub Sandwich of Equal or Greater Value and a Medium Drink.
日
Simply Bimpie For Fresh-Sliced Subs.
Please present this coupon before ordering. Not valid if altered or duplicated. One order per coupon. One coupon per customer per visit. Customer must pay any sales tax due.
Not good in combination with any other offer. Cash value 1/100 of 14. Valid until 12/31/194.
Yello Sub
1814 W. 23rd
12th and Indiana
Yello Sub for Lunch?
Monday-Friday Lunch Special!!
Any 6" sub only $2.49 with purchase of drink (Up to $9.64 value)
With this coupon. I am to 2 pm only. Not valid with other offers.
I offer/coupon/person. Coupon expires on 12/15/94
NOW ACCEPTING EXP. 9/21/194
UDK
COMIC CORNER
* MAGIC: THE GATHERING
* GAMES * MINIATURES
* COMICS * OPEN GAMING
10% off Coupon
841-4294 not valid with any other discounts
1000 Mass, St. Suite B, Open Sundays & weekdays until 7:00
Becky's
2108 West 27th
Park Plaza Center
843-8467
OFFER GOOD WITH ALL STYLISTS
Not Valid With Other Offers
Employee ID 19134
FREE TAN!
WHERE TAN IS OK
7 @ $20
10 @ $25
15 @ $35
FREE TAN!
WITH FREE TAN OF
7 @ $20
10 @ $25
15 @ $35
Well Beat ANY Local Special
since 1985
EUROPEAN
TAN & HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Onsdahl
(bahind Perkins)
841-6232
ENERGIZE
FORMULA ONE
Free Sample
FREE SAMPLE
Haircut • $10.00 With Coupon
Well Beat ANY
Local Special
EUROPEAN
TAN. HEALTH & A HAIR SALON
23rd & Ousdalah
(behind Parkins)
841-6232
PERM $42.00 With Coupon Includes Haircut and Style. Long Hair Slightly Higher.
ENERGIZE
INSPIRING HEALTHY LIFE
FORMULA ONE
Powerfully Supports Health
High Quality Energy
FREE SAMPLE
New! 240ML
$100
$1.00 OFF ANY PURCHASE
• Albums • CD's
• Tapes • Posters
ALLEY CAT RECORDS
717 Massachusetts coupon
Lawrence, KS 865-0122 exp. 10
VIDEO BIZ
Classical Music on CD
Take $2 off Kief's everyday
low price w/coupon only
Not Valid With
Other Offers
KIEF'S
CDS/TAPES
Exclusive Orange
Tap Hits
24th & Iowa R. P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, KS. 86044
CDS & TAPES MEDIA PRODUCTS LLC
013-842-1544 913-842-1811 913-842-1438
VIDEO BIZ
9th & Iowa 749-3507
2 Video Tapes and VCR one night rental $5.99 Expi
2 Movies for the price of one! WE HONOR
HAIR EXPERTS DESIGN TEAM
$5.00 OFF
Any Color or Perm
841-6886
25th and Iowa
Not Valid With Any Other Offer.
Expires 10/13/94
$5.00 OFF
Any Hair Design
841-6886
25th & Iowa
Not Valid With Any Other Offer.
Expires 10/13/94.
Buy Whole Sub
& receive 2nd for
$1.99
Buy Half Sub
& receive 2nd for
99¢
Sub8.Stuff
Sandwich Shop
Expires 10-14-94
1618 W 23rd
COUPON
BUY ONE VISTABURGER
GET ONE FREE
Limit one order per coupon. Owner coupon per
customer. Not valid in combination with any other
offer. Extra charges for cheese and bacon. Valid
after 11:00 a.m.
Auth UDK Expires 10-13-94
1991 Tuttle Creek Blvd. & 2074 Anderson Ave.
Manhattan
1050 Wanamaker in Topeka
1527 W. 6th in Lawrence
Vista DRIVE IN
1527 W. 6th
Vista DRIVE IN 1527 W.6th
NATURALWAY
Natural Fiber Clothing • Natural Body Care
15% Off Jewelry
(Excludes items already on sale.)
Expires September 26, 1994
820-822 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
3 convenient locations Store hours:
• 6th & Main Sun. Thurs 10:30 Midnight
• 23rd & Ousdahl Fri & Sat 10:30 2:00 am
• 23rd & Haskell
TACO JOHN'S
Buy any super item, get the 2nd super item for FREE with purchase of soft drink
BULLFISH
HOP ON
CHEF'S
12th & Oread
(above Yello Sub)
How 2 Cureen
Pasta Dinner only $249
pasta, homemade marinara sauce, garlic toast
With coupon only. Not valid w/other offers
1 offer/coupon/customer. Coupon expires 12/31/94
12th & Oread
(above Yello Sub)
Pasta Dinner only $249
Pasta Dinner only $249
pasta, homemade marinara sauce, garlic toast
With coupon only. Not valid with other offers
1 offer/coupon/customer. Coupon expires 12/31/94
Carnations!
Carnations!
Carnations!
NOW 50¢
Reg. $1.50
Expires 9/20/94
THE FLOWER MARKET
826 Iowa·843-5115
lifestyles
Relax . . . lose your worries and untie those knots with ancient healing arts.
By Casey Barnes Kansan staff writer
Acupressure Meridians
The following list is provided for informational purposes only and
should not replace healthcare provided by your physician
H-9 P-8 G-16
H-7 Li-4 G-14 Gb-21
H-5 Li-7 Si-15 Si-10
P-4
Back Front
Li-11 B-15
B-18
The following list is provided for informational purposes only and should not replace healthcare provided by your physician
Symptoms Pressure Points
Acne H9 B-54 K-12
Ulcer Li-7
Writer's cramp P-8
Elbow Pain Si-11 Si-15 Li-4
Muscle tension In Shoulder Si-10 Si-11
Depression H-7 H-9 H-5
Nervousness Li-4 Li-11 B-10 B-22
Insomnia H-7 B-15 B-19 P-4
Short-Temperedness B-18 B-19
Neck Pain G-14 G-16 Gb-21 Si-15
Hiccups L2 L6 Gv-16 Gv-10
Hay Fever K-10 K-7
Acupressure Meridians
The following list is provided for informational purposes only and should not replace healthcare provided by your physician.
Back Front
Symptoms Pressure Points
Acne H9 B-54 K-12
Ulcer Li-7
Writer's cramp P-8
Elbow Pain Si-11 Si-15 Li-4
Muscle tension In Shoulder Si-10 Si-11
Depression H-7 H-9 H-5
Nervousness Li-4 Li-11 B-10 B-22
Insomnia H-7 B-15 B-19 P-4
Short-Temperedness B-18 B-19
Neck Pain G-14 G-16 Gb-21 Si-15
Hiccups L2 L-6 Gv-16 Gv-10
Hay Fever K-10 K-7
To Relax
Massage in circles from the inside out
To Energize
Massage in circles from the outside in
Using the corner of the thumb, press firmly, but not hard enough to cause pain. Slowly apply rotary pressure while allowing subject to relax. Massage for two to four minutes, depending on severity of alliment.
Native-American Suction
Judy Carman, Lawn tent full of hot rocks, trying to relax.
The Native-American suction that is supposed to cleanse the body of toxins and purify the spirit, Carman said. "The sweat" is an informal meeting of local residents. The time and place of the sweat vary, but the members are usually the same.
Carman, who has been to four or five sweats said it was effective as unloading tension. "It's so important to relieve stress, especially for college students," Carman said. "Students don't take enough time to relax. The sweat lodges takes place in a humped like a baseball cap and with a frame built from sapling. It is about 10 feet in diameter and four feet high and is covere with a nontoxic material such as wool or canvas.
Praying and smoking herbs or organic tobacco is of the ritual.
"The pipe is sacred and everyone wants to get a blessing from it," Carman said. "If you don't smoke, can touch it to your shoulders to the blessing."
During the ritual, been on a bath brought times, incipient Water is then poured into create steam. "I'm not sure ture is," Carman bably h
Symptoms Pressure Points
Acne H9 B-54 K-12
Ulcer Li-7
Writer's cramp P-8
Elbow Pain Si-11 Si-15 Li-4
Muscle tension in Shoulder Si-10 Si-11
Depression H-7 H-9 H-5
Nervousness Li-4 Li-11 B-10 B-22
Insomnia H-7 B-15 B-19 P-4
Short-Temperedness B-18 B-19
Neck Pain G-14 G-16 Gb-21 Si-15
Hiccups L2 L6 Gv-16 Gv-10
Hay Fever K-10 K-7
To Relax
Massage in circles from the inside out
B-54
Using the corner of the thumb,
press firmly, but not hard enough to cause pain.
Slowly apply rotary pressure while allowing subject to relax. Massage for two to four minutes, depending on severity of allment.
To Energize
Massage in circles from the outside in
Kansas Staff Research
Stress. It is not prejudice and takes many prisoners, attacking in the form of backaches, headaches and fatigue.
Noah Musser/Kansan
Carman said being in the hut was not really relaxing because your body was so hot.
"When you come out, you pour cold water on your body, which feels really cold, but your body heats back up, and it is really relaxing." Carman said.
Yoga
Yoga is a multidisciplinary lifestyle that unites the body, mind and spirit, said Paula Duke, instructor of a yoga class sponsored by the KU yoga club.
"The combination of deep breathing and relaxation releases stress," Duke said. "When you do yoga, you focus on the posture and relaxation, which takes the mind off whatever it was spinning on."
While there are many denominations of yoga, the KU club practices physical "asanas," or postures, which is the basic beginning form of yoga. Duke said
Michele Risdal, Springfield senior and president of the KU yoga club, said there were certain poses in yoga that relieved stress around the neck, shoulders and upper back
"My body can get so tight and rigid from school," Risdal said. "Yoga is a good way to loosen up because it involves so much stretching."
Risalid said yoga participants stretched to the point right before pain was felt.
The result is a more limber body and a clearer mind. "I like the fact that yoga helps you become aware of your body and attuned to the rhythms of it," Risdal said.
Massage therapy and Acupressure
The KU yoga club meets from 7 to 8:30 p.m. every Monday in the Daisy Hill room of the Bure Union.
Good hands could be the key to stress relief. Massage and acupressure treatments are part of an Oriental philosophy that is more than 5,000 years old.
Acupressure is oriental acupuncture without the use of needles. Curtis Maendele, independent masseur, said that by pressing appropriate pressure points with finger tips or knuckles, energy blocks were released and various ailments can be cured.
Massages are a kneading or rubbing of the body to relax muscles and aid circulation.
Maendele said he gave acupressure treatments and massages to people for a variety of reasons.
He has given massages to people before they go to chiropractor appointments so their muscles relax and bones can be adjusted easier. He also has massaged women to help them start menstruating.
"Women don't start because they are freaked out about something, then they don't start because they are freaked out about not starting." Maendele said. "When they get a massage, it gets the energy moving and flowing properly, and they usually start the next day."
Maendele, who has been masseur about 15 years, said that massages helped stress because they made you healthy in general.
"When you are stressed out, toxins are created in your system, and you can feel them in the form of knots," Maendle said. "The knots can be massaged out, and the toxins released into the bloodstream."
He said he suggested a person drink water after a massage to flush the toxins out of the blood stream. Gretchen Van Hoet, Shawnee senior, had a massage after this year's sorority rush. As president of Pi Beta Phi, she wanted something to help her relax.
"I was in a dark room with soft music, getting a massage, and I didn't have to think about any outside forces," Van Hoet said. "It was like nothing I ever experienced before. I was totally relaxed for at least a few hours."
Native American Art
Sixth Annual Lawrence Indian Arts Show has paintings, jewelry and pottery at local museums
By Umut Bayramoglu Kansan correspondent
The men gathered the clay and painted the designs. The women shaped the pots.
The art of pottery, which tied the Native American family together, was passed down from generation to generation. Now, this art is on display at the Spencer Museum of Art and the University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology as part of the Sixth Annual Lawrence Indian Arts Show.
When the Lawrence Indian Arts Show began the artists were mostly local, said Maria Martin, museum secretary and coordinator of the arts show. Now the art show features 100 artists from around the nation.
The Southwestern Pueblo Indian Pottery exhibit at the art museum has examples from most of the Pueblo styles, which include Acoma, Cochiti, Hopi, San Ildefonso, Santa Clara, Santo Domingo and Zia. The exhibit opened Saturday and will end Oct. 23.
"The pots are beautifully designed and wonderful to touch," said Andrea Norris, director of the art museum. "This is an exhibition that is exciting personally for me because the more I looked at them, the more I wanted them."
There are 40 pots in the exhibit that are works of contemporary and traditional artists.
The anthropology museum has an exhibit of contemporary Native-American jewelry, pottery and paintings from artists throughout the United States. The techniques used for the pottery and paintings are traditional, Martin said, but the look of the artwork is contemporary.
"Some pots are so old that we don't know who made them." Norris said.
Norris said one of the purposes of the exhibition at the art museum was to demonstrate the different kinds of ceramics of Pueblo Indians Pueblo Indians, who traditionally lived in villages in the Southwest. Each pueblo, or village, had its own set of traditional pottery shapes, finishes and designs. The colors were usually black and white.
Paul KOZ/KANSAK
Jim Jackson's "Power of the Shield"
Norris said the tradition of pottery making was revived at the end of the 19th century by women potters.
Barbara Gonzales and her great-grandmother Maria Martinez are originally from the pueblo of San Ildefonso and are part of one of the best known families in pueblo pottery making. Norris said. They both have pottery on display at the art museum.
"Maria Martinez, who had learned making pottery from her aunt and went on making pottery with her husband Julian, said that it was the woman's part to make things whole," Norris said.
The exhibition also displays works by Maria Martinez' son and grandson, Popovi and Anthony Da.
Not every family in a pueblo made pottery. Each town had certain families that made the pottery for everyone.
Norris said the Lawrence Indian Arts Show was begun at the anthropology museum. The art museum asked to join with a Navajo exhibit three years ago.
"Last year we had the baskets, and this year we are having pottery," she said.
The Sixth Annual Indian Arts Show
Barbara Gonzalez also will teach a workshop from Sept. 19 to 23 at the KU Museum of Anthropology. Participants need a reservation and must pay a fee.
Museum of Anthropology
Exhibit: A Juried Competition.
Museum hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday to Saturday, 1 to 5 p.m.
Sunday. Dates: Sept. 10 to Oct.
23. Admission: Adults $3, Students $1.
Spencer Museum of Art
Spencer Museum of Art
Exhibit: Southwestern Pueblo Indian Pottery. Museum hours:
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday and Saturday,
8:30 to 9 p.m. Thursday, noon to
9 p.m. Sundays. Free.
Museum of Anthropology
Lawrence Art Center
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Exhibit: Recent works by Osage Indian Artist Chris Musgrave.
Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday,
Dates: Sept. 9 to Oct. 5, Free.
For more information, call Maria Martin at 864-4245.
News of the Weird
In June in Baton Rouge, La., the body of 25-year-old man caught fire in his closed coffin minutes after his funeral ended, causing smoke to come shooting out of the cracks. Investigators said embalming fluids spontaneously combusted.
KULife
COULDN'T POSSIBLY BE TRUE
In May in Kissimmee, Fl., William Nelson was shot twice at point-blank range by a man with a .38-caliber snub-nose revolver. One shot went through his shoulder and exited his back. The other bullet hit Nelson "square in the forehead and just stopped," said police officer Jim Lakey. Lakey said Nelson's only major problem only was that his ears were ringing.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission's May report on sports injuries said 1,455 people were sent to emergency rooms in 1992 with injuries from playing Ping-Pong.
In March, a Haitian woman, who had just landed illegally in St. Croix, the Virgin Islands, was arrested when she hailed what she thought was a taxicab but which turned out to be an official INS car.
PEOPLE IN THE WRONG PLACE AT THE WRONG TIME
In a story on Elvis Week '94 in August in Memphis, The Commercial Appeal newspaper reported its selections as the two most bizarre pieces of Elvis memorabilia, both of which belong to Joni Mabe of Athens, Ga. One is a toenail she claims was Elvis', picked out of a carpet in the Jungle Room during her 1983 visit to Graceland. The other is a wart that was removed from Elvis' right wrist in 1957. She said she purchased the wart, encased in formaldehyde, from the operating surgeon's estate in 1990.
In January and February, inmates escaping from prisons in Lancaster, Calif., and Immokalee, Fla., by hiding in garbage trucks failed to get out of the trucks before they were compacted into bales of trash. The California man survived, but the Florida man, who was serving a life sentence for kidnapping, was found dead and badly mangled in a landfill.
William Powell, 35, was convicted of assault in June in Detroit after a court found that he intentionally pulled his pregnant, 33-year-old girlfriend part way through the window of his van as he sped through the neighborhood, rammed her body against a telephone pole and kicked her after he stopped the van. The woman, who lost the baby as well as an arm and leg in the incident, testified in support of Powell, saying that the incident was her fault.
LEAST COMPETENT CRIMINAL
Danny Kelley, 17, was charged again in August for burglarizing a home near San Antonio, Texas. Last year, the 400-pound Kelley was arrested for another home burglary, during which he had also raided the refrigerator, after police traced a trail of discarded ice cream wrappers from that house to Kelley's in the same neighborhood.
---
NATION/WORLD
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5B
The Associated Press
DUBLIN, Ireland — Protestant militants claimed responsibility for a bomb that injured two train passengers yesterday and said the attack was a warning that Northern Ireland's Protestant majority would not be "coerced, forced or persuaded into a united Ireland."
The attack was the first in Ireland since the Irish Republican Army announced a cease-fire Aug. 31 in its violent 25-year campaign to drive the British from Northern Ireland, Britain and Ireland appealed to the IRA not to
The IRA has not avenged three attacks by Protestant militants in Northern Ireland since the cease-fire was announced. Two Roman Catholics died in those attacks.
retaliate.
Protestant extremists fear the evolving peace process will pull Northern Ireland out of Britain and into a union with Ireland.
Police said a small bomb placed beneath a seat on the morning train from Belfast, Northern Ireland, had exploded just as the train arrived at Connolly Station in Dublin.
JERUSALEM — Yasir Arafat met yesterday with Israel's finance minister at the "club," the PLO headquarters in the autonomous Gaza Strip, while Jordanian journalists toured Israeli communal farms on the Sea of Galilee.
Israel and PLO still keeping peace
The Associated Press
Such encounters of the peaceful kind are representative of changes brought by the past year. They were unthinkable in the era of hatred and bloodshed that preceded the tentative handshake between PLO chief Arafat and Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin on the White House lawn one year ago today.
It is a shaky peace, often fractious and ill-tempered, but despite flourishes of violence major changes are taking place.
On the ground, there have been real changes in the Gaza Strip and Jericho, the most visible being the former PLO guerrillas from Libya, Iraq, Lebanon and elsewhere who now man the roadblocks where Israeli soldiers once stood.
In the past year, Israel renewed or
established ties with 21 states, including the Vatican. Israelis have been most touched by budding ties with Jordan, and there are even signs of thaw from Israel's most implacable enemy, Syria.
But the peace agreements are intertwined, and a failure in Gaza could blow down the house of cards.
"A warm peace with Jordan or Syria couldn't happen without the Palestinians," Erakat said. "If the Palestinian track collapsed, the whole thing will collapse."
FUTONS
FUTONS by Abdiana
K.C. Based Manufacturer with 6
Retail Locations
This Complete Futon
& Frame
$269
Exclusively Hardwood Frames
1023 Mass, St Lawrence, KS
843-8222
Futon frame may be avail in black only
EARN CASH
A HELP OUR COMMUNITY TOO!
$15 TODAY
& $30
This WEEK
Walk-ins
Welcome
BY DONATING YOUR
BLOOD PLASMA
CALL FOR INFORMATION
NABI BioMedical Center
816 W. 24th
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
749-5750
BUM STEER
DELIVERY
call 841-SMOK(E) 11:00 to 2:00 & 5:00 to Close Daily
BBQ Sandwiches, Cheese Burgers,
Grilled Chicken, French Fries, BBQ Ribs
MORE MORE MORE
THE BUM
TREE
$10FF
Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can Save Some Cash
any delivery with coupon
THE BUM STEER
KU
$7 min
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
1116W23rd
B
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks.66044
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
BLIMPIE SUBS AND SALADS
AMIGO'S
1819 W. 23rd • 842-1620
1819 W. 2304 - 6220 Get the daily special prices everyday of the week
BONANZA
BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢
**BUNKER**
2329 S. Iowa St·842-1200
$3.99 Freshtastes Food Bar
DOMINO'S PIZZA
DUS HUMBRES
25% OFF Any Delivery Order(not valid with any other offer)
BUY1 Menu Item, and get the Second One at 1/2 Price
DRAKE'S SNACK SHOP
1006 Massachusetts*843-0561
10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more
ESPRESS O'HOUSE
10F. 9th St:843-3007
FULL MOON CAFE
$1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50(Includes food and coffee drink
$1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners Before 6 P.M., Tuesday
624 W1 128-h41-2310+FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Certified Organically Grown) with Anv Meal Purchase
2907 W 6841-1688-FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills) with Birthday of Daily Buffalo Snacks
401 N 2nd-b42-0377-BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg.
price, nJet for $1.00 Mtn thru Fri 4-9m
IMPERIAL GARDEN
JOHNNY'S TAVERN
PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
GLASS ONION
$1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1801 W 23rd 842-1212
PIZZA SHOPPE
601 Kasold*842-0600
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:842-3232-540. $m Red, add_tops 50e; Md.$6.00,
add_tags 75e; $8.00 Lg, ad_tops 1.00; Carry Out Only
RUNZA
2700 Iowa·749-2615•FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of
TACO JOHN'S
1626 W32/84/815-1101 W7 6th/W43-0836-2309 Haskell
Ave.8/452-533-3 Hardshell Tso's for i99 (NO LIMIT)
WEST COAST SALOON
2222 Iowa St.·841-2739
$1.50 OFF Any Sandwich
Retail/Merchandise
ATHLETIC'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
2420 laws; 842 7979
CENTRAL DATA
731 Massachusetts-843*419+15% OFF All Apparel + FREE Free T-Shirt w/ Wearment Over $25.00
20% OFF Entire Inventory (excludes sale items and outlet priced items)
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
745 New Hampshire-843-3282-$25.00 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor, System Cleaning on IBM Communicatis
FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS
JAYHAWK BOCKSTORE
15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
15% Massachusetts*749-4664
15% Off Any item (excludes sale items)
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
1420 Crescent Rd-843-3826
10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
JAYHAWK TROPICAL FISH
10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill
844 Illinois, Suite D+B42-5950>-20% OFF Whisk Brand PowerFilters, All Other Brand Undergravel Filters
JOCKS NITCH
840 Massachusetts-842-2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
837 Massachusetts+842-2992
20% OFE KU Sweatshirts
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640
Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book)£ 5
KU BOOKSTORE
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640
$5.00 Any Jayhawk Clothing or Hat Over $20.00
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
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 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)
740 Massachusetts843-3933
15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
OUTFITTER'S
PRO SOUND
Lawrence, Ks+685-0692
10% OFF All Sales
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
716 Massachusetts/841-1762-200% OFF (CD: Tapes, Movies, Video Games) Tuesday & 15% more (In cash) on Buy Backs
RECYCLED SOUNDS
622 W 12th St. @841-9475-$2.00 OFF Any One CD, Tape,
or LP with Value Greater than $5,000
RENTCO USA
1741 Massachusetts*749-1605
25% OFF All Monthly Rentals
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy)
832 Iowa*749-3507+2 for 1 Video Rental Monday -
Thursday (limit one per day)
UNIVERSITY SHOP
1116W, 23rd-749-5206
OFFICE
20%
VIDEO BIZ
SPRINGMAID|WAMSUTTA
1025 N, 3rd=832-1100
10% Off Any Purchase
20% OFF of all clothing (excluding sale items)
Services
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 6th h48-1695
10% OFF All Parts
BODY CRITICAL
737 Massachusetts+842-0880
15% OFF Complete Eyesight Purchase
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
2800 OLSTON PLACE843 C
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST
1019 Massachusetts:843-3844+25$ 0.00 OFF All Fashion
Eyglass Fees Valid with Fashion Lenses Only
EUROPEAN TAN
1601 W23rd-841-6232-F2. 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
15th & Kasold+832-0281+125% OFF Initial or Annual Visit Plus 40 EXP Cards
B.C. $ ^{8} $ STADIUM BARBERY
R.C.L. *STADIUM BARSEN*
1033 Massachusetts+749-5363
Any Haircut or Hairstyle $5.50
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
4.E. 7th St .841-1113
$35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames w/ FREE Adjustment
TWIN OAKS GOLE COURSE
K-10 & County Rd. 1057-(913)542-1747
Buy One Small Bucket of Balls, Get One Small Bucket
ULTIMATE TAN
2449 Iowa St.*842-9494-1 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
6B
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
VUARNET
FRANCE
The 928 Mass.
Etc. Downtown
Shop Park in the rear
General Meeting
NEED COMPUTER HELP??
6:30 pm tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union
NDHO
ONLY $1000/hr.
Masters Computing
842-4413
- DOS
• Windows
• Spreadsheets
• Wordprocessors
M
The Lowest CD Prices in Town Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5or more CDs for $4.95 Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each! For the Best Values in Town Visit Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire
WATKINS
Since
"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 SERVICE 864-9500
U.S. allies pledge invasion support
WASHINGTON — Seventeen countries, including three NATO allies, Israel and far-off Bangladesh, have pledged a combined minimum of 1,500 troops to assist a U.S.-led invasion of Haiti, the State Department said yesterday.
The Associated Press
Secretary, of State Warren Christopher said the commitments of the 17 countries were a "strong indication of the resolve of the international community to join us in seeking the restoration of democracy in Haiti."
Meanwhile, Republican leaders said Congress should debate a resolution authorizing the commitment of U.S. forces to an invasion.
The administration has been pushing hard to recruit troops to join American forces in liberating Haiti after three years of military dictatorship. Current planning calls for the deployment of about 20,000 U.S. troops.
The 17 countries, some of which had been announced previously, are: Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, The Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belgium, Belize, Bolivia, Dominica, Guyana, Israel, Jamaica, The Netherlands, Panama, St. Vincent, Trinidad and the United Kingdom.
The non-U.S. personnel would be sent to Haiti after the initial invasion force—virtually all U.S. personnel—
Republican leaders sent a letter yesterday to House Speaker Tom Foley, D-Wash., and Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, saying there was ample time to debate the Haiti invasion question since the United States was not immediately threatened.
establishes a "secure environment."
serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
The Republican noted that the Bush administration received prior approval for launching Operation Desert Storm to liberate Kuwait from Iraqi invaders.
But Christopher said the stakes for the United States included defense of democracy in the hemisphere as well as protection of human rights.
THE NEWS in brief
Europa
MONTREAL
Canadian separatists get legislative majority
Quebec voters took what could be their first step toward independence yesterday by giving the separatist Parti Quebeco a solid majority in the provincial legislature, according to national CBC television's projections.
Canadian Broadcasting Corp. showed Jacques Parizeau's Parti Quebecois with 65 seats, Premier Daniel Johnson's Liberal Party with 53, minor parties with one and the remaining six undecided. Polls had consistently indicated the PQ would win.
Parizeau, 64, has promised that his government would hold a referendum within a year on whether the predominantly French-speaking province should split from Anglophone Canada. Johnson had warned that independence would lead to unequal and economic deterioration.
If Quebec were to secede, the maritime provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland would be physically cut off from the rest of the country. And Quebec independence could encourage a new wave of separatism in western provinces that long have felt ignored by Ottawa.
WASHINGTON
United States inmate population high
The group, which promotes alternative sentencing, concluded that get-tough policies of the past two decades have failed to reduce violent crimes.
According to a study released yesterday by a group called The Sentencing Project, the United States has a higher rate of incarceration than any country in the world except Russia.
The study found there are 1.3 million inmates in U.S. prisons, and the incarceration rate has reached an all-time high of 519 per 100,000 population, up 22 percent since 1989. Of 52 nations surveyed, only Russia had a higher incarceration rate.
An Environmental Protection Agency draft study reaffirming health dangers from dioxin is expected to prompt new controls on waste incinerators and intensify debate about the use of chlorine, a chemical that is key to forming dioxin.
EPA: Dioxin harmful to public health
The draft report reaffirms that dioxin in all likelihood causes cancer in humans and raises for the first time concern that even in trace amounts through the food chain there may be a risk to immune, reproductive and developmental systems, according to EPA documents.
The agency concluded that one of the principal sources of dioxin are waste incinerators, accounting for 99 percent of the known dioxin emissions.
The EPA recently announced it would toughen emission standards for municipal waste incinerators and plans to do the same for facilities that burn medical wastes.
WASHINGTON
The draft report raises concern about human exposure to trace levels of dioxin through the general food chain.
WASHINGTON
Congressional Black Caucus meets today
For two years, a bigger, younger Congressional Black Caucus has been accumulating power on Capitol Hill. But the group is in jeopardy of fading just as quickly as it grew.
Redistricting, the process that sent an unprecedented 40 Blacks to Congress, may send many back home if courts rule that drawing political districts to help elect minority candidates is unconstitutional.
Maintaining the caucus' numbers and influence is a central concern at its annual leadership meeting, which begins today. There is a scheduled forum on running for office as well as a briefing on the impact of redistricting lawsuits in five Southern states.
Gains through redistricting expanded the caucus from 24 to 40 members in four years. As the caucus grew larger, it also grew younger.
Population plan ready for vote
CAIRO, Egypt — After seven days of hard bargaining, delegates to the U.N. population conference agreed yesterday on the last tricky points of their 20-year plan for curbing world population growth.
The plan, worked out by a committee that met for 28 hours throughout three days, goes before the full 180-country session today.
The Program of Action breaks new ground by urging that population be controlled not just by family planning but by economic development, empowerment of women and protection of the environment.
Third World delegates questioned whether poor nations could pay their assigned two-thirds share of the target of $17 billion yearly for population and health programs. And they said the almost total concern with sexual issues left little time for discussing development.
The Vatican won reference to parental responsibility in the section on adolescent sex counseling. It also succeeded in getting in two statements proclaiming that abortion should not be promoted as a means of family planning.
To appease Muslim states, the committee cut references to "sexual rights," reduced the reference to "individual" reproductive rights and "sexual health" and eliminated "other unions." Conservative Muslims objected to the last phrase as an endorsement of homosexuality and promiscuity.
Instead, the committee urged that countries "recognize the vital importance of family unification" and push for laws making it easier. The wealthier countries say establishing such a right would undermine their efforts to control immigration.
The United States, Canada and European Union won a victory against poor Third World countries, who wanted immigrants to have the right to have their families join them.
The document will serve as a guideline for countries and aidgivers, and can be used by activists to hold their governments accountable for its principles.
---
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Ks. Union 864-4640
Burne Un. 864-5697
The only store that offers rebates to KU students
Over 40 toppings to choose from!!!
Rudy Tuesday
2 10" Pizzas
ONE
$8.99
2 toppings
2 drinks
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
Home of the Pocket Pizza
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
Rudy Tuesday
KU student I.D. required.
Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
Now Available!
Receipts (period 95) from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 7% rebate at the Customer Service counter of the KU Bookstores until the end of December,1994.
KU Bookstore REBATE
Over $2,400,000 returned to date.
Now accepting receipts from the Spring '94 semester for rebate payments.
---
SUCCESS is right at your FEET
This growth has created outstanding opportunities at our corporate headquarters in Topeka, Kansas. We offer the fast track Corporate Management Associate Program and a compensation package competitive with any industry. Payless ShoeSource will be interviewing December graduates for Corporate Management Associate positions on October 4th. For further information about career opportunities at Payless ShoeSource, visit the business placement office on campus. Resumes must be submitted to the business placement office by September 22nd.
Payless ShoeSource is the nation's largest footwear retailer, operating over 3,800 stores in 49 states and Puerto Rico. Sales during 1993 were $1.97 billion, with 180 million pairs of shoes sold. In the coming year the company will continue its aggressive growth, opening an average of one new store every business day.
Payless
Shoe
Source
Doesn't it feel good to payless?™
3231 E. Sixth Street
Topeka, Ks 66607
Equal Opportunity Employer
Rentals Sales
ROLLERBLADE
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
Sales
1029 Massachusetts 841-PLAY(7529)
100s
Announcements
108 Personal
110 Business
Classified Directory
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Emplores
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
305 For Sale
249 Auto Sales
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Fair Housing Act of 1974, 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-
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
I
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
100s Announcements
300s
Merchandis
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants LEATHER
110 Bus. Personals
105 Personals
SUNGLASSES
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses
THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also insurance for US citizens going abroad. Odisha Insurance Service 411/2 S Main Ottawa, k66067 1800-695-695.
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops,
Us. Rekey, Serenget, and Vuaret.
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
New Dance
Classes
Country Ballroom
Latin and Swing
Call 913-266-5914
Pat Kerr instructor
918 S. Kansas Avenue Topeka
918 S. Kansas Avenue Topeka
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
7B
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
120 Announcements
CASH FOR COLLEGE 900.008 GRANTS AVAILABLE
QUALIFYMENTIED. 1009-432-3434
www.collegechase.com
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobbs, Kavvas Union.
FUNDRAISING
Choose from 3 different
amounts: 3 or 4 days,
No Investment.
Earn $80 for your
group plus personal cash
back. Call 1-800-723-6951.
Call 1-800-723-6951.
Ext. 65.
Recycled Soundsc
12th & Orea
841-9475
We have chartered a bus to the Rolling Stones in Columbia Com in for more details. CRAFTED FOR CDs TRADE BUY SELL. Cd's Lp & Tapes
NEED A RIDER/ RIDER To Self serve the Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2. 15. 1996 • 4. 8. 08 LIGHTHOUSE
STEAMBOAT $168
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
YA GOTTA
BE THERE!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
NORBON DOES SKI BREAMS BETTER
TUTORS List your name with us. We refer you inquiries to you. Student Assessment Center
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 138 Strong. WTCS, the shelter in Lawrence for battered women and their children, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training; September 15 at 7:00 p.m. or Friday, November 20 at 6:30 a.m. held at the Lawrence public library, 707 Vermont. For information, please call WTCS at 841-6887.
Call Today!
For
Thanksgiving AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules. On Campus Location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 m Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
140 Lost & Found
set on Jayakh Boulevard in front of Wescoe—
set of key on a black shirting
749-782 to Wescoe
Lost cat, gray female. Gray with white paws.
1st and 2nd india, 4th and 10th
Call 749-248. Leave message.
LOST: Prescription wounds w/ gray case on
lake sole and lakesle B4. Hail if you
call 314-634-7456. Thanks
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$100/hr, possible mailing our circulars, for info call
(202) 398-9065
Babytitter needed for two delightful toddler girls in nice home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible daya/veneens/weekends. Experience, own car, and references required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to Box #20, University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer Flint.
Bucky's Drive-in is now taking applications for the Bucky Drive-In 1/2 price meal. Apply in person between 10-5.
CRUISE SHIP JOBS!!!! Up to 800 weekly. Free room/board. Now hiring unskilled/unmiled men and women. No experience necessary. Call (601)799-1387 ext. C504 24 hrs.
COLLEGE STUDENTS @ $25-11.65 STARTING
Local branch of all m.i. Coaching immediate entry
level openings. Flex time schedules: 3-5 days, ever
per week. Weekend opt. all majors accepted. For
more info.
Computer tutor. Odd hours. Low Pay. Cool machine. Call Mark at 842-1089.
CRUISER SHIPS NOW HIRING. Earn up to $10,000 travel. Tour companies. Travel season. Season & Full Time employment available. No experience required. For more information call 212-658-4638.
Division of Continuing Education, Publication Services is accepting applications for a student Mail Assistant to work in the Mail Center/Bindery at an off campus site. Duties include preparing outgoing mail and binding equipment, working with various types of outgoing mail & using various methods of binding manuals. Starting salary is $4.50 per hr. Must be a currently enrolled student. Must be able to work open until Sept. 16. Call 811-7478 for appointment. Continuation Education is an EOAA employer.
Division of Continuing Education, Public Services is accepting applications for a student Mail Assistant to work in the Mail Center/Bindery at an off campus site. Duties include preparing materials and documents for mailing binding equipment, working with various types of outgoing mail & using various methods of binding manuals. Starting salary is $4.50 per hr. Must be a currently enrolled student. Must be able to work on computers and open until Sept. 17. Call 1798 for application. Continuing Education is an EOAA employee.
Dog Sitter needed various times. Near 14th and Kentucky. K$ 0.50 per hour. Call 749-9230
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
**STUDENT TRAVEL SALES!** Suncache Tour is seeking ambitious sales rep's to promote and beach trips for Christmas and Spring Break! Earn cash and free tickets. Call today: 1-800-SUNCACHE
UNIQUE MENTAL HEALTH OPPORTUNITY
Needed immediately male roommate to provide emotional support, adult supervision on an 18yr old young man who is transitioning to the Lawrence Roommate will be contracted by the young man's family in conjunction with the Meningitis Support Team. The individual nursing and social work staff, Room, board, stipend provided. Reference and KBI check required. Please call Nancy Parker (ext. 5293). 5232 at (913) 725-7000 or Annette Bartel (ext. 5232) at (913) 725-7000.
Student assist to work approximately 20 hours a week in the Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology. Duties include processing of graduate admissions, typing, filing, running errands and more.
**STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER.**
Deadline: 09/16. Salary $540/month. 20 his per month.
Master's degree in Computer Science, programming and insuring program performance, programming in C, PASCAL, FOXPROX, JAVA, JavaScript, and/or LAN. Currently enrolled in 6 hours at the University of Kansas. A complete job description is available. To apply, submit a cover letter and resume to Computing Services. EO/AE EMPLOYER.
Female vocalist wanted for variety dance band. all styles. High, strong-chief voice, good performer. Avail. immediately. This is a work and, serious incuries only 749-3649.
Eustasius HDILF/ Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for thrs. Thurs, evenings and occasionally 4 hrs. Sunday mornings. Call 822-4900.
**Fypist needed for KU student hourly position.**
Need to have excellent typing skills; IBM-PC com-
puter skills; English proficiency; English
home study of German preferred. Qual-
ified undergrads encourage to apply. A $45/hr,
20 hours per week. Contact Lil or Susan at the Hall
for the Humanities, 21 Watkins Home 864-4796
Required Qualifications: Previous office experience. Typing speed of 50 wpm, with a high degree of accuracy, must be available to work 3-4 hour blocks of time and be able to work with various persons on diverse projects, have a basic understanding and experience, must be detailed oriented and a full knowledge of the job.
**SPRING BREAK** %6- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH
& GOFREE!! !!!Student Travel Services is now hire-
ing campus representatives. Lowest rates to
Pamela City Beach. Call 1-800-648-4849.
**ELP WANTED!** Intramural Soccer officials needed. Part time employment. No experience required.
**learning Stores is hiring a point teacher*'s aides in baby and infant aid and infant odor. Apply at 1100 Watakana
Sports Officials needed! The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Dept. is looking for individuals interested in becoming officials for adult volleyball or basketball and interested please contact Bob Stancil at 843-7122.
Part time and full time positions available. Prefer
work in an office environment. Apply in person, Sept. 8-14 at World
Center.
Office clerical position. Must have experience w/ Macintosh computers, word processing and data management. Resumes to Job ID # 625/628/635/640, 20 hr/week. Pick an application at 301 Dole, Dept. of Special Education. For more information, call (312) 952-7833.
Needed: Experienced, stable individual to watch my child in home from 3:00 to 3:00. M-F Rel's required. Please call Laura 832-321) between 9a.m.-5m.m.
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT Make up to $2,000.44$/m² + mo teaching basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S.Korea. No teach. Contact info: (208) 625.1446 ext. 37583. For contact info: (208) 625.1446 ext. 37583.
Insurance agency needs part-time clerical help, 10-20 hours per week. Alternatives preferred, but may be available on request.
Preferred Qualifications: Computer experience with knowledge of word processing (Word Perfect and/or Macintosh). Available to work additional hours during summer.
WE'RE GROWING!
Golden Opprotunities under the Golden Arches
Part-time temporary Extension 4-H Assistant:
Assist 4-H Agent with the promotion of the 4-H
Enrichment program and related work.
Enrichment program with people: B. S. preferred, 82.5 per
month, mileage, 20 hours per week, October 3, 1994
June 9, 1995. Send resume and 3 letters of reference
by September 16 to Denis Bejot, County Extention
Director, 211 Harper, Lawrence, KS 66446
EOR
Salary: $4.50 - $5.50 per hour depending on experience.
Mail Order Telephone Rep-New Home Improvement catalog has part-time weekday openings between 7am-5pm for inbound call and order kearns. Great for people needing flexible schedules during the day. Good clerical skills required Start $4/hr. Apply in person: H.I.L. 2001 Lakeview Center set of Lawrence Paper, straight ahead, to 2nd right, or call for directions (3652).
Mc Jobs
Open Interviews
Sat., Sept. 17th
11a.m.-2 p.m.
Apply to Pat Statran, Dept. of Pharmacology &
Toxicology, 5044 Malot, 9-11 or 4-Monday/Fri-
day, 9:30am-12pm. Req. MS degree in Pharmacology.
Student Honors position available. Duties:
Receptionist; filing; duplicating; running
errands; typing; proofreading; other duties as
assigned. Position available September 21, 1994,
$425/hr. Applications available at the Student
Office, 630 W. 74th St., Suite 100, Deadline
September 16, 1994, 12:00 PM (Noon).
at McDonalds on 6th St.
New Hiring for our 2 new
molly mcgees
STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER
Deadline: 09/19/15, Salary $650-$850, month. 20hrs per week. Duties include designing and writing programs; maintaining, or enhancing existing systems; assisting with program development hours at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programming languages used in the course, experience in munications skills, experience and/or ability in software testing. Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Complete job description available. To apply, visit www.edu.edu or apply to Job #20 of the Computer Center. EO/AA EMPLOYER
at McDonalds on 6N Now Hiring for our2 locations and to answer any questions about how you can be a part of our team.
grill & bar
DOORMEN NEEDED
Must be friendly, but able to handle confrontation.
Call 749-5039 - Ask for ZAC
Now Hiring!
Cooks and Servers
A.M. and P.M., Full and Part Time
Apply between 2 and 4 p.m.
Mr. Donald's
What you want is what you get.
2429 IOWA
WANTED!
Join one of the country's fastest growing retail companies. MANAGEMENT AND SALES. Full, partial time positions now available. Apply in Factory Outlet Mall, third level. 841-8243
A few great women
* "who like to talk*
* "who are friendly"
* "who are fashionable"
* "and who enjoy great clothes at a fantastic dis-
225 Professional Services
< Driver School > offered a midwinter Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749.
College Credit: Compilation under way, say.
Solar credit plus card. For info call 800-913-8423.
DUI/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND AND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature. ESL classes. Highly
qualified and experienced Call Arthur 841-3331.
International Video Conversions NMTS
(NTSC) or PAL (DVD). Include in return
postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer
PO box 310 Kiowa Ks 600471-1-800-695-695.
235 Typing Services
KC Design Studio; Growing creative studio searching for professional, talented artist. Must be experienced in humorous illustration and cartooning. Graphic illustration and Macintosh experience a plus. Send 10 samples of work with SASE to: STUDIO P. BOX 2857, Kansas City, MO 64113
Prompt abortion and contraception services in Lawrence: 814-7312. Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Mother of two starting registered daycare. Full and part time learning. Infants and up. Many learnings experience. Reasonable rates: 841-7427.
Need a babysitter? College student, loves kids, 10 years experience with infants, toddlers, have mobile and flexible schedule. Call Melanie at 843-3846.
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
843-4023
TRAFFIC-DU'S
Fake D.I.S. & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964.
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
Free Consultation
X
701 Tennessee
R
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter quality type. Also transcriptions: 845-2063
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Theses, Term-papers, Resumes, Business letters, etc... Laser printing. 855-0062
RESUMES
YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST!
Put my service to the test.
For your help, send me mail,
MAKIN' THE GRADE
is the one call we need.
305 For Sale
TRANSCRIPTIONS 842-4619 1012 Mass, Suite 201
300s Merchandise
9 Macintosh SE Great for student #4252. 60
and white monitor no screen Call Mike #437-272
*Professional Writing*
*Cover Letters*
*Consultation*
Linda Morton C.P.R.W.
25% Off everything with KU ID. Booth 218 (down-
down Lawrence, Laurence) Oct. 10, Lot of 15.
Blue padded carpec carpe c to fit dorm room. last semester for $40, sell for $98.00. Call Mike
Honda 1980 Eller 50 red scooter, with 8 baskets. 400 for new battery and tune-up. Make offer
A Member of
PA RW
Professional Association of
Referee Writers
Giant Mountain Bike in excellent condition. Make offer. 792.923
Linda Morton, C.P.R.W
MACINTOSH OSIHCH. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Chris AT 829-288-5683.
Macintosh SE 30, 5 M Ram. 4 MB HD, with Software and carrying case. Apple Stylewriter II
488 PC Mintowner with new CD ROM multi-
new package *1100 or less* 865.2398
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N. 2nd • 841-8903
19th & Haskell • 841-7504
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
4221
STUDENTS! I rent a computer, software, and
business software 20 sermest. Call 1-800-959-6049 for
information.
Vintage table and 2 chairs for sale. All three are in the condition, $100 or best offer for set. Call 749-2828.
Yamala stereo receiver, still in stock, box Model: RV780, #RV780, Ask for Troy 913-411-7135.
340 Auto Sales
83 "Suzuki Katana, 600cc, bik w/ purple & teal accents. Like new, cond. beautiful & bike very fast. $990.000 CALL Jonas at 862-3050 9m-5pm or 796-6297 evenings & weekends.
1922 Nissan 2005XH. 8 speed, with sunroof, power windows, and louver. $1108/BOB. Call Mike at 612-374-5800.
1983 Nissan 2602X sapi T-packs fully loaded AM/FM/cass ACN restur. gdi display, Nice1900
Also 1978 Chv Camaro, drives very good, $850 749 298,
leave mess.
Nissan K2040K $25X, 5-pd, sunroof, cassette
phone, alarm, anti-lock brakes, titer steering, ca-
bra, AC power-lock, cruise, 35-miles, excellent,
$16,000, call Terre®-865-0903
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues - Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
Corrugated boxes, moving and storage boxes.
Large quantity pricing & small quantity walk-in-
welcome. Call 843-8111 and ask for the Sales Service
Department. Carry and cash.
VAGABONDBOOKMAN
400s Real Estate
Buy & Sell Used
Rare & Collectables
842-BOOK 1113 Mass.
(2665)
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well
Bedroom, very nice, quiet, 2 space at an pool. On KU bus route $46/mo. 85-1382 (available immediately 2 bedroom apartment 2 lots from campus, DW, micro cable. Call 400-646-9888)
ORCHARD CORNERS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
4 BEDROOM
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great room, 254 miles route. NO PARKING.
PAVILION AVAILABLE. Call 769-178-8200.
- On KU Bus Route
* Close to Campus
* Swimming Pool
* Stop By Today!
Equal 749-4226 M-F9-5
Opportunity 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4
**LG 2 BDRM apt. off campus. Avail. immed.**
lower level garden; new kitchen overlooking l.
iving room. Full carpet. fireplace fire,
dry/AC. Very clean! $400 + utilities!
1389
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Available for fall.
- 2 bedroom with study
- Directly on bus route
- Call 843-4754
South Pointe APARTMENTS
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
quarantine, hospitalization and appointments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500. Room for rent in house with two male students; block from campus. Laundry facilities available. Call 832-1685 or 843-9094.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Roommate need ASAP to share furnished 36 bedroom apartment, W/D, on bus route, $250 per night.
I roommate needed immediately. Beautiful
begun it up! I block from campus $225 price nego-
dity.
2 females looking for 3rd roommate to live in town-
wash $289 rent cable pay. A valuable immediate
NJS/Female Roommate needs to share for
wire (W1) or NU Bus Unit $200
Utilities 484, 673
One roommate wanted.
Female roommate wanted, start Jan. 1995, spacious energy efficient apd and esp. dup in flat with balcony.
Call 832-9683
Share four bedroom apartments and left Orchard
Corner on his route.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
- By phone: 864-4358
$20 two bedroom apartment old West Lawrence
$190 month plus 3 months. Call 769-1726
One formermate ASAP to share four bedroom. $162 50 plus $4 bills, restitutable $18.
Need Female to provide large 2 ltr. B1 birch api on her route 200 - sull ull. mocker OR-841581
api on her route 200 - sull ull. mocker OR-841581
ROOMMATE WANTED To share a duplex, own bedroom. Front and back yard. Pets allowed. No pets allowed.
Roommate needed for two bedroom apt. on Edinburgh Dr. $225/mo + utilities on the UK busrt. and close to Dillons on 2rd St. Please call locally: 766-101 and leave message
WANTED N.S.C.
1 female 1/2 from home, 1st floor of
house 2 minutes from Union, $240. (utl. 341)
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre payment is made.
* In person: 119 Swaffer Flint
Stop by the Master's office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged
-- The卡斯卡或 VISA
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check 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 aagle lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Num of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8-9 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.
Example: 3 lines for 5 daws — 3 lines X 5 daws X $1.10=$16.50
Classifications
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAI POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
(05%, per liter, W/kg)
IX 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X ∞XX
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
1400 lbs & bound 365 for sale
20 helped water 360 auto sales
222 professional services 360 intercellutions
355 customer service
105 personal
110 business personalis
120 announcements
130 entertainment
370 foot and tubway
405 feet left
430 reinforcement welded
1 | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
Name: PI
Total ad cost:___ Classification:___
Date ad begins: Total days in paper
Total ad day: Classification
Address:
Phone
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 art.
Account number:
MasterCard
Exciration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall; Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By
By GARY LARSON
Jason
yip yip yip yip
yip yip yip yip yip
yip yip yip yip.
Big dogs having fun with helium
8B
Tuesday, September 13, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WE CAN'T HELP YOU WIN THE RAT RACE BUT WE CAN HELP YOU FINISH.
【图】
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.
9
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, economic 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
ME OREAD
MEDICAL ARTS
CENTRE
A
parking make Mt.Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative.
K AS OLD & CLINTON PARKWAY
.
CAMPUS
A KU graduate will leave Saturday for Denver to work in President Clinton's Americorps. Page 3A.
FEATURES
---
Fashion is more than just coordinating colors. For some, it is a window into the personality. Page 4B.
COOLER High 86° Low 70° Weather: Page 2A.
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.104.NO.17
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
GTAs wait for judge's ruling on work status
By Colleen McCain
Kansan staff writer
For graduate teaching assistant Dan Murtaugh, the past year has been a waiting game.
Hearings to determine whether Murtaugh and other University of Kansas GTAs are public employees concluded Sept. 27, 1993, but Murtaugh says GTAs and University administrators can do nothing now but continue to wait
"Initially we hoped to receive a decision this summer, and then we were told that we would have a decision around Labor Day," Murtaugh said. "Now we could get a decision any day, but we don't know. The Kansas Public Employees Relations Board has a backlog of cases, and that's delaying the decision."
The week-long hearings, which pitted the GTAs against University administrators, were conducted by Monty Bertelli, a hearing examiner for the Kansas Public Employees Relations Board. Based on testimony and evidence presented in the hearings, Bertelli will recommend whether GTAs are public employees.
Murtaugh said the GTAs believed they were public employees and should be allowed to unionize.
"We believe that we work for the state, but the University disagrees," Murtragh said. "If we are public employees, then we can form a collective bargaining unit and negotiate contracts and employee benefits."
According to Public Employer-Employee Relations Acts of the Kansas statutes, a public employee is any person - excluding supervisory, professional, elected or confidential workers - employed by any public agency.
During the hearings, the University maintained that the nature of the relationship between the University and GTAs was academic and not employer-employee.
Andrew Debicki, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, said GTAs were primarily students who were in training to be the teachers of the future
"We are trying to make them into better teachers, and classifying them as public employees would hamper our system of apprenticeship." Debicki said.
After the hearing examiner makes his recommendation, both the University and the GTAs have the option to appeal to the entire Kansas Public Employees Board. Debicki said that he could not speculate whether the University would appeal.
"If the decision is not in our favor, no one person will make the decision to appeal," he said. "Legal opinions are rarely a flat 'yes' or 'no', so we will have to study the decision."
"At this point there's nothing to say until we have the decision," Shankel said. "Obviously, we'll review the decision and go from there."
Chancellor Del Shankel said that he, the executive vice chancellor, and the vice chancellors would review the decision to determine what action, if any, would be appropriate.
Scott Stone, chief counsel for the Kansas Association of Public Employees, represented the GTAs during the hearings. He said that he anticipated a decision in the GTAs' favor.
"I would be surprised if the decision did not support us." Stone said. "This will set a precedent in Kansas, but the trend in other states has been toward allowing the GTAs public employee status."
David Reidy, Lawrence graduate student and former GTA, said the GTAs' recourse would be simple if the decision sided with the University.
"There are two possible outcomes, and we simply will appeal if the decision is not in our favor." Reedy said.
If the decision favored the GTAs, and the University appealed, Reidy said GTAs would consider taking action against the University.
"A walkout would be a possibility," he said. "A long-term walkout is unlikely, but a less disruptive walkout for, perhaps, a day would make a practical and moral point. It would make a strong point about our solidarity."
Vice chancellor Debicki said a walkout would be the wrong mode of action for GTAs.
"A walkout puts our relationship in the context of a labor situation, not a university," he said. "But I suppose they can do whatever they want."
INSIDE
Slow, but sure
Organizers of the club sports rugby and soccer have shown their dedication while battling for practice space and student interest.
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
Get-well card makes many sick
Page1B.
Ariel Katzman
Muhammed Saeed, a Sunni Muslim, is on a hurger strike protesting a greeting card made by Recycled Paper Greetings of Chicago. He has not eaten for seven days and said he planned to continue his strike until the company had made a public apology.
Muslims offended by 'bigoted' card; boycott pending
By Nathan Olson
Kansan staff writer
Fighting hatred is becoming a potential life-and-death struggle for Muhammed Saeed.
Saeed, a Lawrence resident who is Muslim, has been on a hunger strike since Sept. 5. He is protesting a get-well card produced by Chicago-based Recycled Paper Greetings.
The front of the card shows a woman in a black robe. A white veil covers her entire face, except for her eyes. The type reads: "Rather than confront her morbid fear of germs, Millicent changed her name to Yazmine and moved to Tehran."
Inside, the card reads: "So you're feeling like Shiite. Don't Mecca big deal out of it."
Violence against Muslims intense
Saeed is the only person upset about the card. Campus and University Muslim organizations have planned a rally at 10 a.m. today in front of the Kansas Union to protest the card.
Saeed said the card was offensive to Muslims because it degraded Muslim women, equated the second-largest sect of Islam with excrement, and demeaned the importance of Mecca by turning the city into a pun.
By Nathan Olson
Kansan staff writer
Aminah Assilmi understood how far-reaching violence against Muslims had become the day the United States became involved in the Gulf War.
See CARD, Page 5A.
"My son, who was in fifth grade, was beaten up that day because his name was Muhammed," she said.
Asslimi, Lawrence resident and director of the International Union of Muslim Women, said the incident was indicative of the increasing violence against Muslims in the United States.
"Even U.S. government documents warn about the existence of an Islamic state," she said.
"The World Trade Center bombings were not done by any Islamic population," she said. "No Islamic organization."
Assilmi said that last year's World Trade Center bombing provided an example of how Muslims often are stereotyped. Many people assumed that because the bombers were Arabic, they were acting on behalf of an Islamic organization.
tion has claimed responsibility for it."
"Communism is dead, so who does America have to hate?" he said.
Increasingly, Muslims are being stereotyped as radical fundamentalists. Assilmi said.
The card is part of a larger hatred of Muslims, Saeed said.
"But Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland are not considered fundamentalists even though there is terrorism there," she said.
Ibrahim Hooper, national communications director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Washington, D.C., said that the national media had not been covering incidents of violence against Muslims.
The problem is that the United States is a very ethnocentric country, said Muhammed Saeed, a Lawrence resident who is Muslim.
"If there's no one to hate, we'll find someone," he said. Saeed has been on a hunger strike since Sept. 5 in protest of a greeting card which uses the word "Shite" as a pun for human excrement.
Muslims in the United States
Muslims in the United States Percent of U.S. Muslim population by ethnicity
Southeast Asians 2% Other 5.6%
Europeans 2.4% African- 42%
Turks 2.4% Americans
Iranians 3.6%
Africans 5.2% South 24.4%
Arabs 12.4% Asians
States with most Muslims Estimated population
California 800,001
New York 800,001
Illinois 420,000
New Jersey 200,000
Indiana 180,000
Michigan 170,000
Source: Staff research
NOTE: U.S. Muslim population figures are estimates based on figures from the American Medical Council. The Census Bureau publishes statistics about several U.S. denominations, but not Islam.
Ken Marshall and Steve Little / Knight-Ridder Tribune
Just two weeks ago, Hooper said, a mosque in Yuba City, Calif., was burned, causing nearly $1 million in damage. The media did not report the incident nationally until Hooper contacted news services.
"The card and the mosque all fit into a cultural milieu in which its OK to be hostile to Muslims," Hooper said. "Muslims only appear on the cultural radar screen when they do something bad."
Museum director will miss the university lifestyle
By Shannon Newton
Kansan staff writer
Philip Humphrey loves his animal collection.
JACK LAMBERT
And in his 26 years as director of KU's Museum of Natural History, Humphrey has worked to expand the collection and many other aspects of the museum. Humphrey, who will retire June 1, has overseen the museum's growth in funding, research and technology.
"When I arrived in 1968, technology was beginning to emerge," he said. "Now everyone in the museum has access to a computer."
Humphrey said that throughout his tenure, the museum had received grant money from the National Science Foundation to allow for a larger concentration on research.
"The faculty can spend more time doing research, and the money allows for more graduate assistant positions," he said.
Humphrey began working at the University of Kansas in August 1968. He came from the Smithsonian Institute in Washington D.C., where he was the chairman of the Department of Vertebrate Zoology. From 1957 to 1962 Humphrey was a faculty member at Yale University.
Humphrey said that when he discovered there was an opening at KU's Natural History Museum he applied for the job because he wanted to return to a universi-
tv setting.
Philip Humphrey, director of KU's Museum of Natural History, is leaving after 26 years of service. Humphrey said of his coming departure, "When I leave, I want to go out quacking, not as a lame duck."
"Of all the work that I have done in research and museums, I enjoy being at a university." Humphrey said.
Humphrey, who specializes in ornithology the study of birds, does not take credit for the museum's success.
Paul Kotz/KANBAN
"My colleagues are the ones that put this place on the map," Humphrey says, "I am lucky to have been on duty throughout the museum's success."
One of the largest changes that Humphrey has seen is the merging of four of KU's museums into one budgetary unit, he said.
"The directors of all of the museums felt it would be more beneficial for research and grants," Humphrey said. "So a couple of years ago we began the planning stages."
Kathryn Morton, marketing and communications coordinator for the museum, has worked with Humphrey for 18 months and said that she had learned a great deal from his work at the museum.
look over your shoulder while you complete it."
"He's a very supportive and fair administrator," Morton said. "When you have an idea, he lets you run with it. He doesn't
When Humphrey retires, his successor will be Leonard "Kris" Kristalka, assistant director for science at the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh.
Humphrey said that he felt emotional about leaving the University.
"I told Kris that I felt like I was giving up the museum for adoption." Humphrey said, "but he reassured me that I had unlimited visitation rights."
4.
.
---
2A
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
。
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
✩
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Although your generosity cuts into your savings at times, it is a major component of your warm-hearted personality. A tendency to be overly self-critical could show business progress. Act confident of success and it will come to pass. Seize a new leadership opportunity and concentrate on long-range professional goals. Only time will reveal the truth about an on-going relation. Ignore idiosyncrasy.
T
CLEBRITIES BORN THIS DATE: "Lone Ranger" star Clayton Moore, sculptor Kate Millett, dancer Heatherton, birth control advocate Margaret Sanger.
♂
♂
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Someone promises support that they do not really intend to give. Do what you can to establish better lines of communication. You have the negotiating skills to come out on ton in business.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Romance may be moving in a more positive direction now. Trust your instincts when deciding whether or not to reveal a secret. Keep a lid on spending. Save for investment purposes – and vacation!
العربية
69
GEMI1 (May 21-June 20): Your involvement in a community project or charity drive will be rewarded in many ways. Someone may not be telling the whole truth about romance.
2
m
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Those in your immediate vicinity should be cooperative today. Be careful not to take advantage of your mate's or partner's mellow mood. Fewer luxury purchases will mean greater peace of mind.
♌
W
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Despite your well-laid plans, your schedule could be upended by unforeseen events. Financial support for a pet project may be difficult to obtain. Focus on domestic and family activities this evening. Your affection is returned!
LEO (July 23-August 22). Conflict is unavoidable now. What you propose could be turned down. Be patient if children are unusually demanding. Find out what is causing their distress.
VS
SCOREPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Be frugal. The money you save now will come in very handy in the near future. Go along with your mate's suggestions for entertainment. Adding to your storehouse of knowledge makes you a more interesting conversationalist.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Turn to close associates if you need a helping hand. People will go on their way to be of assistance. Short trips are favored over longer journeys. A social occasion leads to important introductions.
SAGITTARUS) (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Business affairs could conflict with home responsibilities. A choice will be difficult to make. Postpone signing documents and contracts. Government red tape may ensnare you. Curb your temper. Consider your words and actions carefully.
Water
CAPERCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
You could find that you made the right decision for all the wrong reasons. So what? Stop second-guessing yourself and look confidently to the future.
Learn more about poetry, the theater or opera.
X
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A new friend could provide helpful financial advice. A social gathering reunites you with an old acquaintance. Be willing to forgive what might have been a deliberate slight. You are in the driver's seat now.
PISCES (Feb. 10-March 20). The spotlight is on a prestigious business or community event. Airing original ideas will give your reputation a big boost. Romance may be dazzling. Take things one day at a time.
TODAY'S CHILDREN will do nothing by halves. The throw themselves into work or play with great enthusiasm! Industrials by nature, they will become impatient with people who are lazy. Their peers will find these Virgos' mercurial hard to resist. Fastidious about their appearance and work, these Virgs are equally tidy at home. They enjoy entertaining and will spend long hours cooking and cleaning before a party. Their thrifty ways keep them from having financial worries.
homescopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 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.
ON CAMPUS
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 68045.
Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today in front of Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Mark Wilson at 865-0066.
Student Alumni Association will sponsor Alumni Day as part of Celebrate KU from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today in front of Wescose Hall. For more information, call Kristin Hayne at 864-6429.
OAKS-Non-Traditional Student Organization will sponsor a brown-bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today in Alcove H in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7317.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate daily Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel. For more information, call 843-0357.
The Kansan Correspondents will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The guest speaker will be Bill Snead, deputy editor of The Lawrence Journal-World. The Kansan Correspondents program is open to all students interested in contributing to the Kansan through reporting, photography and graphic design. For more information, call Jamie Munn, freelance editor, at 864-4810.
Biology Student Advisory Panel will sponsor "Bats, bats, bats."
bats!" with Dr. Robert Timm at 5:30 p.m. today in 2023 Haworth Hall.
■ School of Education Student Organization will sponsor a picnic at 5:30 p.m. today in Holcom Park, 27th Street and Lawrence Avenue. For more information, call Brynm Edmonds at 841-5567
Japan Karate-Do Ryobu-Kai Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 515 Robinson Center. For more information, call Dan Blood at 864-7029.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight in Alcove C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call M.C. Baldwin at 864-7321.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight in the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Scott McMillian at 842-4225.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad in Spanish-speaking countries at 10 a.m. tomorrow at 4043 Wescoe Hall.
Canterbury House (Episcopal/Anglican) will celebrate Holy Eucharist ar noon tomorrow at Danforth Church.
KU Literary Club will meet at 5:15 p.m. tomorrow at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jack Lerner at 749-5225.
$100, police said.
ON THE RECORD
A side window of a car was broken late Sunday night on the 1500 block of W. 25th Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage was valued at $50.
A KU student's motorcycle was damaged about 11:45 Sunday on the 1700 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police reported. Police said damage to part of the electrical system on the motorcycle was valued at $100.
About 12 p.m. Sunday, a car was broken into on the 1300 block of W. 24th Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage to the car and stolen items, including a compact disc player and 40 compact discs, were valued at $1,300, police said.
Weather
Two men robbed the Virginia Inn Motel, 2007 W. Sixth St. about 11:30 p.m. Monday, Lawrence police reported. The robbers were wearing ski masks, and one of the men had a small chrome semi-automatic pistol, police said. The men stole $191 from the cashier at the front desk. After a family from Monroe, La, drove by the office on the way back to their room, the men ran out of the office and fired shots at the car, hitting the door and rear window. None of the passengers were injured, and police are still looking for the suspects, who ran from the motel.
The front hood of a KU student's car was damaged about 2 p.m. Sunday on the 500 block of W. 23rd Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage was valued at
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
TODAY
Slightly cooler and windy with mostly cloudy skies.
THURSDAY
89° • • 68°
82° • • 63°
81° • • 65°
85° • • 68°
86° • • 69°
74° • • 60°
83° • • 66°
82° • • 66°
68° • • 54°
88° • • 70°
85° • • 69°
83° • • 71°
85° • • 68°
Mostly cloudy and windy with a 30 percent chance of rain.
8670
8468
FRIDAY
8368
Continued mostly cloudy and warm with a 30 percent chance of showers
Source: Matt Jezewski, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
September 13, 1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
19.52
3,879.86
NYSE
0.52
257.84
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 257.840,000
↑
Advances
4.94
764.95
Declines
1,132
1,001
Unchanged
-
735
ASE
1.75
456.81
fibiS
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
925 IOWA
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We repair
Brass, Aluminum,
& Plastic Radiators
Heaters, water pumps, and
A/C service tool!
842-3333
MOTOROLOGY
VISA
Special Student Memberships!
DATCOMPER
ATHLETIC CLUB INC
State of the art fitness and health facility
✔
US OUT!
Graystone Athletic Club, Inc.
2500 W 6th 841-7230
708 W. 9th
708 W.9th • 842-5921
Welcome Back KU Students
Visit us for that fresh look for fall... The Total Look
total look!
If my roommate moves out, do I have to pay all the rent?
Yes, under most leases.
Legal Services for Students
148 Burge 864-5665
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF LOS ANGELES
SENATE
GRANADA
1020 MASS ST DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
913-842-1390
GRANADA
1020 MASS ST DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
913-842-1390
EVERY WEDNESDAY!
80S
NIGHT
50 CENT DRAWS!!!!
THURS. SEPT. 15
THE
SCOTTY
RIDDIM
BAND
LIVE REGGAE!
THE
SCOTTY
RIDDIM
BAND
LIVE REGGAE!
A Mexican Tradition
WEDNESDAY!!
.25 Draws
$1.25 Swillers
$1.25 Refills
Come party on the Patio
815 New Hampshire
DOS HUMDRES RESTAURANT
841-7286
815 New Hampshire • 841-7286
DOS HOMBRES
BETTA ANNIE
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
3A
FRE
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
Jason Hatfield, Salina senior, looked over a selection of prints for sale in front of Stauffer Flint Hall last week. Businesses that sell products on campus, such as "Wholesale Art Prints," must be sponsored by a student organization which receives some of the businesses' profits.
Campus groups cash in on businesses
By James Evans
Kennettofwrite
Kansanstaffwriter
Credit cards can be applied for in front of Wescoe Hall, Spin Foncard applications can be filled out in the Kansas Union. And all last week, art prints could be bought in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall.
It's all in the name of money. Businesses make money from KU students on campus, and student organizations receive some of their profits
Businesses that come on the campus to sell their products must first find an organization willing to sponsor them, said Ann Eversole, director of the Organizations and Activities Center. Each business that is sponsored by an organization must be approved by the University Events Committee.
The companies are required by the University to give a portion of their on-campus profits to the student organization, she said. The standard fee that the University Events Committee recommends each organization ask for is 20 percent of the profits made.
"Student organizations have been doing it more in the past five years because it's a very creative way to raise funds," Everso said.
Many student organizations agree to sponsor businesses to help finance activities.
"We really needed money for our leadership conference and our Asian-American Festival," said Lisa Nguyen, treasurer of the Asian-American Student Union. She estimated that the union's festival would cost $8,000, and the cost for the leadership conference for Asian-American high school students was not yet determined.
Nguyen said that her group decided to sponsor Wells-Fargo Bank Card, the PNC Bank Cards, and the Total Gas Card this week to help pay for the coming events. She said that the union learned about the companies through a mailer that offered student groups the opportunity to earn
money by sponsoring the companies on campus.
The credit card companies are paying the union $1 for every two applications that students fill out, Nguyen said. She said that 120 applications were filled out by students on Monday, and that the union would receive their money from the card companies in three weeks.
Wholesale Art Prints, which sold prints outside of Stauffer-Flint Hall last week, found a sponsor by contacting the University Events Committee, said Kevin Harmon, independent contractor for the Kansas City, Kan., business. He said that the committee helped him find the University of Kansas League of Undergraduate Art Historians, which sponsored the art sale.
Harmon said that prior to coming to KU, Wholesale Art Prints had sold prints at nine other universities. All the universities that Wholesale Art Prints has sold art at had a similar student organization sponsor program, Harmon said.
Vending it
The following lists organizations that have sponsored businesses to come onto campus since the beginning of the semester.
Student Unit Activities
Art Print Sale in the Kansas Union
Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs Lawrence Journal World
Alpha Chi Omega Sorority
American Passage (credit cards)
Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity
Citibank (credit cards)
Asian American Student Union Wells Fargo Bank, PNC Bank, Total Gas Card (credit cards)
KU Bookstores
Sprint Collegiate Foncard
Source: Kansan staff reports KANSAN
Open house gives football tickets
Kansanstaffreport
Food and free tickets to Haskell Indian Nations University's next football game will be available at an Indian Center of Lawrence open house tonight.
The center, 1423 Haskell Ave., will be open to the public from 6 to 8 tonight to show how it helps in the education and betterment of Native Americans in the Lawrence community.
BRIEFS
The center, a United Way agency, also will feature players from Haskell's football team and give away tickets to its home game tomorrow against Benedictine College.
Chancellor's Club scholars
named
Kansan staff report
When Heather Whitney, Lawrence freshman, was named as a Chancellor's Club Scholar in July, she went straight to her father's office to give him the news.
"I was ecstatic," she said. "I was jumping off the walls."
Whitney is one of 10 incoming freshman to receive a Chancellor's Club scholarship this year.
"In my family, it's considered the best scholarship you can get at KU." she said.
Fred Conboy, director of the Chancellor's
The scholarship was important to her family for financial reasons, Whitney said.
Club, said the club was a group of alumni and friends of the University who contribute money for students and faculty to use.
He said the 10 recipients were chosen by the Department of Educational Services based on their academic merit, including their scores on the American College Test and the Scholastic Aptitude Test. All 10 of the recipients also were recognized National Merit finalists for their scores on the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test.
Five of this year's scholars were from Kansas.
Each of them received a $1,500 scholarship,
Coboy said. The five out-of-state students
received a $2,000 scholarship.
Conboy said all of the scholarships were renewable as long as the recipients maintained a 3.5 grade point average.
KU alumna joins service program
Clinton's program offers travel, cash service experience
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
From the front steps of the White House yesterday, President Clinton swore in the first recruits to AmeriCorps, a national version of President Kennedy's international service program, the Peace Corps.
But Shanda Vangas, a May 1994 graduate of the University of Kansas and an AmeriCorps recruit, wasn't at the ceremony in Washington, D.C. She was at her home in Derby flipping through the T.V. channels to see if she could find a live broadcast of the ceremony on television.
"I never did find it." she said.
But that didn't bother Vangas, who was concentrating more on leaving for Denver, Colo., this Saturday to begin her 11 months of service with the National Civilian Community Corps, a branch of AmeriCorps.
"Definitely, the trip is more important than the little PR rally," she said.
She and her team will clean polluted rivers, tutor children in the Head Start program for low-income children, and do whatever else they are asked to do.
After joining 250 other recruits in Denver, Vangas will travel to cities and towns across the Midwest with a smaller team of about 19 recruits.
Community service is not new to Vangas. Before graduating from KU,
she co-directed the Student Senate's Center for Community Outreach, a program that supplies community service groups such as the United Way with students who want to volunteer.
Last year, Vangas went to an Ameri Corps conference in Washington. D.C. and applied to work in the program soon after.
"I decided I wanted to do something in the non-profit sector," she said.
"Plus, I get money for graduate school."
AmeriCorp recruits who complete the 11 months of service get a $4,725 educational voucher to pay off college loans or pay for more education.
Vangas said that she would like to get a master's degree in non-profit administration.
That goal will be helped by Vangas' decision to sign up with AmeriCorps, said Laura Bellinger, staff secretary for Student Senate. Bellinger worked with Vangas for Senate's Center for Community Outreach program last year.
"She was over at my house last week, and I told her this was the perfect opportunity," she said.
Vangas does not know exactly what jobs will be assigned to her. But they will have to do with education, health, the environment and public safety — the four areas of Ameri-Corps service outlined by President Clinton.
Vangas said not knowing the specifics of her job didn't bother her. This wouldn't surprise Bellinger.
This wouldn't surprise Bellinger.
"Shanda is one of those people who's happy doing whatever she's doing," she said.
Three suspected in three car burglaries
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
Two 18-year-old men were arrested early yesterday, and a juvenile was questioned after three cars were broken into at the Jayhawker Towers parking lot within a span of 30 minutes.
Mark Purcell, Lawrence, was arrested about 1:30 a.m. yesterday, and James Roberts, Lawrence, was arrested about 10 a.m., after Purcell gave police information about Roberts whereabouts. The third suspect was questioned, but because he is a juvenile, charges against him will be decided by the courts, said Sgt. Rose Rozmiraek of the KU police.
Purcell was charged with burglary, three counts of criminal damage and possession of drug paraphernalia. Roberts was charged with burglary and three counts of criminal damage. Both men are being held at the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center without bond.
"We were investigating a call about activity in the parking lot at the Towers," Rozmiarek said. "That's when police saw the three men."
When the suspects saw the police, they ran. Rozmiarek said Purcell was captured in the courtyard on the south side of the Jay-
hawker Towers after a short chase. The other two suspects originally got away.
After capturing Purcell, police found a marijuana pipe in one of his front pockets. He was arrested at the scene and later gave police information about Roberts and the juvenile, police said.
Three KU students' cars that were parked on the lower level of the Jayhawk Tower Parking lot had damage totaling $2,250, police said. The three men apparently broke into the cars with their hands because no tools were found. Rozmiarek said. It appears they tried to steal a car stereo from one of the cars but were unable to pull it out of the dash, police said.
The first car was broken into at 1:14 a.m., KU police reported. Police said damage to the rear window, scratched and chipped paint, damage to the dashboard and damage to a cassette radio was valued together at $1,450.
Within minutes, the men ripped a black vinyl convertible top causing $500 damage, police report
Then, athird car was broken into and the front passenger seat was torn causing $300 in damage, police reported.
Rozmiarek said it was too early to tell if yesterday's break-ins were related to other recent auto burglaries on campus.
CLASSICAL MUSIC ON CD
Kief's has Lawrence's Largest and Best Collection of Classical Music This Week... Take $2.00 Off (ea.) Kief's Everyday Low Price on Classical CD's!!
Not valid with other offersExcludes orange-tag items Good thru 9-19-94
KIEF'S CDs & TAPES
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044 AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES 913*843*1811 913*842*1438 913*842*1544
4A
September 14.1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
Rewording cripples Student Senate resolution
DAVE HULL
DAVE HULL A last minute amendment to the recent community service resolution renders it virtually meaningless.
Last Wednesday, Student Senate passed a resolution that will affect all student organizations receiving funding from Student Senate's unallocated account. In plain English this means any group that goes through Student Senate's budgetary process on a yearly basis.
The resolution is nonbinding. It does not mandate anything. However, the intentions may be to implement this resolution in the form of a bill at some point in the future.
It is titled, "A Resolution To Create The Community Service Initiative." The resolution creates a specific provision for community service. It requests Senate funded organizations to perform one hour of community service for every $100 of funding
received from Student Senate. In other words, if your organization receives $400 from Senate you will be required to perform four hours of community service.
Like nearly every piece of Senate legislation, this resolution was required to go through at least one of Senate's standing committees. These committees are comprised of students and student senators. It is the job of the committee members to discuss and, when necessary, improve legislation before it is sent on to the full Senate.
In the case of the Community Service Initiative, the debate in the University Affairs Committee was heated. Some committee members felt the resolution was equivalent to making
groups work for funding. But at $100 an hour who would complain? After all, the funding for student groups comes out of the pockets of every tuition paying individual It is only fair that groups do something to earn their funding.
Now consider that if a group had three members and was asking for $100 in funding, its community service could be shared by all three members. Each of them would have to work for 20 minutes in exchange for $100 for the group.
Why then did some members of the University Affairs committee so adamantly oppose this legislation? I spoke to a handful of senators to find out what the arguments against the resolution were.
At the knee jerk level the initiative has appeal. But a closer look reveals that this provision places an unnecessary burden on members of the student community who already dedicate a great deal of time performing a community service in virtue of their organizational involvement. The argument is that groups such as Women's Student Union, Hispanic American Leadership Organization et al are, by their very nature, performing a service to the community by offering programs that further cultural awareness.
Some senators claim this provision is a time tax on those most involved in these organizations. The leadership, the dependable members, the ones who put in the most time to begin
with, are going to be the same ones ultimately carrying the weight of community service.
However, during last week's Senate meeting the resolution passed without even an inkling of debate. Why were there no objections to the measure? Perhaps because the resolution was crippled by the University Affairs move to strike lines 59 and 60 that required groups to perform the community service before being eligible to receive funding the following year. Without these lines, the resolution may as well be dead, for even in the form of a binding bill it would accomplish nothing.
Dave Hull is a Wichita senior in history and philosophy.
VIEWPOINT
Continued EPA negligence leaves pesticides unchecked
In the early 1960s, Rachel Carson initiated the modern environmental movement with her book, "Silent Spring." Its attack
Silent Spring on the health risks of DDT and similar pesticides led to a mass of environmental legislation including the
them. The U.S. General Accounting Office predicts the reviews will not be completed until at least 2004.
In terms of cancer risks,
PESTICIDE LAW
The present law lacks a provision for citizen lawsuits against the EPA, allowing the government to escape accountability.
Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act of 1972. However, with pesticide residues in food ranking third among environmental health threats more than a generation later, it remains the weakest and most poorly enforced U.S. environmental law.
This act required that all commercial pesticides be approved for general or restricted use by the EPA. In addition, it mandated the EPA to reevaluate more than 600 active ingredients approved for use before 1972 to determine whether any of them caused cancer, birth defects or other health problems. Although the analysis was to be completed by 1975, the EPA missed the deadline. In 1987, Congress extended it to 1997. By 1989, the EPA had carried out the preliminary assessment of 139 of these chemicals and had completed review of only two of
the EPA ranks pesticides the third most serious environmental health hazard. With frightening
effects of long-term exposure to pesticides being discovered every year, why has the EPA allowed further exposure to hundreds of chemicals with unknown effects on humans?
The federal act of 1972 is the only major environmental law that does not provide for citizen lawsuits against the EPA the essential tool to ensure government compliance.
With the new deadline for reevaluation of all pre1972 chemicals less than three years away, the EPA must act quickly. The National Academy of Sciences claims up to 98 percent of the potential cancer risk from pesticide residues can be eliminated by applying today's stricter standards to those chemicals. If the EPA allows continued exposure to these chemicals, the law should be amended to hold the government liable for its negligence.
ERIC MADDEN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
JEN CARR Business manager
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
CAMERON DEATH
Retail sales manager
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Editors
Editor
News Sara Bennett
Editorial Donella Heame
Campus Mark Martin
Sports Brian James
Photo Daron Bennett
Mellasa Lecey
Features Tracal Car
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 Perrler
Production mgrs ... Holly Boren
Regan Overy
Marketing director ... Alan Stigle
Creative director ... John Carlton
Classified mgr ... Heather Niehaus
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include your writing's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Oklahoma should use the university's official font.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photonarried
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 Stuaffer-Flint Hall.
"HER MORAL
COMPASS IS
AS STRONG
AS ANYBODY'S
IN THIS COUNTRY"
-BILL CLINTON
MR. CLINTON
THE "MORAL COMPASS" OF THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION:
"HER MORAL COMPASS IS AS STRONG AS ANYBODY'S IN THIS COUNTRY."
-Bill Clinton
HILLARY
THE "MORAL WEATHER VANE" OF THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION:
FAMILY VALUES DON'T MATTER!
YES, THEY DO!
NO, THEY DON'T!
YES, THEY DO!
Ferren 1992
VDK. M.
THE
OF THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATIVE
FAMILY
VALUES
DON'T
MATTER!
YES, THEY
DO!
NO,
THEY
DON'T!
YES,
THEY
DO!
Ferr
1992
UDK M
Fenn
1997
U.D.K. N
Sean Finn / KANSAN
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Invasion of Haiti would be unwise
The Clinton administration increased the drumbeat toward a military invasion of Haiti when State and Defense Department officials declared that U.S. troops are going to Haiti.
But before President Clinton commits U.S. forces to an invasion and the loss of lives the operation inevitably will cost, he should get the approval of Congress. And he should spell out for the American people just why such a drastic step is necessary.
Perhaps it is telling that Clinton has sought U.N. approval for "all means necessary" in dealing with Haiti but has not sought the consent of Congress. Perhaps Clinton fears congressional opposition; perhaps he fears being unable to justify a military solution to the satisfaction of Congress.
White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers used a familiar formulation: "It is time to restore democracy to Haiti."
The United States has no vital interest in Haiti, and the international community is not threatened by its instability. So, why invade?
The Rapid City Journal Rapid City, South Dakota
Beware of self-righteous Environs
While enjoying my ride home on the loud, polluted, cyclist menace that we call the bus, I found myself filled with indignation at Chris Stong's column, suggesting that busses and other vehicles not be allowed to drive on campus. Why was I upset?
Well, for starters I found that his solution disregarded several groups of students who might truly need a bus system. What, I ask, does Mr. Stong intend to do for the numerous students on campus who are handicapped? Did it occur to Mr. Stong that some people in wheelchairs cannot "get up the hill independently?" Are he, Amy Trainer and all the wonderful people at Environs going to provide an alternate means of transportation. Or is Mr. Stong advocating that these folks negotiate their wheelchairs through the grass for the sake of the "system."
Exactly, what system is he referring to? Probably, some tree hugging, granola youth group that feels its cause is above the economic concerns of the drivers and other individuals employed by the bus company. No, cleaning the emissions on the buses aren't enough for the true believers. Does Mr. Stong have any idea what these people are supposed to do for a living? Or does he expect
COLUMNIST
NICOLAS SHUMP
the sense of goodwill that a cleaner campus will bring to be sufficient for food and clothing? Doesn't he realize that many students drive buses to pay for their education? Of course, nothing is more important than a little clean air, right?
Another area that Mr. Stong neglected to consider was the fate of the significant number of commuter students. Where exactly are they supposed to park, downtown? Or is Mr. Stong going to provide a shuttle service for all of the commuters? Or maybe we should all bike 30 miles down old K-10 for the sake of Mother Earth? Give me a break!
Finally, Mr. Stong offers no solution to the problem of night classes. What are students who are taking night classes supposed to do under his system? Does he really expect
people to trudge half-a-mile or more to classes in the dark? I guess the chances of being raped are less important than grass on campus, right Chris?
Of course, what really raised my ire was his blatant disregard for inactivity. And this from a philosophy major? I ask Mr. Stong how he thinks that most philosophers operated? Even a cursory glance at the the history of philosophy will show this was not the case. Does he think that Socrates spent his days "gleaming the cube" around the Athenian agora? Of course not. In fact, he probably spent his days on a stool at the neighborhood pub conducting a symposium(it's Greek for drinking party).
Alright. tired of the French? How about the Germans? Did Nietzsche discover his Zarathustra while testing driving a Porsche 944? I think not. Or how about old Marty Heideger, he may have lived on a mountain, but he sure as hell wasn't climbing it while working on Being and Time.
OK, if you're tired of the Greeks let's look at the French. What was Descartes' famous saying: Cogito ergo sum. That's right, I think therefore I am not I think therefore I ran. Or how about Sartre? He didn't come up with Being and Nothingness by doing steps on the Eiffel Tower, he wrote by sitting in one of those street cafes in Paris, chain-smoking Gauloises and going blind.
Assuming that Mr. Stong has a cursory familiarity with these thinkers and their works, what then would cause him to be so hostile to "people sitting on their backsides." It's quite simple really, his analysis is symptomatic of the shoddy thinking in the environmental movement. Or maybe Chris Stong just got caught behind one too many exhaust systems. Whatever the reason, future attempts to analyze the pollution and traffic problems should substitute sound analysis for their everpresent self-righteousness.
Does Mr. Stong think that Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead figure out their Principia while tearing around the paths of Oxford or Cambridge on a pair of Mongooses. Of course all of these ruminations ignore other traditions such as Zen, which places a premium on nondoing and non-being.
Nicolas Shump is a Lawrence senior majoring in comparative literature.
HUBIE
I'M SORRY WE HAD TO SKIP SO MANY LEVELS OF HELL, BUT I THINK YOU'LL ENJOY THIS LAST ONE.
THIS HERE IS THE HELL FOR TV ADVERTISING!
ADVERTISING SCHMAD-VERTISING
THIS HELL WAS CREATED FOR PEOPLE WHO TRY TO SELL YOU THINGS YOU WOULD NEVER EVER NEED.
YES. I R-
THE NEXT STREAK CUTTING HAIR...
MAH
A REAL PRODUCT!
I'M SORRY WE HAD TO SKIP SO MANY LEVELS OF HELL, BUT I THINK YOU'LL ENJOY THIS LAST ONE.
THIS HERE IS THE HELL FOR TV ADVERTISING!
THIS HELL WAS CREATED FOR PEOPLE WHO TRY TO SELL YOU THINGS YOU WOULD NEVER EVER NEED.
YESIR! THERE IS WHAT THE NEXT STORY IN CURIOUS HAIR...
YEAH
A REAL PRODUCT!
IT'S FOR PEOPLE WHO DECIDED TO MAKE INFOMERCIALS THE ONLY FREAKIN' THING ON TV AT 2 AM!!
IT'S FOR THE PEOPLE WHO TRY TO SELL YOU COLLECTIONS OF OLD, CHEESEY MUSIC!
HEY, MAN!, IS WHAT FREEDOM ROCK?
NO, DUDE, IT'S THE VERY BOYS!
EVER HAVE THOSE DAYS WHEN YOU PEEL NOT SO FRESH?
YEAH, MY YEAST INFECTION IS KILLING ME!
BUT, LADIES AND GENTS, THERE IS A WAY FOR THE INNOCENT TO ESCAPE THIS HORRIBLE PLACE, AND FORTUNATELY I'M HOLPING IT RIGHT IN MY HAND.
ESSIAR-
THE NEW
FURNISHING
THE NEXT
STEP.
IN CUTTING
HAIR...
Vroom!
AAAR
A REAL PRODUCT!
IT'S FOR THE PEOPLE WHO TRY TO SELL YOU COLLECTIONS OF OLD, CHEESEY MUSIC!
HEY, MAN, IS THAT FREEDOM ROOK?
NO, DUDE, IT'S THE VERY BOYS!
AND IT'S EXPELLANT FOR ANYONE WHO EVER SCRIPTED A FEMININE HYGIENE COMMERCIAL !!!
EVER HAVE THOSE DAYS WHEN YOU FEEL NOT SO FRESH?
YEAH, MY YEAST INFECTION IS KILLING ME.
BUT GENTS, WAY FOR... TO ESCAPE 5 HORRIBLE PLACE, AND FORTUNATELY I'M HOLDING IT RIGHT IN MY HAND.
AM!!!
By Greg Hardin
HEY MAN,
IS THAT
FREEDOM
ROCK?
NO, DUDE,
IT'S THE
VERY
80's!
EVER HAVE
THOSE DAYS
WHEN YOU
FEEL NOT SO
FRESH?
YEAH,
MY YEAST
INFECTION
IS KILLING
ME.
THE CITY OF MILWAUKEE
Click
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
5A
Greeting card causes Muslim protest
Continued from Page 1A.
Saeed, who is subsisting on water, fruit juices and vitamins, said he would continue to strike until the company recalled the card and issued a formal apology.
Yesterday, Michael Murray, vice president of operations for Recycled Paper Greetings, said that the company would neither recall the card nor apologize for its contents.
Alfred Hamilton, marketing manager for the company, said the card contained no explicit insults toward Shites.
"Did we make a word play?" he said. "Yes. But it's not a declaration that Shities are human excrement."
Get-well cards normally are reviewed by a board of three to six people before they are printed. Hamilton said. Some of the issues examined in the review process include whether the card reasonably could be capable of causing harm and whether the card glorified inhumane behavior.
Hamilton said the company had received about 150 complaints so far about this card, but that many cards elicited complaints from customers.
"We get calls about six to 10 times a month from people complaining about our cards," he said.
The backs of most cards contain a statement of the company's philosophy, which reads: "Our cards convey the sophisticated humor, old-fashioned friendliness and expression of care so important to our customers."
Invitably, Hamilton said, that philosophy meant that occasionally people were offended by cards.
"We certainly did not intend to offend anyone with this card," he said.
Muslims have a sense of humor, said Ibrahim Hoop, national communications director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Washington, D.C. But this card went too far.
"When humor crosses the line into religious bigotry, it is wrong." he said.
Hooper drew an analogy to a fictitious card showing a picture of Auschwitz, a World War II concentration camp, and reading, "If you can't stand the heat, get out of the fire." Few people would disagree that such a card was offensive. Hooper said.
Hooper said the council would begin calling other religious organizations across the country to draw support for a boycott of the company.
"Right now we're organizing weekly protests," he said. "Last week, around 30 people protested in front of the company's headquarters. We're also beginning to contact non-Muslim leaders."
The card has been on sale since last September in more than 2,800 stores in the United States. Hooper said that the council had become aware of the card only in the past month because Muslims generally did not buy cards from non-Muslim card stores.
Rashid Malik, Lawrence graduate student who is Muslim, said he morally supported Saeed's hunger strike.
Malik said that although the strike might draw attention to the card and increase its sales, the protest was necessary.
804 Mass
Consumers should not support products that degrade others, he said.
"If we allow it to happen to someone,
else, it will eventually happen to us."
SUNFLOWER
La Familia III
After Hours
The Kitchen's closed but the bar is open.
Wed, Thur & Fri.
25¢ DRAWS
50¢ KAMIS
Plus daily drink & import specials
18 & over
10:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.
$3.00 cover with KUID
925 Iowa
749•5039 for info
B
GTAs hope verdict will come soon
Continued from Page 1A.
Murtaugh, who has coordinated much of the GTAs' efforts, said the GTAs' actions would be guided by GTA unions at other universities.
Murtaugh attended the Coalition of Graduate Employees Organizations Conference this summer. GTAs from 35 universities attended the conference, and there, KU formed a coalition of graduate student employees with five other universities. The coalition is affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers.
"The coalition will help us immensely," Murtaugh said. "When we begin unionizing, the American Federation of Teachers will help us carry this out."
Unionization, however, could be far in the future. Murtaugh said the appeals process could delay a final settlement of this case indefinitely.
"Ideally, we could form a union and begin negotiating contracts by next year," he said. "But if this is appealed all the way to the Kansas Supreme Court, this could drag out for literally years."
What happens next:
Kansas Public Employees Relations Board hearing examiner Monty Bertelli will recommend whether KU graduate teaching assistants are public employees. Once the recommendation is made:
Either the GTAs or University of Kansas administrators could appeal to the entire Kansas Public Employees Relations Board.
■ Either side could appeal the board's decision to district court.
n Either side could appeal the district court's decision to appellate court.
Either side could appeal the appellate court's decision to Kansas Supreme Court.
Source: Kansan staff reports
KANSAN
THE YACHT CLUB
Lavenga, KS
Daily Specials
Wednesday lunch Chicken Sandwich $3.85 dinner Chicken Sandwich $3.85 drink Margaritas $1.25 Draws $.50 Big Beers $2.00
Thursday lunch Admiral Salad $3.50 dinner K.C.Strip & Fries $6.50 drink Draws $.75 2 Pitchers $6.50
Friday
lunch Chicken Quesadilla $3.25
dinner Nacho Supreme $4.95
drink Busch, Busch Light, & Keystone Light $1.50
Or 5 in a bucket $6.00
5 House shots $5.00
(Free Taco Bar 5pm-?)
Now Available!
Saturday lunch Turkey Club $3.75 dinner Fajitas Salad $3.50 drink Yacht Shots $1.00 (all well shots. Watermelon,Kamikazee,and Sex-on the beach)
Sunday Cheeseburger/Curly Fries & either a draw or coke $2.50 (refills $.75)
KU Bookstore REBATE
KU student I.D. required.
Over $2,400,000 returned to date.
Receipts (period 95) from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 7% rebate at the Customer Service counter of the KU Bookstores until the end of December,1994.
Now accepting receipts from the Spring'94 semester for rebate payments.
Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
843-5000
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Ks. Union 864-4640
Burge Un. 864-5697
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Dickinson
Cinema 6
Cinema 6
841 8500
2139 ABBEY STREET
The Little Rascals*p* 5:10, 7:20, 9:45
True Lies *a* **4.25**, 7:15, 10:00
The Next Karabaz Kid *a* **4.35**, 7:15, 9:45
Trial By Jury *a* **4:40**, 7:20, 9:45
Natural Born Killers *a* **4.30**, 7:10, 9:50
Forrest Gorman *a* **4.20**, 7:00, 9:55
$3 Premature Show (s) Healing baby
Sensitive Cute Animal Imagery Impact States
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 4 PM, ADULTS $3.00
(UNITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Speed $ ^{R} $ 5:00,7:15,9:30
VARSITY
1015 MASSAC HUSEITS 841 5191
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
A Good Man in Africa 6 5:15, 7:30 9:45
The Lion King 6-13 5:15, 7:00 9:30
The Client 6-13 5:10, 7:15 9:30
Milk Money 6-13 5:00, 7:15 9:30
Clear & Present Danger 6-13 5:00, 7:35
CINEMA TWIN
31101OWA 841 5191
ATL SLATE
$1.25
ALL SEATS $1.25
Maverick P6-13
I Love Trouble P6
94:50, 7:20, 9:50
5:00, 7:30, 9:50
SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
the UNDERCOVER answer to the wonder bra!
JAMES C. BURTON
Lilyette's la' diff'e rence comes in red, candle, frost peach, white and black
Lilyette
UNDERCOVER
The pink building 21 W.9th
The 125 Subject Notebook
OLYMPUS
Pearlponder S924
MICROPHONE PHONE ACCESSORI
Becoming a Great Dictator
Marine Biology 234
Observing Human Anatomy
Pondering Your Future
The Poet in You
If You Rused The World
Lyrics 101
Intense French
The Inner Voice
Quoting Keraous
Cafeteria Catharis
Geology 105
Muttering Obacilities
Psychology 203
Capuring Your Coach
Getting Pyched
Political Science 215
Coffee Talk
The Roommate
The Meaning of Life
Phone Numbers
Hot Phone Numbers
Phone Numbers To Die For
Reminiciating With Yourself
Speech Communications
Outlining a Screenplay
Communicating 101
Talking While Masticating
Professor Bashing
And I Am Records Secretary
Shopping List Reminder
Emancipation 301
Top 10 Answering Machine Greetings Chilling 405
Things You Should Tell Your Parents Confessions to Father
Mock Interviewing
Massacring Shakespeare
Building Your Vocabulary
Using the New Testament and Reality Recalling Mart, Lennon and McCartney
Soap Oper Analysis
More Electives...
OLYMPUS
MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM
Never miss another @pqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmn.
If you can't find the Olympus Micro cassette Recorder you want (the 5924 is pictured here) please call 1-800-221-3000 for more information.
---
6A
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Retail construction growth spurs debate
City Commission considers guides for construction
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Retail construction in the growing city of Lawrence has gotten out of hand, said John Nalbandian, city commissioner.
"We have to remember how unacceptable the current situation is," Nalbandian told the other commissioners at a Lawrence City Commission meeting last night.
The commissioners last night discussed a resolution based on an analysis of Lawrence commercial land-use done by Kirk McClure, associate professor of urban planning. The intent was to set a non-binding guideline for retail space policy in the future. At the end of debate, the commission moved to reconsider the resolutions at an October meeting to be announced.
McClure's study said growth could be controlled if three market conditions were met:
Rental rates must not increase faster than the rate of inflation, thus becoming more costly and turning retailers toward new and
cheaper retail space
A vacancy rate of 5 to 8 percent would permit easy turnover and discourage more construction.
The rate at which vacant retail space is rented to tenants should not be too high, or demand will encourage builders to increase the supply by building more space.
The study also said if those three conditions existed now, Lawrence's current retail space had the capability to meet demand until the year 2000.
Dave Corliss, assistant to the city manager, drafted a resolution that would use the study as a nonbinding guideline for all action the city would take concerning retail space in the future.
The commission moved to send the resolution and the study to a steering committee that would consider it and bring back its thoughts to a commission meeting in October.
Dale Willey, president of Dale Willey Pontiac-Cadillac-GMC Truck, 2840 IowaSt., spoke during the public discussion portion of the meeting. He said the city should be careful regulating retail space, even if the proposal before them was only a guideline.
"If I work hard to do things and try to grow, I don't want someone to tell me I can't," Wiley said.
After spending the day listening to professors, students in the residence halls, scholarship halls and fraternity houses got the opportunity last night to talk to them one-to-one.
Students chitchat with professors
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
The three living organizations participated in "Meet-A-Professor," a program that allows students to meet faculty members outside of the classroom.
Kami Thomas, assistant director of student housing, said about 80 professors participated in the program this year, about 20 more than last year.
"We had an excellent turnout this year for faculty." Thomas said.
Thomas said some professors were planning to continue meeting with the group that they spoke to last night by eating dinner with them once a month and stopping by to talk to the students.
Karen Symms Gallagher, the new dean of education, said she participated in the program because she wanted to meet and talk with students.
"It helps me as a dean to see what works and what doesn't work for students." "Gallagher said."
No freshmen attended the meeting with Gallagher in Gertrude Seilards Pearson-Corbin Hall, but she said the program still was a good idea.
"I not sure it's just freshmen who need information," Gallagher said.
"In a big institution like this, I think it's important that students see we're human," Gallagher said. "We have families, too."
Gallagher also said the program allowed students to see how professors live.
Six students came to see Gallagher. Kathryn Kretschmer, director of New Student Orientation, said the program's informal setting was designed to help new students adjust to college and learn to talk to professors.
"We feel that one of the most important things students can do their first year is meet faculty," she said.
Kretschmer said students could ask any questions at the meetings, not just questions about the professor's area of study. Students were also encouraged to visit with any of the professors in the program.
Kretschner said the program used to be part of the Hawk Week activities, but the orientation office decided to set the date later in the school year so that students had college classroom experience before speaking to professors.
Although fraternities participated in the program, sororities did not, said Bill Nelson coordinator of greek activities and assistant director of the Organization and Activities Center.
He said most women already lived in a residence hall and spoke with a professor there. They were not allowed to live in their sorority houses their freshman year, he said.
Seek a Hear
Farewrites
Meet a Seed
Yah, [name] do you
think [name] is a tree?
Is it growing by yourself?
Will it be enough for you to eat?
Will it be the last tree on earth?
WHERE TO GO:
100 LAKES, WESTMINSTER, 115
211
Karen Symms Gallagher, dean of education, spoke to a group of women last night at Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall as part of "Meet A Professor" night. The program is a way for students to meet professors outside the classroom.
Treasurer accuses opponent of 'vile' tactics
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Democratic State Treasurer Sally Thompson yesterday accused her Republican opponent in the November general election of resorting to "vicious and vile" tactics in an effort to discredit her and detract from her "excellent record."
employee she fired.
Thompson said she was "shocked and dismayed" by a television commercial aired by the campaign of her opponent, Randy Duncan of Salina, in the Topeka market Monday night.
The ad implies Thompson is hiding information from the public about the value of the Municipal Investment Pool, which Thompson manages, and a lawsuit filed against her by an office
Thompson called it an example of the "pitifully negative campaign" Duncan intends to conduct and called Duncan, an advertising novelty salesman, "a man lacking in conscience (who) realizes he can't beat me on the issues."
Duncan could not be reached for comment yesterday morning.
However, Kim Wells, the state Republican chairman, said that based on a description of the TV ad, "I've seen a lot worse."
"I think the performance of the investment fund is a legitimate issue, and I know (Duncan) intends to make an issue of it," added Wells, who said he had not seen the commercial.
Thompson said that there was only one true statement in the entire spot: that she was being sued in Shawnee County District Court by a former employee.
"I fired an unclassified employee, an employee who served at the pleasure of the state treasurer, and now he's suing me," she said. "It is the kind of thing Kansas business people face every day."
Thompson took her defense of the Municipal Investment Pool on the road today.
At a regional meeting of the Kansas Bankers Association in Dodge City, she said the fund is "sound, successful and making money for its members."
The Associated Press
Steineger's attorneys dispute plea bargain
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Defense attorneys for Mayor Joseph E. Steineger Jr. yesterday attacked the plea bargain reached by the key witness against him in his corruption trial—a former strip club owner facing obscenity and prostitution charges.
The defense began its case after U.S. District Judge G.T. Van Bebber denied a motion to dismiss the charges against Steineger, The U.S. attorney's office rested its case Monday.
The defense yesterday questioned the attorney for Patrick John "P.J." McGraw, an FBI financial analyst, an agent for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, an assistant
Wyandotte County attorney and a certified public accountant.
Mark Sachse, who is representing the mayor's top aide, Peter Adams, said his client would testify this week and that he expected Steineger to do the same. Steineger's attorneys, James Eisenbrandt and Thomas Bath, have not said if the mayor will take the stand.
The FBI agent heading the probe of alleged corruption in Kansas City, Kan., government testified Monday that McGraw, the chief prosecution witness, failed to tell authorities at first about bribes he allegedly paid for favors.
Special Agent Jeff Lanza was the final prosecution witness in
the joint federal trial of Steineger, 60, and Adams, 45. Each is charged with bribery, conspiracy and obstruction of justice. Adams also is charged with aiding and abetting in the alleged scheme.
Under cross-examination by Bath, Lanza said McGraw failed to disclose any criminal activity in the agency's first official interview with him about alleged political corruption.
That interview, which also had involved McGraw's personal attorney, came after the FBI and federal and state prosecutors agreed to urge probation on pending, unrelated criminal cases against McGraw in return for his cooperation in the public corruption probe.
Baggage plagues candidates
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — In the governor's race, Democrat Jim Slattery wants people to remember he once had a life outside Congress, and Republican Bill Graves wants to convince voters the secretary of state's office is more important than they think.
Conventional wisdom is that Slattery's record as 2nd District congressman for 12 years contains some heavy baggage that may haunt him. Slattery is playing up his pre-Congress experiences, as the operator of a real estate business and as an Atchison County farm boy.
"He's got a voting record he's got to defend," said Pete McGill, a former state House speaker who remains active in GOP politics and runs the state's largest contract lobbying firm. "Graves has less political baggage and less political liabilities."
Graves' problem is the opposite of Slattery's according to insiders, because as secretary of state, he has been in the policy backwaters. But his pitch is that experience in the executive branch counts.
"Nobody cares who the secretary of state is," said state Rep. Ed McKechnie, D-Pittsburg. "The secretary of state is nothing more than a glorified clerk."
Slattery still was in law school at Washburn University in Topeka when he began his political career. He won a seat in the state House of
Representatives in 1972, serving there through 1978.
In 1982, he won the 2nd District seat. He has been re-elected five times.
Graves began working in the secretary of state's office in 1980, five years after leaving college. He was elected secretary of state in 1986 and re-elected in 1990.
Both candidates have records that are somewhat mixed.
Slattery's congressional voting record caused his critics to chortle with anticipation when he decided to run for governor. Even some Democrats find it maddening.
On some major issues — gun control, for example — voters can find Slattery voting on both sides.
He has voted for and against waiting periods on handgun purchases, and for and against bills banning specific numbers of assault weapons.
He said his different votes reflect the large differences in the contents of the legislation before him. But he also acknowledges that such subtleties may be lost on voters.
In 1993, Slattery voted against the North American Free Trade Agreement and for a broad-based energy tax, known as the Btu tax, both of which could hurt him with groups such as the Kansas Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
"The KCCI is not very high on Slattery because of his votes on NAFTA and the Btu tax," McGill said. "The business community in general is going to be quite concerned."
Slattery said of his opponents: "I think they want to talk about the past, and I want to talk about the future."
A January 1993 audit criticized Graves for not compiling a central voter registration list, even though he had been ordered to do so by the Legislature.
Graves called the audit a "politically motivated report," but even some Republicans acknowledged it was damaging.
Even if Graves' record were perfect, many insiders still would consider him a political lightweight.
Consider: The secretary of state's office budget fluctuated wildly from year to year during Graves' tenure, because of two special projects, the 1988 state census and 1992 presidential preference primary. Even projects that would be small for some agencies dominate the secretary of state's office budget.
In fact, the 1994 budget for the office was about four-hundredths of 1 percent of the state budget.
"The secretary of state's office hasn't had to make a tough decision in decades," Slattery said.
Graves said, "I can easily argue that this is one of the most difficult agencies in state government, and we're making it look easy."
KMS JOICO
NEX US BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HANDICHER
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FILL MIDDLE REDKEN
VHARNET
FRANCE
The
Etc.
Shop
928 Mass.
Downtown
Park in the rear
VUHARNET
FRANCE
SUNFLOWER
OAKLEY 804 Mass
Thermoconductor Protection 843-5000
IT'S ALL HAPPENING AT THE LIED CENTER!
IT'S ALL HAPPEN
K
PATIOLAS
FOR TOTAL
ARTS
STUDENT
SENATE
MYAA
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Lied Series
presents
Behind the Scenes
for KU and Haskell Students
at the
Lied Center
Wednesday, September 14
GET FIRST DIBS ON INDIVIDUAL TICKETS TO YOUR FAVORITE LIED SERIES EVENTS!
Check out the Lied Center...from the dressing rooms to the orchestra pit! (PLUS.)Where else can you get free popcorn and Coca Cola from 4:30 to 6:00!
BECOME A CAMPUS (CELEBRITY...GET INTERVIEWED ON KJHK!
Register to win season tickets to the 1994-95 New Directions Series!
CATCH THE NIGHLIGHTS OF THE UPCOMING SEASON!
VENTS!
you get
THE LIVEN CENTER OF SOMETHING
THE LION CAMPAIGN
THE LION GARDEN OF GODS
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
7A
Clinton to make speech on Haiti
Military buildup near Haiti
Carriers prepare to leave for battle
In the event of an American-led invasion, 17 countries have pledged a minimum of 1,500 troops for peacekeeping operations in Haiti. A look at forces near Haiti:
The Associated Press
Naval ships
To depart
America: Aircraft carrier for troops, special operations forces, in Norfolk, Va.
U.S.
Cuba
Halti
Puerto Rico
SOURCE: U.S. Atlantic Command; research by BRENNA SINK
En route
Eisenhower, aircraft carrier for troops, special operations forces
Mount Whitney, amphibious assault ship
Near Halti
■ To enforce embargo:
Coastal patrol boats: Hurricane, Monsoon
Guided missile frigates: Aubrey Fitch, Clifton Sprague, Oliver Hazard Perry
Destroyer: Comte de Grasse
■ To evacuate civilians:
Transport dock ships Nashville, Wasp
Replenishment officer: Savannah
■ International ships near Halti: 1 Canadian 2 Argentine
Multinational troops: 1,500
Antigua Belize Jamaica
Argentina Bolivia Netherlands
Bahamas Britain Dominica Panama
Bangladesh Guyana St. Vincent Trinidad
Barbados Israel
Knight-Ridder Tribune/KUN TIA
WASHINGTON — An aircraft carrier that could serve as a launching platform for invading Haiti headed to sea yesterday, and President Clinton scheduled an address for tomorrow to make his case that U.S. interests there are vital.
Both Democrats and Republicans in Congress complied they were being ignored by a White House bent on war.
Clinton is considering announcing a firm deadline for Haiti's military leaders to leave — or sending an emissary to Port-au-Prince with one last demand that they surrender power, a senior administration official said.
The USS America sailed from Norfolk, Va., as another huge carrier, the USS Eisenhower, was taking on Army helicopters and soldiers there in order to depart today to the Caribbean.
Defense Secretary William Perry was heading to Norfolk to talk with military leaders aboard the Eisenhower and the USS Whitney, which would serve as the command ship for military operations in Haiti.
3/94
At the White House. chief of staff Leon Panetta threatened that if Haiti's military leaders don't give up power, "action is going to be taken against them very soon."
In Haiti, the army-installed government protested what it called the "scandalous and unacceptable behavior" of the United States but gave no indication of stepping aside.
Lawmakers on Capitol Hill were taking the threats at face value.
Lawmakers in both chambers
said there should be votes in Congress before the administration commits any U.S. soldiers to Haiti. But White House representative Dee Dee Myers said there was no need and that any action to restore Haiti's elected leaders would be "minor compared to what was needed" in the Persian Gulf War.
Democratic leaders in both houses, Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell and House Speaker Thomas Foley, both said they preferred the president come to Congress before any invasion. But Mitchell said, "No president in my lifetime has agreed" that congressional approval is necessary for military action.
Dole said that he was pressing for a chance to bring the Haiti issue to the
Senate floor for debate. In the House, Rep. Gene Taylor, D-Miss., hoped to force the body to take up a resolution barring intervention in Haiti without congressional approval.
Despite pleas from Secretary of State Warren Christopher for unity, few Democrats outside the Congressional Black Caucus, which is also divided on the issue, stood publicly behind Clinton.
At a private weekly caucus of Democratic senators, several complained that the president had turned the issue into a political liability, according to one participant.
Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Donn,
said Democrats had "very, very profound concerns about the wisdom of invading Haiti."
Crash cause still in doubt Officials to run tests on recovered debris
The Associated Press
CORAOPOLIS, Pa. — Evidence recovered from the wreck of USAir Flight 427 cast doubt yesterday on the theory that the jet crashed because its right engine was thrown into reverse.
Federal investigators determined that the devices that engage an engine's thrust reversers were not deployed on the right side of the Boeing 737-300, suggesting the engine was operating normally.
Despite the evidence, Tom Hauver of the National Transportation Safety Board said investigators hadn't ruled out any possible cause for Thursday's crash, which killed all 132 people aboard.
"It's too early in this investigation to start discounting things," Haueter said last night at a news conference.
The devices, called locking actuators, determine the position of other actuators that control the thrust reversers, a breaking mechanism. The other actuators, which were found in the deployed position, now are believed to have shifted on impact.
Officials believe something may have caused the plane's right wing to rise, forcing the plane to roll to the left and go out of control.
Three possible scenarios will be tried out via computer: that the right engine went into reverse, it came loose, or spoilers — wing flaps that act as air brakes — were unevenly deployed.
Haueter said the right engine's rear mount also was recovered and appeared to have been dislodged by the crash itself, not by any occurrence before the crash. The missing mount was a component of the theory that the right engine came loose and threw off the plane's balance.
Metalurgists will be asked to examine the wreckage.
$263.8 billion defense budget passes Senate and House
The Associated Press
With an 80-18 vote, coming after final House approval Aug. 17, the bill goes to the president for his signature.
WASHINGTON — The Senate sent President Clinton a $263.8 billion defense budget for 1995 yesterday that closely reflects White House priorities while adding funds for bombers and cutting money for peacekeeping.
The measure slightly increases Clinton's defense budget request for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 and represents an increase of $2.8 billion above this year's defense budget. Adjusted for inflation, however, that translates into a defense spending cut of just under 1 percent, the 10th consecutive real decline in the defense budget.
In all, 18 percent of the total federal budget would go into defense under this legislation.
Republicans and moderate Democrats, including one of the chief architects of the bill, warned that the defense spending trend established by the Clinton administration may not pay for the president's own military plans.
"The current budget levels will not be adequate to maintain the current readiness of our forces," said Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, "to provide for their needed modernization, to support the compensation and quality of life improvements that we all want for our military members and their families, and still support the force structure necessary to carry out the full range of missions."
Sen. Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., the ranking Republican on the committee, was more blunt.
"Our military is already in serious trouble." Thurmard said. "The president has asked our troops to do more and more with less and less."
$2 off for
50 p.c. box
with this ad
SAVE BIG on DISKS & PC'S
`-3.5'` HD IBM Formatted 48d
`-3.2'` DII IBM Formatted 38d
`-3.0'` DII IBM Formatted 38d
`-5.25'` HD or DI IBM Formatted 406
`-5.25'` DD or DI IBM Formatted 34d
电视机
HD IBM Formatted
486SX-25
486SX-33
8X88-3X $750.00 -
MCCB 48X24 -68 Complete system w/ $240.00 -
MCCB 48X24 -68 Complete system w/ BW RAM, BM-
Interleaved, Non-interleaved, 312* 1&48 and $144* 3&48 Mb
Drive, Fan Modem, Doe, Windows, Keyboard
$299.00
2201 W. 25th Street, Lawrence, Tenn. (913) B32-7244
Phone: (817) 650-6100
Business Hours: M-F 8:00-6:00, T-W 1:00-5:00
ADULT DANCE CLASS Classes Beginning Now COME BY AND ENROLL TODAY!
- Western Dance
DISKETTES CENTER
THE LAWRENCE 200 West9TH
- Five Levels of Ballet
- Modern Dance
Winter Program
- Tap
• Jazz
• Ballroom
Arts
CENTER 843-ARTS
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS is barrier after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts Downtown
Women's Self-Defense
and
Empowerment
Attend this presentation on self-defense and empowerment strategies to protect yourself in a threatening situation. The program will include a self-defense demonstration.
Tuesday, September 20, 1994
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
7:00 p.m.-9:0 p.m.
- Sculptured Nails Silk Nails Gel Nails
Presented by
Cindy Chamberlain, Director
Women's Program, En Gande
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
For more information, contact Renee Speicher at 864-352 851
火
BIG BEAT EXOSION
when your desire to perform will take your
desire to do this.
at the
SCROSSDOWN
Sept.
become a part of life where a ndur
Either you're in the HOUSE or
18 and 19 proper ID
A Goodpaw Entertainment Production
Your Complete Nail Care Salon 913-832-9397
Kim NAILS
GRAND OPENING
2
1410 Kasold Dr. #A5 Lawrence, Ks. 66049
- Manicure
- Manicure
- Nail Design
- Touch-Up
- Pedicure
Mon.-Fri.:9:30 am-7pm
Saturday:9:30 am-6 pm
$28.00
Full Set
Of
Nails
(Acrylic or Gel)
Regular $35.00
Valid W/Present Coupon
Not Combined
W/Other Coupon
Walk-ins or Appointments
Welcome!
Manicure...$10.00
Pedicure...$20.00
Manicur/Pedi Combination
$25.00 Regular $30.00
Valid W/Present Coupon.
Not Combled W/Other Coupon
$18.00
TOUCH-UP
Regular $20.00
Valid W/Present
Coupon.Not
Combined W/Other
Coupon.
They're here!
The Powerbook 5204/160
$2000^00
POWER
through it.
MacTech. The Power to be your Best at NX.
union technology center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
A B C D
---
8A
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Crime bill Americans urged to do their part
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — In a ceremony rife with political symbolism, President Clinton and a chief sponsor of the newly signed $30 billion crime law cautioned that the measure alone won't end America's wave of violence.
"Our country will not truly be safe again until all Americans take personal responsibility for themselves, their families and their communities," Clinton said yesterday as he signed the measure at an elaborate outdoor ceremony at the White House.
And Rep. Charles Schumer, D.N.Y., cautioned, "If people expect crime to end tomorrow, they'll be sadly mistaken."
"If they expect crime to end even five years after this bill is signed,
they're mistaken," said Schumer, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee's crime panel. "But will it make a real dent? Should the crime rate go down? Should people actually feel safer and be safer on their streets?" Without a question."
But, he said, all Americans would have to help as well.
Clinton hailed the provisions of the huge law that bans many assault-style firearms, allows the death penalty for dozens more federal crimes and provides billions of dollars throughout six years to build prisons and hire police.
"Even this great law ... cannot do the job alone," he said. "By its own words, it is still a law. It must be implemented by you. And it must be supplemented by you."
"Even when we put a new police officer on your block, the officer can't make you safe unless you come out of your home and help the officer do his or her job," said Clinton.
Republicans fight crime bill
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Republicans sought to put a damper on President Clinton's signing of the crime bill yesterday by introducing legislation to slash $5 billion in social programs and enact tougher criminal penalties.
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole said the $30 billion measure signed by Clinton was an "awful crime bill" that many Americans understood to contain billions in wasteful pork-barrel spending.
The bill, introduced by Dole, is identical to the 10 amendments on
which Republicans senators tried to get votes when the crime bill was debated last month.
The GOP spending cuts would eliminate federal support for several crime prevention programs, including anti-gang efforts, midnight basketball, grants to cities and towns for drug treatment, jobs programs and education.
It would also focus corrections spending on "brick and mortar" prisons instead of alternative programs, beef up truth-in-sentencing provisions and toughen sentences for crimes with guns, selling drugs to minors and other offenses.
ALEXANDRIA, Va. — The government charged the ex-president of United Way of America and two fellow executives with conspiracy, mail and tax fraud yesterday, accusing them of lavishly spending the charity's money on vacations, real estate and air travel.
United Way leaders indicted of fraud
The Associated Press
The 71-count federal indictment named William Aramony, 67, president of United Way from 1970 until 1992; Stephen J. Paulachak, 49, a United Way executive between 1971 and 1988 and also president of an indicted spinoff company; and Thomas J. Merlo, 63, chief financial officer of the charity from 1990 until 1992.
The diversion of funds, previously reported in news stories, caused a
shakeup at the national charity organization known to virtually all Americans and depressed contributions to local United Way organizations.
United Way of America is the national service and training center for local United Way organizations and is financed by dues from the local groups.
The local organizations collect contributions and distribute them to charities. They had nothing to do with the alleged wrongdoing.
The indictment said more than $1.5 million was diverted, with some of the money spent for purchase of a New York City apartment, a Coral Gables, Fla., condominium, a vacation to London and Egypt — complete with a Nile cruise — and a lifetime pass on American Airlines.
Some of the money went to Aramo-
ny's girlfriend, who was not named in the indictment, which was handed down by a federal grand jury and announced by the U.S. attorney's office here.
Money went to pay for construction of a sunroom at the woman's Gainesville, Fla., home; for her personal income tax payments; her own vacations and trips she took with Aramony and for "consulting payments" even though she did no work for the United Way.
"Today's news represents a critical step forward because it reinforces all the positive changes that have been made to restructure United Way of America...," said Dr. Tommy Frist Jr., chairman of the Alexandria-based United Way of America.
After the diversion of money became known, the national group
brought in former Peace Corps chief Elaine L. Chao as president, instituted new financial controls, adopted a new code of ethics and gave local United Ways more control over the national organization.
Aramony, Paulachak and Merlo were accused of filing false personal and corporate tax returns and Merlo was charged with perjury.
The indictment charged Aramany, Paulachak, Merlo and a spinoff company with conspiracy to defraud United Way, mail fraud, wire fraud, interstate transportation of fraudulently acquired property and money laundering.
Aramony is charged in 53 felony counts, Merlo in 35, Paulachak in 35 and the spinoff company — the Partnership Umbrella Inc. — in 24.
Toyota boosts production in US The Associated Press
TOKYO — Toyota Motor Corp. is boosting car production in North America by 48 percent, meaning that within three years, nearly two-thirds of the Toyotas sold in North America will be built there.
Congress may have to follow laws
Toyota, Japan's largest automaker, said yesterday that it was making the move partially because of pressure on profits caused by the decline of the U.S. dollar against the ven.
The yen has soared more than 20 percent over the last two years against the dollar, meaning that revenue earned in dollars is worth less when sent back to Japan.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — With dwindling time in the 103rd Congress, a bipartisan group of lawmakers launched a final push yesterday for legislation that would force Congress to abide by the same laws that govern private emplovers.
Traditionally, Congress has exempted itself from health and safety, civil rights and labor laws that other employers must follow.
But a group of lawmakers, spurred by public complaints about government, has proposed extending such protections to an estimated 40,000 employees of Congress.
"It can help restore the public's faith in government," said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, a chief sponsor of the bill, at a news conference.
Those covered would include congressional staff and employees of branches of Congress such as the General Accounting Office, Congressional Budget Office and the Library of Congress.
Because some legislative workers are already covered, the number of new workers reached by the bill could be as low as 25,000.
At issue is whether the bill will be considered by the Senate before Congress adjourns in a few weeks. A Senate committee is scheduled to take it up next week, and a similar bill overwhelmingly passed the House last month.
Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., another prime sponsor, said he would meet with Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, in the next few days to convince him to bring the bill up for a vote.
If Mitchell does not agree, Lieberman and Grassley said they would try to attach the bill to virtually any other bill that reaches the floor.
Proponents believe the issue is one of simple fairness and that Congress will write better laws if it has to abide by them.
Opponents worry the bill would be costly and would give the executive and judicial branches of government, as enforcers of law, unconstitutional powers over the legislative branch.
The bill would bring Congress under 10 major federal employment laws, including the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and its 1991 amendments, the Occupational Safety and Health Act and the Americans With Disabilities Act.
An independent Office of Compliance would be set up to enforce the laws, and aggrieved employees could sue Congress in federal court, under the bill.
VILAARNET
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass.
Downtown
Park in the rear
V
VOARNET
GOLF Unlimited
WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
601 Kasold Drive, Suite B-103
Lawrence, Ks 65049
Sunday 12-5
Monday-Saturday 10-7
10% off any purchase with KUID (excludes golfballs)
SAVINGS UP TO 75% OFF
Wednesday & Thursday
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
September 14th & 15th
East of the Kansas Union
Huge selection of KU Clothing!!
Sale may be postponed or cancelled in the event of rain.
Sidewalk Sale!
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Kansas Union 864-644
Bruce Union 864-5607
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students
ALL NATIONAL BRAND POP 1¢
PER CAN OVER CHECKER'S
INVOICE COST EVERYDAY!
DAILY SPECIALS
BANANAS 19¢
MILWAUKEE'S BEST REGULAR OR LIGHT
BEER
649
24 PACK
12 OZ.
CANS
LIMIT 1
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
MILWAUKEE'S BEST BEER
100.00 CAN
BONELESS ROUND STEAK
148
LB.
ECONOMY
FRESH CRISP GREEN CABBAGE
15¢
LB.
BOKCHOY OR NAPPA CABBAGE
49¢ LA
BONELESS BEEF BRISKET
99¢
LB.
WHOLE CRYOVAC
RED RIPE TOMATOES
48¢
LB.
BONELESS K.C. STRIP STEAK
ECONOMY PACK
U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET POTATOES
99¢
10 LB. BAG
FRESH PORK SPARE RIBS
128
LB.
WHOLE SLAB
MISSOUR RED OR GOLD DELICIOUS OR JONATHAN APPLES
118
7 LB. BAG.
OISE WHOLE SLICER-SHAVER HAM
775
5 LB.
SEPTIZ HOT DOGS
11 B. PKG. 88¢ LA
RED, BLACK OR THOMPSON SEEDLESS GRAPES
78¢
LB.
FRESH PINEAPPLE
SPLIT FRYER BREASTS
108
LB.
ECONOMY PACK
FRESH BAKED SUGAR FREE PIES
2¢¢ 5
8", 26 OZ.
FARMLAND BACON
125
1 LB. PRO.
SWIFT BROWN N SERVE SAUSAGES
7.8 OZ. PKG. 98¢
SLICED OR SHAVED ROAST BEER CORNED PASTRIM
998
1 LB. PRO.
IMPROVED FROM ENGLAND STILTON BLUE CHEESE
$6 98 LA
MOOSE BROT MEAT TRIP PIZZA
2¢¢ 988
LARGE
12" SIZE
IQF COD FILLETS
249
LB. ECONOMY PACK
BLUE BUNNY FROZEN YOGURT PREMIUM OF VEGETABLES
135
1 LB. PRO.
ORE-IDA FRENCH FRIES OR TATOR TOYS
225
1 BAG
FRESH BAKED ENGLISH MUFFIN BREAD
88¢
1 LB. LOAF
ALL NATIONAL BRAND DOG & CAT FOOD
181.00
14 LB. OVER INVOICE COST!
OPEN ON HOURS EXCEPT OFFICE
Checkers
LOW FOOD PRICES
23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
GRADE "AA"
EGGS 1/2" PER EGG OVER CHECKER'S INVOICE COST!
DRAFTERS IS BEEF DAFFER OVER CHECKER'S INVOICE COST!
FRESH KANSAS RAISED BUFFALO DAILY
PRESSED EXPERTS
NO. 138
MAY 1974
10 NO. 138
MAY 1974
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
9A
Population plan adopted
Vatican gives in approves blueprint for the first time
The Associated Press
CAIRO, Egypt — With the Vatican offering some support for the first time, some 180 nations adopted a 20-year blueprint yesterday for slowing the world's population explosion. Now, it's up to individual nations to come up with the money to put it into action.
Unlike past U.N. population conferences, the 1994 forum focused not only on birth control but on two concepts the Vatican supports for slowing population growth — economic development and a commitment to
giving women more power over their lives.
Research has shown that educated women have fewer children.
The Vatican's partial support for the U.N. plan surprised many delegates. The Holy See rejected the final documents at the 1974 and 1984 U.N. population conferences.
Dr. Nafs Sadik, the conference secretary-general, said the Program of Action "when implemented over the coming few decades...will bring hundreds of millions of women into the mainstream of economic and political life in their countries."
Chief U.S. delegate Timothy Wirth said "a spirit of Cairo" emerged during the nine-day conference that recognized for the first time the need for a comprehensive approach to controlling rapid population growth.
"I think it was a remarkable agreement and an extraordinary consensus," he said.
Nevertheless, funding remains a major challenge. Delegates set a target of $17 billion a year by the year 2000—one-third to come from developed countries and two-thirds from developing nations.
Current spending is less than $6 billion a year, and development experts and delegates said it would be difficult to reach that target. African countries have already said it's impossible to pay two-thirds of the cost.
The Program of Action will be submitted next month to the U.N. General Assembly for approval. It is not legally binding on any nation, but it does carry "moral weight" and gives new ammunition to politicians and private groups lobbying for implementation.
Remains from Korean War costly
PANMUNJOM, Korea — On a September day about a year ago, a U.S. Army officer pushed a briefcase crammed with $897,000 across a green negotiating table in this truce village that straddles the border of North and South Korea.
The Associated Press
A North Korean People's Army officer opened it and seemed astonished at the wads of large bills. He then suspiciously examined the money, wondering if it might be counterfeit,
according to a U.S. official.
This was how the U.S. Army and U.N. Command in South Korea settled accounts with North Korea for delivering the remains of 46 Americans and other U.N. servicemen lost since the 1950-53 Korean War.
The U.S. Army made clear to the North Korean Army that they did not regard the first payment — an average of $19,500 per set of remains — as the set price for future exchanges, said an official.
The U.S. Army and U.N. Command want to limit compensation to two or three thousand dollars per set of remains, especially since only one set of remains has been positively identified, and some of the remains included animal bones.
A U.S. Defense Department official told The Associated Press yesterday that the North Koreans provided them with an itemized bill for expenses, and the U.S. wanted to make a gesture of trust by paying the bill.
THE KU HILLEL FOUNDATION PRESENTS: SHABBATDINNER
Friday, September 16, 6:00 Hillel House (940 Mississippi)
RESERVATIONS MUST BE IN BY THURSDAY AT NOON!
Those without reservations may be turned away.
Free for Hillel members
$3 for non-members
864-3948 for more information
VAN DAMME
THEY KILLED
HIS WIFE
TEN YEARS AGO.
THERE'S STILL
TIME TO
SAVE HER.
VAN DAMME
THEY KILLED
HIS WIFE
TEN YEARS AGO.
THERE'S STILL
TIME TO
SAVE HER.
TIMECOP
MURDER IS FOREVER...UNTIL NOW.
LARCO ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS IN ASSOCIATION WITH JVC ENTERTAINMENT + SIGNATURE REMAISSANCE DARK HORSE PRODUCTION + PETER HYAMS + JEAN CLAUDE VAN DAMME TIMECOP
JON SILVER MIA SARA PRODUCTION IDOD MOYER MARILYN VANCE MARK ISHAM STEVN KEMPER PHILIP HARRISON PETER HYAMS MIKE RICHARDSON
MIKE RICHARDSON MARK VERHEIDEN MIKE RICHARDSON MARK VERHEIDEN MARK VERHEIDEN
R LARCO MISHE DIAMAN SAM RAIMO RUBERT TAVERT PETER HYAMS A UNIVERSAL RELEASE
TIMECOP MURDER IS FOREVER...UNTIL NOW.
OPENS FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 16TH AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU.
"Unmarried since 1998
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
7 Instrumental music 3 008
Kansan
Classifieds
Call 864-4358
Mon-Fri 8am-5pm
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Bord Plaque No. 11 1990
NCCS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A
Great Savings.
$200
$200
OFF AN AT&T
COMPUTER!
Get $200 back by email when you purchase any one of 12 select AT&T Computers by 12/31/94.
New Product:
AT&T Communicator
Multi-Media System
486SX, 33MHz
4Mb, 210Mb
* Sound Card
Mouse
Fax/Modem
* CD-ROM
* DOS, Windows
* Multimedia Software
* Stereo Speakers
* Monitor not included
cator
system
A&T
only
$1,097
wirebate
ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER
813 Mass • Downtown Lawrence • 84
ROCK CLUB Kitchen is open! ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE ROCK CLUB BOOTHROOM
ROCK CLUB Kitchen is open!
WED., SEPT 14 THE PRAYERS LEXINGTON, KY W/SOLEFISH
THUR., SEPT 15 GRUMPY SHALLOW
ADV TIX THE ORIGINAL LINE-UP!
DIXIE DREGS
FRI., SEPT. 16
SAT., SEPT 17
Adam's Farm w/Mother and Shag
MON., SEPT 19
RVMC Showcase
Danger Bob, Pamper the Madman
Bufferbun, Johnny Cluvaless
SUN, SEPT, 18
RON ROBERTS QUARTET
5-8PM • DINNERSHOW
IDA McBETH
AT 9PM
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence KS
For info 913.841.9111
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Mass + 843-5000
MERCANTILE Account Information It's for you...
Everything you ever wanted to know about your checking account is just a phone call away... 24 hours a day!
电话
check up on your checking or savings account balance
电话
The new Account Information Line at Mercantile Bank of Lawrence is like having a teller inside your telephone. Simply dial us up, day or night, input your access code, and you can:
review recent deposits, direct deposits, and checks cleared
电话
电话
look up your loan balance
count the money in your C.D.
Put the Mercantile line to work for you.
Call (913) 865-0210
MERCANTILE BANK
Member FDIC
Mercantile Bank of Lawrence N. A.
Ninth & Massachusetts
Motor Bank, North & Tennessee
South Bank, 1877 West 23rd
Northwest Bank, 3000 West 6th
Mass Street Bank, 647 Massachusetts
South Plaza Bank,
27th & 8th
Mail Address:
P.O. Box 428
Lawrence, Ks 60044 0428
(913) 865-0200
Equal Opportunity
Lender
---
Tired of Pizza and Tacos? Try the...
Sunday Night Student Special
BONANZA.
Steak·Chicken·Seafood·Salad
$4.99 for any sandwich (includes Freshtastics bar & drink) 10% Student Discount every day on any regularly priced menu item
2329 Iowa · 842-1200
DISCOVER
VISA
Eat, Drink & Be Merry!
SPECIALS:
Monday : ZIMA & Domestics • $1.25
Tuesday : Miller Lite & Genuine Draft • $1
Wednesday : Modelos • $1.75
Thursday: Coronas & Pacificos • $2
Friday: MARGARITAS • $2
Saturday : IMPORTS • $2
Come In & See Us!
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Malls Shopping Center
23rd & Louisiana
843-4044
10A
THEN PAINSTAKINGLY REASSEMBLED THE ENTIRE DORM ROOM RIGHT DOWN TO THE UNDERWEAR STREWN ON THE FLOOR
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ONE NIGHT AN M.I.T. FRESHMAN FELL ASLEEP IN A STUDY LOUNGE
Dorm room on the Charles.
M.I.T.
A strange thing happened on campus last night.
Students were using their Sprint COLLEGIATE FONCARDS $ ^{\text{SM}}$ to make long distance calls for just 9¢ a minute. That's weird. That's the late night MOONLIGHT MADNESS $ ^{\circledR} $ rate that only Sprint offers. Gab
MIDLIGHT
WESTERN
Sprint.
COLLEGIATE
FÕNCARD™
816 854 1139 1234
Dial 1-800-877-8000. At Tone, Dial 0 + Area Code + Number
At Tone, Enter FÕNCARD Number.
THIS COLLEGIATE FONCARD IS SO EASY, IT'S WEIRD.
11pm-6am. Even more weird, the Sprint Booth on campus is giving away groovy T-shirts just for signing up.The COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint. Totally weird. Check it out at the Sprint
only Sprint offers. Gab all night long from Booth on campus.
Sprint.
9¢ A
9¢ A MINUTE RATE, 30 FREE MINUTES AND A FREE T-SHIRT? WEIRDNESS AT THE SPRINT BOOTH.
SIGN UP! AT OUR BOOTH! MONDAY & TUESDAY, SEPT. 12 & 13 AT THE MAIN LOBBY, KANSAS UNION. 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
9¢ a minute rate applies to domestic calls made between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m.In addition to the 9¢ a minute rate, surcharges will apply to COLLEGIATE FONCARD calls. ©1994 Sprint Communications Company LP.
HIS ROOM AND PACKED THEM A HALF MILE TO THE CHARLES RIVER. THEY
THINKING QUICKLY, HIS FELLOW DORM RESIDENTS WENT TO WORK. THEY METICULOUSLYREMOVEDTHE ENTIRE CONTENTS O
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1994
Eichloff took shot at pro's; awaiting calls
SECTION E
By Cheesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
Dan Eichloff is back at Kansas — for now. But like many other professional free agents, he is playing the waiting game.
Dan Elchloff
Last April, when the NFL draft was nearing completion, Eichloff, who had high hopes of kicking field goals or punting professionally, said he spent two days waiting for the phone to ring — but it never did.
1984-07-25
"I was thinking I was going to be drafted," said Eichloff, who is living in Lawrence with a few friends. "But I had to prepare myself not to be."
Kansas football assistant coach Vic Adamle said that despite the kicker's record-setting college career, he was not surprised Elchloff was not drafted.
"It's hard for kickers to be drafted," he said. "Professional teams can just wait until the draft is over and sign quality kickers."
Eichloff's Kansas career included 302 points, the Kansas individual scoring record, and a 61-yard field goal, the longest in school history.
But he missed the NFL draft.
However, a couple days after the draft, the Cleveland Browns offered him a free-agent contract.
This summer, Eichloff got his chance at professional football. He played and practiced at training camps with veteran NFL players.
The Browns evaluated and watched Eichloff for five weeks before he was released from the team. In those five weeks, Eichloff wore a Brown's' uniform in two preseason games.
Eichloff would have played in three games, but he pulled an upper-groin hip flexor muscle, which caused him to miss a mid-August game.
"I got a good chance. I think they gave me a fair shot," he said. "I could have done better, but the guy they have now is pretty technically sound. I'm still working on technique."
Prior to his final exams at Kansas last May, Eichlom and teammate Dwyane Tangle, a tight end, flew to Cleveland for rookie camp at Buria, Otio. The camp was five days of workouts, weigh-ins and player evaluations. Those players invited were either rookies, free agents or draft picks.
Eichloff said the camp was all business.
"It was all very impersonal," he said. "You could be out of there in 24 hours — there one day and gone the next. If you can't do it, there's always someone else to do the job. That's their philosophy."
Eichloff said he felt relieved in a way when he was officially released from the Browns. He said there was no more pressure, and he knew exactly where he stood with the team for the first time in five weeks.
But three weeks ago, Eichloff had already received a phone call to try out for a punting position with the Washington Redskins. He was on an airplane the next day to Washington. Eichloff said he didn't fare well in the tryout because he hadn't punted in six months.
"That's the way it works." Adamle said. "It's just a waiting game. They call you when they need you. Each team just needs one kicker and the Browns already have a very good kicker."
Four other former Kansas football players signed free agent contracts for the preseason. Chandler and center Dan Schmidt practiced with the Cleveland Browns, while wide receiver Greg Ballard played with the New England Patriots. But like Eichloff, all were officially released.
Former Kansas defensive tackle Chris Maumalanga currently has a contract with the New York Giants, and tackle Keith Loneker plays for the Los Angeles Rams.
While those players enjoyed the stability of a professional career, Eichloh said his life was in a constant state of flux.
Still, he acknowledged that this summer was one of his most valuable learning experiences.
"Everyone tells you you should be so thankful. You have this opportunity that other people would kill for," he said. "But as far as stability in your life—it just isn't there."
Completion of ball season doubtful
Baseball players owners fail to agree word to come today
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Saving the World Series seemed to be less important yesterday than how to announce its demise.
By fax? By telephone conference call?
Acting commissioner Bud Selig reviewed a draft news release yesterday.
baseball sources said, and was expected to announce the end today. Selig called union head Donald Fehr to talk about a termination date.
"He wanted me to sanction and agree with him that it was OK to pull down the season," Fehr said. "I told him if he wanted to pull down the World Series, that was Bud Selig's responsibility, not mine."
Selig was expected to remain in Milwaukee. Behind-the-scenes efforts to save the World Series subsided, according to many accounts.
"Iwould not hold out any hope," Boston Red Sox chief executive officer John Harrington said.
"It's obvious there's no season left to have," said Atlanta Braves president Stan Kasten.
"It was time to abandon ship," he said.
Agent Dick Moss, who proceeded Fehr as the union's general counsel, left New York on Monday night.
"It was time to abandon ship," he said. Around the country, baseball officials braced for the end of what had been one of the most memorable seasons in years.
Even though the World Series has been played for 89 consecutive years, Fehr said he wasn't surprised by the lack of public outcry over its likely cancellation.
"I think they've telegraphed it for so long that people expect it," he said. "That's why I think there hasn't been a lot of pressure to get the negotiations settled. The owners made it clear so loudly and early on that it wasn't to be ...
"There's no surprise, no upset, no serious efforts to reach a deal to avoid this result." In Washington, Sen. James Exon killed legislation that would have repealed the owners' antitrust exemption if they unilaterally imposed labor conditions, such as a salary cap. If the bill had become law, Fehr said he would have recommended an end to the strike.
5
Jake Corrigan, St. Louis sophomore, practices tackling with John Wiley, Overland Park junior, at a rugby practice Tuesday at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. The rugby club is just one of 33 sports clubs supported by Kansas' Recreation Services this fall.
Club sports organize for successful teams
10
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas soccer club member Magnus Kindstrom, sophomore, dribbles the ball in a recent practice.
Kansas' Recreation Services supports 33 clubs in ways ranging from paying tournament fees to supplying equipment and uniforms. To get part of the $66,825 total allotted for all clubs this semester, clubs have to get their requests in early.
Success in athletics takes determination and dedication. Club sports at Kansas have found those qualities helpful in trying to form a thriving team.
"The budget request for this semester had to be turned in at least three to four weeks ahead of time," said Rick Rosenengle, assistant director of Recreation Services. "We had requests for over $312,000, so we have to have time to make the cuts."
Clubs planning to use University facilities also have to send in requests for practice times at the end of the preceding semester. Those requests go through three offices taking up to three weeks to gain approval
"All the paper work they require is a real headache," said Matt Delargy, rugby club
president.
Restrictions on the space that is available has forced some clubs such as rugby to be adaptable to changing situations.
Lack of space isn't restricted to University fields. Rosenstengle said that space inside Robinson Center was even more restricted than outside the gymnasium.
"We have 12 karate clubs combined with rock climbing and fencing here," Rosenstengle said of the space inside Robinson. "We also want to keep the gym open for general public use."
"Being organized is a must." Delargy said of his club. "We have a 12-member main committee, a land acquisition committee and an alumni committee. We need all of them."
Those committees have helped the rugby club become one of the most successful on campus. The team has even gained national prominence in recent years.
Organization has helped clubs such as rugby, and the lack of organization has hurt teams, such as women's soccer. In the past, the women's soccer president has been
How to join a club
For information on joining any of the 33 sports clubs at the University, contact Recreation Services at 864-3546. Phone numbers of individual club presidents are available.
For a list of KU sports clubs, please turn to page 3B, col. 6.
KANSAN
depended on to deal with almost every aspect of the group's operations. That resulted in problems ranging from scheduling games to keeping people involved.
This year women's soccer will split the duties of running the club between two co-presidents and a treasurer.
"One person just can't do it all," said Karen Bibb, soccer club co-president. "Especially when you go to school on top of it."
FOOTBALL PREVIEW
Texas Christian offense durable
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
When the Kansas football team plays the 1-1 Texas Christian Horned Frogs at 7:05 p.m. Saturday in Fort Worth, Texas, the Jayhawk defense will be up against another high-powered offense — at least statistically.
The Javhawks are going to Frog Land.
The Homed Frogs, who will play their home opener against the Jayhawks, have averaged 442.5 yards and 30.5 points in the first two games.
Unlike the unproven Michigan State Spartans who were touted as having a large, powerful offense, TCU has proven in its first two games that its offense can gain yardage and score.
In TCU's second game against New Mexico, TCU scored 44 points and finished with 606 yards total offense. Junior running back Andre Davis rushed for 325 yards, and junior quarterback Max Knake passed for 236 yards.
A more accurate analysis of TCU for the Jayhawks might be a review of the Horn Frogs' season-opening performance against 16th-ranked North Carolina — a team similar in size and strength to Kansas.
The Horned Frogs scored 17 points and gained 279 yards in losing to North Carolina 27-17.
"They went down to North Carolina and gave them all they wanted," Kansas coach Glen Mason said. "They're very well coached, and they play very hard. It's going to be a tough contest for us."
The Jayhawks also have compiled strong offensive statistics. Kansas has averaged 441 yards and 26 points in winning its first two games.
The Horned Frog defense hopes to stop Kansas with the help of 1993 All-Southwest Conference and third-team All-American senior defensive guard Royal West.
Despite injury, player remains positive
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas senior outside hitter Janet Uher would like to put last year's valleyball season on the shelf and prepare for her senior year.
But this year it's the same story — second chapter.
She suffered a torn tendon in her right shoulder last year, which turned out to be the catalyst for major medical problems that still plague her.
As last season progressed, the training room became a familiar place for Uher. Her shoulder gradually became worse, and Uher saw less and less playing time.
"What happened was my shoulder was popping in and out of the socket," she said. "it got to where I couldn't even play, it hurt so bad."
Doctors told Uher that she was in a similar situation to that of a baseball pitcher who experienced wear and tear on the rotator cuff.
Surgery last spring on Uher's right shoulder left her with no other choice than rehabilitation and sitting on the bench her final year at Kansas.
"I haven't played for almost a year now. It's frustrating," she said. "It's hard, especially as a captain, to contribute when I'm not out there on the court going through the same things."
"Even if I do come back to play this season, I might never be able to give 100 percent and hit the ball full force," she said.
What's even more difficult for Uher is the fact that if she does heal this season, there are other players in her front row position.
Monday was the first day They practiced with the team since earlier this season.
When Uher came back this season, Schonewise said that they had discussed her health.
Even though Uher's shoulder is not ready for competition, she still contributes to the team, Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said.
"Coming into the season our objective was to use her somehow, even in the back-court." she said.
The healing process has been slow for Uher, who still attends all practices, travels with the team and gives positive feedback and reinforcement. Schonewise said.
Even though Uher's last year at Kansas on scholarship is not how she would like to remember it, Uher said there was one thing she never would forget.
"My teammates' support is the one thing that has made this easier for me," she said. "I'm glad to say I was a part of this."
/
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'Kicking' to a different rhythm teaches endurance, self-defense
'Kickboxercise' new training technique and form of entertainment
By Ira Dreyfuss The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Martial arts aerobics is dance with a punch.
The combination of self-defense skills and aerobic rhythms may not ensure victory in a brawl. But, proponents say, it does build a healthy physical confidence and a solid endurance base.
"Most of all, it gives you the conditioning needed for self-defense," said Ken Levy, owner of Ken Levy's Executive Boxing Club of Royal Oak, Mich.
His version of martial arts aerobics, called "Kickboxercise," will teach fighting moves, and the aerobics endurance could let a practitioner outlast an opponent, Levy said.
"What happens with a lot of martial arts is they don't do enough conditioning," Levy said. Martial arts concentrates on practicing moves, he said. "It's more style."
Levy's program is one of many martial arts styles in aerobics.
"The point is to be aerobic in nature and to incorporate self-defense and martial arts techniques with a low-impact aerobic-type routine," said Jill Flyckt, education director of IDEA, a San Diego-based aerobics professional group.
"Personally, I'm not much of a fighter person; I don't feel a need to go out and punch," Flyckt said, "But some people do."
The martial arts programs don't involve a lot of dance-style choreography, which make them easy for nondancers to pick up, Flyckt said. And for some people, they amount to forms of self-expression, she said.
Women can gain confidence from martial arts aerobics. Levy said, "I'm finding they are more sure of themselves."
Martial arts aerobics often uses boxing and kickboxing equipment, such as punching bags, gloves and wraps to protect the hands.
The programs tend to operate in a standard exercise format. There are warmups, martial arts-style aerobic moves and cool downs. They also share with sports, such as boxing, a good deal of rope jumping.
In Levy's program, there's a lot of shadowboxing. But, he also offers a circuit-training routine using heavy
bags, speed bags and other boxing equipment.
Martial arts draws more men than do typical aerobic classes, said Flyckt and Thomas "The Promise" Trebotch of Miami. He developed the "BoxAerobic" program, which he said, combines training elements of boxing and kickboxing.
"Aerobics classes normally draw 90 to 95 percent women and 5 to 10 percent guys," Trebotich said. "When you add BoxAerobic, the average is 60 women, 40 guys."
Martial arts does have some special risks, Flyckt said.
It requires more upper body work than do typical aerobics programs, and the motion of throwing punches may strain some joints, Flyckt said. The moves must be well-controlled, she said.
And the program should be taught by someone who knows aerobic fitness, Flyckt said. Some clubs have hired former fighters who have "more background on biomechanics and exercise physiology," she said.
For instance, a trainer who has the class drop down and knock out pushups, then jump back to do more punches may leave some participants dizzy, Flyct said.
3 2
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Sophomore running back June Henley runs through a hole in the line of scrimmage during Saturday's night victory over Michigan State. Henley rushed for 86 yards, moving to 19th on the Kansas all-time career rushing list.
NFL players get settlement from 1987 strike
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Within weeks, about 1,300 pro football players should receive their share of a record $30 million settlement of lost pay when they were unlawfully barred from NFL games after the 1987 strike.
checks from the 28 NFL teams, $10 million in interest and $3 million for lost bonuses and interest.
The National Labor Relations Board said yesterday that the settlement included $17.4 million in game
Fred Feinstein, the NLRB general counsel, said the game checks range from $3,000 to $100,000 per player, many of whom have since retired.
Team reimbursements range from $917,959 by the Chicago Bears and $827,737 by the Washington Redskins to $363,687 by the Cardinals, who
have since moved from St. Louis to Phoenix.
The players association filed charges with the NLRB against the management council and teams shortly after the 24-day strike.
The central accusation alleged unlawful refusal to allow returning strikers to participate in games immediately, relying instead on nonunion players.
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 119 Stauffer-Flint
Available at these locations:
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
1116 W23rd
Jayhawk Bookstore
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
1420 Crescent Rd.·Lawrence, Ks. 66044
BLIMPIE SUBS AND SALADS
2540 Iowa 865 4000
AMIGO'S
BONANZA
1819 W. 23rd * 842-1620 Get the daily special prices every day of the week
BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢
BURANA
2329 S. Iowa St.*842-1200
$3.99 Freshstates Food Bar
DOMINO'S PIZZA
800 Juvenile Dr. 241-8000
OS HOMBRES
25% OFF Any Delivery Order(not valid with any other offer)
815 New Hampshire 404-726-2780 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 any 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
2907 W 6th+841-1688*FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills)
624 W 12h-84H-2310-FREE Cup of Our House Coffee
(Certified Organically Grown) with Anv Meal Purchase
GLASS ONION
IMPERIAL GARDEN
401 N 2nd-842-0377-BUY a cheeseburger with fries at reg.
price, get price for $1.00 Mon thru Fri 4-9 pm
PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
$1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day
One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only
Med Pizza $5.95, 2 for $9.95; Lg Pizza $7.95, 2 for $13.95
PIZZA SHOPPE
601 Kasold·842-060f
PIZZA SNUTTLE
1601 W.23rd,842,1212
PYRAMID PIZZA
14th & Ohio@842-3232-540$m. add, tops 50e; Md.$6.00,
ad tos 75e; $8.00.Lg, ad tops 1.00; Carry Out Only
1628 W23/d/842-8158-1101 W8th/B434-0936-2309 Haskell
Ave.8/524-8330*3 Hardshell Tus' fors i9 on (NO LIMIT)
TACO JOHN'S
2700 Iowa*749-2615*FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of
RUNZA
WEST COAST SALON
2222 Iowa St.*814-7239
$1.50 OFF Any Sandwich
WEST COAST SALOON
BOBBI'S BEDROOM
0100 840-7070
ATHLETE'S FOOT
914 Massachusetts-841-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
Retail/Merchandise
BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE
731 Massachusetts-843-419-15% OFF All Apparel +
FRRF Frere T-T shirt w/ Purchase Over $25.00
FRANCIS SPORTING GOODS
CENTRAL DATA
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
20% OFF Anv Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals
20% OFF Entire Inventory (excludes sale items and outlet priced items)
745 New Hampshire-843-3282-$25.00 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor, System Cleaning on IBM Compatiables
15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item
743 Massachusetts-749-4664
15% OFF Any Item (excludes sale items)
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET
JAYNAWK BOOKSTORE
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
JAYNAWK BOOKSTORE
1420 Crescent Rd843-3826
10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid
JAYNAWK TROPICAL FISH
10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill
846 Illinois, Suite D=842-5950 - 20% OFF Whisker Brand PowerFilters, and All Other Brand Undergravel Filters
JOCKS NITCH
JOCKS MITCH
840 Massachusetts*842-2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANSAS SPDRTS CLUB
837 Massachusetts 842-2992
20% OFF KU Sweatshirts
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640
Anv Size Exam Book (Blue Book) 5¢
KU BOOKSTORE
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNION$-864-4840
$5.00 OFF Any JAYHawk Clothing or Hat Over $20.00
KU BOOKSTORE
KANAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-640
10% Off Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply
KIZER-COMMUNISH
833 Massachusetts*749-4333
15% OFF Non-Sale Gold Chains
KIZER-CUMMINGS
2340 S. iowa*842-8564*30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid
LAWRENCE ONE HOUR PHOTO
9% & New Hampshire+814-5324
10% OFF All Skin Care Products
MERLE NORMAN
MIRACLE VIDEO
910 N 2nd/b41-8903-1910 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 Recycled Cotton)
OUTFITTER'S
OFFER 9
740 Massachusetts*843-3933
15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
PRO SOUND
PRO SOUND
Lawrence, Ks+865-0692
10% OFF All Sales
716 Massachussette/841-1762-%09 OFF (CD: Tapes, Movies, Video Games) Tuesdays & 15% More (In cash) on Buy Backs
RECYCLED SOUNDS
RENTCO USA
1741 Massachusetts-749-1605
25% OFF All Monthly Rentals
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
701 W Othe R41 8290
622 W 12th St. 841-9475-$2.00 On Any One CD, tape,
or I P (with Value Greater than $5.00)
15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy)
832 Iowa*749-3507*2 for i Video Rental Monday -
Thursday (limit one offer per day)
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
1116W. 23rd*749-5206
20% OFF of all clothing (excluding sale items)
VIDEO BIZ
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
BRADY OPTICAL
737 Massachusetts+842-0880
15% OFF Complete Eyespill Gear Purchase
CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
9000 Clinton Place 842 0367
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
1019 Massachusetts® *b43-3844*$2 **00** Off Lenses Only
Everglades Fees Valid to $43,3844$2 **00** Off Lenses Only
EUROPEAN TAN
1601 W23rd-841-6232-F2 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
15th & Kasold*832-0281*25%,OFF Initial or Annual
R.J. STANDING BANK
1033 Massachusetts>749-5363
Avn Haircut or Hairstyle $5.50
R.C.13 STADIUM BARBERY
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 Session Package (Save $5.50)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
119 Staffer-Flint-643-4358
20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad
7
.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
3B
Controversy created with Sports Illustrated Top 40 list
Magazine's program stirs debate with greatest influential sports figures
By Brian Friedman The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Sports Illustrated is stirring another uproar, and this one has nothing to do with swimsuits.
For its 40th anniversary, the magazine has drawn up a list of the 40 "most influential" sports figures of the past four decades, promoting it in this week's issue and on a one-hour network TV special Wednesday night.
The list is certain to create debate among fans, especially for who's missing: Willey Mills, Mickey Mantle, Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Willie Shoemaker, Nike chairman Phil Knight and NBA commissioner David Stern, to name just a few.
The producers of the show, "40 For the Ages: Sports Illustrated's 40th Anniversary Special," (NBC, 10 p.m. EDT) have distanced themselves from the list. Even the host, Bob Costas, disavows it — saying twice during the program that he'd have a different list.
"As it turned out, I had some very strong disagreements with the list," Costas said. While some of SI's top 40 were "inspired choices," he said, others both on and off the list "had me almost screaming in protest."
Few would disagree with SI's choice of the most influential athlete of the last four decades, Muhammad Ali.
"One athlete has bridged those 40 years with us: Cassius Clay-Muhammad Ali," Sports Illustrated managing editor Mark Mulvoy said.
No. 2 is another consensus favorite, Michael Jordan.
But it doesn't take long after that for the more controversial figures to creep in. The rest of the top 10 are: ABC-TV sports pioneer Roone Arledge, Jim Brown, Billie Jean King, Pete Rose, Marvin Miller, the twin pairing of Larry Bird and Magic Johnson, Arnold Palmer and sports superagent Mark McCormack.
Mulvoy said that nine months ago, he told 20 people at SI to give him a list of 15-20 names. Out of 300, the list was pared to the top 40.
"We looked for people who not only performed, but also impacted the sport, both on and off the field," Mulvoy said.
Some of the more obscure names on the list—to even diehard sports fans—are Harold Gores, the inventor of Astroturf; Bill Rasmussen, the founder of ESPN; Gary Davidson, founder of the short-lived World Hockey Association and World Football League and onetime president of the American Basketball Association, and Dr. Robert Jackson, a pioneer of arthroscopic surgery.
"To me, how many athletes' careers would have been extended without Dr. Bob Jackson?" Mulvoy said.
Costas specifically objected to the absence of Mays, Mantle and Chamberlain.
"I'm 42 years old, and if I was asked to name 10 sports figures and left off Mays, I should be slapped silly," he said.
Noting that Wayne Gretzky*;who redefined hockey, was No. 12, Costas said: "Is not Wayne Gretzky to hockey what Wilt Chamberlain is to basketball?"
Then there's the issue of whether Sports Illustrated is disagreeing with itself.
Ali and Jordan are 1-2 in appearances on the cover of SI over the years, with Ali appearing 33 times and Jordan 30 times. But Abdul-Jabbar — who is third with 27 cover appearances — isn't among the top 40.
In addition, since 1954, the magazine has picked a sportsman or sportswoman of the year — sometimes picking more than one. But 28 to 70 percent of those 40 annual selections — weren't on the "40 for the Ages" list.
Mulvoy defended that by saying the top 40 list contained more "historical perspective" than the annual sportsman or sportswoman selections.
"Obviously, this list is going to generate a firestorm of controversy," he said.
Costas agreed that a one-hour special probably was too short to encompass the history of Sports illustrated, and he would have preferred seeing several magazine-type feature stories along with the list — plus perhaps a free-spirited debate on who should be in the top 40.
But he welcomed the disagreements the list might cause.
"That's good." Costas said. "That's what I think sports is about."
KU
SPORTS in brief
Crew member's cause of death still unknown
The Associated Press
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. — More tests were planned to determine the cause of death for a 20-year-old member of the Rutgers crew team, officials said yesterday.
Andria Keer died Sunday night, shortly after a roommate noticed she was having trouble breathing. an ambulance took her to a hospital two blocks away where she was pronounced dead.
There was no immediate evidence that four play, drugs or alcohol contributed to her death, city police Sgt. Thomas Selesky said.
An autopsy Monday did not reveal a cause of death, and more tests were planned, a Middle-sex County medical examiners office said. "It will be a few weeks before we get anything back," an office representative said.
Reds' center fielder pleads not guilty to charges
The Associated Press
CINCINNATI — An attorney representing Deion Sanders entered written pleas of not guilty yesterday to a felony charge and two misdemeanor charges stemming from a confrontation with an off-duty police officer.
The Cincinnati Reds center fielder was not required to appear at an arrangement before Judge William Mallory Jr. in Hamilton County Municipal Court.
Instead, attorney James Keys Jr. entered written pleas of not guilty to a felony charge of failure to obey a police officer's order and two
misdemeanor charges of leaving the scene of an accident.
A pretrial hearing was set for Oct. 12.
A separate pretrial hearing on two other misdemeanor charges was scheduled for yesterday, but Sanders was granted a continuance until Oct. 12 on charges of driving without a license and resisting arrest.
All five charges stem from an alleged scuffle, which police said started when Sanders tried to drive his motor scooter through a restricted gate after an Aug. 8 game at Riverfront Stadium.
Judge rules NBA player's contract could be illegal
ORLANDO, Fla. — The ball was in Horace Grant's court yesterday after a federal judge ruled that the all-star power forward's $22.3 million contract with the Orlando Magic could be illegal.
But Grant and his agent could have other ideas.
U. S. District Judge Dickinson Debevoise decided Monday in Newark, N.J., that a one-year escape clause in the contract could be a circumvention of the NBA's salary cap, which
is designed to prohibit the richest teams from signing all the best players.
Magic officials indicated they would not pursue the issue in court but would try to sign Grant to a contract acceptable to the NBA.
NBA officials hailed the decision. They had argued that teams were starting to use one-year escape clauses to skirt the NBA rules.
Grant's six-year contract called for him to become a free agent after playing the first year at a salary of $2,125 million, which is the most Orlando can pay under the salary cap. Grant would then sign again with the Magic for the remainder of the contract terms.
The Associated Press
As a result of Debevoise's ruling, Grant now has several options, some of which do not include the Magic. But Grant, who has said repeatedly that he wants to play in Orlando, could not be located for comment yesterday.
KANSAS SPORTS CLUBS Fall 1994
For more information about any of these KU clubs, call 864-3546.
Badminton
Bowling
Champions Club
Climbing Club
Crew
Cycling Club
Equestrian Club, KU Veloc
Fencing Club
Intramural Official's
Club
Japan Karate- Do
Ryobukal
Jayhawk Free Flight
Club
JayRunners
Judo
Karate Klub
Kempo
Ki-Aikido Club
KP Arkto Club
KUGAR (KU Gamers and Roleplayers)
Kuk Sool Won
Men's Lacrosse Club
Men's Volleyball
Nippon Kempo Karate Club
Racquetball Club
Rifle Team
Sailing Club
Shorin Ken Ryu Karate-
Do Martial Arts
Softball Club
Squash Club
Tae Kwon Do Club
Ultimate Frisbee
University Chess Society
Waterpolo
Women's Rugby
Women's Soccer
Wrestling Club
Attention students who will apply to the School of Education
PPST Deadline Information:
Sept. 20 - Registration deadline for Oct. 22 test date Oct.11 - Registration deadline for Nov. 12 test date
If you intend to apply for fall 1995 admission to the School of Education, the School must RECEIVE your PPST scores BEFORE the February 15 deadline. If you have not yet taken the PPST, you must take it this semester.
You may pick up registration materials at Testing Services in 2056 Watkins. Please note that ETS must receive your registration materials by the deadlines listed above.
Mike
the AUTO MEDIC inc.
When you have car trouble, you can...
Alternatives!!
AUTO MEDIC Inc.
or Call:
1. Call a tow truck & take a cab.
2. Find a ride to & from the garage.
3. Cancel life as you knew it.
We Make House Calls!
We'll repair your car on the spot using quality parts and offering competitive prices and guarantee.
Call 842-0384
VISA
TRECKMAN
MasterCard
SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts 843-5000
IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... CALL BIRTHRIGHT
Woolwich.
Woolrich.
EST. 1870
BIRTHRIGHT
843-4821
1246 Kentucky
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you
Monday 1-3, & 6-8
Tuesday 1-3, & 6-8 FREE PREGNANCY
Wednesday 1-4 TESTING.
Thursday 6-8
Friday 1-3
944 Mass.
832-8228
THE LORD OF THE HUNDREDS
Red Lyon Tavern
Fantastic Fall Special!
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
contribute to the
South Pointe
AFARI MALL
2166 W. 26th St.
P
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
winter
open every day!
now buying for
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
ean
16 south ninth columbia, missouri (314) 499-0420
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Park-
pool
sell your clothing to
- Water and Trash Paid
734 massachusetts lawrence, kansas (913) 749-2377
arizona trading co.
Outstanding New Staff!!!
T
Call
842-7001
for a
consultation
today!
Member of Elite Shield &
Health Net
Wednesday Evening Appointments Available
Welcome Back Students!
We offer treatment for all conditions of the skin, hair and nails including:
*Acne
- Tattoo Removal
- Hair Transplants
- Mole & Wart Removal
- Glycolic Acid Peols
- Spider Vein & Collagen Injections
Dermatology Center of laurence
claurence Since 1970
Lee R. Bittenbender, M.D.
证
890 Iowa St. + Hillcrest Professional Services
Lawrence, KS 89044 | (913) 845-7001
lifestyles
Fashion Is it what we wear, or who we are?
Fashion Is it what we wear,
By Casey Barnes Kansan staff writer
Mega
alls as she
not heard
She's on h
fit she s
"I'm
pers
thi
ty
all
Megan Bergman wears oversized overalls as she walks down campus, but she's not heading for the family farm
not needing for the family room.
She's on her way to class in an out-
Site's on her way to class in an outfit she says suits her personality.
"I'm more of a comical type person, and most of the things I wear are along that type," said Bergman, Edina, Minn., junior. "But I mainly like to be comfortable."
Bergman may not ponder her personality each morning when she chooses her look for the day, but, when asked, she links what she wears to the kind of person she is.
Which leads to the question:
Which leads to the question:
Most KU students said we were.
"People are easily lumped into categories because of their clothes," said Amy Tomson, Johnson junior. "But the stereotypes are not always true. In the '80s, black may have meant depressed or alternative, but now so many things are so mainstream that may not necessarily be true."
Like Bergman, Tomson said that her clothes were a reflection of her personality, but what people said and how they acted also could be reflected in their personality.
C. R. Snyder, professor of psychology, said that according to the uniqueness theory, people want to have socially acceptable
would just dress to fit in.
He said that through research he had found people would vary what they wear depending on how the group they were identifying with was perceived.
"When KU is winning, students are more likely to wear clothes with Jayhawks on them," Snyder said. "But when the group does poorly, people will distance themselves away from the group by not wearing clothes that identify with the group."
Snyder said that sometimes people
While some may wear T-shirts with environmental messages and others may spend money on designer clothes, Snyder said that we all conform to a group that we admire.
ways of showing their individuality. Clothes is one of the ways they do it.
While the shirt on your back may be a clue to the thoughts in your mind, some students don't like the idea of differentiating themselves by their wardrobes.
"People are easily
lumped into
categories
because of their
clothes."
Amy Tomson,
Johnson junior
"If two people work up at a party with the same outfit on, one will either leave the party or one will change their outfit in some way," he said. "Clothes are marketed to make the people buying clothes feel special."
"The clothes you wear do say something to other people about how you feel and who you are, but it is often misinterpreted." Hyma Jarrett, Kansas City, Kan.
junior, said. "Clothes can
...
jacket, and clothes can take on a person's personality instead of reflecting it, and it's a shame."
Some students said they dressed to convey a certain message or to portray an aura, depending on the situation.
Jeanne McCready, Prairie Village senior, said what people wore on campus often depended on their major.
"Being an art major, I can dress in a freer man than, say, a business major." McCready said. "It's also different if you have to give a speech or a presentation. But as a professional artist, you are expected to dress a little artsy, depending on where you're going or what you're doing that day."
Some students said that
Some students said that when they got dressed in the morning, they just wore what they had and what was clean.
Cale Wibben, Illinois visitor, said he knew he dressed weird, but it was really not his fault.
"I know I don't look like everybody else, but I don't have anything else to wear," Wibben said.
Susan D.
Megan Bergman, Edina, Minn.. junior
ALEXANDER HARDING
Hyman Jarrett Kansas City, Mo., junior
A
Amy Tomson, Johnson junior
Photos by Jenny Brannan
"I just throw something on, I don't think about it. I really don't think it matters in the big scheme of things. I'll wear the same thing for a week because I just don't care.
I dress for comfort. No tight jeans. I don't like how it feels." Brad Fleming, Leavenworth junior, far left.
CITIZEN
FA
"Some people think that body piercing represents something weird about me, but I don't get into it that much. It doesn't mean anything to me. People may look strangely at me, but as long as I'm nice to them, they are nice back." Cale Wibben, Illinois visitor.
"You'll find that clothes reflect most people's personalities. The louder the person, the louder the clothes. Being a sports fan, most of my wardrobe is sports jerseys like baseball and hockey." Mike Mandl, Kansas City, Mo., freshman.
GILMORE
G
"What I wear depends on where I'm going or who I'm with. If I'm with a group of conservative friends, I'll dress more conservative. If I go out with friends from Kansas City, I may get all decked out." Danielle Lindquist, Overland Park senior, far right.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 14,1994 PAGE 4B KULIfe
Cultural Calendar
EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES
Exhibition-Land and Its Uses: Photographs from the Collection, Sept. 3-Nov. 13 at Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibition-Latter Days of the Law: Images of Chinese Buddhism, 850-1850, Aug. 27-Oct. 9 at Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibition-Native American Ceramics from the Southwest Pueblos, Sept. 10-Oct. 23 at Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibition-Jennifer Bartlett: A Print Retrospective, Aug. 21-Oct. 16 at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo.
Exhibition-paintings of artist Susan C. Ax, Sept. 7-Oct. 5 in the DeMattais Gallery at Kansas Newman College, 3100 McCormick Ave., Wichita.
Exhibition-Shuttlecocks: The Making of a Sculpture, July 8-Oct. 16 at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo.
Exhibition Opening Reception-Marcie Miller Gross and Kristin Miller, 1-4:30 p.m. Sept. 18 in the Art and Design Gallery. Exhibition dates: 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Thursday, 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Friday and 1-4:30 p.m. Saturday from Sept. 12-23.
PERFORMANCES
Doctoral Recital-Scott Feldhausen, organ, 3 p.m Sunday at Country Club Christian Church, Kansas City, Mo.
Doctoral Recital-Charles Barland, organ, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
Starlight Theatre presents Barry Manilow, 8 p.m.
Saturday at Starlight Theatre, Swope Parkway and
Meyer Boulevard, Kansas City, Mo. Tickets $35,
$27 and $22.
Renegade Theatre Company presents "The Broadway Comedy-Drama In Two Acts," 8 p.m.
Friday, 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. Saturday at the Renegade Theatre, 518 East Eighth St. Tickets $6.
The Missouri Repertory Theatre presents "Dancing at Lughnasa," 8 p.m. today, tomorrow and Friday; 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturday; 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sunday at the Center for Performing Arts, 50th and Cherry streets, Kansas City, Mo. Tickets Tuesday-Sunday, $24. Friday and Saturday, $30. Helen Hocker Center for the Performing Arts presents "Fiddler on the Roof," 8 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday in the Gage Park Amphitheater, Topeka. Advanced tickets $6 (adults), $4 (12 and under). $7 and $5 at the gate.
Harvest of the Arts is seeking artists of any field to display or sell works during the festival. For more information, call Jill at 749-2087 or Lissa at 749-0470.
V
NATION/WORLD
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5B
Pilot had drug history
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Maryland man who died after crashing his stolen airplane onto the White House lawn had trace amounts of cocaine in his system and a blood-alcohol content slightly above the legal limit, officials said.
Frank Corder, 38, had a blood-alcohol content of .045. Secret Service representative Dave Adams said yesterday. The legal limit for pilots is .04. The Secret Service reported earlier that the blood-alcohol level was .32, but Adams said that was based on an erroneous blood test.
He said Corder's blood showed "trace amounts of cocaine." Tissue tests to determine the exact amount will not be completed for several days, he said.
Corder, a self-employed trucker, died in the crash when the stolen plane tore into the White House lawn, crashed through a magnolia tree and crumbled against the south wall of the White House.
Corder had a history of alcohol and drug abuse.
Corder, who worked as a self-employed freight truck driver at Baltimore-Washington International Airport, was described as an upbeat, "jeans-and-flannel shirt type of guy," haunted by substance abuse problems.
"Frank ... told me that sometimes ... he just wished he had a gun," said a cousin, Dee George.
Family said Corder's marriage had just fallen apart and his father had recently died of cancer.
He was reported to have undergone alcohol detoxification at the Veterans Hospital in Perry Point, Md. Clinton mentioned the hospital during a speech Sunday in Corder's native Aberdeen, Md., and the Secret Service was investigating a possible link.
At least one family member said Corder may have had publicity, not suicide, in mind. His brother, John, said Corder admired how teen pilot Mathias Rust "made a big thing for himself" when he landed a small plane in Moscow's Red Square in 1987.
The Washington Post yesterday quoted John Corder as saying his brother once spoke of crashing a plane into the White House if he ever wanted to commit suicide. The brother refused to confirm the report.
LOS ANGELES — Comedian George Burns was hospitalized in intensive care yesterday after surgery to drain fluid from the surface of his brain, a hospital representative said.
The Associated Press
George Burns in stable condition
The 98-year-old comic made it through the surgery well and was expected to remain in Cedars-Sinai Medical Center for about a week, Ron Wise, hospital representative,
said.
The fluid collected on Burns' brain after he fell in his bathtub at his Las Vegas home on July 13 and hit his head. Wise said.
Burns was admitted to Cedars-
Sinai on Monday night and underwent two hours of surgery.
"The fluid was drained. He tolerated the operation and has been making gradual progress since the surgery." Wise said, adding that Burns was stable.
Former U.S. treasurer faces prison
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The former U.S. treasurer, whose signature appears on most of the nation's currency, was sentenced yesterday to four months in prison for evading taxes and obstructing justice.
Catalina Vasquez Villalpando had pleaded guilty earlier in the year to three felony charges, which also included conspiring to hide outside income while she served in the Bush administration.
"I'm embarrassed," she told U.S.
District Judge Thomas F. Hogan, her voice broken, "I hope you will find it in your heart to take what I own oociety in some sort of community service" rather than in a prison sentence, she said.
A few minutes later, however, Hogan said, "I can find no basis to excuse your conduct."
After serving her time in a federal prison still to be determined, she will be put on supervised release for three years, including four months of house detention. She also must do 200 hours of community service.
THE UNIVERSITY FAIRY
KANSAN
C A R D
THE CONSTITUTION TOMMY KANSAN
CARD
Please Recycle
Use your Kansan Card!
--BOB FREDERICK,
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
s KU Athletic Director, Bob Frederick knows the importance of helmets to KU football players. As an avid cyclist, Bob experienced firsthand the necessity of a helmet to anyone riding a bike.
You see, Bob was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital in June with multiple injuries suffered in a cycling accident. Fortunately, he was wearing a helmet. "They say he would not have lived if he hadn't had a helmet on," says Margey Frederick, Bob's wife.
one of the 50,000 bicyclists each year who suffer head injuries.And though helmets greatly reduce the risk of head injury. only 5% of children wear bike helmets.
During LMH's Kids' Day '94 on September 17, you can help change that. At Kids' Day you can purchase a bicycle helmet for just $13, compliments of LMH and the Kansas SAFE KIDS Coalition. This one-day event at Pinckney
"FOOTBALL OR BICYCLING TAKE IT FROM ME. WEAR A HELMET."
LAWRENCE
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Community Care-Community Pride
749-5800
(1-800-749-2226 Outside Lawrence)
325 Maine, Lawrence, KS 66044
Elementary School in Lawrence, will highlight children's health and safety, while delighting kids with the magic of the Wizard of Oz.
So, if your children are among the 95 who bicycle without a helmet, there's never been a more affordable time to buy one. Then wear it. Always. After all, according to Bob Frederick you'll be benched if you don't.
KIDS' DAY'94
Frederick,
don't.
ACTIVITIES
Saturday, September 17, from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Pinckney Elementary School, 6th and Mississippi
A CHILDREN'S HEALTH AND SAFETY FAIR FOR PRESCHOOL AND ELEMENTARY AGE CHILDREN AND THEIR PARENTS.
Immunizations - Available for a small fee from the Douglas County Health Department. You must bring the child's immunization record.
Bicycle Rodeo! - Kids can bring their bicycles and navigate a challenging obstacle course. Supervised by the Lawrence Police Department. Bike check-in service available while you visit other activities.
Bike Helmet Sale - Purchase a safety-approved bike helmet for only $13. Cash only. characters will be on hand to entertain and educate the kids!
Children must be accompanied by an adult.
a member of
JAYHAWK HEALTH Alliance
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. Downtown
Parking in the rear
Parking in the rear
Over 10 toppings to choose from!
.357 Special
Wednesday carry out only
$3 small 1 topping
$5 medium 1 topping
$7 large 1 topping
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Open 7 days a week
ROCK 'N WHEAT ROLL BY OLY
thank you
good NITE!
YOU'RE GREAT!
will you play
my PARTY?
IF YOU
AGREE
TO THIS...
$150...OKAY
brown M&M's...
ok... a case
of Bud. ok...
whipped cream?
okAY...
and yello sub...
that's who
catering
the PARTY!!
I'm
THERE!
yello sub JAMS!!
ROCK 'N WHEAT ROLL BY
thank you
good nite!
$150... ok.AY
brown M&M's...
ok... a case
of BuD.. ok...
whipped cream?
ok.!
YOU'RE GREAT!
will you play
my party?
IF YOU AGREE
TO THIS..
and yello sub...
that's who
catering
the PARTY!
I'm
THERE!
TEAM HANDBALL CLUB
Come and Learn One of the Fastest Team Games in the World
Time: Thursday, September 15, 7:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m.
Place: Robinson Gymnasium Entrance by the swimming pool
No Team Handball experience necessary
If you can't make it, Please call
Rey 843-8676 or Bob 843-5928
A
15
15
Mulligan's
MONDAY
NIGHT
FOOTBALL
Saxophone
TUESDAY LIVE JAZZ!
No cover and $1.50 Longnecks (including Rolling Rock)
No cover and $1 off imports
WEDNESDAY ACOLISTIC OPEN-MIC
Darrell Lea & Megan Hurt $1 Samuel Adams Draws
Musicians interchange $1.50 Boulevard Pints
FRIDAY
THURSDAYS
Ricky Dean Sinatra
Ricky Dean Sinatra
$1 P.B.R. bottles • $1.50 wells
$1 dogs/burgers on the patio (5-7PM)
SATURDAY
2 for 1 wells $1 P.B.R. bottles
CHIEFS SUNDAY!
PUPS
$3.50 Domestic Pitchers
$2.00 Bloody Marys
$2.99 Burger Baskets
PUPS GRILL OPEN UNTIL 3AM!!
1016 Massachusetts • Downtown Lawrence
913-855-4055
---
6B
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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
Your School Representative & PTO Will Be Receiving Information Packets.
NEW FOR 94
SPALDING
STRIVER'S GIRL
34567890
incredible
REGISTER
TAPES FOR EDUCATION
FREE EQUIPMENT FOR SCHOOLS
Dillons FOOD STORES
FREE EQUIPMENT
FOR SCHOOLS FROM
Dillons
FOOD STORES
4.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
7B
Nuns' exhibit shows all
The Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO — Sculptures of genitalia. A painting of an angel having intercourse on an altar.
Madonna's next book? Try the latest exhibit at an art gallery run by Roman Catholic nuns.
The nuns and the Archdiocese of San Antonio have been besieged by irate callers. The archbishop has declared himself "highly offended, insulted and hurt at this art."
And yesterday, one day after the exhibit opened, it was shut down until further notice for review by the religious order that operates the gallery.
"We apologize for any confusion or hurt that the community has felt," said Edna Perez-Vega, representative for the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word, an order of about 500 nuns throughout the United States, Mexico
and Peru.
The exhibit of works by Houston artist Donell Hill, titled "Spiritual, Sensual, Sexual," opened on Monday at a renovated century-old barn called ReBarn — A Center For Spirituality and Art.
Sister Alice Holden, the gallery's director, said that she prayed before the exhibit went up and decided the work should be shown because "sexuality is a tremendous gift from God."
"I am very much opposed to pornography," she said. "Yet, I do not believe (this exhibit) is pornography. It's a sacred rendition of the beauty of sexuality."
John Gallaher, a 65-year-old Catholic who saw a photo of the work in the newspaper, had a different take on it.
I've never seen such a sacrilegious pornographic display in a Catholic
institution in my life," he said. Gallerah showed up at the gallery yesterday to see the work for himself but found the gallery closed.
The order received about 100 angry calls in the last two days. The archdiocese, which doesn't oversee the nuns, said it received hundreds.
Among the works are flesh-colored clay sculptures of genitalia in flower-like formations, and oil paintings depicting sexual intercourse.
"I was personally shocked to see on television and in the printed media that the nuns' gallery exhibit links sex and faith," Archbishop Patrick F. Flores said in a statement.
Ms. Hill acknowledged she was surprised the nuns wanted to exhibit her work. "They're in tune with their higher selves. They know that it's right, even if it a little scary. I think that takes courage," she said.
Israel, PLO resolve aid dispute
The Associated Press
OSLO, Norway — Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres and PLO leader Yasser Arafat resolved the thorny issue of development aid for the Palestinian territories yesterday.
years.
After an afternoon of talks in Oslo, where both men came to mark the one-year anniversary of the Mideast peace accord, Arafat and Peres agreed in a 14-point document to stick by the declaration of principles under which Jerusalem's status would not be discussed for two more
The agreement, signed immediately after a concert honoring the peace breakthrough a year ago, was expected to put to rest recent bickering over the status of Jerusalem, even though the city is never mentioned by name in the final version.
"The two sides, Israel and the PLO, declared their commitment to fully implement the declaration of principles," the document stated.
Peres and Arafat were meeting privately and with Norwegian and U.N.
officials to discuss, among other things, $2.3 billion in development aid for the Palestinian territories. That is the amount pledged by 43 countries at a donors' conference last year.
Palestinian negotiators in Paris last week demanded to use part of the money for health and education programs in East Jerusalem. Israel objected, saying any issue on Jerusalem was off limits until 1996, under the peace accord. Since then, the talks had been stalled.
ONE OF THE BESTWAYSTOADVERTISE ISTO BUY NOTHING.
Want to catch the attention of students? Try using some white space in your next ad. Clever use of space can make you ad stand out and give you more for your money. Just be sure to place it where students look first for everything.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nothing works better.
Mosey on down to the
Cadillac RANCH
Campground Mountain Flair
2515 West 6th 842-9845 open 4pm to 2 am 7 days a week! The Ranch has daily drink specials, & a great big dance floor!
Wednesday: Ladies Night/No cover 1$ cover for guys 2 for 1 anything
Thursday: 3$ cover
1$ anvthina
1$ anything
O
Saturday: 3$ cover 1$ anything
1$ anything
704 NEW HAMPSHIRE·749-1999 WEDNSDAY-SATURDAY 8PM-2AM
- NEW MANAGEMENT •
The Stumble Inn
WEDNSDAY- $2.00 COVER
$2.00 PITCHERS
$2.00 BIG BEERS
SPECIALS:
FRIDAY
THURSDAY $2.00 BIG BEERS
COME CHECK $2.50 BIG PALE
US OUT! ALES
FRIDAY
THE STUMBLE UNP
$3.00 COVER
$1.00 ANYTHING
THE STUMBLE UNV SATURDAY
$1.75 WELL
DRINKS
$1.00 WELL SHOTS
Lawrence's Largest
Supplier of
Darkroom Materials
1610 West 23rd Street
841-7205
LAWRENCE. KS
We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
Weights
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
B 3 D
used weights----25cents per lb.
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts
phone 841-PLAY
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Had Enough of the Frat House?
- 3 Bedroom- $575.00 = $525.00
- 2 Bedroom with study- $550.00 = $500.00
- 1/2 month security deposit
- Flexible lease options
We all desire the comfort, privacy, and state of mind that comes with a high quality home. At Heatherwood Valley Apartments, we understand this and provide you with a place you will love to come home to... at a price you can afford! Come take a look today.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
2040 Heatherwood Dr., #203
2040 Heatherwood Dr., #203
KS 66047 843-4754
KS 66047 843-4754
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
take a hike.
take a
hike.
WILDERNESS DISCOVERY
Jaybowl
kansas union • level 1 • 864-3545
WILDERNESS DISCOVERY
Jaybowl
PANUAR INSTITUTE
MOVING?
Let
Solve your moving hassles.
Lawrence Paper Company
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.
YOMKIPPURSERVICES
KOLNIDRE
YOM KIPPUR
Wednesday, September 14, 7:30 pm Kansas Union Ballroom
YOM KIPPUR Thursday, September 15, 9:30 am Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive
for more information, call 864-3948
Fitness Girl
AEROBICS with BODY BOUTIQUE
AEROBICS with
- Reebok Step
aters/Treadmill
The Women's Fitness Facility
- Nautilus & Freeweights • Personal Fitness Training
- Nautilus & Freeweights
* Reehock Sten
- Stairmasters/Treadmill
* Stairmasters/Rowing Machine
- 60 Aerobic classes per week
* 2 Aerobic rooms.
FIRST VISIT FREE!
Buy 1 Year, Get 1 Year FREE
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
AN INVITATION TO MEET
AN INVITATION TO MEET OUR NEXT CONGRESSWOMAN JUDY HANCOCK
Candidate for Congress 3rd District New Courage for Changing Congress. New Energy for Serving Kansas.
Thursday, September 15,8 pm
Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union
---
12
8B
Wednesdav. September 14, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Learn to Fly 842-0000
图示
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
842-1212
"NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
TWO-FERS 2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES
$9.00
PRIMETIME 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES
$11.50
PARTY "10" 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 1-COKE
$30.00 $3.50
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence
DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
"NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY
TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PARTY "10"
2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS 1-PIZZA
2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING
2-COKES 4-COKES 1-TOPPING 1-COKE
$9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
FUTONS by Abdiana
K.C. Based Manufacturer with 6 Retail Locations
This Complete Futon & Frame
Exclusively Hardwood Frames
1023 Mass, St Lawrence, KS
843-8222
Please in any black only
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence
DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
UTON
FUTONS
K.C. Based Manufacturer with 6
Retail Locations
This
Complete Futon
& Frame
1200
Exclusively Hardwood Frames
1023 Mass, St Lawrence, KS
843-8222
Abdiana
FUTON
Fishermen cause panic
FREETOWN, Sierra Leone They were just trying to catch fish the easy way.
The Associated Press
But the dynamite blasts some fishermen set off near the military ruler's sea-front residence set off a panic yesterday in Freetown. Soldiers thought they were hearing a rebel attack, townpeople thought it was a coup.
Gunfire broke out at the army barracks near the beach. Telephones and electricity went dead. People rushed for their homes.
Compounding the chaos was an intense tropical rainstorm in Freetown, the capital.
Soldiers with rocket-propelled grenades and other weapons ran to guard the main government buildings in the west end of the city.
Other soldiers rushed to the beach and started shooting.
They found four frightened fishermen who quickly confessed to illegally using dynamite to stun fish. They were arrested as "rebels" and beaten up, then taken to the military police headquarters, according to army officers who requested anonymity.
But frightened civilians stayed inside and businesses remained shuttered with metal bars against feared footers.
Later, state radio broadcast a brief statement, saying: "There is no cause for alarm."
WASHINGTON — A panel of top scientists urged Congress yesterday to allow the government to aggressively regulate tobacco — from capping nicotine to banning cigarette vending machines — as a way to fight teen-age smoking.
Smoking may be regulated
The Associated Press
The report by the prestigious Institute of Medicine was strong support for the Food and Drug Administration's plan to curb the tobacco industry.
"Tobacco needs supervision and regulation right away," said Dr. Paul Torrens, a University of California at Los Angeles professor who co-wrote the report. "This is a dangerous, addictive substance that is widely and freely available to teen-agers around this country."
The government says more than 400,000 Americans die each year from diseases attributed to smoking — and 70 percent of smokers start before age 18. Anti-smokers and goverment scientists say as many as 3,000 teen-agers a day become regular smokers, hooked on nicotine after experimenting with just a few cigarettes.
The Institute of Medicine spent 18 months studying how to battle teen smoking and concluded that current school education programs and state laws prohibiting tobacco sales to youths simply aren't enough.
The scientists said an aggressive plan to reduce teen access to and awareness of tobacco is the only solution - led by a Public Health Service agency, probably the FDA, that would strictly regulate tobacco and limit the nicotine allowed in cigarettes.
The FDA already is considering doing just that and has asked outside scientists to determine at what level nicotine becomes addictive. Despite a barrage of cigarette company ads to the contrary, FDA Commissioner David Kessler insists the plan won't outlaw tobacco.
The Institute of Medicine doesn't want a ban either.
The panel also recommended that:
—Congress increase the 24-cent federal tax on cigarettes to $2 a pack.
—Mercantis obtain a state license to sell tobacco, which would be suspended if the store sells tobacco to minors.
"We are not prohibitionists, we are not banning cigarettes," Torrens said. "We are simply saying children should be protected from addictive substances."
—Cigarette vending machines be banned.
All public places, from restaurants to shopping malls, ban smoking.
—Congress repeal the federal law prohibiting states from regulating tobacco advertising so states can ban billboards and any advertising deemed attractive to teens.
—Federal funds help states conduct "sting" operations to catch stores that sell tobacco to minors.
Eavesdropping will be costly
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The costs of helping law officers electronically eavesdrop more easily could be billions of dollars and a loss of privacy for law-abiding citizens, skeptics told a House panel yesterday.
$500 million, FBI Director Louis Freeh told the Energy and Commerce Committee's telecommunications subcommittee.
But the telephone industry, which has been working with the government on that problem, said it is more likely to take billions of dollars to install new hardware and software in
He identified 183 cases in the past year where technical problems frustrated wiretap efforts and hampered investigations.
A federal proposal designed to ensure that law enforcers won't lose their ability to eavesdrop in the changing world of digital communications will cost taxpayers about
Exactly what equipment will be needed to make it technically easier for law enforcement officials to tap into communications is not known. United States Telephone Association President Roy Neel said, further complicating accurate cost estimates.
public telephone and cellular phone networks.
VV
About 1,000 wirtapiles are conducted each year, Fresh said.
The Etc. Shop
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
THE WORLD'S TREND SUNGLASSES
8 Mass 843-0611
928 Mass. 843-0611
13TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
CXT
COLORADO
CXT
BREAKS
JANUARY 2 - 15, 1985 • 4, 5, 6 OR 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
$168
from
SunChase
"YA GOTTA
BE THERE!"
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
NOBODY DOES SKI BREAKS BETTER!
SKY & BEACH
Suncha
BREAKE
NOBODY DOES SKI BREAKS BETTER!
reggae
fest '94
sept. 16/17/18
TICKETS AT
TICKETMASTER.
CHARGE BY-PHONE: (816) 931-3330
Tickets subject to convenience charge
including Ny Vee, Sound Warehouse, Record Town and all Ticketmaster Ticket Centers
KANSAS CITY'S 5TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL
ARTS & REGGAE WORLD MUSIC FESTIVAL
PRESENTED BY FRIENDS OF REGGAE
BOOTH INFORMATION, CALL: 816-746-9616 (AFTER 5 PM)
CELLULAR ONE
MORE INFO: 816-756-2871
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE 864-9500
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
"We Care For KU"
WATKINS
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.
Busy days? Watkins Pharmacy is open Monday-Thursday nights.
IN WESTPORT • 40TH & S.W. TRAFFICWAY
Live it! Wear it! Love it! KU!
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
FAN SHOP
COED NAKED
We have Coed Naked, Big Johnson & Game Bar Hats. Come in and see our great selection of NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, & MLB merchandise.
842*2992
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
108 Business
115 College
120 Announcements
124 Homework
140 Lost and Found
2005 Employment
205 Help Wanted
229 Professional Services
238 Typing Services
Classified Policy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are open.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal for discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation of dis-
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against African Americans, 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
I
100s Announcements
105 Personals
THE ETC. SHOP 229 Mass
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Hopscotch, Bells, and Fendens LEATHER
Backpacks, Belles, Jackets, and Purses
Bausch & Lomb, Raveny, Killer Lops,
I's, Revo, Serenegent, and Vuartet
110 Bus. Personals
New Dance Classes
Country Ballroom Latin and Swing Call 913-266-5914 PatKerrinstructor 918 S. Kansas Avenue Topeka
Be healthier and happier!
Relieve pain and stress with massage therapy!
Student discounts available
Sale Price: £216.00
Cash price: £216
Call Ann Lumaria and Laure Face at 841-1587.
Tarot card readings.
Love? Success? Career?
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer.
Call Anna Lumaria at 841-1587.
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
300s
Merchandise
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also insurance for US citizens going abroad.
Oakland Insurance Service 411; S Main Ottawa,
Ks 60067 100-605-6985.
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
362 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
120 Announcements
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
CASH FOR COLLEGE $90,000 GRANTS AN
QUALIFIED IMEDIATELY. 1-800-235-2434
NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Pool Exchange, main lounge
Openings for CNA's 2:10, 3:00 shift for CNA's full or part-time. Flexible hours. Eudora Nursing Center. 913-542-2176.
Pregnant-considering adoption?
Loving families avail. You help select adoptive family. Confidential/Call-A Call A Dream Fulfilled Adoption Inc toll free 1-800-565-4529
PUTORS: List your name with you. We refer us to you. Student Assistance Center, 328 Strong.
Students who plan to STUDENT TEACH the SPRING 1995 semester (GCPs [must] attend the mandatory workshop) from September 19, at 9 a.m. to 3 p.m in 203 Balley. This meeting is mandated "Preliminary information is necessary."
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong WTCS, the shelter in Lawrence for battered women and their children, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteering as a foster parent. September 17 at 9 a.m. m. Both will be held at the Lawrence public Library, 707 Vermont. For information, please call WTCS at 841-6887.
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
140 Lost & Found
Found on Jayack Boulevard in front of Wescoe
set of keys on a black shewing. 749 to 782 ff.
Lost cat, gray female. Gray with white paws.
Black color. Last seen on 8/23 new 4th and 11th
wives.
LOST: Prescription sunscreens w/ gray case on
phone. Prescription lens w/ Houldf Bison if found.
call 541-842-9185.
I'll use plain text for the instructions and output.
LOST: Prescription sunscreens w/ gray case on
phone. Prescription lens w/ Houldf Bison if found.
call 541-842-9185.
Parakeet found near 19th & Haskell. Describe to claim. Call 864-1523
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$100.hr. possible mailing our circulars. for info call (302) 298-9055
5-8 Daily Monday-Friday to prepare light dinner for a stroke injured wheel chair wi驰 and her husband. Prefer pre-nursing student residing in Lawrence or nearby call 843-410-84m for
Adams Alumni Center needs pantry person for AM flexible shift. Banquet cook PM. Line cook 3-11 PM shift. Position available immediately. Apply in person. 1266 Road Ave. No phone call.
Attendant needed PT to assist male student in wheelchair. Male or Female 2 3 rbs./day. Morning only. No lifting necessary. Experience pre-requisite for every morning. Bags: 84 $/hr. 848-800.
Babyfitter needed for two delightful toddler girls in new home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible days/evenings/weekends. Experience, own car, and references required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to Box #20, University Daily Kansasan 119 Stauffer Flint.
Bucky's Drive-in is now taking applications for part-time employment in 1/2 price rooms, 1/3 room accommodations between 18 and
CNA CLASSES
Need some extra pocket money? Certified Nurse Aide classes will start Sept. 26. Call Eudora Nursing Center, 542-2176 for additional information.
Ask for Sylvia, Mori-Fri.
请勿触摸屏幕
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
...
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9B
1024 8192
Part-time Custodial Positions Available
- Sat. & Sun. 6-11am.
- Sat. 8 am.-12 noon
- Sun. 9-11 am..& Mon, Tues,
Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm.
- Sun. 9am-3pm.
- Wed.-Fri. *9:30-11:30pm.*
- Sun. 9am.-12noon & Mon.
Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm.
- Sun.11:30 am.-3pm. & Wed.5:30-7:30pm.
CallBPI Building Services at 842-6264
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
COLLEGE STUDENTS #10.25-11.65 STARTING
Local branch of all n! will. Fill immediate entry
level openings. Flex time schedules. 3-5 days, eyes.
off the desk. All majors accepted. For
info 841-9066
Computer tutor. Odd hours. Low Pay. Cool machine. Call Mark at 824-1089.
CRUISSE SHIP JHBS !!! Up to $900 weekly. Free room/board. Now hiring skilled/unskilled men and women. No experience necessary. Call 601) 799-1382 ext. S(304) 124 lrs.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING Earn up to $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 1:266-634-0468 ext (C7561)
Division of Continuing Education. Public Services is accepting applications for a student Mail Assistant to work in the Mail Center/Bindery at an off campus site. Duties include preparing information about students for binding equipment, working with various types of outgoing mail & using various methods of binding manuals. Starting salary is $45 per hr. Must be a currently enrolled student. Must be able to work daytime hours. Application open until Sept 16. Contact Info: Continuing Education is an EOAA employer
Dog Sitter needs various times. Near 14th and
Kentucky, 8:00 per hour. Call 749-9230
Division of Continuing Education, Publication Services is accepting applications for a student Mail Assistant to work in the Mail Center /Bindery at an off campus site. Duties include preparing brochures for bulk mailing, operating mailing & outgoing mail & outgoing mail using various methods of binding manuals. Starting salary is $4.50 per hr. Must be a currently enrolled student. Must be able to work daytime jobs. Applications open until Sept 16th Call 841-1776 for appointment. Continuing Educa-
Edminson-Berger Lior seeks responsibility and leadership roles in a weekendshift. Apply in person at 690 Lawrence Street, Boston, MA 02105.
Female vocalist wanted for variety dance band. All styles. High, strong-cheese voice, good performer. Avail. immediately. This is a working band, serious inquiries only 749-3649.
Encouashtic HDLF/L Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for 2 hrs. thevenings and occasionally 4hrs. Sunday mornings. Call 842-8800.
HELP WANTED!! Intramural Soccer officers needed
needed employment. No experience
required. Call 212-345-6789.
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Make up to $2,000+/mo +/no teaching basic conversational English in Taiwan, Japan, or S Korea. No teaching English in other countries.
info. call: (208) 632-1146 ext. J5761.
LEGAL SECRETARY
insurance agency needs part-time clinical help,
10 20 hours per week. Afternoms preferred, but
may be required for other duties.
Laborers wanted for tree service . 62 25hr. time application. available in person on 1043 Maple at the job site.
Large Lawrence law firm is now accepting applications for qualified full-time secretary and part-time word processors. Must have Word Perfect 5.1 and strong secretarial skills
Send resume and salary requirements to
ADIA Personal Services
100 E.9th St, E8
Lawrence, KS 60044
842-1513
Mail Order Telephone Rep-New Home Improvement catalog has part-time weekday openings between 7am-5pm for inbound call and order tasks. Great for people needing flexible schedules during the day. Good clerical skills required. Start $3.9r. Apply in person: H.I. 106.291 Lakeview Rd. Blue bib, wide of Lawrence Paper, straight to right or right; call for directions (865-3652).
Needed. Experienced, stable individual to watch my child in my home from 3:00 to 3:30 M-F. Ref's required. Please call Laura 832-3212 between 8a.m.-5p.m.
Part time and full time positions available. Prefer
part-time. Apply to us. September 9-14 per world
days. Apply in person. September 9-14 per world
days. Apply in person.
Part Time Assistant for App. Management. Good Pay. Resume References. Morning Star 917 NETTEBURG
Part time help needed for delivery work. After
Saturday and Saturday. In apply in person. Hanna's
phone number is (212) 555-8789.
Part-time custold worker needed to work morkings two day per week. Rate $7.00 hour. Call 312-695-4860.
Part-time temporary Extension 4-H Assistant. Agent 4-H agent with the promotion of the 4-H Enrichment program and related work. Required: High School Graduate and ability to work as a computer technician plus mileage, 20 hours per week. October 3, 1994 June 9, 1995. Send resume and 3 letters of reference by September 16 to: Demi Bejot, County Extension Director, 211 Harper, Lawrens, K. 69068 DEC
Research assistant for non-profit organization.
$60/ hour. Call Jackie at 848-3423 for information.
SPRING BREAK 9-SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH &
GO FREE!! !!! Student Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Lower rates to City Beach, Panama City and Panama City Beach. Call 848-648-4849
Stepping Stores is hiring part-part teacher's aides to work in K-12 schools the infant and toddler classrooms. 1000 W. Wall Street, New York, NY 10036.
**STUDENT APPLICATION PROGRAMMER.**
Deadline: 09/16/14. Salary $550 per month. 20 his per week. Duties include Program coding, maintenance of computer programs, programming in C, FASCAL, FOXPRO and/or LAN Currently enrolled in 6 hours at the University of Kansas. A complete job description is available. To apply, submit a cover letter and/or an EOA at Computing Services. EO/AEMployer
Student assistant to work approximately 20 hours a week in the Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology. Duties include processing of graduate and clinical lab testing, running errands and other duties required.
Required Qualifications: Previous office experience. Typing speed of 50 wpm, with a high degree of accuracy, must be available to work 3-4 hour blocks of time and be able to work with various persons on diverse projects, have a basic understanding of word processing, be detailed oriented and proficient.
Preferred Qualifications: Computer experience with knowledge of word processing (Word Perfect and/or Macintosh). Available to work additional hours during summer.
Salary: $4.50 - $5.50 per hour depending on experience
Apply to Pat Statton, Dept. of Pharmacology &
Toxicology, 605 Malott, 91-4 or 214-Monday/Fri.
8am-7pm. Please contact: J.K. Smith STUDENT HOURLY BUSINESS SERVICES ASSISTANT. Deadline: 9/16/94 p. $10. Salary: 5.00 (20 hrs/wk). Duties for Networking and Telecommunications Services include assisting with network configuration, data analysis; preparation and maintenance of computer spreadsheets; processing inventory;
order status, and miscellaneous Business office duties. Must be enrolled in 6 hours at the University of Kansas. To apply, complete a job application at the reception desk in Ellsworth Annex (behind Residence Hall). For further information, contact Networking and Telecommunications Services 694-8000, Ellsworth Annex, 1786 Lawrence, Lawrence, KS 69045. EO/AEMployER
Student Hourly, position Available. Duties:
Receptionist; filing; duplicating; running
errands; typing; proofreading; other duties as
assigned. Position available September 21, 1994
84.25/hr. Application available at the Student
Hourly, location 1613. Deadline September
16, 1994 12:00 PM (Mon).
**STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER**
Day 09:15 19:54 $150 Salary 60% month. 20hr per week Duties include designing and writing programs, maintaining, or enhancing existing applications, and developing programming hours at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programming languages (e.g., C/C++, Java), understanding mnemonics skills, experience and/or ability in software testing Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Complete job description要求。- To apply. - Address: Computer Science Department, 202 of the Computer Center EO/AA EMPLOYER
WE'RE GROWING!
Golden Opprotunities under the Golden Arches
Mc Jobs Open Interviews Sat., Sept. 17th 11a.m.-2 p.m.
at McDonalds on 6th St. Now Hiring for our 2 new
locations and to answer any questions about how you can be a part of our team.
UNIQUE MENITAL HEALTH OPPORTUNITY Needed immediately male roommate to provide emotional support, adult supervision tool is yarden community after psychiatric hospitalization. Roommate will be contracted by the young man's family in conjunction with the Meningitis Manager and will be offered training in nursing and social work staff. Roam, board, stipend provided. Reference and KB1 check required. Please call Nancy Parker (ext 529) 3232 at (817) 725-7500 or Annette Barel (ext 529) 3232 at (817) 725-7500.
Fypist needed for KU student hourly position. Need to have excellent typing skills. IBM-PC computer knowledge, proficiency in German preferred. Qualified undergrads encouraged to apply *4.50/hr*, 20 hours per week. Contact Lusan or Susan at the Hall Center for the Humanities, 211 Waltham St. (800) 763-3900.
Join one of the country's fastest growing retail companies. MANAGEMENT AND SAIL. Full and Part time positions now available. Apply in front door Mall Mall third level 149,214. Forward Portion Outlet Mall third level 149,214.
- and who enjoy great clothes at a fantastic dis-
Work Study Students community service internships $5.00/hour. Apply in Center for community Outreach in Student Senate Office. Call 864-3710 with any questions.
We need $sensitualize people to show high fashion
incremental ALN for details, #10-5 after 5. Hours
available.
WANTED!
who like to talk
* who are friendly
A few great women
molly mcgees
grill & bar
Now Hiring!
Cooks and Servers
A.M. and P.M., Full and Part Time
Apply between 2 and 4 p.m.
2429 IOWA
STUDENT TRAVEL SALESI: Sunchase Touris is seeking ambitious sales respa to promote ski and snowboarding. Visit us on campus or cash free trips. Call today: 1-800-SUNCHASE Terravert Construction Company has opening starting immediately for trim carpenters and laborers. Hardworking individuals who can work with others in a team may be hired by work by 8:00 a.m. m. These jobs involve some heavy lifting, etc. Apply in person at 4104 B Trail Road (around back and in the basement). For more info, call 802-362-8829 between the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
225 Professional Services
College Credit. Compilation under way, worlds
personal credit plus Personal credit plus
For info call 180933 2475
offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KJ students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7349.
DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANSASCTY AREA
CHARLESER.GREEN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature, ESL classes. Highly
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3313.
Experienced Spanish tutor - Struggling? Call
hear. Reasonable rates. Call Michelle 864-4199.
International Video Conversions PAL/SECAM/
TSC 25 for up to 10 hours. Return to return
phone for Web Course with Website Transfer
Box p10 IXC3 ks6657 1:000-8655.
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
R
701 Tennesse
KC Design Studio; Growing creative studio searching for professional, talented artist. Must be experienced in humorous illustration and cartooning. Graphic illustration and Macintosh experience a plus. Send 10 samples of work with ASAE to: Studio, PO Box 2267, Kansas City, MO 40115
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defen
Free Consultation
Mother of two starting registered daycare. Full
learning activities. Responsible rates 841-7271
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. Kelsey
16 Eight 13th
842-1133
RESUMES
*Professional Writing*
*Cover Letters*
*Consultation*
Linda Mouton C.P.R.W.
Linda Morton, C.P.R.W
TRANSCRIPTIONS 842-4619 1012 Mass, Suite 201
A Member of
P A R W
Professional
Association of
Resume Writers
Need a baby sister? College student, loves kids, six years experience with infants, toddlers, have transportation and flexible schedule. Call Melanie at 843-3846.
Having Trouble Locating
locating that hard to find CD?
Prompt abortion and contraception services in Lawrence: 84-5768. Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Junior's Farm Records 924'i Mass St.·842-343 we specialize in hard-to-find CDs
235 Typing Services
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transform scribbles into accurate pages of letter of complaint.
Wait, the word "Former" is after "editor".
The word "scribbles" is after "transform".
The word "pages" is after "letter of complaint". Yes.
Let's re-read the whole thing.
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transform scribbles into accurate pages of letter of complaint.
CLIP THIS AD. Quality typing/word processing
Laser printing. Laser printers. Free estimates.
X
Quality Word Processing Dissertation, Themes,
term-papers. Resources, Business letters, et.
etc.
199 NINJA 250 1350 mi. Ex. Cond L1-723-312
25% Off every KU ID, KU Bid 218 (downstairs next to mens room). Antique Mall, Down 'own Lawrence, LOC Jet of Lots. cams
Put my service to the test.
For anything you need at all,
MARIN THE GRATE
865-2855
865-2855
305 For Sale
Rolling Stones tickets for sale. Great seats. Call Chris 895-0011.
9 Macintosh SE Great for student #4525. 00. Black and white monitor no print! MacBook #483. 772-2767
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
Honda 1800 Elite 50 red cooler, with 3 backpacks. 400-
honda 2300 and the tune+ bike. Make offer.
800-2300.
For Sale: Vespa motor scooter Excellent cond.
$650. Ottawa 242-980
300s Merchandise
Blue padded carpet cut to fit dorm room. Bought last semester for $10, sell for $30. Call Mike
Macintosh SE 30, M B Ram, 40 Mb HD, with Soft-
键盘, F200 keypad, Apple Stylewriter B
f798 000-941-9218.
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Chris: 829-368-5955.
media package; $1,100 or best offer 855-2398
ROLLING STONES TIX Two for sale for Sun-
day sales
ware and carrying case. Apple Style...
New,48 McPolower with new CD ROM multi-
STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and
presentation kit for $3 a semester. Call 1-800-950-6049 or
http://www.etsystudents.com/
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.98
---
Two Fort Amos tickets available. Best offer 965-
2021.
910 N, 2nd * 841-8903
19th & Haskell * 841-7504
Vintage table and 3 chairs for sale. All three are in pretty good condition. $100 or best offer set for sit.
1 2
S
LAWRENCE BREWER'S SUPPLY
305 K. 7TH LAWRENCE, KANSAS 68044 ph.(813) 74-YLAST
4221
NEWING SUPPLY 13-14-YEAST
- Equipment kits starting at $32.00
- 5 gallon batches for .30¢ a beer
Yamaha stereo receiver, still in stock, model XRV780, XRV780, Ask for Troy 913-845-7135.
340 Auto Sales
*93 Suzuki Katana, 400cc, bk w/ purple & tae accents. Like new, clean cond. bike and bike very fast. $390;BOO C. Call Jason at 862-250 9am-5pm or 796-262 evenings & weekends.
1882 Nissan 200XH XK with, sumurof. power,
and lovers, and lovers' 11/180/BB Call Mike at
Mike@mike.bb.com
185B SABT Curve 4 dr 4 spd rp wod pw ec;
185B SABT Curve 4 dr 4 spd rp wod pw ec;
heater valve CV distributor and ignition module;
9 Nissan 460XK red, 5-spd, sunroof, cassette,
phone, alarm, anti-lock brakes, titer cleaning,
AC, power-lock, cruise, 35-kmiles, excellent,
$16,000. call Terre™ 865-0930.
360 Miscellaneous
Corrugated boxes, moving and storage boxes.
Large quantity pricing & small quantity walk-ins-
welcome. Call 843-8111 and ask for the Sales Service
Department. Cash and carry.
VAGABONDBOOKMAN
Buy & Sell Used Rare & Collectables
842-BOOK 1113 Mass.
(2665)
Free Black Lab puppy (5 mgs) to a VERY GOOD
home. Please call 832-1498.
370 Want to Buy
FARMING
Want to buy Basketball tickets, or sports combo
Chris 865-001.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept home 841-STAR (72827)
1 or 3 bedrooms in newer 4 dbm duplex in
a lavender air new in 2016. 2 garage
large Largo.
2 people, $210/mo. David 1-489-5626
Available immediately 2 bedroom apartment,
2 blocks from campus, DW, micro, cable, $450. Call now 794-1493.
Lg. 2 BDRM apt. off campus. Avail. immed.
Lower level garden; new kitchen overlooking ligh-
ing room. Full carpet, working fireplace,
wash/dry, A/C. Very clean! $490 + utilities. 841-389
FOREBED ROOM APARTMENT
Great room plan, bus route, NO
PETS. Avalanche. Call 794-1849.
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some useful nearby amenities.
Pets Welcome No Sublease Fee
ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED 4BEDROOM
South Pointo APARTMENTS
- On KU Bus Route
- Close to Campus
- Swimming Pool
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
Equal 749-4226 M-F-9.5
Dormitories 15th & Kasold Sat-10.4
Room for rent in house with 3 male students, 15 female students. Laundry facilities available.
Spiacius 2 bedroom, near campus, a/c/d/w,
bath route, w/o on-site. Availability Oct 16 & 428
mornings.
- Sand Volleyball Court
Sublease 3 months (Oct-Dec), 2 Bedroom, quiet, lots of space for a kitchen or Tornia or Fountain, or 4/6-8/8 bedrooms or 7/8-10/8 bedrooms.
- Swimming Pool
- Ample Private Parking
- On KU Bus Route
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
- 3 bedroom apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
- Directly on bus route
- Water and Trash Paid
- Available for fall.
Outstanding New Staff!!
1 Roommate room needed ASAP to furniture furnished 3 bedroom apartment, W/D, on bus route, $200+ - $45 per night.
Call 843-4754
"Don't get left out in the cold."
430 Roommate Wanted
I roommate needed immediately. Beautiful 3
form a bag, pick from campus. $25z, price negla-
tion.
1 roommate needed to meet 3 bedroom, 2 bath
roommate. $60 a month. Mail deposit. $25 a month. *utilities* 843-899-369
- By phone: 864-4358
Ads shown in may be bills
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3 females looking for 3rd roommate to live in town-
room. Available cable pab. Available immediately.
88: 837-287.
How to schedule an ad:
N/S, Female Roommate need to share four
baths, DWL, on WK Bus Route $260 +
Utilities. 480-735-4392.
One roommate demand ASAP to share four bed-
room space. $400 bills, rent negotiable.
Missouri. B32-174.
Two shared two bedroom apartment old West Lawrence
$190 month plus 4% insurance. Call 749-7265.
Ads phone may be in charge by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Ads phone: 1-800-511-2970
Roomate need for two bedroom apt_ on Edingham Dr. $25$/mo. +1 maintenance. On the Kus bus rt, and close to Dillons on 3rd St. Please call locally: 766-170 and leave message.
1 female n/a wanted 2 bldm, lt floor of house 2 minutes from Union. $240 + uli. 841-
Stop by the Kaanah 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.
ROOMMATE WANTED! To share a duplex, a
bedroom. Front and back yard. Pets allowed.
Bedrooms are private.
- By Mail: 1191 Stuart Fink Law, Lawrence, KS 68045
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 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 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 in a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
When canceling a classified job that was charged on MasterCard or Credit card, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunda on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Rates nine per day
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
| Num. of insertions: | Cost per line per day |
|---|
| 1X | 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 |
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Classifications
ADS MUST FOLLOW KAANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
140 los & found 305 for sale
252 help wanted 340 auto sales
222 professional services 360 miscellaneous
225 yoga services
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
Name:.
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper
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:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan. 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
PERSONNEL
9-14 Jensen
"The problem, Mr. Fudd, is that you've been having a subliminal effect on everyone in the factory. We're proud of our product, Mr. Fudd, and there's no company in the world that builds a finer skwoo dwivuh. ... Dang! Now you got me doing it!"
10B
Wednesday, September 14, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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.
TITANIUM
At times like these,it's comforting to know that the profes-
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
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
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'
parking make Mt. Oread Medical Arts Centre an agreeable health care alternative.
TIME STORIES
CLINTON PARKWAY
4
SPORTS
Texas Christian guard Royal West will challenge the Kansas football team Saturday. Page 1B.
CAMPUS
A former KU student receives the Freedom of Information award from the Kansas Library Association. Page 3A.
CLOUDY High 83° Low 61° Weather: Page 2A.
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
DAH
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.104,NO.18
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 15,1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
End of baseball season a bummer for fans
'Greed' blamed for loss of Americana
By Colleen McCain
Kansan staff writer
The baseball season ended yesterday with a fax instead of a fastball.
After a 34-day players' strike, 26 of the 28 major league teams voted to cancel the games remaining this season, including the World Series.
MAJOR LEAGUERS: Players look to do something with the season over. Page 1B.
Acting commissioner Bud Selig officially declared the cancellation via fax machine, saying the completion of the season was no longer practical.
"This is a sad day," Selig said in his statement. "Nobody wanted this to happen, but the continuing player strike leaves us no choice but to take this action."
Gone are the pennant races, expanded playoffs and the World Series.
For KU student Jeff Brandberg, an integral
part of life also is gone
"To me baseball is life," the Atlanta junior said. "It's the national pastime, and it's wrong that politics got in the way."
Brandberg said the sport of baseball never would die, but its image had been badly tarnished.
"I miss the game, and I hate the business of baseball," he said. "It's sad to see it crash and burn."
The cancellation means that for the first time since 1904 there will be no World Series. And for the first time since professional baseball leagues began in 1871, a major league season was played with no conclusion.
James Carothers, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, has taught a class about baseball literature. He said players and owners threw out 90 years of history and tradition because of egos and greed.
"This is about as bad as it could get," he said. "And both sides are inexcusable."
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham said fans would have limited patience with the sport after ending the season on a sour note.
"I think that people out there may get to the point where they're tired of this relationship between management and players and just decide to put their money someplace else," Bingham said at a press conference yesterday. "Right now my family has season tickets siting at home that we're not able to use."
Mark Steinle, Olathe junior, said fans found it difficult to pity wealthy players who wanted more money.
"I guess I would side with the owners because I can't relate to players' problems," Steinle said. "What's wrong with making $1 million a year?"
Players' yearly salaries, which remain a point of contention for both parties, now average nearly $1.2 million.
See BETS, Page 5A.
Tim Bialek, Gardner senior, participated in
Cultural diversity celebrated
HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH
By Nathan Olson
Kansan staff writer
Hispanics at KU will spend the next four weeks celebrating diversity in their nopulation.
Hispanic Heritage Month, which begins today and continues through Oct. 15, will focus on this year's theme, "Sharing our celebration, celebrating our diversity."
Gloria Flores, associate director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said that the month was a celebration of identity.
"The basic purpose of the month is awareness and celebration of Hispanic culture," she said.
The Hispanic culture consists of people from Spain, Central and South America, Flores said. They represent a unified yet diverse segment of the population.
KU's first celebration of Hispanic Heritage month took place three years ago when President Bush declared Sept. 15 to Oct. 15 Hispanic Heritage Month, Flores said.
She said that this year, Chancellor Del Shankel would officially proclaim the month Hispanic Heritage Month.
The celebration begins Sept. 15 because on that date in 1821, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, El Salvador and Panama declared independence from Spain. In addition, other nations such as Belize, Chile, Mexico and Brazil celebrate their independence days during Hispanic Heritage Month.
The month will include discussions, lectures by Hispanic professionals, films by Hispanic directors, and dances. The month culminates in two events: a speech by Linda Alvarado, co-owner of the Colorado Rockies, on Oct. 21, and the United States Hispanic Leadership Conference Oct. 27 to Oct. 30 in Chicago.
Wetland debate is complicated, crucial
See MONTH, Page 5A
Jane Tremont
Julianne Peter / KANSAN
Roger Boyd, professor of biology at Baker University, describes the balance between plant and animal life at the Baker Wetlands. The Wetlands are located on 31st Street between Louisiana and Haskell streets.
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Ecosystem supports variety of life
Wetlands.
The word has been bantered about in public hearings, Douglas County Commission meetings, impact studies and area newspapers since the South Lawrence Trafficway debate surfaced a year ago.
But people following the debate from afar may wonder. What on earth is a wetland? Is it a durable part of nature, as trafficway supporters say, or an ecosystem fragile beyond belief, as its opponents say?
The question is more than academic. Work already has begun on the western end of the trafficway, a four-lane thoroughfare that would loop south and west of the city and is designed to ease Lawrence's traffic problem. And eventually it will have to go east, either south of the Wakarusa River or straight through the wetlands on the southeast side of Lawrence.
Two of the proposed routes, one of which goes through the Baker Wetlands and the other through the Haskell Wetlands, would cause environmental damage, opponents say. But the Wakarausa route would not be used by commuters and would not solve Lawrence's traffic problem, county officials say.
Experts disagree on the effect of the trafficway on the wetlands. But they all agree the wetlands are not easily understood.
The Baker and Haskell wetlands, which were once the same habitat, now are separated by a natural waterway south of 31st Street. And on a dry September day, that waterway is
--the only water to be seen. The ground is dry and cracked, and the environment looks like an unwatered lawn during the summer.
but the wetlands are resilient enough to survive such dry spells, said Roger Boyd, professor of biology at Baker University in Baldwin. Boyd said under the earth, crawfish were burrowing and waiting for the water to return in the winter. And the plants poking through the mud are arrowleaf, which only grows in mud or in water no deeper than three feet.
"When the water comes in in the spring, you can see all kinds of neat stuff swimming there," Boyd said.
Farther south, ditches create pools that provide homes for muskrat, mallards, blue heron and a variety of frogs. Tiny circular plants called duckweed cover water surfaces with a green sheet.
Boyd said both wetlands were rich and diverse environments. He said he and other professors so far had found more than 500 species of plants, 210 species of birds, 36 species of reptiles, 22 species of mammals and 16 species of fish. Boyd, who specializes in birds, said he had timed the rate at which he could spot different bird species in the past, and one morning identified 70 species during a two-hour period.
"I shouldn't have any difficulty getting 100 species," he said. "I don't know any one-mile area anywhere where I can get 100 species."
The wetlands also serve an important biological function, Boyd said. Found in lowland areas near rivers, wetlands absorb the excess water that runs over riverbanks. The dense soil and thick roots also absorb pollutants and bacteria, keeping water clean.
Boyd said the proposed 31st Street route for
See WETLANDS, Page 8A.
How wetlands form
$\textcircled{1}$ Wetlands consist of lowlands near rivers. $\textcircled{2}$ The rivers sometimes flood, going over their natural levees and covering the land. $\textcircled{3}$ When the waters fall, some remain in the lowlands, creating wetlands.
2
---
$\textcircled{3}$
---
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
INSIDE
Tori Amos Bearing her soul through music isn't easy for Tori Amos. But it's the secret to her soulful, personal lyrics. Page 49.
MARY JONES
Sticky fingers: campus burglaries are up
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
From parking permits to car stereos to televisions, more people on campus have been reporting their belongings missing.
Although campus crime overall has been declining the past three years, burglaries have been on the rise, KU police said.
From 1992 to 1993, the number of burglaries on campus increased 94 percent. While 291 on-campus burglaries were reported last year, by Aug. 31 of this year, 169 had been reported. But Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek of the KU police said most burglaries occurred during the holiday season.
Burglary, or the unauthorized entry into an area with the intent to steal something or commit a felony, is not a problem only for students. Faculty and staff also are victims of campus thefts, she said.
Rozmiarek said she was not sure why the number of on-campus burglaries had increased, but said she thought it could be that more burglaries were being reported.
Rozmiarek said people could help prevent burglaries by locking doors, even if they were leaving for a minute, and keeping valuables such as jewelry out of sight. People who live in residence halls should leave expensive or unnecessary valuables at home or locked somewhere other than in their rooms.
People should use common sense and pay attention to where they put their belongings, she said.
Another preventative measure is engraving valuable materials. Rozmiraek said etching a driver's license number on computers, stereos and other large items could help police return recovered items.
Rozmurek said anyone could check out an engraver from the KU police department in Carruth-O'Leary Hall. Engravers can be checked out on a 24-hour basis and are free to use.
"If we find property and it is engraved or photographed, it is easier for us to locate whose property it is," Rozmiarek said.
Although not everyone is lucky enough to get their property back, getting money from insurance sometimes helps.
Campus crime
Statistics for burglary on campus have fluctuated over the last several years.
1994 81 Total
88 169 ■ On campus a campus auto burglaries
1993 91 200 291
1992 35 150 ■ On campus burglaries
115
1991 111 234 *Figures from Jan.1 through Aug.31.
123
0 100 200 Krista McGlohan/KANSAN
Mike Gurley, operations superintendent for State Farm Insurance, said buying renters insurance was one way to get reimbursed for stolen items. Before buying insurance, he said, students should check to see if they are covered under their parents' policies.
性
2.
2A
Thursday, September 15, 1994
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
✨
Horoscopes
By Jean Dixon
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE! Because you really care about doing a good job, you will find great success professionally. Romance will be happiest with someone who shares your intellectual interests. Do not let a strong physical attraction blind you to someone's weaknesses. Early in 1995, be on the lookout for accounting mistakes. One who boasts of great credentials may have a less than stellar track record. Check references carefully.
T
CLEEBRITIES BORN THIS DATE: quarterback Dan Marino, pianist Bobby Short, actor Tommy Lee Jones, mystery author Agatha Christie.
♂
**ARIES** (March 21-April 19)
**ARIES** relations with a co-worker show decided improvement. A trip or visit could be part of an invitation. Give top priority to projects that promise large financial gains.
5
II
TAUURS (April 20-May 20). A real estate opportunity improves - thanks to an expert's advice. Your contagious optimism will sway others where joint ventures are concerned.
M
69
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
worries or loses a heavy workload could sap your energy. Take a short break and regroup. Spend time with your loved ones is a wonderful for lunged nerves.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Your first impression of a member of the opposite sex is probably correct.
Proceed with caution if considering a new investment of time and money. Catch up on your professional reading this coming week end.
SORPIOR (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Those connected with the arts feel truly inspired today. Romance is heavenly; recent doubts disappear when you get back to visit with old friends should be great fun. Avoid putting mate on the spot.
Arrow
CANCER (June 21- July 22)
Financial backlog you counted on may be delayed or unavailable.
Do not despair! Slow-ups could work to your advantage. The news from those at a distance is promising. Keep close tabs on spending.
O
VS
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21): Tackle a problem that ares
arried yesterday. Artistic energy is plent
ful but should be used judiciously.
Avoid putting too much stock in
promises of people you barrel
know. Leave romance on the bac
burner.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A relationship reaches a crossroads. A live-wire friend may get on your nerves at times. Rethink your living arrangements. You may want privacy more than companion ship.
CAPICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Friends and relatives share good news. Put more time and effort into your professional relationship The good will of your co-worker can help you come to terms with what seem like insurmountable problems. Repay favors.
VIP
WATER
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22) the unencumbered waters are tricky. Goslow. A financial offer or litigation could call for immediate action. Say "no" if you have any qualms. A change of attitude will improve the chances for lasting romance.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Do not let faulty hunches tempt you into taking wild risks today. A cool head will keep you out of hot water. Ideas could protect joint funds. Find out more. Consult experts.
X
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Your social life could slow to a snail's pace. Touch base with relatives. Make better use of your creativity. Be kind to the worker, you would benefit from taking up a relaxing hobby.
TODAY'S CHILDREN are well-organized and methodical, able to complete tough tasks in record time. Following a schedule often makes these youngsters feel more secure and productive. They like to know what exactly will happen next. A career in law or medicine may hold special interest for those intellectual Virgos. Although they are not particularly extravagant, their Virgos do appreciate their creature comforts. When traveling, they want to go first-class!
Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairway-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60404, 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. 60404. 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. 68045.
ON CAMPUS
■ Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Wilson at 865-0066.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 10 a.m. today in 4034 Wescoe Hall.
Canterbury House (Episcopal/Anglican) will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
KU Literary Club will meet at 5:15 p.m. today at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jack Lerner at 749-5225.
Japan Karate-Do Ryobu-Kai Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call Dan Blood at 864-7029.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Par lors in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
Teach for America KU will sponsor an organizational meeting at 7 tonight at Alcove I in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Brynn Edmonds at 841-5567.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor Catholic Scripture Study Group at 7:30 tonight at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kent McDonald at 749-0343.
Ithica Christian Outreach will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 815-9529.
LesBiGayS OK will hold a business meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Eric Moore at 864-3091.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
**Ammey International will sponsor a letter writing session on 8 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.**
KU Democrats will sponsor a speech by Judy Hancock, candidate for 3rd Congressional District at 8 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ted Miller at 842-4596.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at 158 Strong Hall. For more information, call John Dale at 749-5666.
Two mountain bikes valued together at $1,420 were stolen about 4:20 a.m. yesterday from the 1500 block of El Dorado Drive, Lawrence police reported.
Road, Lawrence police reported. Police said $5,000 damage was done to the convertible top and $700 damage was done to the left front fender and grill of the car.
Four tires on a 1991 Honda were slashed about 1 p.m. Sunday in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported. Police said damage to the tires was $1,600.
ON THE RECORD
A 1979 MG convertible was broken into about 2:30 a.m. Tuesday in the 2400 block of Westdale
A KU administrator's house on the 900 block of Alabama Street. was wandalized about 10:30 p.m. Saturday, Lawrence police reported. Police said the southeast side of the white house had blue paint on it and caused $1,000 damage.
A KU student's car was broken into about 6:20 p.m. Monday in the Jayhawker Towers parking lot, KU police reported. Police said damage to the black convertible top of the GEO Tracker was $500.
A blue staff parking permit valued at $120 was stolen about 4:30 p.m. Monday from a car in the Gertrude Sellers Pearson Hall parking lot, KU police said.
The rear window of a KU student's 1988 Plymouth was broken early yesterday morning in the 100 block of East Seventh Street. Lawrence police reported. Police said damage to the window was $300.
TODAYS TEMPS
Weather
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
TODAY
IGH I LOW
86° • 69°
83° • 63°
82° • 61°
81° • 61°
83° • 61°
78° • 61°
74° • 62°
81° • 56°
70° • 55°
87° • 69°
83° • 59°
84° • 67%
85° • 61%
FRIDAY
Mostly cloudy and windy with scattered showers and a 50 percent chance for rain
Continued cloudy with a 50 percent chance of showers.
7756
8361
SATURDAY
7455
Clearing up and slightly cool.
Source: Matt Jezewski, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
$
September 14, 1994
Stock market report
Dow Jones
15.47
3,895.33
NYSE
NYSE
0.64
258.48
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 356,338,390
↓
↑
Nasdaq
2.78
768.61
Advances 1,108
Declines 1,058
Unchanged 699
-
ASE
.52
457.33
Carlos O'Kelly's
MEXICAN CAFE
WEEKLY
MARGARITAS AND FAJITAS FOR OVER 2 YEARS
MONDAY
756 Killians Red Draws
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 Off All Dinner Picados
TUESDAY
WEDDAY
$2 All Imports
$5.95 Sancho/Monterrey Combo
99¢ Kids Meals
WEDNESDAY
WEDNESDAY
$2 Margaritas on the rocks
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
- CARRYOUT AVAILABLE!
SPECIALS
8 3 2 - 0 5 5 0
THURSDAY
THURSDAY
$2 Bud Light 23 Oz. Tap
$1.50 Desserts
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
SUNDAY
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 off Chimis
$2 Bloody Marys
Hours of Operation:
M-Th 11-11
Fri,Sat 11-12
Sun 11-10
Bucky's
- TASTE OF THE WORLD BEER CLUB!
707 W. 23rd Street
Pork T Regular Fry Large Soft Drink ONLY $2.99!!
Limited TimeOnly
Bucky's
9th & IOWA • 842-2930
BROWN BAG SPECIAL
Pork T
Regular Fry
Large Soft Drink
ONLY $2.99!!
Limited Time Only
Lawrence
Brewer's
Supply
Call us and start making your own BEER! 305 E. 7th St. (913) 74- YEAST
Attention students who will apply to the School of Education
PPST Deadline Information:
Sept. 20- Registration deadline for Oct. 22 test date Oct.11- Registration deadline for Nov. 12 test date
If you intend to apply for fall 1995 admission to the School of Education, the School must RECEIVE your PPST scores BEFORE the February 15 deadline. If you have not yet taken the PPST, you must take it this semester. You may pick up registration materials at Testing Services in 2056 Watkins. Please note that ETS must receive your registration materials by the deadlines listed above.
TEAM HANDBALL CLUB
Time: Thursday, September 15, 7:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m.
Place: Robinson Gymnasium Entrance by the swimming pool
Come and Learn One of the Fastest Team Games in the World
No Team Handball experience necessary
If you can't make it, Please call
Rey 843-8676 or Bob 843-5928
08/12/1972
Since
VATKING
"We Care For KU"
1907
PENCILS
Do You Have a Hold on Your Enrollment?
Approximately 2,450 KU students are on hold because they have not documented their Mandatory Immunization (the MMR). The hold must be removed by October 4 to enable Spring '95 enrollment. Students receiving a letter from Watkins regarding the MMR should bring the letter to Watkins Immunizations, Monday-Friday, 8am-4:30 p.m.
Students born before 1957 are exempt but must submit a Health History form to Watkins Immunizations. There is no charge for a required immunization. = 864-9533.
UDENT HEALTH SERV
864-9500
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 15, 1994
3A
Collection is proudly not 'politically correct'
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
Laird Wilcox doesn't like extreme left-wingers. Nor does he like extreme right-wingers.
But he is fascinated by them and their writings — so much so that in 1965 he founded the Wilcox Collection, a small library of right- and left-wing books, newsletters and newspapers found in the Spencer Research Library.
He has been adding to the collection ever since.
"I've always been interested in unusual
Wilcox's interest was rewarded in July, when the Kansas Library Association gave him the Freedom of Information Award, which is awarded annually to individuals or groups whose archival work contributes to intellectual freedom in Kansas.
political movements and particularly why people join them," he said.
Becky Schulte, assistant curator of the Kansas Collection, which includes the Wilcox Collection, said the award was almost custom-made for Wilcox.
When Wilcox first handed the collection over to the University in 1965, it consisted of two file boxes of books and newsletters. Today, it has close to 10,000 items, including video and audio tapes and thousands of pamphlets and yellowed newspapers.
"When we saw the award announcement, we knew immediately he was a definite contender." she said.
Through the Wilcox Collection, a student could watch a promotional video for former Ku Klux Klanman David Duke's run for the U.S. Senate, read a flier promoting the rights of obesian mothers or browse through the correspondence of perennial presidential candidate Lydon LaRouche.
"They're the kind of things that get trampled underfoot at a rally," Schulte said. "Nobody thinks to save and categorize them."
Wilcox, who was a KU student in the mid-1960s, said his fascination with extremist literature dated back to his childhood.
One of the ways for him to express that fascination, he said, was with the Wilcox Collection.
"It's a celebration of the wide diversity of opinion in our country," he said. "I believe very strongly in civil liberties and free speech."
Wilcox said the political climate on today's
college campuses was hostile to free speech, which made the Wilcox Collection that much more important.
"I worry about freedom of speech on campus, especially with P.C.," he said. "Freedom of speech is always under assault. That concerns me."
But with the Wilcox Collection, future historians will know that not everyone had mainstream political opinions, said Becky Schulte.
"It is important because it documents the feelings of a segment of America," she said. "These people were here, and this is what they believed."
Hispanics hope to show diversity
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
People often make false assumptions about Valera Cordoca because she is Hispanic.
"People always ask me about eating tacos in my country," said Cordoca, La Paz, Bolivia, sophomore. "But tacos are not popular in Bolivia."
Organizers of Hispanic Heritage Month, which begins today and runs through Oct. 15, said they hoped to educate people that Hispanics have separate, distinct cultures. The theme of the month is "Sharing our Culture, Celebrating our Diversity."
Karen Gutierrez, secretary of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, said that many people did not know about the diversity of Hispanic origins. The organization is sponsoring the month along with Student Senate and Student Union Activities.
Gutiérrez said that people lumped all Hispanic people into the Mexican culture.
But, Cordoca said, each Hispanic culture had its own attributes.
"Assumptions about the Hispanic culture range from food to political issues," she said. "But all the aspects of different cultures make so much of a difference."
Cordoca also said that people often did not realize that differences existed in the Spanish language.
"Though the nations are Spanish-speaking, things such as slang and accents are different." Cordoca said.
Rubens Gomes, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, graduate student, said that some differences in the Hispanic cultures existed because different countries had different political influences.
Hallmark to pull card as protests continue
Kansan staff writer
By James Evans
National and local protests against the Chicago-based Recycled Paper Greetings company are getting some results.
Muslims objected to the inside of one of the company's greeting cards, which reads "So you're feeling like Shiite. Don't Mecca big deal out of it."
Munecaera Naseer, secretary of the Muslim Student Association's Women's Chapter, said yesterday that Hallmark had agreed to remove the card from its shelves nationwide. Many Hallmark stores carry Recycled Paper Greetings products.
"If by this Friday we don't hear from the company, there will be a national boycott of any store that carries its product," Naseer said.
She said the protests are winning the Muslim community a lot of support.
"The Evangelical Lutheran Church sent out a disclaimer saying that they didn't think the card was appropriate," Naseer said.
Locally, Muslim and nonMuslim students yesterday morning protested the card in front of the Kansas Union.
The protesters involved asked students to sign a petition to take the card off the shelves and asked students to sign a letter asking for a formal apology from the card company.
"Personally, I feel that in a country where we're learning to respect each other, the card has no place in our communities," Naseer said.
She said that a nationwide protest was planned for tomorrow against the company.
Muhammed Saeed, Lawrence resident, who is on the ninth day of a hunger strike protesting the company, said he was pleased with the local protests.
He said that since finding out about the card, he found another card by the same company making fun of Saudi Arabia.
"It just shows you the mentality of the people that create these cards." Saeed said.
HAPPY BIRTH CITY
Com Henderson
Melissa Lacev / KANSAN
Vonnegut lecture heads list of Senate funding requests
By James Evans Kansan staff writer
Student Senate committees approved $16,000 worth of legislation Tuesday night that will be up for
m sertone, Garnett sophomore, adds her signature to an eight-foot card in celebration of KU's 129th birthday. The card was later presented by the Student Alumni Association to Chancellor Del Shankel and will be displayed in his office for the rest of the week.
approval by the full senate next week.
"Most of the bills were very normal," said Eric Medill, student body vice president.
Happy Birthday. KU
C. W. HAWKINS
He said that $6,000 of legislation was more of a normal week
Kurt Vonnegut
It was the second time for the bill to be looked at by the finance committee. The bill originally made it to Senate last week after an appeal by Ken Martin, sponsor of the bill.
for committees, but the Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Honorarium bill pushed the price tag out of the normal range for a week. The bill requests $8,001 to finance a speech by Vonnegut on campus next semester.
The bill failed to make it through Senate because some senators didn't follow the proper procedures, and Student Union Activities had not looked for outside funding for the lecture, said Tonya Cole, holdover senator and member of the finance committee.
She said she would probably vote for the new bill for $8001 if they looked into outside financing.
Lauren Smith, events coordinator for Student Union Activities, said that SUA had now asked for outside funding for the lecture but hasn't received any confirmed sponsors for the $12,500 event. SUA has approached several academic departments on
campus for funding.
Smith said that SUA was planning to have the lecture by Vougnet, who has not been contacted by SUA, in early February at the Lied Center.
Smith said that if Vounegut spoke he would give a lecture titled "How to get a job like mine." She said his lectures were often free flowing, and he spoke on a variety of subjects.
Adam Mayer, Nunemaker senator and sponsor of the new bill, said that Vonnegue would be an excellent speaker.
Mayer, who represents freshmen and sophomores, said that he really enjoyed Vonnegut's books and other writings.
"He's a phenomenal writer," Mayer said. "He'll bring a great outside perspective on life."
He said that he was confident the bill would be passed by the Senate next Wednesday.
Committee action
This is legislation that went through Senate committeees Tues day night.
Bill to fund a lecture by Kurt VonnegutJr. ($8,001) PASSED
Bill to fund Pinch Magazine ($4,700) PASSED
■ Bill to Fund Latin American Solidarity($2,265) PASSED at $450
■Bill to Fund Chinese Student and Scholar Student Friendship Assoc. ($1,460.50) PASSED
■ Bill to Fund the Student Political Task Force ($789) PASSED
Meyers wants to finish what she started
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
U. S. Rep. Jan Meyers believes in self-imposed term limits.
That is why she run for a position in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1984 after spending 12 years in the Kansas Senate and five years on the Overland Park City Council.
"I am not one of those that just stays forever in a loafer." Mews said.
Meyers said people should stay in a job long enough to do what they set out to do.
But Meyers, who is running for her sixth term as the U.S. representative for the 3rd District of Kansas, said she still had something to contribute.
"I've only had Douglas County for a couple years because in 1991 they redrew the lines for the U.S. House," Meyers said. "When they redrew the lines, I wanted Douglas County very much. It's a very educationally oriented county."
Meyers represents Wyandotte, Johnson, Miami and a portion of Douglas counties.
$250,000 by the end of her campaign, including the primary race. The money will come from individual and political action committee contributions, which are individual contributions pooled together in the name of a special interest
PETER L. BURKE
Jan Meyers
Meyers said she planned to spend about
Some of the money
also will come from fund-raisers sponsored in Meyers' name, she said.
"I raise the money as I need it, and then I'm broke at the end." Mewers said.
She said she wanted to address three major issues in her campaign.
"I think the three most important things to me are deficit reduction, creating a sound business and economic climate and welfare reform." Mewers said.
She said representatives needed to address the deficit now for future generations.
"We've been spending more than we've been taking in for 40 years," Meyers said. "Somebody, sooner or later, is going to have to pay for that, and that's your generation."
Meyers is a supporter of small businesses because of their effect on the rest of America. Meyers defined small businesses as manufacturers with less than 500 employees and retailers that make less than $1 million.
"Small business is the backbone of America, the mainstay of the economy," Meyers said.
Owners of small businesses provided most of the entry-level jobs for students just out of college, she said.
Meyers said recently proposed health care reforms could harm small businesses. If they are required to pay healthinsurance for all employees, which the plans stipulated, some may be forced out of business.
"There are a lot of small businesses hanging on by their fingernails," she said.
Meyers also said she wanted to make changes to the welfare system because it
was not being used as originally intended. "It's not a good thing but an incentive to join a very miserable kind of life," Meyers said.
Meyers said she had created a bill that would freeze Aid to Families with Dependent Children, a monthly cash grant, because people that did not need welfare were using it.
"I think it's time to back off of welfare payments to people in a very slow and compassionate way," she said.
Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, said Judy Hancock, Meyers' Democratic opponent, probably was the toughest competition Meyers had seen in her career as a representative.
Loomis said he thought this would be the last time Meyers would run — even though she had not mentioned any plans to leave Washington — because she was not controversial enough.
"She's not seen as a strong representative," Loomis said. "She's a moderate Republican in a district that is comfortable with moderate Republicans."
CLASSICAL MUSIC ON CD
Kief's has Lawrence's Largest and Best Collection of Classical Music This Week... Take $2.00 Off (ea.) Kief's Everyday Low Price on Classical CD's!!
Not valid with other offers Excludes orange-tag items Good thru 9-19-94
KIEF'S CDs & TAPES
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913·843·1811 913·842·1438 913·842·1544
4A
Thursday, September 15, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
CARSON ELROD
MTV should carry more consistent messages
CARSON ELROD The violence is beside the point. MTV should just stop the hypocrisy and confusion:
The hot sun pierces the desert sky. Two cowboys stand opposite each other, eyes locked, hands on guns as if to say, "I don't like you very much."
The men draw closer as if itching to fire. Somewhere in the distance a scorpion crawls under a rock and a rattlesnake lets out an echoing noise through the scene. As the second of eminent doom approaches, the men quickly embrace and begin to dance. The screen flashes, "Would you rather they had killed each other?" Then the heartfelt, "Stop the violence" slogan from MTV.
This message and others like it can hardly be said to be bad ones. However, this outcry for the loving union of mankind is immediately followed by the video from Dr. Drre that depicts
I am not trying to sound like a scary mix of Rush Limbaugh and Tipper Gore in a cute college censorship package. I like seeing Eazy E hunted down like a dog by a posse with AKs just as much as the next guy. The problem I have is with MTV for miscommunication of what they are all about.
Holding this power, I believe it is the duty of MTV, acknowledging their lack of competition, to just do what they do best. Play videos. I am not saying get rid of the "Stop the violence" campaign. I am not asking them to get rid of the violent videos. I am asking for a little consistency. Proclaiming the station to be a hateless, loving and altruistic medium is about as believable as Seinfeld getting canned to make way for the breakthrough new sitcom starring Nancy Kerrigan and her wacky skating antics.
Eazy E being chased down the street by a posse with AK-47s. I have a feeling that at this point the kids at home are experiencing the same confusion they felt when they heard that coke and pop rocks candy blew up Mikey from the Life cereal commercials.
In this discovery of their preeminence, they have discovered that they pretty much have free reign over dictating a lot in terms of style, pop culture and how a lot of people treat each other. The MTV executives would have to represent a cross section of large granite status not to recognize this.
MTV is not a world of daffodils and unity. MTV is a world of rock 'n' roll music and always has been. The owners are good capitalists, and they
What I am getting at is that as MTV exists now, if you go over to Snow Hall and pull a math science major away from a computer for a minute, they will tell you that, if you pair what MTV says to what MTV does, logically
deserve credit for pioneering the way for a new generation of art and concept in the way that music is presented. However, MTV has come to recognize that it is the ONLY one doing it. Since VH-1 is owned by MTV, it isn't really in the competition category. (Not to mention most my age would rather die than see Whitney Houston belt out that last chorus to "I will always love you" one more time.)
the whole channel should cease to exist altogether from the cancellation and contradiction principle.
The moral of this seemingly trivial rant is that we do get all of our ideas and beliefs from somewhere. We need to question the sources of our information the same way we question anything else. If the coolest person in the world ran up to you and said "You know what I can't stand?" Peaches. Hate 'em, Whoowee, I would rather die than eat a peach." Then that person proceeded to take a peach from their pocket and devour it, would you question what this person was really all about? Yeah, me too.
Carson Eldrod is a Topeka junior in history and theater.
VIEWPOINT
Large,enthusiastic crowds make lights seem practical
fans and players, the Athletic Department moved Saturday's game against Michigan State under the lights. The
In an effort to increase attendance and provide milder temperatures for
The experiment worked.
should consider it.
All of the night games played in the past three years have been met with large crowds and even greater enthusiasm.
STADIUM LIGHTS
The success of the night football games should encourage the Athletic Department to consider buying lights
lights.
The night games are supported by local merchants, who have enjoyed full business days on those Saturdays.
result: the largest homeopener crowd ever, mild weather and a victory.
While the success of one event does not by itself justify buying permanent lights, the department
The only stumbling block is the cost of new lights. If the permanent lights would be cost-effective, then night games should become a regular occurrence.
RICHARD BOYD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
Computerized enrollment is administrative letdown
Returning students to the University of Kansas were no doubt looking for the computer enrollment system that was promised by the administration during the fall semester. The University Da il l y Kansan even ran an article explaining to students how the system would work much time would save in ment process.
If the administration is going to promise the fee-
November of this year. It is now believed the system will not even be ready by then.
would work and how much time students would save in the enrollment process.
COMPUTER ENROLLMENT
Students were told computer enrollment would be possible by now. But the administration set a deadline it could not keep.
Since that time the deadline was pushed back to
paying students a service it should be delivered within the time period that they themselves set.
It's not so much an issue of how students enroll, but how much trust is fostered by an institution that doesn't live up to its promises.
MARK YONALLY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSANSTAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
JEN CARR Business manager
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN General manager. news adviser
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
News ... Eara Bennett
Editorial ... Donella Hearne
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Doron Bennett
Melissa Lacey
Features ... Traci Carl
Planning Editor ... Susan White
Design ... Noah Muusser
Assistant to the editor .. Robble 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 mgr Holly Boren
Regen Overy
Marketing director Alan Stiglic
Creative director John Carlton
Classified mgr Heather Niahou
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photo-tanned.
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.
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 California at Berkeley are required to submit their letters.
WE'RE INVADING HAITI!
WE'RE INVADING AMERICA.
VANQUISH CASTRO NO!
Jeff MacNelly/ Chicago Tribune
No solutions arise to problems of violence
Now it is time to find those to blame for the incredibly tragic life and death of Robert Sandifer, the Chicago youth who was both a suspected killer and a murder victim at age 11.
No problem. There are more than enough targets for blame. By the time you read this, you'll probably have heard them all: his parents, the courts, social service agencies, gangs, politicians, gun laws, drugs, bloody movies and television, rap music, schools, the economy, slavery and our violent and racist society.
Have I missed anyone or anything?
Sure, but it doesn't matter because we don't have room for it all, so let's just go with the most obvious suspects.
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
PARENTS: Robert's dad is a criminal and sadist who used children as ashtrays. His mother is a drug user and a fool, who said of her son while the police were hunting him: "He's a nice kid who just needs some counseling."
Obviously, these two boobs should not have had children. But how do you stop them? Tie her tubes? Snip his organs? No, because that's unconstitutional and will remain so unless we become a totalitarian state. Refuse to support them with withholding welfare? That would be legal, but it would punish children, so white liberals and black politicians would scream about racism and fascism. Snatch the children away at the first sign of family neglect or abuse? And do what with them? There aren't enough foster homes for even a fraction of the goofed-up ghetto kids; we'd have to build the world's biggest chain of
MIKE ROYKO
orphanages. So, realistically what do we do about teen-age mothers and thug fathers, third generation welfare illiterates? Darned if I know. I guess we do what we've been doing: conduct studies, then wring our hands and worry.
THE LEGAL SYSTEM: The trouble with the legal system is that it is so legal. Cops can't sweep public or private housing for guns or drugs: unconstitutional. They can't roust known or suspected gangbangers on sight: ditto. Judges and social agencies can't grab kids from moronic parents without terrible cause, and even if they could, where are they going to put them? The fact is, our laws, legal system and social agencies are not geared to handle the growing madness in our society.
THE POLITICAL SYSTEM: Our Washington politicians can't or won't do anything more than slap billion-dollar bandages on gaping social wounds, while local officials must take the blame and are stuck with mopping up the blood. We'd be better
off dumping the entire Crime Bill and most federal anti-crime and social programs and letting local governments and police have the money. They know what the problems are and how to make a dent. The Washington conservatives say we should lock them all up, while knowing that it's impossible to lock up every yahoo the police arrest. The white liberals and black officials say we should spend more money. In recent decades, we've spent more and more money, and now we have 11-year-olds killing 12-year-olds, and 14-year-olds killing 11-year-olds. For all the good the spending has done, we might as well have given the money to the 11-year-olds so they could play video games instead of shooting each other.
OUR VIOLENT CULTURE: OK, let us ban all violence, sex and dirty language on television and radio, in the movies, comic books, video games, rap music, novels, advertising, vulgar T-shirts, wrestling, hockey and anything else that might taint impressionable minds. But if we are going to censor all of the grime and gore that much of our population obviously enjoys as entertainment, be prepared for a long wait. The last legal appeal will probably be filed and heard in about 100 years.
So we can all mourn the short and sad life of Robert Sandifer and point fingers. Then we can wait a few days for a new shocking headline and start it all over again.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
LETTER TO
THE EDITOR
Is the IRA a ruthless terrorist organization, and are they responsible for thousands of deaths all across Britain from London to Belfast as claimed in a recent Kansan editorial? An examination of any facts relative to this topic rejects these claims.
Image of IRA is result of British propaganda
First of all, the violence in Northern Ireland is widely understood to be the result of religious intolerance between Irish Catholics and Irish Protestants. The media have propagated this version of the struggle and portray the British Army as peacekeepers caught between warring Irish factions.
The truth, however, is that British involvement in Ireland is imperialistic. British propaganda has been relentless in its condemnation of the IRA as a "band of craved thugs" and have thereby succeeded in blocking recognition of the wider dimensions of the conflict. Consequently, the IRA has almost no opportunity to explain its actions to a gullible public fed on news reports which reflect only the British view. This tack is not unique to the Irish conflict. George Washington, Samuel Adams and many of the freedom fighters revered in American history were once branded terrorists by the British. One of the leaders of the Israeli Irgun condemned as a "ruthless terrorist" by the British was Menachem Begin, who subsequently distinguished himself as a brilliant statesman for his part in the Israel and Egypt peace accord. Gandhi of India was another of Britain's branded terrorists who suffered imprisonment and was ridiculed for his attempts to gain Indian independence. The list is inexhaustible. Others also suffered extremes of oppression at the hands of British imperial policy of partisan politics, of which Ireland is both its first and last victim. Second, to accuse the IRA of "thousands of deaths ... all across Great Britain ... from London to Belfast" is not supported by the facts. Officially, the number of violent deaths credited to IRA activities in the past 25 years of strife in the six northeastern counties of Ireland is less than those credited to Union pro-British paramilitary groups.
While I share the revolition to violence in Ireland, I question the fair mindedness of those who view the IRA as terrorists and the British as innocent peacekeepers. "In war," Winston Churchill once said, "the first casualty is truth."
Finally, the vast majority of violent deaths due to the struggle for a united and free Ireland have taken place within the six northeastern counties of the province of Ulster. No plans to systematically engage in killings on mainland Britain have ever been contemplated by the IRA and none have ever been identified by anyone.
June Leahy
Limerick, Ireland
graduate student
HUBIE
WE TAKE A BREAK FROM YOUR DAILY CARTOON TO BRING YOU THIS COMMENTARY:
SO THE UNIT - LENTUAL GUANTS CANCELED THE WORLD SERIES HERE!
WE TAKE A BREAK FROM YOUR DAILY CARTOON TO BRING YOU THIS COMMENTARY!
SO, THE INTEL—LEGEND GUNS CANELED THE WORLD SERIES, EH?
HAH! THAT'S JUST WHAT THOSE OVERRAID BABIES DESERVE!!!
THEY WE MESSED WITH THE PUBBLK'S LOYALTY ONE TOO MANY TIMES! THIS WILL BE BASE-BALL'S SWAN SONG!
WE ALL KNOW THEY WERE GREedy AND NON THEY WE PROVEN IT. THEY TOOK AWAY THE LAST THING THEY COULD THAT MATTERED — THE GAME ITSELF.
TELL ME, WHO OF YOU WILL EVER WATCH A BASEBALL GAME AGAIN WITHOUT REMEMBERING THAT ONE MILLION DOLLARS A YEAR STILL IS NOT GOOD ENough FOR THREE GUYS?
THERE'S NOTHING TO MAKE ME COME BACK. BASE-BALL DIED WHEN GEORGE BRETCOUT ANYWAY.
SO, OF COURSE ALL OF MY ENDS WILL NOW BE FOREVER DEVELOP SOLYLY TO THE LOYALTY OF THE ONE START — IS SERVING.
X
By Greg Hardin
哭泣
GEORGE BRECKONT
ANYWAY.
SO, OF COURSE,
ALLOF MY ENERGY
WILL NOW BE
FOREVER DEVOTED
SOLLY TO THE
LORAITY OF THE
ONE STORY THAT
IS TRULY DE-
SERVING . . .
OOOH oh OOOH
oh! QQOOOH
OH, oh...
GE
GH
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 15, 1994
5A
Ships headed for Haiti
Clinton sets sights on ousting leaders
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton declared yesterday the United States has "exhausted every available alternative" short of military invasion to oust Haiti's militant rulers.
"They're going to leave one way or the other," he warned as American warships sailed toward Haiti.
Sounding angry and determined, Clinton said there was still time for the military leaders to leave on their own. "They do not have to push this to a confrontation," he said.
Clinton's warnings came on the eve of an Oval Office address to build support for his policy which is heavily opposed in Congress by Republicans and Democrats. Polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans are opposed to an invasion.
Clinton said he was angry that Haiti's military reneged on a promise to leave voluntarily and then persisted in widespread human rights abuses.
Sifting through graphic pictures of blood-spattered victims, Clinton blamed the military for the deaths of orphans, church people and others.
As Clinton spoke, two American aircraft carriers, the USS Eisenhower and USS America, were steaming toward Flati carrying thousands of combat forces.
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, said there is no emergency warranting such a drastic step.
"It has to pass the Dovertest," Glenn said, referring to the military air base in Delaware where the bodies of slain servicemen are returned. "When the flag-draped coffins come back, will the American people support it?" He said he doubted they would.
Clinton said the United States has a big stake in seeing democracy succeed in the hemisphere. He said other leaders in the region have told him "democracy is not a done deal all over this region" and that if the military rule persists in Haiti "then democracy elsewhere will be more fragile."
If the United States goes into Haiti, it will have "very limited objectives," Clinton said.
He said the U.S. mission would last "a couple of months," removing the military, installing police monitors, rebuilding security forces and restoring democracy.
After the initial goals are secured, a 6,000-member U.N. peacekeeping force will take over. About half of the force would be Americans.
Month devoted to Hispanic life
Continued from Page 1A.
Gabrielle Segura, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said that she celebrated events during the month with her family.
"My brother is coming to see from Kansas City to see 'Like Water for Chocolate,'" she said, referring to the movie set in Mexico. It will be shown at 9:30 tonight in the Woodruff Audioiorium at the Kansas Union.
Segura said that the month was a chance to become educated.
"Through things like mentor programs, we can help other Hispanics and people from other minorities," she said.
The month will begin tonight with the reading of a speech that began Mexico's drive for independence. The speech, "El Grito de Delores," originally was given by Father Miguel Hidalgo on Sept. 16, 1810. It will be read at 7:30 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The month's activities are being sponsored by the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, Student Senate and Student Union Activities.
U.S. wants to end mission in Rwanda The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives wants President Clinton to end U.S. humanitarian operations in Rwanda.
On Tuesday, lawmakers approved non-binding language saying no money should be spent for participation in Rwanda after Oct.7.
The military has been phasing out of Rwanda and the surrounding area for weeks. There are about 670 U.S. troops in the region, down from some 2,000 at the peak of the six-week-old operation.
All bets are off with season's close
Continued from Page 1A.
a rotisserie baseball league this season. The fantasy leagues, which are based on professional players' statistics, ended abruptly with the strike and eventual cancellation.
"I'm frustrated because I was in fifth place in my league when the strike began," Bialek said. "Each person in the league puts in $30, and the top four win money at the end of the season. I was in a good position to move up during August."
ed to resolve this," he said. "You just can't have an owner mediate between the owners and the players."
Białek faulted acting commissioner Selig for the breakdown in negotiations. The fact that Selig is also owner of the Milwaukee Brewers presents a conflict of interests, Białek said.
Selig didn't address the issue of future talks yesterday, and no negotiating sessions were scheduled between union leader Donald Fehr and owners' representative Richard Ravitch.
"A much better mediator was need-
Kansas football coach Glen Mason said yesterday that he had been prepared to step forward if baseball needed his help.
"If they would have done like they did with air controllers and fired them all, I was thinking about trying out," Mason said at a press conference. "I used to be a pretty fair baseball player. I was a catcher until I hurt my arm."
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
YOU COME FIRST!
PRINCIPAL DANCERS of the New York City Ballet Kalischstein-Landry-Rouinzon Trio
SEPTEMBER 15 AND SEPTEMBER 16 11:00AM-6:00PM 1994-95 LIED SERIES INDIVIDUAL TICKETS ON SALE FOR KU AND HASKELL STUDENTS ONLY!
Evita
The Boys Choir of Harlem Oleanna Carol Wincen and Heidi Lehwalder H.T. Chen and Dancers Alice in Wonderland Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company
Wynton Marsalis Septet Shanghai String Quartet Ladysmith Black Mambazo Cleveland String Quartet
BBC Orchestra Emerson String Quartet
Limón Dance Company Awadagin Pratt
Cats
C
STUDENT
SENATE
THE LIED CENTER
THE LIED CENTER OF COLLEGE
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS) and Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982). Ticket prices vary by performance. KU, Haskell, and K-12 students receive discounted tickets to all Series events. Phone orders can be made using VISA or MasterCard.
残疾专用
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
OPENING TOMORROW!
THE
END
IS
HEAR
Downtown Lawrence
Off 10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
The largest record store in Lawrence
128 private listening stations
Espresso Bar by La Prima Tazza
$2 OFF
The End.
Downtown Lawrence
10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
$2 OFF ANY
COMPACT DISC
Must present coupon. Expires September 23, 1994.
THE END IS HEAR
$2 OFF
Must present coupon Expires September 23, 1994.
Valid on regularly priced CDs of $10 99 or more Limit one per purchase
---
6A
Thursday. September 15, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
SUNFLOWER
DEPENDABLE
patagonia
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Imports & Domestics*
*Machine Shop Service*
*Parts Departments*
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
Buy a Quart
Get a Pint
FREE!
(with this coupon)
expires October 10th
Louisiana Purchase
23rd & Louisiana • 843-5500
Orchards Corners
the i's have it.
a stylish temptation.
serious value.
a timely investment.
a nice price for anyone.
the i's have it...all.
The Etc. Shop
Orchards Corners
15th & Kasold • 749-0440
(for only $34.95)
928 Mass.
Hours: Mon-Sat 10-5:30
Thurs' tl 8 Sun 12-5
(open till 7 p.m. on Game Days)
is
sunplates
by BAUSCH & LOMB
RECYCLE!
Your
University Daily Kansan
Technology crashes in Chicago
CHICAGO — A power outage practically paralyzed the world's largest airport. Computer problems shut down the world's busiest commodities exchange. And some customers had trouble calling their friends.
Technology ran afoul in three entirely unconnected incidents yesterday at O'Hare International Airport, the Chicago Board of Trade and MCI Communications Corp.
The Associated Press
we don't pay attention to the flip side of that: The bigger the system, the more likely the accident."
Bad day in cyberspace? Or maybe a taste of disasters to come in a technology-cocky society?
"Technology appears to be productive, efficient and competitive," said Allan Schnalberg, a northwestern University sociology professor. "But
Chicago's run-in with technology began at 8:45 a.m., when all of the radar systems shut down at a regional air traffic control center in suburban Aurora, bringing O'Hare to a standstill. A power outage was blamed.
Then at 9:37 a.m. computers at the Board of Trade shut down — and so did all activity on the floor. The reason for the computer failure was not immediately known.
During the mess, Chicago-area residents who use MCI long distance found their service disrupted by a problem with a software switch.
For 11/2 hours, no planes were allowed to leave O'Hare and only
planes on final approach were permitted to land
As FAA crews worked to restore power, at least 100 planes were backed up on the ground. Takeoffs and landings were also delayed at Chicago's Midway Airport, and Chicago-bound flights throughout the nation were delayed.
The controllers at Aurora, who direct flights in a 155,000-square-mile airspace, were forced to guide the planes using 1950s technology, said Mark Scholl, president of the Chicago branch of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association.
Because of the radar failure, controllers had to guess where the planes were and separate them quickly to lower the risk of a collision.
The Associated Press
Gore's streamlining effort saved money, reduced jobs
WASHINGTON — A year into the government reorganization effort, Americans are seeing the benefits, President Clinton said yesterday.
middle management workers.
Clinton, in a White House ceremony, praised the streamlining effort headed by Vice President Al Gore, saying it had saved the government $47 billion in the first year.
A status report Gore presented to the president said the savings were achieved primarily through the elimination of 71,000 jobs.
Some of that group, he said, "might be worried about it" because that's where cutbacks are taking place.
Gore, in a later roundtable with reporters, acknowledged that the program is drawing a less-than-enthusiastic reception from some
Gore said the ratio of employees to managers in the private sector is about 15-1, in high-performing companies often as high as 75-1, and in federal government, 5-1.
A recent appraisal by the Brookings Institution, a Washington-based think tank, said the reorganization made little progress in its first year.
The research group said the endeavor focused so closely on short-term savings that government bureaucrats — the people most needed to make the plan succeed — were alienated.
Disney proposes to buy NBC stations
The Associated Press
Meat bill updates inspection safety
ering an offer of as much as $5 billion for the NBC network, its seven TV stations and cable channels including CNBC. Price was said to still be a major obstacle.
NEW YORK — Walt Disney is talking with General Electric about the possibility of buying its NBC television division, a source familiar with the discussions said yesterday.
A source familiar with the Disney-GE talks but speaking on condition of anonymity said the discussions had been going on for quite some time and were continuing.
The report about Disney appeared in Wednesday's editions of The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. They each said Disney is consid-
The disclosure increases speculation about potential buyouts, mergers or other alliances involving NBC, which has slipped to third place from first in the prime-time ratings since GE acquired it in 1986.
During the past two weeks, it has been reported that Time Warner Inc., Harcourt General Inc., Turner Broadcasting System Inc. and ITT Corp. are either considering or discussing bids involving all or part of NBC.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The meat and poultry industry would be required to test their products for bacterial contamination under an administration-backed bill designed to ensure the safety of the nation's meat supply.
The proposal, if enacted, would add science to an 88-year-old system of inspection that has relied on the eyes, noses and hands of thousands of inspectors to determine whether raw meat is free of disease-causing micro-organisms.
The bill, announced today, also calls for fines and other measures to punish safety violations and gives the department authority to recall contaminated products.
Moreover, it requires that the industry be able to trace contaminated animals from the slaughterhouse to the farm. And it broadens animal quarantine laws to include conditions that, though harmless to animals, may cause disease in humans.
"Step by step, we are aiming to overhaul the meat and poultry inspection systems so that they utilize the most advanced science and make a safe food supply even safer," Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy said.
VAN DAMME
THEY KILLED
HIS WIFE
TEN YEARS AGO.
THERE'S STILL
TIME TO
SAVE HER.
VAN DAMME
THEY KILLED
HIS WIFE
TEN YEARS AGO.
THERE'S STILL
TIME TO
SAVE HER.
TIMECOP
MURDER IS FOREVER...UNTIL NOW.
LARGO ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS IN ASSOCIATION WITH JUC ENTERTAINMENT • SIGNATURE • RENAISSANCE • DARK NORSE PRODUCTION • PETER HYAMS FILM • JEAN CLAUDE VAN DAMME • TIMECOP
RON SILVER MIA SARA DOOD MOYER MARLYN VANCE MARK ISHAAM STEVEN KEMPER PHILIP HARRISON PETER HYAMS PRODUCTION MIKE RICHARDSON
MIKE RICHARDSON MARK VERHEIDEN MIKI RICHARDSON MARK VERHEIDEN MARK VERHEIDEN
R ARCO MOSHE DIAMANT SAM RAIMI ROBERT TAPERT PETER HYAMS A UNVERSAL RELEASE UNIVERSAL
THE WORLD IS IN TIME
LARGO ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTATION ASSOCIATION JVC ENTERTAINMENT & SIGNATURE RENAISSANCE DARK HORSE PRODUCTION PETER HYAMS JAN CO AUDE VAN DAMME TIMECOP PON SILVER MIA SARA IDDD MOYER MARDYN VANCE MARK ISHAM STEVEN KEMPER PHILIP HARRISON PETER HYAMS MIKE RICHARDSON MIKE RICHARDSON MIKE VERHEIDEN MIKE VERHEIDEN MIKE VERHEIDEN R MASTERCRAFT LARGO ANDRE DIAMANT SAM RAMI ROBERT TAPERT PETER HYAMS DTs A UNIVERSAL RELEASE UNIVERSAL
OPENS FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 16TH AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU.
SAVINGS UP TO 75% OFF
Wednesday & Thursday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
September 14th & 15th East of the Kansas Union
Huge selection of KU Clothing!!
Sidewalk Sale!
Sale may be postponed or cancelled in the event of rain.
KU
KU
BOKSTORES
Kansas Union 864-4644
Burge Union 864-5697
KU Bookstores
Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday.September 15.1994
7A
Breast cancer genes found
Discovery will help find women at risk
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Researchers have isolated one gene that causes the inherited form of breast cancer and discovered the existence of a second.
Scientists said the breakthrough would allow them to develop a test — probably within two years — to help determine women's risk for inherited breast cancer. The discovery will be published in the journal Science next month.
"This is a very,very exciting time in
genetics cancer research, and women should take home the fact that there is real progress," Harmon Eyre, a physician with the American Cancer Society, said yesterday.
Only about 5 percent of all breast cancer is inherited, but identifying the estimated 600,000 women at risk early could save their lives.
Women who inherit a mutated form of BRCA1 have an 85 percent chance of contracting breast cancer by age 65, as well as a highly elevated risk of ovarian cancer.
Scientists first discovered BRCA1's existence four years ago, launching an international race to isolate the gene.
Mark Skollnick of the University of Utah and Myriad Genetics is, the
In another Science study released yesterday, other researchers discovered a second gene, BRCA2, that also causes inherited breast cancer.
physician who discovered the gene.
The researchers, led by Douglas Easton, a physician with London's Institute of Cancer Research, studied 15 cancer-striken families who did not have mutations in BRCA1, which is located on the 17th chromosome.
They discovered this second cancer gene at work on the 13th chromosome, and mapped it to a very specific region. Now, they must go through the hundreds of genes in that tiny region to isolate BRCA2, said Easton, who is on loan to the University of Utah.
BERLIN — Amid reports of deadlock, U.S. and North Korean diplomats held a third day of talks on American initiatives to steer the Koreans' nuclear program away from weapons production.
Reactor compromise is deadlocked
The United States has offered to replace North Korea's reactors with light-water reactors that are safer and produce less weapons-grade plutonium than the Russian-designed graphite reactors they are developing.
A South Korean newspaper yesterday reported a deadlock in the talks caused in part by North Korea's demand that the United States pay $1.2 billion to compensate for stopping construction of its graphite nuclear reactors.
North Korea is suspected of trying to conceal a nuclear weapons development program. Washington's chief negotiator with the North Koreans, Robert Gallucci, said yesterday in Tokyo that the question of how to replace the two reactors was a sticking point.
Gallucci said the reactors could be completed in the next three years and produce "hundreds and hundreds" of pounds of plutonium, a key ingredient in nuclear weapons.
They also are discussing the fate of 8,000 corroding fuel rods removed from North Korea's experimental 5-megawatt reactor.
Barry smokes Kelly in election
The Associated Press
ZAGREB, Croatia — Croatian and Bosnian Muslim leaders, seeking to shore up a faltering federation, agreed yesterday to open a key road linking Croatia and Bosnia and to create joint municipal authorities in Bosnia.
The measures were part of efforts to ease growing tensions six months after Bosnian Croats and Muslims stopped fighting over territory in central Bosnia.
The federation agreement, signed in March, is between Bosnian Croats and Bosnia's Muslim-led government. But neighboring Croatia figures prominently because of its influence on Bosnian Croats.
The accord has opened up Bosnian government territory to shipments of illicit arms through Croatia, vastly
improved food supplies, and halted the fighting between the two sides.
Following two days of talks with Bosnian President Alja Izetbegovic, Croatia's president, Franjo Tudjman, said the meeting was a big step forward in implementing the federation agreement.
"We remain firm in our standpoint that the embargo should be lifted." Izetbegovic said, adding, "Croatia has the right to their own opinion."
Tudjman said last week he was against lifting the embargo because that would escalate fighting in Bosnia with Serb fighters.
Before returning to Sarajevo, izetbegovic told reporters the two sides had agreed to establish joint local authorities for some municipalities within 30 days and to set up district authorities a month later.
Illegal aliens cost states millions
The United States was home to an estimated 3.4 million undocumented aliens in 1992.A federally commissioned study examines the financial impact on seven states home to 86 percent of the immigrants.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The seven states with the largest numbers of undocumented aliens will spend nearly half a billion dollars this year to imprison aliens convicted of crimes, according to a government-commissioned study.
Those states also spent $3.1 billion to educate undocumented aliens in fiscal 1993 and $422 million on their Medicaid costs, according to the analysis released yesterday by the Urban Institute.
The analysis was undertaken in response to complaints by the states that claim the federal government should pay some of the costs for undocumented aliens.
It was based on U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service estimates that 3.4 million undocumented aliens lived in the United States in October 1992. A total of 86
percent of those lived in the seven states that were the focus of the study.
The report found that 21,395 illegal aliens were incarcerated in the seven states in March 1994. California had a disproportionate share, and its cost of incarcerating them was $368 million.
Florida sued the government in April for $1.5 billion — what it says it will cost over two years to provide education, health care, prison beds and other services to an estimated 345,000 illegal immigrants.
The report estimated that 641,000 undocumented alien children were enrolled in public schools in the seven states in 1993-94 costing $3.1 billion.
California filed a lawsuit, seeking nearly $2 billion for the cost of imprisoning illegal immigrants. That suit seeks $377 million to cover the cost of incarcerating about 16,700 illegal aliens this year
Croatia, Bosnia bridge differences
ZAGREB, Croatia — Croatian and Bosnian Muslim leaders, seeking to shore up a faltering federation, agreed Wednesday to open a key road linking Croatia and Bosnia and to create joint municipal authorities in Bosnia.
The measures were part of efforts to ease growing tensions six months after Bosnian Croats and Muslims stopped fighting over territory in central Bosnia.
The Associated Press
The federation agreement, signed in March following U.S. prodding, is between Bosnian Croats and Bosnia's Muslim-led government. But neighboring Croatia figures prominently because of its influence on Bosnian Croats.
Little of the agreement has been enacted, due to lingering mutual mistrust. But the accord has opened up Bosnian government territory to shipments of illicit arms through Croatia, vastly improved food supplies and halted the fighting.
Serbs, who control about 70percent of Bosnia, have rejected U.N. peace plans and want nothing to do with the federation. They have sought to merge land they hold with Serb-dominated Yugoslavia, creating a "Greater Serbia."
Fighting in Bosnia broke out in April 1992, after the Serb minority revolted against a vote by Bosnian Croats and Muslims to secede from Yugoslavia. The fighting has left an estimated 200,000 people dead or missing.
Following two days of talks with Bosnian President Alij Izbejovicg, Croatia's president, Franjo Tudjman, said the meeting was "a big step forward" in implementing the federation agreement.
Conduct allegations postpone admiral's retirement
The Associated Press
What was supposed to have been a routine confirmation vote for the four-star retirement of Adm. Henry H. Mauz Jr.
was postponed until next week.
WASHINGTON — A retiring admiral who is helping coordinate Navy actions off Haiti ran into opposition yesterday from Senate women concerned about his personal conduct.
A Navy leutenant who was the victim of sexual harassment said Mauz took no action against those responsible. Two years ago the admiral also was shown on
"If the senator from Washington
television relaxing in Bermuda at taxpayers' expense. The Navy enlistee who blew the whistle on the trip now says Mauz sought to ruin his career.
As outgoing commander in chief of the U.S. Atlantic fleet, Mauz is coordinating Navy operations off Haiti in preparation for a possible invasion.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a navy veteran and the son and grandson of Navy admirals, ridiculed Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., for suggesting the Senate was part of the military chain of command.
"Tart things have been said to (Murray), behind her back and on the Senate floor," Mikulski said. "We do not see ourselves as the gender cops of the United States Senate but we do believe we need to stand sentry to see that questions raised are questions answered."
doesn't even know what the word 'chain of command' means, it does some damage to the credibility of her argument," McCain said.
That brought Sen. Barbara Mikulski, the dean of the Senate's five Democratic women, to her feet.
The Associated Press
Coffee burns McDonald's
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — A judge ruled yesterday that McDonald's Corp. should be punished for its "willful, wanton, reckless and what the court finds was callous" behavior toward an elderly woman burned by its coffee, but nowhere near the almost $2.9 million awarded by a jury.
State District Judge Robert Scott reduced the punitive damages awarded to 81-year-old Stella Liebeck to $480,000. He let stand the $160,000.
compensatory damages award.
The jury ruled last month in favor of Liebeck, who suffered burns on her legs, groin and buttocks in 1992 when she skinned coffee on her lan
She had put the cup between her legs and tried to pry the lid off at a McDonald's drive-up window.
Liebeck argued that the coffee was a defective product.
She said the coffee was 165 to 170 degrees, while coffee brewed at home is 135 to 140 degrees.
LIED CENTER
8 PM
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 17
An Adventure 65 Million Years In The Making.
JURASSIC PARK
PG-13
ONE DOLLAR
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SUNFLOWER
LIED CENTER
8 PM
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 17
An Adventure 65 Million Years In The Making.
JURASSIC PARK
PG-13
ONE DOLLAR
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD
So. Have you had your vitamins today?
GNC
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTERS
Where America Shapes for Health™
OPEN
10-8 M-F
10-6 Sat.
1-5 Sun.
28% off any one item!
Good only at the 23rd and Louisiana GNC. Not good w/ any other offer.
Expires 10/81/94
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We repair
Brass, Aluminum,
& Plastic Radiators
Heaters, water pumps, and A/C service tool
842-3333
Catch all the Football Action Here!!
Friday
$8.95 Pitchers of Margaritas
Saturday
2-4-1 Wells
Sunday
$4.25 pitchers of Beer
Monday
$6.95 Pitchers of Margaritas $4.25 Pitchers of Beer
815 New Hampshire • 841-7286
Personal Checks Accepted
804 Mass
---
So. Have you had your vitamins today?
GNC GENERAL NUTRITION CENTERS Where America Shops 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. Expires 10/01/94
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We repair Brass, Aluminum, & Plastic Radiators
Heaters, water pumps, and A/C service tool!
842-3333
Catch all the Football Action Here!!
Friday
$8.95 Pitchers of Margaritas
Saturday
2-4-1 Wells
Sunday
$4.25 pitchers of Beer
Monday
$6.95 Pitchers of Margaritas $4.25 Pitchers of Beer
815 New Hampshire • 841-7286
Personal Checks Accepted
843-5000
MOTION CCDS
DISCOVER
Catch all the Football Action Here!!
Friday
$8.95 Pitchers of Margaritas
Saturday
2-4-1 Wells
Sunday
$4.25 pitchers of Beer
Monday
$6.95 Pitchers of Margaritas $4.25 Pitchers of Beer
815 New Hampshire • 841-7286
Personal Checks
Accepted
DUS
SOMBRE
VISA
LNC JP
MasterCard
100%
8A
Thursday, September 15, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wetlands debate continues to be a struggle
Continued from Page 1A.
the trafficway would not affect the Baker Wetlands that much. The noise would drive birds further into the wetlands, but probably would cause more harm to the Haskell wetlands.
The 35th Street route, however, would have serious impact, he said. He said a trafficway straight down the middle would divide the habitat into small islands of wetlands, eventually decreasing its value.
"How do you come in and build a road bigger than 31st Street and expect animals to get through?" Boyd said. "The smaller the islands get, the faster you lose species."
Chuck Haines, professor of biology at Haskell Indian Nations University, said the Haskell Wetlands mostly were in the same state they were in before white settlers came to Kansas. Too wet to be farmed, the land around the small ponds hidden in the undergrowth south of the trafficway rarely have been touched.
"When (the U.S. Department of) Fish and Wildlife came, they said it was unbelievable." Haines said. "They hadn't seen this in 30 or 40 years."
Haskell students have another reason to protect the Haskell Wetlands, Haines said. Haskell's medicine wheel, a circular pattern cut into the grass that Haskell students use for religious ceremonies, is located there. Students also maintain sweat lodges, small huts where smoke from a fire is breathed in as part of a spiritual ceremony.
Haines said that should the trafficway
go through either of the wetlands, it would be typical of the history of environmentalism in the United States.
"Europeans didn't understand when they came in," he said. "They still don't. They're just beginning to with their ecologists. They ask, 'What do the wetlands do?' Their ecologists answer, 'They provide life.'"
--determining the final route.
But environmental concerns have been taken into effect, said David Orr, acting division administrator for the Federal Highway Administration in Topeka. The original Final Environmental Impact Statement, which was presented in 1992, took eight years to write and involved agents from the Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Kansas Fish and Game Department and a number of other agencies.
The final statement concluded that building the trafficway on 31st Street would not adversely affect the Haskell Wetlands if precautions,such as building the trafficway taller than planned, were followed.
"We are involved and interested," Orr said. "Our position is that the final statement adequately addressed the problems of the wetlands."
Orr's department now is in the process of preparing a supplemental impact statement, designed to give Haskell students a chance to state the spiritual importance of the wetlands. Orr said such participation was important in
Future Trafficway Path?
The Baker and Haskell wetlands originally were the same habitat. However, most of the Baker wetlands was farmed in the 1920s while the Haskell wetland was left alone. Now they are separated environmentally by 31st Street and legally by a natural waterway south of 31st Street.
LOUISIANA STREET
23RD STREET
Haskell Indian Nations University
Haskell Wetlands
31ST STREET
1st proposed South Lawrence Trafficway route.
Baker Wetlands (Extends to Wilmington River)
2nd proposed South Lawrence Trafficway route.
proposed 17 acre mitigation site.
Currently, 35th Street does not extend into the wetlands.
Krista McGlohon/ KANSAN
Source: Kansan Staff Research
"White men, we have a really hard time relating to that type of spirituality," he said. "So that learning curve is something we have to overcome. I don't know if it can be done. I hope it can be done."
The supplement also will look at the environmental impact of the proposed 35th Street on the Baker Wetlands, as well as the south-of-the-wetlands routes.
Orr also said federal laws called for creating a mitigation site, an area of wetland to make up for the amount of wetland lost. Currently, the Kansas Biological
Survey is building 17 acres of wetlands, more than will be affected by the trafficway, Orr said.
Orr said federal and county officials didn't want to hurt the wetlands. He said county officials would take steps—such as a screen of more than 1,000 trees to dampen noise and an extensive network of water-control systems designed to keep the water level steady—to ensure the wetlands were preserved.
"They're valuable resources," Orr said. "They serve an important function. People are just starting to realize that."
Respect, time needed to nurse former wetland
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Creating a wetland may be impossible, but resurrecting one is not—which might help the county make up for wetland lost to the trafficway.
The Baker Wetlands aren't completely an act of nature, said Roger Boyd, professor of biology at Baker University in Baldwin. Without the intervention of Baker, the wetlands south of 31st Street wouldn't exist at all.
The wetlands were owned by the Haskell Institute, now Haskell Indian Nations University, in the 1920 and was
used for farming.
Baker bought the land in the 1960s and now uses a series of ditches and controls to recreate and maintain the wetland.
Douglas County is hoping they can use that technique to create a mitigation site, an area that will make up for the wetland taken up by the South Lawrence Trafficway.
What's a wetland?
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, a habitat must meet three criteria to be considered a wetland by the federal government.
Wetland vegetation — Cattail, duckweed and other plants found commonly in freshwater environments.
- Standing water — The area must be covered by water for a total of 21 days sometime during the year.
- Hydric soil — The soil must be dense enough that it doesn't absorb standing water quickly.
The county has taken 17 acres of former wetland Source: Kansan Staff
east of the Baker Wetlands and is using it to create a mitigation site, said Kelly Kinscher, an assistant scientist with the Kansas Biological Survey.
Kinscher said the site was not a high quality wetland, although it was larger than the amount of land that would have been taken on 31st Street. He said it would need time to develop, like the Baker Wetland.
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
Since WATKIN 1907
"We Care For KU"
Gynecology Services
With the Student in Mind
The Gynecology Clinic at Watkins offers comprehensive, expert services at reduced cost compared to off-campus facilities. Gynecology services include:
- contraceptives and contraceptive counseling
- Pap smears
- treatment for sexually transmitted diseases
- infertility counseling
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
Music at Mulligan's
MONDAY
NIGHT
FOOTBALL
No cover and
$1.50 Longnecks
(including
Rolling Rock)
TUESDAY
LIVE JAZZ!
No cover and
$1 off imports
WEDNESDAY
ACOUSTIC
OPEN-MIC
Musicians interchange
$1.50 Boulevard Pints
Darrell Lea & Megan Hurt
$1 Samuel Adams Draws
THURSDAYS
FRIDAY
Ricky Dean Sinatra
$1 P.B.R. bottles • $1.50 wells
$1 dogs/burgers on the patio (5-7PM)
2 for 1 wells
$1 P.B.R. bottles
CHIEFS
SUNDAY!
$3.50 Domestic Pitchers
$2.00 Bloody Marys
$2.99 Burger Baskets
PUPS GRILL OPEN UNTIL 3AM!
1016 Massachusetts • Downtown Lawrence
913-865-405
Mulligan's
Music at Mulligan's
MONDAY
NIGHT
FOOTBALL
No cover and
$1.50 Longnecks
(including
Rolling Rock)
TUESDAY
LIVE JAZZ!
No cover and
$1 off imports
WEDNESDAY
ACOUSTIC
OPEN-MIC
Musicians interchange
$1.50 Boulevard Pints
Darrell Lea & Megan Hurt
$1 Samuel Adams Draws
THURSDAYS
FRIDAY
Ricky Dean Sinatra
SKIN
$1 P.B.R. bottles • $1.50 wells
2 for 1 wells
$1 dogs/burgers on the patio (5-7PM)
$1 P.B.R. bottles
CHIEFS
SUNDAY! $2.99 Burger Baskets
PUPS GRILL OPEN UNTIL 3AM!!
1016 Massachusetts • Downtown Lawrence
913-865-4055
The Reverend Horton Heat CASINO
Kief's Sale Priced
$1177
On CD *
See 'The Rev' Live at
Liberty Hall - Tonight with
Paw & Tenderloin
Kief's has the Lowest EVERYDAY Price...
Kief's has the Lowest TUESDAY Price on New Releases...
Kief's has Buy5/Get 25... 25% Off Retail ANYDAY
• Cassette also available
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
WATCH WHAT'S HAPPENING ON
41 KSHB
Now that we're NBC,
You'll be tuning in KSHB 41 to watch all your favorite shows.
41 NEWS IS NOW AT 10:00
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1994
SECTION B
COLUMNIST
GERRY FEY
Pro baseball's fanatics have lost interest
It has come down to this.
The remainder of the baseball season is canceled. The playoffs will not take place. For the first time since 1908, the World Series has been eliminated. And still the owners and players were not even close to a compromise.
So who cares?
who cares if there is no more baseball season this year? It means I will not be spending $6 for a general admission ticket at Kauffman Stadium, where the players look like small dots and I can never find the ball. I can't blow $5 for a soggy hot dog and a flat beer. I can save my hard-earned cash, which is usually wasted on stupid pennants and shirts, and spend it on books for school. The game's interest has been lost in the shuffle for money.
In Kansas this thirst for frenzied action is realized, maybe even more than anywhere else.
America's sports fans think baseball is dull. We want action, hard hits and — as much as we would like to deny it — injuries and fights.
And that seems to be the general consensus from many sports fans. It's football season now. And besides, the baseball season was too long anyway.
The Kansas City Chiefs have stolen the headlines from professional baseball. They just drew the second-largest crowd in Chiefs' history when the team played the San Francisco 49ers game. The Jayhawks' crowd for their home opener against Michigan State was 48,100, which is the largest Kansas home crowd for an opening game since 1988.
Moreover, winters in the Sunflower State are dominated by college basketball, especially with all the success associated with Kansas and Kansas State. Basketball has even more action than football, and the scoring is fast paced. We like that.
Watching football or basketball games on television is much more exciting than watching baseball live, and Neilson ratings prove it. Sports fans do not miss baseball on television.
Sports highlight shows like ESPN's Sportscenter and CNN's Sports Tonight have promoted the idea of constant action for what they call the "MTV generation."
Our generation loves quick edits and sound bits from sporting events. A quick Michael Jordan slam dunk here or a big uppercut from Evander Holyfield, and we are in seven heaven. We do not care about tradition or history, which is the basis for the earlier generations' love of baseball.
Maybe we were influenced by the cynicism our parents developed after seeing professional sports develop into big business, with all its greed and self-interest. The generation before us probably didn't want to share the game of baseball when it was so skewed from the original game.
So what's next for baseball and us? When and if the players and owners resolve their dispute, will the fans return next season? Of course we just, as we always have
We still hold on to some basic values of the American past, no matter what others say about our MTV idealism. Baseball is about America, and it always will be, even if the players' average salary jumps close to $2 million. We still hold on to icons of the American dream — mom, apple pie, the Fourth of July, and the national pastime — even if they are out-of-date.
If fans set out to boycott a few of next season's games, it alerts the big wigs running the show that we are still the reason they play on the field.
Maybe it is time for the fans to send a signal to baseball's elite. This strike has taught the fan that money is the driving force behind today's baseball business.
Major leaguers begin search for second jobs
Sure, baseball may be a business rather than a game, but the players and owners are still supposed to entertain us.
The Associated Press
Andy Benes is going back to growing corn. Roland Hemond is preparing to take his son to a college football game.
All across the majors, players and officials began making their offseason plans yesterday once the inconceivable became the inevitable — there is no more baseball left this year.
"I don't have to worry about working out anymore, about when I'm going to pitch again," said Benes, a starter for the San Diego Padres.
"We're done. We're jobless," he said, now tending a garden at his California home.
Hemond, general manager of the Baltimore Orioles, has been working in professional baseball for 43 years
and says he's seen at least one World Series game in every season since 1955.
But this October, he'll be watching another sport. He's getting ready to take his son to see Maryland play football.
"It's not really what I had in mind for that weekend," Hemond said. "It's sad, very sad. There will be an unexpected void in my life next month."
Former Pirates star Dick Groat, the 1960 NL MVP, found another reason to be angry.
we get a lot of sports fans here," said Groat, who co-owns a golf course near Pittsburgh with former teammate Jerry Lynch, "and they really could care less, and that's what is upsetting to me."
Atlanta Braves general manager
John Schuerholz said he thought baseball, in time, would recover from canceling the rest of the season and the World Series.
Among those left wondering is Kansas City's Bob Hamelin. He was hitting 282 with 24 home runs and 65 RBIs when play stopped, and is considered a strong candidate for the AL Rookie of the Year award, which will be given out in a month or so.
"I would have loved to play the full season to see what kind of numbers I'd put up," he said from his home in North Carolina. "But what are you going to do?"
"It just goes to show that we humans who are placed in charge of this great game, the caretakers of this great game, have fouled up substantially," he said.
Growth
Baseball strike chronology
Aug.1
Strike begins
Aug.1
Federal mediators meet with player, owner heads
Aug.24
Talks resume
Sept.
Talks resume
Sept.
Owners reject players' offer
Sept.
Owners cancel World Series
SOURCE: News reports
Jay Thornton / KANBAN
Knight-Ridder Tribute/JAMES SMALLWOOD
'Hawks gear up to meet the Frogs
Down in the South, 'Hawks meet West
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas football coach Glen Mason commented on the upcoming game against Texas Christian during a press conference in the Parrott Athletic Center yesterday. The game will start at 7 p.m. on Saturday in Fort Worth, West.
Kansas offensive standouts John Jones and Hessley Hempstead may finally meet their match on Saturday night.
1023076895404
Royal West
When the two senior guards face off against Texas Christian senior defensive guard Royal West at 7 p.m. Saturday in Fort Worth, Texas, they will be trying to block a 1933 All-Southwest Conference performer and third-team All-American.
West broke TCU's school record for sacks with nine in 1993.
He also had nine tackles behind the line of scrimmage and caused 36 incompletions by pressuring quarter-backs.
Perhaps West's best game may be his first game of this season when the Horned Frogs lost 27-17 to the 16h-ranked North Carolina Tarheels.
In that game, West displayed his diverse defensive abilities. He had seven tackles, one sack, one blocked field goal, and two batted-down passes.
"He's a very quick, agile player who plays hard, North Carolina offensive line coach Edwin Williamson said. "He's never really out of a play. He has a knack of being in the right place at the right time."
Texas Christian defensive line coach Hugh Nall said that West's hustle and awareness kept him involved in every play until it was completed.
"There were several times when he got blocked but batted down the pass." Nall said.
West attributed much of his success
to several elements.
"I think my strengths are my technique, basic overall knowledge of the game and quickness," he said.
West said he believed his instincts came from being around his father, who is a high school football coach.
"Ilove to recruit a coach's son," Nall said. "There are little things they understand that others might not because it's talked about around the house and talked about around the dinner table."
Nail said West's experience helped
him succeed because of his effort to improve.
Nall said that, in a sense, West was one of the best defensive tackles in the country.
"I think talent-wise, there might be some that are better," Nall said. "In terms of technique and working hard, I don't know if there's anyone. He probably worked (on his game) more this past summer than he did his whole life."
This week West will get to measure his abilities when he plays against
Hempstead was the offensive MVP for the Michigan State game.
Jones and Hempstead.
"I don't know if I've seen a couple guards as good as those two are," Nall said. "They've got great mobility. They run well and I haven't seen them bust an assignment from the film I've seen. They ought to be professionals."
"It definitely gets you hyped up." West said. "I read where one of them was the offensive team MVP. That says a lot for an offensive lineman."
Opening crowd pleases Mason
By matt irwin
Kansas sportwriter
Kansan sportswriter
Big-time football means big-time crowds, and Kansas football coach Glen Mason said he hopes for both all year long.
When the Jayhawks defeated the Michigan State Spartans 17-10 Saturday at Memorial Stadium, it was in front of the 16th-largest home crowd in Kansas history.
"That's what we need at the University of Kansas," Mason said. "We need a home-field advantage, just like we have a home court advantage."
"We didn't sell any tickets to the Spartans," Mason said. "We had a 48,000 plus crowd of Kansas supporters. That's the thing that was amazing about the crowd. When we start getting involved in the Big Eight schedule there's going to be more of an interest."
Mason said that the large crowd support was an effective recruiting tool, but he expected the crowds to get larger.
Mason said his only role in attendance was winning, and that he does not worry about putting a flashy offense on the field. He said his team reflects his style.
"Everyone has different tastes," Mason said in explaining what fans enjoy seeing in football games. "If I go to watch any type of contest and I see a bunch of athletes out they're playing as hard as they can. That's entertaining to me. If I see a bunch of talented guys running around and not giving it all, I've got to get turned off by that."
Mason said he always thought attendance would reach this level. But he said he hadn't forgotten the small crowds in the past.
"When I first came here, we were giving out tickets in grocery stores."
Volleyball team enjoys bouncing across the country
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
Weekend get-aways all business for team
Out-of-state weekend trips are no oddity to the Kansas volleyball team.
For a third consecutive weekend the Jayhawks will travel out of state, this time to a tournament in Virginia. Earlier weekend trips were to Springfield, Mo., and Fort Collins, Colo.
"We eat, sleep, study and play volleyball," sophomore outside hitter Lara Izokaita said. "Studying and volleyball are our main priorities when we're away."
The weekend volleyball matches are basically all business and are designed to expose Kansas to higher levels of competition, Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said.
Unfortunately for the Jayhawks, trips to out-of-state tournaments include anything but the vacation luxuries of shopping and sightseeing.
Schonewise said she took a no-frills approach to planning the team's itinerary.
"Our whole objective is to play volleyball." Schonewise said. "In planning our trips we do what we need to do to get the team prepared to play."
The team usually leaves for its tournaments via charter bus after classes on Thursdays and returns home late Saturday nights.
But this weekend's trip to Blacksburg, Va., to compete in the Comfort Ink Holk Classic at
In lieu of a charter bus, Kansas will board a plane today at 5:30 p.m. and fly to Roanoke, Va. In addition to more than $2200 dollars for the team's travel expenses, meals and motel costs must be added to the total cost of the trip, Schonewise said.
Virginia Tech.. is a little different.
In early spring, each athletic program at Kansas submits to the Kansas Athletic Department a prospective budget proposal for the fiscal year. An athletic department committee studies the projected expenses, taking into account each athletic program's schedule and anticipated travel expenses, said Susan Wachter, assistant athletic director in charge of business.
"All the expenses are added up and put in one document. If the expenses are less than revenue, we approve it," Wachter said of the teams' budget proposals. "If the expenses are not less, then we sit down with the coach and chip away at it until it fits our budget."
The state of Kansas allots money to non-revenue teams, including the Kansas volleyball team, to assist in paying for the team's meals during out-of-state trips. Schonewise said the state allotted a set amount of $26 for each player's meals a day.
Even though weekend road trips at Kansas aren't all fun and games, Izokaitis said just traveling together as a team made the trips something to look forward to.
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
2015
"We're always on time constraints," she said. "But the coaches are good about making trips enjoyable for us."
Kansas volleyball managers Tim Lattimer and Jason Yeates try to block the kill of sophomore outside hitter Lara Izokaikis in a practice drill. The Jayhawks will travel for the third time already this season when they go to the Comfort Inn Hokie Classic tomorrow in Blacksburg, Va.
1
2B
Thursday, September 15, 1994
"Umpired since 1994"
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass.832-8228
"Legalized since 1993"
fifty
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
fifiS
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE &
HANDSOME
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FULL MIDDLE CELL
REDKEN
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SAVE BIG on DISKS & PC'S
+3.5" HDJIBM Formatted 48d
+3.5" HD Formatted 478
+5.25" HD Or DD IBM Formatted 49d
+5.25" HD Or DD IBM Formatted 34d
*MCC 4868X-51 $725.00
*MCC 4868X-52 $790.00
*MCC 4868X-53 WC Monitor $1240.00
*MCC 4868X-26-68 Complete system w/B RAM BAM,
420MB HD, ND "44 VGA Color Monitor 1024/768, XB
Drive, Fax Modem, Dos, Windows, Keyboard,
Mouse/Pad $1990.00
All CD'S $5 Each Great Selection!!
NEW LOWER CD PRICES
All CD'S $5 Each
Great Selection!!
Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry
1804 W. 6th 2 Blocks East of Iowa
7 49 - 1 91 9
DISKETTS CENTER
2201 W, 28th Street, Lawrence, Telf (913) 832-2744
(a business World behind Food 4 less on Sta.)
Business Hours: M-F 9:00-6:00, Sat 1:00-5:00
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!!
Large Pizza
ONLY
$8.99
2 toppings
plus tax
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
2 drinks
749-0055
Open 7 days a week
ROLLERBLADE®
Rentals
Sales
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts
841-PLAY(7529)
--play in the tournament, to be held Oct. 3-9.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
Men's golf team eager to hit the links
Traveling squad heads to Colorado to compete in Falcon Invitational
By Jenni Carlson
The Kansas men's golf team gets its season underway tomorrow with the three-day Falcon Invitational in Colorado Springs, Colo.
Kansas' traveling squad includes senior Tyler Shelton, juniors Alan Stearns, Dan Rooney and transfer Slade Adams and sophomore Kit Grove, also a transfer.
"This is probably the first time in many years that all five players have never been to this tournament," Randall said. "Usually you have a carryover, but not this year."
The waiting is finally over.
Kansan sportswriter
"They're ready to get in some competition," Kansas men's golf coach Ross Randall said. "They've been dying for this."
Randall said the traveling squad for this tournament consisted of five players who have never played before in the Falcon Invitational.
Shelton said he was anxious to see how his teammates would perform.
"It should be a lot of fun to see how these guys do," Shelton said. "They're all getting experience."
Because of collegiate regulations, the Jayhawks have had only two weeks of practice leading up to their first tournament.
However, their limited amount of practice should not hurt the team since many of the players competed in summer golf tournaments and practice, Shelton said.
Randall agreed that the team's restricted practice time should not have an overwhelming effect on its play.
"If they play to the level of what they're capable of playing, we should do really well," he said. "We should contend."
What may prove to be Kansas' biggest barrier is the team's eagerness to get the season started, Randall said.
"It's their first tournament," he said. "They're going to be a little bit anxious."
Shelton said he has been waiting for the golf season to begin since last spring. Even though he played and competed well in numerous tournaments over the summer, he saw only a limited amount of playing time last year.
"College golf is special," Shelton said. "I'm ready to get out there and compete on the collegiate level."
Kansas will be one of 24 teams at this weekend's tournament, Randall said.
Most of the teams will be from the West Coast.
The Colorado Buffaloes will be the only other Big Eight Conference team in the tournament.
"Every time we play against someone in the Big Eight, we want to play well," Randall said.
Shelton said the field of teams was not the toughest the Jayhawks would face during the season. He said that by playing well, good things could be in store for Kansas this weekend.
Capriati to make comeback in tennis
"I think we have a very good chance of winning the golf tournament," Shelton said.
First appearance slated for October The Associated Press
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — Jennifer Capriati plans to focus on fun and not let the pressure overwhelm her as she makes her professional tennis comeback.
Capriati, who left the women's tour last year and was later arrested on drug charges, plans to return to the game in early October.
"It's going to be different this time," Capriati said Tuesday. "I'm not going to put a lot of pressure on myself. I just want to play again, have fun and see how it goes."
The International Management Group, an agency representing Capriati, said Tuesday the 18-year-old had requested wild-card entries to the Barilla Indoors Tournament in Zurich, Switzerland, and the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix in Filderstadt, Germany.
"She will get the second wildcard for the tournament," Steger said. "We already have five of the top 10 players in Zurich this year, including Mary Pierce, Martina Navratilova and Steffi Graf. This will be an added bonus."
"It is good news. She should be very fit now, according to what we have heard from America, and we hope she will be successful."
Barilla representative Beate Steger confirmed Capriati will be allowed to
"It was a surprise to us. We heard reports two weeks ago that she was coming to Zurich,but we had no information and we didn't believe it—until yesterday."
The Filderstadt tournament runs Oct.10-16
Capriati has been practicing at her family's new home in Palm Desert, Calif.
She moved there a few weeks ago from Boca Raton, Fla. Capriati's parents, who had been residing in the Tampa, Fla., area, also moved to Palm Desert.
The New YorkTimes said Capriati's father, with whom she has had a tempestuous relationship, has become
her courtside adviser. Capriati told
the paper she isn't interested in hiring
a coach until she decides whether she
wants to play full time again.
"It may seem like a sudden decision to some people, but I've wanted to play for some time and I've thought it out and figure, why not, that I'm mentally ready to play," Capriati told The Times.
"It's great news," tennis commentator Mary Carillo said from Naples, Fla. "That's sooner than I thought she'd be back."
Carillo said she could not predict how long it would be before Capriati returns to her old form.
Capriati, who earned nearly $1.5 million during her career, stopped playing tennis last year after losing in the first round of the U.S. Open. She ended 1993 ranked No. 9 in the world despite missing the final three months of the tour.
After leaving the tour, Capriati was arrested May 16 at a motel in Coral Gables, Fla., and charged with marijuana possession after a weekend allegedly spent partying with friends. Acquaintances claimed she used heroin and crack cocaine during that
weekend.
Capriati then spent 23 days in the Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami before being released from its substance abuse unit June 10.
Under a plea bargaining agreement, the arrest will be deleted from her record if she stays out of trouble until next June.
The youngest semifinalist ever at Wimbledon, Capriati began playing professionally shortly before her 14th birthday. She won the gold medal at the 1992 Olympics by beating Steff Graf.
Capriati has never won a Grand Slam event, although she has been a semifinalist at the U.S. Open, Wimbledon and the French Open.
Capriati's success and subsequent problems underlined the risks that can await young players on the tour.
Last week, the Women's Tennis Council announced a series of rule changes that include restrictions on the number of tournaments a 14-year-old may enter.
The WTC said it began looking into the reforms before Capriati's problems were reported.
Please Recycle
YARNBARN
Beginning and Intermediate Knitting Classes Starting Soon!
Beginning Knitting: Learn by making a sweater! $20.00 for 8 weeks. 20% off class yarns.
- Sept.19 (Mon) 7-9 p.m.
- *Oct.4
- Oct.26
(Wed)
Complete schedule of all classes available at Yarn Barn. 842-4333·918 Mass. St.
YARNBARN
Roller skating
AEROBICS with
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
- Nautilus & Freeweights
- Stairmasters/Treadmill
* l'tecycles/Rowing Machine
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
- 60 Aerobic classes per week
* 2 Aerobic rooms!
- Reebok Step
FIRST VISIT FREE!
Buy 1 Year, Get 1 Year FREE
- Nautilus & Freeweights
* Reebok Step
- Personal Fitness Training
- Wellness Area
- Full Spa Area
- 69 Aerobia clas
- Lifecycles/Rowing Machine
Stitch On Needlework Shop
926 Mass St.
842-1101
FALL CLASSES
Beginning Quilting-7 weeks
Monday 10am-12, $31 plus supplies
Beginning Quilting-7 weeks
Monday 7-9pm, $31 plus supplies
Beginning Quilting-7 weeks
Tuesday 7-9pm, $31 plus supplies
Choosing Colors for your quilt-
Oct.26, 7-9pm, $8 plus supplies
Water Color Workshop- Oct.1,
10:30:4:30pm, $25 plus supplies
Machine Appliqué Pillow- 3 weeks
Wed 7-9pm, $19 plus supplies
MORE CLASSES AVAILABLE-CALL ORSTOP IN FOR INFORMATION OR TOSIGNUP
--in the Russell 3000**** a broad index of U.S. stocks.
ANNOUNCING TWO NEW CREF ACCOUNTS
0 0 0
WE RECOMMEND BOTH.
YOU'RE LOOKING AT TWO COMPLETELY OPPOSITE, FUNDAMENTALLY DIFFERENT WAYS TO INVEST IN STOCKS.
Whether you want a fund that selects specific stocks or one that covers the market, we're on the same page. Our new CREF Growth and CREF Equity Index Accounts use two distinct strategies for investing in the stock market, but both aim to provide what every smart investor looks for: long-term growth that outpaces inflation*
Introducing the CREF Growth Account and the CREF Equity Index Account.
The CREF Growth Account searches for individual companies that are poised for superior growth. In contrast, the Equity Index Account looks for more diversification, with a portfolio encompassing almost the entire range of U.S. stock investments. It will invest in stocks
TIAA
CREF
Like our CREF Stock Account, which combines active, indexed, and foreign investing, and our Global Equities Account, which actively seeks opportunities worldwide, the new funds are managed by experienced investment professionals. They're the same experts who have helped make TIAA-CREF the largest pension system in the U.S., managing over $130 billion in assets.
To find out more about our new stock funds, and building your portfolio with TIAA-CREF, just call 1 800-842-2776. And take your pick.
Ensuring the future for those who shape it. $ ^{m} $
- The new funds are available for Retirement Annuities subject to the terms of your institution's plan. They are available for its Supplemental Retirement Annuition.
* **The Ruffin 3000 is a registered record of the Frank Russell Company.** Russell is not a sponsor of a CRFB Equity Index Account and is not affiliated with it in any way. Far more complete information, including charges and expenses, call 1-800-945-2735, ext. 6099 for a CRFB prospectus. Read the prospectus carefully before you invest or send money. CRFB certificates are distributed by TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services, Inc.
4
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 15, 1994
3B
Sanders,49ers close to a deal
The Associated Press
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — With the baseball season gone, Deion Sanders wasted no time closing in on a new job with the San Francisco 49ers.
A free-agent cornerback and
Cincinnati Reds outfielder, Sanders
shopped his services to several NFL
teams while idled by the monthlong
baseball players strike. Yesterday,
the owners called off the season.
With his baseball job gone, at least for this season, Sanders was ready to turn his attention to football, said his agent, Eugene Parker.
Sanders told an Atlanta television station he had decided against rejoining the Atlanta Falcons and intended to sign with the 49ers.
Sanders rejected a more lucrative offer from the Miami Dolphins, plagued by injuries in the secondary and badly needing a reinforcement.
"I'm disappointed," coach Don Shula said. "I thought we were in it and had a good chance. We pursued it hard these few days."
in the 49ers' bid to sign Sanders, they freed $1.3 million under the salary cap by restructuring the contracts of linebackers Gary Plummer and Ken Norton and safety Tim McDonald.
Club president Carmen Policy said Sanders, a three-time Pro Bowler in five seasons with the Falcons, flew to the San Francisco Bay area on Wednesday. Policy said he hoped to conclude a deal within the next 24 hours.
"There are some very sensitive negotiations going on." Policy said. "We're talking numbers. We're talking incentives. We're talking a variety of things. We're even talking philosophy."
Just two weeks ago, Policy said the 49ers couldn't afford Sanders because of salary-cap constraints. Now he was optimistic the two sides could come to terms. However, he was wary of competing offers.
"We're not in there alone," Policy said. "If I was to stand here and tell you it was done, I would be really acting foolhardy. I don't know what's going on behind the scenes. His coming out here may be nothing more than priming the pump to get Atlanta to really come through with a final offer."
Falcons president Taylor Smith said the team still assumed Sanders would give Atlanta a chance to match the best offer from another club.
"If the (money) is what it's rumored to be ... then I know we can be competitive with that kind of offer," Atlanta coach June Jones said. "Delon knows we want him here, and he knows this is the best fit for what he wants to accomplish."
Should Sanders sign with the 48ers, he would be the sixth defensive free agent added to the team. San Francisco (1-1) earlier added Norton, Plummer, Toi Cook, Rickey Jackson and Richard Dent.
San Francisco coach George Seifert has called Sanders the best defensive back in the game today and players agreed his addition could make a great impact.
"It would only make us better and
I'm all for anyone coming here who would make us better," Cook said. "It's all about winning and any player that's going to help us win, bring him here."
McDonald, who was among the players agreeing to renegotiated contracts, added: "Delon's a great player and he brings a man. He brings excellent man to a man coverage skills. He brings a lot of charisma and a lot of excitement and I think he's all business once he steps on the football field."
Sanders had been seeking a long-term, $4 million-a-year deal, but apparently has conceded the NFL's $34.6 million salary cap makes that impossible.
As always, it'd Deion's call," Parker told the Atlanta Journal on Tuesday. "I think he knows what he wants to do."
Recommended rule changes
3-point line shortened:
Shorten 3-point line to a uniform 22 feet from basket; move intended to increase scoring and ease congestion in lane,
3-point foul
Shooter foiled on a 3-point shot
Three shots instead of two.
Current NBA
3-point line:
23 feet, 9 inches
Proposed NBA
3-point line:
22 feet
College
3-point line:
19 feet, 9 inches
Change 'clear path'
foul rules:
include
backcourt
backcourt;
second or
more of back-to-back timeouts where ball has not yet been inbounded be limited to no more than 45 seconds; eject player who commits two unnecessary-contact fouls during one game.
- Get touch on fighting: Address fighting and physical play; including a one-game suspension and maximum $20,000 fine for any
NOTE: Rule changes must be approved by a two-thirds vote of the NBA's board of Governors at a meeting next month.
player who leaves bench during an altercation.
Stiffer fines, more enforcement:
Technical foul fine amounts increased to $500; stricter enforcement of technical fouls for taunting or fighting; need to fightning; hand checking prohibited from end line in the backcourt to opposite foul line; illegal screens called more closely.
SOURCE: AP, Sporting News
Orfando Sentinel, Knight-Ridder Tribune/JILL HARGAA
P. S. MONROE
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. Mercantile is the right choice for student loans, offering:
- Professional Student Loan Specialists who will help you every step of the way.
- More than 30 years of student loan experience.
- A personal commitment to you.
- In-house processing and servicing of all student loans until repayment.
Put Mercantile to work for you.Call Carol at 865-0278.
Parking in the year
VV
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown
SUA FILMS
MERCANTILE BANK
Member FDIC
Equal Opportunity Lender
September 15-18
Like Water For
LONDEN
A
INITIYAN
AKEVEN
UDERNIARY
AVEIL
RECIMAR
ALICIEN
FASION
Dine Water FOR Chocolate
Thursday 9:30
Friday 7:00 and 9:30 pm
Sunday 2:00 pm
COSFONSORBED BY HALO
BEAT STREET
Friday Midnight
Saturday Midnight
Yall Breakdance Contest
Before the Movie Saturday
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
ATKIN
Since
"We Care For KU"
1907
Fat, Sugars
Milk Meats
Vegetables Fruits
Grains
A Picture of Health
Do you have questions about diet, eating patterns, weight loss/gain/maintenance? Contact Ann Chapman, R.D. © 864-9575 Monday-Thursday, 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
Dickinson
Cinema 6
12345 Plum
The Little Rascales *p* 8:10, 7:20, 9:45
True Lies *a* 4:25, 7:15, 10:00
The Next Kate Kid *p* 4:35, 7:15, 9:45
Trial By Jury *a* 4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Natural Born Killers *a* 4:30, 7:10, 9:50
Forrest Gump *p* 4:20, 7:00, 9:55
3 Primetime Show! Meetings Gobey
Senior Citizen Anytime Impressed States
FILMSFORSEPT.15&16
RUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAC FIELMS
Feeness
Sat. 2:00 PM
M*A*S*H
Thurs. 7:00 PM
Like Water For Chocolate Thurs. 9:30 PM
ALL SHOWS IN WOODBRUFF AUD.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MOREINFO.
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 831 5191
Speed®
5:00, 7:15, 9:30
HILLCREST
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
A Good Man in Africa $ ^{R}$ 5:15, 7:30/9:45
The Lion King $ ^{G}$ 5:15, 7:30, 9:30
The Client P$ _{13}$ 5:15, 7:30, 9:30
Milk Money P$ _{13}$ 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
Clear & Present Danger P$ _{13}$ 5:00, 7:30, 9:30
CINEMA TWIN
LUTOWA 641-5191 $1.25
Maverick P0-13 94:50,7:20,9:50
I Love Trouble P0 5:00,7:30,9:50
708 W.9th·842-5921
SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Welcome Back KU Students
708 W. 9th •
Visit us for that fresh look for fall... The Total Look
THE total look!
Eat, Drink & Be Merry!
SPECIALS:
Monday : ZIMA & Domestics • $1.25
Tuesday : Miller Lite & Genuine Draft • $1
Wednesday : Modelos • $1.75
Thursday: Coronas & Pacificos • $2
Friday: MARGARITAS • $2
Saturday : IMPORTS • $2
MAXIMUM
VISA
Come In & See Us!
ancho's
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Malls Shopping Center
23rd - Louisiana
843 - 4044
843-4044
---
music
T▼O▼R▼I A▼M▼O▼S
The redheaded singer and songwriter talks about life and music
SHEYMEN
HARRISON
By Jenny Brannan Kansan staff reporter
Tori Amos' fire-red hair flows as she straddles the piano bench to face the audience and share nakedly, through song, her experiences with religion, sex, guilt and abuse. When the moving female vocalist and pianist, who released the 1992 gold record "Little Earthquakes", caresses the keys of her piano on stage, she jumps from delicate notes to powerfully pounding examples of one woman's feelings.
"Ihad to find a way to feel like I didn't have to answer certain questions," Amos said. "This isn't the National Enquirer. Sometimes I wonder — can I really say this?"
When Amos performs at 8 p.m. on Sept. 23 at the Lied Center for a crowd of more than 2,000, she will play songs that touch on serious issues, such as rape and abuse, with a liberating honesty that stems from her personal experiences.
The song "Me and a Gun" from her album "Little Earthquakes" is based on her rape.
Since then, with funding from Atlantic Records, Amos has set up the first national Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network, RAINH, to help people who have survived traumatic sexual abuse experiences. The service automatically connects the caller with the closest of 341 rape crisis centers in the country. The number is 1-800-656-4673.
Amos said the songs she wrote helped her to heal, but the effect they had on others was out of her control.
"You have to let your work go once you've written it," Amos said.
Amos said that her extraordinary gift made it difficult to lead a typical childhood.
"I was pretty isolated because people didn't know how to react to me," she said. "They feel funny, so I feel funny. You go more into your talent because no one wants to hang out with you."
She said she had believed in creative freedom for the pianist, and the teachers had tried to make her play and read music in a very rigid way. She could play music by ear and the instructors tried to break her of this talent.
"We had real different views on what a musician was,"
"moss said. "How can you or I decide how a composer wants a piece plaved."
"When you're young enough, you still have balls," Amos said. "You don't care what your peers say."
Amos tried many different ways to break into the music business, including playing in piano bars and cocktail lounges as a teenager.
She said she had decided to examine what she wanted from her music after the flop of her first album, "Y Kant Tori Read." in the '80s.
"I was kind of brought to my knees," Amos said. "I had to look at what my intentions were, and I wasn't being fulfilled."
After that, she began to write the songs that made up her album, "Little Earthquakes," which has sold 1 million copies worldwide.
She said she had started to understand and to ask herself what was holding her back before from being creative.
Now, after her newest album, "Under The Pink," has
been released, Amos said that she had to be careful not to suppress her emotion and revelations as she gained exposure.
"The more exposed you get, the more they get to know you," Amos said. "The tendency is to pull back in — feel too exposed."
The KU Student Union Association in conjunction with
Contemporary, a musical promoting company, worked to bring Amos to Lawrence for a sold-out show.
Janie Plesser, SUA Live Music Coordinator, said that a show such as this would bring diversity to the campus.
"I don't think this is music you'll see everyday in Lawrence." Plessera said.
Arts & Reggae Festival
The International music fest draws thousands for everything from Caribbean to spiritual music
A
COURTESY OF TEMPEST ENTERTAINMENT
Wort-A-Girl
By Anne Loeper
Kansan correspondent
Frisbee disks, dogs, and arts and crafts will be as much a part of the Fifth Annual Arts and Reggae World Music Festival as the music.
David Clarke, festival coordinator, said the event's atmosphere was a lot like the University of Kansas' Day on the Hill — except the festival lasts three days.
The festival's theme, "One Love and Unity through Reggae Music," is supposed to reflect the laidback atmosphere of the festival and the fact that it brings many kinds of people together. Clarke said.
The festival features 17 bands. It begins tomorrow and ends Sunday at 40th and Mill streets, which is a park in Westport at Kansas City, Mo. The gates open at 1 p.m. Friday and 11 a.m. Saturday and Sunday.
"People just chill out, bring lawn chairs and Frisbees," he said. "Tents are also ontional."
Bands and performers from as far away as the West Indies and as close as Kansas City will perform. Clarke said this year the festival has expanded the type of reggae music offered.
Renee Bassett, bassist for Green Care, said the band enjoyed playing at the festival because it gained exposure to a younger crowd. Usually Green Care plays at bars for a crowd that is 21 or older.
Last year's attendance was about 12,000 people. Clarke said the new style of reggae might draw an even larger crowd.
"We're introducing Caribbean music this year, whereas usually it's mostly African music," he said.
This is the third year the band has played at the festival, she said. The members started out years ago playing at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
Bassett said the unique aspect of Green Care
Other bands scheduled are Bigga, a rock 'n' roll bandean band and protege of Bob Marley, and Worl-A-Girl, an all-girl dance hall group with rhythm and blues influence.
was the fact that all six members sing. The band is scheduled to play from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday.
Morgan Heritage is reggae's version of the Partridge Family, with seven brothers and a sister singing of spirituality and community.
The Mighty Sparrow is a native of the West Indies with music influenced by African, Creole, Eastern and Jazz rhythms.
Tickets are $8 each day in advance at any Ticketmaster outlet and $10 at the gate. No grills, fireworks or coolers are allowed at the festival.
Band Schedule
Friday - Singers International
Friday — Singers International 2-3 p.m. Opening Ceremony
3-4 p.m. AZ-ONE
6-7.15 p.m. Infrared Rockers
7:45 - 9 p.m. Bigga
Saturday — Reggae Dancehall
1:30-2:30 p.m. Steelie Banks
2:30-3:30 p.m. New Riddim
4 - 5 p.m. Wicked Act/ Andrew Bees
5:30 - 6:45 p.m. Windy Shaw
7:30 - 9 p.m. Worl-A-Girl
12-1 p.m.Irie Tribe
Sunday — World Music Mix
1:30 - 2:30 p.m. Alkebulan
3-4 p.m. Green Care
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
4:30-5:30 p.m. Scotty's Riddim
6-7 p.m. SDJ
7:30 - 9 p.m. Morgan Heritage
9:30 - 10 p.m. Mighty Sparrow
SEPTEMBER 15, 1994 PAGE 4B
KULIife
Lawrence Nightlife Calendar
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Salty Iguanas. 10 p.m. tomorrow. $4
Grither and Amputatee, tonight, no cover charge (18 and over)
Loaded in Lawrence compact disc-release party with Monterey Jack, Danger Bob and Slackjaw, 10 p.m. Saturday, $5
Skankin' Pickle, 10 p.m. Sunday, $6 (18 and over)
Consolidated and "Artis" the Spoonman, 10 p.m.
Monday, advanced tickets $8 (18 and over)
Men Saunders & The Rainforest Band, 10 p.m.
Tuesday, advanced tickets $8 (18 and over)
Lonesome Hounddogs with Lov's Revenge, 10 p.m.
Wednesday, $3
Danger Bob with Yah Yah Little Man, 10 p.m.
Thursday, $3 (18 and over)
Mulligan's
1016 Massachusetts St.
Darrell Lea, 9:30 tonight, $2 (21 and over), $3
(18-20)
Ricky Dean Sinatras, 10 p.m. Friday, cover charge Skin, 10 p.m. Saturday, cover charge
Boulevard presents Acoustic Open Mike Night, 9 p.m. Wednesday, no cover charge Acoustic Juice, 10 p.m. Thursday $2.99
Acoustic Juice, 10 p.m. Thursday, $2-3
642 Massachusetts St.
Liberty Hall
Reverend Horton Heat with Tenderloin and Paw, 8
tonight, advanced tickets $12.50
1601 West 23rd St.
River Valley Music Cafe
Limbo Cafe with Shallow,10 tonight,cover charge Dixie Dregs,10 p.m. tomorrow, advanced tickets $12.50
The Imposters, 10 p.m. Saturday, cover charge
The Moth, 10 p.m. Sunday, cover charge
Danger Bob, Camper the Madman and Sufferbus,
10 q.m. Monday, power charge
Johnny Clueless, 10 p.m. Wednesday, cover charge
John Paul and the Hellhounds with Little John and the Rhythm Rockets and Moe Blues Band, 10 p.m. Thursday, cover charge
Granada Theater
2023 Massachusetts 10. Scotty Riddim Band. 10 tonight. $3-$4
Mondo Disco with D.J. Ray, 9 p.m. tomorrow, $4-5
Lily inguanas, 10 p.m. Saturday, $4-5
Santy Iguanas, 10 p.m. Saturday,
Club 7, 9 p.m. Sunday, $3.4
lub 7, 9 p.m. Sunday, $3-4
Monday Night Football, 8 p.m. Monday, no cover charge
'80s Night, 9 p.m. Wednesday, $5 or $4 with a KUJD
Al Brown and Inner Force, 10 p.m. Thursday, $4-5
Full Moon Cafe
The Jazzholes, 9 tonight, no cover charge
The Atomic Sideshow, 9 p.m. tomorrow, no cover charge
Ashiklar, Gerald Trimble and Peter Stephenson, 9 p.m. Saturday, no cover charge
Kris Wade, 8 p.m. Thursday, no cover charge
---
V
Y.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 15, 1994
5B
Montana, Thomas capture AFC honors
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Joe Montana and Derrick Thomas, who combined to lead Kansas City past the San Francisco 49ers in Montana's first game against his former teammates, earned NFL player of the week honors yesterday.
Also honored were Andre Rison of Atlanta, Hardy Nickerson of Tampa Bay, Brian Mitchell of Washington and Chris Mohr of Buffalo.
Montana was named AFC offensive player of the week after completing 19 of 31 passes for 203 yards and two touchdowns in the Chiefs' 24-17 win over the 49ers.
Thomas, who had three sacks, including one for a safety, was the AFC defensive player.
Rison was named NFC offensive player after catching 12 passes for 123 yards and two touchdowns in Atlanta's 31-13 win over the Los Angeles Rams.
Nickerson had 18 tackles for the Bucs in their 24-10 win over Indianapolis.
Mitchell returned a punt 76 yards for a touchdown and set up another score with an 86-yard kickoff return in Washington's 38-24 win over New Orleans to earn NFC special teams honors.
Mohr, the Buffalo punter, won AFC special teams honors with a 45.7 average on six punts against New England.
'Husker to start at safety, not quarterback
LINCOLN, Neb. — Finally, Tony Veland has earned his way into the starting line-up for Nebraska.
The Associated Press
It's not that Veland lacked the talent to get there. He once was slated the quarterback ahead of then-rookie Tomnie Frazier in the Cornhusker depth chart. Then another in a long series of injuries put the former Omaha high school star on the bench — again.
On Saturday, Veland, junior, will make that first start for No. 2 Nebraska.
But it won't be at the position he dreamed of playing
when he accepted his scholarship several seasons ago. Frazer will be the quarterback; Veland starts at safet
"It really means a lot to me," Veland said. "I hate to be starting under the circumstances I am, but to be play-
I really means a lot to me, Verland said. To be at the starting under the circumstances I am, but to be playing now and not to be hurt on the sidelines means a lot." Ironically, it was an injury that sent Veland to the defense for a new start on his Nebraska career, and it was an injury that provided the opportunity for his first start. Safety Mike Minter was lost for the season with ligament damage to the knee suffered on Sept. 8 against Texas Tech.
He faces a UCLA team ranked No. 13 in the nation.
Welcome Back Students!
Welcome Back
Students!
We offer treatment for all conditions of the skin, hair and nails including:
• Acne
• Tattoo Removal
• Hair Transplants
• Mole & Wart Removal
• Glycolic Acid Peels
• Spider Vein & Collagen Injections
Call 842-7001 for a consultation today!
Member of Blue Shield & Health Net
Wednesday Evening Appointments Available
Dermatology Center of Lawrence
Since 1976
Lee R. Bittenbender, M.D.
930 Iowa St. • Hillcrest Professional Building
Lawrence, KS 68044 • (913) 842-7001
THE ROCK CLUB
Kitchen is open!
ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE CAFE OR THROUGH
WED., SEPT 14 THE PRAYERS
W/SOLEFISH
THUR., SEPT 15 GRUMPY
SHALLOW
ADV TIX
THE ORIGINAL LINE-UP!
FRIL., SEPT 16 DIXIE DREGS
SAT., SEPT 17 Adam's Farm w/Mother and Shag
MON., SEPT 19 RVMC Showcase
Danger Beb, Pamper the Madman,
Bufferbus, Johnny Clueless
SUN., SEPT. 18
RON ROBERTS QUARTET
5-8PM • DINNER SHOW
IDA McBETH
AT 9PM
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
For info 913.841.9111
ADULT DANCE CLASS
Classes Beginning Now
COME BY AND ENROLL TODAY!
• Five Levels of Ballet • Tap
• Modern Dance • Jazz
• Western Dance • Ballroom
THE LAWRENCE
CENTER
200 West 9TH
Arts
843-ARTS
Fantastic Fall Special!
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
• 2 bedrooms $450 per month
• 3 bedrooms $500 per month
• 4 bedrooms $600 per month
• Swimming Pool • Sand Volleyball Court
• On KU Bus Route • Ample Private Parking
• Water and Trash Paid
Outstanding New Staff!!!
Welcome Back
Students!
We offer treatment for
all conditions of the skin,
hair and nails including:
• Acne
• Tattoo Removal
• Hair Transplants
• Mole & Wart Removal
• Glycolic Acid Peels
• Spider Vein &
Collagen Injections
Dermatology
Center
of Lawrence
Since 1978
Lee R. Bittenbender, M.D.
980 Iowa St. • Hillcrest Professional Building
Lawrence, KS 68044 • (913) 842-7001
Dermatology Center of laurence Since 1978 Lee R. Bittenbender M.D.
THE ROCK CLUB Kitchen is open!
ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE CAUSE OR THROUGH
LEXINGTON, KY
WED., SEPT 14 THE PRAYERS W/SOLEFISH
THUR., SEPT 15 GRUMPY SHALLOW
ADV. TIX THE ORIGINAL LINE-UP!
FRI., SEPT 16 DIXIE DREGS
SAT., SEPT 17 Adam's Farm w/Mother and Shag
MON., SEPT 19 RVMC Showcase
Danger Bob, Pamper the Madman,
Bufferbus, Johnny Cluess
SUN., SEPT., 18
RON ROBERTS QUARTET
5-8PM • DINNERSHOW
IDA McBETH
AT 9PM
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
For info 913.841.9111
RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE
Fantastic Fall Special!
South Pointe A FARM HOME
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
South Pointe
AFARTMENTS
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
For less than a dollar a day both will give you the power you need to survive this semester.
Orie java, piping in a sugar and hold the moo juice.
With an Apple Computer Loan, it's now easier than ever to buy a Macintosh personal computer. In fact, with Apple's special low interest and easy terms, you can own a Mac" for as little as $23 per month! Buy any select Macintosh now, and you'll also get something no other computer offers: the Apple student software set. It includes a program designed to help you with all aspects of writing papers. A personal organizer/calendar created specifically for
Investment that are
Apple® PowerBook® 150 4/120.
Only $1,257.00.
students (the only one of its kind). And the Internet Companion to help you tap into on-line resources for researching your papers. It even includes ClarisWorks, an integrated package complete with database, spreadsheet, word processing software and more. All at special low student pricing. With an offer this good, it's the best time ever to discover the power every student needs. The power to be your best.* Apple
Apple
POWER
unooght.
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union technology center
KU Apple
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burge Union * Level 3 * 913/864-5690
Offer expires October 17, 1994, available only while supplies last. © 1994 Apple Computer, Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh, Performa, PowerBook and "The power to be your best" are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. Mac is a trademark of Apple Computer, Inc. ClarkWorks is a registered trademark of Clark Corporation. $23 per month is an ultimate based on an Apple Computer Loan of $1,405.81 at $69 per month. Primes and loan amounts are subject to change without notice. See your Apple Computer Number or representate for current system prices. A 5% loan origination will be added to the required loan amount. The interest rate is variable, based on the commercial paper rate plus 5.5%. For the month of August 1994, the interest rate was 10.0%, with an APR of 11.36%, 8-year loan burn with no prepayment penalty. The monthly payment shown does not deprive of any interest. Student may adjust primes up to 9 years, or until graduation. Deferment will change your monthly payments. The Apple Computer Loan is subject to credit approval.
---
6B
Thursday, September 15, 1994
"Universal since 1993
SPORTS
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
"Imperial rose 1933"
ouaiis
SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE ON WEDDING GOWNS 20%-70% Off Through September 24th Call 800-842-0442 For Your Personal Appointment
Laura's Couture Collection 55th & Brookside Boulevard, Kansas City, Missouri
PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES
CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES
- Complete GYN Care • Pregnancy Testing
- Depo Provera & Norplant • Tubal Ligation
- Abortion / Tubal Ligation (1 procedure)
- Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff · Modern State Licensed Facility PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974
COMPREHENSIVE 345-1400
health for women OUTSIDE*KCA AREA
4401 W. 109th (I-435 & Roe) 1-800-227-1918
Overland Park, KS TOLL FREE
Amateur golf prodigy putts for Stanford, U.S. this fall
invoice pad accept
VISA
MasterCard
Graystone Athletic Club, Inc. 2500 W6th 841-7230
Special Student Memberships!
The carefully crafted letter, written in neat script, says as much about Woods as the golf shoots that have made him famous. It also typifies the approach Woods is taking as he begins his college career.
"The whole thing was whether I
But Woods, 18, is not a typical teenager. By the time he was in seventh grade, he had won several
His first week will be far from routine. After beginning three days of classes Sept. 28, he'll join three other American golfers at the World Amateur Team Championship in Versailles, France.
Goodwin, whose team is the NCAA champion, still shows off the letter he received five years ago from Woods.
STANFORD, Calif. — Four weeks after becoming the youngest winner in U.S. Amateur golf history, Tiger Woods is ready to start his freshman year at Stanford.
And as a 13-year-old, he wrote a letter to Stanford men's golf coach Wally Goodwin to express his interest in someday attending the school "to obtain a quality business education."
US OUT!
The Associated Press
State of the art fitness and health facility
✓
ATHLETIC CLUBING
"It's just the perfect letter," Goodwin said. "Tiger's family, they don't deal in anything other than perfection. This kid is the product of the most amazing environment."
Junior tournaments and was traveling to Thailand — his mother's native country — to play in an event.
wanted to go to school to further my golf game or to further myself," he said yesterday at Stanford, a school that has produced championship golfers such as Tom Watson. "There's more to life than just golf. I'm here for the four years."
--in the heart of downtown"
一
JONES NEW YORK EXECUTIVE SUITE Lawrence Riverfront Plaza Ladies suits and dresses Mens suits, sportcoats and accessories WHILE SUPPLIES LAST SELECTED WOMANS SUITS $99.00 749-0200
--in the heart of downtown"
Learn to Fly 842-0000
"No Lion"- Love Garden pays ca$h for CDs!!
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
Our mane pleasure is buying quality used CDs, LPs and tapes, and we take pride in the fact we pay ca$h for CDs, LPs & tapes 7 davas a week!
936 $ ^{1/2} $ Mass. St.
LOVE
SAL SAFE INSTITUTE
WE THE BEST GARDEN
Sept. 28th
Luscious Jackson
in-store
call for details
936'/2 Mass. St.
(upstairs)
843-1551
open Thurs.'til 8
La Familia III After Hours
The Kitchen's closed but the bar is open.
925 Iowa
749*5039 for info
25¢ DRAWS
50¢ KAMIS
Plus daily drink & import specials
18& over
10:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.
$3.00 cover with KUID
Wed, Thur & Fri.
BULLY
ATKIN
"We Care For KU"
Saturday class includes a 30-min. break. Classes cover adultchild/infant CPR using American Heart Association materials. $5 fee for training.
Since WATKIN 1907
---
CPR can save a life.
To sign up:
864-9570
Sept. 19 & 20
Sept. 26 & 27
Oct. 10 & 11
Oct. 17 & 18
Oct. 22
Oct. 24 & 25
MTu 6-9 p.m.
MTu 6-9 p.m.
MTu 6-9 p.m.
MTu 6-9 p.m.
Sa 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
MTu 6-9 p.m.
DENT HEALTH SERVICE
864-9500
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
O
WE WANT YOU!
Call: 843-4600
512 E.9th Lawrence, KS 66044
(And your next printing job!)
Quality Lithography Design
LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE
Fast Turn-Around
Graphic Design
Multiple Colors
Client Oriented
Quality Service
Brochures
Newsletters
Stationery & Env
Posters & Maps
Manuals & Books
O
lyric opera of kansas city
OTHELLO
BY GIUSSI PPI VIRDLI
DON'T MISS THIS PASSIONATE PRODUCTION BASED ON SHAKESPEARE'S CLASSIC TRAGEDY, PERFORMED IN ENGLISH
SUTTEMBER 31ST 5 PM
SEPH MICR 11 A 2 PM OPERFORMANCE MILES SIGNED
SEPTEMBER 1 MUSIC SPONSORD BY BACK & MYCH
MUSIC SPONSORD BY BACK & MYCH
STUDIO MUSIC ST WITH ID. 30 MINUTES PREVIOUS TO CURRENT
PROVIDED BY THE MISSISSUQUIA COUNTY COUNCIL OF TRAINING NURSING UNDWELPMENTS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE TO LOOK AHEAD OF THE U.S. ARMY.
C
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
Help Wanted
Professional Services
Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, national origin, nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
300s
Merchandis
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, 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 available.
100s Announcements
105 Personals
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
Kansan Classified: 864-4358
THE ETC. SHOP 922 Mass.
STERILING STERLING JEWELRY
Rings, Hooked Jewelry &
Pendants LEATHER
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & PurSES
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Kill Loop,
'i', Revo, Serenegi, and Varnet
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen
110 Bus. Personals
Really Listen
Call or drop by Headquarters
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open
Tarot card readings.
Be healthier and happier!
Believe pain and stress with massage therapy!
Discount students access!
729. Mackay Suite 216
Call Ann Lanna Laura and Laure Pace at 841-1587.
Tard card readings.
Love? Success? Career?
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer.
Call Anna Lumaria at 841-1587.
New Dance
Classes
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Country Ballroom Latin and Swing Call913-266-5914
PattKerrinstructor
918 S. Kansas Avenue Topeka
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also Insurance for US citizens going abroad. Osladli Insurance Service. 4111 S Main Ottawa, Ks 66067 100-606-6955.
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAILABLE. NO REPAYMENTS, EVER. QUALIFY IMEDIATELY: 1-800-243-2435.
COMMUTERS: I Serve Car Pool Exchange.
COMMUTERS: Self serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
NEED A RIDE/RIDER! Use the Self Serve Car
Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
Openings for CNAs 2:10-30 shift for CNA's fall or spring. Eudora Nursery Center 914-528-7478 914-528-7478
TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer ators to you. Student Assistance Center 185 Strong
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong.
School of Education Students
Students who plan to STUDENT TEACH the SPRING 1996 semester (GCPs included) must attend the student teacher meeting on Monday, September 19 at 3:30 p.m. in 303 Bailey. This meeting is mandatory. Preliminary information is available in 117 Bailey.
13TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2 • 16, 1985 • 4, 8, 9, 98, 7, RIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
$168
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
YA GOTTA
BE THERE!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
"NOBODY DOES SKI BREAKS HETTER!"
WTCs, the shelter in Lawrence for battered women and their children, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training: September 15 at 7:00 p.m. on campus or November 26 at 8:30 a.m. Lawrence public Library, 70 Vermont. For information, please call WTCs at 841-6887.
Thanksgiving AIRLINE TICKETS Don'tWait We'll find the
For
Call Today!
Airplane
lowest fares and best schedules. On Campus Location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
140 Lost & Found
Lost cat, gray female. Gray with white paws.
Lost dog, gray female. Gray with 4th and 14th india.
Call 748-2349 Leave message
LOST: Prescription sunglasses w/ gray case on
phone 841-912. Thanks
please call 841-912 Thanks
Parakeet found near 19th & Haskell. Describe to claim. Call 844-4523
卫生间
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$100/hr. possible mailing our circulars, for info call (202) 298-9055
PHILLIPS 66
Now accepting applications for store sales associates for
Now accepting applications for store sales associates for several locations:
•Starting wage above minimum
-Modern,clean locations
- Modern, clean locations
- Flexible working hours
Apply today at 9th & Iowa
✓
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 15, 1994
7B
3-4 Daily Monday-Friday to prepare light dinner for a stroke impaired wheel chair lady and her husband. Please pre-nursing student residency in or nearby call 843-4140 8am-fpm (for appointment)
Adamus Alhami Center needs pantry person for AM flexible banquet. Banquet cook PM shift. Cook 3-11 PM shift. Positions available immediately. Apply in person. 1268 Reed Ave. No phone calls. Attendant needed PT to student in wheelchair. Male or Female 2-3 hrs./day. Morning only. No lifting necessary. Experience pre-certified. Must be committed to every morning. $ 8.25/hr. 844-0000.
CNA CLASSES
Baby sister needed for two delightful toddler girls in nice home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible days/evenings/weekends. Experience, own car, and references required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to Box #20, University Daily Kansan 191 Stauffer Flint.
Need some extra pocket money? Certified Nurse Aide classes will start Sept. 28. Call Eudora Nursa Center, 542-2176 for additional information.
Ask for Svlvia. Mon-Fri
COLLEGE STUDENTS $10.55-11.54 STARTING Local branch of nat 'i ca. Filling immediate entry level opening. Fell in time schedules. 3 days, eyes ends. weekends opt. All majors accepted. For info 841-8905.
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
Cottonwood Inc. a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their residential position. Positions include eventing, weekend, and overnight hours. College coursework required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD A MUST. Please apply by 9-20-94 at Cottonwood Inc. 2801 W 31 EOE
CRUISE SHIP JOBS!! ! Up to $900 weekly. Free room/board. Now hiring skilled/unskilled men and women. No experience necessary. Call (601) 798-1362 ext. CS501424 brs.
**CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING** - Earn up to $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 1-269-634-0488 ext. C75751
WE'RE GROWING!
Golden Opprotunities under the Golden Arches
Mc Jobs
Open Interviews
Sat., Sept. 17th
11a.m.-2 p.m.
at McDonalds on 6 Now Hiring for our locations and to answer any questions about how you can be a part of our team.
McDonald's
What are we waiting for?
Delivery Drivers. Great job, great pizza, Great
pizza. Great hour. Apply in person.
Pizza Shoppe 601 Kasidu
Dog Sitter needed various times. Near 14th and Kentucky, $5.00 per hour. Call 749-9230
EARNEXTMONEY IN AN EXITING ENVIRONMENT The Arrowhead Stadium. Home of Kansas City Chiefs, game day position available in the Arrowhead Club and private suits. The Arrowhead Club, suite runners, servers, bartenders, and kitchen help. For more info call 818-924-4000.
Edmondson-Berger Liquor seeks responsible and reliable PTC client to work evening and weekend shifts.
GRADUATE STUDENT ASSISTANT. Half-time position available in the Student Assistance Center for Disability Related Services. Responsibilities include assisting staff in coordinating services to students with disabilities and providing acadic aids, researching equipment needs, and identifying local, state, and federal regulations impacting students with disabilities. Requires: KU graduate student status for Fall, 1904 and prior to graduation. Relevant Behavioral Counseling, Speech-Language Hearing Sciences Disorders, or related field.
Enhautishic HDFL/Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for 2 hrs. thurs. evenings and occasionally 4hrs. Sunday mornings. Call 842-8200
Insurance agency needs part-time clinical help.
will work with class assistants Call 841-4000
work with class assistants Call 841-4000
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT Make up to
$2,000.00MB+/mo teach basic conversational
language. No textbooks. No teamlab.
background or Asian languages required. For
info. call: (362) 618-437 ext. 15785.
Laborers are for tree service $8.25/hr
time available. Apply in person only 845 Maple at
12345 Street.
REQUIRED: application form, available in the Student Assistance Center, must be completed and received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, September 30, 1994, in 133 Strong Hall, University of Kansas. Mail your resume to 66053, nl3-864-6084. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer.
LEARNING RETRY
LARGE Lawward applications requiring applications for qualified full-time secretaries and parttime word processors. Must have Word Perfect 5.1 and strong secretarial skills.
Send resume and salary requirements to:
ADIA Personnel Services
100 E. 9th St.
Lawrence, KS 66044
842-1515
Looking for a change while getting an education? We need an energetic fun-loving person to preferably live in our new home and be a mother's helper. Free room and board, plus salary. Own living quarters with private entry. For details please call 482-2180 between two and 3 Mon - Fri
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic, highly motivated individuals to sell newspaper subscriptions. Sales experience is helpful, but we will train highly motivated individuals. Evening job offered by the Lawrence Journal World commission. Apply between p.m. and p.m., at the Lawrence Journal World 609 New Hampshire. Contact Valerie for more information. 832-712-71.
Excellent income for part-time work!
Mail Order Telephone Rep - New Home Improvement catalog has part-time weekday openings in the building. Great for people needing flexible schedules during the day. Good clerical skills required. Start $5/hr. Apply in person. H.I., Inc. 2001 Lakeview (Blue blvd, west of Wearwood Paper, straight ahead to 2nd right) or call for directions (863-3652).
Needed: Experienced, stable individual to watch my child in my home from 3:00 to 3:30, m-30, M-F. Ref's required. Please call Laura 832-3211 between 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Occasional babybelieft needed: 1-4 children. Days or
weekdays, evenings or weekends. Call 849-5263.
Part Time Assistant for Apt. Management Good Pay Resume, Reference, Morning Star 917 Tenant
Part time help needed for delivery work. After-
work hours. Apply in person. Hanna's
Annieances 233 Mass.
Part-time custodian worker needed to work worm-
ling per week. Rate $7.00/hour. Call 101-783-0204.
Research assistant for non-profit organization.
$60/hour. Call Jackie at 842-3482 for information.
SPRING BREAK * 96- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH
& GO FREEL! !! Student Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates.
Call 842-3482 and Panama City Beach. Call 849-648-4849.
Stepping Stones is hiring part-time teacher's aided
students in preschool and kindergarten and toddler
rooms. Apply at 1100 Wakayama
STUDENT APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER.
Deadline: 08/14; $19.99, Salary $550/month. 20 his per semester and uses 15-hour program coding maintenance and teaches us program coding maintenance, programming in C, FASCAL, FOXPRO and LAN. He is a manager of languages and/or LAN. He is enrolled in 6 hours at the University of Kansas. A complete job description is available. To apply, submit a cover letter and resume to Ann Rait at Computing Services.
Student assistant to work approximately 20 hours a week in the Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology. Duties include processing of graduate admissions, typing, filing, running errands and
Required Qualifications: Previous office experience. Typing speed of 50 wpm, with a high degree of accuracy, must be available to work 3-4 hour blocks of time and be able to work with various persons on diverse projects, have a basic understanding of word processing, be detailed oriented and comfortable typing.
**Questions**
Preferred Qualification: Computer experience with knowledge of word processing (Word Perfect and/or Macintosh). Available to work additional hours during summer.
Salary: $4.50 - $5.50 per hour depending of experience
Apply to Patt Statron, Dept. of Pharmacology & Toxicology, 5044 Malot, 9-11 or 2-4, Monday/Friday. Deadline for applications: September 15, 1994 STUDENT HOURLY BUSINESS SERVICES ASSISTANT: Deadline: 1/16/94 5:00 p.m. salary; Telecommunications Services include: assisting with customer billing process; financial data entry and analysis; preparation and maintenance of computer spreadsheets; processing inventory; creating order statuses; and miscellaneous Business office duties. Must be enrolled in 6 hours at the University of Kansas. To apply, complete a job application form available online (behind Ellsworth Residence Hall). For further information, contact Networking and Telecommunications Services, 864-9300, Ellsworth Anex, 1738 Engel Road, Lawrence, KS 68045 EO/AH
Student Hourly position Available. Duties:
Receptionist; filing; duplicating; running errands; typing; proofreading; other duties as assigned. Position available September 21, 1994.
Assistance Center; Strong/86hrs; Deadline September 16, 1994, 12:00 PM (Noon).
STUDENT SYSTEM TESTING PROGRAMMER
DAY 09/15, 91% SALE $550/$650-month. 20hrs per week. Duties include design and writing programs, maintaining, or enhancing existing programs, and developing new programming hours at the University of Kansas, demonstrated experience in designing and writing programs, knowledge of at least 2 programming languages used in the computer science applications, experience and/or ability in software testing. Ability to maintain effective working relationships with customers and staff. Experience in setting up complete and available in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EO/AE AAEMPLOYER.
Part-time Custodial Positions Available
- Sat.& Sun. 6-11am
- Sat.8 am.-12 noon
- Sun. 9-11 am...& Mon, Tues,
Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm.
- Wed.-Fri. • 9:30-11:30pm.
- Sun. 9am-3pm.
- Sun. 9am.-12noon & Mon.- Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm.
- Sun. 11:30 am.-3pm. & Wed.5:30-7:30pm.
CallBPI Building Services at 842-6264
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
A DEVISION OF
BUCKINGHAM
PALACE.
STUDENT TRAVEL SALES! Sunchease Tours is seeking ambitious sales reps to promote ski and beach trips for Christmas and Spring Break! Earn cash and free trips. Call today: 1-800-SUNCHASE
Typist needed for KU student hour position.
Need to have excellent typing skills; IBM-PC computer knowledge; excellent verbal and written communication skills; able to follow filed undergrown encourage to apply. $4.50/hour, 20 hours per week. Contact Liz or Susan at the Hall for the Humanities, 21Watkins Home 864-4708
Terraver Construction Company has opening starting immediately for trim carpenters and laborers. Hardworking individuals who can work a minimum of 3 week days and be able to report to work by 8:00 a.m. These jobs involve some heavy lifting, etc. Apply in person at 4104 B Trail Road (around back and in the basement). For more info, call 842-8839 between the hours of 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
UNIQUE MENTAL HEALTH OPPORTUNITY
Needed immediately male roommate to provide emotional support, adult supervision to an 18 yr old child with a chronic illness or community after psychiatric hospitalization. Roommate will be contracted by the young man's family in conjunction with the Meininger Supplementary Psychiatry Program at nursing and social work staff. Room, board, stipend provided. Reference and KHI check required. Please call Nancy Carpenter (ex. 3291) 522-6337 or Annette Bartel (ext. 3291) 522-6337.
Wanted babysitter for two children. Ages 3-5.
evenings 3:10-1:00. Light cooking necessary in
must be reliable, ask for Michelle and bob
84-6334. Call annight before 3:30:00.
Waitress Needed call 749-5039, 925 Iowa
who like to talk
* who are friendly
* who are fashionable
A few great women WANTED!
Join one of the country's fastest growing retail companies. MANAGEMENT AND SALES. Full time. Apply in person. WESTPORT LTD. Lawrence, RIVERfront Factory Outlet Mall, third floor. 814-1234.
WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING
INDIVIDUALS IN MEMORIES TO PROMOTE SPRING BREEDING
AMACUN CANCU, FLORIDA, & PADRE, FANTASTIC
AMACUN AND GREAT COMMISSIONS! SUN
AS SPRING BREEDING EVENT.
We need 5 enthusiastic people to show high fashion
clothes. Call NOW for details. 842-7945 after 3:30 p.m.
Work Study Students community service internships $5.00/hour. In apply in Center for community Justice in Student Senate Office. Call 864-3710 with any questions.
Christmas is Coming!
Earn extra cash for the holidays! Pro Tel Marketing.
We have day, afternoon
We have day, afternoon, and evening positions available. We now have flexible
one of the most successful marketing companies in the U.S., is looking for people to fill 30 positions.
able. We now have flexible scheduling available.
Scheduling available We also have full
and part time positions TRANSPORTATION PROVIDED We Offer:
- 2 automatic increases
- $5.50/hr nights
- $1.00/hr attendance bonus
- Good business and marketing experience
- Paid vacations/holidays
* Incentive programs
- Incentive programs
- Opportunity for advancement
Call 272-6888 (Topeka)
Ask forext. 100
EOE
225 Professional Services
< *Driver Education* > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
College Credit Compilation under way, worlds
of popular party games. Personal credit plus
copyright of favorite games.
SALUTES
OUJ/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
701 Tennessee
Free Consultation
DULTRAFFICICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANSASCITY AREA
CHARLESR. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964.
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
grammar, reading, listening and
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3331.
Experienced Spanish tutor-Struggleging? I can
reasonably rates. Call Michelle 864-6109.
International Video Conversions PAL/SECAM/
NTSC. $25 for up to 2 hours. Includes return
fee. Call Caroline at transfer. Transfer
PO box 310 Ottawa K1 68007 - 66067-8007
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID $&$ alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
O'DALONG G. SYTR
Donald Speer
Kate Geisey
16 Eat13th
842-1133
KC Design Studio: Growing creative studio searching for professional, talented artist. Must be experience in humorous illustration and cartooning. Graphic illustration and Macintosh experiences a plus. Send to samples of work with SAE on the Studio. PO Box 2265, Kansas City, MO 64113
Need a babysitter? College student, loves kids, six years experience with infants, toddlers, have transportation and flexible schedule. Call Melanie at 843-3846.
235 Typing Services
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant
Prompt abortion and contraception services in Lawrence: 841-5718. Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter formulas.
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
A Word Perfect Wor Processing Service.
Laser Printing, Spell Check, Near Campus.
Call (800) 632-7900.
X
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Theses,
Term papers, Resumes. Business letters, etc.
www.writing4u.com
305 For Sale
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
Put my service to the test.
For example, you can call,
MAKIN' THE GRADE
is the one to call
ask me.
300s Merchandise
Brand new '94 YAMAHA RAZZ scooter; paid $1350, will sell for $1000.
Blue plaid carpet carpet to fit dorm room.
Blue plaid carpet carpet for $140, for $80/OBO. Call Mike
887-629-3561
Honda 1989 Elite 50 red scooter, with 2 baskets, 460 miles with new battery and tune-up. Make offer 888-2282.
For Sale: Vespa motorcross Excellent cond.
$650. Oaktara 242-0800
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N. 2nd * 841-8903
19th & Haskell * 841-7504
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 5092. Call Christ at 800-289-5685.
Macintosh SE 30, 5 MB Ram, 40 MB HD, with software and corrosive protection. Apple Stylewriter II
To benefit Lawrence Chamber School Saturday, september 17.8am - 3.pm. (No early callers!) 162D Udall appliances, music items, art work, books, sports equipment, toys, linens, great miscellany
Colossal Yard Sale
1992 NINA 250 1850 im. Exc. Dom I. Call-723-351
% Off every with KU ID, Book 218 (downstairs next to men room). Antique Mall, Downtown Lawrence, Thurville Lakes of Jets)
4221
6 Macintosh SE Great for student @825. 003 Black and white monitor/no printer Call Mike M4-377-279
EARN CASH
ALL YOUR
MONEY GONE?
$15 Today
$30
ThisWeek
By donating your blood plasma
Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center
NABI
The Quality Source
816 W.24th
Behind Laird Noller Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F 9-6:30
Sat.10-4
486 PC Mini Tower with new CD ROM multi-
nedia pack $1,100 or best offer, 862-298
GOLLING STONES TIX Two for sale for Sunny's show. Call 841-8250.
Rolling Stones tickets for sale. Great seats. Call Chris 805-0111.
STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and
printer for 5% a semester. Call 1-800-959-6494
Two Tori Amos tickets available. Best offer 865-2521.
340 Auto Sales
**93 Suzuki Katana, 600cc, blk w/ purple & teal**
accents. Likewise new, beautiful beak vape a very fast
$3900/OBD Call Jason at 362-2050 9am-Spm or
769-6283 events & weekend
1982 Nissan 2005XI SL speed, with sunroof, power
headlights, and louvers. $1108/OBO Call Mike at
866-374-3878.
1965 SAAB Turbo 4 dr 5 spd sun roof pw ee.
Black/maroon. Repair records. Rebuild clutch
heater valve CV distributor and ignition module.
New muffler, new tires. 2000 OBO. 841-738
93 Nissan 246SX red, 5-spd, sunroof, cassette,
phone, alarm, anti-lock brakes, tite steering,
carba, AC power-lock, cruise, 35-kiles, excellent,
$16.000, call Terre-86-0930
Corrugated boxes, moving and storage boxes. Large quantity pricing & small quantity walk-ins welcome. Call 843-8111 and ask for the Sales Service Department. Carry and carry.
360 Miscellaneous
VAGABONDBOOKMAN
Buy & Sell Used Rare & Collectables
842-BOOK 1113 Mass.
(2665)
Free Black Lab puppy (5 mos.) to a VERY GOOD home.
Please call 823.1498.
FIRST BEDROOM APARTMENT
GREAT BEDROOM, 2BR, 2BA, bus robe route.
PETS AVAIL. Call 855-401-7300, Call 855-401-7300.
Want to buy Basketball tickets, or sports combo Call Chris 865-001.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well rented homes 841-STAR 7297
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
1 or 2 bedrooms in new 4bdm duplex in
Aventura avenue av. 3508. Fax (612) 298-7988.
Large room, 4 bedrooms. If I person 4290/m²
and have a master bedroom.
2 people, $210/mo. David 1-485-6232
Available immediately 2 bedroom apartment,
3 blocks from campus, DW, micro, cable, $450. Call now 749-1438.
*On KU Bus Route
Spacious 3 bedroom, near campus. a/c/d/w, on bus route, w/d on-site. Available Oct. 1 $425 & partial deposit. 843-8318-Robyn.
- On KUBus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
Swimming Pool
*Ample Private Parking
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
South Pointe AFFILIATE
Sublease 3 months (Oct-Dec) 2 Bedroom, quiet,
Room at 86-9432 (sam-pm) or 76-3858 (evening)
at 86-9432 (sam-pm) or 76-3858 (evening)
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
- Water and Trash Paid
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Directly on bus route
- 2 bedroom with study
- Call 843-4754
- Available for fall.
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
"Don't get left out in the cold."
ORCHARD CORNERS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
ABEDROOM
Quaint, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Off-street park near New York. Some charge for parking.
- On KUBus Route
* Close to Campus
* SwimmingPool
* Stop By Today!
Equal 749-4226 M-F 9-5
Opportunity 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
- By phone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
1 Roommate needed ASAP to purchase furnished
bedroom apartment, W/D, on bus route; $250-
Female roommate wanted, start Jan. 1985, $350,
roommate to accept apt. dep andJan rent paid
Call Jen at 865-1852
2 females looking for 3rd roommate to live in townhouse. $289 rent cable paid. Available immediate.
- By Mail: 119 Suffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60445
One roommate wanted ASAP to support four bed-
rooms on his hills, rent negotiated (20)
Mississippi 527-7125
**WANTED A.S.A.P.!**
1 female n/s wanted to share 2 birst. 1st floor of house 2 minutes from Union. $240 + 1/2 utility. 841-7923.
4 roommate needed to 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom rooms. Has w/d, dishwasher and garbage bin. Refrigerator available.
Ada phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: 119 Stuart Flint
Stop by the Kanas 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.
ROOMMATE MATTED To share a duplex, own bedroom. Front and backyard. Pets allowed.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified Information and order form
**Calculating Rates:**
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of staged 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 in a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
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.
Num. of insertions:
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
Classifications
140 low and found 345 for sale
285 helped wash 340 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
125 carpet service
Please print your ad one word per box
105 personal
110 business personals
12 announcements
130 entertainment
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper.
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Classification:
Address:
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☑ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dally Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
Account number:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Xenon 9.15
© 1994 Raymonds Inc./Dial by Universal Press Syndicate
"Don't eat the flippers, Zeke, or they'll know we're tourists."
8B
LAKE MENDOTA. THE PROJECT CONSUMED HALF THE STUDENT BUDGET FOR THE YEAR AND CAUSED A CAMPUS FUORO
Thursday, September 15, 1994
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Tower of Liberty at high tide.
University of Wisconsin.
You see some weird things on college campuses.
Like the COLLEGIATE
FONCARD from Sprint. The late night MOONLIGHT MADNESS rate it offers is certainly unusual. So unusual, only Sprint offers it. Gab all
MORNING
MACHINES
Sprint.
COLLEGIATE
FÕNCARD™
816 854 1133 1234
Dial 1-800-877-8000. At Tone, Dial 0 + Area Code + Number
At Tone, Enter FÕNCARD Number.
THIS COLLEGIATE FONCARD IS SO EASY, IT'S WEIRD.
Stranger yet, the Sprint Booth on campus is giving away groovy T-shirts just for signing up. The COLLEGIATE FONCARD from Sprint Totally weird. Check it out at
night long from 11pm-6am at 9¢ a minute. the Sprint Booth on campus.
Sprint.
9¢ A MINUTE RATE, 30 FREE MINUTES AND A FREE T-SHIRT? WEIRDNESS AT THE SPRINT BOOTH.
SIGN UP! AT OUR BOOTH! MONDAY & TUESDAY, SEPT. 12 & 13 AT THE MAIN LOBBY, KANSAS UNION. 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
9¢ a minute rate applies to domestic calls made between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. In addition to the 9¢ a minute rate, surcharges will apply to COLLEGIATE FONCARD calls. ©1994 Sprint Communications Company L.P.
ERECTED A STYROFOAM REPLICA OF THE STATUE OF LIBERTY ON FROZEN
STUDENT GOVERNMENT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN. DEDICATED TO THE PURSUIT OF SILLINESS,THEY IMMEDIATELY
2
SPORTS
CAMPUS
The Kansas/TCU football contest will feature Yom Kippur was a day of fasting and forgiveness two powerful running games. PAGE 1B for one KU student.PAGE 5A High 78° Low 54° Weather: Page 2A.
COOL
AAAAAHHH
VOL.104,NO.19
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KAN
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
ЛАДАДАНИ
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 8644358
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
Inspectors find flaws in Ellsworth
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
NEWS:864-4810
Doing laundry in Ellsworth Hall might not be safe.
The office of Design and Construction Management inspected the new laundry facility Sept. 6 and found several building and fire code violations, said Jim Modig, director of design and construction.
Modig said the facility violated five codes, including the Uniform Building Code, the Uniform Mechanical Code, the Uniform Plumbing Code, the National Electric Code and the National Fire Protection Association's National Fire Codes.
Modig said wood studs were used to build the facility, which violated the fire codes. Noncombustible materials, such as metal, were supposed to be used, he said.
The facility, which was Ellsworth's cafeteria until 1991, also violated the fire code's fire separations standards, Modig said. Fire separations are ratings of how long doors and walls can withstand fire. For example, if a door had a rating of one, it could withstand fire for about one hour, giving the people behind the door time to get out of the room or building.
Modig said residents possibly could be in daner if a fire broke out.
"That is part of the concern," Modig said. "What we want to do is prevent that."
A state architect from the Division of Architectural Services inspected the facility Sept. 7 to confirm the violations design and construction found.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said he did not know if residents were in danger.
"I'm not prepared to comment on that," he said.
Modig said the design and construction staff that inspected the laundry facility Sept. 6 were denied access to the mechanical room located underneath it. The staff was not given a reason.
"We were just told that we weren't going to be allowed in there," Modig said.
He said the state architect staff was allowed to see the room Sept. 7.
Stoner denied that design and construction wasn't permitted to see the room Sept. 6.
"They were in there," he said. "They were everywhere."
Both Modig and Stoner said design and construction soon would discuss the violations and possible solutions with student housing.
"Some of the things, we already knew about," Stoner said.
He said student housing constructed the facility. It was still installing lights and hanging doors and exit signs when the residence halls opened Aug. 14.
"We pressed the project right up to opening." Stoner said.
Stoner said he was not sure if the violations would slow down reconstruction on McCollum Hall's old cafeteria, which possibly was going to be a laundry facility like Ellsworth's.
Tonkovich's termination upheld
Regents affirm Budig's decision to fire professor
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - Emil Tonkovich reached the end of the administrative road yesterday when the Board of Regents voted to uphold former Chancellor Gene Budig's decision
to fire the former law professor.
The Regents unanimously adopted Regent Tom Hammond's motion to accept the three-member subcommittee's findings. The subcommittee recommended denying Tonkovich's appeal for Regents intervention in the decision.
The Regents did not discuss the motion and would not comment on their decision.
The appeal was the last administrative recourse Tonkovich had.
The subcommittee, composed of Regents Frank Sabatini, Phyllis
Nolan and Hammond, spent the past six months reviewing a University of Kansas faculty committee's decision to uphold Budig's recommendation to fire Tonkovich for violating the faculty code of conduct.
Tonkovich did not attend the Regents meeting but said yesterday that he would file a lawsuit seeking damages and reinstatement within the next two months.
"This is going to continue until I receive justice," Tonkovich said. "It's just that simple."
Tonkovich was accused of moral turpitude and behavior that violated professional ethics. He maintains he is innocent of all charges but said he had expected the Regents to side with the University.
"The Board of Regents made a politically expedient decision that protects the University's image," he said. "I fully expected a rubber stamp from the Board of Regents, but I'm just sorry they wasted a year of my life in the process."
Tonkovich was only the second tenured professor ever to be fired
from the University. Although he will continue to seek reinstatement at KU, he said he was unsure of his feelings about returning to teach.
"The University fired me through its perverse notion of due process that included intentional destruction of evidence, smear tactics, harassment of my female student witnesses and intimidation of law professors who
See REGENTS. Page 6A
New music store brings more competition
The End opens today, adds to full music market
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Troy Benson, KU graduate and co-owner of The End, a new compact disc store in town, shows off the store setup at 1000 Massachusetts St. The End, which opens today, features many different attractions including 128 listening booths, a coffee bar and a stage for live music.
A new music store opening today could make the highly competitive Lawrence compact disc market a little more cutthroat.
The End, 1000 Massachusetts St., is different from any other music store in Lawrence, said Troy Benson, a KU graduate and co-owner of the store. It has to be, he said, to compete with the city's other music stores. Currently, Lawrence has four new music stores, four used music stores and three department stores with competitively priced compact discs.
"We decided this is what we're going to do, and we went at it with all guns blazing," Benson said.
Sean R. Crosier/KANSAN
A quick glance inside will show just what guns Benson is talking about. The End takes up more than 6,000 square feet of space. A coffee and espresso bar run by the local coffee shop La Prima Taza, 638 Massachusetts St., is at one end of the store, while a separate room for jazz and classical recordings is at the other. A wooden stage for both midday and evening live music has been set up by the coffee bar. On the compact disc racks, 128 pairs of earphones allow customers to listen to featured selections, such as Mississippi John Hurt and Soundgarden.
Benson said he and Brad Garlinghouse, KU graduate and former student body president, came up with the idea in 1992. Benson said Garlinghouse had visited Germany that summer and had seen music stores with a wide selection of artists and a lot of listening stations.
Benson said a year later he, Garlinghouse and Pat O'Farrell, Kansas City, Kan., senior, decided to try to make the idea a reality.
Benson said the store also would feature a helpful staff, overall low prices and 25 percent discounts on compact discs that were not in stock and need to be ordered.
said.
"At 6,000 square feet, the only reason we don't have it is because we screwed up," he
"Record stores in this town aren't that big," he said. "Lawrence is a music town, but there's no large, cool record store around."
The store will open at 10 a.m. today, Benson said.
But the store could face an uphill battle in Lawrence's tough market, said Steve Wilson, manager of Kief's Discount Records and Stereo Supply, 2429 Iowa St. Wilson, who has managed the store for 15 years, said Lawrence's market was over saturated for a town of about 70,000 people.
"What we're going to see in the next couple of years is a war of attrition," he said. "It's going to be hard for them to make enough money."
Wilson, who said he had seen many music stores come and go, said The End's real test would come in about a year, after its newness wore off. He said it also might need special discounts — such as Kief's 25 percent discount
on the purchase of five compact discs — to stay competitive.
Mark Anthony, manager of Streetside Records, 1403 W. 23rd St., agreed with Wilson. He said Streetside had started discounting its compact discs by 25 percent on Tuesday to compete in Lawrence's tough market.
But, he added that another music store in town would be a boon for music listeners.
"I wish them well," Anthony said. "Competition can only help it." Shakes things up a bit.
Mijanou Burger, Lenexa freshman and a steady compact disc buyer, said The End's listening centers would attract people, but price was a factor as well.
"If it's different, people will like it," she said. "If it's cheap, that's good too. If it's both, people will be loving it."
Tons of Tunes
Lawrence has a glut of music stores even by college town standards, music store companies and managers say.
Junior's Furniture, 924 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Kid's Auction Recorders and Store Supply 2429 Iowa St.
Music Aula, Lawrence Riverfront Plaza
400 W. Riverfront Blvd. 1400 W. Riverfront Blvd.
The Fire, 9003 Massachusetts St.
Streetside Records, 1403 W. 23rd St.
The Land, 1000 Massachusetts St.
Allen Cat Records 717 Massachusetts St.
Love Garden Sounds / Arts Multiple. 330 E.
Massachusetts St.
Recycled Music Center, 715 Massacre
Recycled Sounds, 622 W. 12th St.
Harbors Music Books with DVDs
* Hammond Bakehouse Music & Video, 2000 W. 23rd St.
* Knart Stages, 3100 south St.
* Walt Mart Deal Cities, 3100 south St.
INSIDE
INSIDE
Chef Paul Gasser will be one of eight chefs cooking organic dishes tomorrow at the "From the Good Earth" celebration.
Good earth, good food
Clinton tells dictators their time is up
Page 4B
The Associated Press
Clinton's prime-time address failed to quell widespread opposition in Congress to an American invasion of Haiti. And it prompted a defiant reaction from Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras, the junta's leader, who said he was "prepared to fight with my people."
WASHINGTON — In a terse ultimatum from the Oval Office, President Clinton told Haiti's military leaders last night, "Your time is up. Leave now, or we will force you from power."
In his first major speech devoted to Haiti, Clinton said, "We must act" to expel a military regime that stole power and stands accused of 3,000 political murders.
In Washington and in the Caribbean, every sign pointed to an invasion within a matter of days. One
high-ranking official said an invasion was not likely before Monday.
Clinton said that President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, forced from power three years ago, had committed
A. V.
Bill Clinton
himself to reconciliation among all Haitians and pledged to step down when his term expires in February 1996.
involved in rebuilding Haiti.
The president said the United States' mission in Haiti would be limited to removing Cedras from power and restoring Haiti's democratically elected government. He said U.S. forces would help train a civilian police force but would not get
Clinton said that, "The vast majority of our troops will come home in months, not years." More than 20,000 troops are mobilized for the invasion.
Twenty American warships shadowed Haiti's coast, and two aircraft carriers containing troops were on the way, sailing against the winds of mounting objections from Congress. An overwhelming majority of Americans also are opposed to an invasion, according to polls.
"Obviously, we'll support the American forces and hope and pray that nobody is injured," said Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole. "Plus, the initial assault may not be too difficult, but then you've got the occupation and the mopping up and continued danger for American young men and women, in some cases."
Associated Press
DNA evidence points to Simpson
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Final DNA tests point to O.J. Simpson as the source of at least two drops of blood in a trail leading from the crime scene, and a hair found on one victim's body came from a black person, sources said Thursday.
Meanwhile, Simpson's lawyers are considering calling as witnesses his younger children, including his 8-year-old daughter, who reportedly told police she "heard Mommy's best friend" the night of the slavings.
The genetic test results on two drops of blood, first reported in Thursday's Los Angeles Times, were forwarded to the Simpson defense and confirm preliminary results reported last month by prosecutors, sources speaking on condition of anonymity told The Associated Press.
The sources said there was nothing new in the latest results, which the defense plans to attack as unreliable because of sloppy police and lab work.
2A
Friday, September 16, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
☆
Horoscopes
By Jean Dixon
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE! Your ability to new things quickly is a big career or business advantage. More interesting job assignments are available than in the recent past. The price for wielding greater authority may be longer hours at work. Seek your mate's reaction before taking on new responsibilities. A dedication of excellence marks every achievement.
CLEBERTS BORN ON THIS DATE; actress Lauren Bacall, singer B.B. King, tennis player Rosemary Casuals, naukian David Copperfield.
T
♊
II
U
**ARIES** (March 21-April 19) You are fortunate in your family situation. Realize that pride in material possessions may be misplaced. Set a goal to show them how to share. Romance sizzles this weekend!
69
m
TAURIS (April 20-May 20) Work seems more attractive now, largely because of an associate's change of attitude. Curb unnecessary spending and urge mate to do the same. Investments require careful scrutiny. Can you get a better return elsewhere?
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The emphasis today is on keeping any personal recriminations out of business discussions. Use logic when trying to resolve a difference of opinion. Choose confidants with extra care. Messy romantic entanglements are best avoided.
**SCORPIO** (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Head cover for when covers hurl accusations. Postpone making major purchases or signing contracts. Striking a rule that you cannot help will help you avoid "burrow." Be careful about romance on the rebound.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Concentrate on long-term obligations, using your authority judiciously. A speculative venture will pay off big, giving you a chance to make a distinction. A change of heart could occur in romance. Some will set the date!
♏
8
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Check addresses and phone numbers before starting on a trip. Allow extra time for delays. Your business or family may be benefiting a little low now. Offer your heartfelt and understanding.
CANCER (June 21- July 22) The ability to write well is a tremendous career asset. Be sincere in your praise of associates. When new managers are introduced to the occasion, Higher-ups express gratitude for a fine performance.
VS
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22, Jan. 19): A loved one is finally talking sense. A change of scenery would be good for both of you. The outcome of a finnure will be better than imagines. Read about recent medical advances.
ⅡP
LEO (July 23-28) Influential people may be hard to track down today. Work on your own whenever practical. The end of a troubled relationship can also happen a week period of a happier, more productive person. Make new friends.
Water
**AQUARIUS** (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) The job scene is lively now. You feel enthusiastic about new developments. Be careful not to shortage yourself because it is concerned. Travel may be part of a plan to boost earnings. Relax time.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22) Some who is under great stress requires "kid glove" treatment. Listen instead of lecturing and an important relationship will gradually improve. Your mate's wishes should be given top priority this weekend. Fulfill a special request.
X
PICSCE (Feb. 19-March 20) A good day for trips designed to increase profits or productivity. Your intuition allows you to rise victorious from the set. Be fair but firm when setting terms. Compromise only on minor issues.
TODAY'S CHILDREN are friendly, well-intentioned and greatly influenced by their parents. Habits formed while they are young will endure. Their health-conscious Virgos usually eat carefully and sparingly. Their close attention to detail and insistence on accuracy can be either an advantage or a disadvantage, depending on the tendency to grit hairs and correct other people's stories will aggravate even their dearest friends.
ON CAMPUS
Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairfruit-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.
Students with a Crime and Delinquency Interest Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch for students interested in law enforcement or corrections at noon today on the lawn west of Fraser Hall. For more information, call John Sindt at 843-8751.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel.
Mystery Science Theater 3000 Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. For more information, call Shawn at 842-7998.
Students Tutoring for Literacy will sponsor a workshop at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Jayaawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-3660.
■ Lawrence Apple Users Group will sponsor a fall kick-off meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the auditorium in the Computer Center. For more information, call Shawn Rosen at 863-4950.
Ballroom Dance Club will attend at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Sonia Ratzlaff at 864-1562.
Lutheran Campus Ministry will sponsor supper and worship at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call pastor Brian Johnson at 843-4948.
K-Unity will sponsor silent meditation and readings at 7 p.m. Sunday at Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Scott MacWilliams at 843-8247.
Water Polo Club will meet at 7 p.m. Sunday at Robinson Natorium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873.
Lawrence Symphony Orchestra will sponsor sight reading open rehearsals at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the band room in Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana St. There will not be auditions.
Amanzaa-Spectrum of Students in Journalism will meet at 8 p.m. Sunday at the Brass Apple, 3300 W. 15th St. For more information, call Carlos Tejada at 864-7060.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's apartment in the 900 block of Arkansas Street was broken into about 8 a.m. Wednesday, Lawrence police reported. A Targa stereo and a pair of Pioneer speakers valued together at $160 were stolen, police said.
A KU student's apartment in the 900 block of Arkansas Street was broken into about 9 a.m. Wednesday, Lawrence police reported. Police said a black Seiko watch, Magnavox compact disc walkman, Mizuno baseball glove and a pair of Reebok tennis shoes valued together at $610 were stolen.
gun, a black L.L. Bean backpack and text books valued together at $300 were stolen Sunday morning from a KU student's car that was parked in the 1000 block of Kentucky Street, Lawrence police reported.
The University Housing office filed a report with the KU police Wednesday stating that nine light blue chairs valued together at $5,537.88 were stolen between Jan. 5, 1993, and May 16, 1993, KU police reported. Police said housing officials recently completed an inventory at McCollum Residence Hall and found that the chairs were missing.
A Mossberg 20-gauge shot-
A story on the front page of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. Chuck Haines is an instructor of biology at Haskell Indian Nations University.
A story on the front page of yesterday's Kansan incorrectly stated Panama's independence day as Sept. 15. Honduras, not Panama, should have been included in the list of countries with Sept. 15 as their independence day.
CORRECTIONS
Weather
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
H I G H L O W
TODAY
SATURDAY
Partly cloudy and cooler.
81° • 68°
80° • 58°
72° • 53°
77° • 54°
78° • 54°
77° • 62°
76° • 66°
74° • 52°
81° • 54°
85° • 60°
79° • 51°
81° • 58°
81° • 51°
Continued partly cloudy and mild.
7854
7851
SUNDAY Normal for September.
Source: Paul Shellberg, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
7953
September 15, 1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
NYSE
58.55
3.953.88
NYSE
2.94
261.42
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 280,049,000
↑
8.98
777.59
Advances
↓
1,529
Declines 626
-
Unchanged 708
ASE
2.40
459.73
ANCHOR
At Alvamar Then join us for more fun at
DELTA GAMMA ANCHOR SPLASH
Saturday, Sept 17th
1:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.
ANCHORBASH At River Valley Music Cafe
(Formerly Benchwarmers)
KSTATE
KU
Who Has The MOST LOYAL FANS?
Tuesday, Sept 20th 8:30-2:00 a.m. Benefiting the visually disabled, locally and nationally For tickets call 843-5990
We want to know, don't you? Results printed the week after the game in both school papers... Don't embarrass your school!!! CALL NOW
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VS KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY The Game-October 6,1994
1-900-289-1010 Ext. 329 $2.00 per min. Ave call
1 min/Avg cost $2.00/Maximum cost $10.00
Reebok
University of Kansas
1-900-289-1010 Ext 328 $2.00 per min. Avg call
1 min/Avg cost 2.00/$2.00/main cost $10.00
Touch-tone phone required. Under 18 get parent's permission. Customer Service, Strauss Comm. Carmel, CA (408) 625-1910
Kansas State University
840 Massachusetts
Starting at $48.99 and Up
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
842-2442
This Complete Futon & Frame $269
K-SWISS
NIKE
JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today!
FALL IS HERE!
Champion
Over 25 Boot Styles in Stock
HI-TEC
Abdiiana
Campus Hikers adidas Waterproof Dress Boots Technical Hikers
SUDEN SONN ACVIVI
SUA
LIED CENTER
8 PM SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 17
An Adventure 65 Million Years In The Making
JURASSIC PARK
ONE DOLLAR
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD
Since
ATKIN
"We Care For KU"
1907
注射器
Do You Have a Hold on Your Enrollment?
Approximately 2,450 KU students are on hold because they have not documented their Mandatory Immunization (the MMR). The hold must be removed by October 4 to enable Spring '95 enrollment. Students receiving a letter from Watkins regarding the MMR should bring the letter to Watkins Immunizations, Monday-Friday, 8am-4:30 p.m.
Students born before 1957 are exempt but must submit a Health History form to Watkins Immunizations. There is no charge for a required immunization. = 864-9533.
DENT HEALTH SERVI
864-9500
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 16, 1994
3A
---
HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH
Chancellor opens heritage month
Last night, Chancellor Del Shankel presented the Hispanic American Leadership Organization with a proclamation decreeing yesterday through Oct. 15 Hispanic Heritage Month at the University of Kansas.
By Nathan Olson
Sansan staff writer
Shankel's proclamation was one of three events that highlighted the first night of the month-long celebration. Other events included a reading of the Mexican independence speech, "El Grito de Dolores," and a short speech about how Costa Rica became independent. About 60 people attended the events.
The proclamation made it official.
"Part of the purpose of the month is to be inclusive among the different types of Hispanic people," she said. "But another purpose is to include other people as well. Chancellor Shankel's proclamation helps our ideas of inclusiveness because it made it official."
The proclamation was the highlight of last night's festivities, said Sandra Olivas, president of the organization.
Hidalgo's speech was precipitated by Napoleon Bonaparte's invasion of Spain in 1808, which weakened Spain's hold on Mexico and Central America. In the speech, Hidalgo urged the people to rise up and break free from Spanish control.
Raul Murgia, Lawrence resident, presented the Mexican independence speech, which was first given Sept. 15, 1810, by Father Miguel Hidalgo at his parish in Dolores, Mexico. Murgia read the speech in both English and Spanish.
Olivas, who is Mexican, said she first heard the speech as a freshman in college. Many young Mexican-Americans had never heard the speech, she said.
"The main focus of many families who came here from Mexico was to look to the future, not to the past," she said.
Parking in the rear
The independence of Costa Rica also was discussed last night. Martin Echandi, president of the Costa Rican Student Association, told the audience that independence of the Central American countries from Mexico was announced in Guatemala on Sept. 15, 1821.
But Costa Ricans didn't find out about their independence until Oct. 13, when the horseman carrying the news finally arrived in Costa Rica.
"Costa Ricans treated it with caution," Echandi said. "They have a saying, 'Better to wait for the clouds to go away.'"
Regents say University not at fault for lost wages
TOPEKA — The Kansas Legislature should reimburse the University of Kansas for having to pay its share of a statewide lawsuit settlement, the Board of Regents agreed yesterday at their monthly meeting.
By David Wilson
Kansan staff writer
Three current and two former KU employees were among the 220 salaried state employees who sued the state in U.S. District Court in Topeka in 1900 because their pay had been deducted for missing partial days. The employees won the case in June.
Patty Riley, one of the attorneys who represented the employees in the suit, said deducting pay for missing partial days was a Kansas Department of Administration policy, not a KU policy. The Kansas Department of Administration is a state agency that sets policies for state employees.
The five KU employees who joined the suit received a combined total of more than $80,000.
According to the Regents, KU wasn't at fault for deducting the pay of some salaried employees.
Lt. Vic Strnad and Lt. John Mullens of the KU police received $31,400 and $22,800, respective
by. Jeanne Longaker, a former employee of the KU police, received $20,200.
Colleen Strnad, an accountant with the Comptroller's Office, received $7,265 and Lyle Wellman, a former security chief for the Parking Department, received $9,860.
Richard Mann, University director of administration, said the three KU departments that employed plaintiffs in the suit would be stuck with the tab if the Legislature didn't reimburse the University.
If that happened, Mann said, those departments would have to cut their budgets. For example, the KU police might postpone the purchase of new police cars, Mann said.
"I didn't foresee any problems, win, lose or draw," he said. "I don't have any fear of the state system. Otherwise, I wouldn't be a cop."
But that prospect doesn't bother Mullens. He said he was prepared for any consequences that might have arisen from the lawsuit.
The Regents will submit a formal request for KU's settlement amount to the Legislature in January.
Employee from two other Regents schools, Wichita State University and Kansas State University, also received back pay, but the amounts were small enough to be absorbed by the schools' general funds.
K-State paid $6,603 in back pay to one employee, said Tom Rawson, the school's vice president for administration and finance.
NOW conference begins today
By Khristina Fassett Special to the Kansan
Lawrence Mayor Jo Andersen, State Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, and Martha Burk, a columnist for USA Today, will speak at the 1994 Kansas State National Organization for Women Conference this weekend at the Kansas Union
Other workshops Saturday will include "Woman and Political Coordination," by Joan Wagnon, former candidate for Kansas governor; "Harassment on the Job," by Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center; and "Gay Lesbian Issues," by Kathy Greenlee, attorney.
Sylvia Stone, co- vice president of Lawrence NOW, said it was important for KU students to attend the conference.
Topics at the conference will range from health-care reform to the Baker Wetlands.
The conference will begin with a reception from 6 to 9 p.m. today, and workshops will start at 10 a.m. Saturday in the Jayhawk Room when Mayor Andersen will speak about the need to increase diversity in the women's movement.
"Students are citizens of the town they live in," Stone said. "It is good for them to hear their local politicians."
"We hope to cover everything," said Rolande Hodel, co-president of Lawrence NOW. "We want to cover a broad spectrum of issues and get everyone possible interested and involved."
Anyone interested in attending the conference can contact Rolande Hodel at 841-0256 between 9 and 11 p.m. today or register in the Jayhawk Room tomorrow, before the conference begins.
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown
M V
Attention students who will apply to the School of Education
PPST Deadline Information:
Sept. 20- Registration deadline for Oct. 22 test date Oct.11 - Registration deadline for Nov. 12 test date
If you intend to apply for fall 1995 admission to the School of Education, the School must RECEIVE your PPST scores BEFORE the February 15 deadline. If you have not yet taken the PPST, you must take it this semester. You may pick up registration materials at Testing Services in 2056 Watkins. Please note that ETS must receive your registration materials by the deadlines listed above.
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 9am–2am
21 to drink $1 wells
GRANADA
1020 Massachusetts St.
Lawrence, KS (913)842-1300
club7
The Only Thing Tougher
Than Going to Law School
...is not getting in.
NO ONE KNOWS THE LSAT LIKE
KAPLAN
TEST PREP
1-800-527-TEST
Class Starts
Oct. 2
Class Starts Oct.2
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
OFFOl HOUSE
if interested in performing please sign up in the SUA box office by Wednesday September 21, 5pm
THURS. SEPT 22
MUSIC 7:00 P.M.
HAWK'S NEST TERRACE
COMEDY
free coffee free coffee.
1
1
Scott's Brass Apple GRILL & BAR
KANSAS vs. TEXAS CHRISTIAN Saturday Nite 7:00pm
Come and enjoy a great meal while you watch the game on our 10 t.v.'s and Big Screen!
our 10 t.v. s and Big Screen.
Food and drink units
GOJAYHAWKS
CHIEFS vs.FALCONS
Hot Dogs $ .50 Sunday Game Time 7:00pm Chili Dogs $1.00
Hours:
11:00am-1:30am
Big Draws $2.00
Watch It Here!
Scotts
Bruss Apple
GRILL & BAR
A
3300 W.15th St.
841-0033
KIEF'S CDs/TAPES
The Lowest EVERYDAY CD Prices in Lawrence
AND...
- 25% OFF SAVINGS! Get 25% Off Retail ANYDAY with our BUY 5/GET 25 Program.
- LOWEST PRICES ON NEW RELEASES! Every TUESDAY we'll have the week's new releases at Lawrence's Lowest Sale Price. (Look for the Lowest Price on the new LIZ PHAIR,
Tuesday, Sept. 20.)
DON'T FORGET...
- KIEF'S BUYS, SELLS, AND TRADES USED CDs!!
& Iowa St. P.O.Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913•843•1811 913•842•1438 913•842•1643
4
Friday, September 16 1994
OPINION
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
White House crash reveals our vulnerabilities
COLUMNIST
MATT GOWEN
Whacko who crashed on White House lawn displays hole in security and hole in some Americans' heads.
I wasn't watching CNN on Monday morning. The information came to me from my friend Sludge before my 8:30 class.
"Did you hear? Some whacko crashed a plane into the White House!"
Whacko, however, is a very looser term. Who was this guy? It seemed like a pretty strange assassination attempt. Didn't the whole kamukaze thing go out with World War II? Besides, Clinton was staying at a government guest house across the street during recent White House renovations. I wasn't convinced it was intentional, so I asked Sludge what he thought.
"Probably some terrorist."
"Probably some terrorist."
Or maybe it was Castro. Could he be
was trying to make a lunch date with Bill to work out this whole refugee thing? Or Bob Dole, expressing his opinion on Mr. Clinton's health-care plan?
"I don't know who it was. All I know is I'd have somebody's butt for it."
I'm sure a lot of people's first thought, whether they're willing to admit it or not, was the same as Sludge's. After the World Trade Center bombing in February of 1993, we've become especially wary of the possibility of terrorist attacks on our own soil.
The truth wasn't nearly as sensational as an extremist infiltration from some foreign land that has a beef with the United States. Of course, which foreign land doesn't have a
beef with the United States?
"What about Botswana?"
"Id be down, too, if I had the name Frank."
Oh, I'm sure we covertly propped up some totalitarian regime there sometime, Sludge. But the pilot was not on a militant mission. He wasn't trying to kill the president, even though his stolen plane crashed two floors below Clinton's bedroom. It was, strangely enough, worse. His name was Frank Corder, a trucker from Baltimore, and he was just down in the dumps.
For years, I assume, most of the world has been living under the assumption that the White House is some mythic stronghold: indestructible and impervious to the outside
world. But no, our top government security experts have known for years that the White House was vulnerable to assault from the air but that there wasn't a thing we could do.
"anybody can strike at the president if they're willing to lose their lives doing it," a former White House security official revealed this week.
So some local nutcase who was depressed, divorced and alcoholic punches a hole in the White House coat-of-arms. He even talked to people about doing it beforehand. Although, about as many people believed him as believed Noah.
Maybe he wanted to prove to his ex-wife he could actually follow through on a promise.
It wouldn't be the first time someone took a crack at our priz to win someone's affection. Remember ol' John Hinckley, Jr., Jodie Foster's notso-secret admirer who shot Ronald Reagan.
"I thought it was because he'd just seen "Bedtime for Bono."
Neither Hinckley nor Corder were model citizens.
Regardless, Shudge, our leader was put in jeopardy by a guy who'd seen one too many movies.
When the debris has settled and the facts had been sorted through, we're sobered by the realization that we really need better protection from ourselves.
Matt Gowen is a Lawrence senior in journalism
VIEWPOINT
Clinton pivots 180 degrees on 'unwed mothers' issue
Bill Clinton's recent speeches propound "family values" are contradictory. In May 1992, Dan Quayle blamed the popular sitcom Murphy Brown for
trivializing the importance of fathers in the home.
The Clinton campaign sharply criticized Quayle.
ing rate of babies born to unwed mothers is a disaster. It is wrong. And someone has to say again, it is simply not right. You shouldn't have a baby before you're ready, and
FAMILY VALUES First Clinton decried that family values became part of the presidential campaign and now embraces the issue in recent speech.
saying that his comments denigrated single mothers.
you shouldn't have a baby when you're not married."
Clinton declared that family values ought not be a campaign issue.
Then, on Sept. 9, 1994 Clinton said, "The grow-
However delicately phrased, Clinton has waffled.
He suddenly agrees that family values is an important issue, and he has adopted Quayle's position on single parenthood.
ZACKARY STARBIRD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
Whatever else may be said, Clinton's duplicity is clear and disappointing.
Clinton must define goals before an invasion of Haiti
The United States has been talking about invading Haiti for a long time.The White House even set a deadline last weekend.
deadline last Now, it is too late to back off the threat.
Haiti is most likely an easy task; keeping control after the invasion may not be. Also, the United States must acknowledge that for real progress to be
HAITI INVASION
However, if the United States does invade Haiti, it must do it right. We
to maintain order.
United States should learn from past mistakes in Somalia and outline exact goals for Haiti invasion to maintain order
should remember lessons from the past. Prior to the invasion, the United States must know exactly what it is going to do inside Haiti. Invading
The invasion seems to be
made, the United States may have to stay there for a longer time than expected.
seems to be inevitable now. The United States should define its goals and be prepared to carry out whatever is necessary to accomplish them.
JUAN VARGAS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO
Editor
JEN CARR Business manager
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
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
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
Business Staff
Editors
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 Stigler
Creative director John Carlton
Classified mgr Heather Niehaus
Letters should be typed, double-spaces and fewer than 200 words. They must include the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff affidavit with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff affidavit.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be malled or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
SIR, ARE YOU TRYING
TO DEFEND THE
WHITE HOUSE
FROM ANOTHER AIR
ATTACK?
HOOD
VOK
1944
PREZ.
No. DOLE IS
COMING
OVER!
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Letter is a denial of objective truth
Matt Hood / KANSAN
This letter is in response to Andy Carter's letter, "Bible doesn't tell him so," in the Sept. 9 Kansan, wherein he states that, "...in turning over one's life to religion it seems commonplace to also relinquish one's thought and reason..."
I respectfully find fault with his thought and reason. For one thing, he strongly implies in his letter that there is no objective truth. Clearly, this point of view is void. An electron in the presence of an electric field will be accelerated; there is one right answer for your checkbook balance, and if you get into the shower, you will get wet. These are facts, objective truths, and no amount of sophistry will change these facts. There is also objective spiritual truth. Either people have immortal souls or they do not. Jesus rose from the dead or he did not. Let's not have any more of this philosophical fluff that concrete answers do not exist.
I would suggest that it is the one who refuses to grapple with issues of eternal truth who has cheated on the test of life. It is pure spiritual and intellectual laziness to refuse to attempt to determine the truth of "religion" under the chicane that no answers exist.
Joe Heikes Lawrence graduate student
Joe Heikes
Mexican Independence Day acts as reminder of culture
Today is Mexican Independence Day. *El diez y seis de septiembre.* Now, that's a little harder to say than Cinco de Mayo, which is another important day in Mexican history.
Most people associate Cinco de Mayo with drink specials at Carlos O'Kelly's or Dos Hombres and are unaware that it commemorates the Battle of Puebla in 1862. So because of pronunciation, the 16th of September is forgotten. A although for me, the 16th of September has always been a very special day.
From the time that I was a young boy, my mother told me stories about Padre Hidalgo and how he climbed to the bell tower to issue his "Grito por Dolores," which signaled the start of the Mexican revolution. Thus, not only was he the Mexican George Washington, he was also its Paul Revere. As a young boy, I looked upon Padre Hidalgo as some kind of super hero. He was the mythic, larger-than-life figure that symbolized all that was good about Mexico.
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
Although I did not grow up speaking Spanish, I consider myself a Chicano, or Mexican-American. Mexico was all around me growing up. From the
Mexican music of Vicente Fernandez, Lucha Villa and Little Joe, to the smell of freshly made corr tortilla shells, to the various depictions of La Virgen de Guadalupe, I was immersed in the culture of what my mother called "the old country."
My upbringing was steeped in traditions I associate with my Mexicanness, my mexicanidad. Christmas Meve meant tamales for dinner and midnight Mass at Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish. At the start of Mass, my mother would turn to me and wish me happy birthday because I was born on Christmas day.
When the church would start to sing "Las Mananitas" to el nino Jesus, I knew my mother would also be
singing "Happy Birthday" to me.
Nearly every Sunday after Mass, my family would make its weekly visit to see my grandpa, the family patriarch.
He would talk to us in Spanish, and all of us children would struggle to understand. We learned respect for our elders from those visits. My mother would tell me how my grandfather single-handedly brought himself and his younger brothers and sisters to America. She told me how my grandpa learned to speak English all by himself. In short, my mother filled me with a sense of pride in my family. She taught me the importance of history and remembrance.
When I celebrate the diez y seis de septiembre, those are the things that I celebrate. I celebrate the richness of my cultural heritage. I celebrate tie profound reverence that Mexicans have for La Virgen de Guadaupe and the Catholic faith.
I celebrate the diversity of music that is found in Mexico, the love of the Mexican family and the respect for the elderly, los viejos.
I celebrate the history of the Mexican people, a long history filled with moments of triumph but also with its
But today is not a day to argue; today is a day of celebration. So for all you mexicanos and mexicanas out there, and for those who want to be Mexican for a day, I say:
share of tragedy. I salute the bravery of the many heroes of Mexico, such as Padres Hidalgo y morelos, los ninos de Chapultepec, Benito Juarez, Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata. I also celebrate the exploits of such Mexican-American heroes like Joaquín Murrieta and Gregorio Cortez. I pay tribute to the tenacity and vision of Cesar Chavez and others who joined in his fight for justice.
Viva Mexico, Viva la Virgen, VIVA LA RAZA!
Finally, I salute the hundreds of thousands of immigrants who have come and are still coming to America in search of a better life. And I celebrate the rich and long Hispanic and Mexican heritage of the United States, while at the same time lamenting the racism and prejudice that allows Mexicans and Mexican-Americans to be viewed as "foreigners."
HUBIE
Nicolas Shump is a Lawrence senior in comparative literature.
BACK TO REGULAR PRO
HERE IN THE THIRD
CIRCLE OF HELL RESIDES
THE CARTOON VILLAINS
BACK TO REGULAR PROGRAMMING: TO FOLLOW THE CORRECT SEQUENCE, READ TOMMY'S STRIP AND MONDAY'S — AND IF YOU SILL HAVE IT, READ WEDNESDAY THE
HERE IN THE THIRD CIRCLE OF HELL RESIDERS THE CARTOON VILLAK
BLUTO, GARGAMEL, WILE E. COVITE, SKELETOR, CRUELLA DE VILLE — HEY! WHERE IS EVERY-BODY?
THEY ALL JUMPED IN A PORTABLE HOLE AND NOW THEY'RE IN CHINA.
I'M THAT Guy FROM FANTASY ISLAND? WHO DO YOU THINK I AM?
OH, A SMART BUY, HUM? WELL, IT JUST SO HAPPENS THAT I'M A GUARD ON THIS LEVEL!
AND WHAT A GREAT JOB YOU DO.
UMM, WELL, YEAH—JUST AS SOON AS THE LEMA + LOUISE PICK ME UP.
HUNG? WHO ARE YOU?
BEATS ME, YOU LOOK LIKE A STUB.
SEEMS YOU'RE IN A BIT OF TROUBLE—SMOOTH NOT YOU BE ON THE RUN!
HEAREN BUST!
KAMINIE TO FOLLOW
BLUTO, GARGAMEL,
WILE E. COYOTE,
SKELETER, CRUELLA
DE VILLE — HEY!
WHERE IS EVERY -
BODY?
THEY ALL JUMPED IN A PORTABLE HOLE AND NOW THEY'RE IN CHINA.
HUH? WHO ARE YOU?
BOTT'S ME. YOU LOOK LIKE A STUB.
By Greg Hardin
BOOM
MONDAY — AND IF YOU WILL HAVE IT, READ WEDNESDAY THE
OH, A SMART BUY,
HUH? WELL, IT
JUST SO HAPPENS
THAT I'M A GUARD
ON THIS LEVEL!
AND WHAT A GREAT
JOB YOU DO.
@?#@!OC
SEEMS YOU'RE IN
A BIT OF
TROUBLE—
SHOULDn't
YOU BE
ON THE RUN?
UMM, WELL, YEAH—
JUST AS SOON AS
TRELMA + LOUISE
PICK ME UP.
HEAVEN OR BUST
GIF
AND WHAT A GREAT JOB YOU DO.
@?#@!@C
SEEMS YOU'RE IN A BIT OF TROUBLE—SHOULDN'T YOU BE ON THE FUNE
READ WEDNESDAY THE
UMM, WELL, YEAH
JUST AS SOON AS
TRELMA + LOUSE
PICK ME UP.
HONK OR BUST
STRIP AGAIN ON TUES THE 20TH TO GET A CLEAR CHRONOLOGY! SORRY BUT THIS STATION WAS EXPRISEING TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES : - O
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 16, 1994
5A
Forgiveness, renewal part of Yom Kippur
By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer
It started with poultry and ended with dairy.
In between was spiritual redemption.
For Brad Feinberg, Deerfield, Ill. junior, Yom Kipur began with a simple meal of chicken breasts and salad, which he ate around 6 p.m. Wednesday night.
"The less you eat, the easier it is to fast," he said.
Fasting represents a vital aspect of Yom Kippur, or Day of Atonement. The fasting began at sundown Wednesday and ended one hour after sundown yesterday.
"Fasting helps you remember your sins for the entire day." Fengberg said.
The day began at 10 a.m. Wednesday, when Feinberg arrived at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive, wearing slacks, sport jacket and tie. Draped around his jacket was a white and gold talltie, a prayer shawl with fringes on the four corners representing the four corners of the earth.
Feinberg entered the center and sat on a black, fold-up chair. Jack Wine-
rock, professor of music and dance,
helped lead the ceremony. He wore white and chanted in fast and low tones, pausing occasionally for the audience to respond. Winerock mostly spoke in Hebrew, but occasionally he and the congregation recited together in English.
According to Jewish tradition, Yom Kippur, which occurs 10 days after Rosh Hashana, the new year, is a day in which sins are forgiven by God. The 10 days and two holidays are collectively known as High Holidays.
The tone during High Holidays is redemption, Feinberg said.
"Some people go up to their friends and ask forgiveness for whatever they've done the past year," he said. "At itsit's kind of weird because you don't know what they're forgiving you for."
The prayers were about forgiveness, sin and Jews of the past who sacrificed. Many were half-chanted, half-sung. Some in the audience swayed slightly.
An hour into the service, a large scroll — the torah — was read. People volunteered to read small sections.
adds to the sense of community." Feinberg said.
That community is shown in the prayers, which stress the collective "we" above the individual "I." It also was shown in more subtle ways, as when a child ran down an aisle giggling and two or three adults gently put their fingers to their lips, signaling the child to be quiet.
At 2 p.m., Feinberg left the building.
He went home to rest for a few hours.
At 5 p.m., he returned with two of his friends to read from the Book of Jonah to the congregation. When evening prayers were completed, a ram's horn, called a shofar, was blown, signifying the end of the fast.
"The first thing we have is something dairy," he said. "I don't know why; it's sort of a tradition."
The last hour before the fast ends is the hardest. Feinberg said.
"Sometimes I try to sleep," he said.
"But usually my friends and I will start to talk about our favorite restaurants."
The experience is very important in Feinberg's life, he said.
"When it's over, feel like it's time to start anew," he said.
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Immigration NOW!
New Law Benefital Do You Qualify?
Professional Work Visa • Permanent Residence
• Bachelor's Degree • Employer Certification
• Investor Incentive Adopted • Transitions
• OREN CARDS • An Immigration Workspace
Special Immigrants DEADLINE APPROACHING
ALLAN H. BELL & ASSOCIATES
IMMIGRATION LAW CLINIC
2022 SUMMER
(8) 619-421-4300 (24hrs)
(8) 619-421-4300 (24hrs)
Toll Free USA (603) 385-2537 • FAX (619) 421-1124
Western Competition, Personnel Injury, Beherrschung Haptat, Test
Chi Chi Adv and Save
Move to Mexico Help
VUARNET
FRANCE
V
V
The 928 Mass.
Etc. Downtown
Shop Park in the rear
KMS
S.
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HARDWARE
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FULL MITCHELL REDKEN
NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing
Jazz
igns
up your wardrobe with Natural Fiber Clothing.
Feel the Rythym of the City.
Downtown
820-822 Mass.
Lawrence
STUDIO FILM
841-0100
Tired of Pizza and Tacos? Try the...
Sunday Night Student Special
at BONANZA. Steak Chicken Seafood Salad
$4.99 for any sandwich (includes Freshtastics bar & drink) 10% Student Discount every day on any regularly priced menu item
2329 Iowa 842-1200
DUCOVER
BICOMPANY
VISA
GIRL JUMPING
AEROBICS with
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
- Nautilus & Freeweights
- Reebok Step
- Personal Fitness Training
- Full Spa Area
- 60 Aerobic classes per week
- 2 Aerobic rooms
- Stairmasters/Treadmill
* Lifecycle/Rowing Machine
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
Buy 1 Year, Get 1 Year FREE
- Stairmasters/Treadmill
CHRISTIE'S TOY BOX WHERE THE FUN BEGINS!
CHIBER
- Unique T-Shirts
*Adult Novelties
*Unusual Greeting Cards
*Exotic Lingerie
*"Over-the-Hill" Gifts
*Video Sales & Rentals
*Hilarious Party Games
*Sensuous Oils & Lotions
Current Monthly Magazine
*T-Back/Thong Swimwear
AMERICAN'S CHRISTIES TOY BOX
Rent 1 movie at regular price and get a 2nd movie for iPod with valid KUID 1206 W.23rd, Lawrence, Ks.842-4266
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
NOW OPEN!!
THE END IS HEAR
---
Downtown Lawrence Off 10th & Massachusetts 913.843.3630
The largest record store in Lawrence 128 private listening stations Espresso Bar by La Prima Tazza
The End. Downtown Lawrence 10th & Massachusetts 913.843.3630
$2
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
$2
$2 OFF ANY COMPACT DISC
Must present coupon. Expires September 23, 1994.
Valid on regularly priced CDs of $10.99 or more. Limit one.per purchase
OF
6A
Friday, September 16, 1994
UN I V E R S I T Y DA I L Y K A N S A N
"Unguarded war."
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass.832-8228
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Mass. 843-5000
fifi's 925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
fifi's
SCDI Information Meeting Lawn West of Fraser Fri.Sept 16 from 12:00-1:00 Brown Bag Lunch (Bring your own)
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass·Lawrence, KS
For more information call:
Travis Meats 842-7054
or
John Sindt 843-8751
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
the UNDERCOVER answer
to the wonder bra!
Lilyette's la' difte' rence comes in
I
Lilyette's la' differ ence comes in red, candle, frost peach, white and black
Lilgette
LYRIC OPERA OF KAUSAS CITY
OTHELLO
BY GIUSEPPE AERDE
UNDERCOVER The pink building 21 W.9th
DON'T MISS THIS PASSIONATE PRODUCTION BASED ON SHAKESPEARE'S CLASSIC TRAGEDY, PERFORMED ENGLISHLY
SEPTEMBER 11 AM - PM PERFORMANCE WILL BE SIGNED
SEPTEMBER 12 AT 30 PM
STEP 2 NUMBER = VALS PWL SPONSORED BY MACK X YAACH
SUPTEMBER 14 WS PM SPONSORED BY BLACK & WHITE HI
SUPTEMBER 19 WS 7:30 PM
30 POINTS WITH 1D, 30 MINUTES PROBLEM SOLVING
THE LIGHTS 8:59 P.M. • CELL PHONE 314.422.3030 • FINANCIAL ASSOCIATE
BROKEN BY THE MISSISSIPPI AIR FORCE AND THE NATIONAL EXPEDITION FOR THE MISSION
• THE LIGHTS IS USADE. 6.7
YOU COME FIRST!
SEPTEMBER 15 AND SEPTEMBER 16 11:00AM-6:00PM 1994-95 LIED SERIES INDIVIDUAL TICKETS ON SALE FOR KU AND HASKELL STUDENTS ONLY!
PRINCIPAL DANCERS of the New York City Ballet Katherine Lareto-Robinson Trio Evita
Evita
The Boys Choir of Harlem
Oleanna
Carol Wincen and Heidi Lehwardan H.T. Chen and Dancers
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company
Wynton Marsalis Septet
Ladysmith Black Mambazo
BBC Orchestra
Limón Dance Company Awadagin Pratt
Cats
C
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS) and Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982). Ticket prices vary by performance. KU, Haskell, and K-12 students receive discounted tickets to all Series events. Phone orders can be made using VISA or MasterCard.
Wheelchair
Regents vote Tonkovich out
criticized the unfair process," Tonkovich said. "Obviously, such a university is not a pleasant place to work."
T. P. Srinivasan, presiding officer for University Council, said the Regents decision marked the end of the Tonkovich case in the administrative process and the beginning of the judicial process.
ough and careful review," Shankel said in the statement. "For this I am grateful."
Continued from Page 1A.
Tonkovich had not seen the subcommittee's 13-page report detailing its decision but said he would discuss the report at a press conference this morning.
"He has ceased to be a member of the KU faculty, but he is entitled to full protection under the law," he said.
In its report, the subcommittee considered whether due process was provided by the University and whether substantial evidence existed to support the University's decision. The subcommittee reviewed the findings of the faculty committee and did not consider new evidence in the case.
"My understanding is that the decision is very sound and should prevail in court, he said."
STUDENT
SENATE
"The members of the subcommittee view this dismissal action as a responsible action by the chancellor and his staff of acting to protect the interests of students, an appropriate exercise of the faculty in judging the conduct of the profession and a considered review to assure that the rights of professor Tonkovich were adequately protected," the report said.
Srinivasan said the Regents decision should reassure the community that KU had an effective grievance system in place and could manage its affairs well.
The report concluded that no reason existed to suggest or order reinstatement of Tonkovich.
"While I have not had an opportunity to study the report of the members of the Board of Regents in detail, it is clear that this matter received a thor-
UNIVERSITY OF CLEMSON
Following the Regents decision, Chancellor Del Shankel issued a brief statement.
Political outsider ready for Meyers
Yumi Chikamori / KANSAN
Judy Hancock, Democratic candidate for the 3rd Congressional district, spoke to members of the KU Democrats last night.
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
THE LIBCENTER CENTER
Judy Hancock is ready to hit the campaign trail.
"I can feel it all coming together," said Hancock, Democratic candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives 3rd District, which includes a portion of Douglas County. She spoke to the Young Democrats last night about her campaign.
Hancock, who has never run for political office, has been working on the campaign but said that the pace would pick up as people started to pay more attention to the race.
She said the campaign had left her little time for her Overland Park international law firm, which helps U.S. companies export their products to foreign customers.
"I haven't practiced much law in recent weeks," Hancock said.
Hancock said she sent a letter to Meyers to arrange four debates that would allow the candidates to ask each other questions, but Meyers did not respond.
"She won't debate me, and she doesn't have the guts to tell me she won't debate me," Hancock said. "I'm one constituent of hers
expenses, and an operating budget,
for day-to-day expenses.
Hancock said she thought her experience with international law gave her an advantage over her opponent, Rep. Jan Meyers, because it was suited to the national and international level Congress maintained.
"I understand how business is conducted in other systems," Hancock said. "I understand the world in which the U.S. must operate today."
that's not too happy with her response time to letters.
Hancock said the need for campaign reform was a key issue in her campaign this year.
Hancock said that congressional reform should include a requirement for representatives to turn in an annual report of their activities, much like a business did. The report would include a list of vacations, public appearances, votes on congressional bills and an audit of the office budget.
Hancock also said she would address federal budget reform in her campaign. She proposes a two-year budget in which Congress could spend one year evaluating the effectiveness of the budget. She also favors separating the budget into a capital budget, for major future
Hancock said Meyers had agreed to make a few joint appearances in the district before the elections.
"I don't consider a joint appearance a debate," Hancock said.
Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, said Hancock had a hard time arranging debates with Meyers because Congress was in session. The representative, he said, used her job responsibilities to avoid any confrontations with Hancock.
"Judy simply cannot get her into the ring." Loomis said.
PYRAMID
RICEBUSTER
PYRAMID PIZZA "TO THE RESCUE"
PYRAMID
PIZZA
PRICE·BUSTER
VALUE MENU
Saves You Money
WITH PYRAMID PIZZA'S EVERYDAY SUPER SAVERS
A WHOLE LOT MORE FOR A WHOLE LOT LESS -
We've created these special 10" pizza values for special people like you... our campus customers.
WHAT A DEAL!
So hurry on down and pick one up or give us a call for Free Delivery. Why not? Now they're both delicious and affordable!
842-3232
14th c3 Ohio "Under the Wheel"
WE WANT TO
PUT OUR PIZZA
WHERE YOUR MOUTH IS!
JUST LOVE IT
P. S. This ain't no Cardboard Pizza
MID PIZZA SUPER SAVER
D CAVED
EVERY DAY 10" PYRAMID PIZZA SUPER SAVER
OneZee
1 10" Pizza
TwoZee
2 Toppings
2 10" Pizzas
1 Pepsi
2 Pepsi
2 Toppings
$5.42
ThreeZee
3 10" Pizza
1 Topping 4 Pepsi
$9.89
SALES TAX NOT INCLUDED, LIMITED DELIVERY AREA
$12.97
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1994
SECTION B
ANALYSIS
KANSAS FOOTBALL
Arrogance strikes out baseball
By Jim Litke
The Associated Press
In a last-ditch effort to save baseball, after months of hearing everybody else do nothing but talk about it, I actually tried a salary cap on.
It wasn't all that bad. But after wearing it awhile, I could see why the players never would submit to such a thing. It lets your head get only so big and no bigger. Who needs that?
In another last-ditch effort to save baseball, I tried sharing revenues with the smaller markets in my household.
It wasn't bad. But after awhile, I could see why the owners want most of the revenue to be shared to come out of the players' pockets. After a few regular meals, the kids were bold enough — not to mention strong enough — to start competing for the dessert. Who needs that?
No wonder the baseball season is dead.
Like a runaway train, everybody saw this wreck coming. But reasonable solutions need reasonable people to have a reasonable chance to succeed. There were some reasonable solutions mentioned from time to time. Several, with a little bit of compromise and fine-tuning, would have addressed the only legitimate issue in this whole mess: How to form an economic partnership that would shore up all the teams and launch baseball toward the next century.
A salary cap put the NBA back on its feet. Revenue sharing增了the NFL the 800-pound gorilla of sports. Some modification of either, or both, might have done wonders for baseball. But we won't know because those bitter twins — the owners and the players — couldn't even be bothered to listen to each other.
Talk all you want about the selfishness and greed that disrupted all those seasons over the past two decades. What this strike demonstrates, above all else, is the height of the two side's arrogance.
Acting baseball commissioner Bud Selig spent most of Tuesday wrestling with the wording of a news release announcing baseball's end. Next, he had to wrestle with the weighty question of how to pass it around without spilling the bad news all over himself by bax, or conference call, or the always troublesome news conference, where people might actually ask questions?
Baseball as we know it is finished. Whenever it comes back, unlike past reincarnations, it won't come back intact. The owners could face competition from rival leagues, the players could face competition from the same Triple-A kids that they looked so haughtily down on only a few months earlier.
Because they couldn't brave that new world, they are going to have to find their way in it without a road map. If nothing else, that will wipe the smugness off their faces.
Rushing attacks to highlight matchup
Ground games to test defenses of Kansas, TCU tomorrow night
By Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter
Can a running game be stopped?
When the Kansas football team plays Texas Christian University, each team's defense will try to stop the other's running game and answer that question with a yes.
Both teams will display rushing attacks that have amassed more than 400 vards for each team this season.
Both teams will find out how their defenses shape up against these running attacks at 7:05 p.m. tomorrow at Fort Worth, Texas.
Kansas is 1-2 after defeating Houston 35-13 and Michigan State 17-10. The Horned Frogs are 1-1 after losing to 16th-ranked North Carolina 27-17 and defeating New Mexico 44-29.
Coming off an impressive defensive performance against Michigan State, the Kansas defense will be trying to stop a team that racked up 606 yards in total offense against New Mexico, including 325 yards rushing by junior running back Andre Davis.
"Any time a guy rushes for 325 yards in a game, he's pretty dam good," said Kansas coach Glen Mason. "He's got good speed. He's got good moves. He's got good hands. He's a guy you don't stop with one guy playing well on defense. You need a good defensive team effort."
The Jayhawks have a potent rush offense of their own. In their first
two games the Jayhawks rushed for 589 yards.
Texas Christian defensive line coach Hugh Nall said that the Jayhawks' running game was impressive.
"I don't know if we can stop it," he said. "I just hope we can slow it down."
Nall said Texas Christian had even more to worry about in preparing for Kansas' option, which worked well against Michigan State.
Nall will rely on senior defensive guard Royal West, who was a 1993 All-Southwest Conference selection, to help stop the Kansas running attack and disrupt passes.
The Texas Christian defensive mastermind trying to shut down the Kansas offense is Pat Henderson, first-year defensive coordinator and secondary coach.
20
66
Henderson played linebacker and defensive end for Kansas from 1970 to 1974 and was a member of Kansas' 1973 Liberty Bowl team, which lost 31-18 to North Carolina State.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Mason said Henderson was a member of an impressive coaching staff, and that the Horned Frogs were better this season than he had expected.
Mason stressed that the Jayhawks must not let down after their game with Michigan State.
"That was a big win against Michigan State, and everybody was excited and talking about it," he said. "But come Monday, you've got to get back to work on Texas Christian."
"And if come Wednesday you're still thinking about Michigan State rather than Texas Christian, you're going to get your butt beat."
Sophomore June Henley leads a talented Kansas corps of running backs this season. "I don't know if we can stop it. I just hope we can slow it down," Texas Christian defensive line coach Hugh Nall said. Tomorrow night's 7:05 game will not be televised but will be broadcasted live on 105.9 FM radio.
Jayhawk Football Listed are the starters for Kansas' offense and defense
Offense
72. John Power #19. AJ McHenry
FB
9. Abbeith Foster IB
OB
2. Gordon White
WR
78. Marc Augers
61. Keen Jenkins
42. Dee Dillon
66. Hannon (G) Segwell
79. Scott Kuhliger
91. Brett Woodard
7. Redford Reed
WN
RT
RG
S
LG
LP
TE
WR
Defense
93. Davenport Harvey
70. Harvett Harvey
DN
ET
RI
DU
92. Brett Harvey
17. Donna Drew
94. Davenport Harvey
81. Davenport Harvey
FS
OHB
MUF
O1B
SS
95. Brett Perrin
16. North Reddicks
45. Hamble Water
19. Brett McHarrows
KU
JCU
Matching up 'mythical' mascots
During the Civil War, Kansas' governor formed a group called the "Independent Mounted Jayhawks". After the Civil War, the word Jayhawk was associated with comradeship and courageous fighting spirit. In 1890, the Kansas football team's first season, the team was called the Jayhawkers.
The name "Horned Frog" was adopted by Texas Christian University in 1897 to name the school yearbook. The plural name gradually became the nickname for Texas Christian's athletic teams. The committee which chose the name decided on the horned frog instead of the cactus.
--cross-country race, Kempf said. All of the swimmers will start at Lone Star's boat dock and swim for 3.1 miles on a continuous course. Kempf expects the finishing times to be around one hour.
FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK
**Turn the TV off:** The Kansas-Texas Christian football game will not be televised in Lawrence.
The Jayhawk Radio Network, 105.9 FM the Lazer, will carry the game.
*The grass is always greener: Tomorrow's game will be played on natural grass. Kansas has played 42 consecutive games on artificial turf. The Jayhawks last played on grass Oct. 13, 1990.*
A historic challenge: Kansas will play Texas Christian for the 25th time in its history. The Horned Frogs lead the series 15-5-4.
Rushing ahead: Despite being one of many running backs used in the Kansas rushing attack, sophomore running back June Henley has climbed to 19th on the career rushing list since the beginning of the season.
Henley has gained 200 yards in two games and needs 74 yards to move to 14th on the all-time list. If Henley can gain 105 yards against Texas Christian, he will move to 13th on the all-time list.
**Passing attack:** Kansas senior quarterback Asheli Preston has passed for 1,521 yards and is 273 yards away from moving into Kansas' top 10 in career passing yards.
BRIEF
1.
Royals fire McRae hoping to build younger ballclub
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City manager Hal McRae and all his coaches were fired yesterday as the Royals began a youth movement.
Sophomore swimmer Robert Tegada practices in the pool in Robinson Center. The Kansas swimming team began practicing three weeks ago and will compete in a meet tomorrow.
Jayhawk swimmers to go jump in the lake
"We appreciate the contributions Hal has made in the past four years," Robinson said. "Our focus in the immediate future will be on transition of the young talent from our minor league system on to the major league club. And we believe a change in managers is necessary to make this step successful."
Robinson said the club needed a manager who could work with young players.
Paul Kotz / KANSBAN
"We want someone who can understand the young player when they come up and what they have to go through." Robinson said.
General manager Herk Robinson praised McRae and his efforts but said that the Royals would have a number of young players next year and that change was needed.
Robinson said he did not have a successor in hand. Team vice president George Brett sat next to Robinson at a news conference but said he was not interested in the job.
Robinson said he did not have a successor in mind.
"Because then," he said, turning to Robinson,
"you'd have to sit up here one day and tell me! wasn't coming back."
Swim team starts season with meet outside of the pool
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
The waves were high in the pool during yesterday's practice. But it's nothing like the ones the Kansas swimming team could see this weekend.
The Jayhawks will battle the weather, as well as their opponents, when they open their season at 8 a.m. tomorrow with the Open Water Invitational at Lone Star Lake. Kansas has attempted to hold this meet twice before, but weather forced cancelation both times, Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf said.
A competitive meet in open water is a unique concept, Kempf said. He said he thought it was the first dual competition of its kind in the nation. The only other team competing in the invitational will be Southern Illinois University.
"I've never heard of anything like this," he said. "Our idea is to expand it into a college invitational."
The format for the meet is much like a
Kempf said the Kansas team was accustomed to swimming in the lake for extended periods of time.
Senior captain Heather Switzer said she was prepared for the challenge to compete at the lake.
Sophomore Erik Jorgensen said he preferred swimming in the pool but was looking forward to competing in the lake.
'It's an adjustment, but I think we're doing just fine. It's just different mental-
"We've been training in open water for about five years," Kempf said.
"I like the lake because it poses a challenge to me," he said. "It's good for me to go out of my comfort zone."
Jorgensen said that Southern Illinois would be good competition for the Jayhawks.
"What we're doing right now is getting our base for the year," she said. "Saturday will dictate where we are and where we are going for the year."
Switzer said tomorrow's race would serve as a measuring stick for the Jayhawks progress.
ty," she said, though the team swims in the lake two or three days a week.
Kansas is only in its third week of practice, but the squad has been swimming well, Jorgensen said.
The ability to compete, though, only will better help prepare the Jayhawks, he said.
"I'm glad we're competing early in the season," jorgensen said. "Itgets us mentally ready for the season. The sooner we get into competition, the better."
4.
Not only should the invitational benefit Kansas, but Kempf said, "I think we're going to have fun doing this."
2B
Fridav. September 16, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NFL
NFL Week Three Preview
A look at the top games this weekend
NFL
Kansas City Chiefs at Atlanta Falcons
KC
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — How in the world can the Kansas City Chiefs, one week after their high-as-a-kite victory over San Francisco, not experience an emotional let-down in Atlanta?
It would be no slap at the Falcons, who will face the Chiefs in a 7 p.m. kickoff Sunday in the Georgia Dome. But coaches and players alike say beating the 49ers 24-17 in front of the second-biggest crowd in Arrowhead Stadium history was a Pikes Peak of energized emotion.
In his weekly media luncheon Tuesday, coach Marty Schottenheimer admitted it was a worry.
"There's no way any team in the NFL can play every game with the kind of intensity and energy that we
Schottenheimer doesn't deny that unprecedented levels of adrenaline rippled through his team the afternoon Joe Montana beat his old teammates and bested Steve Young, who took his job. It was probably the most anticipated event in Arrowhead Stadium history.
played with the other day," he said. "When you recognize that, you have to play efficiently, even perhaps without the same intensity."
"I cannot recall a game I've been involved with where two teams played with the intense energy and intensity that those two played with Sunday," Schottenheimer said.
This will be a week when the Chiefs call upon the leadership of veterans like Montana and Marcus Allen, who know the perils that can ambush a team following an emotional game.
"It can be tough if you linger too long on it and don't look forward to the opponent coming up." Montana said. "It shouldn't be that difficult this week because we've got an opponent that's playing pretty well."
New York Jets at Miami
JETS
JETS
Nobody would confuse Pete Carroll, who blasts MTV on his office stereo, and Don Shula, who probably couldn't identify Beavis or Butt-head. On the other hand, Shula can afford to be unhip — he has 327 more career wins than Carroll's two.
HUSKY
Still, when Carroll's 2-10 jets take on Shula's 2-0 Dolphins sun at Joe Robbie Stadium, the early edge in the AFC East will be at stake.
Minnesota at Chicago
familiar for the Dolphins, who seem set on replicating last season, when they began 9-2, then lost five straight games
This is new ground for the Jets, who beat the Bills then the Broncos in their first two games. It's more
The injuries already have started.
"Sometimes it's like a domino effect," cornerback J.B. Brown said.
Already injured are three defensive backs and Irving Spikes, the free agent rookie who was so impressive last week in the 24-14 win over Green Bay.
"There's no explanation for it. You've got to go with whomever you have."
The injuries already have started.
after lots of injuries.
for his players, as well as catering to their musical tastes, has loosened up a team that has spent a decade under the uptight Joe Walton and Bruce Coslet.
Carroll, who conducts bowling competitions and soccer shootouts
All were instrumental in last week's 25-22 overtime victory over Denver, won on Lowery's 38-vard field goal.
So far, the veterans and the "let's have fun" attitude of the 43-year-old Carroll fit perfectly.
He's done it with help from a group of veterans whose playing skills may be declining but whose leadership skills aren't - Ronnie Lott, Boomer Elison, art Monk and Nick Lowery.
Buffalo at Houston
Miami historylly has been far more successful than the Jets.
FASTENING TECHNOLOGY
G
They had better not do that against the Vikings, who have only one offensive TD all year, because Warren Moon starts slowly. The Vikings have allowed just 19 points in their two games and last week shut down Detroit, a far better offensive team.
Chicago hadn't given up more than two touchdowns in any of Dave Wannstedt's first 17 games, then allowed three in the first 22 minutes in Philadelphia on Monday night.
But the Jets won both meetings last season, and five of the last six against the Dolphins.
HAWKEYE
This is a matchup of two teams that seem on the downslide, although Houston's performance in Dallas was a lot more impressive than its no-show in Indianapolis.
The Oilers' string of seven straight playoff appearances would be in deep jeopardy with a loss this week. And if Buffalo loses, it will be two games behind the winner of the Miami-Jets game, not a good position even in the third week
Cody Carlson is back for Houston after Bucky Richardson was bounced around by Charles Haley.
San Francisco
at Los
Angeles
Rams
JETS
It's fine for the 49ers to sign Deion Sanders. It's just too bad he doesn't play guard. San Francisco goes into this game without three offensive line starters, a problem that had more to do with the loss in Kansas City than any of Joe Montana's heroics.
The Rams haven't beaten the 49ers in Anaheim since 1987, meaning if they don't do it this week, they probably never will.
Los Angeles Raiders at Denver
HOTEL MILKFIELD
The Raiders begin 0-2 and have been outscored 82-23 in their first two games.
"We're the worst team in the league." Tim Brown said.
"I're the worst team in the league," I'm Brown said. What does that make the Broncos? Well, they've lost two games by three points each. But most distressing is the disappearance of the magic from John Elway. He had two interceptions returned for touchdowns and, at the end of the San Diego game, fumbled the ball away.
San Diego at Seattle
Maybe Elway misses Dan Reeves.
PAC-10
You know how unpredictable this year is when these two teams are playing for first place in the AFC West, even this early in the season.
"Anyone can have two good weeks," said Stan Humphries, who has become the NFL's top-rated quarterback by leading the Chargers over the Broncos and Bengals.
Raiders 38-9.
The Seahawks,
an improving
young team,
trounced the
Washington at New York Giants
The only thing wrong with the Sea hawks is the cornerbacks, Rick Mirer, Cortez Kennedy, Eugene Robinson and Chris Warren are all Pro Bowl quality players.
GIANTS
Green Bay at Philadelphia
Is Dan Reeves a genius? Is Dave Brown really better than Phil Simms? As Buddy Ryan predicted, he handled the "46" defense better than Simms usually did. About the only thing troubling the Giants is the injury to Rodney Hampton (Dave Meggett replaces him) and the gripping from some players about wearing unfashionable 1956 uniforms.
The Redskins unveiled some leather helmets this week (why not Sammy Baugh?) for their replica game. But they won't unveil Heath Shuler. After John Friesz' four touchdown passes in New Orleans last week, Shuler must wait until Friesz messes up.
G
Reggie White comes home to Philadelphia. It's fortunate that the Eagles beat the Bears Monday night because, if they hadn't, the home crowd would be a Packer crowd, or at least a crowd rooting for White to sack Randall Cunningham.
White and his friends were a little loose last week in their 24-14 loss to Miami. This is not a defense that should give up 146 yards to a team known for its passing. And Brett Favre reverted to his old form — fumbling once and throwing an interception. And the running game? The Packers ran only seven times, second lowest in league history.
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Mass • 843-5000
VUARNET
FRANCE
Couple
The 928 Mass.
Etc. Downtown
Shop Park in the rear
Our lunch menu will allow you to come back for dinner.
Grilled Chicken Salad Platter
Filet of Sale / rice pilet£ & salad
Bowie Vegetable Pasta
Cajun Reuben w/ French fries & salad
Fifi's affordable lunches prices as fine as the dining
5.50
4.95
5.50
5.50
fifi's
925 lower 8x1 7226
fifi's
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"EVERYDAY
THE STUDENT FRIENDLY STORE
Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry
1804 W. 6th 2 Blocks East of Iowa
VISA DISCOVER
7 49 - 1 9 1 9
MasterCard
MasterCard
THE BREAKING NEWS
NEW LOWER CD PRICES
All CD'S $5 Each
Great Selection!!
VISA
FAXCARD
J ay h
TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PART"10
-2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS
-2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING
-COKES COCKES
842-1212
Dehorn
the Frogs
GRAHAM'S RETAIL LIQUORS
The mom and pop store of Lawrence
1906 Mass 843-8186
VISA DUCOVER
CARRY-OUT
1-PIZZA
1-TOPPING
1-COKE
$9.00 $11.50 $30.00
$3.50
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs
Fri-Sat
11am-2am
11am-3am
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center · Lawrence DINE-IN AVAILABLE · WE ACCEPT CHECKS
They're here!
KANSAS
The Powerbook 5204/160
$2000^00
POWER
through it.
Machinists. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union technology center
Academic Computer Supplies, Services & Equipment
H8B
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 16. 1994
3B
1
Kansas rugby team ready to get the G.O.A.T.S. of Omaha
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
So far, the only team able to beat the Kansas rugby club has been a group of Kansas players.
It's a trend the team hopes to continue when it takes on the Greater Omaha Area Touring Squad (the G.O.A.T.S.) at 1 p.m. Saturday on the Shenk Complex at 23rd and Iowa streets.
The Kaw Valley Cup tournament in Topeka proved to be little competition for Kansas. The club entered two teams, a collegiate team and a club team. The collegiate team, made up of Kansas students, went 2-1 and finished third in the tournament. The team's only loss came against the club team.
The club team, made up of Lawrence area residents and recent Kansas graduates, went 4-0 and won the tournament championship. The club team defeated Kansas State 27-3 in the championship game.
"The level of competition wasn't really that great," said Dominic Barna, head coach for both teams. "I
was really glad to see that we went out and played our game and didn't deteriorate to their level."
Barnao said the early season games showed areas where improvement was needed. He said the club had a problem catching high-kicked balls.
"This week we want to continue to play our game," he said. "The level of competition will increase this weekend."
That competition will come in the form of the G.O.A.T.S. from Omaha, Neb. The team is made up of former college players that reside in the Omaha area.
The club team will play the Omaha team's first division squad. And the collegiate side takes on the B-team.
"There is not a large drop off in the talent level in either team," Barnao said. "They have guys that have a lot of experience."
Barnao said that he thought the experience the G.O.A.T.S. have would help them to play a strong defensive game.
"They're probably one of the top five teams in the Western territory." he said.
Collegiate team captain Matt Delargy said that last weekend's games gave both Kansas teams a chance to give younger players some experience.
"There was a lot of mixing of new faces out there last weekend," Delargy said.
Sophomore team member John Wiley said the collegiate team played well for its first game.
"We really came together as a team on the collegiate side," Wiley said.
Wiley credited much of last week's success to the strong performances from the team's back and forward positions who are responsible for advancing the ball.
Delray said the early season games were important in getting ready for the team's first merit table match Oct. 8 at Northeast Missouri State University. Kansas has two fall merit table matches, which are used in figuring rankings for the national tournament next spring.
"We have to get the new players ready to play so that they are comfortable with our style," Delargy said.
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
KMS SEBASTIAN
REDKEN
Nucleic A.
MAGE AURA BEAUTY WAREHOUSE® HAYASHI®
Brotalo Lanza WAREHOUSE® & HAIRZONE® 841-5885 Rusk
HAIR ZONE AT • BEAUTY • WAREHOUSE
REDKEN
1 liter SHAMPOOS AMINO PON GLYPRO-L CAT $995
Recovery Complex Spa Therapy for Stressed Hair
2 oz. $895
PEAL MITCHELL SHAMPOOT OR AWAPUHI 32 oz. w/pump $895
REDKEN CAT PROTEIN TREATMENT 5 oz. $695
JOICO KERAPRO SHAMPOO 1/2 liter. $695
IMAGE ALL PRODUCTS BUY ONE GET ONE 1/2 PRICE
SEBASTIAN SHAPER or SHAPER PLUS 10 oz. $599
NEXUS THERAPPE 43 oz. w/pump $1495
SEBASTIAN CELLO SHAMPOO 32 oz. $995
JOICO LITE CONDITIONER 1/2 liter $795
REDKEN LIFT & SHINE FORM HOLD 8.5 oz. $395
Lanza MOUSSE 7 oz. BUY ONE GET ONE FREE
NEXUS
PAUL MITCHELL
JOICO
ROFFLER
SORBIE.
HAIR ZONE
AT BEAUTY WAREHOUSE
PAUL MITCHELL
SHAMPOO I
OR
AWAPUHI
32 oz.
w/pump
$895
PAUL MITCHELL SHAMPOO I OR SHAMPOO II
REDKEN
CAT
PROTEIN
TREATMENT
5 oz.
$695
IMAGE
ALL PRODUCTS
BUY ONE
GET ONE
SEBASTIAN
SHAPER or
SHAPER PLUS
10 oz.
SEHASTIAN
CELLO
SHAMPOO
32 oz.
$9.95
SEHASTIAN
CELLO
SHAMPOO
32 oz.
$9.95
$599
NEXUS
THERAPPE
43 oz.
w/ pump
$14.95
NEXUS
THERAPPE
MULTIPLE MASK
FIRMNESS & TREATMENT
100% NATURAL
FOR Sensitive Skin
NO PARABENS
NO PEGS
NET WT 250 ML
REDKEN
LIFT & SHINE
FRIM HOLD
8.5 oz.
$3.95
e 100%
NE PALELAND
CINEMAS IN
NEW YORK
123 456 7890
www.nepalandcinema.com
We've got
REDKEN
THE POWER BEHIND BEAUTIFUL HUMANITY
@Redken Laboratories, Inc. 1933. All rights reserved.
great heads for hair
salon REAUMONDE
great heads for hair
THE PROFESSIONAL DIFFERENCE
Radiation professional training Hot new services.
Keep your skirts on the edge. Because the smarter you look.
With hot new products.
Deep In and Relax Your Feel on It Today.
where the world is Beautiful through You.
15 east 7th a. - Lawrence, KA (Above the Jern Break)
Bold Choreer, pro
(9137)49-7667
Glanny Proctor, pro
(9138)43-304
Savannah
Juicers Showgirls
Savannah
Brooke
Juicers Showgirls
Featuring
千
Totally N* de
Dancers
18 + Welcome
913 N. Second
(Next to Riverfront Square)
841-4122
Watch Out For Student Specials and New Afternoon Specials
MASS STREET MUSIC
1347 Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS
DJ
The finest in acoustic instruments including: Martin, Bourgeois, Lowden, Larrivee, Goodall, Santa Cruz (913)843-3535(800)747-9980
CALVIN KLEIN FRAGRANCES
ESCAPE
Calvin Klein
ETERNITY
Calvin Klein
ESCAPE Calvin Klein ETERNITY Calvin Klein OBSESSION COLOGNE Calvin Klein ESCAPE ETERNITY OBSESSION
W
OBSESSION
COLOGNE
Calvin Klein
OBSESSION
DOCASIONE
Calvin Klein
Indulge in the most luxurious fragrances of our time from Calvin Klein. Pamper yourself or give it as a gift to your favorite man or woman.
OBSESSION
WeaverS
9th & Massachusetts
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
Buy a Quart Get a Pint FREE!
(with this coupon)
expires October 10th
Louisiana Purchase
23rd & Louisiana * 843-5500
Orchards Corners
15th & Kasold • 749-0440
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS · (913) 841-LIVE
Bottleneck
Fri. Sept. 16
Salty Iguanas
Sat. Sept. 17
Loaded in Lawrence Cd
Monterey Jack, Hatful of Rain
Danger Bob, Slackjaw
18+ over
Sun. Sept. 18
Skankin Pickle
Tantra Monsters
Jimmy Skaffa
18+ over
Mon. Sept. 19
Consolidated
Artist 'the spoonman'
18+ cover
MERCANTILE ACCOUNT INFORMATION It's for you...
Everything you ever wanted to know about your checking account is just a phone call away... 24 hours a day!
The new Account Information Line at Mercantile Bank of Lawrence is like having a teller inside your telephone. Simply dial us up, day or night, input your access code, and you can:
电话
电话
check up on your checking or savings account balance
review recent deposits, direct deposits, and checks cleared
电话
look up your loan balance
电话
count the money in your C.D.
Put the Mercantile line to work for you.
Call (913)865-0210
MERCANTILE BANK
Member FDIC
Marcantille Bank of Lawrence N. A.
Ninth & Massachusetts
Motor Bank, Ninth & Tennessee
South Bank, 1807 West 23rd
Northwest Bank, 3500 West 6th
Mass Street Bank, 647 Massachusetts
South Plaza Bank,
27th & Iowa
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 428
Lawrence, KA 66044-0428
(913) 865-0200
Equal Opportunity
Lender
4B
Friday. September 16, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Daylong festival to promote organic farming
By Paul Todd Special to the Kansan
B. J. H.
Chef Jim Gasser says his meals taste better when he uses organically grown food.
Jim Gasser, a chef at American Bistro Restaurant, 101 W. Seventh St., prepares Johnny Walker Prailine Sauce. Gasser will be participating Saturday in "From the Good Earth," an event promoting organic farming.
"The organic produce makes cooking easier," said Gasser, who is head chef at American Bistro, 101 W. Seventh St. "You don't have to make up for a lack of flavors in cooking."
Saturday, Gasser and seven other area chefs will be cooking organic dishes at the Farmers' Market, 11th and Vermont streets, as part of a daylong festival celebrating organic farming and sustainable agriculture. The event will be called "From the Good Earth."
Other chefs from Lawrence who will be participating are Mark Ramirez of Fifi's Restaurant, 925 Iowa St., Charlie Rascoll of Free State Brewery, 636 Massachusetts St.; and LeAnn Ward of Paradise Cafe, 728 Massachusetts St. Other chefs and food experts who will participate include Debbie Gold and Michael Smith of the American Restaurant in Kansas City, Mo., and Robert Krause of Gourmet To Go in Topека Alice Waters, an award-winning chef from Berkeley, Calif., also will cook. Waters was named James Beard Chef of the Year in 1992 and is an advocate for family farming.
The chefs will cook organic dishes at the Farmers' Market from 9 to 11 a.m. Tickets are $6.
"From the Good Earth" is sponsored by KU's Natural History Museum, the Land Institute in Salina and the Kansas Rural Center in Whiting.
Kathryn Morton, marketing and communications coordinator at the Natural History Museum, said the event, the first of its kind in Lawrence, had come about when some great minds worked together.
Morton said that Waters and the board of directors of the Land Institute wanted to do a benefit for
the institute. The museum already had secured a photographic exhibit on worldwide farming practices by Michael Ableman, an organic farmer and community activist.
The organizers decided to combine the benefit and exhibit into a daylong event which would culminate with a gala Saturday night at the Adams Alumni Center followed by a multimedia presentation at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Proceeds from the $75-per-ticket gala, which is
sold out, will benefit the sponsors.
Morton said the multimedia program in Woodruff Auditorium would be about remote farming cultures and practices, modern farming and personal roles in taking care of the earth.
"I would like to encourage the University community to come to the multimedia presentation," Morton said. "It concerns all of us. The choices we make on a daily basis really affect the health of our world."
Kansan
Classifieds
Call 864-4358
Mon-Fri 8am-5pm
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Washington, D.C. 20035
NCGS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Via University Ave 21-1895
NCG
Great Savings.
THE GIANT OF MARYLAND
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
"Historical Society 1901"
Mulligan's
Music at
Mulligan's
MONDAY
NIGHT
FOOTBALL
No cover and
$1.50 Longnecks
(including
Rolling Rock)
TUESDAY
LIVE JAZZ!
No cover and
$1 off imports
WEDNESDAY
ACOUSTIC
OPEN-MIC
Musicians.interchange
$1.50 Boulevard Pints
Darrell Lea & Megan Hurt
$1 Samuel Adams Draws
THURSDAYS
FRIDAY
Ricky Dean Sinatra
$1 P.B.R. bottles • $1.50 wells
$1 dogs/burgers on the patio (5-7PM)
SATURDAY
SKIN
2 for 1 wells
$1 P.B.R. bottles
CHIEFS
SUNDAY!
$3.50 Domestic Pitchers
$2.00 Bloody Marys
$2.99 Burger Baskets
PUPS GRILL OPEN UNTIL 3AM!!
VIN TITAS
MATCHEN
CINDERELLA
SUNSET
BECUMA
RECEPT AUS
PASSION
1016 Massachusetts • Downtown Lawrence
913-865-4055
PUPS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
September 15-18
Like Water For
Chocolate
Thursday 9:30
Friday 7:00 and 9:30 pm
Sunday 2:00 pm
COSPONSORED BY HALO
BEAT STREET
Friday Midnight
Saturday Midnight
Yol Breakdance Contest
Before the Movie Saturday
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
September 15-18
Like Water For
Chocolate
Thursday 9:30
Friday 7:00 and 9:30 pm
Sunday 2:00 pm
COSPONSORED BY HALO
BEAT STREET
Friday Midnight
Saturday Midnight
Yo! Breakdance Contest
Before the Movie Saturday
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
ROCK CLUB Kitchen is open!
ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE GUEST ON THURSDAY
WED., SEPT 14 THE PRAYERS
LEXINGTON, KY
W/SOLEFISH
THUR., SEPT 15 GRUMPY
SHALLOW
ADV-TIX
THE ORIGINAL LINE-UP!
FRI., SEPT 16 DIXIE DREGS
SAT., SEPT 17 Adam's Farm
w/Mother and Shag
MON., SEPT 19 RVMC Showcase
Danger Bob, Pamper the Madman,
Bufferbus, Johnny Clueless
SUN., SEPT., 18
RON ROBERTS QUARTET
5-8PM • DINNERSHOW
IDA McBETH
AT 9PM
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
For info 913.841.9111
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
ROCK CLUB
Kitchen
is open!
ADVENUE TICKETS AVAILABLE
AT THE CAFE ON THROUGH
musicmaster
WED., SEPT 14 THE PRAYERS LEXINGTON, KY
W/SOLEFISH
THUR., SEPT 15 GRUMPY SHALLOW
ADV TIX
THE ORIGINAL LINE-UP!
FRIL., SEPT 16 DIXIE DREGS
SAT., SEPT 17 Adam's Farm w/Mother and Shag
MON., SEPT 19 RVMC Showcase
Danger Bob, Pamper the Madman,
Bufferbus, Johnny Clauses
SUN., SEPT., 18
RON ROBERTS QUARTET
5-8PM • DINNER SHOW
IDA McBETH
AT 9PM
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
For info 913.841.9111
RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE
ADV TIX THE ORIGINAL LINE-UP!
DIXIE DREGS
FRI., SEPT. 16
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
This Offer Is Cut & Dried.
At Great Clips, our stylists give you the look you want, every time. Every Great Clips stylist is specially trained to give you a salon-quality cut or perm, without the salon price. So come to Great Clips, and let our stylists give you your style.
M
Great Clips for hair:
OUR STYLISTS YOUR STYLE $ ^{ \textcircled{2} }$
Not Valid With Other Offers.
Offer good through September 24.
HAIRCUT AND BLOW DRY $3.99 Reg.59
Located at 6th and Minnesota 832-2424 M-F 9-9 • Sat 9-6 • Sun 12-5
Organic food tasting booth from 9 to 11 a.m. at the Farmers' Market, 11th and Vermont streets. Tickets are $6.
"From the Good Earth" is an event to promote organic farming and sustainable agriculture. Saturday's events will be:
Good Earth events
"Yummy in Your Tummy," an educational program for ages 4 to 6 from 9:30 to 11 a.m. and 1:30 to 5 p.m. at the Natural History Museum. Tickets are $7 for museum members. $8 for nonmembers.
A discussion of sustainable agriculture and a tour of an organic farm north of Lawrence from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Shuttles to the farm
A workshop including area farmers, chefs and restaurateurs who will discuss agriculture and purchasing local produce from 1:30 to 3 p.m. at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Free.
A wine tasting and book signing at 6 p.m. at KU's Natural History Museum followed by a gala dinner at 7 p.m. at the Adams Alumni Center. The dinner is sold out.
will be leaving from the Farmers' Market every hour starting at 11 a.m. Free.
A multimedia program about farming and the earth at 8:30 p.m. at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Tickets are $3 for the general public, $1 for students with a KUID and free for children 12 and under.
Source: Kansan Correspondent research
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
115 Financial
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
130 Sports
200s Employment
206 Help Wanted
229 Professional Services
238 Typing Services
Classified Policy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are on hold.
The Kanaan 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 Kanaan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kanaan regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and may not be posted without permission, 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-
KANSAN
CARB
105 Personals
100s Announcements
1
THE ETC. SHOP 228 Mass.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoop earrings & Pendants
LEATHER
Backpacks, Ballets, Jackets, &
UNGLESSES
Bauchs & Buckles Killer Loops,
'i', Revo, Serenegeti, and Vuartn
J10 Bus. Personals
New Dance Classes
Country Ballroom
Latin and Swing
Call 913-266-5914
Pat Kerr instructor
918 S. Kansas Avenue Topeka
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also insurance for US citizens going abroad.
Oshlad Insurance Service 411; S Main Ottawa,
Ks 60687 1800-695-695.
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
CASH FOR COLLEGE 900,000 GRANTS AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY 1.000-433-2867 QUALIFY
IMMEDIATELY 1.000-433-2867
NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Self Serve Car
Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
Openings for CNA's: 2:10:30 shift for CNA's full or
short hours. Eudora Nursing Center:
913-827-5168
Recycled Source
12th & Oreac 841-9475
DON'T MISS THE BUS!
Last chance to sign up for the bus to the Rolling Stones on Sun! Suit in for more details!
Pay Cash for CD's
S
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
TRADE BUY SELL Cd's Lp's & Tapes
Pregnant-considering adoption?
Loving families avail. You help select adoptive family.
Confidential! toll-free A Dream Fulilled Adoption Inc toll free | 1-800-565-4529
TUTORS: List your name with you. We refer
usertos to you. Student Assistance center,
133 Sesame Street.
School of Education Students
Students who plan to STUDENT TEACH the 1966 semester (GCPs included must attend the 1966 semester). Students attending September 15 at 3:30 p.m. in 333 Bailey. This meeting is mandated by Preliminary information.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong Street
Kansan Classified: 864-4358
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2 - 15, 1800 • 4, 6, 8 OR 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
WALL/BEAVER CREEK
YA GOTTA
BE THERE!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
NORODY DOES SKI BREAKS HETTER!
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 p.m Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
LOST: Prescription sunglasses w/ gray case on
phone 614-812-7042 Dole & Hale. If you call
case # 614-812-7042 Tina.
Lost cat, gray female. Gray with white paws.
Andi call 749-249 and 4th and iii india.
Call 749-249 Leave message
Parkeit found near 19th & Haskell. Describe to claim. Call 864-1523
200s Employment
男 女
$100 hr. possible mailing our circulars for info call (202) 298-9065
205 Help Wanted
GRADUATE STUDENT ASSISTANT Half-time position available in the Student Assistance Center for Disability Related Services. Responsibilities include assisting staff in coordinating services to students with disabilities, demic aides, researching equipment needs, and identifying local, state, and federal regulations impacting students with disabilities. Requires: KU graduate student status for Fall, 1994 and Spring, 1995 in Special Education, Rehabilitative Medicine, Hearing Hearing Science Disorders, or related field.
REQUIRED: application form, available in the Student Assistance Center, must be completed and received by 5:00 p.m. Friday, September 30, 1994 in 133 Strong Hall, University of Kansas. 609-6485, 613-8848-4064. The University of Kansas is authorized/originative employment action employed
Insurance agency needs part-time clerical help.
10-20 hours a week. Insurers prefer round-trip,
with class with students.
A couple or two individuals to work two weekends a month at a coed group home. Responsible for supervising and overseeing activities of kids. Good learning environment, with basic K-12 curriculum, current physical, high school graduate Send resume to Trinity Foster Home, Box 3385, Lawrence, KS or call RK Spano at 842-7463.
Adams Alumni Center needs pantry person for AM flexible shift. Banquet coat PM shift. Cook line 3-11 PM shift. Positions available immediately. Apply in person. 1266 Broad Ave. No phone calls. Attendant needed PT to assist male student in wheelchair. Male or Female 2-3 hours./day. Morning only. No lifting necessary. Experience pre-employment required. Committee committed to every morning. $8.25/hr. 844-8038
Babytitter needed for two delightful toddler girls in new home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible days/evenings/wEEKends. Experience, own car, and references required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to Box 420. University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer Flint.
1
COLLEGE STUDENTS $4.25-11.65 STARTING
Local branch of nat! col. Filling immediate entry
level openings. Flex time schedules. 3-5 days, eve-
ldays in weeksends. opt all majors accepted. For
ipl 841-843.
Cottonwood Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their residential division. Positions include evening, weekend, and overnight hours. College course work and related experience helpful but not required. GOOD DRIVING RECORD A MUST. Please apply to 82-344 at RECORD A MUST WD 19 FEB 09
Need some extra pocket money? Certified Nurse Aide classes will start Sept. 26, Call Eudora Nursery Center, #54-2178 for additional information Ask for Sylvia Mone-Pri
CRUSSE SHIP JOB!S!!! Up to $900 weekly. Free room/board. Now hiring skilled/unskilled men and women. No experience necessary. Call 6011798-1362 ext C501424 hrs.
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn up to $2,000+/month working on Cruise Ships or Land
Travel ships. Call 877-345-6911 Time employment available. No experience nee-
der or more information call 1-877-203-6484 csc.9653
Dellivery Drivers, Great job, Great pizza, great hour. Applies on Pizza Planet 601 KaaSri.
EARN EXTRMoney IN AN EXCTING ENVIRONMENT The Arrowhead Stadium, Home of Kansas City Chiefs, game day position available in the Arrowhead Club and private suites. The Arrowhead Club, cars, airplanes, servers, bartenders, and kitchen help. For info call 818-924-9000.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. September 16. 1994
5B
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
Female vocalist wanted for variety dance band. All styles. High, strong-chest voice, good performer. Avail immediately. This is a working band, serious injuries only 749-3849.
Part-time Custodial Positions Available
- Sat.& Sun. 6-11am.
- Sun. 9-11am..& Mon, Tues,
Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm.
- Sat. 8 am.-12 noon
- Wed.-Fri. * 9:30-11:30pm.
- Sun. 9am-3pm.
- Sun.9am.-12noon & Mon.- Thurs.5:30-7:30pm.
- Sun. 11:30 am.-3pm. &
Wed. 5:30-7:30pm.
CallBPI Building Services at 842-6264
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
A DIVISION OF BUCKINGHAM PALACE.
WE'RE GROWING!
Golden Opprotunities under the Golden Arches Mc Jobs Open Interviews Sat., Sept. 17th 11a.m.-2p.m.
at McDonald's once Now Hiring for our locations and to answer any questions about how you can be a part of our team.
Mcdonald's
What you want
is what you get.
Christmas is Coming!
U. S., is looking for people to fill 30 positions.
Earn extra cash for the holidays! Pro Tel Marketing.
one of the most successful marketing companies in the U.S., is looking for people to fill 20 positions.
We have day, afternoon and evening positions available. We now have flexible scheduling available. We also have full and part time positions. TRANSPORTATION PROVIDED We Offer
- $5.00/hr to start days
$5.50/hr nights
- $5.50/hr nights
- 2 automatic increases
- $1.00/hr attendance bonus
- Paid vacations/holidays
- Incentive programs
- Good business and marketing experience
- Opportunity for advancement
Call 272-6888
(Topeka)
Askforext.100
EOE
PHILLIPS 66
Now accepting applications for store sales associates for several locations:
•Starting wage above minimum
•Modern, clean locations
•Flexible working hours
Apply today at 9th& Iowa
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Make up to $2,000-$4,000 + / mo. teaching basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S Korea. No teaching based on IELTS test requirement. For QR codes: 623-1124-1587, 623-1124-1578.
JOB JOB JOB JOB JOB
Cashier needed for weekends and evenings. Contact Jerry at jawayh Food M art. 494-4123. Laborers wanted for tree service 86%/hr. Part available. Apply in person only 845 Maple at 7 a.m.
LEGAL SECRETARY
Large Law enforcement firm in now accepting applications for law enforcement work and part time word processors. Must have Word Perfect 5.1 and strong secretarial skills.
Send resume and salary requirements to:
NO FEE
ADIA Personnel Services
100 e. W. 8th St.
Lawrence, KS 66044
842-1515
Looking for a change while getting an education:
Available rooms are located ally living room, bore house and baby pluper Free room and board, plus salary. Own living quarters with private entry For details please call us at (800) 264-9172
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic, highly motivated individuals to sell newspaper subscriptions. Sales experience is helpful, but we'll train highly motivated individuals. Even hours, Monday through Friday. We pay salary + commission. Apply between 29 m. and 6 p.m., call 312-748-1020 or visit www.lawrencejournalworld.com for more information. #221720
Excellent income for part-time work!
Needed. Experienced, stable individual to teach my child in my home from 9:30 w 3:20 M-F. MEF required. Please call Laura 832-3211 between 9:30 w 3:20 M-F.
Occasional babyssister needed. 1. T fourteen. Days or evenings, weekdays or weekends. Call 842-9268 Part Time Assistant for Apt. Management. Goo Pay. Resume. References. Morning Star 911 797
Part time help needed for delivery work. After nonsense and sadness. Apply in person Ihanna
Part-time custodial worker needed to work morn-
ing two days per week. Rate $75/hour / Calr
Research assistant for non-profit organization $6.00/hour. Call Jacka at 1-842-3424 for information SPRING BREAK '65 "SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE!" Student Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to: Beach. Call 1-840-648-4849. Panama City. Beach. Call 1-840-648-4849.
STUDENT HOURLY BUSINESS SERVICE:
ASSISTANT Deadline: 9/16/14 5:00 p.m. Salary
5.00 120 hrs/wk! Duties for Networking and
Communications services include assisting
with network configuration, entry and analysis; preparation and maintenance of computer spreadsheets; processing inventory
responding to vendor inquiries on account and
managing customer service requests.
Must be enrolled in 6 hours at the University
(of Kahls) 'to apply, complete a job application available at the reception desk in Ellsworth Awnemor, 840-930-7650. Contact information, contact Networking and Telecommunications Services; 884-9000, Ellsworth Anness, 1728 Angel Road, Lawrence, KS 66045. OE/AA EMPLOYER.
Student Hourly position Available. Duties:
Receptionist; filing; duplicating; running
errands, typing; proofreading; other duties as
assigned. Position available September 21, 1994
$42.25/hr. Applications available at the Student
Hours Office. Deadline September
16, 1994 12:00 PM (Noon).
STUDENT TRAVEL SALES: Sunshee tours is seeking ambitious salespeople to promote ski to beach trips for Christmas and Spring Break! Earn cash and free trips. Call today: 1-800-SUNSHEA
Terravera Construction Company has opening startling immediately for trim carpenters and laborers. Hardworking individuals who can work a minimum of 3 week days and be able to report to work by 8:00 a.m. They jobs involve some heavy lifting, etc. apply in person at 4104 A Trail Road back and in the basement. For more info, call 892-8899 between the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.
Typist needed for KU student hourly position
Need to have excellent typing skills, IBM-PC computer knowledge, excellent verbal and written communication skills, be able to understrain fed undergrads encourage to apply. $4 $50/hour, 20 hours per week. Contact Liz or Susan at the Hall of the Humanities, 21 Walkins Home 864-4798
UNIQUE MENTAL HEALTH OPPORTUNITY Needed immediately male roommate to provide emotional support, adult supervision to an 18 yr old individual in a community after psychiatric hospitalization Roommate will be contracted by the young man's family in conjunction with the Menninger Nurse Support and Program; study of menningnursing and staff. Room stipend provided. Reference and KBI check required. Please call Nancy Parker (ext. 329). Don Perkins (ext. 3514) or Annette Bartel (ext. 3513).
Waitress needed call 749-5039, 925 Iowa
Wanted babysitter for two children. Ages 3-5,
evening 3:10 - 1:00 am. Light cooking necessary in
the kitchen. Call Bob at 843-6334. Call anytime before 3:30pm.
Join one of the country's fastest growing retail companies. MANAGEMENT AND SALES FULL. WESTPORT LTD. In person. WESTPORT LTD. LAWRENCE Riverfront Factory Outlet Mall, third floor. 814-423-8434
WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING
TREE! TO PROMOTE SPRING BREAK TO JAMAICA.
FLORIDA & FADRE. FANTASTIC
FREE TREE! TO PROMOTE SPRING BREAK TO JAMAICA.
SPLASH TUES 1:00-426-7710.
Waitress Needed call 749-5039.925 Iowa
- who like to talk
* who are friendly
* who are fashionable
molly mcgees
grill & bar
- and who enjoy great clothes at a fantastic discount.
molly mcgees
grill & bar
Now Hiring!
Cooks and Servers
A.M. and P.M., Full and Part Time
Apply between 2 and 4 p.m.
2429 IOWA
Wanted: Caring people who like kids 38-yrs old are needed at Head Start as volunteers for a minimum of 15 hours per week. 12:30, Monday-Friday. Daycare volunteers needed from 12:30-5:30. For more information call 840-796-2870.
Enthusiastic HIDFLE Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for 2hrs. Thurs. evenings and occasionally 1Sunday. Sunday calls. Call 842-9830.
Experienced, Energetic, and Caring Person to provide child care in our home for 2 children, ages 1 and 4. References Required. Hours Friday nights, Sat, and Sun. days, Call 832-9192.
Work Study Students community service internships $5.00/hour. Apply in Center for community Outreach in Student Senate Office. Call 864-3710 with any questions.
We need 5 stnultimate people to show high fashion
models how to dress for details at:
CALL NOW @details.749-7844 from 5:30 p.m.
Worker for firewood production. Flexible hours.
Call 749-5140 at 7 am for more information.
225 Professional Services
offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749.
College Credit Compilation Under way, ways
of obtaining a personal credit plus
copy. For information 18091432 621.
ENGLISH TUTOR. Experience. Writing, proofreading, literature. ESL classes. Highly qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3331. Experienced tutor -Strugling? I can help. Reasonable rates. Call Michelle 864-6190. International Video Conversions PAL/SECAM/NTSC. $25 for up to 2 hours. Includes return. Transfer Package. $125. Transfer Box 501 Ottawa K1a 66007. J 6007-8564.
DU/LTRAFFICICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANSASCITY AREA
CHARLESR.GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake DI & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
Paken D. a alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Gaind G. Strole
Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 134
842-1133
KC Design Studio: Growing creative studio search for professional, talented artist. Must be experience in humorous illustration and cartooning. Graphic illustration and Macintosh experience a plus. Send 10 samples with SASE to KC Design Studio, PO Box 22857, Kansas City, MO 40413
Need a babysitter? College student, loves kids, six years experience with infants, toddlers, have transportation and flexible schedule. Call Melanie at 843-3846.
R
OUI/ DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
701 Tennessee
Prompt abortion and contraception services in Lawrence 84-3714, Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Free Consultation
235 Typing Services
1-er Women Word Processing. Former edita transforms words Word processing into accurate pages of letters and numbers.
A Word Perfect Wor Processing Service.
Laser Printing Services. Call:
Dale 860-521-7400.
Dale Acee 860-521-7400.
CLIP THIS AD. Quality typing/word processing/indexing Laser printing. Free estimates
Quality Word Processing Distruptions, Theses,
term-papers, Resumes, Business letters, etc.
(Received 9/15/04)
ANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
Put my service to the test.
For anything you need at all,
MAKIN' THE GRADE
is the one to call.
865-2855
X
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
To benefit Lawrence Chamber Players Saturday, 17. september - 3.p.m. (no early callers) 1628 Dudley, N.W. Sunset off 8th S.L. Furniture, appliance stores, sports equipment, toys, linens, great miscellany
EARN CASH
ALL YOUR
MONEY GONE?
25% off Everything with KU ID. Booth 218 (down town Lawrence, Thur Oct. 10 of jeans!)
Blue plumed carpet to fit dorm room. Bought
last semester for $146, sell for $0/8O. Call Mike
Colossal Yard Sale
Attention collectors: Playboys & Penthouses for ale. Call 833-2770.
$15 Today
...tooth SB Great for student $25.00 . Black
...card . Call Mia $48.777
day; 841-848-even
By donating your blood plasma
fonda 1804 Elite 50 red scooter, with 3 baskets. 60tils with new battery and tune-up. Make offer
Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center
$30
This Week
Drive a Classic 7 Honda CB125 $400, 7 Honda
Twin Bags 600, Both low miles & great shape.
Brand new '94 YAMAHA RAZZ scooter; paid $1350, will sell for $1000.
aedia package. $190 or less offer. 855-3298
'aanasonic racing bike. Shimano 600 Uleagre, Capture Micro circuit computer, Durance cullage pedal extra Ultra uleagre hubs, $95. Call Steve at k784-7924
NABI
The Quality Source
816 W. 24th
Behind Laird Norler Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F 9-6:30
Sat. 10-4
IACNTINYOR Computer. Complete system including printer only 509. Call Chris at 800-299-5863.
Rolling Stones tickets for sale. Great seats. Call Chris 865-0011.
NABI
Schwinn-Black Phantom, Corvette § spd. American Womans (Korean War Production). All very rare, require restoration. 913-299-9536, 913-334-5724 STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and printer for $120 a semester. Call 1-800-959-6049 for information.
Two Fori Amos tickets available. Best offer 865-
2521.
93 Sunzu Katana, 600cc, h/w purple & teal accents. Like new cond, beautiful & bike very fast. $950;ROU Call Jason at 362-2050 8am-5pm or 796- evenings & weekends.
1974 WV Bug. No rust, runs good, $800. Good inter-
ior. excellent transportation.
1982 Nissan 200XH XII with, with sunroof, power windows, and wipers. $1190/BOO. Call Mike at Mk74563050000000000
340 Auto Sales
1985 SAAB Turbo 4 dr 5 spd sun roof pwc etc,
black/马棕, Repair records. Rebuild clutch
switch. Replace battery. Install new muffler,
2 new tires. $2000 OBO. 84-1738
9 Nissan 240SX red. 5 spd, sunroof, cassette,
phone, alarm, anti-lock brakes, tilt steering, car
brake, mirror, cruise, skimp, 35K, excellent,
16,100 CALL, servo
360 Miscellaneous
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues - Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
Free Black Lab puppy (5 mos.) to a VERY GOOD
home. Please call 832-1498
VAGABOND BOOKMAN
Buy & Sell Used
Rare & Collectables
842-BOOK 1113 Mass.
(2665)
370 Want to Buy
Want to buy Basketball tickets, or sports combo Call Chris 865-001-
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Looking for Love
Lonely, attractive. 3 bedroom apartments seeking residents to share a long or short term relationship. Call any time at 843-6446.
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept older homes 841-STAR (7827)
3 bdm. 2 bath, fully furn. Orchard Corrors apt. for rent-Spring $65 215 per mon. on bus route, Call Amy; Melanie at 841-885
ORCHARD CORNERS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
4 BEDROOM
- On KU Bus Route
* Close to Campus
* Swimming Pool
* Stop By Today!
Equal 1749-4226 M-F 9-5
Baking 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4
Opportunity
Available immediately 2 bedroom apartment, 2 blocks from campus, DW, micro, cable, $450. Call now 749-1486.
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid
- Swimming Pool
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
South Pointe
AFFILIATE
- Available for fall.
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Directly on bus route
- 2 bedroom with study
*Call 843-4754
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
"Don't get left out in the cold."
For Sale, College Hill Co.ord. Why rent when you can own? For infocall 1-800-241-1471.
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great floor plan, 2 bath, on KU bus route, NO PETS. Available NOW. Call 749-4226.
Quilt, comfort, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Cali-811-5500.
Spacious 2 bedroom, near campus, a/c/d, w/on bus route, w/o d-site. Available Oct 1 425 & $24 for room or dorm.
Sublease 3 months (OC-Dec), 2 Bedroom. must space of all spaces.
Sublase 2 (Oct-Dec) 3 Bedroom, quiet,
kitchen, large apartment at 84-302-1595 (evenings)
at 84-302-1595 (sun-6pm) or 749-3095 (evenings)
430 Roommate Wanted
1 or 2 bedrooms in newer 4 bdrm duplex in
W. Lawrence avail. now, W/D 2 car garage.
Large rooms. Sept. paid. If person, $280/mo. If
person, $590/mo. Door #753.
2 people. $109.00 | Mail: 814-583-6532
1 Roommate needed ASAP to share furnished 3 bedroom apartment, W/D, on bus route, $250 +/- utilities. #42-0395
One roommate asked ASAP to share four bed-
rooms with 40 hilts, rent negotiated
Mississippi; 832-1715.
Female roommate wanted, start Jan. 1995, spca
Call Jen at num. 1855-1692. dep. jen and rent paid
Call Jen at num. 1855-1692.
ROOMMATE WANTED! To share a duplex, own
neighborhood. Call 841-5818. Pets allow
neighborhood. Call 841-5818.
1 roommate needed to share 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom condo. Has w/d. dishwasher, and garbage disposal. $220 month *) utilities. 843-8899.
Female roommate wanted. mail
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate needed for two bedrooms apt. Eddingham Dr. $225/mo. +1 utilities. On the KU bus rt. and close to Dillons on 3rd St. Please call locally: 766-170 and leave message.
1 female n/w want to share 2 kdrm. t1 floor of
house 2 minutes from Union $240 + 1uil 841-
691
How to schedule an ad:
Ads phone may be in billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: 119 Staffer First
Stop by the Kansas offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified bases are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gaps 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 cast per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Refine:
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.
Rates Cost per line per day
| | Num. of insertions: | 1X | 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 |
Classifications
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
120 entertainment
125 typing services
140 local found
205 help waited
225 professional services
235 typing services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
lease print your ad one word per box:
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
Reqnims: ___ Total days in paper
Total ad cost: ___ Classification: ___
Name: ___ 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:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Xiamen 9-16
© 1994 FarWorks Inc./Dai by Univ. symbicate
"Boy, you wiped out, Kumba. ... Nothing left but rebar."
6B
Friday, September 16, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Learn to Fly 842-0000
YOGA
YOGA
Lawrence Community Theatre
1501 New Hampshire • 843-7469
ECM Program Center
1204 Oread • 843-9333
---
strike
out.
$8.00/hr. lane rentals on weekends.
Jaybowl
kansas union • level 1 • 864-3545
Jaybowl
Dickinson Cinema 6
53 Primate Show (A) / Hearing Baby
Senior Critic Anime / Impaired Space
The Little Rascals **p** 5:10, 7:20, 9:45
True Lies **b** 4:25, 7:15, 10:00
The Next Kid Kid **p** 4:35, 7:15, 9:45
Trial By Jury **a** 4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Natural Born Killers **a** 3:10, 7:50, 9:55
Forrest Gump **p** 13:40, 7:00, 9:55
SUNFLOWER
GEAR UP FOR FALL
Columbia
Sportswear Company
Dependable outdoor clothing.
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
Two big thumbs up! A great film!
"Don't pass up this逗劲 thriller. The mix of wanton sex and white-knuckle suspense proves undeniably riveting!"
*Jack Dillinger, New York, November*
"A hilariously wicked black comedy."
"The first above-ground of 1904! The film is a ride, a dazzling prince of plotting that has an insatiable twist... filled with deligiated twists... the human experience movie gross!" *Alex Lacorte* | 1:32
"The best new American film of the year!"
*Dave Katz, Loar & Star*
"A terrifyingly seedy, scarcely acted, over-the-top director!"
1
MARC JORDAN PICTURES LLC
RED ROCK
WEST
R
RED ROCK (R) (4:45), 7:15, 9:45
"DELECTABLE!"
EAT DRINK
MAN
W9MAN
© 1994 by Samuel Lathrop Company
by rights reserved
EAT DRINK (R) (4:30), 7:00, 9:00
LIBERTY HALL
642
Mass
749-
1912
theatre it is accessible to all persons
"DELECTABLE!"
THE MOVIE WEEKLY NATIONAL SERIES
EAT DRINK MAN WOMAN
© 1984 The Samuel Goldwyn Company
All rights reserved.
EAT DRINK (R)(4:30), 7:00, 9:00
LIBERTY HALL 749
542 Mass. 1912
Theatre it is accessible to all persons
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
2166 W. 26th St.
Fantastic Fall Special!
South Point
Apartments
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
• 2 bedrooms $450 per month
• 3 bedrooms $500 per month
• 4 bedrooms $600 per month
• Swimming Pool
• AU Bus Route
• Sand Volleyball Court
• Ample Private Parking
• Water and Trash Paid
Outstanding New Staff!!!
Crown Cinema
TIMECOP
VAN DAMME
R
5:00 7:15 9:30
VARSITY
1012 MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191
CLEAR PRESENT DANGER
starring HARRISON FORD
PC-B
5:00 7:35
HILLCREST
841 5191
COLIN FRIELS
SEAN CONNERY
A GOOD IN MAN AFRICA
R
5:15 7:30
9:45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841 5191
5:15 7:30
9:30
WALT DISNEY PICTURES PRESENTS
THE LION KING
G
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 ALL DAY
THE CLIENT
SUSAN SARANDON
TOMMY LEE JONES
PC-B
5:00 7:15
9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841 5191
5:00 7:15
9:30
MELANIE GRIFFITH
ED HARRIS
MILK MONEY
PC-B
5:00 7:15
9:30
Four Weddings and a Funeral
HUGH GRANT
ANDIE MACDOWELL
R
5:00 7:25
9:45
BLOWN AWAY
JEFF BRIDGES
TOMMY LEE JONES
R
5:00 7:20
9:45
CINEMA TWIN $1.25
Four Weddings and a Funeral
HUGH GRANT
ANDIE MACDOWELL R
BLOWN AWAY
JEFF
BRIDGES
TOMMY
LEE
JONES R
5:00 7:25
9:45
CINEMA TWIN $1.25
841-704-3171
5:00 7:20
9:45
Friday After Class
on 14th street
This Friday-LIVE DJ!
$1.50 cans
$1 Kami and Watermelon Shots
$2 Burger and Fries
The Wheel
14th and Ohio
841-0488
18th AMENDMENT
1340 Ohio
843-9273
SAND VOLLEYBALL is HERE!
$1 Bud Dry cans
Pool tables, Air Hockey, Foosball, Pinball, Electronic Darts, 100 CD Jukebox, Outside Patio, & SAND VOLLEYBALL Courts & Leagues.
BULLWINKLE'S
1344 Tennessee
843-9726
COME SEE OUR NEW DECK!
Friday after class specials
$1.25 cans
$1 Burgers
Rock The Block!
The Wheel
I
CAMPUS
Programs in the "From the Good Earth" event demonstrated the benefits of organic farming. Page3A.
COMMUNITY
KU students work as counselors at a Lawrence home for pregnant teenagers. Page 6A.
SUNNY High 80° Low 55° Weather: Page 2A.
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.104.NO.20
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Tonkovich says he will sue
Ex-professor's appeal denied by Regents
A. W. Roehlinger
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
An embittered Emil Tonkovich stood Friday in front of the University of Kansas law school to reassert his innocence.
"I stand in front of the law school today because I stood for principles that are not shared by some people in this University," Tonkovich said.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Tonkovich held a news conference at 10:30 a.m. Friday after the Board of Regents voted unanimously Thursday to uphold former Chancellor Gene Budig's decision to fire the former law professor.
"I have mixed feelings about being in front of the law school," Tonkovich said. "Sometimes I feel like I would like to return, and other times, quite frankly, the thought of returning disgusts me."
Tonkovich, who was fired for violating the faculty code of ethics, criticized both the University and the Regents for their handling of the case.
"The message is clear," he said. "If a professor asserts his innocence and demands a hearing, the University will resort to any conduct to fire him, and the Board of Regents will condone the University's conduct."
Enul Tonkovich, former law professor, held a news conference Friday and addressed the University's and Board of Regents decision to fire him. The news conference was held in front of the Green Hall.
Tonkovich appealed for Regents intervention in August 1993, and a Regents subcommittee spent the past six months reviewing a University faculty committee's decision to uphold Budig's recommendation to fire Tonkovich. Tonkovich rebuked the 13-page report issued by the subcommittee, saying it failed to address key questions.
"The Board of Regents refused all of my requests, including my request to investigate the conduct of those involved in my dismissal, which included findings of intentional destruction and concealment of evidence, false denials of knowledge of evidence and dissembled sworn testimony," Tonkovich said. "I think it's outra-
See TONKOVICH, Page 8A.
Tonkovich finds no sympathy from Regents
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
After a Board of Regents subcommittee studied whether Emil Tonkovich received due process and whether evidence existed to support his dismissal from the University of Kansas, the Regents
The three-member subcommittee presented its findings in a 13-page report at Thursday's Regents meeting.
voted unanimously to uphold the University's decision to fire the former law professor.
The subcommittee reviewed the findings of a University faculty
In determining whether due process was provided, the subcommittee considered five questions and made the following conclusions:
committee and did not consider new evidence in the case.
Was the faculty committee biased?
Tonkvich's claims that the committee was biased because his allegations were made after the faculty committee's decision was announced.
The report discounted
The report concluded "that the five members of the committee
See REGENTS, Page 8A.
Military junta to leave Haiti
U.S. military to ensure order
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — An American invasion of Haiti was averted yesterday in a dramatic fashion as President Clinton's negotiators reached an 11th-hour compromise with Haitian Army commander Raoul Cedras. Clinton said Haiti's military rulers would leave power by Oct. 15.
Clinton announced the accord in a televised address and said it came only after 61 planes with Army paratroopers had been airborne to begin an invasion to restore democracy to the Caribbean nation.
The diplomatic accord, negotiated
in part by former President Jimmy Carter, paves the way for the eventual return to power of Haiti's democratically elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Carter returned in the middle of the night from Haiti.
The Haiti invasion was to have begun yesterday evening, and planes took to the air at 6:47 p.m., recalled 73 minutes later. There was relief on Clinton's face — and that of his top aides — when they announced at 9:30 p.m. that it wouldn't be necessary.
"From the beginning, I have said the Haitian dictators must go," he said. "And tonight I can say that they will go."
Defense Secretary William Perry said of Cedras: "I am absolutely convinced that being absolute of the prepa-
Committee to rate chancellor applicants
See HAITI. Page 5B
By David Wilson
Kansan staff writer
The 17 members of the chancellor search committee approved a position description and reviewed the process for rating applicants at a meeting Friday afternoon at the Adams Alumni Center.
Committee Chairman Frank Becker of El Dorado said that, as of Friday, more than 50 people had been nominated or had sent in their own applications. The deadline for applications is Oct. 15.
Members of the committee will spend the next few weeks reviewing the applications and resumes of would-be chancellors. Members will assign each applicant a grade of "A," "B" or "C." with "A" being the best.
Richard Mann, University director of administration and a member of the committee, said the ratings would be pooled to create three master lists of A.B and C applicants.
"This is simply a resume review," Mann said. "But you have to start somewhere."
The committee also briefly discussed whether to release the names of the five finalists when they are chosen
KU alumni Bill Hougland, a committee member from Edwards, Colo., said the names should be kept secret.
"I'm afraid that if we make those five names public, we'll lose some of the quality applicants," he said.
Frank Sabatini, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents but not a member of the committee, told the committee that if too many applicants were scared off by the prospect of having their names made public, the Regents would move to keep the names secret.
"Our board is ready to receive any
recommendation that may come out."he said.
The first hour of the three-hour meeting was spent hammering out details of the position description of the chancellor, which includes duties, qualifications and personal characteristics.
Before approving the description, some committee members from the University of Kansas Medical Center wanted to make "experience working with a medical center campus" a qualification.
Other committee members said that would disqualify too many applicants.
"It's not easy to run a medical center," he said. "There will be a great bit of delegation."
Wint Winter Sr., a committee member from Ottawa, said the chancellor wouldn't need to know the details of running a medical center campus.
The committee settled on "provide leadership for the medical center" as the qualification.
Under the "personal characteristics" part of the position description, some committee members questioned an item that read, "(The chancellor should) be open, visible, accessible in relations with faculty, students and staff."
Winter said it was unrealistic to expect the chancellor to spend time meeting with students.
But Sherman Reeves, student body president and a member of the committee, said the item should be left in.
"Obviously, not every student, faculty or staff member will want to meet with the chancellor," he said.
"But for the people who do. it nice."
The committee will meet again at 1:30 p.m. Sept. 30 at the alumni center. The meeting is open to the public.
INSIDE Jumped by the frogs
The Kansas football team lost its first game of the season Saturday against Texas Christian and may have lost its starting quarterback, senior Ashelki Preston.
WILLIAMS
KU students sacrifice sleeping in for United Way
Page 15.
Scott Winnie did not get much sleep Saturday. He woke up a little early after a night of partying to volunteer his time at the Social Service League of Lawrence.
The Overland Park freshmen and Phi Delta Theta fraternity pledge was one of about 450 volunteers that gave their time for the United Way's "Day of Caring." KU students and Lawrence residents worked on more than 30 volunteer projects throughout the city as part of the event.
By James Evans Kansan staff writer
"I've been pulling weeds, sweeping and helping clean up the basement," Winnie said in front of the league's building. 905 Rhode Island St.
Susan Buchanan, president of the league's board, said the league's grounds and building, which was built in the 1860s, had been neglected for many years.
"They've cleaned up over 40 years of yard work." Buchanan said.
Three hours of work was donated by each of the 20 members of the Alpha Chi Omega sororit
ty and the 20 members of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
Members of Sigma Nu fraternity, Pi Beta Phi sorority and Ellsworth Hall's 10th floor helped at the First Step House, 345 Florida St.
During the year, the league runs a Thrift Store, coordinates a shoe fund for children from low-income families and provides inexpensive eye exams for school-age children.
"We're painting six of the clients rooms today," said Kim Nelson, intake coordinator for the halfway house for alcohol-dependent women and their children.
The 20 gallons of paint for the project were donated by the Douglas County Household Hazardous Waste Facility.
The train in Watson Park, Sixth, Kentucky and Tennessee streets, also got a new coat of paint. Members of the Lawrence Breakfast Optimist Club gave the locomotive its first paint job in more than 10 years.
NATIONAL FOREST RESCUE
COMMAND
"One of our guys was driving by the park one day and was saying that it just looked so cruddy," said Fred DeVictor, director of Lawrence Parks and Recreation and optimist member.
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
Karen Sager, Millstadt, Ill., junior, David Thompson, Austin, Texas, freshman, Tara Witthuhn, Wichita, freshman, and Trent Marquardt, Leawood, freshman, pull weeds at the Social Service League. 905 Rhode Island St.
2A
Monday, September 19, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
✩
Horoscopes
By Jean Dixon
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Prompt decisions must be mad concerning your financial security and home. A change of residence could bring many benefits. The family circle extends to include a newcomer. Keep up-to-date financial records. Your career could take a big leap forward early in 1985. Those engaged in real estate make a handsome profit! Postnove vacation travel until late summer of 1985.
T
CLEMIBERTS BON ON THIS DATE: "Good Morning America" host Joan Lunden, newspaper columnist Mike Ribowk, model twins "Batman" Adam West.
♉
Ζ
ARIES (March 21- April 19) Make the most of some good news. Morning is the best time to meet with influential contacts. Taking a more assertive stance in romance will give a prospective partner know the secret.
69
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) An impulsive choice may be the right one. Take more time for reflection. A love relationship must be nurtured if you want it to last. Curb a tendency to find fault.
15
GEMIH (May 21-June 20) Do more listening than lecturing when dealing with teenagers. Young people will talk back if they feel misjudged. Lay down guidelines but avoid sound sanctimonious.
2
TR
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Stop pushing yourself so hard! Taking an occasional break will allow you to return to your work refreshed. Guard against throwing out important documents. A new romance could cause trouble at work; be discreet.
m
LEO (sh) 23-Aug. 22] Finish an overhee project; it could be a financial winner! Postpone making partnership decisions until you have more facts and figures. Romance keeps you guessing. Heed your intuition if someone asks for a loan.
⬅
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Your diligence test a good example for your co-workers. Higher-ups begin to see you in a new light. Present a forceful argument to back up any claims you make. Romance will gradually intensify.
LJRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Any doubts that have slowed progress should be removed as quickly as possible. Your talents are more valuable than you think. Establish your leadership credentials by acting more independent. Stand up for your beliefs!
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22) A well-thought-out investment strategy will give you and your family greater security. Emphasize your literary and educational interests when talking with academic types. Enrolling in a special class open up new career possibilities.
VS
SAGITTARUIS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) A last-minute development could create havoc with your plans for today. Be aware of changing trends. Move ahead full throttle on the social front.
CAPICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Generosity can be carried to excess, not only depleting your resources but crippling those you want to help. Explore the career possibilities offered by publishing or creative writing.
Water
AQUARI S (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Delays are likely this morning. Afternoon is the best time to push a favorite project. Be careful of rushed怠理. Take in a stray pet if you want to know the joy of unselfish love.
X
PISCES (Feb. 10-March 20). As long as your determination does not falter, you will achieve something important! Key allies provide valuable support. Let someone in authority speak for you today. Romance is a source of surprise. Be flexible.
TODAY'S CHILDREN: These Virgins' well-known perfectionism makes them harder on themselves than on others. Born teachers, they are quick to share their expertise with friends and strangers alike. Count on them to be especially well-informed on matters of health. A desire for self-improvement is reflected in a love of books. As they grow older, they will learn to relax more and worry less. Loyal and sentimental, they have great respect for the sanctity of marriage.
Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairwater Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, 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. 60404. 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
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate daily Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a discussion group for Catholic Law Students at 12:30 p.m. today in Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about study abroad in Spanish-speaking countries at 3:30 p.m. today in 4021 Wesco Hall
Japan Karate-Do Ryubo-Kai Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. in 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call Dan Blood at 864-7029.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today in the Parlors in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Girish Ballolla at 864-4848.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Hurt at 842-4713
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jason Anishanslin at 843-7973.
The department of political science will sponsor a 1995 Washington Semester Program
informational meeting at 7 tonight in the Parlors in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Burdett Loomis at 864-3523.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor "Fundamentals of Catholicism," at 7 tonight on 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357.
Office of Minority Affairs Advisory Board will meet at 7 tonight in the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-4351.
Yoga Club will meet at 7 tonight in the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Michele Risdal at 841-8818.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor "Exploring the Faith," at 8 tonight in 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357.
OAKS-Non-Traditional Student Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow in the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7317.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Jacqueline Flannigan at 864-8219.
ON THE RECORD
A University of Kansas staff member was treated Thursday morning at Lawrence Memorial Hospital for grease burns, KU police reported. Police said the woman fell and spilled a pot of meat sauce on herself in the kitchen of Lewis Hall.
from the KU student's apartment. Total losses were estimated at $220.
A black 12-speed mountain bicycle was stolen early Thursday morning in the 1000 block of Connecticut Street, KU police reported. Police said a bicycle headlight and cable lock also were stolen
A book bag and its contents valued together at $193.25 were stolen about 4:20 p.m. Thursday from a classroom at Robinson Center, KU police reported.
A KU student's car was broken into about 2:15 a.m. Wednesday in the 2500 block of W. 6th Street, Lawrence police reported. Police said a Pioneer cassette car stereo valued at $300 was stolen.
in 1821. The countries became independent from Spain, not Mexico.
Weather
CORRECTION
TODAY'S TEMPS
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
H I G H L O W
TODAY
78° • 60°
77° • 52°
80° • 55°
81° • 57°
80° • 55°
85° • 66°
72° • 57°
84° • 55°
80° • 53°
80° • 60°
81° • 55°
81° • 57°
84° • 54°
Sunny,light and variable winds from the southeast.
Partly cloudy and mild.
8055
7861
Chance for thunderstorms.
WEDNESDAY
81 55
Source: Paul Snellberg, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Sept. 16,1994
$
A story on page three of Fridays' Kansan incorrectly stated that Central American countries became independent from Mexico
Stock market report
Dow Jones
20.53
NYSE
1.65
259.77
3,933.35
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 468,586,800
.75
777.91
↑
Advances 739
Declines 1,418
↓
-
Unchanged 722
ASE
.12
459. 86
EARN CASH
& HELP OUR COMMUNITY TOO!
$15 TODAY
& $30
This WEEK
Walk-Ins
Welcome
BY DONATING YOUR
BLOOD PLASMA
CALL FOR INFORMATION
NABI
The Quality Source
NABI BigMedical Center
816 W. 24th
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
749-5750
EARN CASH
& HELP OUR COMMUNITY TOO!
$15 TODAY
& $30
This WEEK
Walk-Ins
Welcome
BY DONATING YOUR
BLOOD PLASMA
CALL FOR INFORMATION
NABI BigMedical Center
816 W. 24th
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
749-5750
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
1-800-527-TEST
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- Sand Volleyball Court
* Ample Private Parking
South Pointe
AFTERMORE
Fantastic Fall Special!
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
Water and Trash Paid
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
Outstanding New Staff!!!
"We Care For KU"
Since 1907 WATKINS
ATKIN
The Gynecology Clinic at Watkins offers comprehensive, expert services at reduced cost compared to off-campus facilities. Gynecology services include:
Gynecology Services With the Student In Mind
- contraceptives and contraceptive ...
- Pap smears
- treatment for sexually transmitted disease
- infertility counseling
DENT HEALTH SERV
864-9500
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
SUNFLOWER
843-5000
804 Massachusetts
RECREATION!!
MARLIN'S
North Chicago, Illinois
Sunflower has the
Sunflower has the best selection of golf discs, ultimate discs, boomerangs and a plethora of other recreational devices.
- ΓφβΓφβΓφβΓφβΓφβΓφβΓφβΓφβΓφβΓφβΓφ
Par-Tee with G-Phi-B amma Phi Beta
Par-Tee with G-Phi-B Gamma Phi Beta
benefitting Camp Sechelt (a camp for under privateledged girls)
18 hole scramble golf tournament at Alvamar Country Club
Saturday, October 1
Entry deadline is Saturday, September 24
For more information contact Susan at 812-3889
benefitting
Camp Sechelt
(a camp for under
priveledged girls)
18 hole scramble
golf tournament at
Alvamar Country Club
Saturday, October 1
Entry deadline is Saturday, September 24
For more information contact Susan at 812-3889
ΓϕβΓϕβΓϕβΓϕβΓϕβΓϕβΓϕβΓϕβΓϕβΓϕβΓϕβ
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 19, 1994
3A
'Good Earth' celebration stresses the farm roots
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Michael Ableman exposed people to their food source Saturday.
Ableman, a California farmer and photographer, was a presenter in a multi-media program that was part of a daylong celebration called "From the Good Earth." The event had a variety of sessions to educate people about organic farming and sustainable agriculture. The sessions included informational booths, a sampling of organic foods from area chefs at the Farmers' Market, a tour of an organic farm north of Lawrence and the opening of a photographic exhibition on worldwide agricultural practices created by Ableman.
Museum of Natural History, the Kansas Rural Center in Whiting and the Land Institute in Salina sponsored the all-day event to celebrate food and farming.
Kathryn Morton, marketing and communications coordinator for the museum, said Saturday's programs were designed to educate people from all ages and backgrounds.
"There was a large array of guests," Morton said, "There were both children and adults, people who knew about agriculture were there as well as people who wanted to learn."
A benefit gala Saturday evening included wine tasting and book signing from Ableman. The $75 tickets for the sold-out gala benefited the three sponsors.
At 8:30 p.m. there was a multimedia presentation to introduce the photography exhibit by Ableman.
The presentation began with remarks from Wes Jackson, cofounder of the Land Institute, followed by a slide show from Ableman on the transitions from traditional farming to industrial farming.
Ableman worked for 10 years on the exhibit. He traveled throughout South America, Africa and the United States to complete it..
Ableman said the photographs were a visual experience on the roots of farming.
The photographs begin with an introduction to the past.
"The exhibit tells about the impacts of the current agricultural systems," Ableman said.
[Photograph of an adult reading a book to two children in a classroom setting].
"The photos visit traditional cultures and get a sense of roots," Ableman said, "I want people to see where we went off course to industrial agriculture with pesticides and chemicals."
Ableman grew up on a farm and wanted to reconnect people with their agricultural roots.
"These photos are to remind people about what we had lost and what we would have had." he said.
The exhibit then visits the cultures of the world and their agricultural process, he said.
"Everyone has agriculture throughout their roots," he said "I want to reach people who are not familiar with the issues."
He said, "I am passionate about the subject, and I have a story to tell."
Ableman's views were formed from his experiences as a practicing farmer.
Ableman's exhibit will be in the history museum until Dec. 15.
Meghan Dougherty / KANSAN
Brad Wendt, public education instructor at the Museum of Natural History, reads a story to local children about crop planting. Saturday's class was part of the "From the Good Earth" food and farming celebration.
Attorney general candidates debate about crime, justice
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
At least that is what Democratic candidate Richard Schodorf thinks.
The Republican candidate for attorney general needs to go to prison.
In a speech last week in Topeka, Carla Stovall, Republican candidate', said Kansans had the wrong impression about prisons being elegant and said the perception that inmates don't work hard was false.
The speech kicked off a heated debate between the two candidates about how to deal with criminals in Kansas.
"People are opting for prison rather than working in the community," Schodorf said. "The system is
not working."
Schodorf disagreed and said that the $58 million spent on the new El Dorado prison had given the prisoners a luxurious place to stay. He said Kansas prisons are as nice as an athletic club in Lawrence and allow prisoners to have personal TV's and stereos, and Stovall should go to the El Dorado prison to see for herself.
PETER A. RUBER
Schodorf, who is chief attorney and director of the Consumer Fraud and Economic Crime Division of the Office of District Attorney in Wichita, said
Richard Schodorf
that prison had become a right of passage to many young people, and other options should be considered for first-time offenders.
"They go to jail to earn respect," he said.
"The best way to keep prisoners off the street is by public humiliation," he said. "First offenders should be put in orange suits and work in the community."
Stovall said that Schodorf's view of the criminal justice system was superficial.
'Stovall, who has a private law practice in Shawnee County, served on the Kansas Parole Board between 1988 and 1992.
"I know the criminal justice system," she said. "I was consistently the no-vote in allowing violent offenders to receive parole."
Stovall said she approved of the Department of Corrections "Earn It" program to give stricter guidelines in giving benefits and privileges to prisoners.
The program is designed to make inmates work for their privileges, she said. Prisoners must comply to the rules of the prison to gain such privileges as visitation rights and telephone and television usage.
Stovall said that Schodorf had the attorney general's responsibilities confused with the secretary of corrections responsibilities.
"The secretary of corrections is appointed by the governor so essentially he is criticizing his own party," Stovall said.
The rules of the states' prisons are made by the secretly of corrections not the attorney general, she said.
"The press release was a trick to attract attention," she said.
Sandia Labs to help Haskell
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
It sounds like the essay question on the final exam of a higher-education class;
How do you educate about 800 students and pay for their books, supplies and housing while on a limited budget from the federal government?
But Haskell has found a partial solution in partnerships with private corporations and government agencies. In the partnerships, Haskell receives money, equipment and added faculty. In return, the corporations and agencies have more qualified Native Americans in their job pools.
For Haskell Indian Nations University, which is run by the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington, the question is more than hypothetical. Unlike state universities, which can lobby state legislatures for more money, Haskell subsists on a fixed budget from the U.S. government. If Haskell needs supplies, repairs, more faculty or any other improvement, it must go through U.S. Congress to get additional funding.
"It's not something we can do
ourselves," said Hannes Combes, education assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin. "The funding's not there. This kind of partnership helps make up for it."
Haskell's latest partnership is with Sandia National Laboratories of Albuquerque, N.M., a defense contractor with the Department of Energy, Combest said.
Starting this fall, Combest said, Sandia would pay the salaries of Larry Lucas, a visiting professor from Southwest Missouri State University, and three graduate teaching assistants from the University of Kansas to teach science.
The Sanda partnership joins several other Haskell partnerships, Combest said. The Kansas Geological Survey keeps a computer lab on Haskell's campus for Haskell students who are working on survey projects. The Bureau of Reclamation, an agency of the Department of the Interior, supplies equipment to Haskell for students assessing the Hoover Dam in Arizona. Haskell also belongs to an energy consortium that sponsors science education.
chance to improve their math and science skills, said Karen Braman, Cheyenne, Wyo, graduate teaching assistant who is teaching math at Haskell this year.
The Sandia partnership provides essential education for Haskell students who might not have the
"Just about anything they're going to get into requires some basic math skills," she said.
Students then could take their skills back to their reservations, where education is needed, she said.
Braman said her salary for nine months of teaching was $10,189, about the same salary graduate teaching assistants received at KU.
Some of Braman's students said the partnership idea was a good one.
"It's a good deal," said Joey Brady, Haskell freshman. "It's benefiting Indian students whose families don't have enough money to send them off to state schools."
But Katrina Coker, Haskell sophomore, said Haskell should be sure its partners didn't start dictating what was taught. She said Haskell classes still should teach respect for the land and for the students' Native-American heritage.
"This kind of thing has to be carefully watched," Coker said.
Please Don't Toss Your Inserts - Recycle!
Use Kansan Classifieds
Please Don't Toss Your Inserts - Recycle!
KIEF'S CDs/TAPES
The Lowest EVERYDAY CD Prices in Lawrence
AND. . .
- 25% OFF SAVINGS! Get 25% Off Retail ANYDAY with our BUY 5/GET 25 Program.
- LOWEST PRICES ON NEW RELEASES! Every TUESDAY we'll have the week's new releases at Lawrence's Lowest Sale Price. (Look for the Lowest Price on the new LIZ PHAIR Tuesday, Sept. 20.)
DON'T FORGET... - KIEF'S BUYS, SELLS, AND TRADES USED CDs!!
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES 913*843*1811 913*842*1438 913*842*1544
4A
Monday, September 19, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
---
In Haiti, the U.S. can conquer like the big boys
MIKE ROYKO
The United States is great at invasions, and Haiti would be another opportunity to prove it.
"As long as we don't have baseball," Slats Grobkul said, "we might as well invade Haiti and have some daytime TV that's worth watching. But Clinton should do it before O.J.'s trial begins and grabs the ratings."
The use of military force is a serious matter and should not be thought of as television entertainment.
"Maybe. But it's only fair for Clinton to win one. Bush had Desert Storm, which was a smash hit for a while. Reagan had Granada, which was kind of an nickel-dime tussle, but Clint Eastwood still made a pretty good movie about it. Even Gerald Ford had some dinky island, even though nobody remembers the name of it."
foe to kick around?
Are you saying this is becoming a presidential tradition, finding an easy
"Why not? It's a way of letting off steam, having a patriotic high, giving the troops some on-the-job training, and reminding all the little wise-guy, off-brand nations that we're not somebody you want to give lip to."
There are those who say that we have no national interest in Haiti, other than wanting to end the nuisance of its boat people. And all we would do is wind up being bogged down trying to install democracy in a dinky country that has no tradition of democratic rule.
"And they're right about that. It just shows that we're still good at fighting, but we're stupid at winning."
"It means the old-timers knew how
to win. The Roman Empire, Alexander and his Greeks, Genghis and all the other Khans, little Attila and his Hun buddies, and the Spanish guys who came here after Columbus. When they moved in, it was party time — loot and plunder, grab everything that ain't nailed down, and bring home some servants, baby sitters, upstairs maids, handymen and other domestic help you don't have to pay no Social Security for."
I can't believe you are talking about conquering and enslaving people and taking their lands.
"Why not? Look what happened after World War II. Italy surrenders, and we start booking reservations for vacations in Rome. Japan folds, and we give them a new constitution, tell
'em we'll protect them from their enemies so they don't have to squander their money on military stuff, and then we let them hustle us out of all the electronics stuff and cars, which we pretty much invented. And we whip Germany and spend billions protecting them from the Russkies and getting their factories going."
So you would have us invade Haiti for the purpose of exhibiting people?
"Hey, the only reason it is screwed up is they don't know what to do with it. If people can have happy lives in Wisconsin and Indiana, why can't they make it in Haiti, where it don't snow? It's got a good climate, beaches, a lot of low-cost help, so we could give franchises to Disney to build golf courses and theme parks, and the
Bally Company could put in casinos, and Trump could put up condos and time-share resorts. Of course, we don't say we're going to own Haiti forever. Maybe 100 years. Then we lease it back to them and give them the option to buy."
He's dead.
I can't believe in this day and age you would be advocating colonialism and the conquering of your fellow man.
"Why not? It's what made this country great before we went soft. Just ask Sitting Bull."
"He's bad."
"Yeah, but if he wasn't, he'd have a piece of a casino. All's well that ends well."
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
VIEWPOINT
Those who respect ethnicity should boycott greeting card
The Recycled Paper Greetings card angering many Muslims also should anger all individuals who value their ethnicity and expect
others to respect it.
Although the company has every right to produce cards of such poor taste,no self-
such little regard for the religious beliefs and ethnicity of others. Even if an offensive product does not affect us directly, we should act on the principle
GREETING CARD
The company that makes the tasteless card referring to Muslims should be boycotted until it can show some respect.
respecting person should buy such a card.
that the next time we could be the subject of attack.
The public should peacefully protest and boycott any company that has
If individuals respect their own culture, they should not buy Recycled
DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
Former mayor is running too soon after jail release
The message sent when a
The resurrection of Marion Barry, through his victory in the Washington Democratic mayoral primary, reveals an apparent flaw in the electoral system.
for a period of five years after release. And bearing in mind that rehabilitation is possible, this prohibition should not be permanent.
Its purpose would be to show disapproval of the
MARION BARRY
Convicted criminals should not be allowed to run for public office for a period of five years after release from prison.
But perhaps the best idea
which is fighting to overcome the staggering problems of crime and poverty. It seems proper to deny convicted criminals the right to hold public office
convicted and their crimes, rather than allowing them to return nearly unscathed to positions of public trust.
would be for the public to remember the past indiscretions of candidates and hold them accountable at the ballot box.
MICHAEL PAUL FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
JEN CARR Business manager
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
TOMERLEN
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
Listed 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 Perrer
Production mgrs...Holly Boren
...Regan Overy
Marketing director...Alan Stiglic
Creative director...John Carlton
Classified mgr...Heather Nielhaus
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Numbers affiliated with the University of California should be bolded.
***
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.
BAD NEWS, MR. PRESIDENT: TWO MORE DEMOCRATS SAY THEY WILL DISTANCE THEMSELVES FROM YOU THIS NOVEMBER--THEY FEAR BEING TIED TO SOMEONE WITH YOUR PERCEIVED LACK OF CHARACTER.
OUCH.
HOPE YOU WON'T TAKE PERSONALLY.
Sean Finn / KANSAN
BOTH SENATOR KENNEDY AND MARION BARRY SAY THEY HOPE YOU WON'T TAKE IT PERSONALLY
Who has the time for 'time management'?
Everyone has advice about time, most of which is useless. I have decided that people who waste time giving advice about how you ought to spend yours, have too much time of their own.
Suggestion #2 — Always take time out for yourself.
I never thought the words "time management" were an oxymoron, but after investigating how I might become more efficient, I have decided they are.
The thing about time is, you have to have it in order to manage it.
That is, of course, except me. I can give you at least 700 words of advice about time.
What's this supposed to mean? The problem is, I don't have enough time
This is some of the advice I have gotten this week:
The people who suggest this must think they are very important. I wonder how they will feel next week when I tell them they weren't high enough on my priority list, and I have to ignore them until tomorrow or even the next day.
Suggestion #1— Prioritize the things you need to do. At the end of the day, don't worry about what you haven't finished. Just do it tomorrow
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
HEATHER KIRKWOOD
to physically accomplish everything I need to do in a 24-hour time frame. Am I supposed to somehow invent time for my own personal amusement? This person must have thought I wasn't very smart. If I could take time for myself, I assure you, I wouldn't have hesitated. If I could invent time, I would be the richest person in the universe.
Suggestion #3 — Drop some of the things you are doing. Only do what is important.
Gee! I wish I would have thought of this one! Only do what is Important!
What a novel idea!
Of course, the only flaw in this brainy plan is that everyone thinks what you are doing for them is the
most important thing you have to do.
Somehow everything else is just
gravy on the biscuit of life.
Sure, I do lots of things that don't seem very important to me, but they seem very important to the professors who assign them. Maybe I'll try this excuse next time at the phone company.
"I didn't think your bill was important enough to take the necessary time in my life to pay it." They would promptly inform me that I am not an important enough customer to take the time to provide me with a working phone.
If I sound grouchy, I am. I haven't had time to sleep much lately. Sleep does wonders for my disposition.
Ooops! Groceries, I guess that's another thing I have to take time to do.
Time is like money. If you have money, all of a sudden you have to learn to manage it so you can make more. What you really needed to know was how to make more of it when you were up to your knees in Ramen noodles with three dimes to your name to pay for next week's groceries.
Heather Kirkwood is a Wichita Junior in magazine Journalism.
COLUMNIST
'Family values' waffles Clinton to the 'Right'
Cats and dogs living together. That's what I believe President Clinton is really concerned about.
Let me explain. In a recent speech to the National Baptist Convention in New Orleans, the infamous waffle waffled again. I usually don't subscribe to Clinton bashing (any more than I do to using pretentious symbols to describe people — for shame, Gary Trudeau!), but I must confront his speech on "family values."
Before you assume that I will be calling Clinton racist and homophobic, I'm not — at least not flat out. I like the guy; I even voted for him. And he was probably compelled to throw out this rhetoric to compete against Dan Quayle in the next election. And we fondly remember the Murphy Brown episode a few years back that was so embarrassing. If I wanted to call Clinton racist, I'd write a block of text like the one in the Journal-World ("Speaking in a black church...[he] said the nation would be better off if everyone lived... in '50s sitcoms" — yeah, all those black '50s sitcoms!")
Back to the cats and dogs thing. It seems that this attack on nontraditional families (and I do believe a single mother and a child, or two men and a child, CAN be a family) is just his way of reaching out to the Right to say, "Yeah, I care about gays in the military and the gag rule for federally funded family planning clinics, but gosh, I care about conservative issues, too. We just got off to a rocky start. God bless America!"
The Waffle must realize that when he uses the loaded term "family values" and starts making references to the Glorious '50s, he is tarnishing the progressive image of his campaign. "It's just not right," he says, as if he were the Great Moralist of the Church of The Poisoned Mind (now forming in Waco).
We've all heard it before: fire and brimstone will shower the earth if we don't mend our evil ways. Well, I left church the day I heard it and never went back. Though Clinton may not have intended to ruffle the feathers of anyone's boa, he did — MINE!
What if we were to all get married before we have sex, have the right amount of kids in the right amount of time and live in suburban bliss just like the Brady's? Well, to quote Ethan Hawke's response to the same question in the film "Reality Bites": "Because Mr. Brady died of AIDS."
HUBIE
David Johnson is a Coffeyville senior in magazine Journalism.
ALL RIGHT FELAS—
WE GOT TO GET OUT OF
HEE... HEXK OUT OF
HERE, AND THE ONLY
WAY OUT IS DOWN.
THE AIRHEADQUARTERS HERE'S WHERE WE HAVE NOT JUST CREATED A TELEVISION CHANNEL, BUT A CULTURAL
DOWN, DOWN
THROUGH THE WORST
PART OF HELL...
BUT A CULTURE
FORCE!
WE OWN YOU
FORCE!
WE OWN YOU
WE TOOK ALL OF THE WORST AMPERATURE NIGHT COMEDIANS IN THE WORLD AND TURNED THEM INTO VIDEO JOCKES!
WE TELL KIDS THAT
THE ONLY COOL PEOPLE
A-LINE ARE AXL ROSE,
MADOWNA, AND KURT
COBAIN!
WANT A JOB?
ABOUT IT!
VHM... WELL,
HE USED TO BE
COOL...
WE SEND MESSAGES ON HOW TO LIVE YOUR LIFE FASTER THAN THE SPEED OF LIGHT SO YOU DON'T HAVE A CHANGE TO THINK
ABOUT
YOU LIKE
BULL
CHILDREN
HOW YOU
DON'T
LIKE
WASH
FRIENDS
LOVE
1. I WANT
2. I WANT
3. I WANT
4. I WANT
5. I WANT
6. I WANT
7. I WANT
8. I WANT
9. I WANT
10. I WANT
11. I WANT
12. I WANT
13. I WANT
14. I WANT
15. I WANT
16. I WANT
17. I WANT
18. I WANT
19. I WANT
20. I WANT
21. I WANT
22. I WANT
23. I WANT
24. I WANT
25. I WANT
26. I WANT
27. I WANT
28. I WANT
29. I WANT
30. I WANT
31. I WANT
32. I WANT
33. I WANT
34. I WANT
35. I WANT
36. I WANT
37. I WANT
38. I WANT
39. I WANT
40. I WANT
41. I WANT
42. I WANT
43. I WANT
44. I WANT
45. I WANT
46. I WANT
47. I WANT
48. I WANT
49. I WANT
50. I WANT
51. I WANT
52. I WANT
53. I WANT
54. I WANT
55. I WANT
56. I WANT
57. I WANT
58. I WANT
59. I WANT
60. I WANT
61. I WANT
62. I WANT
63. I WANT
64. I WANT
65. I WANT
66. I WANT
67. I WANT
68. I WANT
69. I WANT
70. I WANT
71. I WANT
72. I WANT
73. I WANT
74. I WANT
75. I WANT
76. I WANT
77. I WANT
78. I WANT
79. I WANT
80. I WANT
81. I WANT
82. I WANT
83. I WANT
84. I WANT
85. I WANT
86. I WANT
87. I WANT
88. I WANT
89. I WANT
90. I WANT
91. I WANT
92. I WANT
93. I WANT
94. I WANT
95. I WANT
96. I WANT
97. I WANT
98. I WANT
99. I WANT
100. I WANT
By Greg Hardin
AND IF YOU JUST HAPPEN TO THINK THAT ANY OF THE SEXUAL, SOCIAL, OR POLITICAL BEHAVIORS WE ENDORSE ARE WRONG — WELL,
WE'LL MAKE YOU FEEL GUILTY
ABOUT THAT WITH A Few MILLION FREE YOUR MIND COMMERCIALS
NOW IF YOU'LL EXCUSE ME, I MUST GO MAKE AN EXAMPLE OF PEARL JAM FOR NOT PUTING OUT ANY VIDEO'S FOR THEIR LAST ALBUM!
WE CAN'T LOOK UNCOOL, YOU KNOW!
WE CAN'T LOOK UNCOOK, YOU KNOW!
GH
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 19, 1994
5A
HUM MIA
FACT BOOK
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
Carl Flyer, a World War II prisoner of war, spoke to a crowd of about 60 people at POW/MIA Recognition Day on Friday afternoon. After the ceremony, a bouquet of black balloons was released at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 852 in Lawrence in honor of POW's and MIA's from Kansas.
Memorial calls for action
Veterans demand MIA information
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
Asomber group of military veterans gathered with their families and friends around a flagpole on Friday afternoon outside the entrance to Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 852 in Lawrence to remember prisoners of war and soldiers who are missing in action.
But the gathering was more than a memorial, speakers said. They urged the group to keep pressure on the U.S. and Vietnamese governments for more information about missing soldiers.
"We are here to rededicate ourselves," said Ray Calore, chairman of the Kansas POW/MIA committee. "There are ways of getting information out, and it's like pulling teeth."
About 60 people gathered at the post, at 138 Alabama St., to observe
POW/MIA Recognition Day.
Calore said both living and dead solders were still in Vietnam.
"For those of you who doubt, I'm sure there are a lot of folks in this audience you can get information from," he said.
Before two VFW post members released a bouquet of black balloons, Bob Kuhmeier, a Green Beret and Vietnam veteran, called out the name, rank, branch of service and hometown of the more than 30 Kansas soldiers still unaccounted for from the Vietnam War.
After each name, two uniformed veterans standing toward the back of the gathering alternately responded with the number of years, months and days that the soldier had been missing.
"William D. McGonicle, U. S. Marines, Wichita," Kuhlmeier called out.
"Missing in action, sir. Twenty-six years, four months, seven days," was the response.
People at the ceremony remained silent during the reading of the
names, except for one acknowledgment of a loved one.
"The candle still burns," choked one woman through her tears as one name was read.
One speaker, Carl Flyer, a World War II prisoner of war, said that he was lucky to be alive and back in the United States.
"I spent two cold winters on the Black Sea," he said. "But I got my chance to come home."
Flyer said the missing Kansas soldiers from the Vietnam War suffered indigences even before they were declared missing.
"Jane Fonda didn't help one bit," he said, referring to the actress' controversial trip to Hanoi in North Vietnam during the war. People nodded vigorously in response.
Mike Miller, co-chairman of the post's POW/MIA committee, told the people gathered not to forget the soldiers.
"This is a sad day," he said. "There's a lot of people over there still missing. Don't ever forget these people."
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
OFFEE HOUSE e
If interested in performing...sign up in SUA box office, level 4, KS union by Wed., Sept. 21 5pm
THURS. SEPT. 22
7:00 P.M.
MUSIC
HAWK'S NEAT TERRACE
COMEDY
free coffee free coffee
OFFEI HOUSE
If interested in performing...sign up
in SUA box office, level 4, KS union
by Wed., Sept. 21 5pm
THURS. SEPT 22
7:00 P.M.
MUSIC
HAWK'S NEAT TERRACE
COMEDY
free coffee free coffee
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
NOW OPEN!!
Downtown Lawrence
Off 10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
The largest record store in Lawrence
128 private listening stations
Espresso Bar by La Prima Tazza
$2 OFF
The End.
Downtown Lawrence
10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
$2 OFF ANY COMPACT DISC
Must present coupon. Expires September 23, 1994.
Valid on regularly priced CDs of $10.99 or more. Limit one per purchase.
6A
Monday, September 19, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
11 August 1983
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
Red Lvon Tavern
METROPOLITAN UNION
The Etc. Shop
TM 928 MASS
PARKING IN REAR
The Etc. Shop
TM 928 MASS PARKING IN REAR
LEATHER BAGS,
BELTS & JACKETS
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses
Costumes - 2nd floor
LEATHER BAGS,
BELTS & JACKETS
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses
Costumes - 2nd floor
Carlos O'Kelly's
MEXICAN CAFE
Carlos O'Kelly's
MEXICAN CAFE
MARGARITAS AND FAJITAS FOR OVER 2 YEARS!
WEEKLY
75¢ Killians Rod Draws^
$1 Small Chili Con Quezo
$1 Off ALL Dinner Pieces
$2 All Imports
$5.95 Sancho/Monterrey Combo
99c Kids Meals
SPECIALS
WEDNESDAY
$2 Margaritas on the rocks
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
SUNDAY
SUNDAY
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 off Chimis
$2 Bloody Marys
- CARRYOUT AVAILABLE!
Heuris of Operation:
M-Th 11-11
Fri,Sat 11-12
Sun 11-10
8 3 2 - 0 5 5 0
- TASTE OF THE WORLD BEER CLUB!
So youre on a date. He wants true love. You want.
BURRITOS
BURRITOS He wants commitment. You
TACOS
want TACOS. He wants to hold hands. You
want to use your hands to eat NACHOS.
He wants to take you back to his place and watch
sparks fly. You want to go back to your place, alone.
and watch VIDEOS. You're smart, you'll go
to TACO BELL .and buy your favorite food
for just 59¢79¢, or 99¢ add a medium or large drink
F
FREE VIDEO
rental, with any rental. It's redeemable at your local
BLOCKBUSTER
time, so keep his phone number.
CROSS THE BORDER.
TACO BELL
Prices exclude tax. Offer valid at participating locations where supplies last. Limit one offer per person per visit. Offer good for one location only.
**TICKETS AND PRESENTATIONS ARE CUSTOMIZED FOR SPECIFIC LOCATIONS.**
for one hour. For free rental when you need one, Movie Rental must be at or near 10:19am. Exclusive video game rentals. BlackBuckle Rentals nets apply. CoconutCodes 10.19.94 *Taco Bacon* CD
SUCCESS is right at your FEET
Payless ShoeSource is the nation's largest footwear retailer, operating over 3,800 stores in 49 states and Puerto Rico. Sales during 1993 were $1.97 billion, with 180 million pairs of shoes sold. In the coming year the company will continue its aggressive growth, opening an average of one new store every business day.
This growth has created outstanding opportunities at our corporate headquarters in Topeka, Kansas. We offer the fast track Corporate Management Associate Program and a compensation package competitive with any industry. Payless ShoeSource will be interviewing December graduates for Corporate Management Associate positions on October 4th. For further information about career opportunities at Payless ShoeSource, visit the business placement office on campus. Resumes must be submitted to the business placement office by September 22nd.
Payless Shoe Source
Doesn't it feel good to payless?TM 3231 E.Sixth Street Topeka, Ks 66607 Equal Opportunity Employer
Pregnant women find a helping hand
By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer
Linda Johnson
When 19-year-old Lona found out that she was pregnant in January, she could not decide whether she wanted to terminate the pregnancy, keep the baby or put the child up for adoption.
"I changed my mind a million times," said Lona, who is due this month. "I couldn't decide whether I wanted to give the baby up for adoption or keep the baby. I decided to keep it because it was just too hard to think about abortion or adoption."
After some serious consideration, she decided to move into Hannah's House.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Susan Schneweis, executive director of Hannah's House, speaks with Lorretta Zachary, a member of the day staff, at Hannah's House. 2216 Alabama St. Hannah's House is a residence for several pregnant teenage girls.
Hannah's House, 2216 Alabama St., is a nonprofit, interdenominational Christian home for unwed, pregnant women under 21 years of age. Residents live in the house during their pregnancy and for up to three months after their child's birth. They receive counseling, including birth control options, parenting classes, job/career counseling and medical services. Two women, including Lona, live in the house now.
Hannah's House helps the residents learn about their pregnancy and motherhood. When Lona first entered Hannah's House, she was scared, she said, but now that she's been living in the home for several months, she feels much less apprehensive.
"I just finished Lamaze classes," she said. "Jennifer Wiggins is my coach. It's really helpful. It taught me how to relax and how to breathe."
Wiggins, Wichita senior, is one of two KU students who work at Hannah's House. She and Monique Garcia, Wichita senior, work for 24 hours at a time at the house.
"Hannah's House provides a really calm and safe environment, so that these girls can relax and concentrate on their situations," she said. "We listen to them and help them get through their pregnancy. One of the most important things, though, is that we give the girls self-esteem, which they can give to their babies."
Wiggins said she enjoyed helping provide a nurturing environment for the residents.
Garcia said she started getting involved with pregnant teen-agers in high school when she volunteered at the Girard House in Wichita, a home similar to Hannah's House.
But Garcia said that sometimes the residents' situations depressed her.
"Sometimes, it gets me down," she said. "Some of the girls have been physically or sexually abused."
Garcia said that her depression was alleviated when the women listened
"They listen to me because I'm more their age," she said. "I don't lecture. It's just a conversation. I tell them that people I know who are close to me have gone through what they're going through. My cousin is 23, and she has three kids."
Susan Schneweis, executive director of Hannah's House, said employees did their best to ensure the residents had a healthy pregnancy and a successful delivery, while remaining non-judgmental and supportive.
"We need to provide a calm, safe atmosphere," Schneweis said. "We don't judge. There are so many other people that will judge them. They
won't get that here."
But Lona said, even with all the support that Hannah's House staff has given her, she was still scared about her delivery and motherhood.
It's a frustrating because I'm scared — scared that something is wrong with the baby, scared about being a mother," she said. "I've taken care of babies before, but I've never done it for a long period of time."
Lona said she was thankful for the open-minded atmosphere at Hannah's House.
Lona also said being a pregnant teen-ager was a position she would advise against.
"I'm tired," she said. "To teen-age girls, I would say 'stop having sex,' or do something. Use birth control." Before I got pregnant, I knew about birth control, but I didn't think that it could happen to me."
Lona said her parents were not
going to support her and the baby.
“When I told my mom that I was pregnant, she said that it figured. When I told my dad, I thought that he was in shock at first. But he came around and said that God must have blessed me. Now they say things like they can't wait to see the baby.”
"I still need them, but they can help me," she said. "When I have the baby, I'm going to move into my own place, and I'm going to go to beauty school in Lawrence."
Lona said that she did not want the father to be involved with the child.
While Lona said Hannah's House had been supportive, she was not in the mood for a repeat performance.
"I'm never doing this again," she said. "I don't want any more children."
"He found out about the baby, and he wants to be involved," she said. "I don't want him in my baby's life because he's a drug addict."
Students land internships in Washington
Kansan staff writer
By Ashley Miller
LaRisa Chambers, Colby, senior spent last semester working in the real world.
Chambers, a political science major, interned for Colorado Congresswoman Pat Schroeder in Washington D.C. She worked in Schroeder's Family and Children's Issues office, writing press releases and answering letters.
"It was a blast living up there," Chambers said.
Chambers was one of 32 students last spring who participated in the Washington Semester Program sponsored by the department of political science.
Bob Whittaker, who coordinates the Washington D.C. side of the program, said that although most of the students in the program were political science majors, all students were welcomed.
Whittaker said different kinds of internships were available, including working for senators, representatives, C-SPAN, CNN, the White House and the Smithsonian Institution.
Each internship is a full-time job, Whittaker said.
Whittaker said that while students were in Washington D.C., they lived in apartments contracted by the department. Students spent about $350 a month on rent and utilities. The interns also needed money for transportation, food and social expenses. Students did not have to pay campus fees.
Although students went to Washington as interns, Whittaker said they still paid an off-campus tuition rate because they received nine hours of college credit.
Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, started the internship program in the Fall of 1983.
Most of the students who now participate in the program are political
science or journalism majors, Loomis said.
"In the beginning of the program there was more diversity in majors," Loomis said.
He said economics majors, history majors and art history majors were common when the program began.
Loomis said the internship program gave students both work and life experience.
"They learn about government, they learn about doing work full-time, and they learn a lot about their own capabilities," Loomis said. "I think you have students who use this, knowingly or unknowingly, to see if they like Washington and want to be on the fast track."
Loomis said he thought the University also benefited from the internship program.
"This has the lifetime benefit for the University of channeling KU people into Washington," Loomis said.
Washington bound
The department of political science will have a meeting at 7 tonight on the fifth floor of the Kansas Union about the 1995 Washington Semester Program. Students in all majors are invited to attend.
The program runs from January 15 to the beginning of May.
Students must have a 2.75 grade point average to be considered automatically for the program, but the GPA often is waived.
Students in the program are required to attend one or two seminars a week and listen to various speakers, keep a journal of their activities and write a term paper at the end of the semester.
Students receive nine hours of college credit
Source: Staff research
KANSAN
Since WATKINS
1907
"We Care For KU"
Health
Fair '94
Thu., Sept. 22 & Fri., Sept. 23
9 a.m.- 3 p.m.
Watkins West Entrance
Cholesterol Screening/Percent Body Fat Caloric Needs Assessment/Stress Assessment Diabetes and Cancer Information/Health Literature Free Nutritional Snacks/Prize Drawing/And More!
PRESIDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500
100s Announcements
Announcements
108 Personal
109 Business
Personal
120 Enthancements
120 Enthancement
140 Lost and Found
Classified Directory
200s Employment
Help Wanted
Professional Services
Services
Trying Services
Classified Policy
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preferential race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, sex, age, 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
100s Announcements
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are closed.
1
300s
Merchandise
SUNGLASSES
Bausch & Lomb Rayhan, Killer Loops
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses
SUNSHINE ACCES
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hooks, Bracelet & Pendants
Bausen & Lomb, Kaydan, Killer Loops,
l's, Révo, Serengeti, and Vuarnet
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate
In this threatening world, everyone needs a PAAL.
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
105 Personals
ing
e
one wherever you go When its
Clip a lightweight PAIR. II on your cloth-
pin is pulled, the PAL II it encloses an ear-piercing alarm and a bright flashing light, startling an attacker and attaching attention. The灯它也可 be used as a flashlight. The PAL II it your best defense against attack.
Securing Line
Quorum Securing Life
The technology is
Quorum. The opportunity
is yours.
- Contact your Quantum Independent Distributor *
KUStudent Adam Redden (913)441-4061
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7A
Monday, September 19, 1994
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
WWW.UKANSAN.COM
NCGS
Great Savings.
110 Bus. Personals
**Heather M. and sapper!**
Recognize and stress with massage therapy!
Student pain and stress program.
729/1 Massachusetts Suite 216.
Call Anna Lunaria and Laurea Pace at 841-1587
Tarot card readings.
Love? Success? Career? You'll need the U D K and 109. 9 The Lazer.
Call Ann Lazar 1587.
Medical insurance for Foreign Students. Also
insurance for US citizens go abroad &
Osladl Insurance Service. 411/2 S Main Ottawa.
Ks 66067 106-609-695.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen
Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30am-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
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 TO YOLLEY
QUALIFY IMMEDIATELY
1-800-243-2433
COMMUTERS: SelfServe Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Self Server Car
Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas City
Opportunities for CNA 2:30:10 work with CNA's staff or
Openings for CNA 2:30:10 work with EDUARA's staff or
9:14:54-8:47
School of Education Students
Tuesday, Sept. 20 8:30 p.m.
518 E 8th St. (Renegade Theater)
Students who plan to STUDENT TEACH the students will attend the student teacher meeting on Monday, September 19 at 3:30 p.m. in 303 Bailey. This meeting is mandated by "Preliminary information is required."
TUTORS List your name with us. We refer
inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center
WANT TO HAVE A TUITOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong Street
13TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2. 15, 1996 • 4. 5, 8, 9N 7 HIGHLIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
$168
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
YA GOTTA
BE THERE!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
NORBODY DOES SKI BREAKS BETTER
BabySitters needed for a research grant. *45 hr.* Must have experience with babySitting young children and infants, babySitting references, and be a pediatrician. Apply at 487 Dole, Suite Seed, 23rd.
Attendant needed PT to assist male student in wheelchair. Male or female 3-3 hr./day. Morning only. No lifting necessary. Experience pre-employment. Req's Bachelor's degree or every morning. 84.25 hr./844-9003.
Adams Alumun Center needs pantry person for AM flexible shift. Banquet cook PM shift. Line cook 11 PM shift. Positions available immediately. Apply in person. 1266 Oread Ave. No phone call.
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
Babyssiter needed for two delightful toddler girls in nice home on West side of Lawrence Flexible days/evenings/wEEKends. Experience, own car, and references required. Short drive from KU. Please respond to Box 220. University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer Flint.
A couple or two individuals to work two weeks a month at a coed group home. Responsible for supervising daily activities of kids. Good learning experience. Must be 21, valid Kansas driver's license, current physical, high school graduate Send resume to Trinity Foster Home, Box 3365, Lawrence, KS or挂Rick Spano at 842-7483. Trinity is an Equal Opportunity employer.
Need some extra pocket money? Certified Nurse Aide classes will start Sept. 28. Call Eudora Nursing Center, 542-2176 for additional information. Ask for Sylvia, M-Fri.
130 Entertainment
205 Help Wanted
男 女
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
COLLEGE STUDENTS $10.25-11.45 STARTING Local branch of nat'l ca. Ifflof. Invited entry level openings. Flex time schedules. 35 days, ever. Schedules opt. all majors accepted. For info 841-8695.
200s Employment
Cottonwood Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their residential division. Positions include evening, weekend, and overnight hours. College course work and related experience helpful but not required. GOOD DRIVING RECORD A MUST. Please apply by 09/30/18 at Cottonwood Inc. 2800 W. 31 EOJ
Delivery Drivers, Great job, Great pizza, Great
hours. Apply in person,
Pizza Shoppe 60 Kaaidu.
EARN EXTRA MONEY IN AN EXCITING ENVIRONMENT The Arrowhead Stadium, Home of Kansas City Chiefs, has game day position available in the Arrowhead Club and private suites. Each suite captains, suite runners, seating, hartenders and kitchen help. For more information call 811-924-0400.
Enhusitional HDFL/Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for 2hrs. thurs. evening and occasionally 4hrs. Sunday mornings. Call 842-8820.
PHILLIPS 66
Now accepting application for store sales associates for several locations:
•Starting wage above minimum
•Modern, clean locations
•Flexible working hours
Apply today at 9th & Iowa
GRADUATE STUDENT ASSISTANT Half-time position available in the Student Assistance Center for Disability Related Services. Responsibilities include assisting staff in coordinating services to students with special needs, providing demographic aides, researching equipment needs, and identifying local, state, and federal regulations impacting students with disabilities. Requires: KU graduate student status for Fall, 1994 and Spring, 1996 in Special Education, Rehabilitative Health, Communication, Hearing Science, Disorders, or related field
REQUIRED: application form, available in the Student Assistance Center, must be completed and received by 5:00 p.m. Friday, September 30, 1994 in 133 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60045, 913-864-644. The University offers an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer.
Female vocalist wanted for variety dance band All styles. High, strong chest voice, good performer. Avail immediately. This is a working band, serious injuries only 749-3649.
Insurance agency needs part-time clerical help,
10-20 hours per week. Afterwards prefered, but
Experienced, Energetic, and Caring Person to provide child care in our home for 2 children, ages 1 and 4. References Required. Hours Friday evenings. Sat, and Sun days. Call 832-9192.
Looking for a change while getting an education? Try to help live in your new home and be a mother's helper Free room and board, plus salary. Own living quarters with private entry. For details please call 212-854-7099.
Cashier need for weekends and evenings. Contact larry at Jayhawk Food M art. 749-4123.
Laborers want for tree service: $6.25/hour. Apply in person only 845 Maple at 11 am. Mon. Sat.
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic, highly motivated individuals to sell newspaper subscriptions. Sales experience is helpful, but we’ll train highly motivated individuals. Even hours, Monday through Friday. We pay salary + benefits. Please contact the Lawrence Journal World 609 New Hampshire. Contact Valerie for more information. K2W-7128
Occasional babyssister needed 1-4 children. Days or evenings, weekdays or weekends. Call 842-9268 Office assistant, leasing agent, part-time. Good pay, flexible hours. 841-7827
Part Time Assistant for Apt. Management Good Pay Resume, Reference Morning Star 107 Jetten
Contact variance for more information, 652-1172.
Excellent income for part-time work!
Part time help needed for delivery work. After
workshops, apply in person. Hanna's
Appliances 835 Mass.
- Sat.& Sun. 6-11 am.
Part-time Custodial Positions Available
- Sat. 8 am.-12 noon
- Sun. 9am-3pm.
- Sun. 9am.-12noon & Mon.- Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm.
- Sun. 9-11am..& Mon, Tues,
Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm.
- Sun. 11:30 am.-3pm. & Wed.5:30-7:30 pm.
- Wed.-Fri. * 9:30-11:30pm.
bpi BUILDING SERVICES
CallBPI Building Services
McDonalds is looking for individuals who would be interested in working at one of our two new restaurants, Downtown and 6th and Wakarusa
LOOK WHAT'S COMING!
McDonald's
at 842-6264
A DIVISION OF BUCKINGHAM PALACE.
Positions Available
- Hostess
- Specialcleaningteams
- Management
- Late Night closing team
(8p.m.-4a.m.)
Open interviews Mondays and Fridays at McDonalds on 6th St. from 2-5 p.m.
Wednesday at McDonalds on 23rd St. from 2-5 p.m.
WE'RE GROWING AND WOULD LIKE YOU TO BE A PART OF OUR TEAM.
- Administrative Assistant
Part-time custodial worker needed to work morn-
ing or per week. Rate $7.00/hour. Call (813) 762-7932.
Research assistant for non-profit organization.
$6.00/hour. Call Jacket at 842-4848 for information.
SPRING BREAK *95*- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH
& GO FREEBE!! !!! Student Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Lowest rates to
Pamela City Beach. Call 1-800-648-4849
Terraver Construction Company has opening startling immediately for trim carpenters and laborers. Hardworking individuals who can work a minimum of 3 week days and be able to report to work by 8:00 a.m. these jobs involve some heavy lifting, etc. apply in person at 4104 A Trail Road back and in the basement. For more info, call 842 8829 between the hours of 9:00 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. call 842 8829
UNIQUE MENTAL HEALTH OPORTUNITY Needed immediately male roommate to provide emotional support, adult supervision to an 18-year old young man who is transitioning to the Lawrence School. Roommate will be contracted by the young man's family in conjunction with the Menninger Supportive Living Program, supervised by Menninger. Permanent roommate must not stipend provided. Reference and KBI check required. Please call Nancy Parker (ext. 529). Don Perkins (ext. 554) or Annette Bartel (ext. 567).
Waitress Needed call 749-5039, 925 Iowa
235 Typing Services
Wanted babycare for two children. Age 3-5,
evenings 3:01 - 9:00 am. Light cooking necessary in
home, must be reliable, ask for Michelle and Bob
843 - 6343. Call an invite before 3:30 am.
WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING
DISTRICTS! SPRING BREAK FOR JAMMIES
CANCUN, FLORIDA & PADRE, FANTASTIC
SUMMER SPLURPS! UPCOMES 6/7/10
Wanted: Caring people who like kids 3-5yrs old are needed at Head Start as volunteers for a minimum of 10 hours per week from 12:30, 12:40, 12:50, 12:60, 12:70, 12:80, 12:90, 12:10, 12:15, 12:16, 12:17, 12:18, 12:19, 12:20, 12:21, 12:22, 12:23, 12:24, 12:25, 12:26, 12:27, 12:28, 12:29, 12:30, 12:31, 12:32, 12:33, 12:34, 12:35, 12:36, 12:37, 12:38, 12:39, 12:40, 12:41, 12:42, 12:43, 12:44, 12:45, 12:46, 12:47, 12:48, 12:49, 12:50, 12:51, 12:52, 12:53, 12:54, 12:55, 12:56, 12:57, 12:58, 12:59, 12:60, 12:61, 12:62, 12:63, 12:64, 12:65, 12:66, 12:67, 12:68, 12:69, 12:70, 12:71, 12:72, 12:73, 12:74, 12:75, 12:76, 12:77, 12:78, 12:79, 12:80, 12:81, 12:82, 12:83, 12:84, 12:85, 12:86, 12:87, 12:88, 12:89, 12:90, 12:91, 12:92, 12:93, 12:94, 12:95, 12:96, 12:97, 12:98, 12:99, 12:100, 12:101, 12:102, 12:103, 12:104, 12:105, 12:106, 12:107, 12:108, 12:109, 12:110, 12:111, 12:112, 12:113, 12:114, 12:115, 12:116, 12:117, 12:118, 12:119, 12:120, 12:121, 12:122, 12:123, 12:124, 12:125, 12:126, 12:127, 12:128, 12:129, 12:130, 12:131, 12:132, 12:133, 12:134, 12:135, 12:136, 12:137, 12:138, 12:139, 12:140, 12:141, 12:142, 12:143, 12:144, 12:145, 12:146, 12:147, 12:148, 12:149, 12:150, 12:151, 12:152, 12:153, 12:154, 12:155, 12:156, 12:157, 12:158, 12:159, 12:160, 12:161, 12:162, 12:163, 12:164, 12:165, 12:166, 12:167, 12:168, 12:169, 12:170, 12:171, 12:172, 12:173, 12:174, 12:175, 12:176, 12:177, 12:178, 12:179, 12:180, 12:181, 12:182, 12:183, 12:184, 12:185, 12:186, 12:187, 12:188, 12:189, 12:190, 12:191, 12:192, 12:193, 12:194, 12:195, 12:196, 12:197, 12:198, 12:199, 12:200, 12:201, 12:202, 12:203, 12:204, 12:205, 12:206, 12:207, 12:208, 12:209, 12:210, 12:211, 12:212, 12:213, 12:214, 12:215, 12:216, 12:217, 12:218, 12:219, 12:220, 12:221, 12:222, 12:223, 12:224, 12:225, 12:226, 12:227, 12:228, 12:229, 12:230, 12:231, 12:232, 12:233, 12:234, 12:235, 12:236, 12:237, 12:238, 12:239, 12:240, 12:241, 12:242, 12:243, 12:244, 12:245, 12:246, 12:247, 12:248, 12:249, 12:250, 12:251, 12:252, 12:253, 12:254, 12:255, 12:256, 12:257, 12:258, 12:259, 12:260, 12:261, 12:262, 12:263, 12:264, 12:265, 12:266, 12:267, 12:268, 12:269, 12:270, 12:271, 12:272, 12:273, 12:274, 12:275, 12:276, 12:277, 12:278, 12:279, 12:280, 12:281, 12:282, 12:283, 12:284, 12:285, 12:286, 12:287, 12:288, 12:289, 12:290, 12:291, 12:292, 12:293, 12:294, 12:295, 12:296, 12:297, 12:298, 12:299, 13:00, 13:01, 13:02, 13:03, 13:04, 13:05, 13:06, 13:07, 13:08, 13:09, 13:10, 13:11, 13:12, 13:13, 13:14, 13:15, 13:16, 13:17, 13:18, 13:19, 13:20, 13:21, 13:22, 13:23, 13:24, 13:25, 13:26, 13:27, 13:28, 13:29, 13:30, 13:31, 13:32, 13:33, 13:34, 13:35, 13:36, 13:37, 13:38, 13:39, 13:40, 13:41, 13:42, 13:43, 13:44, 13:45, 13:46, 13:47, 13:48, 13:49, 13:50, 13:51, 13:52, 13:53, 13:54, 13:55, 13:56, 13:57, 13:58, 13:59, 13:60, 13:61, 13:62, 13:63, 13:64, 13:65, 13:66, 13:67, 13:68, 13:69, 13:70, 13:71, 13:72, 13:73, 13:74, 13:75, 13:76, 13:77, 13:78, 13:79, 13:80, 13:81, 13:82, 13:83, 13:84, 13:85, 13:86, 13:87, 13:88, 13:89, 13:90, 13:91, 13:92, 13:93, 13:94, 13:95, 13:96, 13:97, 13:98, 13:99, 1400, 1401, 1402, 1403, 1404, 1405, 1406, 1407, 1408, 1409, 1410, 1411, 1412, 1413, 1414, 1415, 1416, 1417, 1418, 1419, 1420, 1421, 1422, 1423, 1424, 1425, 1426, 1427, 1428, 1429, 1430, 1431, 1432, 1433, 1434, 1435, 1436, 1437, 1438, 1439, 1440, 1441, 1442, 1443, 1444, 1445, 1446, 1447, 1448, 1449, 1450, 1451, 1452, 1453, 1454, 1455, 1456, 1457, 1458, 1459, 1460, 1461, 1462, 1463, 1464, 1465, 1466, 1467, 1468, 1469, 1470, 1471, 1472, 1473, 1474, 1475, 1476, 1477, 1478, 1479, 1480, 1481, 1482, 1483, 1484, 1485, 1486, 1487, 1488, 1489, 1490, 1491, 1492, 1493, 1494, 1495, 1496, 1497, 1498, 1499, 1500, 1501, 1502, 1503, 1504, 1505, 1506, 1507, 1508, 1509, 1510, 1511, 1512, 1513, 1514, 1515, 1516, 1517, 1518, 1519, 1520, 1521, 1522, 1523, 1524, 1525, 1526, 1527, 1528, 1529, 1530, 1531, 1532, 1533, 1534, 1535, 1536, 1537, 1538, 1539, 1540, 1541, 1542, 1543, 1544, 1545, 1546, 1547, 1548, 1549, 1550, 1551, 1552, 1553, 1554, 1555, 1556, 1557, 1558, 1559, 1560, 1561, 1562, 1563, 1564, 1565, 1566, 1567, 1568, 1569, 1570, 1571, 1572, 1573, 1574, 1575, 1576, 1577, 1578, 1579, 1580, 1581, 1582, 1583, 1584, 1585, 1586, 1587, 1588, 1589, 1590, 1591, 1592, 1593, 1594, 1595, 1596, 1597, 1598, 1599, 1600, 1601, 1602, 1603, 1604, 1605, 1606, 1607, 1608, 1609, 1610, 1611, 1612, 1613, 1614, 1615, 1616, 1617, 1618, 1619, 1620, 1621, 1622, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, 1627, 1628, 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1635, 1636, 1637, 1638, 1639, 1640, 1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649, 1650, 1651, 1652, 1653, 1654, 1655, 1656, 1657, 1658, 1659, 1660, 1661, 1662, 1663, 1664, 1665, 1666, 1667, 1668, 1669, 1670, 1671, 1672, 1673, 1674, 1675, 1676, 1677, 1678, 1679, 1680, 1681, 1682, 1683, 1684, 1685, 1686, 1687, 1688, 1689, 1690, 1691, 1692, 1693, 1694, 1695, 1696, 1697, 1698, 1699, 1700, 1701, 1702, 1703, 1704, 1705, 1706, 1707, 1708, 1709, 1710, 1711, 1712, 1713, 1714, 1715, 1716, 1717, 1718, 1719, 1720, 1721, 1722, 1723, 1724, 1725, 1726, 1727, 1728, 1729, 1730, 1731, 1732, 1733, 1734, 1735, 1736, 1737, 1738, 1739, 1740, 1741, 1742, 1743, 1744, 1745, 1746, 1747, 1748, 1749, 1750, 1751, 1752, 1753, 1754, 1755, 1756, 1757, 1758, 1759, 1760, 1761, 1762, 1763, 1764, 1765, 1766, 1767, 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771, 1772, 1773, 1774, 1775, 1776, 1777, 1778, 1779, 1780, 1781, 1782, 1783, 1784, 1785, 1786, 1787, 1788, 1789, 1790, 1791, 1792, 1793, 1794, 1795, 1796, 1797, 1798, 1799, 1800, 1801, 1802, 1803, 1804, 1805, 1806, 1807, 1808, 1809, 1810, 1811, 1812, 1813, 1814, 1815, 1816, 1817, 1818, 1819, 1820, 1821, 1822, 1823, 1824, 1825, 1826, 1827, 1828, 1829, 1830, 1831, 1832, 1833, 1834, 1835, 1836, 1837, 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842, 1843, 1844, 1845, 1846, 1847, 1848, 1849, 1850, 1851, 1852, 1853, 1854, 1855, 1856, 1857, 1858, 1859, 1860, 1861, 1862, 1863, 1864, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868, 1869, 1870, 1871, 1872, 1873, 1874, 1875, 1876, 1877, 1878, 1879, 1880, 1881, 1882, 1883, 1884, 1885, 1886, 1887, 1888, 1889, 1890, 1891, 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896, 1897, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910, 1911, 1912, 1913, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1920, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2170, 2171, 2172, 2173, 2174, 2175, 2176, 2177, 2178, 2179, 2180, 2181, 2182, 2183, 2184, 2185, 2186, 2187, 2188, 2189, 2190, 2191, 2192, 2193, 2194, 2195, 2196, 2197, 2198, 2199, 2200, 2201, 2202, 2203, 2204, 2205, 2206, 2207, 2208, 2209, 2210, 2211, 2212, 2213, 2214, 2215, 2216, 2217, 2218, 2219, 2220, 2221, 2222, 2223, 2224, 2225, 2226, 2227, 2228, 2229, 2230, 2231, 2232, 2233, 2234, 2235, 2236, 2237, 2238, 2239, 2240, 2241, 2242, 2243, 2244, 2245, 2246, 2247, 2248, 2249, 2250, 2251, 2252, 2253, 2254, 2255, 2256, 2257, 2258, 2259, 2260, 2261, 2262, 2263, 2264, 2265, 2266, 2267, 2268, 2269, 2270, 2271, 2272, 2273, 2274, 2275, 2276, 2277, 2278, 2279, 2280, 2281, 2282, 2283, 2284, 2285, 2286, 2287, 2288, 2289, 2290, 2291, 2292, 2293, 2294, 2295, 2296, 2297, 2298, 2299, 2300, 2301, 2302, 2303, 2304, 2305, 2306, 2307, 2308, 2309, 2310, 2311, 2312, 2313, 2314, 2315, 2316, 2317, 2318, 2319, 2320, 2321, 2322, 2323, 2324, 2325, 2326, 2327, 2328, 2329, 2330, 2331, 2332, 2333, 2334, 2335, 2336, 2337, 2338, 2339, 2340, 2341, 2342, 2343, 2344, 2345, 2346, 2347, 2348, 2349, 2350, 2351, 2352, 2353, 2354, 2355, 2356, 2357, 2358, 2359, 2360, 2361, 2362, 2363, 2364, 2365, 2366, 2367, 2368, 2369, 2370, 2371, 2372, 2373, 2374, 2375, 2376, 2377, 2378, 2379, 2380, 2381, 2382, 2383, 2384, 2385, 2386, 2387, 2388, 2389, 2390, 2391, 2392, 2393, 2394, 2395, 2396, 2397, 2398, 2399, 2400, 2401, 2402, 2403, 2404, 2405, 2406, 2407, 2408, 2409, 2410, 2411, 2412, 2413, 2414, 2415, 2416, 2417, 2418, 2419, 2420, 2421, 2422, 2423, 2424, 2425, 2426, 2427, 2428, 2429, 2430, 2431, 2432, 2433, 2434, 2435, 2436, 2437, 2438, 2439, 2440, 2441, 2442, 2443, 2444, 2445, 2446, 2447, 2448, 2449, 2450, 2451, 2452, 2453, 2454, 2455, 2456, 2457, 2458, 2459, 2460, 2461, 2462, 2463, 2464, 2465, 2466, 2467, 2468, 2469, 2470, 2471, 2472, 2473, 2474, 2475, 2476, 2477, 2478, 2479, 2480, 2481, 2482, 2483, 2484, 2485, 2486, 2487, 2488, 2489, 2490, 2491, 2492, 2493, 2494, 2495, 2496, 2497, 2498, 2499, 2500, 2501, 2502, 2503, 2504, 2505, 2506, 2507, 2508, 2509, 2510, 2511, 2512, 2513, 2514, 2515, 2516, 2517, 2518, 2519, 2520, 2521, 2522, 2523, 2524, 2525, 2526, 2527, 2528, 2529, 2530, 2531, 2532, 2533, 2534, 2535, 2536, 2537, 2538, 2539, 2540, 2541, 2542, 2543, 2544, 2545, 2546, 2547, 2548, 2549, 2550, 2551, 2552, 2553, 2554, 2555, 2556, 2557, 2558, 2559, 2560, 2561, 2562, 2563, 2564, 2565, 2566, 2567, 2568, 2569, 2570, 2571, 2572, 2573, 2574, 2575, 2576, 2577, 2578, 2579, 2580, 2581, 2582, 2583, 2584, 2585, 2586, 2587, 2588, 2589, 2590, 2591, 2592, 2593, 2594, 2595, 2596, 2597, 2598, 2599, 2600, 2601, 2602, 2603, 2604, 2605, 2606, 2607, 2608, 2609, 2610, 2611, 2612, 2613, 2614, 2615, 2616, 2617, 2618, 2619, 2620, 2621, 2622, 2623, 2624, 2625, 2626, 2627, 2628, 2629, 2630, 2631, 2632, 2633, 2634, 2635, 2636, 2637, 2638, 2639, 2640, 2641, 2642, 2643, 2644, 2645, 2646, 2647, 2648, 2649, 2650, 2651, 2652, 2653, 2654, 2655, 2656, 2657, 2658, 2659, 2660, 2661, 2662, 2663, 2664, 2665, 2666, 2667, 2668, 2669, 2670, 2671, 2672, 2673, 2674, 2675, 2676, 2677, 2678, 2679, 2680, 2681, 2682, 2683, 2684, 2685, 2686, 2687, 2688, 2689, 2690, 2691, 2692, 2693, 2694, 2695, 2696, 2697, 2698, 2699, 2700, 2701, 2702, 2703, 2704, 2705, 2706, 2707, 2708, 2709, 2710, 2711, 2712, 2713, 2714, 2715, 2716, 2717, 2718, 2719, 2720, 2721, 2722, 2723, 2724, 2725, 2726, 2727, 2728, 2729, 2730, 2731, 2732, 2733, 2734, 2735, 2736, 2737, 2738, 2739, 2740, 2741, 2742, 2743, 2744, 2745, 2746, 2747, 2748, 2749, 2750, 2751, 2752, 2753, 2754, 2755, 2756, 2757, 2758, 2759, 2760, 2761, 2762, 2763, 2764, 2765, 2766, 2767, 2768, 2769, 2770, 2771, 2772, 2773, 2774, 2775, 2776, 2777, 2778, 2779, 2780, 2781, 2782, 2783, 2784, 2785, 2786, 2787, 2788, 2789, 2790, 2791, 2792, 2793, 2794, 2795, 2796, 2797, 2798, 2799, 2800, 2801, 2802, 2803, 2804, 2805, 2806, 2807, 2808, 2809, 2810, 2811, 2812, 2813, 2814, 2815, 2816, 2817, 2818, 2819, 2820, 2821, 2822, 2823, 2824, 2825, 2826, 2827, 2828, 2829, 2830, 2831, 2832, 2833, 2834, 2835, 2836, 2837, 2838, 2839, 2840, 2841, 2842, 2843, 2844, 2845, 2846, 2847, 2848, 2849, 2850, 2851, 2852, 2853, 2854, 2855, 2856, 2857, 2858, 2859, 2860, 2861, 2862, 2863, 2864, 2865, 2866, 2867, 2868, 2869, 2870, 2871, 2872, 2873, 2874, 2875, 2876, 2877, 2878, 2879, 2880, 2881, 2882, 2883, 2884, 2885, 2886, 2887, 2888, 2889, 2890, 2891, 2892, 2893, 2894, 2895, 2896, 2897, 2898, 2899, 2900, 2901, 2902, 2903, 2904, 2905, 2906, 2907, 2908, 2909, 2910, 2911, 2912, 2913, 2914, 2915, 2916, 2917, 2918, 2919, 2920, 2921, 2922, 2923, 2924, 2925, 2926, 2927, 2928, 2929, 2930, 2931, 2932, 2933, 2934, 2935, 2936, 2937, 2938, 2939, 2940, 2941, 2942, 2943, 2944, 2945, 2946, 2947, 2948, 2949, 29
We need 5 enthusiastic people to show high fashion jewelry. No delivery, no inventory investment. Call NOW for details. 842-7945 after 5:30 p.m.
Worker for firewood production. Flexible hours.
Worker for firewood production. Flexible hours.
Call 749-510 at 7am for more information.
225 Professional Services
< Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
TRAFFIC.DUI'S
TRAFFIC-DUUI
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
College Credit: Compilation under way, worlds
favorite party games. Personal credit plus
your own.
I-der Women *Word Processing*. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter formatting.
DONALDG.STROLE
DUI/TRAPPICTICKETS
OVERLAND
CITY AREA
OVERLAND
CITY AREA
ATTORNEY-LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964.
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature. ESL classes. High
school or college level courses.
701 Tennessee
International Video Conversions PAL/SECM/
NTSC. $25 for up to 2 hours. Includes return
postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer
PO box 310 Ottawa Kkc 6067 1-800-606-6955.
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
Prompt abortion and contraception services in 841-578, Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Theses,
Term-papers, Resumes. Business letters, etc.
www.quizlet.com
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
CLIP THIS AD. Quality typing/word processing/indexing Laser printing Free estimates.
A Word Perfect Word Processing Service.
Laser Printing. Cleveland, New York. Call
840-296-1830. DSN 840-296-1830.
Free Consultation
Tutoring Available for Russian and Ukrainian
Nation speaker. Reasonable rates. Contact Lucy
Brown.
X
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST
Put my service to the test,
make my work your task.
MAKE THE GRADE
is the one to call,
accepts
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
93 Specialized Hard Rock Ultra. $300 obo. For more info call 843-5662.
Brand new '94 YAMAHA RAZZ scooter; paid $1350, will sell for $1000. 841-1971.
Attention collectors: Playboys & Penthouses for sale. Call 833-2770
Drive a Classic 7 Honda CB135 440, 7 Honda 182
Twin 650. Both low miles and large shape.
For Sale: Sony CCD-TB 8 mm camcorder, $650.
Call George at 749-4323.
Honda 1988 Elite 50 red scooter, with 2 baskets, mk6 with new battery and tune-up. Make offer £1499.
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Christ at 800-289-5685.
Large healthy Iguana 4 feel long. 865-2471
Macintosh Performa 405, 80 mge, hard drive
of choice. Software price $99. Call PCMa at 843-416.
Software price $99. Call PCMa at 843-416.
Mattress set, queen new, never used, firm, excellent quality. Cost $399, sacrilege $195, 913/764-1661.
Moving! Must sell new stepper climber exercise机
Panasonic racing bike, Shimano 600 Ultra78 Cateye Micro cycle computer, Durace clipsie peddles, extra Utegra hubs, $295, Call Steve at 749-6234.
Moving. Will sell 417/4 month Body Boutique membership. $95. 842-647-658.
Schinws-Black Phantom, Corvette 3 spd. American Womans (Korean War Production). All very rare, require restoration, 913-299-9636, 913-334-5724 STUDENTS! Rent a computer, software, and printer for $120 a semester. Call 1-800-959-6049 for information.
Two Fort Amos tickets available. Best offer 865-2911
340 Auto Sales
'93 Suzuki Katana, 600cc, black w/ purple & teal acarbens. Like accen, beautiful bike v a very fast.
$3900/OBO Call Jason at 362-850 9am-5pm or 796-629 weeks & evenings
1974 VW Bug. Nor rust, runs good, $800. Good interior/exterior transportation.
1922 Nissan 2005XII 5 speed, with sunroof, wind windows, and louvers. $99/OB. Book Mate at 878-432-1600.
1985 SAAB Turbor 4 turb 5 spd sun roof pw etc.
black/maroon. Repair records. Rebuild clutch
heater valve CV distributor and ignition module.
new muffer, new tires. $2000 OBO. 841-1738
Free Black Lab pupb (5 mos.) to a VERY GOOD
home. Please call 832-1498.
370 Want to Buy
Want to buy Basketball tickets, or sports combo Call Chris 865-0011.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well loved homes 841-737-7207
3bdm 2 balth, fully furn Orchard Corners app,
on bus route, Call Amy; Melanie at 841 885 855
2.
4 BEDROOM
ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED
LSAT Test-Prep For The Dec.3rd Exam
- Close to Campus
- Swimming Pool
Equity 749-4226 M-F-9.5
Opportunity 15th & Kasolda Sat 10-4
1-800-527-TEST
available immediately 2 bedroom apartment 2
campus, DW, micro, cable. $450
low 194-793
Class Starts Oct.2nd
For Sale College Hill Condo. Why rent when you can own? For info call 1-800-241-1471.
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great place to live in,
no route, NO PETS.
PETS AVAILABLE. NOW Call 649-7248.
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments.
Paid on time.
Paids used for street parking. No pets. Call 841-5000.
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
Looking for Love
Lonely, attractive 3 bedroom apartments seeking residents to share a long or short term relationship. Call any time at 843-6446.
South Points
AEROPLOT
2166 W.26th St.
843-6446
- Swimming Pool
- On KUBus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Water and Trash Paid
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Available for fall.
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
- Directly on bus route
*Call 843-4754
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Spacious 2 bedroom, near campus, a/c / d./W. on
bath route, w/d. on site-available Oct 1 & Oct 2 & par-
rameter.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
- By phone: 864-4358
1 or 2 bedrooms in newer 4 dbrm duplex in
W. Lawrence avail now, W/D. Z car garage.
Large rooms. Sept. paid. If 1 person, $290/mo. If
3 people, $524/mo. David J. Aklesi 843-765-8262
1 bedroom needed ASAP to share furnished 3
bedroom apartment, W/D, on bus route $230+ -
$75 per night.
- Ads sponsored in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: 119 Slufter Finti
Female roommate wished, start Jan. 1985,spare energy efficient apt.dep. and Jan rent paid
One roommate wanted ASAP to share four bedroom. $162.50 plus $40 bills, rent negotiable. 520 Mississippi. 832-1715.
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.
1 roommate need to needs 3 bedroom. 2 bathroom condo. Has w/id, dishwasher, and garbage disposal. $220 a month *1* utilities. 843-3899.
Sample phone number: (843) 3899-
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 it billed to your MasterCard or Ads. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check 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 agile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Reflect:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00
Rates per line per day
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANANAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Please use your own ID
Classifications
| IX | 2-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30xX |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 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 |
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
140 loss & fund
205 help wanted
225 professional services
360 miscellaneous
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
Name:
Date ad begins: Total days in paper:
Total ad cost: Classification:
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
Account number:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS, 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
9:19
"Well, lad, you caught me fair and square. ... But truthfully, as far as leprechauns go, I've never been considered all that lucky."
8A
Monday, September. 19. 1994
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Chat Games Projet Hits an
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Imports & Domestics*
*Machine Shop Service*
*Parts Departments*
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
PETER GROTHAM
Call 842-7001 for a consultation today!
Member of Blue Shield &
Health Net
Wednesday Evening Appointments Available
Welcome Back Students!
We offer treatment for all conditions of the skin hair and nails including:
- Hair Transplants
- Tattoo Removal
- Acne
- Mole & Wart Removal
- Glycolic Acid Peels
- Spider Vein & Collagen Injections
印
Dermatology Center of Lawrence
Since 1978
Lee R. Bittenbender, M.D.
930 Iowa St. • Hillcrest Professional Building
Lawrence, KS 68044 • (913) 842-7001
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We repair
Brass, Aluminum,
& Plastic Radiators
Heaters, water pumps, and
A/C service too!
842-3333
1907
DUCOVER
VISA
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
We Care For KU"
Since
Buy a Quart Get a Pint FREE!
(with this coupon)
expires October 10th
Louisiana Purchase
23rd & Louisiana • 843-550
VATKIN
Orchards Corners
15th & Kasold • 749-0440
Fat,
Sugars
Milk Meats
Vegetables Fruits
Grains
A Picture of Health
Do you have questions about diet, eating patterns, weight loss/gain/maintenance? Contact Ann Chapman, R.D. @ 864-9575, Monday-Thursday, 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
UDENT HEALTH SERVIC
864-9500
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
FITNESS
STEP UP with
---
BODY
B
OUTIQUE
60 classes per week and much more
ABSOLUTELY NO JOINING FEE VIP
exp.10/3/94
10 TANS
for only
$20
Give us the Lion's Share of Your Work.
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
We've got a great new way to make your presentations look professional. It's the new LionHeart 1392, a 300 dpi printer. And it's going to make your documents stand out. Why? Because now you can print hundreds of pages with superior quality for the same amount of money you'd normally spend on photocopies. Choose different paper. Have it automatically stapled. Simple. Fast. And all for the same price you'd pay to babysit the copier. So for documents you can be proud of, let the lion do it for you. Call Rick at the Printing Services for more information at 864-4341.
One-sided
5¢ each
3¢ each
1-10 Prints
11 or more
ed
h
h
Two-sided
9.5¢ each
5.4¢ each
PS
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
PRINTING SERVICES
2425 West 15th St.
(15th and Crestline)
TONKOVICH: Lawsuit pending
geous that the Board of Regents waited over a year to write a report that I think could have been written in three or four hours."
Continued from Page 1A.
Tonkovich's appeal to the Regents was the last administrative recourse available. He said he would file a lawsuit within two months seeking financial damages and reinstatement.
"The administrative process is over, and now we're going to court," Tonkovich said. "We're going to have this in a neutral forum for the first time."
Tonkovich, who was accused of moral turpitude and behavior that violated professional ethics, maintained he was innocent of all charges. He said the University intentionally ruined his reputation, punctuating many of his statements with, "This is an outrage."
"The University smeared me with inflammatory and highly prejudicial publicity," Tonkovich said. "If you stand up for the principles you believe in, you will be punished."
Tonkovich said University administrators acted in accordance with a politically correct agenda.
"The tactics used to promote politically correct agendas in American universities are notorious," he said. "And they are often directed at outspoken conservatives like me."
The primary issue is no longer returning to his job, Tonkovich said. The case now is a question of principles.
"I prosecuted organized crime cases, and I treated mafia bosses with fairness, and the University cannot treat me with fairness," he said. "I'm sad more than anything else."
For now, Tonkovich said he would devote most of his time to the pending lawsuit. The future, however, is uncertain.
"It's been very hard," he said. "My reputation has been ruined, and I have no job, but I think my principles will sustain me through this. I don't know what I'll do in the future, though."
Chancellor Del Shankel issued a brief statement Thursday, saying he had not studied the Regents' report on the Tonkovich case. Shankel did not return calls from The University Daily Kansan Friday.
"Whether Tonkovich files a lawsuit is up to him," Thomas said. "We have a lot of other things to work on, and we won't prepare a case until a lawsuit has been filed."
REGENTS: Dismissal upheld
Victoria Thomas, general counsel for the University, said she was pleased with the Regents decision, but would not comment on the University's future strategy.
Continued from Page 1A.
worked assiduously to provide both professor Tonkovich and the University an opportunity for a fair, unbiased and judicious process."
Did Tonkovich have notice that his conduct violated the faculty code of conduct and could result in dismissal?
The report said that while hindsight suggested alternative ways of proceeding, a flawless procedure was not required to provide due process.
- Were allegations barred by the statute of limitations?
Although Tonkovich asserted that
Was substantive due process provided?
the six-month statute of limitations should be applied to his case, the subcommittee determined that the statute of limitations was applicable only to certain grievance and review procedures and not to the faculty committee.
The report stated that "the University's actions, in totality, cannot reasonably be considered to be arbitrary or capricious."
Was the sanction reasonable?
The report stated that faculty members were qualified to determine whether a colleague violated professional standards and no reason existed for the subcommittee to substitute its own judgment.
In considering whether substantial evidence existed to support the University's decision, the subcommittee said it should not substitute its judgment for that of the people who observed the hearings.
"While it is true that some testimony was uncorroborated and some was contradicted by other testimony, it was the function of the committee to determine what testimony was persuasive," the report stated.
In its conclusion, the subcommittee recommended denying Tonkovich's request for Regents intervention in the decision.
THE UNIVERSITY OF TOMBES
KANSAN
C AR G
Use your Kansan Card!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
CARRD
Use your Kansan Card!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
CARD
STREETSIDE RECORDS
THE UNIVERSITY FOUND
KANSAN
C A R O
GENERATE READING
WHERE VALUE IS
WHILE GENERATE READING
WHERE VALUE IS
HITS UNDER CONSTRUCTION
HOOTIE & THE BLOWFISH cracked rear view
HOOTIE & THE BLOWFISH
Featuring "HOLD MY HAND" "LET HER CRY"
'HANNAH JANE'
Specially Priced
HOOTIE & THE BLOWFISH
ATLANTIC
Sale ends 10 10 94
Melding folk-rock jangle with sharply honed songcraft, Hootie & The Blowfish create guitar-charged music that draws on rock's rich past while intimating an equally promising future. It's a sound that reflects the band's interracial makeup, blending the best elements of '60s rock and classic black pop.
1403 W. 23RD ST.
842-7173
Stay Streetsmart, Shop Streets
Stay Streetsmart, Shop Streetside!
LET YOUR EARS DO THE BROWSING ON THE 1 station See store for details
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Jayhawk FOOTBALL
SECTION B
MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 19. 1994
PRESTON 9
BIG8 CONFERENCE
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Kansas senior quarterback Asheiki Preston is escorted off the field prior to the completion of the game at Texas Christian Saturday. Preston left the game during the third quarter after being hit hard by the Homed Frog defense.
Kansas St. 27
Rice 18
SCORES
Oklahoma 17
Texas Tech 11
Baylor 14
Oklahoma St. 10
Nebraska 49
UCLA 21
Missouri 16
Houston 0
Colorado 55 Wisconsin 17
W. Michigan 23 Iowa St.19
J. JONES 67 91 90 97
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
Kansas senior quarterback Asheikil Preston, attempts to break free of Texas Christian sophomore defensive tackle Aaron Burton's tackle during Saturday's game at Texas Christian. The Jayhawks lost the game 31-21.
Associated Press Top 25
me Top Twenty Five teams in the Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 17, and ranking in the previous poll.
rank team record pta. pr
1. Florida (33) 3-0 1,540 1
2. Nebraska (20) 3-0 1,497 2
3. Florida St. (3) 3-0 1,376 3
4. Michigan (1) 3-0 1,336 4
5. Penn St. (3) 3-0 1,317 6
6. Miami (1) 2-0 1,262 5
7. Colorado 2-0 1,200 7
8. Arizona (1) 2-0 1,195 9
9. Notre Dame 2-0 1,054 8
10. Auburn 3-0 947 11
11. Alabama 3-0 927 12
12. Texas A&M 3-0 886 14
13. N. Carolina 2-0 781 16
14. Virginia Tech 2-0 661 18
15.Texas 2-0 615 17
16. Wisconsin 2-0 555 10
17. Washington 1-1 484 19
18. UCLA 2-1 444 13
19. Southern Cal 1-1 396 20
20. Ohio St. 2-1 340 23
21. Oklahoma 2-1 338 21
22. Wash. St. 2-0 261 24
23. Tennessee 2-0 121 15
24. N. Car. St. 2-0 187 25
25. Indiana 3-0 107
Others receiving votes: Kansas State 86, Baylor 64, Illinois 58, Colorado State 38, Virginia 23, Kansas 7, Georgia 13, Syracuse 13, Brigham Young 8, Utah 8, Stanford 6, Duke 2, Western Michigan 2, Bowling Green 1, Georgia Tech 1, Hawaii 1, LSU 1, South Carolina 1.
Source: The Associated Press KANBA
Horned Frogs jump over 'Hawks
Summaries of the key
NFL games from week
three. Page 7B
Inside:
Passing game key for TCU
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
FORT WORTH, TEXAS — Texas Christian quarterback Max Knake had a career game in passing around, over and through the Jayhawk defense Saturday night.
In defeating the Kansas football team 31-21, Knake completed 19 passes for 299 yards and four touchdowns.
Knake, a junior, had never passed for more than two touchdowns in a game and his previous high for passing yards in a game was 288 against Southern Methodist in 1993.
Washington was one of six receivers who caught Knake passes and helped the Horned Frogs convert their first three third-and-long situations. Texas Christian converted all eight of its third-down opportunities in the first half and 13 of 15 in the game. It also converted five of six third-down situations in which the
"He was real calm," said Texas Christian wide receiver John Washington of Knake's performance. "That's the kind of leader we need to go to a bowl game."
team needed more than five yards to get a first down.
Oliver also helped convert a third-and ten situation late in the third quarter at the Horned Frog 20-yard line when he caught a 33-yard pass. The Horned Frogs kicked a field goal to narrow the Kansas lead to 21-17. Oliver also caught a 50-yard touchdown pass with 7:21 left in the game, giving the Horned Frogs a 24-21 lead. Oliver beat Kansas junior cornerback Dorian Brew on an out-and-up pattern.
"We saw on film they were more of a run-support defense," Texas Christian wide receiver Jimmy Oliver said. "Andre rushed for so many yards last week that we figured their defense would key on him."
Texas Christian wide receiver Chris Brassfield, who scored his team's first touchdown, said the Kansas secondary was concentrating on the run.
"The corners were biting on the out big time." Knake said.
"They weren't even looking at the receivers," Brasfield said. "They were so busy looking at the quarterback and the running backs that they forgot us."
67
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Kansas coach Glen Mason, right, confers with Golden Pat Ruel, assistant coach, during the second quarter of Kansas' game Saturday.
Loss of Preston limits Kansas' offense; Texas Christian shows heart
By Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter
FORT WORTH, Texas — Texas Christian football coach Pat Sullivan walked off the field a proud man Saturday night.
Sullivan said his Horned Frogs showed a lot of heart in their home opener by defeating Kansas 31-21. Both teams are now 2-1.
After dominating the first 19 minutes of the game, the Horned Frogs had to scratch and claw for the remaining quarters to maintain their lead.
Kansas struggled after losing senior quarterback Asheiki Preston with 8:25 left in the third quarter.
In the end, Sullivan's team was the top dog.
The Jayhawks' offense became one dimensional in the second half after Preston injured his ribs when he was tackled while scrambling on a pass play.
"Our offense got outplayed, our defense got outplayed, and we got out-coached," Kansas coach Glen Mason said. "That's why we got beat."
An update on Preston's condition was unavailable late yesterday.
Mason replaced Preston with senior quarterback Van Davis, who had the most experience as a quarterback.
"It helped us when we got Preston out of there," Texas Christian defensive coordinator Pat Henderson said. "Eventually we got the bleeding stopped."
With a 21-17 lead, but without Preston, the Jayhawks marched down to the Texas Christian 11 yard line on nine rushing plains.
The Horned Frogs stopped the Jayhawks on the 10th play of the drive — a fourth-and-one situation — on another rushing attempt.
"We were kind of disappointed that they moved the ball on offense running the ball," Texas Christian junior linebacker Lenoy Jones said. "They have a great line. Their line blocked exceptionally, and they have some great backs."
Mason said he was not as pleased with his team's performance.
"Third and short and fourth and short are critical downs in a football game," Mason said. "If you don't convert on those, you don't deserve to win the game."
Mason's team had converted two fourth and short situations early on, which led to its first touchdown.
When the Horned Frog's defense stopped the bleeding,
its offense caused Kansas to bleed.
After a 45-yard field goal attempt by Kansas freshman kicker Jeff McCord sailed wide left, the Horned Frogs went 72 yards on seven plays and took a 24-21 lead with 7:21 remaining in the game.
The key play of the drive was the 50-yard touchdown pass from junior quarterback Max Knake to senior wide receiver Jimmy Oliver. Oliver ran an out-and-up pattern and beat Kansas junior cornerback Dori Brew.
On the first play of the Jayhawks' next drive, Davis dropped back to attempt his first pass of the game. But he fumbled after he was hit.
Texas Christian recovered the ball and scored five plays later on a three-yard touchdown to junior running back Andre Davis, making the score 31-21.
Sullivan said the Horned Frogs should be proud of how they battled.
"Thev'll be able to draw on that the rest of their careers."
1 Florida (2-0) beat No. 15 Tennessee
2 Nebraska (1-0) beat No. 13 UCLA
3 Florida State (3-0) beat White Forest
4 Michigan (2-0) did not play Tennessee
5 Miami (2-0) did not play
6 Penn State (2-0) beat Ohio
7 Colorado (2-0) beat No. 10 Wisconsin
8 Notre Dame (2-1) beat Michigan State
9 Arizona (2-0) did not play
10 Wisconsin (1-1) left to No. 1 Colorado
11 Auburn (2-0) beat Louisiana State
12 Alabama (2-0) beat Arkansas
13 UCLA (2-1) left to number 2 Indiana
14 Texas A&M (2-0) did not play
15 Tennessee (1-2) left to No. 3 Florida
16 North Carolina (2-0) heat Tulane
17 Texas (1-2) did not play
18 Virginia Tech (2-0) beat Boston College
19 Southern Cal (1-1) did not play
20 Washington (1-1) did not play
2B
Monday, September 19, 1994
V V
Parking in the area
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown
Parking in the rear
SUNFLOWER
843-5000 804 Massachusetts
Tired of wimpy watch bands??
GET THE BAND
A very comfortable alternative.
Available in a multitude of colors and sizes
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company is seeking men 18-45 years of age, to participate in one of our research drug studies. Receive from $300 or as much as $2,900 for completing one of our studies. You must be able to complete overnight stays at our clinic.
For more information on how to qualify, call IMTCI
1-800-669-4682 or 599-4100
International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc.
1690 College Boulevard, Lenca, ks 66219
Healthy Male?
Receive From
$300-$2,900
JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today!
FALL IS HERE!
NIKE
HI-TEC
Over 25 Boot Styles in Stock
adidas
K-SWISS
Campus Hikers Waterproof Dress Boots Technical Hikers
Reebok
Starting at $48.99 and Up
Champion
842-2442
840 Massachusetts
BIG8 CONFERENCE
CONFERENCE
Drive Chart
10 20 30 40 50 40 30 20 10
P 6 plays 12 yds.
P 4 plays 4 yds.
15 plays 52 yds
TD
9 play s 67 yds.
TD
INT 5 plays 28 yds.
9 play s 78 yds
TD
TU 9 plays 61
MFG 4 plays 8 yds.
1 play 0 yds. F
TU 6 plays 18 yds.
Kansas T C U
TD touchdown
FG field goal
MFG missed field goal.
S safety
INT interception
F fumble
TU turnover on downs
P punt
Final Score:
TCU 31
KANSAS 21
Strong teams carry weekend for Big Eight
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Top to bottom, it was almost a smashing week for Big Eight football.
By Doug Tucker The Associated Press
In the middle, No. 21 Oklahoma was a winner in one of the least impressive home debuts demanding Sooner fans recall. Kansas State was a copycat. The Wildcats won in such slipshod fashion that their postgame comments sound like losers'.
Kansas came within one quarter of a 3-0 start and a probable national ranking in Fort Worth. Oklahoma State lost a similar heartbreaker in Waco and a chance to start 2-0.
Most certainly at the top. No. 2 Nebraska and No. 7 Colorado marched smartly to victory against nationally ranked opponents on national television, assuring the Big Eight a prominent place among the national elite.
Equally stirring was Colorado. Only slight favorites against No. 16 Wisconsin, the Buffs turned four first-half interceptions into 17 points en route to a 55-17 laugher against the defending Big Ten champions.
At Lincoln, the Huskers looked mighty in a 49-21 crunching of No. 18 UCLA. With Tommie Frazier running for one touchdown and throwing for two, Nebraska stopped the Bruins from talking about how lucky the Huskers were to win last year 14-13.
But not quite to the bottom, where an unfortunate Iowa State is now all alone. Missouri, formerly the Cyclones' bottom-dwelling cell mate, discovered in south Texas an outfit even more desperate, more discouraged and more forlorn than itself.
Oklahoma was a 21-point favorite in its first home game on natural grass in 25 years. But all the Sooners could do was eke out two touchdowns and a field goal to get past Texas Tech, 17-11.
Kansas State never seemed in danger of losing, even after Rice jumped on Wildcats' mistakes to take a 10-3 lead in the first quarter. But K-State's 27-18 victory was less than reassuring.
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
LAWRENCE/KANSAS CITY
FOR THE BEST IN CONSERVATIVE TO WEST COAST STYLES
$5.50
ALL CUTS
AND STYLES
coupon
Expires 10-24-94
ONE DOLLAR
ONE DOLLAR
Supporting the Jayhawks Since 1953 FREE Party Room Available For Groups of 20-200 Call842-0377 401 N2nd
At Waco, it took the longest pass play against Oklahoma State since 1974 for Baylor to remain unbeaten
HOURS Mon-Friday 3:30-5:30
Saturday 3:00-4:00
Appointment Monday after 5 pm
the road stuff and you know what they can do with that," Smith said.
At Manhattan, Kansas State lost two fumbles, missed a few tackles, dropped a few passes and collected more than twice as many penalty yards as Rice. But Chad May threw for one TD and ran for another as the Wildcats beat an unranked opponent at home for the 22nd straight time.
TEL. 749-5363
1033 MASSACHUSETTS
Lawrence, KS
- WET CUT
* PRECISION CUT
* BLOW DRY
* FLAT TOPS
* SPIKES
* BEARD TRIMS
* TOP GUN
* WRESTLER
RC'S STADIUM BARBERY
"They've come back from a lot of adversity," Smith said. "Tonight we took more than one step in Missouri football. I'm usually considered very intense and not much fun. I had to rethink that and start emphasizing having fun like we've had tonight.
It made Larry Smith, now 1-2 in his Missouri tenure, an uncharacteristically happy man.
"It was sloppy overall," said K-State's Chuck Marlowe. "That's the best way to describe it."
It was their first road win since 1990. It was their first nonconference victory away from home since 1981 — yes, 1981.
Iowa State dropped to 0-3 in what could be turning into a nightmare season at Ames. Western Michigan's Jay McDonahay threw for 239 yards and two touchdowns for a 23-19 victory against coach Jim Walden's heavy-hearted Cyclones.
with a come-from-behind 14-10 victory against the Cowboys.
Winless, by the way, no longer applies to Missouri. In what fans may look back on one day as a fork in the long, winding road to respectability, the Tigers beat Houston 16-0.
"They can take that can't-win-on-
It was their first shutout since 1986.
Our lunch menu will allow you to come back for dinner.
Grilled Chicken Salad Platter
Filet of Leaf or wile rice pilaf & salad
Boutine Vegetable Pasta
Cajun Reuben w lrench fries & salad
Fifi's affordable lunches, prices as fine as the dining.
5.50
4.95
5.50
5.50
FAN SHOP
Live it! Wear it! Love it! KU!
fifi's
841-7226
925 Iowa
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
FAN SHOP
COED NAKED
837 Massachusetts
We have Coed Naked, Big Johnson & Game Bar Hats.
Come in and see our great selection of NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, & MLB merchandise.
842-2992
Da Beer Machine
BEER MACHINE
Why Buy when you can Brew!
Da Beer Machine and ingredients now available at
Cottin's
C
Coast to Coast HARDWARE
1832 Massachusetts (913) 843-2981
Mon-Fri 8-8
Sat 8-6
Sun 10-5
---
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1994
Volleyball team falls off track
Virginia Tech., William and Mary, and Michigan spike and kill Jayhawks
Tough competition allowed the Kansas volleyball team little time for rest or relaxation this weekend in Virginia at the Comfort Ink Holie Classic hosted by Virginia Tech.
Kansas, 3-8, suffered three tournament losses, falling to Virginia Tech, Michigan and William & Mary. Kansas wrote off two of those losses, to Willian and Mary and Michigan, in 3 straight games.
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
First round tournament action Friday against Michigan ended quickly as the Wolverines knocked off Kansas, 15-2, 15-9, 17-15.
In the losing effort, junior outside hitter Tracie Walt, led the Jayhawks with 12 kills and eight defensive digs, while sophomore outside hitter Katie Walsh remained a consistent contributor with nine kills and 10 defensive digs.
PAGE 3B
Karen Schonewise said she was most pleased with the play of freshman setter Tiffany Sennett and freshman middle blocker Jenny Wiedeke.
The pair came off the bench to provide the Kansas lineup with positive key plays.
Sennet took over the duties of freshman setter Trisha Lindgren and contributed 16 kills and two digs.
Saturday, Kansas again failed to get on the winning track in the second round of tournament play.
Although Kansas was able to take Virginia Tech into four games, 11-15, 15-6 15, 14-16, they were unable to put together a completely solid
match.
Walt followed her solid Friday performance against Michigan with solid offensive and defensive play, recording 14 kills and 16 digs against Virginia Tech.
Freshman middle blocker Leslie Purkepyile added 10 kills and 10 digs, while Katie Walsh put down 10 kills and dug up 14 Virginia Tech hits.
Despite strong Kansas offensive play, errors plagued the Jayhawks throughout the match.
Kansas committed 26 team errors and 18 service errors, compared to Virginia Tech's 11 errors and six service errors.
To combat the errors, Schonewise experimented with a new lineup in the second match of the day against William and Mary.
Walsh and Purkeypile started on the left side, freshman middle blockers Maggie Mohrfeld and Kendra Kahler in the middle, junior outside hitter Tracie Walt on the right side and Sennett as the setter.
Even though Kansas recorded another loss, falling in three straight, Schonewise said she was pleased with the lineup and the solid play of Walt, with 12 defensive digs, and Purkeypile who added 13 unreturnable hits.
"Tracie and Leslie played exceptionally well for us in their new positions," Schoenweiss said. "They were definitely the two bright spots for us."
Kansas will have little time to recover from the Virginia Tech. tournament before their next outing.
The Jayhawks will travel tomorrow to Wichita State to take on the Shockers in Henry Levitt Arena.
Kansas suffered a previous loss on Sept. 3 to Wichita State in the Colorado State tournament.
LOS ANGELES — Whitey Herzog will be offered the job as manager of the Kansas City Royals in a deal that would reunite him with close friend George Brett, now a team vice president, it was reported.
Herzog to be offered Royals job, L.A. newspaper reports
Herzog, 62, managed Brett and the Royals to three division titles from 1976-1978.
Herzog, who resigned in January as general manager of the California Angels, is scheduled to talk with the Royals this week, sources told the Los Angeles Times.
But the Times said yesterday there was no assurance Herzog would accept the job.
The Associated Press
He was offered the job in midseason and declined, allowing Hal McRae to continue. McRae was fired last week.
Herzog couldn't be reached for comment. If he declines, the Times said Chicago Cubs third base coach Tony Muser was expected to be a leading candidate.
Herzog, nicknamed "The White Rat," managed the St. Louis Cardinals from 1980 to 1990.
The Cardinals won the World Series in 1982 and lost it in 1985 and 1987. Herzog made his managing debut in 1973 with Texas.
I
Sean Crosier / KANSAN
Sean Crosier / KANBAN Kansas senior fly half Mike Schwartz passes the ball to junior flanker Hayden Krizman during a rugby match with the Omaha G. O. A.T. S. B-team. The Kansas college team won 52-12 Saturday.
Jay Thornton/KANSAN
Ballard's
A member of Kansas' Army ROTC bats the ball away from a member of "the Blasters." The Blasters beat the ROTC team 21-0 during an intramural flag football game Friday at Shenk Sports Complex.
Kansas swimmers part of history
pen 91
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
"You are part of collegiate history," Kempf said, sounding an air-horn to signify the start of the nation's first ever collegiate open-water competition.
"I think it was beautiful, just absolutely beautiful," he said. "We saw a little bit of history."
After having Kansas' Open Water Invitational canceled twice due to bad weather, Kempf said he was elated to see it go off without a hitch.
The format for the Jayhawks'
Seconds before 43 competitors swimmerin the 70 degree water Saturday morning at Lone Star Lake, Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf made a special announcement.
57 57
Frankie Hanson, top, senior distance freestyler, took first place in the women's division, and B.J. Waker, below, junior distance freestyler, won the men's competition at the first-ever collegiate open water competition at Lone Star Lake.
duel with Southern Illinois was very much like that of a cross country meet.
In the team standings, an individual first place counted for one point, second for two points, and so on. The team with the lowest score was determined the winner. The women won 8-30 over the Salukis, while the men handed a 19-62 defeat to Southern Illinois.
The competitors swam 3.1 miles, or five kilometers, on a continuous course.
Southern Illinois women's swimming coach Mark Kluemer said the Salukis had planned to attend last year's meet before it was canceled by cold weather.
"We're really glad to see it get off the ground," Kluemper said.
Junior distance freestyle B.J. Walker won the men's competition with a time of 55 minutes, 16 seconds. Being a part of history was a good feeling, Walker said, but it was not easy. He said he had the most trouble with his vision in the lake.
"The last stretch I didn't have that much direction, and it was when my body started testing me," Walker said. "It was a fun race, but really challenging."
Like Walker, Hanson said she swam with limited vision, but it was slightly different than Walker's.
Senior distance freestyle
Frankie Hanson edged her nearest competitor Diana Roberts by 14 seconds with a time of 57.56 to earn first place honors in the women's division.
"It was hard to tell who was a girl and who was a guy," she said.
The team swam the course
once before, but it was in the afternoon sun. Hanson said one advantage the swimmers had Saturday was competing in the morning without the overpowering heat.
However, freshman Marshall Dortch said he had some trouble with the cool conditions.
"It took me a while to get warmed up," he said.
Once he did, Dortch said he swam well, placing fifth with a time of 57:49.
Members of the Southern Illinois team who made the trip from Carbondale, Ill., to Lawrence did so on a voluntary basis. Kluemper said the swimmers that came on Saturday may bring back more of their teammates next year.
"I think they're going to go back and tell about how much they enjoyed it," he said.
The Salukis may also return with a better understanding of open water competitive swimming, Kluemer said. Most of the team was comprised of freshmen who had a limited amount of open water training.
"They're already talking about, 'When I come back next year, I'll know more about this," he said.
"It's just everything we hoped it would be," Kempf said. "It's a great day for swimming in this area."
But for now, Kempf and everyone else involved in the history-making Open Water Invitational are enjoying their accomplishments.
Evelin Hensel, mother of senior freestyle Marc Hensel, said all the competitors should be congratulated for their efforts.
"They all did wonderful — not just the ones who placed at the top," she said.
Kansas' collegiate rugby team beats Omaha
By Kent Hohifeld
Kansan sportswriter
Saturday's rugby games left the Kansas collegiate team pleased with its performance and the Kansas club team, which is made up of Lawrence residents and recent Kansas graduates, scratching its collective head.
The Kansas collegiate team defeated the Greater Omaha Area Touring Squad's B-team, which is also known as the G.O.A.T.S., 52-12.
However, the G.O.A.T.S. scored 19 points in a 13-minute span during the second half to defeat the Kansas club team 25-24.
The club's collegiate squad had a much easier time dealing with Omaha's second team. Kansas began the game by scoring four tries in the first half and completed two conversion kicks.
A try, worth five points in rugby, is scored like a touchdown in football. After a try, a team can
attempt a conversion kick worth two points.
The G.O.A.T.S. were only able to muster two tries during the entire game. The team missed one of its two conversion attempts.
"We executed the basics very well, "Kansas rugby coach Dominic Barnao said. "Our physical fitness and conditioning really showed through, especially at the end."
Barnao said the team wanted to run a fast-paced game to take advantage of its conditioning.
"Every time the guy with the ball was about to go down, there was someone right behind him to pass
"We really wanted to move the ball forward without having to kick it," Barnao said.
Collegiate captain Matt Delargy said part of the team's success was teamwork.
Forward passes are not allowed in rugby. Teams can advance the ball only by kicking or running the ball forward.
the ball to," said Delargy, a conversion kicker who made six conversions out of eight attempts. "It allowed us to keep constantly moving forward."
The club side had a lot harder time against Omaha's A team.
"We had a lot of mental errors that really cost us," said Larry Clarke, club team member. "We dominated them for most of the game."
Despite the miscues, the team had a chance to win in the final moments of the game.
However, Kansas was unable to get the ball across the goal line as time expired, leaving the G.O.A.T.S. with the victory.
Next week the club team will compete in a tournament in Aspen while the collegiate team stays at home.
'The collegiate A team will take on Ouaha and the B-squad will play against Creighton.
---
.
4B
Monday, September 19, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hockey agreement may be reached
NHL players could play in 1998 Olympics games international competition
By The Associated Press
TORONTO—NHLplayers might be skating in the 1998 Olympics and participating in international tournaments under a new agreement between the league and the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF).
That's part of a three-year deal between the NHL and IIHF spelled out Friday that covers everything from Olympic participation to expanded international competitions to the joint formation of a European Super League and the orderly transfer of players across the Atlantic.
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said hockey fans would benefit most from the deal.
"This is great news for all who care about hockey," Bettman said Friday in a news release from New York. "Working with the IIHF means stronger international events and support for hockey all over the world."
The Olympic plan still requires ratification by the NHL Players Associa
tion and gaining such approval will be part of the labor negotiations between the NHL and its players' union. The NHL and NHLPA met in New York on Friday and said negotiations would continue next week.
The Olympic plan is to have an eight-country pre-Olympic tournament in Canada in September 1997, with six teams qualifying for the Olympics.
In Nagano, Japan, there would be a two-tiered tournament. The first week would feature eight countries competing for two spots in a second round where they would join the six teams that qualified in September. Those eight would then form two four-team divisions, with the top two finishers from each advancing to the medal round.
The agreement between the NHL and IIHF was signed last week in Helsinki, Finland. Friday, the groups issued a joint news release detailing the various points of the wide-ranging pact.
IHF president Rene Fasel feels the highlight of the pact is the commitment to have NHL players at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano.
"This is an historic agreement and a very proud day for the IHF," Pasel
said from Switzerland. "We are going to work with the NHL for the benefit of hockey on a world level."
The agreement stated: "The NHL and IIHF will take all such steps as are necessary to cause the International Olympic Committee and the Nagano Olympic Organizing Committee to schedule the Olympic hockey tournament in a way to ensure the participation of NHL players. The NHL and IIHF agree that in order to ensure the participation of NHL players, that portion of the Olympic tournament involving NHL players may not exceed eight days."
The IIHF-NHL pact also comms NHL teams to release players for the world championship unless there is a conflict with Stanley Cup playoffs, which traditionally has been the case. However, both sides say they are resolved to work together to avoid scheduling the world tournament at the same time as the NHL playoffs.
Sources say consideration is being given to moving the world championships into the Christmas-New Year's period, a slot currently occupied by the world junior championships. Another possibility is making it a September tournament.
ALEXANDRO LARRAS
Jimmy Fishbein / KANSAN
Kicking it up
Maintaining control of the ball, Kansas junior Fredlin Joseph, right, moves away from a Wichita State opponent. The KU varsity soccer club defeated the Shockers 3 to 1 yesterday at the YSI soccer complex.
Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
MON. SEPT. 19 TO WED. SEPT. 21
SEPT. 19 TO WED. SEPT. 21
Gay & Lesbian Film Fest
Mon. 9:30 PM
Tues. 7:00 PM
Prick Up Your Ears
Tues. 9:30 PM
Wed. 7:00 PM
Breakfast at Tiffany's
Wed. 9:30 PM
ALL Shows in Woodruff Aud.
Tickets $2.50, Mornings $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MORE CARD
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00
( LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
IOWA MASSACHUSETTS 841-6191
TIMECOPR 5:00,7:15,9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
The Lion King® 5:15,7:30,9:30
Milk Money®P13 5:15,7:30,9:30
A Good Man in Africa® 5:15,7:30,9:45
Clear & Present Danger®P13 5:00,7:35
The Client®P13 5:00,7:15,9:30
CINEMA TWIN 841-6191
CINEMA TWIN ALL STATES
3110 IOWA BILL 5191 $1.25
Blown Away® 5:00,7:20,9:45
4 Weddings & a Funeral® 5:00,7:25,9:45
4Weddings&aFuneral®5:00,7:25,9:45
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Hey Big D !!!!
Yeah You! The One With The Cool Shirt On!!
Big D'S DRIVEWAY REPAIR - No Crash is Too Big To Fill — (739)
Big D'S FETTING ZOO - You Can Put Our Dorky — (732)
Big D'S Driving School - We Can Teach You to Drive Like a BIG D Tool (707)
Big D'S Road Racing - You Need More than A Knee When You Rule With BIG D (738)
If I Can't Hike Ya, I Don't A Sport (701)
BALLS NOT INCLUDED (708)
DONT BRANE THY YOU SEE GOD (703)
DONT BRANE THY YOU SEE ELVIS (705)
No Limits, No Rules The Only Person Is DEATH! (702)
The girls are just $2.95 plus $2.50 SAH
for a total of $15.45 each (CHEAP)
Please let quantity, size (l or XL), and code
Mail check or money order for
ENTERTAIN.TOO
PO BOX 3081
OLATHE.KS 66063
Code | Size LXL | Quantity | Total
--- | --- | --- | ---
| | | X $15.45 |
| | | X $15.45 |
| | | X $15.45 |
| | | X $15.45 |
| | | X $15.45 |
| | | X $15.45 |
Total of all items | | |
For long distance calls, Savings based on a 3 minute AT&T operator-dated interstate call
A.B.C.
GUM
POLITENESSMAN
1-800-COLLECT
The Polite Way to Call Collect
"Chewing gum while calling collect is as rude as dialing zero." Please use the space provided above to store gum for after conversation enjoyment. And always dial 1-800-COLLECT when calling collect. You'll save the people you call up to 44%.
---
NATION/WORLD
Monday, September 19, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5B
Haiti: Military leaders to step down
Continued from Page 1A.
-rations of such an overwhelpming force, made him blink."
"This is one instance where power has served diplomacy in an absolutely classic way," said Secretary of State Warren Christopher.
Under the agreement, the dictators agreed to leave power as soon as the Haitian parliament passes an amnesty law to protect the coup leaders and their supporters from retribution. In any event, that would have to happen no later than Oct. 15, under the pact.
The White House had said Friday that Carter was only negotiating the departure of the Haitian leaders, but the agreement held details far beyond
the administration's insistence that the leaders leave immediately and unconditionally. Cedras, in fact, was not required to leave Hali at all, and he did not sign the agreement — that fell to figurehead President Emile Jonassaint.
Clinton kept in continuous contact with the diplomatic team, which also included retired Gen. Colin Powell and Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.
The agreement requires Haitian army chief of staff Philippe Biamby to give up his authority, officials said. Though he and Cedras were not required to leave Haiti, Christopher said, "For all practical purposes, they are certain to leave," and without any American-aid money.
in September 1991 — had promised "no vengeance, no violence, no retribution."
"This is a time for peace," Clinton said.
Clinton said that Aristide — ousted
Clinton said Army Gen, Henry Hugh Shelton would arrive in Haiti today and would meet with Cedras to tell him how the U.S. force would be deployed.
Aristide representative Jean-Claude Martineau expressed qualified optimism: "It seems that we are coming out of a long, long dark night. Let's hope that what we expect will happen, will happen," he said in a telephone interview.
Cedras has reneged on earlier agreements to depart, most recently Oct 30,1993.
Perry and Joint Chiefs Chairman John Shalikashvill were at the White House with Clinton when the accord was reached, working on the details of the peaceful insertion of U.S. troops to maintain order in Haiti.
The troops "will go in the daytime," a senior officer said. Shalikkashvili said he expected U.S. forces to arrive today.
The Pentagon's invasion plans had called for paratroopers to drop into Haiti as part of the leading edge of the assault.
Clinton was under enormous political pressure to avoid an invasion. Congress and a majority of the public were opposed, believing that there were not valid national security stakes in Haiti.
WASHINGTON — The mining industry remains dug in on Capitol Hill, despite months of lawmakers' trying to change a 122-year-old law that has allowed companies to reap billions of dollars from mining on federal land while paying almost nothing to the government.
With only a few weeks left before adjournment, the prospect of a compromise bill passing Congress appears dimmer each day.
"There are three or four or more factions each threatening to kill any package that does not meet with their views," said Rep George Miller, D-Calif, who has led the House negotiating team. He has said privately that he expects any compromise — if one is ever reached — to be opposed in the Senate, probably by a filibuster from Western mining-state senators.
The Senate passed an industry-supported mining reform bill nearly 16 months ago and the House approved a much stronger bill last November. But efforts all summer to blend the two proposals have made little headway.
"We cannot afford further concessions," 17 mining companies said in a letter to Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., who also has been trying to work out a settlement.
The Associated Press
Mining legislation faces opposition
Agency ignored embargo violations
telling subordinates during a senior staff meeting that he had been directed to drag his feet by then-Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady.
Newcomb is a career government executive whose Treasury Department enforcement office by law is designed to be independent from political appointees. In an interview, Newcomb said he would like to speak
With American forces poised to invade Haiti, the U.S. attorney's office launched an investigation last week into Texaco's actions and the tepid response by the Office of Foreign Assets Control, The Associated Press has learned.
about the case involving Texaco Caribbean Inc., but because it is still active, "I'm not at liberty to do so."
Newcomb was served Friday with a grand jury subpoena for all relevant documents, according to officials familiar with the U.S. attorney's probe.
One official's notes from the mid-1992 meeting quotes Newcomb as saying, "Brady told me to go slow on Texaco." Haiti's president was overthrown in September 1991 and the Bush administration ordered an embargo to punish Haiti's new rulers.
A key question involves influence by Texaco among Bush administration officials. One document reviewed by The AP quotes OFAC Director Richard R. Newcomb as
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The agency in charge of enforcing trade embargoes concluded in 1992 that Texaco's Caribbean subsidiary was illegally doing business with Haiti's military junta, but its director ignored recommendations to stop the flow of oil and money, government records show.
A spokesman for Brady, Hollis McGlooughlin, said Brady — a longtime confident of George Bush — recalls having a telephone conversation with a Texaco executive and referring the matter to Newcomb's office. But Brady "doesn't have a recollection" of instructing Newcomb to go slowly, he said.
Since the U.S. embargo took effect in October 1991, Texaco has distributed fuel inside Haiti from at least 26 tanker ships brought in by the Haitian regime, paying the Haitian junta millions of dollars, a 1993 OFAC document alleged. Its authors proposed a maximum $1.6 million fine — $10,000 for each of 160 embargo violations.
Simpson defense will try to disallow evidence
The Associated Press
tv to fabricate.
"If the defense wins, the case may be over," said Stanley Goldman, Loyola University Law School professor. "However, I don't think the defense will win."
LOS ANGELES — O.J. Simpson will try this week to scrub away much of the blood in his double-murder case.
Inept detectives with a propensi-
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
Because much of the argument is from the preliminary hearing, It may not allow witnesses to testify.
In the most publicized legal battle since the preliminary hearing, the Simpson camp will attempt to persuade Superior Court Judge Lance Ito that the former football star shouldn't have been charged with murder, and that much of the evidence should be thrown out.
Zealous prosecutors who clung to a misguided single-assailant theory. A Municipal Court judge who didn't understand the law.
Legal analysts guess Simpson will have as much success with the motion this time as he did at the preliminary hearing.
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
In a motion to dismiss the murder charges, Simpson's lawyers will argue during hearings starting today that he was the victim of:
KIM'S ALTERATIONS QUICK & QUALITY SERVICE
Still, the Simpson defense can undercut the prosecution case with a motion to suppress the bulk of the evidence.
944 Mass.
Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
Simpson's defense singles out Detective Philip Vannatter as the officer most prone to fiction, contending that he never had any concerns about Simpson's welfare or anybody else's, which was the basis of the "exigent circumstances" that allow a warrantless search.
The defense claims police found much of their evidence only after illegally scaling Simpson's wall the morning after the murders, then led about why they were at the estate.
2201-FW25T ST
(Behind Food 4 Less) 842-6812
Available at these locations:
Red Lyon Tavern
KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
119 Stauffer Flint
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Valid Through July 31, 1995
NCGS
Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can Save Some Cash
832-8228
804 Massachusetts
843-5000
letts
fifiy 9251OWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
bifi's
UNIVERSITY
BOOK
SHOP
SUNFLOWER
Woolwich.
Jayhawk Bookstore
AMIGO'S
1819 W. 23rd • 842-1620
Get the daily special prices every day of the week
2540 Iowa 865-4000
BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢
1116 W 23rd
*Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore at the Courtyard County
*First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore at the Courtyard Counter
S
Restaurants
PEZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W 23rd/842.1212
CLASS ONION
JOHNNY'S TAVERN
2329 Slow Town St. $84.1200
$ 99.1250 Previews & Food Bar
DONNING A PIZZA
275-361-2420
KMS
Med Pizza $5.95, 2 for $9.95,1.g Pizza $7.95, 2 for $13.95
ENDRE, ANYHIME,
PITZA SHOPPE
UNIVERSAL'S SNACK BURGER
1006 Massachusetts-843-0561
10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more
One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
25% OFF Any Delivery Order (not valid with any other offer)
2907 W 6th-841-1688-FREE Soft Drink (with FREE reefs)
with Purchase of Hulbert Shell Refreshment
DOS HOMBRES
FULL MOON CAFE
101 menu hibernate 6417 128
BUY1 Menu item, and the second One at 1/2 Price
101 Menu item, and the second One at 1/2 Price
624 1Wb84-2130 IWF FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Certified Organically) 1 Wheat Amur Mee Tea
6035 Avenue of the Americas 444-444-4444
$1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners before 6 P.M. Tuesday
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY WORKSHOP & HASHRINGS
520 West 23rd
841-5885
PLUMMET REDKEN
401 N 2ndd-8423-0777-BLY a cheeseburger with fries at eagle.
according, first set for 1.00 Mn Mon fr 4:9 am
$1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50Includes food and coffee drink
1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044
$1.00 Off Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day
14th & Ohio 842.43223.390 4m, add $10,桌上 $6.50,MD 10,
tender $75.80 i. u. $10, add $1.00 one that chick
JOICO
745 New Hamphire+643-328-3100 30% Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor, System Cleaning IBM Compatible
PYRAMID PIZZA
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
23rd & Louisiana-B32-170C
2700 Iowa-749-2615-FREE Medium Drink with Purchase of
743 Massachusetts>749-4604
15% OFF Any Item (excludes sale items)
TRAINING GROUP
16:28 W 3rd February 2015 11:01 W / W@4396-2909 HOST
16:28 W 3rd February 2015 11:01 W / W@4396-2909 HOST
(NO LIMIT)
Retail/Merchandise
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
WEST COAST SALOON
2222 Iowa St.+841-2739
$1 50 OFF Any Sandwich
BOBBYS BEDROOM
2429 Iowa·842-7378
13 Massachusetts Q4-3-19!+15% Off All Appart =
FREE Christian T-shirt *W Purchase B2-$9.00*
JAYHAWK BOOKSTONE
1420 Crescent Rd#843-3826
20% OFF Entire Inventory (excludes sale items and outlet priced items)
15%Off Any Pro Performance 24-Hour Diet Item
AATYANK TROPICAL FISH
10% OFF Any Tynnwaretire. Printer Bibbons or Printer Ink
AFTERSTYLE 'ATFOS'
914 Massachusetts $841-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
BARD'S WINTER ROSE
20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals
848 filtres, Sku DD-842-9580%20, OFW Whisper Brush
PowerFilters, and All Other Brand Whisper Filters
142 Cratecursus Rpq-843-3820
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
1420 Crescent Rd-B434-3826
10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid
KANSA SPORTS CLUB
837 Massachusetts·842-2992
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS* 864-4640
10% OFF Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply
10% OFF KU Sweatshirt
KARRONSTORE
JOHN LEE
B40 Massachusetts-John 2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANSS AND BURGE UNIONS-684-4640
$5.00 Off Any jaxy clothing Clothing at Hat Over $200
837 Massachusetts·842-2992 20% OFF KU Sweatshirts
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4640
Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book) 5¢
82 Massachusetts 641-910-0200® All Cotton T-Shirt &
Women's (Organic Cotton, Green Cotton, and Revised Cotton)
KU BOOKSTORE
MERLE HUMAN
9th & New Hampshire+841-5324
10% OFF All Skin Care Products
N10 2nD/803-8039 1910 Hallway Ave, Suite 1641-7549
$1.00 OOF. Bureaux Mobile (1-800) one visit
2340 S. lowe 842-8644 3509 OFF-C41 Process (Not Valid
with C41)
www.pc3.com
BIZER-CUMMINGS
833 Massachusetts·749-4333
1454 N. Baldwin St. #C-1433
PRI SOURCE
Lawrence, Ks-865-0692
10% OFF All Sales
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
716 Massachusetts - 841-72-2000 OFF OCC Train, Marine, Medical
Tuesday & Sunday *15% Mort on Buy Backs
622 W 128th St.-841 B475-12.00 Off Any One CD, Tap
RECYCLER COMMUN
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
1741 Massachusetts-749-1605
25% OFF All Monthly Rentals
15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stusy)
SPRINGMAIR/WASSUITTA
1025 N.3 3rdH-832-110
10%OFF Any Purchase
832 Iowa-749-3507-2 Value 1 for 1 Video Rental Monday -
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
1116W, 23rd-749-5206
OFF!
Services
B. C.A.T.E & CYCLE
510 N 6th-841-6955
10% OFF All Parts
BODY PRECIAL
737 Massachusetts 642-880-091
15% OFF Complete Eyeglass Purchas
CHOPROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
3320 Cannon FXKY-843-0367
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
Consultation at No Charge (Usually $3)
CRAMDON & COUMPTICS
1018 Massachusetts 543-344-3254 123456789
Ballot Box
Fairness Folder Valid with DETRIP
DIDTIRP
SUNFLOWER
Vasque
TOURING & CLIMBING COMPANY
TAKE A
HIKE
bounce off the walls.
Jaybowl ARCADE
pinball, pool hall,
video games galore!
864-3545 • kansas union • level 1
1601 W 2 Tans 6123-6323-F2 Tans with Purchasers
T 3 dTans For $20 and FREI Total Formula One
(1 customer)
MANETAMERS
846 Illinois Suite E*841-5499
804MASSACHUSETTS843-5000
YEAR 2014/15
15th & Kacadei 652-0321 - 25% OFF! initial or Annual
FREE
ULTIMATE TAN
$35.00 OFF Lanses and Frames w/ FRFF Adjustment
CUSTOMER LINK HONOR
119 Stauffer-Flint-684+358
20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad
R.2.*STADINUM BANBENY*
1033 Massachusetts 749-5636
Any Haircut or Hairstyle $.50
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
2494 lows ST-1424-4994 | FREELANCE with the
purchase of a 6-Way Floor Jack (Save $5.90)
TWIN GAKS GOLF COURSE
K-10 & County RD. 1057-913142-1747
Buy One Small Bucklet of Baskets, Get One Small Buck
NEW LOWER CD PRICES
All CD'S $5 Each Great Selection!!
Jayha
VISA
deconve
Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry
1804 W. 6th 2 Blocks East of Iowa
VISA DISCOVER
7 49 - 1 9 1 9
MasterCard
So. Have you had your vitamins today?
GNC
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTERS
there America Shops 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.
Expires 10/01/94
Da Beer Machine
BEER MACHINE
Why Buy when you can Brew!
Da Beer Machine and ingredients now available at
Cottin's
C
Coast to Coast HARDWARE
1832 Massachusetts (913) 843-2981
Mon-Fri 8-8
Sat 8-6
Sun 10-5
6B
Monday, September 19, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE NEWS in brief
EAST AFRICA
HONG KONG
China pledges to annul Hong Kong's elections
In the twilight of British rule, Hong Kong voters chose local governments yesterday in the colony's first fully democratic election, which China has sworn to annul.
The election was held under rules imposed unilaterally by Gov. Chris Patten after China, Hong Kong's ruler come 1997, refused to accept them.
The turnout, keenly watched as a barometer of Hong Kong's enthusiasm for democracy, suggested a mixed triumph for Patten.
At 33.1 percent, the turnout was less than 1 percent higher than in 1991. But a government registration drive almost doubled the electoral roll, and the number of ballots cast increased 67 percent, official figures showed.
"Ithink China should take into consideration that people have very strong support for the political reforms," said Stephen Tang, a political analyst, on Hong Kong's TVB channel. "They should seriously consider any move against the election result."
China has said it will disband all institutions filled through elections under Patten's rules. But its distaste for Western-style elections did not deter its supporters in the colony from campaigning vigorously.
Electing patriotic figures would restrain "the attempt to cause chaos and harm to Hong Kong's people's interests by the Pattern reforms," the China-backed newspaper Wen Wei Po said.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida Discovery's return may be delayed
With their mission accomplished, Discovery's six astronauts may have to spend some extra time in space.
Stormy weather was forecast for Kennedy Space Center at the 2:23 p.m. scheduled landing. NASA could send the shuttle to Edwards Air Force Base in California later in the day.
"It's pretty fatiging up here. I think a lot of us are looking forward to getting home, getting a good shower and some good old Earthbound things we enjoy," Discovery's pilot, L. Blaine Hammond Jr., said yesterday.
The shuttle blasted off on Sept. 9.
The astronauts released and retrieved a sun-gazing satellite, measured the damaging effects of their own steering jet exhaust on space structures, helped direct laser pulses at Earth for an atmospheric study and tested a new jet pack during a rare, untreated spacewalk.
Astronaut Mark Lee became the first human satellite in 10 years Friday when he disconnected his lifeline and used the jet pack to drift over the open cargo bay.
Lee's partner, Carl Meade, gave him a spin and a toss to see if the jet pack would steady an astronaut tumbling out of control. It did.
CIA officials ignored spy Aldrich Ames
WASHINGTON
More than a dozen active or retired officials either ignored warnings or overlooked complaints, allowing former CIA agent Aldrich Ames to spy for the Soviet Union for nine years, according to a report by the CIA's inspector general.
Chiefs, deputies and operating personnel in the CIA's security office are singled out for criticism in a 400-page draft of the report described in yesterday's editions of The Washington Post.
The newspaper quoted sources who have seen the draft as saying it criticizes CIA officials for failing to follow up on information about Ames' lavish spending in 1900.
The report was particularly critical of the security office's polygraph operation, which passed Ames in 1986 and 1991 despite indications that he lied on key financial questions, The Post said.
CIA official David French said yesterday that he had not seen the draft of the report, but that the final version was to be delivered to CIA Director R. James Woolsey soon. The inspector general is chosen independently and confirmed by the U.S. Senate.
WASHINGTON
Clarence Thomas was so mentored during the Anita Hill sexual harassment hearings that he often sobbed before friends and once writed on his bedroom floor, according to a new book by his Senate sponsor.
Anita Hill hearings tortured Thomas
Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., also wrote that his own fervor to see Thomas confirmed to the Supreme Court led him to cross the "boundary of propriety" in trying to destroy Hill's credibility.
"It was a departure from anything anybody would say was fair," Danforth said in an interview. "But if you're there in an alley, and people are throwing rocks, you pick up a rock."
Danforth, who as Missouri attorney general hired Thomas in 1974 out of Yale Law School and later made him a top Senate assistant, was the prime Senate sponsor of Thomas' nomination in 1991 to replace Thurgood Marshall on the high court.
PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea
Volcano eruption evacuation
Authorities ordered the evacuation of 30,000 people from the city of Rabaul just hours before a nearby volcano began erupting early today.
"She's smoking away there like a chimney at the moment, spreading ash everywhere," said Leith Anderson, National Disaster and Emergency Services director of the volcano. "We believe we may have a major volcanic eruption within the next few hours or days."
SINGAPORE
Two teens suspected of vandalism
Two American teen-agers have been arrested on suspicion of vandalizing cars, four months after the caning of another American teen for vandalism strained relations between Singapore and the United States.
The two Americans, along with a British teen-ager, were taken into custody Saturday after a police chase, the *Straits Times* reported yesterday. They are suspected of stealing car emblems.
The names of the teens, ages 16 to 18, were not disclosed because police had not filed charges against them, the newspaper reported. Two Mercedes-Benz emblems were confiscated from them.
Ohio teen Michael Fay was imprisoned and flaged after he was convicted of spray-painting cars in a vandalism spree with several other teen-agers. The flogging caused a furor the United States over Singapore's stern justice system.
MONETA. Virginia
Elvis fans have theor of his 'death'
Dead men don't sweat.
That is one reason the Presley Commission, which is a sleuthing group of Elvis fans, claims to have proof the King lives.
The commission's report said threats from organized crime forced Elvis to stage a phony funeral with a persiring wax likeness inside a coffin — all so that he could enter the federal witness protection program.
After working on the theory for 21/2 years, the commission's writers, researchers and unidentified federal officials unveiled their report Friday at Camper's Paradise Resort in Moneta.
The 25 members used materials from several best-selling books purporting to show that Elvis faked his death and obtained hundreds of new government and medical documents under the Freedom of Information Act.
Serbs continue with ethnic cleansing
The commission said the body found in the bathroom of Graceland, Presley's Memphis, Tenn., mansion, on Aug. 16, 1977, actually was the cousin of the King's manager.
What mourners passing the King's catafalque saw was a wax dummy cooled by an elaborate system of dry ice and battery-powered, soundproof fans concealed inside the casket.
That, the commission said, explains why a dead Elvis sweats.
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — The heaviest shelling and gunfire in more than six months erupted yesterday in Sarajevo, wounding eight people and raising the prospect of new NATO air strikes.
the commander of U.N. forces in Bosnia, Lt. Gen. Sir Michael Rose, warned against unspecified measures against both the Muslim-led government and the Bosnian Serbs if the fighting did not stop. A U.N. representative said those measures could include NATO air strikes.
The Associated Press
Meanwhile, Serb nationalists pushed 1,300 exhausted, weeping Muslims from their homes and across front lines in northeastern Bosnia yesterday in a defiant drive to finish their ethnic purges.
In the Bosnian capital, mortar shelling, machine-gun fire and anti-aircraft fire could all be heard yes-
Rose said initial reports indicated that government forces started the fighting. That apparently touched off retaliatory fire from the Bosnian Serbs. Rose said the fighting was a clear violation of a NATO-enforced heavy weapons exclusion zone around Sarajevo.
terdy. The fighting shattered months of relative calm in Sarajevo, which has been under Serb siege for almost 21/2 years.
"This fighting is seriously endangering the civilian population of Sarajevo," said representative Koos Sol, reading a statement from Rose. "If the fighting doesn't stop, he will take appropriate measures against both sides."
Sarajevo has enjoyed a semblance of normalcy since February, when NATO threatened air strikes if the Serbs did not withdraw their heavy weapons from around the city. But conditions have deteriorated in
recent weeks, with the closing of roads leading to the capital, sporadic shooting at aid flights and the cutting off last week of utilities.
The push showed the Bosnian Serbs' determination to remove the remaining non-Serbs from areas they control despite increasing international pressure and isolation.
The eight wounded yesterday included at least six civilians, one of them a 12-year-old boy. Sarajevo's streets were virtually empty, as residents who have only recently been able to walk through the city without fear, once again sought safety.
In northern Bosnia, the refugees flowing into Tuzla, a government-held city, coupled with those reportedly expelled from another Serb-controlled area Saturday, raised to as many as 9,000 the number of people forced out of their homes since mid-July.
Miss America faces challenge
The Associated Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — The first deaf Miss America got a taste of the difficult task ahead of her yesterday.
Heather Whitestone, a plucky 21-year-old collegan from Birmingham, Ala., told photographers to stop shooting pictures as she tried to read a reporter's lips on her first full day wearing the crown.
"You keep flashing. You make it hard for me to see his lips. Can you hold on for a minute?" she asked.
Later, she turned the tables on a reporter. "Let me know what you don't understand," she said when he look puzzled in response to answer she'd given.
Whitestone, who became deaf at age 11/2 after a reaction to a diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus shot, has 5 percent hearing in her left ear.
A junior at Jacksonville State University, she reads lips, uses a hearing aid and knows sign language. But she said exclusive use of sign language limits what the hearing impaired can achieve.
Whitestone needed six years of speech therapy to learn how to say her last name.
Whitestone said that the most handicapped person in the world was a negative thinker and that her mother told her when she was a child that the last four letters of "American" spelled "ican."
Her platform centers on telling young people — not only those with disabilities — that anything is possible. She said Sunday she would try to spread that message during her reign as the first disabled Miss America.
"It'll be a shot in the arm for deaf children everywhere," said David Updegraff, superintendent of St. Mary's School for the Deaf in Buffalo, N.Y.
Victims fight for restitution
Associated Press
BOSTON — Eight years ago, Kathy Tennihan was beaten so severely her eyes swelled shut. For months afterward she crawled because she was too terrified to stand.
Today the attacker is free after serving 61/2 years for assault and battery with intent to murder.
But Tennihan, 46, still pays with mental anguish, and she believes her attacker ought to be paying still, too. The anguish has prevented her from working full time, she said.
She is pushing for a state law to make financial restitution a mandatory part of punishment for violent crimes.
At least two other states have laws requiring attackers to make recovery payments to their victims. And the new federal crime bill requires sex offenders and child molesters to compensate their victims for all losses, including the cost of psychological therapy.
Judges and victims' advocates say mandatory financial restitution can be unconstitutional and tricky to enforce. But they also say it could help eliminate the disparity between
the criminals who serve their time and forget and the victims who bear scars for the rest of their lives.
"Lots of times victims feel left out of the criminal process," said Marshall Dayan, a Durham, N.C., lawyer who has been court-appointed defender in dozens of capital cases. "It seems to me that there's a place in the system for making the direct victims of crime a part of it. That place, to me, is having the offender make restitution directly to the victim."
In all states, victims and their families can turn to victim compensation funds to be reimbursed for lost wages, medical bills and funeral costs.
Richard Pompelio, a lawyer from Sparta, N.J., knows the flaws in the system personally and professionally. His son was murdered in 1989, and since then Pompelio has pushed for greater compensation for crime victims and their families.
New Jersey, like most states, caps compensation at $25,000. Pompello said that cannot pay for the years of psychological therapy many of his clients have needed after being sexually assaulted.
The Associated Press
Church cashes in on self-help trend
A century later, her followers have added mass marketing and sales.
BOSTON — Mary Baker Eddy combined religion and science when she wrote the bible of the Christian Science Church.
Church officials are seizing on a dramatic upswing in sales of religious, New Age and self-help books to spread their belief that prayer can heal injuries and illness.
"People are going to bookstores for answers and for help, and so this book that has helped thousands, perhaps millions, ought to be there," said Virginia Harris, who heads the church's five-member board of directors.
The church has repackaged the book, "Science and Health With Key to the Scriptures," adding the mainstream message "Over 8 million
copies sold" to the cover and an index ("Devil; see also Satan").
While a previous edition was available in 600 specialty bookstores and Christian Science reading rooms, the new one, subject of a 12-city promotional tour, will be in bookstores nationwide Oct. 1.
"Jesus went into the marketplace. We have to go to where people are," Harris said. "It's the malls of today and the bookstores in those malls where people are going for answers."
... We've seen the demand grow, the demand for answers, spirituality and healing. There's a reaitake-charge-of- my-own-well-being attitude in this country."
Sales of religious titles increased 249 percent from June 1993 to June 1994, according to the Ingram Book Co. of LaVergne, Teen., the world's largest book distributor.
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 843-0611
Ray-Ban
INCREASES BY
BAJCH & LOMB
THE WORLD'S FIRST BRANDMAN
Since 1907 WATKIN "We Care For KU"
CPR can save a life.
To sign up:
864-9570.
WATKIN
Since 1907
"We Care For KU"
CPR can save a life.
To sign up:
864-9570.
Sept. 19 & 20 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Sept. 26 & 27 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Oct. 10 & 11 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Oct. 17 & 18 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Oct. 22 Sa 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
Oct. 24 & 25 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Saturday class includes a 30-min. break. Classes cover adult/child/infant CPR using American Heart Association materials. $5 fee for training.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500
Servine Only Laurence Campus Students
I KNOW WHAT I KNOW. WE COME & WE GO. IT'S IN THE BACK OF MY EYES
The End.
ICONOGRAPHICS
ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTERS
LARGEST TRAVELING MOVIE PO
MON-, SEPT, 19 TO FRI, SEPT, 23
KANSAS UNION GALLERY
9AM - 5PM LEVEL 4, KS. UNION
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAR
INDEPENDENCE OF KANSAS
KU Bookstore REBATE
Now accepting receipts from the Spring'94 semester for rebate payments.
Over $2,400,000 returned to date.
Receipts (period 95) from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 7% rebate at the Customer Service counter of the KU Bookstores until the end of December,1994.
KU student I.D. required.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Ks. Union 864-4640
Burge Un. 864-5697
Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
FOOTBALL ROUND-UP
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 19, 1994
B7
Chiefs bury Falcons in Georgia Dome
Thomas forces two fumbles and one sack in 30-10 win
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Joe Montana seems to always have his way with the Atlanta Falcons.
He did again yesterday night, passing for a Georgia Dome record 361 yards and two touchdowns as the Kansas City Chiefs downed the Falcons 30-10.
Montana completed 28 of 39 passes, including scoring tosses of 13 and 34 yards to J.J. Birden, as Kansas City remained unbeaten after three games. Atlanta fell to 1-2.
It was Montana's seventh victory in a row in Atlanta, the other six coming when he was with the San Francisco 49ers. It also lifted his career record in starts against the
Falcons to 14-5, including 12 of his last 13.
ous to 14-5, including 12 of his last 13. He was intercepted twice but got plenty of help from a defense that forced the Falcons into six turnovers. There were two interceptions of Jeff George, who passed for 299 yards and Atlanta's only touchdown, a 25-yard pass to Andre Rison in the final quarter after the Chiefs had built a 23-3 lead.
Derrick Thomas was the ringleader of the defense with a sack, two forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries.
The Chiefs wasted little time setting the tone when Dale Carter ended George's string of 279 passes without an interception, third-best in NFL history. Carter returned it 24 yards to the Atlanta 28, setting up the game's first touchdown.
Carter stepped alongside Rison, the league's leading receiver, to make the interception on the game's fifth play. George completed his first two attempts in the game.
Carter's defense on Rison was one of the keys to Kansas City's taking a 10-0 halftime
lead. He simply took the Atlanta star, who had 26 catches the first two weeks, out of the game. Rison's only catch in the first half came on the last play, a 20-yard gain to the Kansas City 43, where Carter made the tackle before Rison could get out of bounds.
Rison had three catches for 72 yards.
It took Montana only four plays to score following Carter's interception. He overcame a holding infraction against Keith Cash with a 20-yard pass to Willie Davis at the Atlanta 16. Montana hit Birden in the end zone for a touch down.
The Chiefs stretched their lead to 10-0 on Lin Elliott's 48-yard field goal in the second quarter. That score also followed an Atlanta turnover when Jaime Fields forced Eric Pegram's fumble, which Thomas scooped up and returned 11 yards to the Falcons' '21. Two holding penalties forced the Chiefs to settle for the field goal.
Montana directed a 69-yard scoring drive on the first series of the second half, one that ended on Donnell Bennett's three-
"I don't throw the ball hard. There's no wind to hamper the ducks I throw."
Joe Montana Kansas City Chiefs quarterback
yard run. Montana was the key figure in the drive, completing four passes for 47 yards, including a 23-yard pass to Davis at the Atlanta 22. Montana also scrambled for five yards on a third-and-three at the Atlanta 15, and five yards was tacked on at the end when Ron George was called for a facemack violation on the play.
TONIGHT
MONDAY NIGHT
FOOTBALL
The Detroit Lions at
the Dallas Cowboys
8 p.m. on ABC
IRVING, Texas — There's a spy telling the Dallas Cowboys all about the Detroit Lions.
Remember Rodney Peete? Last year he was quarterbacking for the Lions. This year he spilled Detroit's innermost secrets to Dallas.
But the Cowboys also get a bonus this week because of Peete's knowledge of the Lions' run-and-shoot offense.
"I hope we blow the Lions out by 40 points so I can get in there," said Peete
NFL Standings
A
Central
W L PF PA
Cleveland 1 1 38 37
Pittsburgh 1 1 26 36
Cincinnati 0 2 30 55
Houston 0 2 38 65
East
W L W L PF PA
Miami 1 2 63 49
N.Y. Jets 2 0 48 45
Buffalo 1 2 41 58
Indianapolis 1 2 55 45
New England 0 1 70 77
West
W L W PF
Kansas City 3 0 54 34
San Diego 2 0 64 44
Seattle 2 0 64 16
Denver 2 0 56 62
L.A. Raiders 0 2 23 82
N
East
Central
West
NFL Week 3 at a Glance
W 1 W LP PF
Chicago 1 1 14 39
Detroit 1 1 14 39
Green Bay 1 1 30 38
Minnesota 1 1 20 39
Tampa Bay 1 1 20 31
W L PF PA
Dallas 2 0 46 26
N.Y. Giants 2 0 48 40
Philadelphia 1 0 53 50
Washington 1 1 45 52
Arizona 1 2 29 34
W L WL PF PA
L.A. Rams 1 1 17 43
San Francisco 1 1 61 38
Atlanta 1 2 59 44
New Orleans 0 2 44 68
Raiders 48
Broncos 16
DENNER — Seeking a getwell Vermedy, all the Los Angeles Raiders' anemic offense needed was a dose of Denver defense.
Jeff Hosteler, the supposedly sore-armed quarterback, threw for 338 yards and four touchdowns.
Bills 15
Oilers 7
HOUSTON — Buffalo's Jim Kelly and Andre Reed played a personal game of catch to set up five field goals by Doug Christie, and Bruce Smith squashed Houston's offense with four sacks.
The Bills defeated the Oilers for the third consecu
Vikings 42
Bears 14
CHICAGO — Minnesota overwhelmed the Chicago Bears with basic football that included the passing of Warren Moon, the running of Terry Allen, the receiving of Cris Carter and an 81-yard interception return by DeWayne Washington.
Eagles 13
Packers 7
PHILADELPHIHA — The Eagles defense chalked up six sacks, two interceptions and a forced fumble to beat the Packers.
The Eagles scored on two 26-yard field goals from Eddie Murray and a one-yard run by Randall Cunningham.
Giants 31
Redskins 23
DAVE MEGGET answerws all the questions about his durability with two short touchdown runs and a 16-unit scoring pass to Aaron Pierce as the New York Giants beat the Washington Redskins on Sunday.
EAST RUTHERFORD 1
49ers 34
Rams 19
ANAHEIM, Calif. — 49ers quarterback Steve Young had
— even by his lofty standards,
a brilliant day, completing
31 of 39 for 355 yards and two
tails to also be able for a ran for
a pair of scores.
Jerry Rice had 11 receptions for 147 yards and a touchdown, and Taylor had seven catches for 103 yards.
Dolphins 28
Jets 14
Kirby rushed for 100 yards, an injury-plagued defense intercepted four passes and Keith Jackson improvised a lateral for a touchdown Sunday as Miami handed New York its first loss.
MIAMI — Interceptions, ingenuity and Terry Kirby helped the Miami Dolphins dominate the New York Jets.
COMPETE
AIR conditioned. ARE you?
NFL AIR it OUT
FOUR ON FOUR FLAG FOOTBALL
PRESENTED BY
in the OFFICIAL 4 on 4 FLAG Football tournament.
Introducing NFL Air-It-Out, a national non-contact 4-on-4 flag football tournament. Anyone aged 8 to 80 can sign up, and the top division winners will go on to the national finals, where they'll AIR on ABC Sports. So draft your five member team, and see how you AIR.
ON TOUR EXPERIENCE
AIRline. 913-341-5225
PLUS! NFL Air-It-Out competitors and spectators can take part in the NFL Experience: Pro football's interactive theme park touring with Air-It-Out.
$25.0ff for KU Students
Please send copy of valid school ID with entry
AIRfield. Swope Park
AIRdate. October 1-2
Deadline. September 23, 1994
ONE WEEKEND ONLY!
Budweiser
KING OF BERKS.
Gatorade
MUT 103 JAMZ!
more continuous music
101 MFX
RBC CITY
Reilly Automotive
A crowd of 65,536 showed up at Husky Stadium, where the game was moved because the Kingdome was closed while undergoing ceiling and roof repairs.
SEATTLE — Stan Humphries and Tony Martin teamed on a 99-yard touchdown pass and Stanley Richard ran back a pass interception 73 yards for a score as the San Diego Chargers spoiled Seattle's home opener 24-10 yesterday.
Chargers end Seattle's streak at two
The Seahawks (2-1) lost both their tailbacks, Chris Warren and Jon Vaughn, with injuries in the first half. Although Warren returned in the second half, Seattle's rushing attack was ineffective until Warren scored on an 11-yard run with 5:11 gone in the fourth quarter.
In a battle of two previously unbeaten AFC West teams, the Chargers improved their record to 3-0, their best start since 1981.
The Associated Press
The Humphries-to-Martin play was the longest touchdown pass in Chargers' history.
It was Seattle's first regular-season game ever played away from the Kingdome.
For most of the game, it was up to quarterback Rick Mirer to try to move the Seahawks through the air. He was
sacked six times, three by Leslie O'Neal. The Seahawks were held to 187 yards, 59 rushing.
Humphries completed 19 of 29 passes for 262 yards and one touchdown. Martin caught six passes for 152 yards. Natrime Means of San Diego had 86 yards and a touchdown on 24 carries.
He found Martin in front of Patrick Hunter at the San Diego 35, and Martin outran Hunter to the end zone.
Ahead 10-3 at halftime, the Chargers broke the game open with the touchdowns by Richard and Martin in the third quarter.
Richard stepped in front of Paul Green, Mirer's intended target, at the San Diego 27 and ran down the left sideline for a touchdown with 8:32 gone in the third quarter.
It was Martin's second pass interception touchdown return this season. He also ran back an interception 99 yards for a touchdown in a victory in the first week at Denver.
San Diego made it 24-3 with 1:55 remaining in the third quarter. Pinned on the 1 after a sack by Brent Williams, Humphries passed from his own end zone on third-and-18.
The 99-yard play broke the club record of 91 yards set by Jack Kemp and Keith Lincoln on Nov. 12, 1961.
The turning point of the first half came when Vaughn lost 20 yards on a running play on second-and-goal at the San Diego 1. Vaughn, who replaced Warren after he was injured in the first quarter, was lost after Reuben Davis poked Vaughn in the left eye.
The Chargers drove 51 yards in 11 plays in 5:52 for a touchdown 19 seconds before halftime for their 10-3 lead. Means bulled into the end zone from 1 yard out.
The Seahawks had to settle for a 30-yard field goal by John Kasay with two minutes gone in the second quarter.
San Diego's touchdown drive was kept alive by a roughing-the-passer penalty on Rufus Porter against Humphries on a third-and-10 play at the Seattle 49.
The Seahawks had only 54 yards of offense in the first half and 25 came in the final 15 seconds of the half on two Mirper runs when San Diego was in a prevent defense.
San Diego came back and drove 54 yards in 13 plays to the Seattle 18, where John Carney kicked a 36-yard field goal to tie the score at 3-3 at 7:49 in the second quarter.
Hunter ran back an interception 51 yards down the right sideline to give Seattle the ball on the San Diego 18.
JOY
601 Kasold
865-4040
Sunday
$1.00 off Burgers
$.75 Draws
Every Chiefs Game "All You Can Eat" Taco Bar.
Monday
$.15 Wing Night
$1.50 Domestic Bottle
Tuesday "All you Can Eat" Taco and Burrito Bar
C
Wednesday
Mini Burger Night
1/2 dozen $3.95
$3.75 Pitchers
Come Play NTN Trivia!
8B
Monday, September 19, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
LIFE'S A
JOURNEY.
ARE
YOU
PACKED?
NO annual FEE nationwide ACCEPTANCE and LOW rates. Because this is a ONCE in a lifetime trip.
DISCOVER
6011 0000 0000 0000
IF YOU DON'T GOT IT, GET IT.
NETWORK © 1994 Greenwood Trust Company, Member FDIC
CAMPUS
KU has put the brakes on a proposed bike path through West Campus. Page 3A
FEATURES Allergy season has taken Lawrence by storm. Page 3B
PARTLY CLOUDY High 83° Low 58° Weather. Page 2A.
Page 3B
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANS KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.104.NO.21
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20,1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
People wary about results of accord
LEST WE FORGET THE
COURAGE, HONOR AND SACRIFICE
OF OUR FELLOW STUDENTS.
Julanne Peter / KANSAN
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Bryant Freeman characterized the 11th-hour compromise that averted an American invasion of Haiti as an absolute betrayal of the Haitian people.
Freeman, director of KU's Institute of Haitian Studies, said the accord reached by President Clinton's negotiators was a total reversal of previous actions by the United States.
The accord, which was announced Sunday night, is intended to pave the way for the
return of Haiti's democratically elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. However, the agreement does not mandate that Haitian army commander Raoul Cedras leave the country, and Cedras did not even sign the agreement.
"At this point, Clinton has talked himself into a corner," Freeman said.
Secretary of State Warren Christopher said Cedras and Haitian army chief of staff Philippe Biamby were almost certain to leave. But Freeman, who has studied Haiti for 35 years, said Cedras and Biamby would not leave voluntarily.
"Why should they leave?" Freeman said. "They have their houses, their money and their supporters in Haiti. Until Sunday, they were going to have to leave, but this allows them to stay."
At this point, Freeman said, the United States could try to restructure Haiti's economy.
"We can help them economically, and they would welcome this," he said. "But politically. I don't see any way for us to be successful with this agreement."
Vandals defaced the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on Memorial Drive and West Campus Road Sunday night. They wrote "Vietnam and Haiti" in red letters.
Sara Lechtenberg, Overland Park law student, said the agreement was typical of Haiti's unpredictable political atmosphere.
"In Haiti, you never know what will happen," said Lechtenberg, who has visited Haiti four times to study and complete service projects. "Only when the changes happen will I really believe that the agreement worked."
Lechtenberg acknowledged that Clinton and his negotiators had done their best but said they were setting themselves up for disaster.
"Clearly, this is a compromise and not what we really wanted," she said. "It's a ridiculous idea because there is no mandate for the military leaders to leave. This is so very typical of politics in Haiti."
James Nasser, Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, sophomore, spent the first 19 years of his life in Haiti. He said the agreement should be
"I believe Cedras and Blamby eventually will leave," Nasser said. "I think they realize their time is up."
While the transition will not be immediate, Nasser said Aristide would return to the presidency and a more peaceful atmosphere
would be achieved.
The transition won't happen in two years, but it will happen, perhaps in 10 years," he said. "When I was younger, it was more peaceful, and people weren't afraid to go out. I hope it will be like that again when I go back."
Campus acts as an obstacle Life on the Hill is not always accessible for disabled persons
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
F
“It’s rare to get anything before 10,” said Steward, who has to call a city transportation service to send a wheelchair-accessible van to her home each day.
Julie Steward spends most of her morning finding a ride to campus.
Sean R. Crosier/ KANSAN
Steward is a research assistant in the Research and Training Center of Independent Living, a campus program that teaches the appropriate language to describe a disability, shows those with disabilities different living options and educates others about disabilities. She also is a wheelchair user.
Steward said gaining access to campus buildings sometimes was as tough as finding a van.
"It varies from building to building a little bit," she said.
Steward said Carruth O'Leary Hall did not have an elevator. Wheelchair users can enter the building only on the basement and first floor levels.
Lippincott Hall also does not have good elevator access for students in wheelchairs, she said. The elevator only goes to the second and fourth floors of the building.
Steward said she thought many wheelchair users complained about curb cuts, the areas where curbs were removed for wheelchair accessibility, near the Kansas Union. The cuts near the Union are not in the same places on each side of the street, forcing wheelchair users into the street — and into traffic.
Doors are also a problem for wheelchair users. Steward said.
"If I were trying to open the door, it would be nearly impossible for me to maneuver my chair, open the door and carry my books," she said. "You should be able to park beside the door and open it."
Steward said the stacks at the Anschutz Science Library also were too narrow for a wheelchair. Wheelchair users needed help finding books, and she did not know if the staff at the library was prepared to retrieve books for them. Blake Hall is another building on campus with difficult wheelchair accessibility, Steward said. There is a bathroom only on every other floor.
She said accessibility problems in many other campus buildings included the height of elevator buttons and drinking fountains, cracks in the sidewalks, small elevators and lack of access to a bathroom on every floor.
"Dole is an excellent example of accessibl- erson," she said. "It was built to access standards."
But, Steward said, at least one campus building was accessible to wheelchair users.
Bob Burke, the founder of Access USA, a wheelchair-accessibility advocacy group, said colleges and universities were required by law to provide students with wheelchair accessibility if possible, even if only one student used it.
For example, if one student has class in a building without an elevator and the class meets on the second floor, the school has to accommodate the student.
"You can't deny a student education because of a lack of access," Burke said.
Access group meets tonight
By Ashley Miller
Kansan staff writer
Although most of the KU campus is wheelchair accessible, some parts are not. Organizations that advocate wheelchair accessibility are trying to help students solve this problem.
Access USA will present a seminar at 7 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in Lawrence Memorial Hospital to discuss accessibility problems, employment of people with a disability and other issues, said Bob Burke, founder of the wheelchair accessibility advocacy group. The group often addresses problems such as wheelchair-accessible parking, building accessibility and legislation.
The meeting is open to anyone interested in wheelchair accessibility, especially those interested in filing a complaint.
Most people that complain about accessibility are disabled. Burke said.
However, some individuals file complaints because they are sensitive to accessibility issues or know someone who needs wheelchair accessibility, he said.
Burke said people filed complaints because businesses, colleges and cities throughout the state often did not meet the access requirements outlined in the Americans with Disabilities Act. Accessibility problems often are not solved unless a complaint is filed.
Mike Shuttic, assistant director of the Student Assistance Center, said the act did not require all buildings to be accessible to wheelchair users. For example, if wheelchair users cannot attend a class they are taking because the building is not accessible, the class can be moved to a different building.
Both Burke and Shuttic said they only knew of a few complaints against accessibility at the University.
"I know KU is the only college in Kansas that meets the criteria for parking," Burke said.
Burke worked with Don Kearns, parking director, to regulate the wheelchair-accessible parking on campus. The criteria included posted signs, access to the curb and parking spaces closest to the door of a building, he said.
INSIDE Taking punishment
A hard hit during
Saturday's game
against Texas
Christian has taken
Kansas senior
quarterback Asheikd
Preston out of the
line-up indefinitely.
NO1530
Pazo 18.
Labels attempt to distinguish Hispanic identities
By Nathan Olson
Kansan staff writer
KU's Hispanic American Leadership Organization and the Student Organization of Latinos at Rockhurst College in Kansas City, Mo., serve the same populations.
Around the country and at KU, many Hispanic students are examining words others use to describe them and words they use to describe themselves.
But what those populations call themselves differs.
John Augusto, Topeka graduate student, said some of the words referred to geographic regions.
"Many people in the Southwest of the United States call themselves Chicano, while in the East, it's more Latino and Puerto Rican," he said.
Augusto said the different terms were part of Hispanic culture.
"The Southwest has more indigenous
---
people, while the East Coast has more people of a Latin accent," he said.
Another division between the names revolves around history, said Eladio Valdez III, Kansas City, Kan., senior.
Valdez said the term Chicano implied an alignment with Mexico's indigenous people, while Hispanic referred to the entire population of Spanish-speaking people. Latino emphasizes the influence of the Catholic Church and implies a mild protest of the term Hispanic, which is used for census purposes. Hispanic is seen by some as an acceptable term Americans have created for Spanish-speaking people.
"For political reasons I'll say I'm Hispanic because that groups all Spanish-speaking people together." Valdez said.
"The trend in my family is that people 30 and over are bilingual, and people 60 and over speak only Spanish. But some of the little kids are starting to learn Spanish."
Valdez, whose grandparents immigrated from Mexico in about 1915, said he grew up in a Mexican-American family but went to a predominantly Caucasian, Catholic school.
"The only thing I didn't learn as a child was the language," he said. "But I learned the culture and the values.
Octavio Hinojosa, Hutchinson senior,
said that he considered himself more Mexican than American.
Hinojosa said he also used the term Hispanic.
"I say my family is from Mexico," said Hinojosa, whose family moved to the United States in 1975 from Mexico. "That's my identity, my background."
"I say I'm Hispanic-American to Anglo- Americans because that associates me with other Hispanics," he said.
But, he said, he wasn't always comfortable with the terms.
"When I was between 9 and 12 years old, I went through a self-denial of identity as a Mexican because I wanted to be an average American boy," he said.
Hinojosa said that his self-denial was common among first-generation immigrants. Often, Hinojosa said, they are forced to choose between Hispanic and American cultures.
"The change for me occurred in the summer of 1983, when my mother hired a tutor for me while I was on vacation in Mexico," he said.
Hinojosa said his Spanish was broken, and he had forgotten much of the culture. The summer in Mexico, however, changed him.
"It made me more aware of my Hispanic aspects and culture," he said.
أد
2A
Tuesday, September 20, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
☆
Horoscopes
By Jean Dixon
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF OUR LIFE: This could be your luckiest year! Make those in authority aware of your leadership skills by taking the initiative at business meetings. A change of environment could benefit you financially as well as emotionally. New domestic arrangements will be better for both you and a child. Know your priorities. Seek additional sources of income.
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE. movie star Sophia Loren, hockey's Guy La Fleur, newscaster Pia Lindsorm,inzza jazz "Jel红" Morton.
♂
Gi
ARIES (March 21-April 19) When drawing up a work schedule, consult someone who is both experienced and devoted to you. Acting impatient with a supervisor or client is a no-not Spend the evening with longtime Friends
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Neither you nor your mate should feel shey about making your feelings or views known. A relationship based on trust will flourish. Do something behind the scenes to help a friend who is having difficulties.
69
Leo
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): If there is work to be done, pitch right in. Influential people will be impressed. Save time and effort by being well informed about recent developments in your field. Decisiveness leads to greater success.
1
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your diligence could rub off on your co-workers now. Pay close attention to details. Someone makes a convincing argument for a policy change. Let a new admirer know exactly what you want.
π
♞
WP
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Inspiration strikes early this morning, resulting in profitable financial activities. A shopping bargain improves your home. Fortitude influences act as a stimulant for our ambitions. Keep all business dealings strictly aboveboard.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) The next two days will be great for financial transactions. Give further thought to a real estate investment. The contacts you make now will help you later on. Seek valuable introductions.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). You get a chance, thanks perhaps to a VIP, to add the finishing touches to yesterday's rewarding developments. Be appreciative. Look for the cause of a family upset tonight, then talk things out.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
You now find a way to successfully combine your home-front interests with your efforts to get ahead professionally. You will have to burn the midnight oil to accomplish your goals.
Seek your mate's support.
VS
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sep 22): Joint ventures enjoy highly favorable influences now. Be supportive of your co-workers' efforts. A desire to do something original should be encouraged. The tempo picks up in romance.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) The more charm you turn on in the weeks ahead, the more you will profit from any pending financial deals. Arrange a lunch date with someone you would like to know better. Pay the tab.
水
AQURAI U(S) Jan, 20-Feb. 18). Financial changes are in the wind. Show your flexible, practical mind-set. Someone tips you off to a real bargain. Emphasize ethics and morality on the road to business stardom. Guard any company secrets.
X
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) The emphasis now is on getting enough exercise to boost your energy level. Pace yourself when working out. Loved one could put the kibosh on romance. Back off.
TODAY'S CHILDREN are imaginative, industrious and quick to set others at ease. Rarely overwhelm themselves, these Virgos will be stunned when their success arouses jealousy in others. They have a strong sense of justice that could lead them to become political activists. Count on them to write or create something that will strike a responsive chord with the public. A late marriage would probably be best for these independent and privacy-loving Virgos.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60404, 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. 60404. 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 864-7317.
American Meteorological Society will meet at 4 p.m. today at 3092 Malott Hall. For more information, call Robyn Weeks at 864-4547.
Japan Karate-Do Ryobu-Kai Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call Dan Blood at 864-7029.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Jacqueline Flannigan at 864-8219.
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and Cindy Chamberlain will sponsor "Women's Self-Defense and Empowerment," seminar at 7 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Renee Speicher at 864-3552.
Water Polo Club will meet at 7 tonight at Robinson Natoratium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873.
College Republicans will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Parlors in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Carl Erickson at 865-2417.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Natatorium. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
John Hendrix at 864-5861
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor Human Services Committee at 8 tonight at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries and Lutheran Campus Ministries will sponsor Taize Evening Prayer at 8:30 tonight at Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Ellen at 841-5424.
Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow at Wescoe Beach. For more information, call Mark Wilson at 865-0066.
KU Study Abroad in French-
speaking countries will sponsor
an informational meeting at 4 p.m.
tomorrow in 4058 Wesco Hall.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Linda Bell at 865-2950.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Campanile hill. For more information, call Amy Trainer at 832-8381.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Scott McMillian at 842-4225.
marjuanha she had smoked 15 minutes earlier. She told police she feared that another drug had been put in the marjuanha. The student was not taken to the hospital.
A 21-year old man was arrested and charged with criminal trespassing at McCollum Hall on Sunday, KU police reported.
■ KU police and Douglas County Ambulance Services responded to a call Friday evening from a student at Oliver Hall who said she was having a bad reaction to the
The words "Vietnam" and "Haii" were written in red lipstick or crayon on the upper left corner of the Vietnam Memorial between West Campus Road and Memorial Drive, KU police reported Sunday. The words were cleaned off later that afternoon.
KU police and Douglas County Ambulance Services responded to a call Thursday morning from a female student at Oliver Hall who said she had taken 60 laxatives the night before. The student was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
ON THE RECORD
TODAYS TEMPS
A video cassette player valued at $75 was stolen on Thursday from Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union, KU police reported.
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
Weather
Partly cloudy. South winds 10 m.p.h.
TODAY
WEDNESDAY
79° * **61***
79° * **60***
81° * **58***
82° * **60***
83° * **58***
72° * **63***
77° * **62***
82° * **59***
81° * **58***
81° * **62***
83° * **60***
82° * **61***
83° * **61**
Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers.
THURSDAY
Cloudy and cooler with a chance of showers.
7050
8358
8257
H I G H L O W
Source: Glenn Martin. KU Weather Service: 864-3300
September 19, 1994
Stock market report
$
Dow Jones
3.37
3,936.72
NYSE
0.14
259.63
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 272,800,000
↑
Advances 964
DOWN
0.83
777.08
Declines 1,209
-
Unchanged 709
ASE
1.27
461.13
SUNFLOWER
GET OUT!
Royal Robbins
Dependable outdoor wear
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
Lawrence's Largest Supplier of Darkroom Materials 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
Camera America ONE HOUR PHOTO
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
KMS
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY
WAREHOUSE
& HASSELLING
520 West 23rd
841-5885
FULL MIDDLE REDKEN
---
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 SERVIC
864-9500
State Radiator
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
Student Friendly
We repair
Brass, Aluminum,
& Plastic Radiators
Heaters, water pumps, and
A/C service too!
842-3333
Busy days? Watkins Pharmacy is open Monday-Thursday nights.
MY INCOME
DISCOVER
YARNBARN
VISA
"We Care For KU
Beginning and Intermediate Knitting Classes Starting Soon!
*Sept. 19
*Oct. 4
*Oct. 26
Beginning Knitting: Learn by making a sweater! $20.00 for 8 weeks. 20% off class yarns.
Since WATKINS 1907
(Mon)
(Tue)
(Wed)
7-9 p.m.
7-9 p.m.
7-9 p.m.
Complete schedule of all classes available at Yarn Barn. 842-4333·918 Mass. St.
YARNBARN
Now Available!
KU Bookstore REBATE
Over $2,400,000 returned to date.
Now accepting receipts from the Spring'94 semester for rebate payments.
Receipts (period 95) from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 7% rebate at the Customer Service counter of the KU Bookstores until the end of December,1994.
KU student I.D. required.
KU
KU
COOKSTORES
Ks. Union 864-4640
Burge Un. 864-5697
Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
I KNOW WHAT I KNOW. WE COME & WE GO. IT'S IN THE BACK OF MY EYES.
The End.
ICONOGRAPHICS
ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTERS
ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTERS
MOVIE TRAVELING MOVIE POSTER SHOW ON THE PLANET
LARGEST TRAVELING MOVIE
MON., SEPT. 19 TO FRI. SEPT. 23
KANSAS UNION GALLERY
9AM - 5PM LEVEL 4, KS. UNION
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 20,1994
3A
G
Julianne Peter / KANSAN
James Carothers, professor of English, read excerpts from "University Days," an essay by James Thurber, to high school seniors. Carothers was conducting a mock classroom yesterday as part of Crimson and Blue Preview Days.
Visiting seniors sample KU life
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
The nine high school seniors who went to James Carothers' mock classroom yesterday morning in Haworth Hall might not have expected him to spend the hour poking fun at college classes.
But to the delight of the seniors, Carothers, professor of English, read excerpts from humorist James Thurber's essay, "University Days," an account of humiliating classroom experiences from Thurber's time as a student at Ohio State University.
Carothers' presentation was a part of Crimson and Blue Preview Days, a recruiting program for high school seniors organized by the Office of Admissions. The program, which included campus tours and academic advising in addition to the mock classrooms, was the first of five weekly Crimson and Blue Preview Days.
The preview days replace Senior Day, a one-day recruiting program for high school seniors.
Deborah Castrop, director of the Office of Admissions, said the one-day program had gotten too big.
Last year's Senior Day drew almost 1,200 seniors — too many for one day. Castrado said.
"We think a lot of prospective students see the University of Kansas as large and impersonal," she said.
Castrop said that adding the mock classrooms and making the recruitment program smaller and more personal would help dispel that notion.
About 150 seniors and 50 parents attended yesterday's program, she said.
Some of the seniors who were assigned to Carothers' presentation agreed that the program was personal.
"You got to talk to the teacher," said Allison Mayes, a senior from Junction City High School.
Megan Williams, a senior from Gardner High School, said the mock classroom was a good idea because it showed what a college class was like.
"It made you think," she said.
I would you join, she said. Williams said she planned to attend KU.
Other seniors liked the content of the mock classroom more than the concept.
"It was funny," said La Ronna Lassiter, a senior from Highland Park High School in Topeka.
Four other professors also gave presentations to different groups of seniors. Presentations included "Crazy Traffic Signs," given by Tom Mulinazzi, professor of engineering, and "Atoms, Molecules and Ions: A Microscopic View of Air Surroundings," given by Grover Everett, professor of chemistry.
The professors who were asked to give the presentations all have won teaching awards, said Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Carothers said he agreed to conduct a mock classroom because he felt obligated to help recruit good students.
"Recruiting students is nominally the job of Student Affairs, but we all have responsibilities." Carothers said.
Too darn hot
A Lawrence firefighter assesses the damage to a basement apartment in the Orchard Corners apartment complex. A passer-by noticed smoke coming from the apartment's windows around 2:30 p.m.yesterday and then called the fire department. Fire damage was contained to one apartment, mostly in the living area. Adjoining apartments suffered smoke damage.
City wants land for bike path; University is cautious
H
Planning committee not ready to give up West Campus land
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
Thomas Harmon, Lawrence, senior, rides his bike home from school on the bike path along Clinton Parkway. The city wants to build a similar bike path on University-owned land between 15th Street and Clinton Parkway west of Crescent Drive.
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
City officials may have the money and the energy to build bike paths on West Campus, but the University of Kansas isn't quite ready for them yet.
University planners have delayed a proposal by the City of Lawrence to build a mile-long bike path between 15th Street and Clinton Parkway. Although the money is present, planners haven't looked that far ahead yet, said Max Lucas, dean of architecture. Lucas is also head of the University Long Range Planning Committee steering committee.
"It takes time to get it done," he said. "We're shooting for next summer or early fall."
The city had requested an easement — or permission to assume partial control of a small area of land — from the Kansas University Endowment Association for the northern half of the trail this summer. Should the association, which owns the land, allow the easement, the city would contract a construction company to build a 10-foot-wide paved bicycle path along an area creek.
But the planning committee hasn't completed its study of the future of West Campus, Lucas said, and that area of campus is expanding quickly. He said the committee wasn't sure whether the space the path would take up might be needed for a future building, for example.
"West Campus is an important area for the University, and it's going to be looked over very thoroughly," Lucas said.
The city received the money for the bike paths from the federal government as part of a grant, said Mike Wildgen, city manager. He said the government gave the city $257,000 under its Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991, which allows local governments to request federal funds to improve transportation.
Wildgen said the trail especially would appeal to students, many of whom use the bike paths along Clinton Parkway.
Bikes on brakes
The City of Lawrence was given $257,000 by the Federal Government in April to build a mile-long bicycle path. However, the path must go through University land, and University planners are unsure whether they have room for it.
15th Street
Disputed area
proposed bike hall
University of Kansas property
Kasold Drive
Clinton Parkway
Iowa Street
Source: Kansan staff research Dave Campbell / KANSAN
In a letter this summer to Allen Wiechert, University architect, Wildgen said the money would be saved until the project went up to bid in 1996. This would give the University more time to come up with its plan, he said.
Daryl Beene, senior vice president with property management for the endowment association, said the University was interested in the bike paths but could not commit to them yet.
"Sure, we're interested," he said. "We can appreciate the need and the beautification aspects of the path. But we also have a responsibility to create a plan for West Campus."
The Lowest EVERYDAY CD Prices in Lawrence
KIEF'S CDs/TAPES
AND...
- 25% OFF SAVINGS! Get 25% Off Retail ANYDAY with our BUY 5/GET 25 Program.
- LOWEST PRICES ON NEW RELEASES! Every TUESDAY we'll have the week's new releases at Lawrence's Lowest Sale Price. (Look for the Lowest Price on the new LIZ PHAIR, Tuesday, Sept. 20.)
DON'T FORGET. . .
- KIEF'S BUYS, SELLS, AND TRADES USED CDs!!
4th & Iowa St. R.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES 913*843*1811 913*842*1438 913*842*1544
4A
Tuesday, September 20, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Commissioner profits from 'transients" rent
COLUMNIST
CHRIS STONG
Jim Chappell says students don't contribute to the community, but we do contribute to his wallet.
I really don't feel as if I am a transient. But there is at least one man is this county who thinks I am, Jim Chappell. He called you that, too. At a July county commission meeting he said, "There are 25,000 people who come here and live for nine months and pay no taxes here, and they are major contributors to our jail population and to our municipal court population and to our court system."
The problem is, Chappell is complaining about the system he profits from. When the police keep Lawrence safe, he protects his pocketbook. For every student "tying up" the courts and police, there are hundreds paying rent to Chappell to live on his properties. It certainly wasn't my idea to hire all of these nice police officers. As far
as I know, police really don't do much more than write as many tickets as they can and begin the process that Mr. Chappell complains about. Very rarely do the police stumble onto a crime other than traffic violations, even minor ones, and keep it from being committed. If they did their popular image would be considerably more heroic. Headlines would read: "Police Crack Assailant's Skull, Prevent Rape" and "Officer Crashes Car Jacker's Efforts, Saves Family of Nine"—you just never see that.
On consideration, I can not find any fault with the police. They have never stumbled upon me when I was committing any crimes, and the rest of my contact with them has been no more than annoying: "Hey, you. Get down
from there — you can't cumo city trees." Is it against the law? "Yes — it's trespassing on city property" I laughed, making matters worse. But that is exactly the sort of relationship I have with the Lawrence police, excepting speeding tickets and high-speed chases. We all know the police are civil servants, guardians of public safety. Still we sometimes may be upset with that idea. But only because they never seem to do what we would like them to do. And this is where the fault lies: It's the brass that give them marching orders.
These sorts of enforcement policies give the community a great deal. Lawrence is the safest city I ever have lived in, and the citizens, including students, get a lot for what they pay.
But Chappell gets something no student gets — protection for his rental properties and a nice big fat tax cut. His plan is nothing more than a scam to increase his own profits.
And not only at the students' expense. Everyone in the county pays sales tax. By the same percent he can reduce his property taxes, he can increase his profit — it's not only smart on his part, it's his best reason to be in office. Consider a $10 weekly increase at the register and thousands returned in reduced taxes April 15, ad infinitum.
Unfortunately, Chappell is right. Students are transients; political transients. David Stevens, who helps head the Student Political Awareness Task Force, said in jest, "If we could get 25
percent of our student body to vote and keep the rest of Douglas County at its current voter turnout, we could take every seat on the commission and the office of mayor!" Stevens has a great idea: Vote.
Any citizen of the United States can register in Douglas County and still have time to vote against tax increases. I hope they do because the subtlety of Chappell's argument and his profit sharing plan lie just below the surface. You do pay property taxes. Not once a year like Chappell, but once a month, in the form of rent. And as you know, slum lords never lower rent.
Chris Stong is a Lawrence senior in philosophy.
VIEWPOINT
Student Senate must alter fiscally irresponsible habit
Student Senate shouldn't sponsor bills that give a disproportionate amount of money to groups that have a limited potential impact on the lives of KU students. With the budget crunch problems of last year still fresh in many students' minds, Senate needs to set a more fiscaly responsible tone to prevent budget shortfalls in fiscal year 1995.
At the start of the fiscal year 1994, the total amount of money in the unallocated account, which is used to fund student organizations, was listed at more than $42,000. Later in the year this account was increased by $20,000 from reserves because of the pressure on Senate by groups that wanted to be funded. But even with this $20,000 increase, Senate was $9,348.48 over budget. This set the precedent that it is acceptable to ignore fiscal responsibility and, in turn, refuse to cut the proposed funds of organizations that have little potential benefit for KU students.
Senate can reverse this precedent tonight by dramatically reducing the amount of money requested by Pinch magazine. If the $4,700 bill to fund the magazine passes Senate,the representative body will have reaffirmed the dangerous precedent that groups with limited outreach to KU students can receive more funding than other groups that are both open and accessible to every person on campus.
Senate should remember that the Chinese Student Association, Women's Student Union and Students for Wildcare each received less than $500 last year. But yet each group can potentially benefit any KU student through increased knowledge of a particular culture or the environment. If Pinch magazine is funded for its full request of $4,700, Senate will be hard-pressed to justify its meager apportionments to the other student organizations.
Because Pinch magazine is only published once during the school year, and not all of the distribution sites for the magazine are located on campus, Pinch magazine isn't a good buy at the proposed $4,700 price tag.
Pinch magazine has every right to continue publishing and distributing its magazine on this campus. However, Senate shouldn't continue to overexpand its checkbook to accommodate organizations that have minimal impacts on this campus.
LANCE HAMBY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
JEN CARR Business manager
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Editors
News ... Sara Bennoff
Editorial ... Donella Hauser
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
Mellissa Lacey
Features ... Traci Carl
Planning Editor ... Susan White
Design ... Noah Musser
Assistant to the editor ... Robbie Johnson
Editors
PAT BOYLE Accounting
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Todd Winters
Regional mgr ... Laureth Guath
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 Niahaus
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include use of the registered name, telephone number, Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown information.
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 mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
NECESSITIES FOR DOING LAUNDRY AT ELLSWORTH...
SOAP
BLEACH
SOAP
BLEACH
EXTINGUISHER
HOOD VOK'14
HOOD VOK 14
EXTINGUISHER
FIRE
Environs wants buses to clean up
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Nicholas Shump needs to get his facts straight the next time he starts untactfully attacking people who realize and seek the need for change. In his rebuttal to Chris Stong's column about the pollution the buses create on campus, Mr. Shump was blatantly misinformed about what KU Environments advocates. First, I challenge him to find any bicyclists who do not agree that the buses should be required to clean up the black cloud of smoke spewing from tailpipes. Enviros does advocate mass transit but not at the risk of every bike's health and safety. We would also like to see cars restricted from campus during the main class period and bike lanes put in their place. Except for the services provided for handicapped students, cars are a nuisance and only put those in danger who do get off their backsidees and bike or walk to class. As anyone can see, these ideas are neither radical nor representative of the "shoddy thinking" Mr. Shump claims to have encountered with past environmentalists.
And NO!! nothing is more important than clean air!' I am sure that there are many scientists and professors who would be thoroughly interested in Mr. Shump's theory on
how we can live without it. Maybe if he had ever even been caught once on his bike behind a bus, he would understand the effect that inhaling a black cloud of smoke can have on your lungs. Furthermore, if being "self-righteous" means attempting to make the world we live in a cleaner place, then I guess all the Environs members are guilty as charged. Quite a crime we're committing, don't you think?
Amy Trainer President, KU Environs
Chris Stong's article, "Bus System has out-polluted its welcome here" lists the goals of the KU on Wheels bus system but says they are not being met and then goes on to argue only one drawback of the buses: pollution. The article deals very well with the problems that the Lawrence Bus Co.'s buses have in noise and air pollution, but what about the advantages of the buses? These buses do reduce gasoline consumption, parking lots, traffic and arguish for students who don't live on campus or who don't have the time to walk 20 minutes to and from classes. Where would all of the students driving in from their residences west of Iowa Street, east of Kentucky Street, north of Ninth Street and south of 19th Street park Chris? How would Watkins Health Center handle all of the freshmen from Daisy Hill with frostbite in January, who tried to walk from their 10:30 class to lunch at Mrs. E's and then back to campus for their 1:30 class? What about students who can't afford a car or even a bike? What about students who don't have the 300-plus dollars for a bike with 12 speeds to ascend the campus hills? I think you get my point.
Good of buses outweighs bad
Although I do ride my bike or walk to campus from the Jayhawker Towers and do not like riding behind buses. I also possess a bus pass. Fifty bucks and a 100 step walk is a good deal for warm winter transportation, and a few dozen buses can't be as polluting as hundreds of cars. The campus buses might be loud and crowd Jayhawk Boulevard during class time, but in reality, you can't have your cake and eat it too. Maybe a more attainable solution for bikers would be a bike land on the boulevard, instead of no boulevard…think about it Chris, wouldn't that be nice?
Seth Fine
Glenview, Ill., sophomore
COLUMNIST
KATHY KIPP
I got a call today. It was from Ramsey, a high school friend who now resides in Fort Bragg, N.C., and calls himself Private Airborne. I had just received a package from him, and I was glad he was calling. I could say thank you without footing the bill.
Military rituals are irritating but necessary
"Hey, how's it going? This is Ramsev."
"OK. I got your package, thanks." "Listen, I don't really have that much time to talk. I just called Baskin Robbins. Now, I am calling you. I miss you. Remember to watch the news. If there is anything you can tell someone that I said, it's that news is important; you have a right to know. You have to watch what is going on and come up with your own conclusion; I can't tell you. I really hope I still get to see you at Christmas. Well, I really have to go."
"All right, take care."
"I love you, too."
"You too. Watch the news. I love you."
Not your everyday conversation.
As I hung up, I looked at my roommates. I knew they had been listening,
and I was sure they would ask why I had told Ramsey I loved him.
"Bye." Click.
"He's going to Haiti," I said. "I know it. He didn't say, but he once told us that if he ever got sent there, he wouldn't be able to let us know. He is in the special forces or something. They monitor the phone conversations. They cut us off once, that's why he couldn't tell me straight off."
"Well, I guess this means old Pvt. Ramsito is heading off to Haiti. It irritates me, though, that he can't just tell us."
After that I walked up to my room and sat on my bed and did something I rarely ever do. I got pissed off. Normally, I love my country. I sing the national anthem; I go to Fourth of July parades; I tried to get upset about the baseball strike, and I eat apple pie. But not today. Today I am irritated. I am irritated with the military and all of its little quirks and rituals and secrets that make them what they are. I am irritated with democracy and bureaucracy. I am irritated with our involvement in Haiti. But most of all, I am irritated with the fact that these things are, in an abstract way, necessary
The phone just rang. It was forme. It was Amber, one of my best friends from home. She just got the same abstract call.
"I hate being irritated."
Kathy Kipp is a Woolridge, ill., sophomore in English
HUBIE
UHHHHHH
WHAT HAPPENED?
LICK
LICK
UHHHHH
WHAT HAPPENED?
LICK LICK
YOU RAMMED THAT VE-HICLE OF YOURS INTO THE BACK OF OUR CAR, SONNY!
YER! WE'LL SEE YOU IN COURT!
OH THAT'S JUST GREAT! MAYBE IF YOU WEREN'T DRIVING SLOWER THAN SNOT, I WOULDN't BE IN THIS SITUATION!!!
SIGH
WELL, AT LEAST NOW I KNOW THAT MY TRIP TO HELL WAS JUST A DREAM.
MAJOR PORESA-DOWING
OH NO YA DON'T! WE KNOW OUR RIGHTS! WE'LL SUE BACK UNTIL YOU HAVEN'T GOT A POT TO—
AAAAAAH!
GET YOUR SCRUNKY BUT BACK HERE!
By Greg Hardin
YE! WE'LL SEE YOU IN COURT!
SIGH
AMAAH!
GET YOUR SCRUNKY GOT BACK HERE!
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 20, 1994
5A
Haiti's future still in crucial stages
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — By air and sea, U.S. troops swept peacefully into Haiti on Monday to help usher in a new dawn of democracy after a long night of dictatorship in this poor, backward land.
The first GIs dropping in by helicopter at Port-au-Prince airport met no resistance. Down at the harbor, jubilant Haitians elambered over fences to welcome other arriving soldiers.
"We're free! We're free!" one man shouted.
"The mission still has risks," President Clinton said at a White House news conference.
Day 1 in Haiti
Although Haiti's military chiefs, by pledging to surrender power, kept the Americans from shooting their way in, a key uncertainty clings to Sunday's last-minute deal: Will next month's promised transition back to an elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, take place without new turmoil and bloodsed?
NAITI INTERVENTION
But the Americans still faced some tough challenges.
Highlights of the first day of U.S. military intervention in Healt:
1
Harbor secured:
By Coast Guard cutter, two
U.S. warships
Airport secured:
Cuba
2
Airport secured:
Black Hawks, Cobras from warships deliver troops
Dom. Rep.
Negotiations:
Reld commander Gen. Henry Shelton negotiates change of control with Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras
Hai
ti
Port-au Prince Bay
3
6,000 to 8,000 troops as well as vehicles,arms,food medicine to arrive by day's end; people in countryside told of coalition's arrival
4
Logistics:
Port-au-Prince
Port-au-Prince (population: about 500,000)
International Airport
Ouest Rue
Frère
Military
Academy
U.S.
Embassy
Route de Delhaye
Naval
Station
stadium
Mile
Officer's
Club
Cedros'
house
Carter brokers last-minute deal with Haiti
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Former President Jimmy Carter could feel peace slipping from his grasp when Brig. Gen. Philippe Biamby walked into Haiti's military headquarters with a cellular telephone and bad news: American invasion forces were on the wav.
The Haitians thought they were tricked, that the Carter team's negotiations were only a diversion to keep them occupied while U.S. troops pounced. "We saw the entire agreement coming apart," Carter said yesterday.
So did President Clinton, who wanted the negotiating team cleared out of Haiti before his invasion force arrived Sunday night. "I, frankly, had come to the conclusion that we were not going to reach an agreement," he told reporters.
Clinton played a dangerous game of
diplomatic chicken — all at once controlling warplanes in the sky and negotiators on the ground. Carter stubbornly refused to forsake talks for war, pleading for just a little more time.
Clinton hesitated. "This is uncomfortable for me," he replied, "I'm going to have to order you out of there in 30 minutes. You've got to get out!"
The warplanes were closing in on Haiti when Carter finally engineered a deal. As a result, U.S. troops landed yesterday without drawing a shot.
The story behind how he brokered the deal and how Clinton walked to the precipice of a military strike is a tale of cliffhanger diplomacy.
Almost immediately after the speech, Clinton agreed to send Carter, retired Gen. Colin Powell and
It began Thursday, moments after Clinton told the nation that he had exhausted diplomatic efforts to remove Haiti's dictators peacefully.
Sen. Sam Num, D-Ga., to Haiti in one last-ditch effort at negotiating. Their mission: persuade the military leaders to leave the country and avert an invasion. Their deadline: noon Sunday.
The team arrived at midday Saturday, commencing an exhausting 22 hours of negotiations during a day and a half.
The third meeting with military leader Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras had just gotten under way when, a thousand nules away, Clinton agreed to send off plane-loads of paratroopers for the invasion. It took only two words: "Pack 'em."
The negotiators persuaded Cedras to go to the presidential palace and meet with President Emile Jonassaint. The president was told about Clinton's demand for a deadline, and finally, Jonassaint spoke "Isaytoyou that we'll have peace, not war," Carter quoted him as saying.
SUBMIT ART
FOR THE
SUA
EXHIBITION
OF
KU STUDENT
PAINTINGS
EXHIBITION DATES:
SEPT. 26 TO OCT. 8
KANSAS UNION GALLERY
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT
SUA OFFICE LEVEL 4,
KS. UNION
9AM TO 5PM M-F
APPS DUE BY...
WED. SEPT. 21
5PM
SAME OFFICE
OPEN TO
ALL STUDENTS
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
NOW OPEN!!
Downtown Lawrence
Off 10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
The largest record store in Lawrence
128 private listening stations
Espresso Bar by La Prima Tazza
$2 OFF
The End.
Downtown Lawrence
10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
$2 OFF ANY
COMPACT DISC
Must present coupon. Expires September 23, 1994.
Valid on regularly priced CDs of $10.99 or more. Limit one per purchase.
6A
Tuesday, September 20, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228
Make an impression
plaques, awards, & gifts
Jaybowl ENGRAVING
864-3545 • kansas union • level I
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS
MON. SEPT. 19 TO WED. SEPT. 21
Gay & Lesbian Film Fest
Mon. 9:30 PM
Tues. 7:00 PM
Prick Up Your Ears
Tues. 9:30 PM
Wed. 7:00 PM
Breakfast at Tiffany's
Wed. 9:30 PM
ALL SHOWS IN WOODRUFF AUD.
TICKETS $2.50, MONTHAGES $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVE CARD
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 P.M. ADULTS $3.00
(UNLIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSASUETTLEY 841-5191
TIMECOP® 5:00,7:15,9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
The Lion King® 5:15,7:30,9:30
Milk MoneyPB-13 5:00,7:15,9:30
A Good Man in Africa® 5:15,7:30,9:45
Clear & Present DangerPB-13 5:00,7:35
The ClientPB-13 5:00,7:15,9:30
CINEMA TWIN
1100 IOWA 841-5191 ALL SEATS $1.25
Blown Away® 5:00,7:20,9:45
4 Weddings & a Funeral® 5:00,7:25,9:45
SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 841 5191
$1.25
Blown.Away®
5:00,7:20,9:45
4Weddings&aFuneral®5:00,7:25,9:45
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
OFFEEI HOUSE
if interested in performing please sign up in the SUABox office by Wednesday September 21, 5pm
THURS. SEPT 22
MUSIC
7:00 P.M.
HAWK'S NEST TERRACE
COMEDY
free coffee free coffee.
GLOBAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS CO., LTD.
Rollerblades Used & CHEAP
Great skates, cheap! We RENT skates! We're selling our old RENTAL fleet. * quantities limited
- quantities limited
1029 Mass.
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
841-7529
THE NEWS in brief
LONDON
Health study predicts rise in smoking deaths
Deaths from cigarettes are likely to more than triple over the next quarter century to 20 every minute around the world, scientists warn in a new global survey.
The findings are in a book, "Mortality from Smoking in Developed Countries 1950-2000," to be published today by scientists at Britain's Imperial Cancer Research Fund, the World Health Organization and the American Cancer Society.
"Worldwide smoking is already killing 3 million people each year, and this number is increasing," said Richard Peto, a researcher at the Imperial Cancer Research Fund.
The new survey provides the most comprehensive analysis of the world's smokers, describing trends in smoking-related deaths since the 1950s and forecasting deaths into the next century. A previous study by the same authors two years ago covered the 1960s through the 1990s.
The new book covers 45 countries,15 more than the previous study. The additional nations are from eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
Sixty million deaths have been caused by smoking since the 1950s, the investigators estimate. They predict smoking will kill about 10 million people a year by 2020, the vast majority in developing countries where the habit continues to attract young women.
WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON Representatives give Clinton praise
Acting less than 12 hours after the first troops chopper into Haiti, the House called yesterday for the orderly withdrawal of all American forces "as soon as possible."
In a 1953-45 vote, lawmakers also offered a muted commendation for President Clinton and praised U.S. forces on the ground for their "professional excellence and dedicated patriotism."
The legislation underscored widespread opposition in the House to Clinton's earlier plans to invade Haiti, and lawmakers of both parties called for a more comprehensive airing of the administration's policy within several days.
Rep. David McCurdy, D-Okla., said that they were not supporting Clinton's policy on Haiti, or authorizing a long-term occupation.
WASHINGTON The world's big cities continue to grow
WASHINGTON
The bank issued the report as about 900 urban leaders gathered in Washington to find ways to bolster out-
The world's big cities are growing by a million people a week and will hold more than half the Earth's population within a decade, the World Bank said yesterday.
stripped health services before environmental risks worsen. Among the leaders was Henry Cisneros, U.S. secretary of housing and urban development.
Cisneros urged the conference to avoid unchecked growth, citing the consequences reaped in many U.S. cities: whole communities that are bereft of jobs, packed with poor people and generally unhealthy due to waste left behind by industry that left long ago.
"Empty buildings on contaminated lots. Toxic material buried in the ground, which no one will develop." Cisneros said. "The legacy of industrial pollution contributes to the poverty. These communities cannot sustain themselves."
WASHINGTON
Oregon's welfare mothers to get jobs
Oregon's welfare experiment, known as JOBS Plus, is the largest demonstration project in recent years involving wage subsidies for welfare recipients, experts say.
The Clinton administration gave Oregon final approval today to begin subsidizing private jobs for thousands of single mothers on welfare.
Waiivers of federal rules were required because Oregon will convert food stamps and Aid to Families with Dependent Children into cash and then use the money to subsidize temporary jobs for welfare recipients, most of them single mothers.
Participants will be paid no less than the Oregon minimum wage, $4.75 per hour, and will be eligible to receive the Earned Income Tax Credit, which pushes their hourly earnings above $6.
JOBS Plus is expected to place as many as 5,000 welfare recipients into real work jobs, most of them private and some public, throughout the next three years.
WASHINGTON
Technology lagging for virtual reality
People won't be exploring outer space or helping with heart surgery from the comfort of their homes unless the government aggressively pursues now-lagging technology to create virtual reality.
That's the conclusion of the National Research Council, which yesterday detailed a large gap between the expectations for virtual reality and the machinery that will make he futuristic concept possible.
Virtual reality is a concept in which people use computer programs and imaging hardware to experience a different place as if they were there.
People are already using some aspects of virtual reality: Remote-controlled robots take scientists to the ocean floor. Rural doctors beam live pictures of patients to specialists for help in diagnosis and even surgery from hundreds of miles away.
The options are limitless, from exploring outer space cheaper to developing new manufacturing processes,yesterday's report said.
But scientists lack the technology to make such long-awaited innovation a reality anytime soon — unless the government starts a major program to push this stagnating field along, the NRC said.
United Parcel Service Part time Jobs
ups
$8Hour
Interviews will be held Wednesday, Sept.21 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
ups
Sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union
E/O/Em/f
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20,1994
SECTION B
Three shots cost Kansas first place
Hairline fracture sidelines Preston
NOISEY
Texas Christian junior outside linebacker Lenoy Jones (left) and senior middle linebacker Mike Moulton sandwich Kansas senior quarterback Asheiki Preston. That hit forced Preston out of the game, and he will now be out of the linup indefinitely. BELOW: Lynn Bott, director of sports medicine, attends to Preston after Preston suffered game-ending injuries to his ribs.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
The beginning was not exactly a Rocky Mountain high, but the Kansas men's golf team climbed three spots to finish second in the Falcon/Cross Creek Invitational last weekend.
After two rounds of competition in the Colorado Springs, Colo., tournament, Kansas was tied for fifth place with Missouri and 13 strokes out of the lead. In the final round of play Sunday, however, the team's score of 293 put them in second place, only three strokes behind the tournament champion Minnesota.
"The team and myself gave away a lot of shots that would have won the tournament," junior Dan Rooney said.
Kansas men's golf coach Ross Randall said that on the final day the team kept up their intensity throughout the entire round. In the two previous rounds, the team lost several shots for par over the final four holes.
"We finished better the last day," Randall said. "We had a good round the last round."
Randall said Stearns and Rooney had career performances.
"With all the new players, I didn't really know what to expect," Randall said. "It's nice to see some of them step up."
All the Kansas golfers that competed in the tournament were there for the first time, Randall said.
Kansas' biggest hurdle in the invitational was the landscape. Set at the base of the Rocky Mountains, the Eisenhower Golf Course presented different putting conditions than the golfers had been used to, Randall said.
"We had a lot of missed putts," he said. "There are so many optical illusions that can fool you."
Rooney agreed that the greens posed problems for putting.
"We only got to putt the greens once before we played, but people adjusted as the tournament went on," he said.
New quarterback to start his first game for Hawks
By Matt Irwin
9
By Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter
Williams will replace senior quarterback Asheiki Preston. Preston is out indefinitely because of a hairline fracture to one rib and a partially collapsed lung.
Paul Kotz / KANSAM
When the Jayhawks march into Memorial Stadium to take on Alabama-Birmingham Saturday, they will be led by junior quarterback Mark Williams.
The Kansas football team is making a quarterback change.
"He was wearing a flak jacket," Kansas coach Glen Mason said. "One linebacker put a good clean hit on him but, because he was sandwiched, it resulted in a hairline fracture."
Preston was injured during the Jayhawks' 31-21 loss to Texas Christian when he was sandwiched by two Texas Christian defenders when he tried to scramble.
Mason said that Preston could return as soon as the Oct.6 Kansas State game or as late as the Oct. 22 Oklahoma game. The decision ultimately would be up to the medical staff, he said.
Mason said two factors would determine when Preston would return: the safety of Preston playing and the ability of Preston to play with pain.
Williams, who transferred from Diablo Valley Community College in Concord, Calif., has not played a down of football for Kansas, despite being listed as the No. 2 quarterback on the depth chart.
Williams was an All-league performer both junior college seasons, completing 309 of 419 passes for 4,194 yards and 32 touchdowns while operating in a run-and-shoot offense.
"Like I talked about all year long, we were going to try to redshirt Mark Williams," Mason said. "But I said if anything happened to Asheki Preston on a definite or indefinite basis, we would play him."
Big Eight teams challenge top ranks
By Matt Irwin
By Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter
Led by Nebraska and Colorado's thrashings of Top 25 teams, the Big Eight Conference was 5-3 this week.
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said he was happy with his team's defeat of 18th-ranked UCLA.
"I thought our defense played with a lot of intensity," Osborne said in the Big Eight coaches' briefing yesterday.
"The defense was going against the strongest part of their team, their offense."
Colorado destroyed a Big Ten Conference opponent, 16th-ranked Wisconsin, 55-17 at home. Next Saturday, the Buffalooes will face fourth-ranked Michigan in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Colorado coach Bill McCartney, who had been an assistant coach at Michigan, said he had always wanted to take one of his team's back to where he started his college coaching career in 1974.
"They don't have a weakness at any defensive position," McCartney said of the Michigan defense. "They all run like corners."
Big Eight offensive player of the week Kordell Stewart led the Buffaloes. With 301 total vards (249 vards
passing, 52 yards rushing), the senior quarterback moved into position to break Darian Hagan's school record for career total yards. With 156 yards this week, Stewart will pass Hagen.
Oklahoma coach Gary Gibbs said he was pleased with the team's new grass field but not with how his team was playing.
"The speed and quickness did hold up for both teams," Gibbs said of the teams' performance on the grass.
He said he was concerned about costly Sooner mistakes.
"We gave up too many big plays and we've got to secure the ball better," he said.
Volleyball team takes on Shockers
Kansan sportswriter
By Chesley Dohl
Kansas will go into the Wichita State volleyball match tonight cold turkey.
Instead of practicing yesterday, Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said the Jayhawks reviewed videotapes of the Jayhawks' match against Wichita State at the Colorado State Tournament Sept. 2 and Sept. 3.
Any leftover energy from a weekend tournament at Virginia Tech will have to get them by, Schonewise said.
"It's not so much that they're physically tired," she said. "The girls are coming off a big weekend, a road trip and lots of tests to prepare for. They're as much mentally fatigued as anything."
While watching videotape yesterday, the team discussed strategy that could stop Wichita State's strong middle blocker and outside hitters.
"We'll concentrate on blocking and serving," Schonehwa said. "Those will be the two big factors in the match."
Wichita State coach Phil Shoemaker said
that despite the Shockers' victory over Kansas in three games at the Colorado State Tournament, Wichita State would not overlook Kansas.
"Obviously Kansas is a young team, but they have athletic ability, a good tradition, they're well coached and they take pride in what they're out to accomplish." Shoemaker said. "They're just as capable as any other team in the conference."
When a program puts four freshman out on the court and they still compete, that definitely says something, Shoemaker said, referring to the Jawhawk's starting lineup.
"Experience works major wonders, and I'm sure they wish they could put the season in fast forward right now," he said. "It's a major transition from the high school to the college level. Time is all the Jayhawks really need."
good player, Shoemaker said.
The only thing Kansas lacked at this point in the season was experience, he said.
Wichita State returns fifth-year middle blocker Nona Saldana, an effective force at the net. Even though Saldana plays a major role for the Shockers, she is not the only
"We're a good team," he said. "We don't rely on any superstar player at any one position. As a group we far exceed the sum of our parts."
Wichita State freshman outside hitter Julia Schnurstein is another player the Jayhawks will have to shut down. Schonewise said.
While the Shockers are fine tuning their lineup, Schonewise is still trying to find six starters who work effectively together.
Tonight, Kansas will go with yet another lineup.
Freshman middle blockers Kendra Kahler and Maggie Morhfeld will defend the middle of the court, while junior outside hitter Tracie Walt and freshman setter Tiffany Sennett will play on the right side.
"We need to get the best lineup out on the court right now," Schonewise said. "We'll see who has the best chemistry and go from there."
Sophomore outside hitter Katie Walsh and freshman middle blocker Leslie Purkeypile will start out on the left side for the Jayhawks.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 21
Jav Thornton / KANSAN
Kansas junior outside hitter Jenny Larson bumps the ball across the net during a practice at Robinson Center. The Jayhawks play on the road against Wichita State tonight at 8.
BRIEFS
Herzog not interested in manager's position
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City Royals officials are denying a report that former Royals and St. Louis Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog would be offered the vacant job here.
General manager Herk Robinson and vice president George Brett acknowledge they have talked with Herzog about the job, but each say Herzog told them he is not interested.
"I asked him if he was general manager, who he would pick as manager, and he didn't say himself," Brett said.
The Royals fired manager Hal McRae the day after acting commissioner Bud Selig canceled the season due to the players strike.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Retired tennis player found dead at age 40
Police find no signs of drugs; cause of death not yet known
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — He didn't have Connors' back or Borg's forehand, but Vitas Geraldius had a heart, that kept him running through the longest matches. It got him as high as 0.3 in protennis 15 years ago, and it made his death at 40 past weekend all the more mysterious.
The Associated Press
"It's just baffling," said his agent, Chuck Bennett. "When you're 40 you gain a few inches around the middle, but Vitas was in great shape. He played golf every day."
Gerulatis' body was found Sunday in the guest cottage of an oceanfront estate in this affluent Long Island town. He was lying on the bed, fully clothed. Police said there were no signs of drugs or crime.
The medical examiner said that an autonsv vesterdav
afternoon did not indicate a cause of death and that further toxicological tests were being done.
Gerulaitis acknowledged using cocaine during the late 1970s and '80s and said that drugs and late nights undercut a career that was based on quickness and endurance. He was treated for substance abuse and was implicated, though never charged, in a cocaine-dealing conspiracy in 1983.
Former tennis star Fred Stolle, Geralitus' fellow broadcaster and former coach, said Geralitus had admitted using drugs, but that he'd been off them "at least the last couple of years."
Stole le Gerulatitis "had gone through rehab ... and gotten taken care of" at an institution founded by John Lucas, now coach of the Philadelphia 76ers.
Asked whether he would be surprised if Gerulatitis' death was drug-related, Lucas, a recovering addict, told ABC Radio Sports: "Nothing in this world surprises me today. You know where I've been and where I go and where I've come from. Nothing surprises me."
Despite a sore back, a long trip and little sleep, Gerulata was in good spirits, she said. "He looked good. He didn't look like he wasn't feeling well or that something was wrong."
Betty Chaffee Whitaker, a former tennis star married to ABC sportscaster Jack Whitaker, saw Gerulaitis the day before his body was found. He'd flown in from the West Coast late Friday night and arrived at the Racquet Club of East Hampton early the next morning for a charity tennis clinic.
When the clinic ended, she said, "He gave me a hug and said, 'I'll see you at 7,' when a dinner at the club was scheduled.
But Gerulatitis did not show up at the dinner, and the following afternoon a servant went to the guest cottage to make the bed found his body.
Gerulatius' host was developer Martin Raynes, a friend since both men were fixtures on the Manhattan party circuit in the 70s. Gerulatius was a frequent guest at the shingle-and-stone cottage, police said.
1
---
2B
Tuesday, September 20, 1994
Vintage clothes for guys and gals
-1900-1970-
• new cottons
• accessories and costumes
Barb Vintage Rose
927 Massachusetts / 841-2451
Mon-Sat 11-5
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Barba Vintage Rose
927 Massachusetts / 841-2451
Mon-Sat 11-5
Over 10 toppings to choose from!!
Rudy Tuesday
2 10" Pizzas
2 toppings
2 drinks
ONLY
$8.99
plates
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
Home of the Pocket Pizza
--the 1993 Super Bowl and his gaffe against Miami last Thanksgiving when he touched a blocked kick instead of leaving it alone. Lett didn't maintain control of the ball, Miami recovered and kicked a field goal to win.
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
Buy a Quart
Get a Pint
FREE!
(with this coupon)
expires October 10th
Louisiana Purchase
23rd & Louisiana • 843-5500
Orchards Corners
15th & Kasold • 749-0440
SUNFLOWER
843-5000
804 Massachusetts
RECREATION!!
Sunflower has the
best selection of golf discs,
ultimate discs, boomerangs
and a plethora of other recreational devices.
Third kick's a charm: Detroit upsets Dallas
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — Jason Hanson, who had two kicks blocked by Leon Lett late in the game, made a 44-yard field goal with 27 seconds left in overtime Monday night to send the Detroit Lions past Dallas 20-17, ending the Cowboys' 10-game winning streak.
It was the first loss for the Super Bowl champions since last Thanksgiving when a blunder by Lett on a blocked field goal attempt allowed the Miami Dolphins to win in the snow at Texas Stadium.
Hanson made his second overtime field goal of the year. He had a 37-yarder against Atlanta in the first game of the season.
Detroit got the ball back with 1:55 left in overtime when Pat Swilling sacked Troy Alkman, and Broderick Thomas recovered a fumble — the second for Dallas in overtime.
After a 17-yard pass to Brett Perriman and three unsuccessful running plays, Hanson put the winner just inside the right goal post.
Barry Sanders rushed 40 times for 194 yards, and Emmitt Smith carried 29 times for 143 yards in a matchup of two of the NFL's most prolific backs.
At the end of regulation, Hanson's 57-yard attempt was blocked by Lett, and the lineman knocked down a 51-yard attempt 51/2 minutes into overtime.
But Lett was not in position to block the game-winner as the ball sailed over the other end of the Cowboys' defensive line.
In the end, though, it came down to Detroit's kicking game and Lett's outstretched arms.
A tie game would have been the NFL's first since 1989, when Cleveland and Kansas City finished 10-10.
Scott Mitchell connected on 13 of 27 passes for 127 yards and two TDs, while Aikman hit 26 of 39 passes for 223 yards and one score.
The Cowboys trailed for most of the game, but they overcame a 10-point deficit and tied it 17-17 with 4:09 to play in regulation on Smith's 6-yard touchdown run to cap 59-yard drive. The drive started at the Dallas 41 after Hanson missed from 51 yards.
Mitchell burned the Cowboys with two clutch passes to Hernan Moore that helped the Lions open a 17-7 lead midway through the third period. Mitchell hit Moore with a 25-yard pass on fourth-and-3 from the Dallas 36, then connected with him on a 9-yard touchdown pass on third-and-9.
Instead, the loss gave Barry Switzer his first loss as coach of the Cowboys and kept Lett from finally being a hero. The lineman is best known for fumbling away a sure touchdown in
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
842-1212
"NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PARTY "10" CARRY-OUT
2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS 1-PIZZA
2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING
2-COKES 4-COKES 1-COKE
$9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence
DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
Linebackers Chris Spielman and Thomas stopped Smith twice from the 1 yard line late in the third quarter, and the Cowboys had to settle for Chris Boniol's 19-yard field goal that made it 17-10.
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
23rd Southern Hills Center - Lawrence
EARN CASH
A HELP OUR COMMUNITY TOO!
$15 TODAY
& $30
This WEEK
Walk-Ins
Welcome
BY DONATING YOUR
BLOOD PLASMA
CALL FOR INFORMATION
NABI
The Quality Service
NABI BigMedical Center
816 W. 24th
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
749-5750
FUTONS
K.C. Based Manufacturer with 6 Retail Locations
This Complete Futon & Frame $269
Twin Futon & Frame $99
Abdiiana
FUTON
Exclusively Hardwood Frames
1023 Mass. St. Lawrence, KS 843-8222
We've just made this 6-pound computer even easier to pick up.
(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 Powerbook to the right.
When you weigh the options, it's quite possibly the best deal available for college students. For a limited time, buy a select Apple PowerBook at a special student price and get a unique new student software set available only from Apple. It's all the software you're likely to need to breeze through 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
Investment that are
Investment that are
Apple PowerBook 150 4/120.
Only $1,257.00.
Companion to help you tap into on-line research resources. Plus ClarisWorks, an integrated package with a word processor, database, spreadsheet and more. All with the portable computer you can use anytime, anywhere you happen to be. Apple PowerBook. And now, with an Apple Computer Loan, you can own one for less than a dollar a day! It's the power no student should be without. The power to be your best.' Apple
Apple
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union technology center
union technology center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
KU
POWER though it.
Offer expires October 17, 1999, available only while registration lasts. ©1999 Apple Computer Inc., all rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, PowerBook and "The power to be your best" are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. ClarisWorks is a registered trademark of Claris Corporation. 'An estimate based on an Apple Computer Loan of $1,352.17 for the PowerBook 150 shown above. Price and loan amounts are subject to change without notice. PowerBook Nexus or representative for current system price. A 5.5% loan origination fee will be added to the requested loan amount. The interest rate is variable, based on the commercial monthly rate plus 5.5%. For the month of August 1999, the interest rate was 10.10%, with an APR of 11.36%. 8-year loan term with no prepayment penalty. The monthly payment shows assume no difference of principal or interest. Students may adjust principal payments up to 4 years, or until graduation. Deferment will change your monthly balance. The Apple Computer loan is subject to credit approval.
lifestyles
ACHOO!
By Casey Barnes
Knapsock staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Fighting a runny nose and itchy eyes is becoming a way of life for Chrissy Campobasso.
Graphic by Noah Musser
Campobasso, Kansas City, Mo., senior,
suffers every fall and spring through the
dreaded allergy season. She is not alone in
her misery.
"Ihave to take this pill before I go to bed, use this spray when I wake up and always carry this inhaler with me," Campobasso said, as she rummaged through her piles of allergy medicine. "But I'm used to it."
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that two out of three Americans suffered from hay fever, which is caused by various types of pollen in the air.
This year the ragged pollen is at its worse, sending victims of allergies sniffing and sneezing across campus in what many say is the worst allergy season in years.
But Yockey said fall allergies are always a problem.
The week after Labor Day, more than half of the visits to Watkins were students with allergies.
She spent Labor Day weekend in bed because her eyes were swollen shut.
Effie Sullivan, Hugoton junior, said her allergies were definitely worse this year.
"Allergies make me miserable and tired."
Sullivan said, "For two weeks I couldn't do homework because my eyes hurt so bad. I always carry three handkerchiefs around with me and they're usually wet."
This magnified ragweed pollen can cause all kinds of sniffles and sneezes. This year, it is wreaking all kinds of havoc.
Sullivan said one reason her allergies were so bad this season was because she could not take prescription medicine. She is preparing to be tested for allergy shots, a solution she hopes will help alleviate her symptoms in the future.
But Yockey said that shots only help one out of four adults with their allergy problems.
Prescription medications are the best way to deal with the symptoms of allergies. "Prescription medicines may cost more
Yockey said trying to get someone off over-the-counter nose spray could be challenging.
than over-the-counter drugs, but they have less side effects and are much safer," Yockey said. "Over-the-counter medications should be avoided at all costs. There is no instant relief, they cause sedation and they can be addictive."
He once had a patient who had to walk down the aisle of her wedding carrying nose spray because she could not breathe without it.
Robert Wright, Wichita junior, knows how addictive allergy medicine can be.
He said it was difficult to enjoy himself during allergy season without taking medicine. But he takes so much of some medicines that his body has become immune, he said.
"Football season is no fun when you can't function properly," Wright said. "You're sitting in the stands sniffing and feeling miserable and all you want to do is take a pill. It's frustrating when your medicine doesn't work."
Yockey said the worst part of the fall allergy season is coming to an end.
The wait is almost over.
"It is already getting better," Yockey said.
"The week of Labor Day is always the worst, but patients will start coming in feeling better."
The amount of pollen was stable until August 15 when the count reached 247, Yockey said. It increased to 2,900 the week of Labor Day, and the pollen will not be completely gone until there is a hard freeze toward the end of November.
Until then, Yockey said the only real relief was to avoid the outdoors.
"Stay inside and run the air conditioner," he said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 20, 1994 PAGE 3B
KU LIFE
news of the weird
LEAD STORY
Desmond Morris' latest documentary, "The Human Animal: The Biology of Love," now on TV in England, will appear on U.S. cable TV in January and picture a human orgasm—from inside the vagina. A tiny camera, similar to those used for exploration of the colon, was placed inside Wendy Duffield, 31, and another was strapped onto her husband's penis. The couple reportedly had sex about 60 times to assure sufficient footage.
SCHEMES
Delaware prison officials decided in July to allow condemned murderer Nelson Shelton to undergo a kidney removal at public expense so that he could donate the organ to his mother. The state initially refused to pay but relented when Shelton played his trump card: He threatened to use all of his legal rights to appeal his sentence, which would cost the state hundreds of thousands of dollars.
In June, South Charleston, W. Va., inmate Robert Dale Shepard, in jail on robbery charges, escaped from a recree-
ation yard by braiding dental floss into a rope that he used to scale a fence. To prevent such occurrences, the state of Maine prohibits inmates from having dental floss. But in July, Portland inmate Michael Tuck, 31, filed a lawsuit against the state, claiming that the policy hinders his ability to fight tooth decay.
In June, Michael Frazier, the "lifestyle" editor of the daily newspaper in Oak Ridge, Tenn., was charged with attempted murder of the husband of a woman he had written about. According to police reports, Frazier and Lisa Whedbee began an affair shortly after he interviewed her. In a plot to kill John Whedebe, Frazier was supposed to pose as a robber-intruder and stab John while Lisa stood
In February, a federal court in California dismissed the complaint of Jogaezak Karkhan against the director of the FBI and about two dozen other defendants for harassing him. The other defendants included President Bush, "the Queen of England," French President Mitterrand, the San Francisco Chronicle, some college professors, several street gangs in Hong Kong, "the drug carol," H. Ross Perot, Newman, Kirk Douglas, Frank Sinatra, Dennis Hopper, Phil Donahue, "the founders of Israel," Olive North, and a "humanoid alien extraterrestrial leader speaking Greek."
by with a baseball bat and pretended to defend John. According to John, Frazier seemed tentative, causing Lisa to break character and yell to Frazier, "You've got to do it, just do it now."
In July, Mollie Brusstar, 48, was convicted of two counts of embezzlement from the Catholic Diocese of Arlington. Va., where she had been employed in administration. According to the prosecutor, Brusstar put imaginary employees on the rolls and issued their paychecks to herself. She and a sister went to Utah and, posing as nuns, used the money to obtain dental work and cosmetic abdomen-reduction surgery. Brusstar's defense was that a monsignor had approved everything, but he was unavailable to testify, having committed suicide in the interim after being accused of molesting a parishioner.
FEUDS
In August, to end a feud in Concordia Sagittaria, Italy, a judge ordered Maria Bruna Bortolussi to keep her talking blackbird away from neighbor Norina Miorin, after Miorin testified the Bortolussi had taught the bird to say, in Italian, "Norina, I'm going to kill you." The two were fussing over a garden.
In June at Minot, N.D., a woman ran into a police station asking for protection from her husband, who was chasing her. Before police could get to her case, they found the couple outside in the parking lot facing off, with each pointing a chain saw at the other.
LEAST COMPETENT CRIMINALS
■ In November, in St. Joseph, Mo., Michael Gene McCrary, 37, was charged with attempted robbery of a barber shop. He walked in, reportedly slightly inebriated, pretending to have a gun in his pocket, and said to barber Fred Robertson, "Set 'em up." When Robertson requested clarification, McCrary replied, "You know what I mean." A customer walked outside and summoned police.
I DON'T THINK SO
In a St John's, Newfoundland, courtroom in August, George Clarke denied that the bruises and cuts on his girlfriend's body were the result of domestic assault. He said the back bruises occurred one night when Clarke was suicidal. He said he tied a noose inptly to an overhead pipe and ultimately fell on top of her when she tried to stop him. The bruises and cuts on her arm came because he is forced to hold arms tightly during sex because, he said, "Your Honor, I only got a small penis on me."
OLYMPUS
Pearlcorder S924
MICROCASSETTE PROGRAMMER
(Actual Size)
"Power is knowledge." (Batteries not included)
Keep your brain charged. Start talking into an Olympus Microcassette recorder. It gives you more power to memorize, summarize, analyze, fantasize, and fully realize your own brilliance. It also takes notes five times faster than you can write them, read them, correct them, and rewrite them. Inside the classroom or out, an Olympus Microcassette™ Recorder helps keep your mind on.
OLYMPUS
MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM
Never miss another •pqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmn.
Available at: Camera America 1610 West 23rd Street, Lawrence, Kansas 66046 • Wolf's Camera Shop 635 Kansas Avenue, Topeka, Kansas 66603.
And Other Fine Stores. If you can't find the Olympus相机 Cassette™ recorder you can find the (S924 is pictured here) up to 8-802-2300 for information.
Roller Skating
STEP UP with BODY BOUTIQUE
60 classes per week and much more
ABSOLUTELY NO JOINING FEE
-VIP-
exp.10/3/94
10 TANS for only $20 exp 10/3/94
exp.10/3/94
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
Now accepting applications for following Senate seats:
- Business
- Graduate
- Liberal Arts and Sciences
- Non-traditional
- Social Welfare
Applications are available in Student Senate office at 410 Kansas Union. Call 864-3710 with questions.
APPLICATION DEADLINE IS SEPTEMBER 28 AT 5 PM
4B
Tuesday, September 20, 1994
Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228
fifiS
KIM'S ALTERATIONS
QUICK & QUALITY SERVICE
2201-FW25TH ST
(Behind Food 4 Less)
842-6812
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (915) 841-LIVE
Tues, Sept. 20
Merl Saunders &
the Rainforest Band
Lonesome Boundogs
18 + over
Wed. Sept. 21
Lonesome Hounddogs Lou's Revenge
Thurs. Sept. 22
Danger Bob
Yah Yah Littleman
Tix. on Sale Sebadoh, the spectals, the Paladins 311. Violent Femmes
MERCANTILE Account Information
It's for you...
Everything you ever wanted to know about your checking account is just a phone call away... 24 hours a day!
The new Account Information Line at Mercantile Bank of Lawrence is like having a teller inside your telephone. Simply dial us up, day or night, input your access code, and you can:
check up on your checking or savings account balance
电话
review recent deposits, direct deposits, and checks cleared
Telephone
电话
look up your loan balance
电话
count the money in your C.D.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Member FDIC
Put the Mercantile line to work for you.
SPORTS
MERCANTILE BANK
Call (913)865-0210
ANTILE BANK
Mercantile Bank of Lawrence N. A.
Ninth & Massachusetts
Motor Bank, Ninth & Tennessee
South Bank, 1807 West 23rd
Northwest Bank, 3500 West 6th
Mass Street Bank, 647 Massachusetts
South Plaza Bank,
27th & Iowa
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 428
Lawrence, Ka 66044-0428
(913) 865-0200
Equal Opportunity Lender
The Etc. Shop
TM 928 MASS
PARKING IN REAL
LEATHER BAGS,
BELTS & JACKETS
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses
Costumes . 2nd floor
Fantastic Fall Special!
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
---
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
- Swimming Pool
* On KU Bus Route
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
- Sand Volleyball Court
* Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid
Outstanding New Staff!!!
Just as telling is the tough-to-please Parcells has given what amounts to, for him, a ringing endorsement.
That happened late in the game when the Patriots were protecting a 31-20 lead, trying to pick up a first down and keep the clock moving. Bledsoe chose to throw deep to Timpson although Turner was open in the flat.
By Howard Ulman The Associated Press
Patriot's quarterback maturing
And yesterday, Parcells gave his most glowing review since he took Bledsoe with the first pick of last year's NL draft.
FOXBORO, Mass. — it's a sure sign that Drew Bledsoe has arrived. His demanding coaching, Bill Parcells, only got mad at him once Sunday.
Bledsoe gets thumbs-up from coach Bill Parcells
Yet he had at least 365 passing yards in all three games. In 19 pro seasons, Hall of Famer Johnny Unitas did that just seven times.
So don't issue Bledsoe's ticket to the Hall of Fame just three games into his second season, even if he has thrown for an NFL-high 388.7 yards per game, 72 more than the second most productive quarterback, Steve Young.
How could he not praise the man most responsible for the New England Patriots league-leading offense?
"We're 1-2, and I think that's the biggest analysis of a quarterback," he said. "It doesn't matter what the stats are. When you're winning ballgames, that's when you become a good quarterback."
"I'm very pleased with him, so write everything on a positive note." Parcels said, then paused, "but he did overthrow three touchdowns. The guys were open."
"People and you guys (reporters) especially are always going to try and build expectations beyond all reality," Bledsoe said yesterday. "Before people start comparing me with other quarterbacks around the league, let me accomplish something first."
He completed 30 of 50 passes for 365 yards and one touchdown in Sunday's 31-28 win at Cincinnati. But he has his own way to measure how he's doing.
He also has gotten excellent protection, being sacked only three times, and has an outstanding receiving corps in Ben Coates, Michael Timpson and backlash Kevin Turner.
"I told him in the shower Sunday that I only got mad at him one time," Parcells said.
In six seasons, since 1989, Marino has done it only three times.
"But the next play he hit Coates to the first down, so he made up for what I would say would be a wrong choice," Parcells said.
Wednesday Evening Appointments Available
Bledsoe and Parcells have developed a productive relationship.
He praised Bledsoe's game management and said the biggest improvement has been in his passing accuracy.
Mike Riese
Member of Blue Shield &
Health Net
"I suppose he probably gets angry but it really doesn't matter," Bledsoe said. "I'm going to listen to what he has to say no matter how he says it."
Call 842-7001 for a consultation today!
Welcome Back
We offer treatment for all conditions of the skin, hair and nails including:
Students!
*Acne
- Hair Transplants
- Tattoo Removal
- Mole & Wart Removal
- Glycolic Acid Pools
- Spider Vein & Collagen Injections
Dermatology Center of Lawrence Since 1970
890 Iowa St. • Hillcrest Professional Building,
Lawrence, KS 80044 | (813) 845-7001
SPORTS in brief
V
More litigation is set to begin as baseball heads to Washington
NEW YORK — Baseball players are expected to file more litigation against owners this week.
The striking players, who already have filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board over missed pension payments, are expected to file default notices and grievances this week over players brought up from the minor leagues since the strike began Aug. 12.
Union head Donald Fehr takes to the road for the start of a seven-city tour to update players. Acting commissioner Bud Selig says he will speak with his fellow owners, but a formal meeting won't happen until the week of Oct. 3 or Oct. 10.
"We'll be having a lot of discussions," said Selig, who spent Sunday watching the Green Bay Packers lose to the Philadelphia Eagles.
With no World Series, free-agent filing would start Oct. 15 if owners don't alter the terms of the expired collective-bargaining agreement. The union expects
KU
owners to declare an impasse in bargaining and to implement their salary-cap plan, triggering even more litigation.
U.S. takes Presidents Cup
GAINESVILLE, Va. — There was a lot the first Presidents Cup didn't have. It didn't have Greg Norman or Ernie Els.
It didn't have 70 years of tradition and an intense rivalry like the Ryder Cup.
The United States only needed to win one of the four matches that went to sudden death to take the cup. The 20-12 final score likely would have been closer if Els, the U.S. Open champion, had accepted his invitation to play and if Norman hadn't been forced to withdraw after losing 13 pounds to an intestinal problem.
"Then the other matches started to tighten up and I realized I better get going." Couples said.
"I had a great time playing with Nick," Fred Couples said after he knocked his 9-iron one foot from the final hole to win the clinching match 1-up.
"I actually had a great time getting beat because the other guys were all ahead," Couples said about his front nine, where he fell 3 down.
Get going he did. Couples' back nine was one for the books. He birdied four of the last six holes to pull it out Compiled from The Associated Press.
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
1021 Massachusetts
Downtown
Tired of Pizza and Tacos? Try the...
1¢ Lunch Special
BONANZA.
Steak • Chicken • Seafood • Salad
Buy our food bar at regular lunch price of $4.29 and get 1 of 5 selected lunch items for 1¢ more
Offer good Mon-Sat, 11am-4pm
10% Student Discount every day on any regularly priced menu iter
2329 Iowa · 842-1200
OICCOVE WILLOW CREEK
Give us the Lion's Share of Your Work.
We've got a great new way to make your presentations look profes sional. It's the new LionHeart 1392, a 300 dpi printer. And it's going to make your documents stand out. Why? Because now you can print hundreds of pages with superior quality for the same amount of money you'd normally spend on photocopies. Choose different paper. Have it automatically stapled, Simple. Fast. And all for the same price you'd pay to babysit the copier. So for documents you can be proud of, let the lion do it for you. Call Rick at the Printing Services for more information at 864-4341.
11 or more
1-10 Prints
One-sided
MATHEMATICI
5¢ each
3¢ each
VISA KANYAN
Two-sidee
9.5¢ each
5.4¢ each
ed
h
h
PS
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
PRINTING SERVICES
2425 West 15th St.
(15th and Crestline)
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Classified Directory
200s Employment
120 Help Wanted
125 Professional Services
135 Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and its provisions. The degree of erasure, 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 advertised in this newspaper are subject to change.
1
100s Announcements
105 Personals
In this threatening world, everyone needs a PAAL.
ng
Clip a lightweight PAAL II on your cloth-
n whether your girl when it pin is pulled, the PAL II emits an car-plevering alarm and a bright flashing light, standing an attacker and attaching attention. The light can also be used as a flashlight. The PAL II is your best defense against attack.
- * Contact your Quantum Independent Distributor * *
Quorum The technology is Quorum. The opportunity is yours. Securing Life
KU Student Adam Redden (913)441-4061
205 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
300s
Merchandise
-Kansan Classified; 864-4358-
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
**ETC. SHOP 928 MAAR.**
STERLING SALVOR JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Braces &
Pendants
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses
UNSAFE
Bausch & Looter Killer Loops,
I's, Rewo, Serenget, and Vuartn
110 Bus. Personals
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also Insurance for US citizens going abroad.
Oslad Insurance Service. 411/2 S Main Ottawa.
Ka 60687180-606-6955.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
CALCULUS: TAKING CONTROL, workshop. Are things not adding up right? Thurs., Sept. 27, 7:4pm,
120 Snow, FREE! Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
CASH FOR COLLEGE $90,000 GRANTS AVAIL-
ABLE
QUALITY - VARIOUS
IMMEDIATE TEL. 1-800-423-2452
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 20,1994
5B
Openings for CNA: 3-10:30 shift for CNA's full or partial work. Eudora Nursing Center - 949-281-5261.
POETRY SLAM
Tuesday, Sept. 20 8:30p.m.
518 E 9th St. (Renegade Theater) $2
16TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2. 15, 1998 • 4. S.B. ON 7 RIGHTS
STREAMOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
$168
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
SHOW "YA GOTTA"
BE THE BEST!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1-800-SUNCHASE
CALCULUS: TAKING CONTROL
Are things not adding up right?
Are things not adding up right?
Thurs, Sep. 22, 7:00-9:00pm
120 Snow
FREE!
Sponsored by
the Student Assistance Center
Call Today!
For
Thanksgiving AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait Wellfindthe
We find the lowest fares and best schedules. On Campus Location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
24 hour telephone answering service is seeking part-time help. Experience helpful, but will train the right person. Immediate opening for weekend Fr, sat, graveyard shift. Also some mornings. Call 800-775-2361.
A couple or two individuals to work two weekends a month at a coed group home. Responsible for supervising daily activities of kids. Good learning experience. Must be 21, valid Kansas driver's license, current physical, high school graduate Send resume to Trinity Foster Home, Box 3385, Lawrence, KS or call Rick Spano at 842-7463. Trinity is anEqual Opportunity employer.
Anhui Center needs painter person for AM fax flexible room. 11 PM shift. Positions available immediately. Apply in person. 1266 Oread Ave. No phone calls. Babysit needed for two delightful toddler girls in nice home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible days/evenings/weekends. Experience. own car. Please respond to box z20. University Daily Kansan 1850 Staff尔流 Ft.
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
Sabysisters needed for a research grant. $43.35/hr.
Experience with sabysisting young children and infant school students, references, and a current KU student. Apply at 402 Date. Deadline September 23rd.
Day, evening and weekend shifts needed. Work with elderly clients in their homes. Reliable transportation required. Call Scott at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association. 843-3738
CNACLASSES
Need some extra pocket money? Certified Nurse Aide classes will start Sept. 28. Call Eudora Nursing Center, 542-2176 for additional information.
Ask for Sivia, Mon-Fri.
COLLEGE STUDENTS $12.51-1.65 STARTING Local branch of nat i'll co. Firing immediate entry level opening. Fires time schedule. 3 days, eyesends weekends opt. All majors accepted. For info 841-8605.
Cottonwood Inc. a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their residential division. Positions include evening, weekend, and overnight hours. College course work and related experience helpful but not required. GOOD DRIVING RECORE A MUST. Please apply by EOCT 14 in Cottonwood Inc. 2000 W. B1 EOE
Delivery Drivers, Great Job. Great pizza, Great
tours. Help you cool. Inquire in person.
Pizza Shoppe 601 Kasandra
EARN EXTRA MONEY IN AN EXITING ENVIRONMENT The Arrowhead Stadium, Home of Kansas City Chiefs, has game day position available in the Arrowhead Club and private suites. Positions include suite captains, suite runners, office staff, and kitchen help. For more info call 816-924-4000.
Enthusiastic HDFL/Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for 2 hrs. Thurs. events and occasionally 4 hrs. Sunday mornings. Call 842-8820
Eudora U.S.D.N 491 is accepting applications for the following Assistant Coach/Sponsor positions: 7.8 and 9-12 Track, 7.8 and 9-12 Girls Basketball, and 9-12 Track. Contact information may be obtained by contacting KK 1002 Elm Street, Eudora, KS K60253, 913-542-2491. Positions will be filled as soon as possible. EOE
Experienced, Energetic, and Caring Person to provide child care in our home for 2 children, ages 1 and 4. References Required. Hours Friday evening, Sat, and Sun days. Call 839.8192
Female vocalist wanted for variety dance band
All styles. High, strong-chest voice, good performer. Avail. immediately. This is a working band, serious inquiries only 748-3649.
Lift shop clerk, apply at Natural History Museum,
located south of the Kansas Union.
PHILLIPS 66
Now accepting applications for store sales associates for several locations:
•Starting wage above minimum
•Modern, clean locations
•Flexible working hours
Apply today at 9th& Iowa
Looking for a change while getting an education?
Look for a long living person to preferably live in your new home and enjoy Free room and board, plus salary. Own living quarters with private entry. For details please call 800-265-9177.
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic, highly motivated individuals to sell newspaper subscriptions. Sales experience is helpful, but we will train highly motivated individuals. Even hours, Monday through Friday. We pay salary + commission. Apply between 2 p.m. and 6 p.m., at the Lawrence Journal World office or Contact Valerie for more information.
Excellent income for part-time work!
Mass Street Del!
is reopening and is looking for food service employees. Duties include both food prep and line cook work. Volunteer needed to part of the new "Deli" team, apply at Shumun Food Co. Business Office between 9am-5pm Monday-Friday.
Now hiring babysitters / childcare providers. Day, eve, and wend hours available. For more info please contact us at 1-800-257-4000.
Office assistant, leasing agent, part-time. Good pay, flexible hours. 841-7827
Office position in medical setting. Part-time
approx 15 hrs/wk. Morning and/or afternoon
shifts available. General clerical duties-filing.
Attendance. Send resume to Janice Hock, 1967 N. Atlantic St,
US 90047
Part Time Assistant for Apt. Management
$6/hour, Resume, Reference. 841-7827
Part time help needed for delivery work. Afternoons and Saturday. Apply in person. Hanna's
Part-time custodial worker needed to work morn-
rent per week. Rate $7.00/hour. Call
(816) 793-6253
Part-time Help Retail Sales T-Shirt Designer
Must have previous computer experience prefer-
ence in graphic design or experience helpful. Must have an outgoing per-
sonality and be customer service oriented. Retail sales a plus. Contact Debate at 316/838-2012 or send
802, suite 100, Witcha, KS 67258.
Research assistant for non-profit organization.
$6.00/hour. Call Jacket at 842-3824 for information.
Part-time Custodial Positions Available
- Sat.& Sun. 6-11 am.
- Sat. 8 am.-12 noon
- Sun. 9-11am..& Mon, Tues,
Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm.
- Wed.-Fri. • 9:30-11:30pm.
- Sun. 9am.-12noon & Mon.
- Thurs. 5:30-7:30pm.
- Sun. 9am-3pm.
- Sun. 11:30 am.-3pm. & Wed.5:30-7:30pm.
**SPRING BREAK** 96- SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE!! !!! Student Travel Services is now hire- rate. Cancun, Davao and Panama City Beach. Call 800-648-4849
Call BPI Building Services at 842-6264
bpi
UNIQUE MENTAL HEALTH OPPORTUNITY Needed immediately male roommate to provide emotional support, adult supervision to an 18 yr old child. Req. Master's degree in community after psychiatric hospitalization Roommate will be contracted by the young man's family in conjunction with the Meininger Support Group. Resume as social worker, nursing and social work staff, Room, board, stipend provided. Reference and KB check required. Please call Nancy Parker (ext. 239) or Anne Bartel (ext. 232) at 9133 277-7500.
A DIVISION OF
BUCKINGHAM
PALACE.
Waitress Needed call 749-5039.925 Iowa
Wanted babyssister for two children. Ages 3-5,
evenings 3:30:10 a.m. Light cooking necessary in
home, must be reliable, ask for Michelle and Bob
843-834. Call anytime before 3:30:30.
WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING TO PROMOTE SPRING BREAK TO JAMAICA, CANCUN, FLORIDA & PADRE. FANTASTIC SUMMER MISSIONS! SUN SPILL LAUNCHES 1-400-897-3651
BUILDING SERVICES
Wanted: Caring people who like kids 3-5yrs are needed at Head Start as volunteers for a minimum of 12 hours a week, between 7:30-12:30, Monday-Friday. Days from 12:30 to 12:30. For more information call 842-625-9211.
We need 5 enthusiastic people to high fashion hiss-
near. No delivery, no inventory investment.
NOW IMMO!
Worker for firewood production. Flexible hours.
Call 749-5140 at 7am for more information.
McDonalds is looking for individuals who would be interested in working at one of four new restaurants, Downtown and 6th and Wakarusa
LOOK WHAT'S COMING!
M
McDonald's
McDONALDS
Positions Available
- Specialcleaningteams
- Late Nightclosingteam
- Specialcleaningteams
- Hostess
- Management
- Late Nightclosingteam
(8p.m.-4a.m.)
Open interviews Mondays and Fridays at McDonalds on 6th St. from 2-5 p.m.
- Administrative Assistant
Wednesdays at McDonalds on 23rd St. from 2-5 p.m.
GRADUATE STUDENT ASSISTANT. Half-time position available in the Student Assistance Center for Disability Related Services. Responsibilities include assisting staff in coordinating services to students with disabilities, demic aides, research equipment needs, and identifying local, state, and federal regulations impacting students with disabilities. Requires: KU graduate student status for Fall, 1994 and Spring, 1985 in Special Education, Reliabilistic Communication, Hearing Science Disorders, or related field.
WE'RE GROWING AND
WOULD LIKE YOU TO BEA
PART OF OUR TEAM.
REQUIRED: application form, available in the Student Assistance Center, must be completed and received by 5:00 p.m. friday, September 30, 1994 in 133 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60045, 913-804-6644. The University has an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer.
Growing Overland Park, KC-based custom sportwear company seeks out fraternity-sorority vehicle for part time office help. Must have vehicle license to commute from Lawrence to KC.
The Holidime is recruiting service professionals to join our team! Current openings include:
Lawrence to KC.
Call (913) 381-7970 or (800) 886-9328.
HARLAND JANE
*p.ii. servers
*cocktail servers
*p.m. cashiers
- p.m. cashers
- banquet help
- weekend housekeepers
We offer excellent compensation and benefits,
which include uniforms, meals, tuition reimbursement,
hot room discount and much more!
Please apply at 200 Macdonald Dr. dre
Landscape Company, in Southern Johnson County; seeking FT/Pt employees. Call 341.7661
Contact Jerry at jayhawk Food M. art. 749-4123
Laborers want for tree service e. g.
Time available Apply in person only 845 Maple at 7
am. Mon.- Sat.
225. Professional Services
< Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-779
College Credit: Compilation under way, world-
wide credit card service. Please visit www.
passionpaid.com for info call 809) 1631 432
TRAFFIC-DUU'S
Fake ID $&$ alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
Donald G. Stroble Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964.
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature, ESL classes. Highly
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3313.
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY
CHARLESLER, GREEN
BAYSIDE
RESUMES
R
701 Tennessee
International Video Conversions PAL/SEGAM/
NTSC. $25 for up to 2 hours. Includes return
postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer
PQ box 310 Itaownka Oktawa 68007 1-800-600-6955.
Prompt abortion and contraception services in
Lawrence 841-5716 Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Available for Russian and Ukrainian.
Natural teacher. Reasonable rates. Contact Luc
at 841-7832.
ichard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
LSAT Test-Prep For The Dec. 3rd Exam
Professional Writing
Cover Letters
Consultation
Linda Morton, C.P.R.W
TRANSCRIPTIONS
842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite 201
A Member of
PA RW Professional Association for Refund Writers
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
235 Typing Services
Class Starts Oct.2nd
A Word Perfect Wipe Processing Service.
Laser Printing. Spell Check Company. Call
415-786-2302 442-600-9656
1-der Women W Word Processing. Former editor transforms scrubbies into records of letter composition. (68-80)
Free Consultation
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Theses,
term papers, Resumes, Business letters, etc.
1-800-527-TEST
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST!
Put my service to the test.
For anything you need at all,
AWARN THE QUESTION
is the one to call.
---
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
'93 Specialized Hard Rock Ultra $300 obo. For more info call 843-5662.
Brand new 94 "YAMAHA RAZZ scouter; paid
$1350, will sell for $1000. 814-1971.
for Sale: Sony CCD-TRH 8 mm camcorder $650,
all George at 794-4352
konda Scooter in good condition, $375 or best offer
all: 842-1371
Large healthy Iguauna. 4 feet long, 865-2471.
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only $500. Call Chris at 809-289-5685.
Macintosh Performa 405, 80 mg, hard drive,
modem, printer, 14" color monitor, install-
ment for Macintosh Pro 6.00
Mattress set, queen new, never used, firm, excellent quality. Cost $893, surrender $195. $193/764-1661. Moving? Must sell new steeper climber exerciser i175 call 842-6512, ask for Dana.
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N. 2nd * 841-8903
19th & Haskell * 841-7504
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $0.99
4221
***
Moving. Will sell 4*month Body Boutique mem
bership $95 842-6676
Panoasonic racing bike, Shimano 600 UltraG, Cateye Micro cycle computer, Durace clapless pedals, extra Ultrag hubs, $295. Call Steve at 749-3624.
Schwinn's Black Phantom, Corvette 3 spd. American Woman (Korean War Production). All very nice, require restoration. 912-399-5936, 913-394-5724 Tort Arias ticket available. Best offer 865-2311
340 Auto Sales
93 Suzuki Katana, 600cc, bik w/ purple & teal
likeness. Like new cond., beautiful bike & very fast
8390/OBO Call Jason: 362-250 9am-5pm or 769-237
evenings & weekends.
1974 VW Bug. runs run, goods $800. Good interior or excellent transportation. 749-3042
1926 Nissan 2005XII - 4 speed, with sunroof, power windows and iowers. $95/OSO | Call Mike at 877-332-2011
1985 SAAB Turbo 4 dr 3 spd sun roof wp ec,
Black/maroon. Repair records. Rebuilt clutch
heater valve CV distributor and ignition module.
New muffler, 2 new tires. $2000 OBO 841-1738
360 Miscellaneous
Free Black Lab puppy (5 months) to a VERY GOOD house. Please call 832-1498.
370 Want to Buy
Want to buy Basketball tickets, or sports combo Call Chris 865-001.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well ked elder homes 841-STAR-7972
3 bdmr. 2 bath, fully furn. Orchard Corners apt. for rent-Spring $9 215 per mon. on bus route. Call Amly.Melanie at 841-885
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great fit on, on or on RK route. NO PETS. APP ON.
VIEW.
For Rest: Small two bedroom house suitable for one or two people. $350 month plus utilities. No children.
Pets Welcome No Sublease Fee
South Pointe APT MLS
- On KUBus Route
- Swimming Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
ORCHARD CORNERS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
4 BEDROOM
• On KU Bus Route
• Close to Campus
• Swimming Pool
• StopByToday!
Legal Housing 15th&Kasold M-F9-8 Sat10-4
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
- Water and Trash Paid
Looking for Love
Lonely, attractive 3 bedroom apartments seeking residents to share a long or short term relationship. Call any time at 843-6446.
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Available for fall.
- Directly on bus route
- Directly on bus route
Call 843-4754
"Don't get left out in the cold."
1 or 2 bedrooms in newer 4bdm duplex in
Larvaire, nwlw. new, lwv. 2 car garage.
Large Warehouse.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Quet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500 Room for rent for N/S female. Newly remodeled, very clean, W/D, all utilities pd. including remodeled $265. mor. 842-1069 or 832-8258
430 Roommate Wanted
Two Bedroom Apartment Now Available at Two Bedroom Apartment and trash pickup through July. 15, 2018-2500
- By phone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
no. theo David I-689-8300
1 roommate needed for home and bathroom room cado Has w/2 old bedrooms and garbage disposal $220 a month* u.utilities 843-5899
Female roommate wanted, start Jan 1966
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS 66045
Spacitions 3 bedroom, near campus, a/c/d./w/b.
Spacitions 3 bedroom, near campus, Oct 16 $25 & per
deposit. @831-8189-7080
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: 119 S Stauffer Flint
Roommate roommate start. Jan 1985, spa-
sage roommate apt. dep. and Jan rent paid
Call Jen at 885 1642
One roommate wanted ASAP to share four bed-
room. $160 for a 40" hall, rent negotiated. 320
bedrooms. 862-751-1717.
Stop by the Office office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on the MasterCard or VISA.
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kanese office. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of apaine 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.
**Definition:**
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a tee of $4.00.
When cancelling a classified card that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by or check with cash are not available.
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5 lines
7 lines
84 lines
Rates
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 davs X $1.10=$16.50
Observer the per day
1X 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
Classifications
410 loss & fund
263 help wanted
222 professional services
725 insurellance
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
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Date ad begins: Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification:
Address
Address:
Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad.
Account number:
Exniration Date
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card
Signature
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66040
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
And ice cream!
I said, "Let them eat cake and ice cream!"
Marie Antoinette's last-ditch effort to save her head.
6B
Tuesday, September 20, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AT LAWRENCE PROMPTCARE YOU'RE NOT ONE IN A MILLION...
S
At Lawrence PromptCare, we believe you should be treated like a person and not a number.
When you're hurting or ill, waiting in discomfort for long periods of time to see a doctor is irritating. Not only that, but you may be paying the bill for months. Why not
872
select a quicker, more convenient alternativeLawrence
60 Hes
6th Street
Museum
15th Street
KU campus
Lawndale
Chapman Parkway
Fountain
Third Street
are trained in general care, acute care industrial medicine ...the works. Open seven days a week until 11 p.m., no appointment is necessary. You'll be greeted immediately by a nurse and treated fast. Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, lab and radiology services flexible hours and plenty of convenient accessible parking
make Lawrence PromptCare an agreeable health-care
PromptCare. At Lawrence PromptCare, we see you quickly and many visits are
really inexpensive. We're the ideal alternative to long waits in the emergency room and for those times when you can't see your regular doctor. Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center, equipped to handle just about any emergency that comes up, from a scrape to a breakand full service means from head to toe. Our experienced and board certified emergency medical physicians
alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician.
Mt OREAD
MEDICAL ARTS
CENTRE
865-3997 KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY
SPORTS
The Ultimate Frisbee club is gaining more interest on the KU campus. Page 1B
CAMPUS/AREA
A Lawrence resident protesting a get-well card has ended his 15-day hunger strike. Page 3A
MOSTLY CLOUDY High 85° Low 57° Weather: Page 2A.
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
A cloudy day.
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.104,NO.22
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Former KU student may sue University
Dan Murrow asks for housing refund
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
A former KU student says he will sue the University of Kansas if administrators do not grant his request for a tuition reimbursement for being kicked out of Templin Hall in Spring 1994.
Dan Murrow, who was a freshman last year, was given a notice to quit the premises on March 14, 1994, after a string of incidents at Templin that included Murrow's posting of
signs on his door that read, "Homosexuals suck," and "F.A.G.G.O.T.," which stood for "For Abolishing Gay Guys of Templin."
Incident reports were filed by resident assistants for both signs in Fall 1993, prompting housing administrators to ask Murrow to move to Oliver Hall after the Christmas break.
Murrow refused, and after an additional incident report was filed by a female security monitor who said Murrow dropped his pants in front of her, he was asked to leave University housing altogether.
He now lives with his parents in Kansas City, Kan.
council. The board still is reviewing Murrow's request.
Last week, Murrow brought his request for a tuition reimbursement to the Judicial Board, University governance's highest arbitration
"If they don't give me what I want, I'll sue for both semesters," he said from his home last week.
"What's common decency to one person may be different for another," he said. "The rule is too vague."
He also is asking for an apology from the Association of University Residence Halls and a revision of housing rules regarding common decency, which housing administrators said he violated with his actions.
Murrow said that during the proceedings with housing administrators that lead to the cancellation of his housing contract, his right to privacy was violated because his incident
reports were made public, which is against the law.
"There's a lot of laws that have been broken," he said. "Incident reports are confidential."
The resident assistants who wrote Murrow's incident reports agreed, and said they could not comment on Murrow's case.
Jim Schmaedeeke, who was complex director for Lewis and Templin Halls last year, also said he could not discuss any part of Murrow's case.
In addition to the violation of privacy complaint, Murrow said being disciplined for posting signs on his door was a violation of his free speech.
"I think I should have the freedom to do
that," he said. "But they've told me that I can't."
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the Judicial Board would make a recommendation to the chancellor about Murrow's requests.
"We have policies about refunds, but those are usually about illnesses or things beyond students' control," he said.
Ambler said the University had not confronted a case like Murrow's before. But by bringing his case to the Judicial Board, Murrow said he hoped to set a precedent for student rights.
Professor to start Russian Budget Office
"I guess nobody fought them before," he said. "They were trying to go above the law, and I caught them."
Mohamed El-Hodiri plans to head up U.S. team to Russia
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Although one person cannot affect this change, El-Hodiri said he hoped he could help.
Mohamed El-Hodiri thinks Russians deserve a better economic system than the haphazard system that plagues Russia today.
J. K.
El-Hodri, professor of economics, will travel to Russia in January to help the Russian parliament establish the Russian equivalent of the General Accounting Office and the Congressional Budget Office.
"Institutions don't evolve overnight," El-Hodiri said. "The Russians hope that we can perform magic, but I just hope to set a good example."
El-Hodiri will serve as chief economist for a team of seven American economists which will work with the parliament. Two other teams of American economists will work with Russia's ministry of finance and Moscow's government.
The economic teams, which are sponsored by the U.S. State Department and organized by Peat Marwick Policy Economics Group, will try to make gradual improvements in Russia's economy. El-Hodiri was selected to be chief economist by the Peat Marwick group and now will spend the spring semester in Rus-
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
See ELHODIRI, Page 7A.
Mohamed El-Hodiri, professor of economics, will be leaving for Russia in January to help the Russian Parliament with its economy. El-Hodiri plans to be in Russia during the spring semesters for the next three to five years.
Russia's economy in turmoil; crime is rampant
KU economics professor to aid Russian parliament in its transitional period
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Russia's economy has so many problems, it is hard to know where to begin to make changes, Leslie Dienes said.
had degenerated into a sort of jungle capitalism.
"Right now, there are too many forces straining against each other," Dienes said. "It's become a very difficult balancing game."
In January, Mohamed EL-Hodrii, professor of economics, will travel to Russia with a team of seven American economists to help the Russian parliament improve the economy.
El-Hodiri said a basic problem was that Russia lacked an internal ethical system after the fall of communism.
Dienes, professor of Russian and East European Studies, said Russia's economic system
"It is as if you spent your life in a penitentiary, and suddenly the warden is gone," El-Hodiri said. "The warden is gone in Russia, and the
people don't know how to react."
The results of Russia's chaotic economy are rampant crime and suspicion among the people, El-Hodiri said.
"Trust doesn't exist there," he said. "If you talk to people, they don't believe you because they're so used to lies."
Dienes said increased crime, corruption and poverty had resulted from such a rapid transition from communism.
"Americans have advised radical changes too quickly," Dienes said. "In the transition, they have neglected to build institutions."
Speeding up the creation of financial and
legal institutions must be a priority, Dienes said.
"They also must navigate between decreasing the budget deficit and avoiding complete bankruptcy," he said.
Dienes said the Russian economy had continually deteriorated since the fall of communism, but Russians could now begin working toward a free market.
"They have so many problems right now," Dienes said. "The ratios among prices are wrong, and they don't even know which industries are healthy. But they need to begin to change."
SenEx to decide appeals
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
Repeated appeals by a student who was asked to leave a residence hall last year have prompted an administrator to ask the University Senate Executive Committee to streamline the appeals process.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, asked SenEx in August to strike a clause from University Senate Rules and Regulations that allowed students who had unresolved grievances with the Department of Student Housing to present their cases to the Judicial Board, the University's highest arbitration council.
"We ask that recourse to the Judicial Board be deleted because violations of Department of Student Housing policies are also breaches of the housing contracts, which may be litigated in civil courts under applicable landlord-tenant law." he wrote.
In his memo to SenEx, Ambler said housing contract violations were outside the jurisdiction of the Judicial Board.
Ambler said appeals to the Judicial Board were unnecessary because students already had opportunities to appeal within the Department of Student Housing.
Ambler said students could first appeal hall staff decisions to the residence hall director, then to associate directors of student housing and finally to the director of student housing, Ken Stoner.
"To take this on to the Judicial Board just prolongs the process," he said.
But student senator Ken Martin said the proposal to eliminate appeals to the Judicial Board would be an infringement of student rights. Students should have a hearing from a disinterested panel, he said.
Martin said the Judicial Board appeal option should be left in or that a Residence Hall Judicial Board should be established.
INSIDE Spoonin' up fame
Artis is the inspiration for Soundgarden's song "Spoonman." While in Lawrence, he openly talked about his 36-year career in music.
Page 6B.
THE HOWLING MACHINE
Student Senate says its salaries are hard-earned
By James Evans
Kansan staff writer
When many students accept the presidency of a campus organization, they expect little more than satisfaction and a good experience.
But the president of the student body and five other Student Senate executives get a little bit more. Each month, six Senate executives take home a paycheck from the state of Kansas.
Each executive is paid for attending and organizing meetings, keeping Senate operations going and keeping Senate finances in order. They are required, according to Student Senate regulations, to work 18 to 20 hours a week depending on their positions.
Sherman Reeves, student body president, said that he usually put in a lot more than his required time for his
Citing a typical week, Reeves said last week he met with the Board of Regents all day Thursday and worked on the chancellor's search Friday. That's in addition to his two weekly meetings and regular office hours.
elected,paid position.
"In my case, I can easily work a 40-hour week," said Reeves, who earns $400 a month. He said that he often took work home from Senate to make sure he kept up with his responsibilities.
Reeves, who is a pre-medicine student, said that he had cut his class schedule down because of his extensive student involvement.
"I'm only taking eight hours of classes." Beevens said.
Some faculty members said it was necessary to pay Senate executives for their time since they could be working at a typical student job.
"If you look at the amount of time
"Some students may feel that they need money and just opt out of participating in Student Senate," he said.
Some student senators agree that the executive officers earn every dollar they receive for their work with Student Senate.
they dedicate to Student Senate, it makes it very difficult to find a job," said Danny Kaiser, assistant dean of student life.
Kaiser, who has worked with Senate in the past, said money could play a heavy influence on whether students could afford to get involved.
"I think the salaries are necessary," said Stephanie Guerin, Senate finance committee chairwoman. "Technically they're supposed to work around 20 hours a week, but they work way beyond that. Most of them don't even make minimum wage."
Student Senate salaries
The salaries and benefits for the Student Senate
positions total more than $85,000. This also includes
the full time staff secretary.
Position Monday salary
Sherman Reeves $440.00
Student body president
Eric Medill $412.50
Vice president
Shea Browning $440.00
treasurer
Jill Bechtel $400.00
Studex Chair
Bob Grundinger $390.00
Assistant treasurer
Mediana Leander $180.00
Executive secretary
Source: Student Senate Dave Campbell / KANSAN
2A
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSA*N
喜
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Focus on educational merits, short trips and your neighborhood. A beautification project will increase the real estate value of your home. Seize an opportunity to reconcile with a relative this winter. The year 1905 will find you eager to hit the road in search of adventure! Romance will blossom as the weather turns warmer next spring.
By Jean Dixon
T
CLEEBRITES BORN ON THIS DATE, actress Nancy Travis, singer Leonard Cohen, actor Bill Murray, novelist Fannie Flagg
♀
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Attend a special meeting even if not in the mood - it could have a huge impact on your professional or personal future. A romantic relationship is strengthened without your realizing it.
69
8
TAURIS (April 20-May 20). An exciting career development sends your income or earning power soaring. Do nothing to jeopardize your reputation for reliability. A well-planned project will get the green light later today. Assemble your own team.
M
WP
GEMINI (May 21 June 20). You have good ideas on the best way to tackle a home-related task. A take-charge attitude will work wonders! There may be a financial reason behind a canceled date.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Despite some petty aggravations,
you will enjoy rubbing elbows
with the members of a trendy
group. Join forces with someone
who can help your career or financial
prospects. Anchor your
genius in practical work.
M
LEO (July 23-August 27): Remarkable mental rapport could send your love life in a new direction. You will know when to speak up and to whom! Today also favors discussion of legal matters. Voice your views with confidence.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Today's events point out the importance of keeping a close eye on joint financial interests, tax payments and credit matters. Let others know you respect their views. An unusual trip brings a wealth of insights.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22): If you want to sell property, this is a good day to show it; and if you want to buy, now is also a great time to look. Tie up loose ends tonight.
♈
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21) In one way or another, the job scene could introduce you to a new romantic interest. Take an aerobics class or a daily walk if worried about a lack of exercise. Speak with a noted authority.
VS
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
This is not a good day to try putting your foot down at home. Seize an opportunity to promote domestic harmony. Zero in on athletic or social events that younger family members will enjoy.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 10):
An old complaint may resurface between you and your mate. It is up to you to promote accord. Artistic pursuits enjoy better influences than legal endeavors now.
Water
X
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Steer clear of risky financial ventures involving your friends. You can obtain much better investment advice elsewhere! Your social life is on the upwring. Count on your popularity to zoom as you meet more people.
ON CAMPUS
PICSCE (Feb. 19-March 20): A family powwow will produce a wise decision regarding a property matter or major domestic change. You discover that your partner is in agreement with you on basic issues. Be willing to make concessions.
TODAY'S CHILDREN. Once these Virgos have acquired self-confidence, they will express their views in an attractively assertive manner. They pride themselves on their objectivity and will want to hear all sides of an issue before making a final decision. Organized and methodical, these Virgos are able to juggle several tasks at a time. A favorite hobby or cause could lead to a second career as they approach retirement age.
Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes onlv.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Kansas, 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. 6044. 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.
Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today in front of Wescue Hall.
OAKS, Non-Traditional Student Organization, will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove H in the Kansas Union.
Unclassified Professional Staff Association will meet at 12:15 p.m. today at Parlors A and B in the Kansas Union
KU Study Abroad in French-
speaking countries will sponsor
an informational meeting at 4 p.m.
today in 4055 Wesley Hall.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at Campanile hill
Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today at 1204 Oread Ave.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center.
KU Religious Advisors will sponsor a Spiritual Awareness Week and a Panel Presentation at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
- Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight at Parlors A and B in the Kansas Union.
Promoting Alcohol Responsibility Through You will meet at 7:30 tonight at the first floor conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Straight Allies of Lesbians, Gays and Bisexuals will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Cataloging Conference Room in Watson Library.
Water Polo Club will meet at 7:45 tonight at Robinson Center's natatorium.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Literary Club will meet at 5:15 p.m. tomorrow at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union
Japan Karate-do Ryobu-kai Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at 215 Robinson Center.
Kansan Advisory Board will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at 120 Stauffer Flint Hall.
KU NOW will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
Psi Chi will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at 547 Fraser Hall.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a C.A.R.E. meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow at 1631 Crescent Rd.
Campus Crusade for Christ will sponsor "College Life" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union.
LeSibBigAYOK will hold a business meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
KU Triathlon Team and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Robinson Pool
Amnesty International will hold a letter writing session at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at 130 Robinson Center.
caused $1,000 in theft and damage, Lawrence police reported.
ON THE RECORD
Books and stereo equipment valued together at $178.90 were stolen from a KU student's car in the 400 block of Illinois Street Saturday night, Lawrence police reported.
A 23-year-old Lawrence man was arrested Monday and charged with possession of drugs with intent to sell, Lawrence police reported.
Weather
TODAY'S TEMPS
Two KU students reported two separate incidents of telephone harassment, KU police said. The first incident was repeated calls from Sept. 5 until Monday to a student's room in Ellsworth Hall, police said. The second was a single incident Sunday in McCollum Hall, police said.
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
- Unknown assailants broke into a KU student's 1984 Volkswagen Rabbit Sept. 13 in the 1000 block of Emery Road and
H I G H L O W
THURSDAY
Mostly cloudy and breezy with a slight chance for rain.
78° • 62°
79° • 59°
76° • 56°
79° • 55°
82° • 57°
76° • 62°
79° • 61°
76° • 44°
77° • 50°
80° • 63°
81° • 56°
84° • 63°
79° • 53°
8257
Mostly cloudy witha 60 percent chance for rain.
FRIDAY
Much cooler with mostly cloudy skies
6339
6950
Source: Matt Jezewski, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
September 20,1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
67.63
NYSE
3.72
255.91
3,869.09
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 325,910,000
488
Advances
Declines
7.76
768.96
1,811
Unchanged
-
584
ASE
2.98
458.15
458. 15
Rollerblades Used & CHEAP
Great skates, cheap!
We RENT skates!
We RENT
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
- quantities limited 1029 Mass.
We're selling our old RENTAL fleet.
841-PLAY(7529)
THE YACHT CLUB
JOYRANCE
842-9445 530 Wisconsin
Daily Drink Specials
2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS
(913) 842-4949
Friday Busch, Busch Light, & Keystone Light $1.50 Or 5 in a bucket $6.00 5 House Shots $5.00 (Free Taco Bar 5pm-?)
Thursday Draws $.75 2 Pitchers$6.50
Wednesday Margaritas $1.25 Draws $.50 Big Beers $2.00
Saturday Yacht Shots $1.00 All well shots.Watermelon, Kamikazee,& Sex-On the Beach)
Sunday Cheeseburger/Curly Fries & either a draw or Coke $2.50 (Refills $.75)
VIVO
ULTIMATE TAN
If your summer whites are looking drab, then pick up a Kansan Card for the Ultimate Tan with the ultimate discount.
The summer is ending... Did you spend enough time outside?
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Valid through July 31, 1995
NCCS
Monday
A Mexican Tradition
Monday
Tostada, Burrito,Rice or Beans $3.50
Tuesday
Carnita, Side Salad, Rice & Beans $3.50
Wednesday
Veggie Quesadilla, Rice,
Beans & Side Salad $3.50
Thursday
Pork Burrito, Tostada, Rice or Beans
$3.50
Friday
Chicken or Beef Flauta, Rice & Beans
$4.00
$4.00
Bring your Amigos and Try Our Daily Lunch Specials!
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Malls Shopping Center
23rd & Louisiana
843-4944
8
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
3A
Martial arts helps students clear their heads, begin the day
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Nicole Vasco went to Campanile hill at 6 a.m. yesterday to clear her head.
"I do it to escape," said Vasco, Stillwell junior. "It's peaceful, and I can block out the world."
Vasco is one of 25 students who participated in a morning meditation session conducted by Michael Ur, KU Karate instructor.
"I learned about the meditation from my martial arts master," Ur said. "It was very beneficial to me, so I decided to teach it to my students."
Ur teaches five different karate classes at Robinson Gymnasium and allows his students to participate in a weeklong meditation training every semester.
The students arrived for yesterday's session before the sun came up and quietly stretched to prepare for the training.
They began the session with a 40 minute physical workout.
"This training is to challenge yourself," Ur told them. "Don't worry about anyone else around you."
Ur told the students to concentrate on combining their minds and bodies
"Without your mind working together with your body, your body is only material," Ur said. "It can't become stronger."
After the physical training the students had a mental training.
The students sat with their legs crossed and their eyes closed.
"Sense the new day," he said, "Feel the wind. Hear the birds."
Ur said that meditation helped people learn how to focus and concentrate.
"It helps with studying and for life in general because people learn to focus on one thing," he said.
Ur said that that meditation could benefit people in all areas of their lives.
"Sometimes when I watch basketball games I wonder why the players don't try meditating." Ur said. "If the players would focus their energy on shooting, our free throws would be incredible."
"I want them to work beyond what they think they can accomplish," he said.
Ur wants to teach his students that the only limits they have are the ones they create.
Vasco said it was not that difficult to wake up for the sessions because it was something she enjoyed.
1970
"It's a great way to start the day," Vasco said. "It's a great way to escape stress. I close my eyes and think about everything around me."
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
"I will be getting my black belt in December, and the meditation has always helped my form."
Sun said that the concentration skills he had learned had helped him with his study habits.
"Focusing helps me gain power on other areas of my life, especially with my studies," he said.
David Burgett(right), Overland Park senior, and Charlie Sun, Springfield, Mo. senior, meditate on Campanile Hill. Burgett and Sun were among approximately 15 students that participated in the early morning meditation Tuesday morning.
15-day hunger strike is ended by doctor; Man's health was in question after pains
Lawrence resident's mission produces national attention, but card hasn't been recalled
By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer
A Lawrence resident's 15-day hunger strike ended Monday on his doctor's orders.
The outside of the card shows a Muslim woman in face veil and reads, "Rather than confront her fear of germs, Millicent changed her name to Yazmine and moved to Tehran." Inside, the card reads, "So, you're feeling like Shite. Don't Mecca big deal out of it."
Mohammed Saeed had been protesting a get-well card made by Chicago-based Recycled Paper Greetings. Saeed, who received national attention for the strike, had said he would strike until the company issued an apology and recalled the card.
Saeed subsisted on water, fruit juice and daily vitamin pills throughout the strike. But after Saeed complained of chest pains last week, his doctor told him that if he did not stop the strike, he could damage his heart.
Saeed said he would be seeing a doctor today to determine more specifically what was wrong with him.
Ibrahim Hooper, national communications director for the Council on Islamic-American Relations in Washington D.C., said that the council asked Saeed to end his strike.
"There is an Islamic principle that says you shouldn't do anything to harm yourself," Hooper said.
Hooper said Saeed's strike was beneficial because it brought national attention to the card and Recycled Paper Greetings.
Although Hallmark Cards Inc. does not carry Recycled Paper Greetings in its corporate-owned stores, last week the company announced that it would inform its independently-owned stores that it considered the card unacceptable. Hallmark also announced it would encourage Hallmark retailers to remove the card from their stores.
But Recycled Paper Greetings has done little, Hooper said.
"They have not apologized for the card, nor have they recalled it," he said.
In response, Hooper said, a nationwide protest would take place Saturday in selected cities across the United States, including San Francisco and Chicago.
Saeed said that responses to the strike were positive.
"The Chicago Tribune, The Washington Post and The New York Times have written about it," he said. "Here in Lawrence, a young man who said he runs two computer networks told me he was telling people to boycott the company."
Saeed said he hoped his protest had been effective.
"We want to say to people, 'Don't buy the card,'" he said. "That way, we'll hit them where it counts: in their pocketbooks."
"I'm now craving vegetables and salads," he said. "Before I really didn't like vegetables. Now I can't seem to eat red meat."
Saeed said that one strange effect of the strike was that his food preferences were changing.
"The first thing I did when my doctor told me to eat was go to Penny Annie's Sweet Shoppe on Massachusetts Street and have a chicken taco salad and a root beer float."
"Other than an occasional Wendy's attack, the thing I missed the most was cherry pie and peach pie," he said.
He said he thought the change might have to do with his body being depleted of vitamins.
Candidates work 40-hour week in quest for a Kansas House seat
Candidates agree that door-to-door campaign works best
By James Evans
Kansan staff writer
Troy Findley and Eric Schmidt have found a new full-time job. The Democratic and Republican first-time candidates for the 46th Kansas State House District are finding out just what it takes to run for the house seat.
"It's pretty much like a second job," Findley, of Lawrence, said.
He said that he was spending 35 to 40 hours a week on campaigning for the House seat. Findley still works to help other Democratic candidates on their campaigns as Kansas Democratic Party-County Outreach Director.
Findley said that he decided to run for the house seat in May when Mary Jo Charlton retired from the position.
Findley said that he started meeting with voters in July.
"Before the primary, I tried to door-to-door on a daily basis," Findley said. He finds door-to-door one of the most effective ways to campaign, since an estimated 13,000 to 14,000 registered voters are in the district.
Since the primary, in which he beat Dick Small of Lawrence, the amount of time he had spent on his campaign has increased.
He said that he had 10 to 20 core
people working with him to help on his campaign on any given day. For special campaign events the volunteer help increased to 50 or 60 people.
POLICY REPORTERS
Eric Schmidt
He could not estimate how
much his campaign costs would run until the Nov. 8 election.
"We'll spend as much as we money as we need to win," Findley said.
Schmidt, Findley's opponent who is also a financial consultant, has also been spending a lot of time on the campaign trail. He said that he worked around 40 hours a week on his campaign.
To get out his campaign message, Schmidt said that he had spoken to different community groups, the media, and done door-to-door campaigning.
Schmidt, who is also from Lawrence, said that he would probably spend around $7,000 for his campaign. The largest campaign expense was printing costs for campaign literature.
"I've put some of my own money into the campaign and have done some fund raising also," Schmidt said. He raised funds for his campaign by a direct mail campaign, contributions, and from telephone solicitations.
Voting Districts
45th District
Iowa St.
44th District
46th District
Clinton Parkway
23rd St.
47th District
Dave Campbell, Nathan Olson / KANSAN
Dave Campbell, Nathan Olson / KANB Russell Getter, associate professor of political science, said Schmidt's estimation of $7,000 for an open Kansas state seat is a reasonable figure.
"Candidates can spend up to $20,000 for a seat," he said. "It cost more to run for office depending on how you run the campaign."
Getter said door-to-door campaigning in urban districts, such as Lawrence's 46th district, was effective.
"The door-to-door campaign is the standard particularly if the candidate is new to the citizenship," he said. "If your one of the older candidates you can use things such as mail."
The Lowest EVERYDAY CD Prices in Lawrence
KIEF'S CDs/TAPES
AND...
- 25% OFF SAVINGS! Get 25% Off Retail ANYDAY with our BUY 5/GET 25 Program.
- LOWEST PRICES ON NEW RELEASES! Every TUESDAY we'll have the week's new releases at Lawrence's Lowest Sale Price. Come at 11 p.m., Mon., Spt. 26 For the Listening Party... Stick Around Til Midnight For The LOWEST LAWRENCE PRICE on R.E.M's "Monster".
DON'T FORGET.
- KIEF'S BUYS, SELLS, AND TRADES USED CDs!!
24th & Iowa St. P.O.Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES 913*843*1811 913*842*1438 913*842*1544
4A
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
God exists in the preservation of earth's beauty
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
DAVID ZIMMERMAN Conservative Christians cynical about environmentalism should look closer.
Last Saturday, in Kansas City, the Catholic Church sponsored a musical. The musical, called "Earth Awakening," used music, scripture and a letter from the pope to encourage Catholics to be more environmentally conscious. It is a response to a pastoral letter written by the pope in 1900 urging Catholics to take more action to protect the environment.
Even though I am not Catholic, I find myself agreeing that Christians, indeed everyone, should be taking more action to preserve and protect the world around them.
I have found that most conservative Christians are extremely cynical toward taking action to preserve the environment. I am not excluded from
this group — last year I frequently razzed my roommate for all his environmental propaganda.
For all my cynicism, I was inconsistent. I enjoyed being in the outdoors — camping, backpacking, hiking and that sort of stuff. You have not lived until you have awakened in the bottom of the Grand Canyon to see the sunlight softly and gradually highlight the reeds and oranges of the buttes and mesas. I have never appreciated God's beautiful creation more than when I was sitting on top of Horn Peak in Colorado, reading the Psalms and absorbing the complicated beauty of the mountains around me — aliteral mountain-top experience. Attimes like these, I cannot understand
how people can say there is no God. How could I not want to preserve this beauty for others to share?
Most conservative Christians approach the environmental issue with defenses up. This is because, so often, environmentalism is equated with strange, pantheistic ideas about an earth goddess named Gaia. However pagan the idea of Gaia, she isn't the only reason people should protect the environment.
Christians often throw around the word stewardship. A steward is someone who is entrusted to care for the master's belongings. Most of the time, this concept is applied to money — we should take good care of the money God has entrusted to us. This
means we shouldn't waste our money, spend it poorly and, basically, throw it around. In the same way, we are stewards of this world. We shouldn't waste it, spend its resources poorly and throw it around.
Another reason so many conservative Christians aren't environmentalists is because it could distract from more important issues. First and foremost, Christianity is about a God who came to the world to pay the penalty for the sins of his people. Many times, Christian groups have forgotten this in the context of other issues. For instance, the Salvation Army used to be about bringing the gospel message to the people. Lately, it has been distracted from this mission in order to
focus on feeding the poor. Feeding the poor is a good and noble action — which Christians are called to do — but what good does it do in the eternal scheme of things to have a full belly but confined to the fires of hell.
their caution is correct. We shouldn't let environmentalism become the overriding issue for Christianity. However, because the saving grace of God is the key issue of Christianity, we should try and preserve the world's beauty. "The heavens declare the glory of God," says Psalm 19, "The skies proclaim the works of his hands." An ugly world full of pollution does not do this.
David Zimmerman is a Wichita senior in communication studies
VIEWPOINT
Commissioner's tax plan deserves to be defeated
It's too bad County Commissioner Jim Chappell is not up for re-election in November.
Although we cannot vote the man out of office,we can at least ensure that his outrageous 1 percent county-wide sales tax increase will not pass.
Chappell has decided that the only way to make sure "transient" students pay their fair share in the community is by increasing sales tax.
What he fails to realize is that all Lawrence and Douglas County residents will be affected by such a tax increase and that very few of those residents are likely to go for such an increase.
But that is not the only failure in Chappell's reasoning.
Part of the court system that sees those students is the traffic court.
The commissioner contends that part of the tax increase would go to pay for the gross numbers of KU students clogging the court system.
What Chappell doesn't mention is the tremendous amount of revenue Lawrence receives from traffic fines and parking tickets.
This is revenue that allows the town of Lawrence to maintain such a large police force.
Another failing in Chap-
pell's reasoning is that students do not pay property tax. Part of the sales tax increase, he says, will go toward relieving the property tax of Lawrence residents.
Contrary to Chappell's public statements, students do pay property taxes when they pay their rents.
It is highly unlikely in a city where rent is high that property owners are not including the cost of property tax in the monthly rent they charge students.
Chappell himself should be well aware of this considering that he owns rental properties and a property-management service called Chappell Land Company.
It is obvious that Lawrence and Douglas County would not be what they are without the University and without the students and professors and jobs it brings in.
At least it is obvious to everyone but Jim Chappell and anyone who supports his poorly reasoned sales tax increase.
The best thing students can do for Chappell is to get out and vote against his tax increase and, when the time comes, do him the favor of voting him out of office and saving him from making a bigger fool of himself.
DONELLA HEARNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
JEN CARR Business manager
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
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 Heame
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
Mellasa Lacey
Features ... Traci Carl
Planning Editor ... Susan White
Design ... Noah Muuss
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 Stigle
Creative director ... John Cartton
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 phone number associated with affiliated with the University of Chicago or a university, town or faculty or staff member.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
AT LAST, JIM SLATTERY AND BILL GRAVES FIND A POINT ON WHICH THEY DISAGREE:
PERHAPS YOU DON'T HAVE THE LEGISLATIVE EXPERIENCE TO SEE THAT IT'S LESS FILLING.
ONLY A WASHINGTON INSIDER LIKE YOU COULD FAIL TO SEE THAT IT TASTES GREAT.
Sean Finn/ KANSAN
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Kansan editorials lack importance
If I choose, I could certainly pick apart and find all the fallacies, inaccuracies, and downright ramblings of Mr. Zimmerman. However, I would merely like to request that the Kansan take the suggestion of one student who would much rather read opinions of more journalistic, as well as topical, issues than the
With all due respect to the University Daily Kansan and the many awards the paper has received, I wish to express my dissatisfaction for the recent editorial ("opinion") page for this semester, as well as the previous.
Perhaps this dissatisfaction is best exemplified by the editorial in the Kansan on Aug. 31, titled "Life's meaning found in faith, not rock lyrics." We had a crime bill pass the Senate, the "Haitian Coalition" was formed the day the editorial appeared (as was reported on the front page of the Kansan) and a former graduate assistant from the University had been found guilty of rape, as well as acquitted of a similar charge. With all these events, as well as many other issues too numerous to mention, to select from to compose an editorial, why did the paper choose to print this particular one?
Kansan has been presenting.
While the rock group Kansas has its own subtle form of topical journalistic merit and while the obvious importance of relating one of its songs to finding God could come in handy one day, maybe the editorial board could watch the evening news and come up with an issue someone might even have an opinion on, and dare I say it, care.
Jeremy Plummer Kansas City senior
Editor's Response:
We appreciate letters such as these, as they give us an opportunity to clarify the intent of our page.
The purpose of the opinion page is to provide readers with several viewpoints, which can be as broad in spectrum as a national event or as narrow in focus as a minor everyday occurrence. They can be serious. They can be funny. For this reason, the editorials and columns occupy separate portions of the page every day.
The viewpoint section that runs down the left side of the page is composed daily by the editorial board, which consists of 13 individuals from various schools within the University as well as varying schools of thought. Editorials, by definition, state the opinion of the paper.
Twice a week the board meets to discuss and to take a position on certain issues that affect the University or community. These issues, for the most part, take on a more serious tone. We attempt to consistently focus on the issues most important to KU, including issues of national or international significance.
Unfortunately, we do not always have the time to address every issue we feel is pertinent. We apologize at times, our editorial section falls short of providing all the information a student needs and wants.
In contrast to the editorial board, our columnists provide their own individual viewpoints. It is our opinion that the columnists we have hired for this semester represent a broad base of beliefs and styles. The subjects range from weighty topics such as rape or the crime bill to lighter topics such as time management or involvement in University organizations. With occasional editing, the columnist is his or her own boss. In other words, whether we disagree with a columnist's viewpoint is irrelevant.
If, on the other hand, readers such as Mr. Plummer find fault in our hiring practices, then we suggest submitting a column that would give us a reasonable alternative.
Donella Hearne editorial editor
Matt Gowen associate editorial editor
COLUMNIST
ERIKA RASMUSSON
There is a virus, silent but ever present, that is threading its way through campus and into the hearts and minds of female students and staff at the University of Kansas. This virus is fear, and it is threatening to become an epidemic.
Rape coverage does nothing to quell fears
The Kansan has been giving the issues of rape and assault full coverage this year and not always to rave reviews. However, I can't help but think that almost any coverage is positive because it puts these important issues where they need to be — in the spotlight and on the front page. And, unfortunately, there has been plenty of news to report.
Since August, when I returned to school, it has become apparent that perhaps Lawrence, and KU's campus, is not as safe as it has been in years past. I've seen filers posted that report a man assaulting women in northwest Lawrence. He is still on the loose. And according to a recent Kansan article, "the number of rapes reported on campus has increased 400 percent since last year ... " 400 percent!
That number alone is enough to put more than a little bit of fear and apprehension inside me. And I'm not alone, either. A professor of mine has called the police twice within the past two weeks because of a strange man (or men) lurking outside her house. On one occasion, a man streaked through her yard naked. On the second, a man actually got up on her back porch and unscrewed the light bulb she had turned on hoping to ward off intruders. So much for awareness. Apparently safety measures don't always work.
I'm to scary cat, nor is my roommate or any other woman I know. Still, a can of mace does little to quell the nagging fear that buries itself in my consciousness every time I must walk on campus at night. I can't help but be aware of the dangers. And sadly, the statistics seem to support my fears.
It is assaults such as these, as well as rapes, that put fear into women's hearts, making us feel unsafe in our own apartments and on the campus we call home. These are the thoughts that I think of when I must walk to my parked car in the dark, wondering if an offender is lurking in the shadowy trees or behind another car. It is thoughts such as these that have kept my professor in Kansas City some nights, rather than face coming home to an empty house at night.
Erika Rasmusson is a Minnitonta, Minn,
senior in magazine journalism.
MIXED MEDIA
By Jack Ohman
© 1994 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY SMOKEY
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesdav, September 21. 1994
5A
Address updates necessary for aid
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Financial aid recipients need to remember to update their addresses.
If they don't update their addresses with the Office of Student Financial Aid by the Oct. 1 deadline, they could have problems renewing their financial aid.
Chris Johnson, assistant director for financial aid, said that in previous years, students had to fill out entirely new, free applications for federal student aid each year. But last year the renewal application process began, requiring students only to update the applications.
But problems arose when students didn't update their addresses. Financial Aid needs students' correct
addresses so that they can begin preparing to mail the renewal forms out. The forms will begin reaching students in December and are due Jan. 1.
"The renewal form is easier to complete because it allows the student to just update those items which have changed from the prior application year," Johnson said.
Johnson said the applications sometimes did not reach students because financial aid did not have the students' correct addresses.
"Last year, students waited for their renewal application, but it was probably sent to their previous address," Johnson said.
The U.S. Department of Education came up with the renewal application to make the process simpler, he said.
Students who don't turn in renewal forms still have the opportunity to fill out a long application, which is due March 1. But Johnson said that filling out a renewal form could decrease the chance that a student might make an error that could make the student's financial aid late or incorrect.
"If students turn the renewal application in by the deadline, it will enhance their chance to get the best possible aid package," Johnson said.
Most students who will be effected by the renewal process receive federal Perkins Loans, Federal Work Study, and the federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant.
Students who wish update their addresses may do so in the Office of Student Financial Aid, 50 Strong Hall.
Psychology classes require student research
By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer
Psychology faculty and graduate students need guinea pigs, and Psychology 104 students need a passing grade. Thus, a symbiotic relationship has developed between the two interests over a 22-year period at the University of Kansas.
David S. Holmes, professor of psychology, said the requirement for General Psychology students to complete five hours of psychological experiments benefited the students as well as the faculty conducting the experiments.
Students are required to participate as subjects or complete two term papers to receive credit for the class.
"Having such a large pool of students available is productive for the department in terms of research," Holmes said. "It's an advantage to the student because the more research that's published, the better reputation the University gets and the more
money that comes in. "Tuition only pays a fraction of what education costs."
Holmes also said students learned from participating in experiments.
"Some students don't see the value of participating," he said. "But it gives them some exposure to research."
While Holmes said using students for experiments had been successful in the past, he said he realized that there were some inherent obstacles experimenters encountered.
One issue that has been raised is the lack of minority students used in the studies, he said.
"The lack of minorities is a serious problem that we're focusing on," he said. "We don't know that WASPy middle-class students generalize to minority groups. It's an issue that psychology is behind on. It's especially hard to study ethnic issues in Kansas."
Holmes also said that every precaution was taken to ensure that students were not exploited by the experimenters. Each experiment must meet the standards of the Advisory Committee on Human Experimentation.
Holmes said that the committee is comprised of students, faculty, a lawyer and people from the Lawrence community.
Most students said they did not feel uncomfortable about the experiments or resentful at having to complete them to receive credit for the class.
Chad Denpsey, Maryville, Mo,
freshman, who had already participated
in one experiment said that he didn't mind being a subject.
"It wasn't tough," he said. "It's easier than writing a term paper. It's something different."
Dempsey said that he participated in an experiment that asked him to predict the sex of a person by what their job title was.
Tailgate
Party Time
Stop By
Alvins Before
The Game
B-B-Q
Beef
Sandwiches
Stop by
for B-B-Q
11 A.M. TO 7 P.M.
“Kick
The Season
Off Right”
9th and IOWA
Tailgate Party Time
Stop By Alvins Before The Game
B-B-Q Beef Sandwiches
9th and IOWA
Stop by for B-B-Q
11 A.M. TO 7 P.M.
"Kick The Season Off Right"
4¢99
Limit 1 w/$10 in other purchases
Doritos Chips
2/$500
pp.$2.99
Lays or Ruffles Potato Chips
2/$500
Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream
2/$300 pints
Keg Beer
16 gal.
39¢99
Lowest Price in Town!
Call
843-2313
Alvin's
Cost Kutter
IGA
HOMETOWN PROUD
VISA
MasterCard
DICover
Accepted
•Check Cashing
•Post Office
•Carry Outs
•Dell
•Bakery
•Videos
843-2313
9th & Iowa
499
Limit 1 w/$10 in
other purchases
Doritos Chips
2/$500
pp.$2.99
Lays or Ruffles
Potato Chips
2/$500
Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream 2/$300 pints
Keg Beer 16 gal. 39'99 Lowest Price in Town!
Call 843-2313
Alvin's Cost Kutter
IGA HOMETOWN PROUD
VISA MasterCard DISCOVER Accepted
•Check Cashing
•Post Office
•Carry Outs
•Dell
•Bakery
•Videos
843-2313 9th & Iowa
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
NOW OPEN!!
Downtown Lawrence
Off 10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
The largest record store in Lawrence
128 private listening stations
Espresso Bar by La Prima Tazza
$2 OFF
The End.
Downtown Lawrence
10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
$2 OFF ANY
COMPACT DISC
Must present coupon. Expires September 23, 1994.
Valid on regularly priced CDs of $10.99 or more. Limit one per purchase.
NOW OPEN!!
2
Wednesday, September 21. 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
1051 Madisonhasset
Downtown
Learn to Fly
Lawrence Air Services
Instruction•Charter
Service•Rental
842-0000
Lawrence Air Services
Instruction·Charter
Service·Rental
842-0000
Red Lyon
Tavern
A touch of Irish
in downtown Lawrence
944 Massachusetts
"University of Massachusetts 1993"
832-8228
I KNOW WHAT I KNOW. WE COME & WE GO. IT'S IN THE BACK OF MY EYES
The End
ICONOGRAPHICS
ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTERS
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
LARGEST TRAVELING MOVIE POSTER SHOW ON THE PLANET
MON., SEPT. 19 TO FRI. SEPT. 23
KANSAS UNION GALLERY
9AM - 5PM LEVEL 4, KS. UNION
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
P
Mark Sockwell, Topeka graduate student, rips up his kite and enjoys the last of the summer skies over the Robinson fields. Summer officially ends at 1 a.m. Friday.
Watkins health fair aims to inform students about their bodies and the center's programs
By Megan Poplinger Special to the Kansan
When Janine Gracy was a freshman in 1981, all incoming students were forced to endure a physical that included weight measurements and a urine test.
"I was mortified when they gave me that cup and told me to go to that bathroom and fill it." Grace said.
From this experience, Gracy knew that the KU initiation gave students a terrible first impression of the Watkins Memorial Health Center. So, when she became coordinator of health education at Watkins, she created an event that would give students a better impression of the health center.
The horrifying physical Gracy expe-
That was six years ago, and from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. tomorrow and Friday, the seventh-annual health fair will be held outside of Watkins, rain or shine.
the health fair was beneficial to students because they learned so much about their bodies.
In addition to health information, students with a lucky dot on the back of the brochures they receive can win T-shirts from Christie's Toy Box, along with merchandise from other local retailers. Popcorn, ICBIY yogurt, non-alcoholic beverages and condoms will be given away.
rienced has been abolished — students must now mail in their immunization records and health histories. But they still can receive the benefits of a personal physical by participating in the health fair.
Gracy said she aimed to convince college-aged people to begin leading healthy lifestyles while they are young, so they can be successful when they are older.
The health fair's newest attraction this year is an over-the-counter drugs booth. Gracy said that many people over self-medicated and were unaware of the repercussions.
Although Gracy hopes to reach many more people, she said she had experienced some success. A doctor told Gracy that one of his patients had lost 65 pounds after attending the fair and learning the importance of changing his lifestyle.
Free screenings of body fat, blood pressure and cholesterol counts, as well as nutritional analysis and career advice from Counseling and Psychological Services, also will be available.
Many students have become aware of blood pressure and cholesterol problems in past years, Gracy said. It always catches students by surprise because college-aged people do not think they can be affected by such problems.
"When a physician comes to you with a story like that, you think - Yes!" Gracysaid.
Lisa Trownsell, Chicago junior, who volunteered last year, said that
City says no to additional traffic lane
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
City officials last night put the brakes on a proposal to build a fifth lane on North Second Street.
Missing one member, the Lawrence City Commission voted 4-0 last night to continue with a $1.6 million road-widening project on North Second Street without the addition of a fifth lane. The vote followed a presentation by Jeffrey Morrow, traffic engineer with George Butler Associates, Inc., the company contracted to widen the street.
"It's really not necessary," Morrow told the commission.
Commissioners earlier had asked the firm to look into the possibility of a fifth lane, a left-turn lane. The proposal would have been added to the plan, which will widen the current four lanes from 10 to 12 feet wide each.
Morrow said George Butler Associates, Inc., had looked at three different projections for Lawrence traffic 20 years from now. The report said business along North Second Street would increase moderately, drastically, or to the point where the street would overload completely.
The results, he said, pointed toward keeping the road-widening project to its original scope. He said even at its busiest, the street's estimated traffic still did not warrant a turn lane.
Morrow also said finding the room for the fifth lane would be difficult. Currently, retail development along North Second Street is squeezed between the Kansas River levee on the west and North Lawrence residential areas on the east.
Another lane also would destroy the atmosphere surrounding North Second Street and the North Lawrence business district. Morrow said.
"We want to try to preserve some of the rural characteristics of the North Lawrence corridor," he said.
Bob Moody, city commissioner, said a fifth lane also might have brought undesired commercial growth to North Lawrence.
REDNECK CHECK YOUR NECK!
Y
You Might Be a Redneck If..
Someone asks to see your I.D. and you show them your belt buckle
You consider a six pack of beer and a bug-zapper quality entertainment
Directions to your house include "turn off the paved road"
You have ever been too drunk to fish
JEFF FOXWORTHY
Coming for Family Weekend, October 22,1994
THE LIB CENTER
MILWAUKEE
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
kets On Sale at the SUA Box Office
Fourth Floor Kansas Union
$14 Reserved Seating
$18 Gold Circle Seating
e
YOU CAN HELP STOP SEXUAL ASSAULT
]
Communicate with one another
]
Respect your date or partner
L
Avoid excessive use of alcohol STOP Confront sexism
]
Attend a sexual assault prevention program
L
Report sexual assault
K
The University of Kansas Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 Strong Hall (913) 864-3552 864-3600
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
7A
Anatomy students not bothered by cadavers
By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer
The sickly-sweet smell of formaldehyde and phenol permeated the air yesterday as students in anatomy lab scraped fat from the breast of a woman in order to examine a tumor.
Five weeks into the semester, students in teaching assistant Jeff Parmelee's Human Anatomy Disssection Laboratory seemed at ease sliding skin away from dead bodies. But they were not all as enthusiastic on the first day of class.
"The first time I did it, I kept having flash-backs of this leg that I dissected." Matthew Foster, Delia senior, said. "The first day of class I was just thinking that there would be an introduction and a lecture on what we would be doing. But the first day we started cutting. I had never seen a dead body before."
While some students were disgusted by the sight of dead bodies, most said that they found the class to be a good learning experience.
Foster, who is majoring in nursing and required to take the class, said he enjoyed dissection so much that this was his second time taking the lab.
"I took it last spring," he said. "I
wanted to come back and re-learn everything. I really like the hands-on experience."
Parmelae, biology graduate, who has been teaching the anatomy dissection lab for four years, said he was grateful to have cadavers for his students to work on.
"It's nice to have cadavers," he said. "Some universities have to use plastic models."
Parmalee's anatomy class receives their cadavers from the KU Medical Center.
He said the quality of bodies was generally good, but that KU medical students and dental students got first dibs. Some smaller schools, like Emporia University got what was left over after the University of Kansas had finished selecting their cadavers.
The class, which meets Tuesdays and Thursdays, uses three bodies the entire semester.
After the students are through dissecting the bodies, Parmelle helps load them in a pick-up truck to haul them to the KU Medical Center for cremation.
A person must specifically ask to donate their body to science.
people might find dissection unpleasant, he enjoyed teaching the class.
Parmelee said even though some
"I love teaching this class instead of an introductory biology course," he said. "The students are really interested in the class. No one's taking this to satisfy a science requirement."
Parmelee said most of the students in his class were nursing or physical therapy majors.
Anne Maslia, Canton, Ohio, graduate student, said human dissection was so fascinating that she started teaching an observation anatomy lab.
"It's just really neat," she said. "I want to teach anatomy at a university level. I am interested in morphology. Dissecting bodies never bothered me."
But Maslia said that her students' first reactions to the cadavers were similar to the ones in Parmelee's class.
"Now the students just see the bodies like they're in a book," she said. "At first, though, you could see their hesitation."
While Parmalee's class actually cuts the bodies, Maslia's class only observes what his class has done.
"My students learn the structure."
she said. "It's nice and clean."
Maslia said that she wanted to donate her body to science if her organs could not be used for transplant.
"Iwould absolutely donate my body to science," she said. "Most people think that it's really strange. I would give my organs to someone who is alive but if no one could use them, I would donate my whole body to science."
Foster said that while he enjoyed dissecting bodies, he would never donate his body to science, or at least not for dissection.
"There's no way I would do it after I saw what we do to them," he said.
While students and faculty are split on the decision to donate their bodies to science, all agree that the stench of formaldehyde and phenol are patently unpleasant.
"I have to go home and take a shower," Parmelee said. "I hear from some students that people don't want to sit with them if they have a class after this one."
Foster said he found the smell unpleasant, but he said sarcastically, "I'm thinking of bottling the scent and selling it."
EL HODIRI: Professor to help Russian Parliament
Continued from Page 1A.
sia for each of the next three to five years.
"I feel a tenderness for the Russian people, and I think they need to hear an alternative American voice," he said. "I am boiling mad about the advice Russians have been given by traditional American economists because I think it has been irresponsible."
Many traditional economists have pushed Russia to make monumental changes too quickly, El-Hodiri said. The results have devastated many Russians.
"Things have worsened dramatically for a lot of Russians since the fall of communism," he said. "Russian people are bright and sincere, but they are not used to this system."
The goal should not be to duplicate the U.S. free-market economy, El-
Hodiri said. Instead, Russians should modify American capitalism so that it fits their culture.
n the end, their system should be
In the end, the similar to ours, but it must fit their history and their beliefs," he said. "It has to be their own."
E-Lhodir said an important obstacle was teaching Russians the concept of individual thinking.
"Some Russians are in a stage of denial and think that this is an economic stage that will pass," he
realize that the people in the streets have minds of their own and can make their own decisions."
To pronara for the trin. El Udidis
"I am boiling mad about the advice Russians have been given..."
said. "Russians have always had a cooperative mentality, and we need to make our Russian counterparts
Mohamed El-Hodiril Professor of economics
the trip. El-Hodri has been fine-tuning his Russian by studying with a tutor three hours a week.
"I spent a year in Russia in 1958, and I've always maintained enough Russian to get along," he said. "But I admit I've forgotten some of it."
Studies, said El-Hodiri's previous experience in Russia would serve him well.
Leslie Dienes,
professor of
Russian and
East European
"He has spent time in Russia, and he grew up in Egypt," Dienes said. "Both of these things make him better suited to help the Russians."
El-Hodiri, who spent the first 21 years of his life in Egypt, witnessed Egypt's transition from a free-market to a socialist economy in 1960.
"Because of his experience in Egypt, he knows the problems associated with the developmental side of economics," Dienes said. "I think he can offer the Russians very sober, not radical, advice."
"Russians have become very suspicious of advice from Americans, but I think they are more likely to listen to Mohamed," Dienes said. "Russia's problems are formidable, but I think Mohamed can help. I just wish he could have gone three years ago."
Dienes said Russians probably would trust El-Hodiri more than traditional American economists.
KIM'S ALTERATIONS
QUICK AND QUALITY SERVICE SUITS, COATS, JEANS, ZIPPERS... ALL TYPES OF ALTERATIONS.
2201-F W.25TH ST.
(BEHIND FOOD 4 LESS)
VISA
DELIVERY ONLY
EXPIRY DATE 12/31/2024
CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES
• Complete GYN Care • Pregnancy Testing
• Depo Provera & Norplant • Tubal Ligation
• Abortion / Tubal Ligation (1 procedure)
• Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff • Modern State Licensed Facility
PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974
COMPREHENSIVE 345-1400
health for women
OUTSIDE/KC AREA
Insurance plans accepted.
4401 W. 109th (I-435 & Roe) 1-800-227-1918
Overland Park, KS
TOLL FREE
GRANADA
1020 MASS. ST. DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
913-842-1390
RONALD HAWKINS
JOAN JETT WAS AN ABSURDLY SOULER
FLOCK OF SEAGULLS BANANAARAMA MEN WITHOUT HAT
MISSING PERSONS EVEN OLIVIA NEWTON-JOIE
ROMEO VOID VIOLENT BY THE CLASH VAN HALEY
THE CURE KOO AND THE GANG RICK JAMES TONI CHILD
THE GAP BAY BARNAMAN TERR GARRIEN
MADONNA ROE PLACE WITH TON LOVERROSE
DEF LEPPARD AC DC THE DAZZ BAND ROB BASS B-529
SOME PEOPLE TO DOUBLEWORKERS UNDER
AL BROWN
AND
INNER FORCE
REGGAE FROM THE SOUL
GRANADA
1020 MASS.ST.DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
913-842-1390
MASON BRADLEY NO.1 MASSAEM DENNIS DOWN
JOAN JETT NO.2 MASSAEM SQUIRRE
FLOCK OF SEAGULLS BANARAMA MEN WITHOUT HAT
MISSING PERSONS EP.1 OLIVIA NEWTON JOI
HOMEOVO VOID VIOLENCE THE CLASH VAN HALEY
THE CURE KOOL AND THE GANG RICK JAMES TOMI CHILD
THE GAP BAND WALTER GABRIEL
MADonna ROSE TONY TION LOVERBOY
DEF LEPPARD MC DC THE DAZZ BAND FOR BASS B-523
BALTE PEN 2 ENLIMITED BONNA SUMMER STYLIST
COME DANCE TO YOUR FAVORITE BOS NUNESIN
AL BROWN
AND
INNER FORCE
REGGAE FROM THE SOUL
FREE! to College Students FIVE FREE HOURS of long distance service!
1. **FIVE HOURS of FREE** Fiber Optic Quality long distance service EACH YEAR!
2. Six second billing increments will save an additional 10-50% over full minute billing.
3. It' s what all long distance companies should do.
4. Our lowest possible rates, anywhere, anytime!
5. No Monthly Minimums • No Monthly quotas • No Gimmicks • No special list of friends
No monthly fees • NO CONFUSION
6. One bill convenience. NOTHING CHANGES except for your new reduced Global Wats rates on your Southwestern Bell phone bill!
7. FREE travel cards with surcharge savings of up to $ .30 per call over MCI, Sprint, and AT&T.
Call for Details!
Please complete, detach, and mail today. If you are requesting an Enhanced Value Calling Card, enclose this form in envelope to mail
Five Hours
Please print your name and address EXACTLY as it appears on your local telephone bill.
Name (EXACTLY as it appears on your local telephone bill)
Home Street Address □ Own □ Rent
City State Zip
My Local Telephone Company is:
Please provide the GN service to the following numbers located at your home or office:
Area Code Main Billing Number
Area Code Additional Number
Residential Service Request. I will contact you if there are any issues with the GN service that require immediate attention. Please call 1-800-555-7890 for assistance.
Customer Signature Date
For Additional Information Contact:
DIVERSE FUNDING
P.O. Box 442022
Lawrence, KS 60044
1(800) 231-373/5 or (813) 843-8044
☐ Free GN Calling Card.
I request ___ call cards (each with individual PH #)
□ Telehome 800 Service. I understand there is a $5.00 monthly base fee plus a per minute rate.
Please change my U Address, or U Main Billing Number in your records (for enclosed DXE ($sponsor) NAME)
TELEPHONENUMBER
TRADING NUMBER
Administrative Office Data. The Administrative Office Data includes:
AIRWALK SHARK'S VANS SURF SHOP QUIKSILVER
AIRWALK
SHARK'S
VANS
SURF SHOP
QUICKSILVER
1 Year Anniversary
Blowout
This Fri. and Sat.
Check UDK for details
BILLABONG
STUSSY
MOSSIMO
MOSSIMO, INC.
Lawrence
701 W 9th
(9th and Indiana)
841-8289
8A
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Lawrence's Largest
Supplier of
Darkroom Materials
1610 West 23rd Street
841-7205
Esquire Barber Service
1st Time $3.99
Customer
2323 Bridge Ct.
First Med Building
842-3699
Esquire Barber Service
1st Time $3.99
Customer
2323 Ridge Ct.
First Med Building
862-3699
IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... CALL BIRTHRIGHT
IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW...
CALL
BIRTHRIGHT
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you
FREE PREGNANCY
Monday 1-3, & 6-8
Tuesday 1-3, & 6-8
Wednesday 1-4
843-4821 Thursday 6-8
1246 Kentucky Friday 1-4
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you
FREE PREGNANCY
Monday 1-3, & 6-8
Tuesday 1-3, & 6-8
Wednesday 1-4
843-4821
Thursday 6-8
1246 Kentucky
Friday 1-4
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
Buy a Quart
Get a Pint
FREE!
(with this coupon)
expires October 10th
Louisiana Purchase
23rd & Louisiana • 843-5500
Orchards Corners
15th & Kasold • 749-0440
Comm
to
KU
Excell
46TH DISTRICT
ERIC
SCHMIDT
STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Paid for by the COMMITTEE TO ELECT ERIC SCHMIDT
Gin Bunnin, Treasurer
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
WEDNESDAYS!
50¢ DRAWS $1 ANY-THING
Excludes pitchers, doubles and imports.
AND WE HAVE A FREE PARTY ROOM AVAILABLE FOR 200 PEOPLE!
WEDNESDAYS!
50¢ DRAWS $1 ANY-THING
Excludes pitchers,
doubles and imports.
AND WE HAVE A FREE
PARTY ROOM AVAILABLE
FOR 200 PEOPLE!
Blueprints
1994
the eighth annual student leadership conference
Building U for tomorrow
Sat. October 1 Kansas Union
9:00 am - 3:30 pm Conference
9:00 am - 3:30 pm Conference
3:30 pm - 6:30 pm Community Service Project
Conference fee is $12 prior to Sept. 23rd
Late registration fee is $15 until Sept. 27th by 5:00 pm
Register at the OAC office at 400 Kansas Union
Questions? Call 864-4861
Sponsored by Sprint, Commerce Bank, Anderson Consulting, Kansas Union Bookstores and Student Senate.
- Scholarships are available to those who qualify
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Trade deficit grows larger
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The government said yesterday that rising oil prices and a drop in airliner sales in July gave the nation its second worst merchandise trade deficit in history, which sent financial markets into a tailspin.
The Commerce Department said the overall deficit in goods and services surged 21.6 percent to $10.9 billion as imports remained near an alltime high and exports weakened considerably.
The worse-than-expected deficit figure, which followed a June shortfall of $9.04 billion, rattled Wall Street. Stocks, bonds and the dollar weakened.
Analysts said the weaker dollar would only add to inflationary pressures and increase the prospect that
the federal Reserve would be forced to boost interest rates for a sixth time this year, possibly as soon as the next Fed policymakers meeting Sept. 27 in Washington.
The disappointing trade performance and rate increase fears sent the Dow Jones industrial average down by nearly 68 points, with the 30 blue-chip stocks losing 1.72 percent of their value. The yield on Treasury's benchmark 30-year bond, which moves in the opposite direction of its price, climbed to 7.78 percent.
Commerce Secretary Ron Brown said the dramatic widening of the deficit was "not indicative of the economy's long-term trend." The Clinton administration insisted the trade deficit would shrink in coming months as faster growth in Europe and Japan helps increase demand for U.S. exports.
Allen Sinai, chief economist at Lehman Brothers in New York, said it was critical for export growth to rebound to keep the U.S. economy out of recession.
So far this year, America's merchandise deficit is running at an annual rate of $145.6 billion, which is the second worst in history. The biggest merchandise trade deficit was a $152.1 billion imbalance in 1987.
The administration has pushed both countries this year to open their markets to more American goods but has met with little success.
As usual, the biggest monthly deficit—a shortfall of $5.67 billion, which is the worst showing since March—was with Japan. The deficit with China rose 8.6 percent to an all-time high of $2.67 billion.
Committees agree on trade accord
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Lawmakers yesterday approved recommendations to President Clinton for putting a new, tariff-reducing, 123-nation world-trade accord into force.
After weeks of contentious talks, members of House and Senate committees that deal with trade reached agreement on most provisions of a bill implementing the pact negotiated under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
Because the legislation cannot be amended once it is introduced, the Clinton administration has engaged in a lengthy consultation process
with congressional committees before it actually submits its proposal.
The consultation period ended late yesterday afternoon with unanimous votes by delegates from the Senate Finance and House Ways and Means committees. The two panels resolved most of their differences and agreed on a financing package to offset $12 billion in tariff revenues expected to be lost during the agreement's first five years.
GATT would cut worldwide tariffs by about a third and reduce other barriers to trade.
"It is the largest world-trade agreement in history. It means more jobs and growth and higher incomes for ordinary Americans," Clinton said.
Opponents, however, say the agreement gives too much power to a new World Trade Organization, which would police the accord.
They fear world-trade bureaucrats will use the threat of huge fines to force changes in federal and state laws on everything from auto-emission standards to protecting porpoises from tuna nets.
Many union leaders also oppose the pact, fearing it will push thousands of jobs in the textile and apparel industries to low-wage countries.
EGGS ALL GRADE "AA" EGGS 1/2¢ PER EGG OVER CHECKER'S INVOICE COST EVERYDAY!
DAILY SPECIAL
Motion Times, Day 30, 7am & 8:30pm, Tue, 29, 7am, Sun, 29, 7am
BANANAS 19¢
BUD DRY
BEER
998
4 - 6 PACKS
12OZ. CANS
LIMIT 3
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
BUD DRY BEER
6 PR I 100Z. CANS
$279
BONELESS TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
188
1 LB. ECONOMY PACK
FRESH CRISP ICEBURG HEAD LETTUCE
48¢ EA.
TYSON GRADE A WHOLE FROZEN FRYERS
48¢
LB. LIMIT 3
ALL PURPOSE RUSSET POTATOES
178
20 LB. BAG
FRESH SLICED 1/4
9-11 AM. FINAL DATE
PORK LOIN
148
1 LB. ECONOMY PACK
FRESH CRISP COLORADO CARROTS
39¢
2 LB. BAG
COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS CUT FROM THE PORK BUTT
98¢
LB. ECONOMY PACK
RED, BLACK OR THOMPSON SEEDLESS GRAPES
78¢
LB.
BONE-IN RIB STEAK OR ROAST
LARGE END
268
1 LB. ECONOMY PACK
CUCUMBERS, GREEN ONIONS,
OR BELL PEPPERS
22¢ EA.
T-BONE STEAK
298
LB. ECONOMY PACK
BLUE BUNNY'S POLAR TREAT
ICE CREAM
98¢
EACH
12OZ. CARTON
FRESH BAKED PUMPERNICKEL RYE BREAD
88¢
1 LB. ROUND
FROM THE DELI FRESH DILL DIP
$249 LB.
BIRDS EYE CORN, PEAS MIXED VEGETABLES
78¢
16 OZ. BAG
MOOSE BROTH THE PIG OUT PIZZA
TELEPHONE SALEMORE CENTER HOME BOX
48¢ EACH
Armour Premium BACON
88¢
12OZ. Packing
REAMES FROZEN EGG NOODLES
BEEF OR FAT FREE
98¢
20Z. BAG
FROM THE DELI WILSON COOKED HAM
SLICED OR SHAKED
198¢
ECONOMY PACK
IMPORTED FROM DENMARK SWISS FONTINA CHEESE
$499 LB.
FRESH BAKED CROISSANTS
98¢
6 CT. PROG.
ALL NATIONAL BRAND DOG & CATFOOD
1 LB.
14 LB. OVER NOVEL COST!
OPEN 24 HOURS ENGLISH LANGUAGE
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES
23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
FRESH KANSAS RAISED BLUFFALD DAILY
DIMENSIONS & DIRECTORS CHECKER'S INVOICE COST EVERYDAY!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
9A
Americans in bad mood, poll shows
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Americans are more cynical and less compassionate than they were seven years ago, and many feel strapped for money despite the improving economy, according to a poll released yesterday.
A mostly discouraging snapshot of the national mood emerged from the survey of 4,809 people by the Times Mirror Center for the People and the Press.
"It's not a pretty picture. The trends have a negative cast," Andrew Kohut, poll director, said.
Attitudes toward minorities, immigrants and the poor all have hardened somewhat over the seven years of the poll, particularly when it comes to spending money on them and expanding opportunities for them.
In 1987, 71 percent sai the government should take care of people who can't take care of themselves — but that fell to 57 percent this year. Only 41 percent said the government should help the needy even if it means going deeper in debt.
Also, this year for the first time a majority of whites, 51 percent, agreed with the statement that equal rights for racial minorities have been pushed too far, up from 42 percent two years earlier. And 82 percent said people coming here to live should be restricted and controlled more than they are now, up six percentage points from 1992.
"It's an unusual set of trends for a time in which the economy's been expanding and unemployment's been going down," Kohut said. He said one reason may be that the new wave of jobs offers relatively low wages, benefits and security.
More than 40 percent in the survey
said they "often don't have enough money to make ends meet"—a huge chunk considering the relatively healthy economy, Kohut said. Six in 10 said they don't have enough money to lead the kinds of lives they want to, and only half of those expect they ever will.
The financial discontent is centered in a political group Kohut calls the New Economy Independents — a high-school educated group, heavy on single mothers and service workers, who represent nearly one in five U.S. voters and gave nearly 29 percent of their votes to independent Ross Perot in the last presidential election.
"They are the anxious class. Politically they're unanchored, because neither the Republican or Democratic party has paid off for them," Kohut said. "Their level of information is very low and they're very volatile."
Bentsen orders investigation into embargo-violations case
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen has ordered an independent investigation into an agency's handling of a Haiti-embargo violations case against Texaco. Documents suggest that the case may have involved political interference, a Treasury official said yesterday.
Bentens's request means the matter will be reviewed simultaneously at two levels — the Treasury inspector general and the U.S. attorney's office, which launched a separate probe last week.
Both inquiries are in response to an Associated Press report that Richard Newcomb, director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control, ignored staff pleas to stop the flow of oil and money to Haiti's military junta. The pleas followed his agency's conclusion that Texaco was illegally doing business with the regime.
LEAPing off welfare helps teen-age moms
They're taking part in an experimental state welfare program that pays teen-age mothers not to drop out.
CLEVELAND — Crystal Ledger is staying in class and learning to work with a computer, while her classmates are polishing their math and English skills.
If they drop out or miss too many days, their benefits are cut by the same amount.
Ledger, 19, and her classmates are part of the Learning, Education and Parenting or LEAP program. They receive $62 a month over their regular welfare benefits for continuing to work toward their high school diploma.
Young women in the program can stay in public schools and work toward their diploma, or work on a General Equivalency Diploma at privately-operated centers. Ledger and her classmates attend the Gilbert School, a GED center run by a nonprofit social services agency under contract with Cuyahoga County.
A study released yesterday found LEAP is having a small but significant impact on teenage dropout rates.
25 REASONS TO GO TO LA FAMILIA III
After Hours
The kitchen's closed but the bar is open
Wed, Thur, & Fri.
25¢ DRAWS
50¢ KAMIS
10:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.
$3.00 cover
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1927
with student ID
WED, THUR & FRI 18 & OVER WELCOME
925 IOWA (BEHIND ALVIN'S) 749-5039
You won't be hungry an hour after our buffet
IMPERIAL GARDEN
G
The Imperial Garden's affordable buffet has all your favorite Chinese dishes, and you can go back as many times as you want. Just get a clean plate.
聚豐圍
WE HONOR
KANSAS
Dinner Buffet 6.95
Lunch Buffet 4.95
Sun.Brunch 5.95
841-1688 (across from Dillon's on 6th)
LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION AND ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB
PRESENT THE SECOND ANNUAL EVENT FOR
Stepping Out Against Breast Cancer
A benefit dance to increase awareness
Featuring
THE BENDERS
Let Byron, Johnny, Kevin and Larry bring back all those memories from the '50s &'60s as you dance the night away in support of breast cancer awareness. This year 182,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer and 46,000 women will die. We need your help to get the word out. Early detection saves lives. We must speak out loudly and together.
8 P.M. TO MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB $12.50 PER PERSON/$25 PER COUPLE
All proceeds from this event will benefit women who are unable to afford regular mammograms and medical treatment. Tickets available in LMH Administration office during regular business hours.
Lawrence
Brewer'S
Supply
Call us and start making your own BEER! 305 E.7th St. (913)74-YFAST
A
A Mexican Tradition
EAT AND RUN LUNCH SPECIALS
$3.95
Lunch Guaranteed in 15 min.
Mon. - Fri. OR your lunch is FREE !!!!!!
(Guarantee is limited to parties of six or less)
EACH SPECIAL ONLY $3.95
BEEF TACO BURRITO
CHILLE RELLENO BEEF TACO
CHIMICHANGA
YOUR CHOICE:
BEEF, CHICKEN, OR PORK
SOFT TACO YOUR CHOICE:
BEEF, CHICKEN, OR PORK
PORK QUESO BURRITO
BEEF TACO &
BEEF ENCHILADA
TACO SALAD
YOUR CHOICE:
BEEF, CHICKEN, OR PORK
ALL LUNCH SPECIALS
ARE SERVED WITH
BEANS AND RICE
DOS HOMBRES
RESTAURANTE
For more information, please call 749-632-
10A
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
You'll
Dillons
FOOD STORES
8
You'll *3000 W. 6th *1015 W. 23rd *1740 Massachusetts
What We've Done In Lawrence
Tyson Cut-Up Fryers
69¢ lb.
For Your Tailgate Party...
Chicken Boxes To Go:
2, 3, 6, or 12 Piece Boxes
Lay's/Wavy Lay's Potato Chips
9 oz. Asst. Varieties
2/$3
Pepsi Products Caffeine Free Pepsi, Diet, Caffeine Free Diet or Mt. Dew 12 pack, 12 oz. cans $2'79
2 Liter Btl...$1.19
Rocky Top Pop 6 pack, 12 oz. cans Assorted Varieties 99¢
Milwaukee's Best Beer 6 Pack 12 oz. Cans Regular or Light $1'99
Ultra Purex Laundry Detergent
28 oz. Original, 31 oz. With Bleach pp $2.69
2/$4
Ragu Spaghetti Sauce
27.5 to 30 oz. Asst. Varieties $1'89
Dillons Ice Cream Half Gallon, Asst. Varieties Buy One Get One FREE!
From our Deli...
-Full Service Catering: For one stop planning- ordering- and delivery call 843-7648.
-Be sure to stop by our new cappuccino and espresso bars in our stores at 3000 W. 6th & 1015 W. 23rd.
Deli Fresh Ham or Chicken Salad 12 oz. Mix or Match
Buy One Get One FREE!
Sampler Plate
Your Choice of Appetizer, Rice, and any 3 Entrees
$4'99
$3'49
Jayhawk T-Shirts or Sweatshirts
Sweatshirts T-Shirts Navy Blue & Black
$2'99 $14'99
We Deliver!
Large Mixed Bouquets
10 Stem...$4.99 Reg. $5.99
12 Stem...$5.99 Reg. $6.99
18 Stem...$8.99 Reg. $9.99
Dillon Fresh Baked Garlic Bread
99¢
See Dillons For All Your Tailgate Party Items
-Deli Coupon -
This Coupon Good For $1.00 Off Any Deli Fried Chicken 2, 3, 6, or 12 Piece Box
Coupon Good Sept. 21 Thru Sept. 27 Not Included In Double Coupon Program. Limit One Coupon Per Box Per Customer.
-From Our Seafood Department-
Singleton Bakeable Popcorn Shrimp 10 oz.
$1.99
New 1 Hour Photofinishing 2nd Set FREE! All Week Long
(Available only at our 3000 W. 6th and 1015 W. 23rd locations.)
What We've Done In Lawrence
e
Our Floral Shop...
Tyson
Poultry Farm
ALL NATURAL
Whole Chicken
Cut Up
Cut-Up Fryers
FTD
Large Mixed Bouquets
2014
GARLIC BREAD
GARLIC BREAD
Dillon Fresh Baked
Garlic
Bread
99¢
See Dillons For All Your Tailgate
Party Items
$ lb.
Dillons
HOME STORAGE
Lay's
Taster & Crispier
Potato Chips
Sour Cream &
Onion
MOUNTAIN DEW
PEPSI
DEPT PEPSI
DEPT PEPSI
DEPT PEPSI
MOCKY TOP
COLA
Milwaukee Brewery
Milwaukee Brewery
Milwaukee Brewery
Milwaukee Brewery
Milwaukee's
Best Beer
6 Pack 12 oz. Cans
Regular or Light
$199
ultra $269
Purex
CARFOUR
18 LOADS
RAGU
NEW COUNTY
HOMESTYLE
RAGU
CHUNKY
GARDENSTYLE
RAGU HOMESTYLE CHUNKY GARLENDSTYLE Ragu Spaghetti Sauce 27.5 to 30 oz. Asst. Varieties $189
CAVEDOLE
HUMMUS
CAVEDOLE
HUMMUS
CAVEDOLE
HUMMUS
CAVEDOLE
HUMMUS
SINGLETON
POPCORN
SHRIMP
PRECOOKED BRANDY SHRIMP
MASTER FROZEN
FREE OF ADDITIVES
NET WT. 16 OZ. 23 g
Buy One Get One FREE!
CHUNKY
Dairy & Wheat
Pâté
HAM SALAD
MADE WITH NUTS, FRESH MILK AND POTATOES
MADE IN BELGIUM
MADE WITH NO ADDITIVES
NO ARTIFICIAL FLAVOURS
NO ARTIFICIAL COLORS
NO ARTIFICIAL Dyes
MADE WITH LEGUME
MADE WITH TOMATOES
MADE WITH PARSNIPS
MADE WITH CORN
MADE WITH GARLIC
MADE WITH POTATOES
MADE WITH CHICKEN
MADE WITH SWEET ONIONS
MADE WITH SALT
MADE WITH VINEGAR
MADE WITH OATS
MADE WITH RICE
MADE WITH WHEAT
MADE WITH POTATOES
MADE WITH LENTILS
MADE WITH SUGAR
MADE WITH LEMON
MADE WITH MINT
MADE WITH PAPER
MADE WITH MILK
MADE WITH SOYURY
MADE WITH HONEY
MADE WITH EGG
MADE WITH SPICED PEpper
MADE WITH RED Pepper
MADE WITH Green Pepper
MADE WITH Yellow Pepper
MADE WITH Orange Pepper
MADE WITH Pink Pepper
MADE WITH White Pepper
MADE WITH Blue Pepper
MADE WITH Purple Pepper
MADE WITH Black Pepper
MADE WITH Red Pepper
MADE WITH Green Pepper
MADE WITH Yellow
Buy One Get One FREE!
CHINESE KITCHEN!
Sampler Plate
Your Choice of Appetizer, Rice,
and any 3 Entrees
$499
$349
p.m. daily...
only in our stores at
Luncheon Special $349
Available 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily...
Available only in our stores at
3000 W. 6th & 1015 W. 23rd
DILLON'S PHARMACY
---
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1994
UAB moving on up
SECTION B
Football team has risen quickly during short life
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
In the spring of 1989, a group of students at Alabama-Birmingham wondered if they could draw enough interest on campus to form a club football team.
Five years later, the Alabama-Birmingham football team is heading into its first game with a Division I-A school at Kansas on Saturday.
Richard Konzem, Kansas assistant athletic director, said several factors went into the decision to schedule the Blazers, but for financial reasons the department had no choice but to play a team that was not Division I-A.
If the Jayhawks defeat the Blazers, the victory would not count towards the six victories needed to qualify for a bowl.
Konzeid said that that the Jayhawks already had filled dates in future seasons to play Division I-A opponents. But for this season, Kansas had to
find a team that would agree to play only one game, he said, adding that the game had to be played at Memorial Stadium.
Konzem said that all the Division I-A teams he contacted wanted $300,000 to $400,000 to play one game at Kansas. He said Kansas could not afford that because its attendance was not large enough. Kansas will pay Alabama-Birmingham $100,000 for this game.
Kansas has a week off before playing Kansas State which could have been used to schedule a Division I-A team, but Konzem said the Jayhawks did not consider it because of a past experience with California during the 1992 season.
The Jayhawks lost to California on a Thursday night after playing the weekend before, while California did not play that weekend. K-State also does not play before its matchup with Kansas this year.
Alabama-Birmingham has made a quick ascent to the divisional ladder. The team spent its first two seasons as a club and moved up to Division III status during the 1991 and 1992 seasons. It finished 9-2 last season, its first year as a Division I-AA team.
become a Division I-A level school, a goal that has been quick in coming.
From the beginning, the interest in football was intense at Alabama-Birmingham. The Blazers are coached by Jim Hilzer, a former National Football League and college assistant coach.
In 1996, Alabama-Birmingham will
Hilroy has coached Alabama-Birmingham since the club team was formed in 1898, when it had 120 students participate.
After a rocky start in which they lost their first nine games, the Blazers defeated Marion Institute 15-7 in 1990.
Alabama-Birmingham has struggled when entering a new level, but it has eventually succeeded as it moved up through the divisions.
Alabama-Birmingham's football program has ascended almost as quickly as its basketball program, which has appeared in postseason play 14 times.
The Blazers have played Kansas in basketball, but this will be the football team's first shot at the Jayhawks and a Division I-A team.
Bernie Kish, Kansas director of ticket sales and operations, said he expected a crowd of about 35,000.
15
Kansas, meet Mark Williams
Kansas junior quarterback Mark Williams warms up before practice yesterday. He will replace senior quarterback Asheli Presti in the football game Saturday.
Volleyball team loses to Wichita
By Chesley Dohl
By Chestley Dont
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas volleyball team traveled to Wichita State yesterday seeking sweet revenge for an earlier season loss to the Shockers.
The Jayhawks, now 3-9, fell to Wichita State in three games, 2-15, 13-15, 5-15.
Instead the Jayhawks again were defeated by a more experienced Shocker volleyball team which reaffirmed its dominance on the volleyball court.
The Shockers, 4-6, defeated Kansas in a three-game match at the Colorado State Tournament September 2 and 3.
"We are still inconsistent and it was evident in the second game," she said. "We made a run at it but we just needed to play harder."
Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said inconsistency contributed to last night's loss.
Kansas was never able to take the lead, committing 32 team errors to Wichita State's 12 team errors.
Freshman middle blocker Leslie Purkepyle stepped forward and led the Jayhawks with 11 kills for the match. Defensively, Purkepyle countered with seven digs and one block assist.
Sophomore outside hitter Katie Walsh helped lead the Kansas attack with nine kills and six defensive digs.
Walsh, who played another consistent match for Kansas last night, said communication had to improve before the Jayhawks could play to their potential.
"As a team we lack confidence, and as a young team, that has a lot to do with (our losses)," she said.
Schonewise she made several changes last night she felt would play a big role in future matches.
Photos by
Brian
Vandervliet
It's All in the Wrist
Story by Kent Hohlfeld
A 1980s game of Frisbee.
Above: Tim Hindman, Tyler, Texas, senior,肩颈 past defender Wade Vezaye, Lawrence senior, during a Kansas ultimate frisbee club scrimmage. Right: Brett Murray, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, whirls the frisbee during a practice drill.
Not many sports depend on honest athletes to referee their own games. One such sport is Ultimate Frisbee.
"There aren't any refs out there," said Brad Hines, Kansas ultimate frisbee club president. "We depend on the players to make their own calls."
Ultimate frisbee is a sport which has grown in both overall popularity and awareness in the last five years. Despite the gains the sport has
made, many university students still know little or nothing about Kansas' ultimate frisbee club.
"One of our problems is awareness of the club among the university population," said Tina Cameli, women's team captain. "We're really hoping more people will come out this year."
Hines said the club usually had between 60 to 70 people come out for the spring semester, which is the team's competitive collegiate season. During the fall, the team competes in non-collegiate sectional and regional competitions.
Ultimate frisbee combines skills used in both football and soccer. Seven team members throw a frisbee down a rectangular field with the goal of getting into the end zone, while the opposing team tries to stop them.
bee or the frisbee hits the ground, it is considered a turnover.
A player has 10 seconds to throw the frisbee once they have caught it. If the player doesn't throw the fris-
"It's a lot like soccer and football." Hines said. "The player is always on the go to keep the frisbee moving."
Both the men's and women's teams have enjoyed a great deal of success in their respective histories. The women's team, named Betty, won the national title in 1986. The team was ranked No. 1 in the nation for part of last year and lost in the
TREVIN'S REPRESENTATION AT THE WATERCAMP CIRCLE IN MONTANA.
national tournament.
"You get to meet interesting people and travel a lot which helps to make it more fun," Hines said.
"Over the last 10 years, we've made it to nationals every year except for one," Cameli said.
The men's team, like its counterpart on the women's side, has enjoyed some success in its 15-year history. The team has been ranked annually in the top 20 and has qualified for the 12-team national tournament every year. However, it has yet
The same thing applies to the men's team, Hines said.
That success is one factor that draws many athletes like Cameli to the club. She said that team spirit and competition also helped to draw people.
to win a national title.
"It's like an addiction. Once you play in your first tournament, it's hard to stop," Hines said.
Despite the thrill, the addiction can prove costly for the team's finances. The men's club traveled to California and cities like Austin, Atlanta and New Orleans last season. All traveling expenses come out of club members' pockets.
"It cancest $50 to $100 to go compete in a weekend tournament," said Tocletti, senior
"Recreation Services pays entry fees, but we're responsible for everything else."
Despite the expense of the weekend trips, Triplett said he has enjoyed his four years with the club.
"It's a non-contact sport," he said.
"Where else can you get this kind of exercise throwing a frisbee around?"
ROYALS BRIEF
Twins' third base coach considered for Royals job
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Minnesota Twins third base coach Ron Gardenhire reportedly will be the first to be interviewed for the Kansas City Royals manager's job.
Gardenhire, 37, was appointed to Twins manager Tom Kelly's staff in 1990 and quickly became a top aide.
General manager Herk Robinson confirmed Gardenhire was being considered, and The Kansas City Star reported yesterday he would be interviewed tomorrow.
He was runner-up to Don Baylor for the job as manager of the Colorado Rockies and interviewed for the San Francisco Giants job that went to Dusty Baker.
Robinson reiterated that Whitey Herzog, the popular favorite for the job of the fired Hal McRae, wasn't interested in a second stint with the Royals.
Leading Rushers
Phillips,Neb 62 479 7.1
Salem,Colo 50 269 5.4
Shaffer,Colo 46 236 5.1
Miller,Colo 39 321 5.4
Wilson,Colo 172 4.6 86
Russell,Colo 250 4.3 83
Elliott,Colo 143 7.6 81
Phelan,Colo 141 4.9 80
Brown,Colo 136 8.5 68
Davis,Colo 120 4.9 68
Hunt,Colo 21 167 8.0
Schlesinger,Neb 21 165 7.9
Levine,Kansas 20 146 7.9
Preston,Kansas 25 145 5.8
Total Defense
Kansas St. 266 3 203.5
Nebraska 261 3 213.3
Oklahoma St. 277 3 136.7
Oklahoma 251 4 115.3
Kansas 247 4 114.2
Colorado 22 317 2 107.0
Nasourl 225 36 506 3 101.
Denison,Iowa St 23 12 132 0
Dave Campbell, Brian James / KANSAN
2B
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
Serving downtown since 1936
1031 Massachusetts Downtown
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
Serving downtown since 1936
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
fifi's
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
fifiS
fifi's 925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass * Lawrence, KS
take a hike.
take a
hike.
WILDERNESS DISCOVERY
Jaybowl
kansas union • level 1 • 864-3545
WILDERNESS DISCOVERY
Jaybowl
THE MUSIC UNION
KMS
JOICO
BEAUTY
MEDIA JOICE
KMS JOICO
NEX US BEAUTY WATERHOUSE & HARDWARE
520 West 23rd
841-5885
REDKEN
S
LEBASSTUDIO
Oilers' defense ventilates anger toward offense's performance
ByThe Associated Press
HOUSTON — The Houston Oilers haven't been able to beat anyone else this season, so they've started beating up on themselves.
In the post-game frustration of Sunday's 15-7 loss to Buffalo, cornerback Cris Dishman led a revolt of the defense against the offense, which is struggling with quarterback Cody Carlson injured.
"It was a horrible display by our offense," he said. "I'm saying this now because I want them to get the message. We need somebody over there who knows what the hell he's doing."
That was on Sunday, and he was still firing away on Monday.
"I don't regret anything I said and if some of those guys take it personally, then they should look at themselves personally," Dishman said. "If it takes me being the black sheep of the family to say something and get something done, then I'll do it."
Darryll Lewis added to Dishman's assault.
the offense," he said. "I think it's time to point fingers and name names. It's time for individual gut checks. The defense player well enough to win."
"It was a terrible performance by
The defense did play well enough to win, forcing the Bills to kick five field goals for its victory.
The offense continued to struggle with back-up quarterback Bucky Richardson and a porous offensive line.
Richardson is learning on the run, while the offensive line hasn't gotten over the loss of perennial Pro Bowler Mike Munchak to retirement and Doug Dawson to free agency.
"We've got to address our problems among one another," Carlson said. "Yesterday was frustrating. Even today, we felt that we should have won the game. We just have to worry about correcting our own business."
Dishman said the offense shouldn't take offense at his comments.
"I'm not worried about what they think because I didn't single anyone out," Dishman said. "It's just time for the men to step to the front and the boys to step to the back."
When told that assistant head coach Kevin Gilbride thought his comments were divisive, Dishman said: "Everyone needs to look at themselves, including Gilbride. I'm angry and when Cris gets angry the first person I'm angry at is myself.
"I'm just saying that we should have scored more points."
Wide receiver Haywood Jeffires said he was not offended by Dishman's talk.
"I might put some firecrackers beside his locker," Jeffries said as he laughed. "Dishman is a great player. He wants to win more than anyone I've ever been around. If Cris has some things he needs to address, we'll listen. We're not mad at anyone. We just need to win."
Coach Jack Pardee admitted the Oilers didn't deserve to have much faith placed in them at the moment, but said that bickering was not the solution.
"I'd be disappointed if our players weren't upset and not accepting defeat," Pardee said. "But there's a better way to do it."
Bengals suspend linebacker for DUI arrest
CINCINNATI — Backup linebacker Eric Shaw was suspended by the Cincinnati Bengals for Sunday's game against the Houston Oilers for conduct detrimental to the team, and it will cost him more than $10,000.
Bengals general manager Mike Brown said Shaw was stopped by Cincinnati police Saturday night or early Sunday morning for driving under the influence of alcohol and speeding. Saturday was Shaw's 23rd birthday.
Shaw, a second-string linebacker and special teams player, played Sunday in the Bengals' 31-28 loss to the New England Patriots.
The Associated Press
Brown found out about the incident shortly before the game, but decided to let Shaw play against the Patriots until the Bengals could look into the charges.
"He played hard, and he played well," Brown said. "But we're not going to accept this kind of conduct. Eric's going to have to adhere to a standard."
Shaw, a 12th-round draft pick from Louisiana Tech in 1992, did not return a phone call for comment yesterday. He has not been in trouble with the Bengals before.
The Bengals finsh Fawar for missing a Saturday curfew, and fined him again — as is allowed under the NFL's collective bargaining agreement with its players — for conduct detrimental to the club.
A player can be fined as much as one week's pay and suspended without pay for up to four weeks. Shaw is paid about $162,000 a year.
49ers to start Deion, but at the expense of a fellow teammate
Shaw is to meet with coach Dave Shula on Monday for a status review. Shula could decide to suspend him further, cut him from the team or put him back on the active roster.
San Francisco coach George Seifert said Monday that Sanders would make his first start for the 48ers on Sunday against the New Orleans Saints.
One of the league's top cornerbacks, Sanders joined San Francisco last week as a free agent and made his debut in a reserve role during Sunday's 34-19 win against the Los Angeles Rams. He was in for 31 plays, entering primarily as the nickel back and helping to keep Rams receiver Flipper Anderson without a reception.
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — With the addition of Denon Sandif, change is in store for the San Francisco 48ers' secondary.
The Associated Press
"He played better than I would have expected," Seifert said of Sanders, whose last football outing was the Pro Bowl in February.
But starting Sanders is only half of the decision. The rest involves which starter will be bumped from the line-up to make room for the newcomer.
"Everybody's aware there's basically two scenarios that could take place," Seifert said. "One he'll replace (left cornerback) Eric Davis. The other is he'll replace (free safety) Dana Hall. One of those situations will take place."
Sanders, a three-time Pro Bowler in five seasons with Atlanta, can play either left or right cornerback. So, either he replaces Davis directly or becomes the numerical replacement for Hall by taking over at right corner for Merton Hanks, who then would shift to free safety
A decision is expected today.
to replace Hall.
The dilemma for the 48ers is both Davis and Hall have played well.
Hall, the club's No. 1 pick in 1992, seems to be coming around after two disappointing seasons. He defensed a potential touchdown pass and made a drive-stopping tackle in the loss to Kansas City two weeks ago.
"I feel confident I've done the job to this point," Hall said. "Now it's going to be a coach's decision."
Davis, in his third year as a starter, had one of his best games Sunday, registering six tackles, knocking down two passes and recovering a fumble against the Rams.
"George hasn't said anything," Davis said. "I imagine something will be said soon, because something has to be said soon. I've always said in the NFL, jobs aren't won or lost. They're given and taken and you've got to deal with the fact that it's a business."
Sanders, stung by criticism this week from former Atlanta teammates and sensitive to knocking one of his new teammates from the line-up, said he was happy to get the start. But he also moved to defuse any bad feelings and even called a meeting Monday for the secondary.
"We called the defensive backs together and talked," Sanders said. "I assumed I was going to start. I mean, they told me that. I told them we're in here as a team and we don't need anybody going to the press and causing a big controversy. You guys thrush on stuff like that, but it's not going to be like that around here. I think I left all of that in Atlanta."
20% OFF ANY PURCHASE FANTASTIC SELECTION! SPECTRUM
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
Choose from over 1,000 frames
4 East 7th • Downtown Lawrence
NOT VALID WITH OTHER COPIES OR OFFERS
- 841-1113
EXPIRES 9/30/94
Lenses duplicated or made from Doctor's prescription
In-Store Lab One Day Service (in most cases)
- 486DX2/66Mhz CPU
- 486DX2/66Mhz CPU
* 256K Cache
* 4 MB RAM
* 420 MB Fast Hard Drive
* 1.44 MB floppy drive
* 14" SVGA NI color monitor
* 1 MB SVGA graphics card
* 2S, IP, IG ports
* Enhanced keyboard
- Embedded keyboard
- Minitower or Desktop
● Sound Blaster Discovery
CD16 Mutl Media Kit $253
● MS DOS 6.22, Windows FWG
3.11M Mouse $135
486 DX2
66 Mhz
745 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS 66044
843-3282
$1,345^{00}$
CENTRAL DATA
$1,34500
CENTRAL DATA
COMPUTER SYSTEMS
The Only Thing Tougher
Than Going to Law School
...is not getting in.
NO ONE KNOWS THE LSAT LIKE
KAPLAN
TEST PREP
1-800-527-TEST
Class
Starts
Oct. 2
...
KAPLAN
TEST PREP
1-800-527-TEST
Class Starts Oct. 2
When you need to shift your course load...
Earn University of Kansas Credit through
---
Independent Study by Correspondence
Enroll any week day of the year 8am to 4pm.
Stop by Independent Study Student Servi 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
1.
Get a new perspective on education.
The PowerBook 520 4/160
The pile-up of papers, tests and projects has begun. The increased stress and monotony of juggling classwork can leave you craving just a little time to relax with nature. But alas, there is no time to spare in these hectic times.
Sound a bit confining? Here is where the right computer can make all the difference. The Macintosh Power Book 520 4/160 can give you all the power and portability to do all this stressful work in whatever environment you find most relaxing. So make your power study sessions feel a little more leisurely and purchase a portable Mac. Because this nice weather won't last, and neither will these great prices. The Macintosh PowerBook 520 4/160 now sells for only
$2000⁰⁰
$2000^{00}
0
making college life just a little easier
union
tech cell lab
KU
center
KU
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesdav, September 21. 1994
3B
One-time NFL failure finds success with Lions
Ex-Husker Thomas has 'new lease on football career'
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — During his first five years in the NFL, Broderick Thomas was one of many living symbols of the Tampa Bay Bucs' futility — another high draft choice that didn't pan out.
In his sixth year, with the Detroit Lions, he demonstrated Monday night that he still can make big plays.
Thomas, signed as a free agent by the Lions this year, made perhaps the biggest play of his career against the Dallas Cowboys, racing by all-Pro tackle Erik Williams with 1:55 left in overtime, then stripping Troy Aikman and falling on the ball at the Dallas 43.
That led to Jason Hanson's 44-yard field goal that gave the Lions a 20-17 win over the Cowboys, Dallas' first loss in 11 games and their first since Leon Lett's infamous gaffe in the snow against Miami last Thanksgiving.
"He's the best right tackle in the NFL," Thomas said of Williams. "But I was able to run right by him and then I went for the ball instead of teeing off on Troy."
Thomas has something in common with Aikman — his status in the 1989 NFL draft. Aikman was the first pick overall, Thomas was the sixth.
In between was one bust, Tony Mandarich, and Thomas' superstar teammate, Barry Sanders, who had 194 yards in 40 carries Monday night. Also in the top six that year were
Kansas City's Derrick Thomas and Deion Sanders, who signed last week with San Francisco.
Broderick Thomas, by contrast,
was simply ordinary in Tampa,
suffering through five seasons of
double-digit losses with the woeful Bucs.
After 111/2 sacks in 1991, he was switched into a coverage position as a linebacker, typical of the way players were shifted under shifting regimes in Tampa.
Not in Detroit. He's strictly an upman opposite Pat Swilling.
Thomas not only made the play that won the game, he made one that might have saved it, throwing Emmitt Smith for a 1-yard loss on a third-and-goal from the 1-yard line in the third quarter. That forced Dallas to settle for Chris Boniol's 19-yard field goal that made the game 17-10 instead of 17-14.
So Smith's touchdown with 4:09 left in regulation only tied the game instead of won it.
"We have four linebackers who can really play," said Mike Johnson, another new addition to the Detroit defense.
"Broderick just flat out beat his man and instead of teeing on the quarternback, he went for the ball. It was smart tackling on his part."
The Cowboys simply gave credit to the Lions — Sanders and the defense—and got ready to take their mandated week off.
"The turnovers hurt us, especially in overtime," Aikman said. "We made some stupid mistakes and it cost us. But you can't take anything away from Detroit. They really played well tonight."
Particularly Broderick Thomas. With a new lease on football life.
Former Bulls forward makes Magic again
The Associated Press
ORLANDO, Fla. — Horace Grant, his initial contract with Orlando struck down by the NBA, signed with the Magic for five years Monday in a deal already approved by the league.
"We've done this before, and this is the last time," said the free-agent power forward who played the last seven years with the Chicago Bulls.
The contract has a two-year, early-release option clause and was signed exactly a week after a federal judge in Newark, N.J., ruled Grant's first offer from the franchise — a $22.3 million contract with a one-year escape clause — could violate the NAba salary cap.
Magic coach Brian Hill called the signing of the 6-foot-10 forward "another sign of a commitment of the Magic (owners) to build it into a championship organization."
The NBA initially took the Orlando franchise to court, claiming the Magic's owners were trying to use the one-year escape clause to skirt NBA rules.
"I think we have a great young nucleus here... to eventually win an NBA championship," Hill said at a news conference at Orlanda Arena.
No further details were released on Grant's contract. John Gabriel, Orlando's vice president of basketball operations, emphasized that the NBA backed the new contract.
Grant said he and his agent, Jimmy Sexton, had not contacted any other NBA club after the original contract with the Magic was disallowed.
"My mind was made up," Grant said.
The new contract followed a legal tussle between Orlando and the NBA over the Magic's original six-year contract offer.
That first offer called for Grant to become a free agent after playing the first year at a salary of $2.125 million. That is the most the Magic can pay under the salary cap.
Under the first proposal, Grant would then re-sign with the Magic for the remainder of the contract terms.
But on Sept. 12, U.S. District Judge Dickinson Debevoise said a one-year escape clause in Grant's contract could be a circumvention of the salary cap. The salary cap is designed to prohibit the richest teams from signing all the best players.
Grant could have agreed to a one-year, $2.125 million contract with the Magic or signed a contract with another team with money to spend below the salary cap.
Grant also could have gone back to the Bulls, who had tried to resign him to a five-year, $20 million contract. Another option he chose not to pursue would have been to ask for a full hearing before the judge to continue a fight for the first contract proposal.
"The real hero here, in my eyes, is Horace Grant, who chose the Orlando Magic — again," Gabriel said, referring to the legal tangle the Magic went through to sign Grant.
The Etc. Shop
TM
928 Mass. 843-0611
Pay-Ban
IN PLEASE BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
The world's largest sunglasses*
P
Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City
Birth control
Pap tests
STD testing &
treatment
Orchards Corners
shopping center
Sex education
FREE
Pregnancy testing
1420 Kawold Drive, Suite C
Lawrence, KS
(913)832-0281
PARKING LOT
WEDELIVER!
Open Daily
10:30 A. M. -
11:00P. M.
15th & Kasold
Orchards Corner
Shopping Center
Lawrence, Ks
MR. GOODCENTS
MR. GOODCENTS
SUBS & PASTAS.
Bread
SUP-SANDWICHES
PAYAS
Daily
A.M.
P.M.
MR. GOODCENTS
I
Great subs and pasta at a price that makes GOODCENTS!
C
100
841-8444
Look for our daily specials!
We deliver all day EVERYday!
THE HOLY FINGER
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
GOODFORA
FREE
SIDE OF PASTA
WIPURCHASE OF ONE OF OUR
"FRESH" SLICED WHILE SUB
DANWICHES
AKE SAMBURIES
MR. GOODCENTS
(whole cup capacity per cup)
Dine in or Carry Out Only
expires 10/15/94
valid w/ any other offer
MR. GOODCENTS SUBS & PASTAS.
--is Proud to Announce
15th & Kasold Orchards Corners Shopping Center Lawrence, KS 841-8444 WE DELIVER!
--is Proud to Announce
Sports
OPENDAILY
10:30 A.M. - 11:00 P.M.
KANSASFOOTBALL
-
The Nationally-Ranked JAYHAWKS VS.
football
Alabama-Birmingham
Saturday, Sept. 24 1:00pm kickoff * Memorial Stadium
47th BAND DAY The largest Band Day in America
ATTENTION
Oct. 6 vs. K-State (Night Game)
Nov.12 vs. Colorado (Senior Day)
Oct.22 vs. Oklahoma (Parents Weekend)
Oct.29 vs. Oklahoma State (Homecoming)
STUDENTS & FACULTY/STAFF KU's Other Remaining Games
PRO-RATED SEASON TICKETS Students $30 F/S $73 and $50 CALL NOW 864-3141
Jay's Sports Bar
NEW CASTLE BROWN ALE
Now on tap
14oz. Drafts...$2.25
Also Available on Tap
Coors, Coors Lt., Bud, Bud Lt... $1.00
Enjoy our Professional Dart Pit
Free Pool on Wednesdays! and Continous Sports T.V.
Featured Bottle Beer: Pete's Wicked Ale, Rhino Chasers Lager, Watney's Red Barrel, Sierra Nevada Porter, and McEwan's Scotch Ale.
JAY'S Sports Bar
at the Holiday Inn 200 McDonald DR. 841-7077
4B
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
JONES NEW YORK
FACTORY STORE
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza
MAKE YOUR OWN DEAL ON SELECTED
SPORT AND CAREER GROUPS
1 OR 2 ITEMS 25% OFF
3 OR 4 ITEMS 40% OFF
865-5100 5 OR MORE 50% OFF
Since WATKINS 1907
Since WATKINS 1907
"We Care For KU"
Health
Fair '94
Thu., Sept. 22 & Fri., Sept. 23
9 a.m.- 3 p.m.
Watkine West Entrance
Health
Fair '94
Cholesterol Screening/Percent Body Fat Caloric Needs Assessment/Stress Assessment Diabetes and Cancer Information/Health Literature Free Nutritional Snacks/Prize Drawings/And More!
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICED
864-9500
ROCK CLUB
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
JOHNNY CLUELESS
WED., SEPT 21-
Dinner & Jazz!
SUN., SEPT 25
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUFFET
AND SALAD BAR!
Ron Roberts Quartet,
from 5-8pm • dinner show
SIMPLEXITY
THUR., SEPT 22
JOHN PAUL & THE HELLHOUNDS
W LITTLE JOHNNY & THE RHYTHM ROCKETS
W MOE BLUES BAND
BEAR MUSIC WORKSHOP
MON., SEPT 26
TOE TRUCK
Power & Fear
WED., SEPT 28
Vitreous Humor
Sunday Drive
Iris Anvil
FRI., SEPT 23 ADV TIX
SMITHEREENS
SAT, SMOKIN'
SEPT SECTION
24
ADVANCE TICKET AVAILABLE
AT THE CAFE OR THROUGH
DRINK SPECIALS
**addresses**
$3 Dawson Pitchers
$4 Sam Adams & Boulevard Pitchers
$5 Whitney's Red Barrel Pitchers
**待遇**
$2.90 weekdays
weekdaydays
for 1 Everything (except pitchers)
thursday
$1.25 Longnecks
wEDAYS
$1.25 Wells
saturday
for 1 Wells
morning
$1.25 Vodka Wells
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
For info 913.841.9111
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
Rules of engagement limit soldiers
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Jubilal supporters of Haiti's exiled president cheered U.S. troops yesterday, but police clubbed the demonstrators and fired tear gas as American soldiers stood by, under orders not to get involved.
Some demonstrators became angry at the Americans for failing to protect a man who, according to witnesses, was clubbed to death by a Haitian policeman.
After the disturbances, senior U.S. military officers roared up to Haiti's army headquarters for a lengthy "talk to," as one American officer said it. At sunset, U.S. military police emerged from their bases at the airport and seaport to begin motor patrols along the perimeters.
The confrontations in the capital, which came as U.S. Marines swarmed ashore at Cap-Haitien on the northern coast, underlined the tensions in Haiti and the danger of factional violence that could drag in the Americans.
U. S. troops are walking a precarious path in trying to build democracy in the impoverished Caribbean nation. Their very presence could embolden mobs into violence against Haiti's military regime, but staying aloof runs the risk of being viewed by the masses as allies of hated Haitian soldiers and police.
Some American soldiers bridled at the orders that prevented them from intervening when police attacked supporters of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Haiti's first freely elected president.
For now, U.S. officials said, the troops would not interfere in Haiti's domestic affairs. In Washington, Gen. John Shallkashvili, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned the risk of violence was high and said, "We can be taking casualties at any moment."
A day after soldiers of the 10th Mountain Division began landing at the Port-au-Prince airport, Marines extended the U.S. military operation to Cap-Haitien, Haiti's second largest city with a population of 65,000.
About 1,600 Marines came ashore in armored amphibious vehicles, helicopters and Hovercraft. Haitian police cooperated with the American troops as in the capital Monday.
who was ousted in a 1991 coup.
U. S. troops in Port-au-Prince appeared to be concentrating on consolidating defense positions and supply depots. Convoys moved between the port, airport, an industrial park and a warehouse district where the Americans were setting up bases.
HAITI INTERVENTION
The Marines' objective was to secure the port and airport at Cap-Haitien then move inland to take control of two roads and two bridges. Later in the day, they were expected to move farther into town to locations by a Haitian army barracks, several police outposts and a prison.
Day 2 in Haiti
U. S. troops did not intervene in civil disturbances in Port-au-Prince as they continued to build up their presence in Haiti.
While street clashes escalated in Port-au-Prince, most parts of the capital were quiet. Many people were still holed up with relatives out of town waiting for the dust to settle. The normally bustling Iron Market in the heart of the city was all but deserted.
Marine Lt. Col. Steve Hartly, commander of one of the two task forces which landed yesterday, said that under the rules of engagement his men could only step in when murder or rape was involved.
Trouble among Haitians in Port-au-Prince
▶ Port: Angry crowd threw rocks at police
▶ Airport: Group of Haitians mobbed another Haitian
▶ Cite Soleil: Police fired automatic weapons to disperse more than 5,000 people in this Aristide stronghold
TROOPS: About 1,800 Marines secured the city after coming ashore from the Wasp
Cap-Haitien
Haiti
Port-au-Prince Bay
Dom. Rep.
EQUIPMENT:
Bradley fighting vehicles, other heavy equipment unloaded from roll-on roll-off cargo ships
PORT-au-Prince
Camp Application
MILITARY PRESENCE: Troops arrived at camp, where Haitian military stores most of its heavy weapons and equipment
Source: Diefense Department; research by Pt Car Care
Source: Diefense Department; research by Pt Car Care
A U.S. army representative, Col. Barry Wilvey, said the Pentagon was "looking closely at the implications of the rules of the engagement in light of
Kun Tian / Knight-Riddler Tribun
the incidents." But, Willey said he didn't anticipate any major rewriting of the rules.
The planned U.S. invasion to depose the Haitian military was called off Sunday because of a last-minute agreement by Haiti's army rulers to give up power and cooperate with U.S. forces.
Kidnapping plan is questioned
By The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — American commandos were set to kidnap Haiti's military leader Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras as the U.S. invasion force headed for the Caribbean nation, a U.S. officer said.
"They were cocked and loaded to get him," said Capt. Chris Hughes, of the U.S. Army's elite Rangers, confirming reports from other military sources.
But in Washington, a senior Pentagon official heatedly denied yesterday that there was any plan to kidnap Cedras.
"It's absolutely not true," said the official, who had a major role in drawing up the plans for the Haiti operation. "There never was any intent" to kidnap Cedras.
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the commando teams were sent in to spot out targets, assess security at airfields and other pre invasion tasks, had no orders to kidnap anyone.
General says Haiti is still volatile
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The nation's top general warned yesterday that American casualties could occur in Haiti "at any moment." Republicans sharply attacked the two-day-old military operation and some Democrats in Congress talked of swiftly setting a date for withdrawal.
Exiled Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, too, signaled his disapproval of an American policy that permits Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras to remain in power until mid-October.
At the White House, President Clinton said the nation awoke to a "much
better and very different day" than if the troops had been sent in as an invasion force.
Gen. John Shalikashvili, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters at the White House there could be an outbreak of violence at any time.
"The nation needs to understand that we can be taking casualties at any moment and we need to be prepared for it," he said.
Shortly afterwards came word that some Haitians, jubilant at the prospect of an American-led change in government, clashed with police in
the streets. In one incident, Haitian police clubbed them and fired tear gas as American soldiers stood by under orders not to respond. One Haitian was said by witnesses to have been killed.
In Congress, where opposition to a military invasion had been overwhelming, Republicans said the mission is doomed to failure.
"If our forces stay long enough they will become the target of both sides," predicted Sen. Malcolm Wallop of Wyoming. He and other Republicans likened the situation to Somalia, where Americans were sucked into tribal animosities.
The Associated Press
Carter blasts Clinton's policy on Haiti
WASHINGTON — If he didn't learn the lesson in North Korea, President Clinton knows now that Jimmy Carter's help comes with a price.
Hours after closing a deal to avert a military invasion of Haiti, the former president broadsided Clinton with criticism of his Haiti policy and launched a publicity campaign from the Lincoln bedroom.
Carter opposed an invasion. He opposed an embargo. He opposed
driving fallen dictators from Haiti. He opposed nearly every aspect of the president's work in Haiti, a senior Clinton aide said, except the decision to let Carter try to make peace.
And even that wasn't handled right, the former president said.
He accused Clinton of nearly scutting peace talks by deploying an invasion force while negotiations were still under way. "What we had worked on to accomplish was about to come apart," Carter told CNN in an interview he arranged from the historic
White House bedroom, moments after returning from Haiti.
The administration obviously disagreed. Clinton's foreign policy team insisted that an imminent threat of war was what pushed military leader Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras to close the deal.
Carter credited Haitian President Emile Jonassaint for showing the courage and power to force peace on the military regime. This is the same man Clinton considered a puppet of the military.
Did you know that leaving private property with an open container is a illegal?
You do now.
Legal Services for Students
148 Burge • 864-5665
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF COLLEGE
SENATE
SPIRITUAL AWARENESS WEEK
"INSEARCH OF..."
Students come to a university "In search of" many
different things: freedom, an education, new friends, success, purpose and meaning in life, etc. In that search, many find answers only as they explore the "spiritual" side of life. Spiritual Awareness Week is being sponsored by KUReligious Advisors and planned by students from a variety of religious groups on campus. Its purpose is to provide a focus on the spiritual side of life and to give students an opportunity to share their own spiritual journeys with each other. YOU are invited to attend these special events:
CANDLE
Wednesday, September 21,7:30 pm.
Pioneer Room in Burge Union
A panel presentation by students from different spiritual backgrounds sharing their spiritual journeys.
Thursday, September 22,7:00 pm.
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union,5th floor
Amixer for students from all religious backgrounds.
Thursday, September 22,8:30 pm.
In front of Smith Hall
A candlelight vigil for religious diversity and understanding.
SPONSORED BY KANSAS UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS ADVISORS
A
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
5B
Exercise reduces cancer risk
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Women who exercise an average of four hours a week over the course of their child-bearing years run almost a 60 percent lower risk of breast cancer, according to a study.
Leslie Bernstein, a professor of preventive medicine at the University of Southern California School of Medicine and the study's chief author said, "Even one to three hours of physical exercise per week reduces a woman's risk of breast cancer by about 30 percent."
The findings appear in today's issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
They were drawn from surveys of 1,000 Los Angeles County women 40 and younger — 545 with newly diagnosed breast cancer and 545 without the disease. The study analyzed the women's exercise habits since they began menstruating.
The risk of breast cancer among those who averaged four hours of exercise a week since menstruation was 58 percent lower than that of women who did no exercise at all.
Bernstein said the determining factor for women in the study was how much exercise they did when it was averaged out over their childbearing years.
The study did not prescribe any particular sport or type of exercise. But among the activities reported by the women surveyed were individual or team sports, dance or exercise classes, swimming, jogging and working out at the gym.
"I think this is an extremely exciting study," said Dr. Susan M. Love, director of the University of California at Los Angeles Breast Center. "This is the kind of prevention we need. This is lifestyle changes instead of drugs."
Promoting exercise in young women "will not only prevent breast cancer, but osteoporosis and heart disease," said Love, author of "Dr. Susan Love's Breast Book."
The researchers speculated that exercise may protect by altering the production of the ovarian hormones estrogen and progesterone during menstrual cycles. Other research has shown that vigorous athletics can delay the onset of menstruation and
halt ovulation in some women. A woman's cumulative exposure to the sex hormones is believed to be associated with breast-cancer risk.
Love suggested other mechanisms may be at work.
"It may be that (exercise) decreases body fat and increases muscle mass. We know that women with a higher percentage of body fat have a higher incidence of breast cancer," she said.
Bernstein, a researcher at the USC-Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, said the results intensified her concerns about how sedentary American girls have become. A 1900 study showed that fewer than 40 percent of high school junior and senior girls were enrolled in physical education classes.
"Our results strongly support the need for educational school policies that require participation in physical education classes that encourage lifelong participation in exercise programs," Bernstein said.
Each year, 180,000 American women develop breast cancer;46,000 die from the disease.
Study links diet with ovarian cancer
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Scientists have found one more reason to choose vegetables over a greasy hamburger: Just two small servings of vegetables a day could more than offset that risk
"We need to do more research," said study author Dr. Harvey Risch of Yale University. But "if I were female, I might change my diet."
Ovarian cancer strikes some 20,000 U.S. women a year and kills about 12,500 of them, mostly because there is no good way to detect it early.
The main risk factor is exposure to the hormone estrogen. Women who have multiple pregnancies or use oral contraceptives, which both inhibit estrogen, are at lower risk.
But scientists have long suspected that the same fat that causes heart disease plays a role too, because women who eat less meat aren't stricken as often.
Now, the first large study of diet and
ovarian cancer, published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, suggests the link is real.
Risch and colleagues at the University of Toronto compared the eating habits of 450 Canadian women newly diagnosed with ovarian cancer to 540 demographically similar, healthy women.
For every 10 grams of saturated fat a woman ate per day, her risk of ovarial cancer rose 20 percent. Conversely, women who lowered their saturated fat consumption by 10 grams a day experienced a 20 percent drop in risk.
But every 10 grams of vegetable fiber added to a woman's daily menu lowered her risk of ovarian cancer by 37 percent, the study found.
Each full-term pregnancy a woman experiences lowers her risk by about 20 percent, and each year of oral contraceptive use lowers it by 5-10 percent.
Nobody knows exactly why saturat
ed fat might affect a hormone-caused cancer. But Risch has a few theories;
—Animal fat may contain estrogens or boost a woman's natural production of them.
—Plants contain chemicals that mimic female estrogen. The brain may not be able to tell the difference.
—Fiber may bind up estrogen so that it is eliminated instead of being continually circulated through the body.
Dr. Michael Thun of the American Cancer Society warned that one study doesn't make for scientific certainty.
Risch agreed but said he hoped a similar Australian study due out soon will confirm his findings, because they may provide the only high-risk women — who are childless or forego oral contraceptives — can do to stave off ovarian cancer.
WASHINGTON — A tourist's life was in jeopardy after an auto accident in the remote Mojave Desert, and the doctors at a rural California hospital lacked the equipment and skills to save her.
Telemedicine wave of future
But High Desert Hospital did have access by satellite to doctors at a trauma center in Los Angeles, where the accident victim was quickly transferred after initial X-rays were taken.
And with help from the satellite and a supercomputer, the surgeons there called up the accident victim's medical records and consulted with the woman's physician back in Maryland and other specialists on the case.
The accident never happened. Doctors played out that scenario in a congressional office building yesterday. A satellite dish on the roof provided the link to medical facilities in California and Maryland.
The high-technology equipment allowed doctors on different coasts to summon the woman's medical records in a matter of minutes.
It was a demonstration by a nonprofit consortium of private companies, universities and government agencies on how lives could be saved on the information superhighway.
Doctors often must wait hours or overnight to get records transferred over slow-speed networks. In the demonstration, a CT scan was transferred in less than a third of a minute, compared to 215 minutes for a normal, slow-speed transmission.
Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., said there are legal barriers to the spread of telemedicine, including restrictions on practicing medicine across state lines without a license, privacy concerns and the refusal by Medicare and other insurers to reimburse physicians if they do not see the patient in person.
Surgeons like tunes while they operate
CHICAGO (AP) — Toscanini for a tonsillectomy. Bach for brain surgery.
Surgeons are likely to do a better job at the operating table with a little background music, a study suggests.
Surgeons had lower blood pressure and pulse rates and performed better on nonsurgical mental exercises while listening to music, researchers wrote in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.
Two Chicago-area surgeons agreed heartily but disagreed sharply on which music works best.
"It has to be classical music," said Dr. Roque Pifarer, a cardiovascular surgeon at Loyola University Medical Center. "Anything else interferes with
the rhythm of the operation. And no singing! I don't think opera is good for my operating room."
Dr. Edward May, an oral and maxillofacial surgeon at the University of Chicago Hospitals, favors Pink Floyd and Peter Gabriel.
"It's a great way to relax, and it just makes the place less impersonal," he said.
The study tested 50 men, ages 31 to 61, all of whom regularly listened to music while operating.
The surgeons were hooked up to a polygraph, which measures stress through factors such as pulse and blood pressure, and were asked to count backward by 13s, 27s or other
increments from a five-digit number. The task was repeated while the surgeons listened to music of their own choosing, to music of the kind used in commercial stress-reduction tapes, and with no music at all.
The quickest, most accurate performances with the least physical stress came while the surgeons were listening to the music they chose.
They also performed better with less stress when listening to the music chosen by the experimenter than with no music at all.
The surgeons selected 50 musical pieces, all instrumental. Forty-six were classical, two were jazz and two were Irish folk tunes.
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
Serving downtown since 1938
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downtown Parking in the rear
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
The world's finest sunglasses™
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
The world's finest sunglasses!™
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass.
Downtown
Parking in the rear
GOLF Unlimited
WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER 10% off any 601 Kasold Drive, Suite B-103 purchase with KUID Lawrence, Ks 66049 (excludes golfballs) 913-832-2582
Monday-Saturday 10-7
Sunday 12-5
Esquire Barber Service
1st Time Customer $3.99
No waiting with appointment
2323 Ridge Ct. at the First Med Building
842-3699
Over 10 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
Over 40 toppings to choose from!
.357 Special
Wednesday carry out only
$3 small 1 topping
$5 medium 1 topping
$7 large 1 topping
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Open 7 days a week
OLYMPUS
MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM
Never miss another opqrstuwwxyzabcdefghijklmn.
Fantastic Fall Special!
South Pointe AFFILIATES
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
Available at **Camera America** 1610 West 2nd Street, Lawrence, Kansas 60046 * Wolf's Camera Shop 635 Kansas Avenue, Tuppeh, Kansas 66031. And Other Fine Stores. If you can't find the Microscope Olympus® recorder you need (924 is pictured) a phone: 1-802-2520-3000 for information.
- Swimming Pool Sand Volleyball Court
- On KU Bus Route Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid
Outstanding New Staff!!!
The Power of Babble
accessories. They're where your earphone and microphone go.
HI/LOW MIC
The great equalizer.
As sensitive to your words of wisdom up close as the prof's distant rambling.
Audible Cue Mark Button
Helps you find where you changed the subject.
Dual tape speeds Let you sleep through three hours of lectures without having to change a single XZZZZZZZZZZZZ-90 tape.
Tape Counter Keeps notes, classes and even your days numbered.
Hands-free Recording.
VOVA
(Variable control voice actuation)
Ready for class before you are.
Pearlconer S924 MICROCASSETTE RECORDER
(Actual Size)
External Jacks are the Black Holes for
the earphones, where your earphone
and microphone go.
M. S. LOUIS
TAKE AN ADDITIONAL 25% OFF ALL DRESSES
10
TAKE AN ADDITIONAL 25% OFF ALL JEANS
HARPER'S FASHIONS
835 Mass.
Downtown Lawrence
1
music
He used to play his spoons on the streets of Seattle. Then he hit the road. Now he's a legend in his own time after Soundgarden wrote a song about
him.
Right: Artis, the Spoonman, plays the spoons during a performance art piece at the Bottleneck. Below: Artis uses different spoon types and body parts to create his style of music. Photos by Melissa Lacey
Spoonman
Story by Jenny Brannan
A
rtis, the Spoonman, stood center stage with the spot
center stage with the spot lights shining off his shaved head during a sound check Monday night at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. At his feet were several spoons strategically placed on a blue cloth — some wooden, some metal, some small, some large. When the drum began to beat, he picked up two spoons, placing one between his thumb and index fingers and the other between his middle and ring fingers and began to knock them wildly across his knees, hips and chin.
Arts, are you hurting yourselves yet?" asked Alex Skull, the monitoring engineer, from behind his booth of blinking lights and knobs.
"Not at all, not yet," Artis, 46, replied. "I'm so close to getting this thing right." Artis has been making music by hitting spoons together on different objects for 36 years.
She bought the spoons at Peterson's Five and Dime, a toy store in Seattle. His talent has taken him to New York to play on "Late Night with David Letterman." He has also played with artists such as Jimmy Page, Frank Zappa and k.d.lang.
The band Soundgarden wrote a song about Artis, called "Spoonman," for its album "Superunknown." Artis performed in the song's music video in 1993 at a naval shipyard in Long Beach, Calif.
"My mom bought me a pair of musical spoons when I was about 10 years old," he said.
Music is not about fame and fortune for Arts. It is a way of life.
"Right on for them presenting to the world a living myth," Artis said about "Spoonman." "It's not about me; it involves me. It's about how music saves people."
He said that he liked to play on the childrens' hands after the show. When he went up to one girl, he noticed that she only had three fingers on each hand.
His most satisfying performance was in a children's hospital in 1975 in Seattle.
"I took her little hand in mine and started to play, but, sure enough, I missed a beat," he said. "I was so upset I had to regroup."
He said he also liked to teach children how to play spoons, so he went to the little girl first after he was done playing on the other children's hands.
He said he taught her how to play with the two small spoons intertwined between her three fingers.
Artis said he bought his spoons at Goodwill stores for about 50 cents each.
"In a minute, or less than three, she had it," he said. "When I left, her eyes were sparkling. When I came they were blurry — like she had a sheet over her eyes — but when I left, they sparkled. It was my most valuable show."
"I want to make sure that people realize they're the same as people have at home." he said.
He is always looking for stronger and better spoons with a unique pitch.
"My favorite ones are, of course, the ones that break," he said.
Artis has been on the road since 1974, when he quit his job to hitchhike to the Mount Hood Blue Grass Festival outside of Portland, Ore., for the Fourth of July weekend.
He had been playing spoons steadily for two years before that but only in his spare time.
"I worked in a café in Seattle in 1972, and when it wasn't busy I'd take two teaspoons out of the tray and play on the jukebox." Artis said.
Even though life on the road can be rough, Artis said he would not have it any other way.
"The difficult part is to believe in your earliest aspirations regardless of the condition you're living in now," he said.
The father of five and a grandfather of three, Artis said he had given up a permanent residence — aside from a post office box in Seattle and a yellow school bus parked somewhere outside the city.
"I haven't slept in the same bed for seven days in a row since 1990," he said. "Well, once I did but that was because I was stuck. My car broke down."
Artis spends as little time in bars as possible because he does not like the atmosphere of smoke and drinking.
In addition to performing with spoons, Artis also writes songs and poetry, which he includes in his show. He has released two tapes of his music and written a book about his life called "Artis: Aspirations to Manifestations, From the Womb to the Void."
"I never pursued me on stage. I wanted it, dreamed about it." Artis said. "My whole career has been based on reputation and referral — never pursuit."
He has never gone looking for stardom.
Artis said he was once playing on the street with a friend in Seattle, and they were in the middle of a song when a well-dressed woman walked up to him.
"Do you have the kind with handles?" she asked, politely "Because my dad
invented the kind with handles."
Arts said he stopped her and asked her about her father, who invented his first set of molded-together spoons with a turquoise plastic handle. She said he had died a few years earlier.
Artis said that he still got scared before each performance.
He didn't look scared Monday night on stage as he fiddled with the five microphones that were surrounding him on all sides. Standing upright, alone on stage, he raised the middle microphone up an inch or two to his mouth.
"If I'm talking like this," he began in a soft voice.
"Can you hear me? Am I all right with this?" he ended in a roar.
"OK, that's good," he said, back to a normal voice, before he stepped off the stage to disappear until his show.
Loaded in Lawrence Again
It's not another Saturday night. It's the second compact disc of local music.
Kansan staff reporter
By Jenny Brannan
Brian Byers, owner of Mercy Record Studio, sat with friends Saturday night at a table near the back of the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., enjoying the result of a local project he's been working on since February—the release of the second annual "Loaded in Lawrence Again" compact disc, which features 15 local bands.
"It's not a best of Lawrence." Byers said.
"It's a taste of Lawrence."
Fifteen local bands were chosen to record any song they wanted at Mercy Record Studio, a local recording company. The songs were compiled to make the "Loaded in Lawrence again" compact disc, which can be bought at any local music store. A party celebrating the release of the compact disc was conducted Saturday at
The first "Loaded in Lawrence" compact disc was released last year to celebrate the one year anniversary of Mercy Records, 735 1/2 New Hampshire St., and the fifth anniversary of the Bottleneck.
the Bottleneck. The party featured live music from some of the bands on the compact disc.
Byers and the owner of the Bottleneck, Brett Mossiman, chose bands that they thought sounded good on compact disc and that represented Lawrence well.
"It gives the bands a chance to be heard," said Jim Sammons, Mercy Records manager. "It's good exposure for the bands on the first level, and it's a good chance to get something on disc for the bands that can't afford it otherwise."
The 1994 compact disc will be distributed nationally thanks to the success of last year's product.
Lovell said he also liked the fact that the bands were able to be in the studio while the Mercy engineers were mixing the songs for the disc.
Danger Bob bass player Jason Lovell said the compact disc would expose people who didn't go to bars to his band's music.
"It's our most popular compact disc for Mercy Records," Sammons said. "It was in demand so much, we did another one."
"It actually shows that we're legitimate," Lovell said. "They know we're out here; we're good, and they should give us a shot."
Bob Cutter, lead guitarist for Slackjaw,
said the compact disc was a crosscut of
Lawrence's music scene, but there were
other bands in Lawrence.
"One thing I like about these compilations is it documents what's going on in Lawrence," he said.
The Bands
Byers said Mercy would like to make the
Shower Trick
Coffee House Burns
Hatful of Rain
Crap Supper
John Brown's Undergroun
Common Ground
L.A. Ramblers
Monterey Jack
Nic Cosmos
Mountain Clyde
Sunday Drive
Slackjaw
Spamskinners
Danger Bob
Salty Iguanas
PAGE 6B
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
compact disc an annual tradition.
"We're going to keep doing this until Lawrence runs out of bands, or we run out of sequel titles," he said.
SEPT.21,1994
Calendar
SEPT. 21, 1994 PAGE 6B KU Life
EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES
Exhibition-Holocaust Display, Sept. 26-Oct. 16 in the Lobby of the Center for the Performing Arts, 50th and Cherry streets, Kansas City, Mo. Exhibition-Shuttlecocks: The Making of a Sculpture, July 8-Oct. 6 in Gallery 136 at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo.
Exhibition-Kansas State University Graduate Student Art Exhibit, 1-4:30 p.m. Sunday in the Art and Design Building Gallery.
Exhibition-recent works of Osage Indian artist Chris Musgrave, Sept. 9-Oct. 5 at the Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth St.
Ethanity Community Theater presents "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat," 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St. Tickets are $11 for the public, $10 for students and senior citizens on Fridays and Saturdays; $10 for the public, $9 for students and senior citizens on Sundays.
The Lied Center presents "Stars of the New York City Ballet," 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Lied Center. Tickets are $25 and $30 for the public, $15 and $12.50 for students.
Exhibition Jennifer Bartlett: A Print Retrospective, Aug. 21-Oct. 16 in the Southwest Mezzanine Print Galleries at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo.
Exhibition-group art show by the Douglas County Senior Center, Sept. 1-30 at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.
Renegade Theatre presents East Side Comedy Shop's "Night of the Amazon" 8 p.m. Friday, 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. Saturday at the Renegade Theatre, 518 E. 8th St. Tickets are $6 at the 8 p.m.
show and $4 at the 10 p.m. show.
Exhibition- Kid's Art Showcase, Sept. 26-0ct. 3 at Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, Sixth and New Hampshire streets in downtown Lawrence. Kids ages 1-16 may bring original artwork (paintings, sculpture, short stories, poems, photographs, etc.) to be part of the display from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Monday.
Music Festival- KY-102's Radio Free Westport Alternative Music Festival, 1 p.m. Sunday in the parking lot south of Muldoons restaurant in Westport.
Art Festival- The Third Annual Harvest or the Arts, Sept. 26-Oct. 2 around downtown Lawrence and in Watson train park, Sixth and Tennessee streets.
PERFORMANCES
AUDITIONS
The Lawrence Chamber Players, Lawrence's only community-based chamber orchestra, will be holding open auditions for the 1994-95 season 7 p.m. Tuesday in Trinity Episcopal Church, 1011 Vermont St. Auditions are open to all musicians. For more information and to schedule an audition time, call Leslie Vining, manager, at 841-8617.
7
-40
7
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
7B
Officials looking into cause of crash
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — USAir was trying to milk more use out of the engines on ill-fated Flight 427 by running them on shorter flights rather than giving them an overhaul, a source familiar with the airline's maintenance said vesterday.
USAir got FAA approval to adopt the practice in February, part of a broader cost-cutting effort. The Sept. 8 crash came as the plane approached Pittsburgh for a scheduled stop. All 132 people aboard died.
By using the older engines solely on
short flights instead of more taxing long trips, USAir aimed to save $1 million per plane and gain an extra two years before an overhaul.
The airline, which is trying to cut annual overhead by $1 billion, has denied it is scrimping on safety to save money.
The practice of giving older jets less stressful flights was first reported in February by Aerospace Propulsion, an industry newsletter. Barron's this week reported the engines on Flight 427 were part of the program.
USAir representative Andrea Butler wasn't able to confirm whether the engines on the 737-300 that
crashed had been switched to shorter routes to avoid an overhaul. Of the more than 100 737-300 jets USAir operates, 28 were covered by the program.
But a source familiar with the engine rating program, who spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity, said yesterday that the engines and the jet that crashed were part of the program.
On short flights, less thrust is needed because the planes aren't weighed down with as much fuel. The lower thrust rate means the engines don't run as hot and don't need to be refurbished as often.
Oil exploration agreed upon
Associated Press
BAKU, Azerbaijan — An international consortium led by British Petroleum and Amoco Corp. signed a landmark $9 billion agreement yesterday with Azerbaijan's state oil company to explore for oil and gas in the Caspian Sea.
The 30-year deal, which must still be ratified by Azerbaijan's parliament, represents a tremendous economic boost for the former Soviet republic.
Azerbaijani President Heydar Aliyev and U.S. Deputy Energy Secretary Bill White attended the signing.
Despite the participation of the Russian national oil company Lukoil, Russian Foreign Ministry representative Grigory Karasin said later that his country would not recognize the contract.
The oil companies will develop the Azeri, Chirag and part of the Gyuneshli oil fields. They expect to extract 3.5 billion barrels of crude oil.
Debate flares over guns-in-school bill
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A law requiring one-year suspensions of students who bring guns to class is in jeopardy, supporters said yesterday.
Negotiators writing a compromise Elementary and Secondary Education Act are trying to choose between two versions of the anti-gun provision.
The Senate provision, which duplicates a law enacted in March, would continue the required one-year suspension. The House version would let
local school boards determine the proper punishment for violators.
"How can we expect anyone to learn if they look over and they see a 45 or a.38 tucked in someone's belt?" asked Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., a sponsor of the Senate plan. "They can't."
"We want to send a message ... that this country says no guns in schools, no excuses," added Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., another author of the "zero-tolerance" measure passed by the Senate.
Bill represents compromise
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Legislation to reduce federal regulation of drinking water and help small communities pay for improvements to their systems was approved yesterday by a House panel.
The bill sent to the House floor by the Energy and Commerce Committee represents a hard-fought compromise between environmental groups, states and cities and the Clinton administration about how to comply with water quality laws.
Environmental groups said the breakthrough was "significant" but cautioned they would withdraw support if any major changes are made in the compromise.
Current law has been criticized for requiring all systems to adhere to "cookie-cutter" standards, for not helping small water systems pay for government-mandated improvements and for unworkable monitoring requirements.
Sciest Food
I'LL HAVE THE Monko Burger.
Here you go...
that was tasty...
00000... I'm sick...
I'll have a Creamy Club.
We'll bring it out to you...
ANHIMM..
CHRISTIE'S TOY BOX WHERE THE FUN BEGINS!
- Unique T-Shirts
- Unusual Greeting Cards
• Exotic Lingerie
• "Over-the-Hill" Gifts
• Video Sales & Rentals
• Hilarious Party Games
• Sensuous Oils & Lotions
Current Monthly Magazines
• T-Back/Thong Swimwear
CHE
BREWING
AMERICAN
CHRISTIES
BREATH LONG & GIRL SIZED
TOY BOX
students -Rent 1 movie at regular price and get a 2nd movie for 1c
with valid KUID
1206 W. 23rd, Lawrence. Ks. 842-4266
SEPTEMBER 30·8 P.M.
TOPEKA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER The Georgia Neese Gray Performance Hall
TOPEKA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
The Georgia Neese Gray Performance Hall
$19, $15, $11 PLUS TAX -
GROUP DISCOUNT AVAILABLE
TPAC BOX OFFICE: 8TH & QUINCY
OPEN NOON TO 5 P.M.
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY
CALL 297-9000 OR 1-800-949-8722
SPONSORED BY
Payless Shoe Source
Dwana Smallwood & Kevin Boseman in Shapiro & Smith's
Three Dances with Army Blankets. Photo: Beatrie Schiller
Due to the nature of performing arts, all dates, programs and artists are
subject to change without notice. Handling changes on mail orders.
Payless
Shoe
Source
Due to the nature of performing arts, all dates, programs and artists are subject to change without notice. Handling charges on mail orders
820-822 Mass.841-0100
NATURALWAY
amrsis
SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE
ON WEDDING GOWNS
20%-70% Off
Through September 24th
Call:800-842-0442
For Your Personal Appointment
Laura's Couture Collection
55th & Boothide Boulevard, Kansas City, Missouri
ATHLETIC
Gymnastics
CLUB ING
Special Student Memberships!
State of the art fitness and health facility
√
US OUT!
Graystone Athletic Club, Inc.
2500 W 6th 841-7230
Keep It Clean
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
New Product:
$200
Get $200 back by mail when you purchase any one of 12 select AT&T Computers 12/3/94
AT&T Communicator Multi-Media System
- 486SX, 33MHz
- 48SX, 33MHz
* 4Mb, 210Mb
* Sound Card
* Mouse
Fax/Modem ALTR
CDROM
OFF AN AT&T COMPUTER!
DOS, Windows
Multimedia Software
Stereo Speakers
Monitor not included
only
$1,097
w/rebate
BROUGHT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAC FILMS
Point COMPUTER CENTER
WED. SEPT 21 TO SAT, SEPT. 24
Gay & Lesbian Film Fest
Thurs. 9:30 PM
ConnectingPoint
Prick Up Your Ears
Wed. 7:00 PM
Sat. 2:00 PM
Breakfast at Tiffany's
Wed. 9:30 PM
Thurs. 7:00 PM
ALL SHOWS IN WOODROUFF AUD.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
TIMECOP $ ^{R} $ 5:00,7:15,9:30
BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00
(UNLIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Crown Cinema
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191
HILLCREST
The Lion King $ ^{R}$ 5:15,730,9:30
Milk Money $ ^{PG-13}$ 5:00,715,9:30
A Good Man in Africa $ ^{R}$ 5:15,730,9:45
Clear & Present Danger $ ^{R}$ 5:00,7:45
The Client $ ^{PG-13}$ 5:00,715,9:30
ALL SEATS
$1.25
CINEMA TWIN ALL SEATS
311.0 IOWA 841-5197 $1.25
BlowAway $ ^{R} $ 5:00,7:20,9:45
4Weddings & aFuneral® 5:00,7:25,9:45
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Mulligan's
featuring DINE IN or CARRY OUT 11am-3am PUPS Free Downtown Delivery Available
813 Mass Downtown Lawrence 843-7584
featuring
HUR
Acoustic Juice
$1 Sam Adams
Draws
ODY
Great Food-Great Music
$1.50 Wells
Particle Man
SAT
White Trash
2 For 1 Wells
R
with
1016 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 865-4055
All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged
Fitness Fun
STEP UP
B
BOUTIQUE
60 classes per week and much more
ABSOLUTELY NO JOINING FEE -VIP-
exp. 10/3/94
for only
10 TANS for only
$20
$20
exp. 10/3/94
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
Now accepting applications for following Senate seats:
- Business
- Graduate
- Liberal Arts and Sciences
- Non-traditional
- Social Welfare
Applications are available in Student Senate office at 410 Kansas Union.Call 864-3710 with questions.
APPLICATION DEADLINE IS SEPTEMBER 28 AT 5 pm
---
8B
Wednesday,September 21,1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE NEWS in brief
CHARLOTTE, North Carolina
Pilots attest wind shear
in July USAir plane crash
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — When USAir Flight 1016 flew into a downdraft during a thunderstorm, it felt as though "you were suspended from a string, and somebody dropped you," a pilot testified yesterday.
First Officer James P. Hayes, who was flying the DC-9, had been warned of wind shear in the area of Charlotte-Douglas International Airport. But Hayes said he had no idea he was so near the sudden, dangerous shift in wind speed and direction caused by a downward rush of cooled air.
"When I saw the rapid decrease in airspeed and felt the very severe sinking of the airplane, it was ... it was ... very noticeable. Something you would never forget," Hayes said. "It's as if you were suspended from a string and somebody dropped you."
The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the July 2 crash, which killed 37 of the 57 people aboard.
WASHINGTON
Government to focus on friendly service
President Clinton made some striking promises yesterday: tax filing by phone, a repaired postal service and helpful people at federal agencies to get things done more quickly.
The promises are among a broad array of pledges in the government's new customer-service standards. Clinton said that they will make the federal government user-friendly and demonstrate that service can be its hallmark. Clinton and Vice President Al Gore presented the new customer standards in a White House ceremony as 21 Cabinet members and federal agency heads traveled across the country to tout them in person.
NEW YORK
Composer Jule Styne, whose brash Broadway musicals like "Gypsy" and "Funny Girl" showcased such stars as Ethel Merman and Barbra Streisand, died yesterday at 88.
Broadway composer Jule Stynedies
Styne wrote for some of the theater's biggest names and most distinctive performers.
Styne, who won an Oscar and a Tony and wrote 1,500 songs during a seven-decade career that continued into the 1990s, died at Mount Sinai Hospital, where he had undergone open heart surgery six weeks ago.
He gave both Steisand and Carol Channing their signature songs — "People" and "Diamonds Are a Girl's Friend," respectively.
He also created music for Judy Holliday in "Bells Are Ringing"; Phil Silvers and Nancy Walker in "Do Re Mi"; Silvers and Nanette Fabray in "High Button Shoes"; and Bert Lahr and Dolores Gray in "The On Aisle".
ROME
Former interior minister linked to Mafia
A former interior minister who directed anti-Mafia operations was arrested at dawn yesterday and charged with having ties with mobsters.
Antonio Gava and 97 others, including three other former members of parliament and prominent businessmen, were accused of working with the Camorra, the Neapolitan version of the Sicilian Mafia.
Gava, 64, was first investigated in 1993 for suspected ties with organized crime. He had headed the interior ministry from 1987 to 1991 and was a top-ranking Christian Democrat.
He lost parliamentary immunity from arrest this spring, after he chose not to run for re-election. The balloting swept away the four-decade Christian Democratic domination of politics in the wake of corruption scandals.
Defense plan $40 billion over
WASHINGTON — The Clinton administration estimates its long-term defense spending plan will cost about $40 billion more than what will be available, top Pentagon officials said yesterday.
Deputy Defense Secretary John Deutch said the administration had not yet devised a plan for how to close the gap in its defense spending plans for fiscal years 1996 through 2001.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Associated Press
"Our estimate is that over this period we are about $40 billion short." Deutsch told the Senate Armed Services Committee. According to Deutch, the key question occupying defense planners and White House budget officials is, "Does the Department of Defense have enough money to fulfill its missions it has been assigned both in the short run and in the long run?"
Deutch also confirmed that the Pentagon would be seeking a supplemental appropriation to cover the military mission in Haiti, but he did not provide a precise figure. He said the administration estimated the total cost to the military for peacekeeping activities was running about $1.5 billion a year.
Congress was considering taking up a debate on whether to formally approve of the Haiti occupation or to impose a time limit on the military mission as was done in Somalia.
About $11 billion of the $40 billion defense budget gap represents higher military pay raises for the next five years than President Clinton has anticipated approving. Quality-of-life improvements, such as better military housing, as well as moving up the date of cost-of-living increases for military retirees, add up to about $7 billion. Increases in Army readiness funds add another $3 billion.
French charged for tainted blood Associated Press
PARIS — Former Premier Laurent Fabius and two former members of his Cabinet will be charged this month with complicity in poisoning hemophiliacs who received AIDS-tainted blood products, justice officials said yesterday.
The scandal grew out of revelations that blood products contaminated with HIV, the AIDS virus, were knowingly distributed to hemophiliacs in 1985. About 1,200 hemophiliacs were contaminated with the AIDS virus as a result, and more than 300 have died.
New Guinea capital devastated by volcanoes
Pacific Ocean
Papua New Guinea
Rabaiu
Indonesia
Corel
Sea
Australia
0 600
Miles
Two volcanoes erupt, nearby city evacuated
PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea — Rain-sodden ash crushed buildings and trees in the port of Rabaul yesterday while ships picked up thousands of people who fled the simultaneous eruption of two volcanoes.
By The Associated Press
Thick ash, dense black smoke and poisonous fumes blanketed the area around the city, which is on New Britain island about 500 miles northeast of Port Moresby, the capital of New Guinea.
"You cannot see Raabu. You cannot see the landscape. You can only see smoke and ash, "Sir Julius Chan, the
prime minister, said after flying over the devastated region.
Most of Rabalu's 30,000 residents and people in nearby villages fled just before the Tavururv and Vulcan volcanoes erupted on opposite sides of the once picturesque harbor. The eruptions triggered earthquakes and fierce lightning storms.
Witnesses reported that ash was up to 3 feet deep across the city. Much of it mixed with rain to form heavy, gray mud that collapsed many buildings and trees under its weight.
Officials said communications with Rabaul had broken down, and there were fears for a small number of people still in the city.
White House against arms reduction
The Associated Press
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — West Virginia sued 17 tobacco companies yesterday in an attempt to recover millions of dollars in health-care costs and to keep the companies from promoting cigarettes to minors.
"For decades, the tobacco companies have gotten West Virginians hooked on their products, taken millions of dollars in profits back to their companies and stuck West Virginia taxpayers with the bill for the medical care of people made sick by tobacco," said Attorney General Darrell V. McGraw.
Mississippi and Minnesota have filed similar lawsuits.
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Concerned that Russia might re-emerge as a military threat, the Clinton administration has decided against substantial new reductions in the U.S. nuclear arsenal, Defense Secretary William Perry said Tuesday.
"The most important reason to be concerned about the future is that Russia still has about 25,000 nuclear weapons — many more than enough to threaten our national survival," Perry said.
Perry said the United States already had reduced its arsenal of strategic, or long-range, nuclear arms to 8,000 as set by the first Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, even though that treaty has not yet officially entered into force. A second START treaty, not yet ratified by the Senate or the
Russian parliament, would reduce U.S. and Russian strategic arsenals to 3,500 warheads each.
Some private defense experts have recommended large additional cuts in the U.S. arsenal, first to 2,000 warheads and later to as few as 100. Some also advocate destroying, rather than just storing, warheads that are taken out of service.
The main rationales offered for continuing to reduce the size of U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals are to lessen the chance of a nuclear accident or attack and to encourage other nations to give up their weapons or forgo making more.
But in a policy address to the Henry L. Stimson Center, Perry indicated that a lengthy administration study, dubbed the Nuclear Posture Review, has concluded that it's too early to consider substantial new arms reductions and that the U.S. military must be prepared to reverse recent arms cuts in an emergency.
Perry cited a "small but real danger that reform in Russia might fall" and a government arise that is hostile to the United States.
Progress in Russia's internal reforms, as well as U.S. and Russian nuclear reductions, is expected to be a central topic at next week's meeting in Washington between President Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin.
In his speech, Perry said the Clinton administration was worried that Moscow is lagging behind in the START weapons reductions. Moscow also is preserving more tactical, or short-range, nuclear weapons than is the United States, and it is permitting each of its service branches to retain a nuclear role.
Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can Save Some Cash
Available at these locations:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Valid Through July 31, 1995
NCGS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Restaurants
1819 W. 234d + 842-1620
Get the daily specials every day of the week
BLIMPIE SURS AND SALADS
2540 low... 865...
IMPERIAL GARDEN
UNIVERSITY
BOOK
SHOP
803 Massachusetts-832-4044
$1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners for 6 P.M.. Tuesday
HLA-B27 DNALINK
624 W 12thB-843 -1201 FREE Cup of Our Coffee (Ceramic Organically Grown) with any All Purpose Mug
FREELIBER & SOFT DRINK
2007 W 86 h=41-1888-Free Drink Soft Drink (with FREE refills)
FULL MOON CAFE
401 N 2nd Bd-847-3D77-BUV a cheeseburger with fries at餐,
price get $2.00 one Mth (four) Fri 4-7pm
DONNAZIA
2329 89-701-1200
5.199 Feesignal
DONNAZIA PIZZA
832 low st. -b41-8002
1234 Low St.
615 New Hampshire 841-7236
BV1 Manhattan 841-7236 / 1/Price
**DRAWSHACK BAGS**
**DRAWSHACK BAGS**
25% Off Any Delivery Order(not valid with any other offer)
PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
1711 W 23;842.9040
$1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day
PUZZA SHOPPE
Kaselh842D
ESPRESS 0'HOUSE
10.F 9th St:843 3007
Med Pizza $5.95, for $9.95, L Pizza $7.95, for $13.95
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Custom Rd. Lansing, MI 69044
JOHNNY'S TAVERN
One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only
$1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $ 50 includes food and coffee data
2700 www=748-2615-FREE Mild Drink with Purchase or
Bottle at Best Price
1. 824 w2kdr2-8453-b181-1010 T44 w330-8396-2308 Hammel
1. 824 w2kdr2-8453-b181-1010 T44 w330-8396-2308 Hammel
1. 824 w2kdr2-8453-b181-1010 T44 w330-8396-2308 Hammel
(NO LIMIT)
PYRAMID PIZZA
148h & Ohio &824-3232-800, 45m, add. tpd $50, Mdge $60, 148h & Ohio &824-3232-800, 45m, add. tpd $50, Mdge $60, 148h & Ohio &824-3232-800, 45m, add. tpd $1, Carry Out Only
20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals
BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE
927 Massachusetts·641-2451
4320 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044
WEST COAST SALOON
2222 Iowa St.*841-2739
BOBBI'S BEDROOM
2429 jersey #42, 7378
743 Massachusetts-749-4684
15% OFF Any Item (excludes sale items)
ENRICH GRAPHING BOOBS
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
Retail/Merchandise
Classified Policy
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
ATHLETES' FOOT
914 Massachusetts-841-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item
MAXIMUM $89.00
10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer tac Refill
846 litres. Sku D4-845-8800 OFF Whigbrand Power filters, and All Other Brand Gravity Filter sets
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
3rd & Louisiana*832-1700
4.59 New Hamburg GmbH 643-3822-525 00 discount for Diagnostic
Upgrade, LGW Lab System, LGW Incompatibility
4.59 New Hamburg GmbH 643-3822-525 00 discount for Diagnostic
Upgrade, LGW Lab System, LGW Incompatibility
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
120 Crescent Rd. 843-391
20% OFF Entire Inventory (includes items from and outside special stores)
731 Massachusetts B4.34 191-1% OFF All Apparel
731 Franklin Square B5.07 DSR04-DSR4.00
KINGS OF OU CITY
837 Massachusetts-642-2992
20% OFF KU Sweatshirts
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS+864-4640
Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book) 5¢
JUNKETS HITCH
840 Massachusetts-842-2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANASS AND BURGE UNIONS-684-4840
$5.00 Offer any Jahayk Clothing item at Hat Over $20.00
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates based on race, age, color, creed, religion or nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
N 19 n2d 7481-8003-191011aaf Avenue. Suite 1841-7504
$1.00 OFF Phone Rental (limit one per visit)
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it advertiable 'any preference, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
MERCEDES
9th & New Hampshire+841-5324
10% OFF All Skin Care Products
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES!
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are subject to change.
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
2340 S. Iowa 684-8560 % Off C41 Process (Not Valid)
740 Massachusetts·843-3933
15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
716 Massachusetts - 81-172-200 OFF CITY, Mamaroneck, MN
Tuesday & Sunday *15% Meat on Black Beans*
20 Massachusetts (41-110-00) OFF All Cars 7 Times Main
& Women's (49Games of Gear), Reduced, and Recycled
PRO SOUND
Lawrence, ka-865-0692
10% OFF ALL Sales
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
SHOW CARE AFTER OFFER RECYCLED SOUNDS
- Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore at the Courtsite County
* First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore at the Courtsite County
Classified Directory
822 W 128 H 841-847F532 OFF Any One CD, Tape,
822 W 128 H 841-847F532 OFF Any One CD, Tape,
300s
Merchandise
NO BOOKING TIME
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS:864-4640
10% OFF Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
209 Help Wanted
212 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
X
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
1741 Massachusetts*749-1605
25% OFF All Month Rentals
SNARK'S SURF SHOP
200s Employment
15% Off Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stunny)
832 lowa-749-3507-i2e 1 Video Resale Monday
Thursday (limit one offer per day)
UNIVERSITY BOOK SUPP
111W. 23rd-749-566
SPRIMMER/WAMAITTA
1025 N.3 B-932-110
10%OFF Any Purchase
unless you
10% OFF of all clothing (excluding sale items)
Services
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 8th-614-6955
10% OFF All Parts
BRADY OPTICAL
CRANON & CRANON OPTOMETRIST
www.mcweb.com/n432-2844-t11006E45447
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
CRANIDON & CRANIDON RECENTMENTS
10.19 Massachusetts - 943-834-250 and 25.00 All AIF Air
Eyeglass Frame Valser with PRESCRIPTION Lens Only
EUROPEAN TAN
2008 FEBRUARY
(1/customer)
MANETAMERS
10 W3/2d-84/1 83+232-FREE 2 Zines with Purchases
of 1 Tens For $20 and FREE Trial Formula One
MANETAMERS
846 Illinois Suite E-841-5499
FEE or 80 $0 FEW Charges
$3.00 OFF Harrol or $5.00 OFF Chemical Service
PLANNER PANEL 180000
15th & Kasidak 323-0281-25FF, OPEF initial or Annual
15th & Kasaid-0321-825-019F OFF Initials or Annu
Visit Plus 12 FREE Condoms
B.C.* STADIUM BARBERY
1033 Massachusetts 749-6536
Any Haircut or Hairstyle $5.50
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
E. 7th St. 841-1112
K-10 A County Bldg. 1075-1019(813)542-1747
Buy One Small Buckle of Balls, Get One Small Buckle
TWIN GAKS GOLF COURSE
1975 E HARRISON
$35.00 OFF Lenses & Frames w/ FREE Adhesive
FREE ULTIMATE TAN
100s Announcements
2494 lowa SI. 61-4449 1+ FREEB Session with the
Purchaser
(with Savings $5.50)
BANK OF NEW YORK
BANK OF NEW YORK
BANK OF NEW YORK
UNIVERSITY BABY KANSAM
LAO College Filipino 4652
1Tst Student-First-Id#4-358
20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad
12
THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass.
STERILING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
LEATHER
105 Personals
SUNGLASSES
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops,
i's, Révo, Serengeti, and Vuamet
In this threatening world, everyone needs a PAAL.
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Quorum
Securing Life
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
ING
The technology is Quorum. The opportunity is yours.
wherever you go. When its pin is pulled, the PAL II emits an ear-piercing alarm and a bright flashing light, starting an attacker and attracting attention. The light can also be used as a flashlight. The PAL II is your best defense against attack.
- * Connect your Quorum independent Distributor * *
KU Student
Adam Redden
(913) 441-4061
110 Bus, Personals
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Be healthier and happier!
Relieve pain and stress with massage therapy!
Student discounts available.
Call 1-800-325-7941 or visit www.aca.edu.
Call Ana Garcia and Laura Paca at 841-1587.
case card readings
Lose case readings
Lose case readings
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer.
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer.
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also insurance for US citizens going abroad. Osklad Insurance Service. 411'A S Main Ottawa, Ks 60667 180-606-6653.
Ruth & Kids Discount Floral. Dozen arranged roses in vase 19.95. Accept all major credit cards and checks. Open 9-7 MF, 9-5 Sat. closed Sun. 933 E. 23rd 832-0704
WEBB'S
*Viaka 1.75 $8.98*
*Bacardi 750 $7.99*
*Sebastiani 1.5 $7.99*
*Bud & Bud Lt. 24PK $11.99
*Coors & Coors Lt. 24PK $11.99
*Lite & MGD 24PK $11.99
800 West 23rd Street
841-2277
120 Announcements
CALCULUS: TAKING CONTROL Workshop. are things not adding up right? Thursday, Sept. 22, 7-9pm, 120 Snow, FREE! Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
CALCULUS:TAKINGCONTROL
Arethingsnotaddingupright?
Thurs, Sep. 22, 7:00-9:00 pm
120 Snow
FREE!
Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
Lose weight and have energy at the same time. I lost 45 lbs. in 3 months, my energy level was great, I don't need to work for it, recommended. For a free sample, send name, address and phone number to Beham Research.
Openings for CNAs: 3:10:36 am for CNAs the full or
partial hour; Eudora Nursing Center:
9:45:14-2570
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
9B
EARTH MYSTICS and GODDESS OF MANY FACES-workshops on Earth-based spirituality, OCT.8-9. Presenter from St. Louis. For info: Institute of Transformational Studies 1-862-2006.
FUNDRAISING
Change from different fundraisers lasting either 3 or 7 days. No Investment. Earn $$$ for your group plus personal cash donations or your donations. Call 1-800-832-6528, Ext. 65.
11TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2. - 15, 1989 • 4, 5, 8 OR 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
$168
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
YA GOTTA
BE THERE!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1-800-SUNCHASE
NO BODY DOES SKI BEANS BEETLE
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
140 Lost & Found
Lost red male Doberman with green collar & flop
eyes. Call 685-8648 REWARD!
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
24 hour telephone answering service is seeking part-time help. Experience helpful, but will train the right person. Immediate opening for weekend positions. Send resume to HR@tellus.com. Apply in person Mon.,/Wed./Fri, at 1441 W. 6th St.
A couple or two individuals to work two weekends a month at a coed group home. Responsible for the care of children with special needs experience. Must be 21, valid Kansas driver's license, current physical. high school graduate Send resume to Trinity Foster Home, Box 3365, 404-824-7498. Employer is anEqual Opportunity employer.
Babytitter needed for two delightful toddler girls in nite home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible with mobility, ability to swim and references required. Short drive from KU and references required. 20, University Dayanzan KANSAN 119 SLAFFER Flint
Babyssitters needed for a research grant. $43.35mr. Must have experience with babysitting young children and infant, babysitting references, and be a certified student. Apply at 407 Dole. Deadline Sept. 23rd.
Brandon Woolls is currently accepting applications for a full-time housekeeper. The qualified applicant must be outgoing, observant, self-motivated, able to work independently and enjoy working in a beautiful facility. We offer health, life and long-term disability insurance, vacation and holiday benefits, as well as a competitive salary. Please apply in person at 181 Inverness Dr., Lawrence, KS E.O. 1E2.
Caters, Kansas Union Catering Department,
425 hr .25 h., m. 3p.-m. Monday thru Friday, weekends as scheduled, must have previous food service experience, able stand for long periods, lift 50 pounds, valid driver's license. Apply Katsburg and Burge Union Personnel Office. EOE.
CNA
CNA CLASSES
Need some extra pocket money? Certified Nurse Aide classes will start Sep. 26. Call Eudora Nursing Center, 542-2176 for additional information. For askvila.Mon-Fri
Day, evening and weekend shifts needed. Work with elderly clients in their homes. Reliable transportation required. Call Scott at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association. 843-3728
COLLEGE STUDENTS $12.51-11.65 STARTING
Local branch of nat 'i' carl. Fletch immediate entry
level openings. Fletch time schedules. 3-8 days, ever
weekend event. all majors accepted. For
info 841-8695.
Euthasitische HDLF/Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for 2hrs. Thurs. evenings and occasionally 4hrs. Sunday mornings. Call 642-8280.
Cottwood wood Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their residential division. Positions include evening, weekend, and overnight hours. College course work and related experience help but also provide GOOD DRIVING RECORD A MUST. Please apply by 8:00AM in Cottwood Incl. 2901 W. E10
Embora U.S. D.N.P. 491 is accepting applications for the following Assistant Coach/Consort positions: 7,8 and 9-12 Track, 7,8 and 9-12 Girls Basketball, Wrestling, and FLA. Application information may be obtained by contacting the Central Office, 310-536-2311 or www.fla.edu/positions will be filled as soon as possible. EOE Female vocalist wanted for variety dance band. All styles, High, strong-chest voice, good performer. Avail. immediately. This is a working band, serious inquiries only 749-3649.
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
GRADUATE STUDENT ASSISTANT. Half-time position available in the Student Assistance Center for Disability Related Services. Responsibilities include assisting staff in coordinating services to students with disabilities, developing demic aides, researching equipment needs, and identifying local, state, and federal regulations impacting students with disabilities. Requires: KU graduate student status for Fall, 1994 and post-graduation. KU graduate student position: Science Disorders, or related field.
REQUIRED: application form, available in the Student Assistance Center, must be completed and received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, September 30, 1984, in 133 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, at 864-254-1854, and 864-254-1854. The University of Kansas is an opportunity/affirmative action employer.
Growing Overland Park, KC-based custom sportwear company seeks out fraternity-sorority member for part time office help. Must have vehicle and be willing to commute from
Lawrence to KC
Call (913) 381-9709 or (800) 886-9328
Shop clerk, apply at Natural History Museum.
Located south of the Kansas University.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
Part time positions available.
Apply at store today. 1029 Mass.
HOLIDAY INN
The Holideum is recruiting service professionals to join our team! Current openings include;
- p.m. servers
* cocktail servers
- cocktail servers
- n.m. sessions
- p.m. cashiers
* banquet help
- weekend housekeepers
We offer excellent compensation and benefits,
which include uniforms, meals, tuition reimbursement,
hot room hotel discounts and much more!
Please apply at 200 Macdonald Dr. droe
JOB JOB JOB JOB JOB
Cashier needed for weekends and evenings. Contact Jerry at Jayhawk Food M. art. 749-4123.
KARAOKE Hlw wanted. Requestable per day.
KARAOKE DJ wanted. Responsible, great personality, attractive. M or P. 749-3649
Laborers wanted for tree service. 08/25 hr. Part
am. Mon.-Tue. Apply in person only 845 Maple at
1 am. Mon.-Tue.
Landscape Company, in Southern Johnson County,
seeking FF/PI employees. Call 341-7681.
Looking for a change while getting an education?
We need an energetic fun-loving person to preface our planning process. We offer Free room and board, plus salary. Owner living quarters with private entrance. Please call us 212-365-7080 or visit www.mcpland.org for 3 Mon.-Fri. calls!
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic subscriptions. The department has subscriptions. Sales experience is helpful, but we'll train highly motivated individuals. Even though our staff works with all departments of commission. Apply between 2p.m. and 5p.m., at the Lawrence Journal World 609 New Hampshire.
Contact email info@mba-martin, 205712.
Excellent income for part-time work!
NSF SERVICES is and is looking for food service employees is and is looking for food service employees. Duties include both food prep and line cooking. Some experience required. If you want to be a part of the "new" Deli team, apply at Shmum Food Co. Business Office between 5am - 4pm Fri - Fiat 719 Mass (upstairs, above Smokehouse)
Mazzio's Pizza is now hiring waitresses for work during the noon hour. Flexible hours. Must be outgoing, have a positive attitude, and have the ability to smile. Inply in person at 2630 Iowa
Now hiring babybissers / childcare providers. Day,
even, and weekdays available. More info on:
1843-7960. 555-2699. www.babybissers.com
SHIPPING ASSISTANTS NEEDED
SHIPING ASSISTANTS NEEDED
HIS JOB is publishing company with a patente (15-20) week position) available. Duties include shipping orders; stuffing and mailing statements; copying computer disks for inventory; and daily mail delivery to and pickup from the post office. Previous experience working with high volume and working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 20 feet in any direction. These positions are part of our internal clinical team team (ASSSTF) 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 with good facilities and fill out an application at 161 West 23rd Street, Suite 200, Lawrence, KS.
R.D
Office assistant, leasing agent, part-time. Good
oak, easy hours. 841-797
Office position in medical setting. Part-time approx. 15 wrs/hw. Morning and/or afternoon shifts available. General clerical duties- filing, sorting, typing, biling, etc. Send resume to:
Jancehek, 1067 N. 9000d, Lawrence, KS 65031
Part-time custodian needed to work mornings two days per week. Rate $7.03/hour. Call (816) 763-7887.
Part-time Help Retail Sales T Shirt Designer.
Must have previous computer experience prefer-
ence helpful. Must have experience helpful. Must have outspo-
personality and be customer service oriented. Retail sales plus. Contact (Debbie at 316/838-2012 or send
email to Debbie@debbie.com) N. Bldg 802, suite 100, Witcha. KS K5227.
Waitress Needed call 749-5039, 925 Iowa
Wanted babyssitter for two children. Ages 3-5,
evenings 3:10:10 am. Light cooking necessary in
home, must be reliable, ask for Michelle and Bob
843-8334. Call anytime before 3:30:30.
WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING
TRAVEL COMPANY SEEKING INDIVIDUALS
TO PROMOTE SPRING BREAK TO JAMAICA,
CANCUN, FLORIDA, & PADRE. FANTASTIC
FREE TRAVEL & GREAT COMMISSIONS! SUN
SPLASH TOURS 1-800-426-7710.
McDonalds
Wanted: Caring people who like kids 3-sayers are required. Volunteers need to be on 2 hours per day, 1 day per week, between 7:30-12:30, Monday-Friday. Daycare volunteers needed from 12:30-5:30. For more information call 622-495-6818.
McDonalds islooking for individuals who would be interested in working at one of our two new restaurants, Downtown and 6th and Wakarusa
LOOKWHAT'S COMING!
Positions Available
- Specialcleaningteams
- Open interviews Mondays and Fridays at McDonalds on 6th St. from2-5 p.m.
- Hostess
- Late Night closing team
(8 p.m.-4 a.m.)
- Wednesdays at McDonalds on 23rd St. from 2-5 p.m.
- Managemen
- Crowd
- Administrative Assistant
WE'RE GROWING AND WOULD LIKE YOU TO BE A PART OF OUR TEAM.
PHILLIPS 66
Worker for firewood production. Flexible boa.
Call 749-580 at 7am for more information.
Now accepting applications for store sales associates for several locations:
•Starting wage above minimum
•Modern, clean locations
•Flexible working hours
Apply today at 9th & Iowa
<*Driver Education* > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 411-7749.
225 Professional Services
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Midmeaneans,
Landlord/Tenant
719 Massachusetts, 749-5333
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
ATTORNEY-TA-LAW
Call for a free consultation (818) 361-9044.
R
701 T
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
ichard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
701 Tennessee
ENGLISH TUFOP. English courses, writing.
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3311.
Free Consultation
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID' and alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civil matters
the law offices of
International Video Conversions PAL/SECAM/
NTSC. $25 for up to 2 hours. Includes return
postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer
PO box 130 Ottawa Kk6701-1 800-690-6955.
Promo photography. Headshots, modeling, band
photos. B&W and color. Primer Screen 841-6030.
Donald G. Strohe Sally G. Kelsey
16 Fast 13th 842-1133
RESUMES
*Professional Writing*
*Cover Letters*
*Consultation*
Linda Morton C.P.R.W.
TRANSCRIPTIONS 842-4619 1012 Mass, Suite 201
A Member of
PA
RW
Professional Association of Résumé Writers
Prompt abortion and contraception services in Lawrence: 841-576, Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Tutoring Available for Russian and Ukrainian.
Native speaker. Reasonable rates. Contact Lucy
LSAT Test-Prep For The Dec.3rd Exam
Class Starts Oct. 2nd
235 Typing Services
1-800-527-TEST
X
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Theses,
term papers, lectures, Business letters, etc.
with special emphasis on the English language.
1-der Women_Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into a passage of letter formatting.
A Word Perfect Worning Processing Service.
Laser Printing. Call Campus. Call
DAPpe 842-6950.
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
Put my service to the test.
For anything you need at all,
MARK IN THE GRADE
is the one to call.
865-2853
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
*Specialized Hard Rock Ultra.* $300 obo. For more info. call 843-5662.
REP
82 Toyota Tercel. AC, AM/FM Cass. 104, 900 miles, 5 spd, 3 Dr. Runs Great, great body, Burns oil, $750/obo, 749-3707.
Brand new Y49 WAHAMA RAZZ scooter; paid $1350, will sell for $1000. 814-1971.
KAPLAN TEST-PRE
For Sale: Sony CCD-TR8 8mm camcorder. $650.
Call George at 749-4322.
Honda Scooter in good condition. $75 or best offer.
Call 843-1371.
*Mattress set, queen new, never used, firm, excellent quality. Cost $939, surrender $195, 917/764-1661.* Moving! *Must sell new stepper climber exerciser 1'call 824-6512, ask for Dana.*
Macintosh Performa 405, 80 meg, hard drive,
modem, printer, 14" color monitor, preinstalled
software. Price $380. Call Ponfa at 855-4116.
"MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only $500. Call Chris at 800-299-5685.
Magicintosh."
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N. 2nd * 841-8903
19th & Haskell * 841-7504
Moving. Will sell 4'x-5" body Boutique membership $95, $84-6676.
4221
Panasonic racing bike, Shimano 600 Utegra Cateye Micro cycle computer, Durace clipsless pedals, extra Utegra hubs, $395. Call Steve at 749-3023.
Must sell 2 tickets for Bahamas航 and 4 night
courses at $1,300 or best offer. For details call
918-971-7417.
EARN CASH
ALL YOUR
MONEY GONE?
$15 Today
$30
Large healthy Iguana. 4 feet long. 865-2471.
This Week
By donating your blood plasma
Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center
NARI
NABI
The Quality Source
816 W. 24th
Behind Laird Noller Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F 9:6:30
Sat 10-4
Schwinns-Black Phantom, Corvette 3 spd. American Womans (Korean War Production). All very comfortable. 102-947-534-5724. 102-947-534-5724. We want your used steel weights and benches. It Play Again. 1025 Mesh 841-PIAY.
340 Auto Sales
93 'Suzuki Katanja, 600cc, bk w/ purple & teal accents. Like new cond., beautiful bike very fast.
$3900/OBO. Call Jason at 325-2050 9am+ or 796-6397 evenings & weekends
1974 VW Bug. no rust, runs good, $800. Good inter-
ior excellent transportation. 749-3042
1922 Nissan 2005 XH14 a speed, with sunroof, power windows, and louvres. $95/OS/BO Call Mike at 878-355-2222.
1985 SAAB Turbo 4 dr 5 spd sun roof wp efc.
Black/maroon. Repair records. Rebuild clutch
heater valve CV distributor and ignition module
new muffler, 2 new tires. $2000 OBD. QA1-1728
360 Miscellaneous
'81 Honda Express II moped, new carburetor, fuel system. two-speed automatic. Cadillac of Mopeds. One owner. 941-5088 leave message.
One year-old Iguanas for sale. Best offer. 865-5758.
370 Want to Buy
Want to buy Basketball tickets, or sports combo Call Chris 865-0011.
Want to buy a used moped or scooter call Sheri at 865-3991.
HOUSE
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for
rooms and apartments and well kept older homes 841-STAR (7827)
3 bdrm. 2 bath, fully furn. Orchard Corners apt. for rent-Rent $5 $215 per mon. on bus route, Call Amy;Melanie at 841-5855
For Rent: Small two bedroom house suitable for
Rent: Small $350 month plus utilities. No
Call: 744-2797
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great Apt. 7032 route, NO.
Avalable NOW. Call 749-2842
ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED 4 BEDROOM
- On KU Bus Route
* Close to Campus
- SwimmingPool
- StopByToday!
- StopByToday!
Equality 749-4226 M-F-9.5
Opportunity 15th & Kascald Sat 10-4
Two Bedroom Apartment Now Available at Aspen West. $75 water and trash paid. Lease through July. $75 deposit. Call 865-250
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500. Room for rent for N/F female. Newly remodeled, very clean, W/D, all utilities pd, including cable. 825 mc. 843-1090 or 832-8258.
Pets Welcome No Sublease Fee
- On KUBus Route
- Available for fall.
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
- Sand Volleyball Court
- 3 bedroom apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
2 bedroom with study
- Ample Private Parking
- Swimming Pool
- Directly on bus route
South Point
AFTERMERE
- Water and Trash Paid
- Call 843-4754
Outstanding New Staff!!!
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Looking for Love
Lonely, attractive 3 or4 bedroom apartments seeking residents to share a long or short term relationship. Call any time at 843-6446.
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
1 or 2 bedrooms in newer 4 bed m duplex in larger rooms. Sept. paid. If 1 person, $280 per. If large rooms. Sept. paid. If 1 person, $280 per.
Stop by the Kasian 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 charged in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person 119 Sauer Flint
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS 66045
2 people, $120/mo. Davin 1-4
One roommate wanted ASAP to share four bedroom. $162.50 plus $4 bills, rent negotiable. 520 Mississippi, 823-1715.
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classifier order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Calculating rates
To calculate the cost on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of apile 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.
Refine:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
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:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
9 lines
Cost per mile 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
Classifications
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
130 entertainment
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
140 lbs & found
269 helped wait
240 auto sales
225 professional services
252 yoga services
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
Total ad cost:
Date ad begins: Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification:
Address:
VISA
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dany Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charing your ad:
Account number:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By
Jason 9.21
By GARY LARSON
Jaroo 9.21
© 1994 farWorfs, Inc./Dest. by Universal Press Syndicate
Fish rides
10B
Wednesday, September 21, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AT LAWRENCE PROMPTCARE, YOU'RE NOT ONE IN A MILLION...
-
At Lawrence PromptCare, we believe you should be treated like a person and not a number.
When you're hurting or ill,waiting in discomfort for long periods of time to see a doctor is irritating. Not only that,but you may be paying the bill for months. Why not
select a quicker, more convenient alternativeLawrence
872
60 Days 6th Street Massachusetts
12th Street KU campus
Kenwood Clinton Parkway 23rd Street
PromptCare At Lawrence PromptCare, we see you quickly and many visits are
are trained in general care, acute care industrial medicine...the works. Open seven days a week until 11 p.m., no appointment is necessary. You'll be greeted immediately by a nurse and treated fast. Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, lab and radiology services flexible hours and plenty of convenient accessible parking
make Lawrence PromptCare an agreeable health-care
really inexpensive. We're the ideal alternative to long waits in the emergency room and for those times when you can't see your regular doctor. Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center, equipped to handle just about any emergency that comes up, from a scrape to a break—and full service means from head to toe. Our experienced and board certified emergency medical physicians
alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician.
M.T. OREAD
MEDICAL ARTS
CENTRE
865-3997 KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY
CAMPUS
A KU graduate student lures others with the siren-like call of her bagpipes. Page 3B.
SPORTS
Kansas junior quarterback Mark Williams and the Jayhawks look for a victory on Saturday. Page 1B.
COOLER, RAINY High 65° Low 55° Weather: Page 2A
KANSAN KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612
Weather: Page 2A.
雨
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.104.NO.23
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Mix-up in Ellsworth corrected
State architect to make plans for laundry room
By Ashley Miller
Kansan staff writer
Residents in Ellsworth Hall won't have to find someplace else to do laundry.
The building and fire code violations found earlier this month in the new laundry facility will not force the department of student housing to shut it down, said Ken Stoner, director of the department.
"I think we can keep in operation what we've got in operation," he said.
According to a press release issued on Tuesday by University Relations, the Office of
Design and Construction Management is planning to meet soon with a state-approved architect to develop plans for changes in the facility.
Jim Modig, director of the office, declined to comment on the case.
A Sept. 6 inspection by Modig's office uncovered violations of five codes, including the Uniform Building Code, the Uniform Mechanical Code, the Uniform Plumbing Code, the National Electric Code and the National Fire Protection Association's National Fire Code.
Some corrective measures already have been taken to solve the problems, Stoner said. Five of the 14 dryers were removed because the dryer vents were too long.
If the dryers were equipped with fans, long vents would not be a problem, Stoner said, but the dryers in Ellsworth did not have fans. Over a period of time lint could build up in the vents, which is a potential fire hazard.
THIS IS A LANDMARK. THE GLOBAL WORLD CAN BE FOUND HERE.
Ross Boelling, chief of the fire prevention division of the State Fire Marshal's Office, said the office planned to be involved in the rest of the renovations.
Rodger Oroke, director of facilities management, said there was a certain procedure for completing construction work at KU that student housing failed to follow.
"They addressed the problem in a timely manner, so no action was taken." Boelling said.
When a department wants construction work completed, such as enlarging a room or knocking out a wall, it is supposed to file a request with Design and Construction.
"Any modifications in state-owned buildings have to go through that office," he said.
If student housing had worked with Design and Construction to build the facility, the violations could have been avoided, Oroke said.
Oroke said student housing used their own maintenance staff to build the facility. He said facilities operations did most of the construction work for the University.
Stoner said the request was not filed because of a lack of communication.
Stormy they hawk, to ten the truth, he said.
President Obama said a presidential death last May. He thought a design request had already been filed.
"The good of this is it's been called to our attention," Stoner said. "We do what we have to do on this project, we learn our lesson and move on."
After discovering the violations during the Sept. 6 inspection, the Design and Construction staff was denied access to the bollerv room under the laundry facility.
Stoner said he did not know why the staff was not allowed into the boilerroom during the inspection.
"I don't know what happened there." Stoner said. "I mean, if people want in, we'll let them in."
He said he thought Ellsworth employees either did not have a key to the boilerroom or did not think representatives from Design and Construction could enter the room. The inspectors left Ellsworth before permission was cleared for them to see the room.
KU director gets best of both worlds
PANCAKE
Gloria Flores, associate director of Minority Affairs, started in January. Flores said Hispanics could succeed in the United States while maintaining their heritage.
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
By Nathan Olson Kansan staff writer
Gloria Flores had a revelation her freshman year at the University of Central Arkansas.
"I was in the main building on campus," she said, "when I saw a display with Mexican artifacts. I felt like a warm blanket had been wrapped around me. That was when I decided to major in Spanish."
Flores, who is now the associate director of the Office of Minority Affairs, credited her parents for giving her both American and Mexican values.
Flores recalled a conversation with her father once when they were visiting Mexico.
"I said to him, 'Dad, I'm a full-blooded Mexican,'" she said. "He said I wasn't. I said, 'Mom is Mexican, and you're Mexican, so I'm Mexican.' And he told me that because we lived in the United States, the American influence was now a part of my life."
That American influence, Flores said, has helped her in many ways. She said that in the United States, she had fewer restrictions on her expected role as a woman.
Flores' parents moved to Corpus Christi, Texas, from northern Mexico in the mid-1950s. When Flores was ten, her family moved to Hope, Ark. Flores lived in Hope until she
went to college.
Because her parents spoke Spanish in their house, Flores also learned about Mexican culture.
"Family, especially extended family, is very important in Mexican culture," she said. "When we built our house in Hope, my father added an extra room in case we needed to take care of relatives."
After graduating Flores traveled throughout the United States.
"During that year I got to meet African-American sisters, Asian-American sisters and Hispanic-American sisters. It opened my eyes to diversity." she said.
But Flores' eyes have also been opened to prejudice.
"Some Hispanic men have trouble with a Hispanic woman in power," she said.
"My advice to Hispanic-American women would be that they should embark on opportunities at every turn. More Hispanic women need to be more confident in their abilities.
"We need to preserve the strength, history and culture of being Hispanic women but not in a subservient role."
Sandra Olivas, president of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, is one of Flores' biggest supporters.
"There are not very many Hispanic women in education," Olivas said. "It's very hard to make it in the world as a Hispanic woman. Gloria's made it while retaining both Mexican and American cultures."
Speech to discuss problems Hispanic women face
Kansan staff writer
By Nathan Olson
Christine Arguello, associate professor of law, still vividly remembers her first year at Harvard Law School. That year the Chicano Law Students Association at
"It was a very close and controversial vote." she said.
It was a very close and controversial vote, she said.
The event for Arguello undercooked the problems Hispanic women face in today's society. Those problems will be part of Arguello's discussion at 7 tonight in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. The speech is titled "The Added Obstacles of Being a Hispanic Woman in Today's Society."
Arguello said she thought some of the added obstacles came from the machismo in Hispanic culture.
For Arguello, overcoming obstacles led to becoming the first Hispanic woman from Colorado to attend Harvard Law School and becoming the first minority partner at Holland and Hart, the largest law firm in Colorado.
"I think there are more obstacles for Hispanic women than men," she said.
"Although it's getting better now, the Hispanic culture has been very chauvinistic," she said. "There were times as a child when I said, 'Why was I born a girl?'
Education has played a crucial role in her success.
"I was lucky because my family encouraged education," she said. "There was no discrimination about who was educated in my immediate family.
But Arguello said that many of her female cousins still were not encouraged to go to college.
"And I was the brains of the family."
Another part of Arguello's success was her attitude.
"I have an optimistic outlook on life," she said. "I don't have a chip on my shoulder. I'm not walking around with a grudge."
Sandra Olivas, president of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, said that Argello's speech was part of an effort during Hispanic Heritage Month to be more inclusive.
"In the past, most keynote speakers have been men," Olivas said. "We've tried this year to concentrate on contributions Hispanic women have made."
Olivas said she hoped that Arguello's speech would help unify Hispanic women, a concept Arguello said was very important.
"Hispanic women shouldn't be afraid to look back and help others," she said. "Together we can make it."
In addition to community and education, Arguello said
Julianne Peter / KANBAN
Christine Arguello, assistant professor of law talks about growing up Hispanic and her years as a student at Harvard Law School.
that young Hispanic women should not be afraid to set high goals.
"Not enough Hispanic women have faith in themselves," she said. "They should be disciplined and not let obstacles get in their way."
INSIDE Medieval times
AKU freshman has the last hurrah as a dyemaker's daughter at the Kansas City Renaissance Festival.
Haitian police violence lessens in U.S. presence
15
Page 5B.
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The motorcade roared up to Haitian army headquarters yesterday carrying the top U.S. general in Haiti with a message for the country's military rulers: Stop beating up your people.
The Associated Press
Another 1,000 U.S. military police flew in to help back up Lt. Gen. Henry Hugh Shelton's words.
By late afternoon, American troops arrived at the Haitian army's only munitions depot to dismantle the Caribbean nation's heavy artillery, equipment and weapons.
Haitian police sheathed the clubs they had used Tuesday in full view of American troops. But they still shoved and threatened people and in one case hurtled through a crowd in a van to break up a demonstration.
"Get out of way! I'm going to lick your butt!" one policeman shouted. He was
pushing one of at least 5,000 Haitians who have been drawn to the U.S. beachheads here, hoping that America's Operation Uphold Democracy will actually do so.
Haiti's de facto government banned public gatherings, an action criticized by the U.S. Embassy as anti-democratic and largely ignored yesterday by thousands of Haitians.
Human rights organizations and Washington itself until recently had depicted the Haitian police and army as killers, rapists, extortionists and kidnappers. Since the 1991 coup that ousted the elected government, up to 3,000 Haitians have been killed in military-tolerated political violence.
"The habits of violence will not be shed overnight," President Clinton said. "We will make steady progress. We will restore democracy. We will also work to moderate the conduct of Haitian security forces without assuming their responsibilities."
However, Shelton said there were limits
to the U.S. mission. "We-certainly cannot police 100 percent of Haiti." he said.
Exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who is to return to office under the agreement reached last weekend with the Haitian military, finally voiced his support for the U.S. effort, after days of indirect criticism.
"Use of unnecessary force is a matter of concern to us," the general said yesterday. "The military and police have not had to
"Nothing must block this light of peace — neither violence nor vengeance, guns nor provocation, impunity nor retaliation." Aristide said in a ceremony on the steps of the Pentagon. "Peace must flourish in Haiti."
Fleets of helicopters, planes and amphibious boats kept ferrying in the American troops yesterday. Shelton, who counted 35 C-5 and C-141 landings by midmorning, expected up to 10,000 troops by day's end, not including the 1,000 military police.
deal with such large numbers. They are not trained in crowd control."
U. S. troops late yesterday occupied the Camp d'Application in suburban Petionville, where such heavy equipment as six V-150 armored vehicles, 40mm and 20mm anti-aircraft weapons, anti-tank weapons and artillery is stored. The equipment was to be "rendered inoperable."
American soldiers should be fanning out into the countryside by tomorrow, trying to train traditionally repressive rural police and soldiers how to do their jobs in a more professional manner.
Humanitarian aid to Haiti also will increase sharply as U.S. soldiers are deployed, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Madeleine Albright, said yesterday.
But she reiterated that the United States would not ask the U.N. Security Council to lift the economic embargo that had crippled Haiti until the coup leaders stepped down and Aristide was back in office.
2A
Thursday, September 22, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
心
By Jean Dixon
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Put daydreams aside and build a strong foundation for future gains. If you are willing to take a backseat temporarily, your goodness will carry you to the top. Co-workers will insist you pay your dues. Hide your impatience. Overseas travel could prove lucky early in 1905. Let a romance mature before you make any judgments or commitments. financial issues cannot be settled overnight. Your career goals could suddenly change.
T
CLEEBRITTES BORN ON THIS DATE, baseball player Wally Backman, model Shari Belafonte, singer from Jett, actor Scott Raja.
♂
II
12
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). A period of reconstruction and revitalization lies ahead. Focus on creative endeavors and you may find new career opportunities. Travel is best postponed.
69
M
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): A financial bonanza gives you cause for celebration. You may be doing more daydreaming than usual. Direct your energies towards constructive goals. Creative urges are likely to lead to new artistic triumphs.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Let your bold imagination guide you when engaged in creative work Judicious spending helps you make the most of time and work with a worldlike streak. Know when to slow down before you blow a fuse.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Ever if your plans seem sound, put them on ice until conditions are more favorable. Widen your social circle by joining a club or community group. Privacy will be very important to you tonight.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Your social aspirations could lead you to extravagance. Keep a tighter reign or spending. Friends may try to interfere with your domestic arrangements.
al
←
SAGITTARUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
An unexpected offer or event should help solve a financial crisis. Do not let up on your efforts to boost your income. Enrolling in high-tech classes will give you new career options.
Study hard!
v8
LEO (July 23-Aug 27): Be prudent if you must criticize others or in writing. Reckless comments could create real ennity. Observe all safety factors when plying your trade, especially if moving machinery from place.
IVP
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19). You may be able to profit from a mistake now. Be more attentive to a family member who complains that you are aloof. Apologizing for an unintended slight sets the stage for happy romance.
water
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) **Constrictional restrictions will have a silver lining if they teach you the value of frugality and thrift.** A strong character makes it possible for you to work as a favorite pastime after work hours.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): New business developments should convince you to take a more realistic view regarding cash flow problems. Refrain from making any statements that could antagonize an employer or valued client. Romance looks rosy. Speak from the heart.
X
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Two heads are better than one when conducting tricky negotiations. Curb a tendency to daydream or make impractical suggestions. Turn to trusted friends or professional counselors for guidance. You may have overlooked something.
TODAY'S CHILDREN are energetic, helpful and greatly interested in the written word. Count on them to be good students, always reading ahead in their school books. A career that lets these Virgos be of practical assistance to other people will hold tremendous appeal. They make wonderful doctors, teachers and counselors — keenly attuned to the emotional needs of both the very young and the elderly. They are capable of deep parental love but will probably have only one or two children. Are emotions involved in this?
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stair-Finkt St., 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
Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union. For information, call Mark Wilson at 805-0066.
Canterbury House (Episcopal/Anglican) will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
KU Literary Club will meet at 5:15 p.m. today at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For information, call Jack Lerner at 749-5225.
Japan Karate-Do Ryobu-Kai Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 215 Robinson Center. For information, call Dan Blood at 864-7029.
Kansan Advisory Board will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 120 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For information, call Robbie Johnson at 864-4810.
KU NOW will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For information, call 864-4861.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Parlors in the Kansas Union. For information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will hold a C.A.R.E. meeting at 7 tonight at 1631 Crescent Rd. For information, call 843-0357
Psi Chi will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at 547 Fraser Hall.
Mystery Science Theater 3000 Club will meet at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For information, call Shawn at 842-7998.
Campus Crusade for Christ will sponsor "College Life," at 7:30 tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. For information, call Kent at 749-0343.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 7:30 on the night at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For information, call Mark Winton at 843-9529.
LeBigGaySOK will hold a business meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For information, call Eric Moore at 864-3091.
KU Triathlon Team and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Pool. For information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Amnesty International will hold a letter writing session at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at 158 Strong Hall. For information, call John Dale at 749-5666.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at 130 Robinson. For information, call John Hendrix at 864-5861.
KU Hellenic Club will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For information, call Myria Astaniot at 864-2296.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will hold daily Mass at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow at Danforth Chapel.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor Vespers and Concert at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow at 1631 Crescent Rd. For information, call 843-0357.
ON THE RECORD
Three students from Central Junior High School, 1400 Mass., were reported missing Tuesday afternoon, Lawrence police reported yesterday. Police said one of the students had been grounded by his parents this weekend. The students were still missing yesterday morning.
enth floor of the west wing of the building and yelled obscenities. The KU police officer went to the suspected room but nobody was in the room. The residents of the suspected room later said they were not in the room at the time of the harassment.
A KU parking officer was harassed in the parking lot of McCollium Hall Tuesday afternoon. KU police reported yesterday. The parking officer told KU police that two male students had leanced out the window of the sev-
A compact disc player, radar detector and tools valued at $1,774 were stolen from a KU student's Jeep in the 1200 block of Kentucky on Sept. 8. Lawrence police reported yesterday. Damage to the Jeep was $200.
Weather
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta Chicago Des Moines Kansas City Lawrence Los Angeles New York Omaha Seattle St. Louis Topeka Tulsa Wichita
H I G H L O W
FRIDAY
Cloudy and much cooler with a 40 percent chance of showers.
I G N L O W
79° • 60°
71° • 60°
59° • 57°
58° • 53°
61° • 55°
75° • 63°
72° • 61°
55° • 52°
80° • 53°
71° • 64°
59° • 54°
66° • 56°
64° • 50°
Mostly cloudy and still cool with a 30 percent chance of rain.
6155
6241
SATURDAY
Becoming partly cloudy.
Source: Matt Jezewski, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
6439
September 21, 1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
17.49
3.851.60
NYSE
1.20
254.71
Nasdaq
SharesTraded: 325,890,000
↑
Advances 642
Declines 1,578
Unchanged 666
↓
6.41
760.33
O
ASE
3.38
454.77
SENATE
STUDENT
Now accepting applications for following Senate seats:
- Business
- Graduate
- Liberal Arts and Sciences
- Non-traditional
- Social Welfare
APPLICATION DEADLINE IS SEPTEMBER 28 AT 5 pm
Fridays are
Applications are available in Student Senate office at 410 Kansas Union.Call 864-3710 with questions.
Double Print Days at Jayhawk Bookstore Bring in any roll of C-41 process color film for developing and get the 2nd same size set of prints FREE!
Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 843-3826
*Fortune Magazines Most Admired Life Insurance Co. 12 Years Running
*Voted #1 Sales Force In America by Sales and Marketing Management Mag.
FORTUNE 50 COMPANY NOW HIRING!
*Best Sales Opportunity in America According to Jobs '94
Northwestern Mutual Life The Hames Agency
This profession offers freedom and flexibility. The best training in the industry, management opportunities, and income twice the industry average. Work in the business and professional marketplace in the Kansas City area.
Interview Dates:
Tue. Oct. 11 KU Placement Center-Burge Union 864-3624 Wed. Oct. 12, Thurs. Oct. 13 School of Business Placement Center 864-5591
- 70% of sales force hired off college campuses
- Out of 7,000 sales people nationally number 6 and 55 are KU grads
- 75% of Hames sales force are KU grads
Contact Placement Center to schedule an interview
GAME WEEKEND SPECIALS POLO RUFF HEWN COLE-HAAN
Information and video on company available in the placement center
JOHNNYCOTTONS
Take $10 to $50 off fall sportswear
839 Mass.
LASTON'S E LIMITED
843-5755
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 22.1994
3A
The image shows a person playing the bagpipes. The individual is wearing a light-colored jacket with a pattern of horizontal stripes. They are holding two bagpipes, one in each hand, and appear to be focused on their performance. The background is blurred, suggesting an indoor setting. There is a shadow of the person visible on the wall behind them.
Martha Robinson, Tucson, Ariz., graduate student, plays the bagpipes in front of the Lied Center, Robinson, who often practices her bagpipes at the Campanile, pre-
head under the overhang of the Lied Center yesterday to escape the rain.
Bagpipes resound across the campus
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
Like a sailor lured by a siren's call, Foist Miracle wandered to the overhang on the west side of the Lied Center yesterday afternoon to hear Martha Robinson, Tucson, Ariz., graduate student, play the bagines.
The monotone drone of her bagpipes undergirded the high, quick-paced bleats of "Silver Spear," a favorite song of Robinson's. Her bagpipes were loud enough to keep Miracle at a slight distance.
"She sounds pretty good," Miracle said as he crouched on the concrete and smoked a cigarette. "You don't year bagpipes too often. It really grows on you."
The bagpipes have grown on Robinson, too.
She started playing the bagpipes six years ago as a freshman at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Ariz., partly inspired by her older sister, who also plays the bagpipes.
Today, her daily practices take her to places all over Lawrence — as long as the place is outside. Bagpipes are too loud to be played inside of Robinson's apartment at Jayhawker Towers.
"Even though bagpipes have this reputation as being a loud instrument, people don't really realize it until they get up close and say, 'Wow,
One of her preferred practice spots is the Campanile, where the rolling green hill transports a listener to an imaginary Scottish countryside.
"I love to compete solo," she said.
"It's a real thrill."
that's really loud," Robinson said.
Competitive performances have taken Robinson all over the United States. She has played the baggipes at Scottish festivals in places such as Phoenix, Santa Rosa, Calif., and Tulsa, Okla.
Robinson is a member of Kansas City St. Andrew Pipes and Drums, a 25-member performing group from Kansas City, Mo. She also takes lessons in Kansas City.
Playing the bagpipes is not as difficult as some pipers have made it out to be, Robinson said.
Group upset over Senate finance confusion
"I've talked to some people who have said pipes are as hard as it gets," she said. "They say it's the hardest instrument in the world. I don't know about that. Who's played every instrument in the world?"
Still, playing the Lament for Mary McLoud" on the baggies is more difficult than playing "Chopsticks" on the piano.
By James Evans
Kansan staff writer
"Just tuning it is difficult," she said. But, the reward for both Robinson and her listeners, is timeless music
Molina, El Salvador senior and group member, said that his experience in trying to get his organization financed had been negative.
Eduardo Molina was a little upset last night about how Student Senate looked at a bill to finance the Latin American Solidarity organization.
"We come to this country with the idea of being able to share our country with people," Molina said. But he has had to learn to deal with bureaucracy in order to get money to teach people about his culture through his organization, he said.
The Latin American Solidarity organization went to Senate finance committee last week with a bill asking for $2,256 to finance the organization's activities. The finance committee, which analyzes groups' specific money requests before the full Senate votes on them, looked at the bill for two hours and pushed the bill down to $456.
"I just think the music is beautiful," she said.
Guerin said that the committee actually had voted to cut the money.
But Stephanie Guerin, Finance Committee chair, said that some of the committee's members had been unclear about the vote. Some thought they were voting to cut a request in the bill for $400 for a newsletter, while others thought they were voting to give the group the money.
Molina said he also was confused. He said he thought that the senators should understand what they were voting for before they voted.
"The finance committee is always trying to find a guideline to say that this or that is not important," Molina said. "The only thing I want to say is that it's not fair sometimes."
Guerin said that the committee members were new and still were learning the ropes of their jobs.
"Basically, the finance committee is very young and inexperienced," she said.
She said that committee members had to learn budget code regulations, senate rules and regulations and parliamentary procedure.
Clinton to help Wheat with fund-raiser this weekend
The Associated Press
Clinton will appear Saturday at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Kansas City, Mo., at a $1,000-a-couple reception followed by a $5,000-a-plate dinner, wheat campaign officials said. The events begin at 6 p.m. local time.
WASHINGTON — Although President Clinton is being shunned by some Democratic candidates in areas where he is unpopular, Rep. Alan Wheat said yesterday he welcomes the president to Missouri for a weekend fund-raiser.
It will mark Clinton's fourth visit to the Kansas City area in the past six months.
The president was in Kansas City in April for a televised town hall meeting on health care, in June to announce his welfare-reform plan and in July to tout his health care reform plan.
Wheat, who acknowledged he trails Republican former Gov. John Ashcroft in both money and opinion polls, said the president's visit will boost his standing in both areas.
"I'm looking forward to having his help in fund-raising and providing a forum for me to get out my message," Wheat told reporters at a meeting yesterday.
Ashcroft was in Washington yesterday to meet with Republican strategists and attend a rally near the Capitol with other Senate candidates and fund-raisers of his own.
Wheat's own polls show him trailing Ashcroft by about 15 percentage points, he said. And although Wheat raised $2 million before the August primary, the campaign was broke after winning the nomination and now has struggled back to between $600,000 and $700,000.
"It's not that I'm having problems. I've never had to raise this magnitude of funds before. It's a lot of hard work. It takes time," Wheat said.
Wheat said the Clinton fund-raiser would net his campaign about $100,000 out of an expected total of about $500,000. The rest will go for other Democratic Senate candidates and the Missouri Democratic Party's Victory '94 fund for state candidates.
"It demonstrates how hypocritical he can truly be." Wheat said. "I'm not sure what has happened to change his mind, other than the opportunity to talk about his record and lack of accomplishment."
Wheat also took Ashcroft to task for refusing to attend any more debates, even though the Republican challenged Wheat to debate in all 114 counties shortly after the primary.
Ashcroft said it was time to focus on his pledge to again visit all 114 counties before the November election, not debate Wheat a fourth time.
"I really think the time for debates is behind us," Ashcroft said. "We've had opportunities to question each other."
DUV
Acity ordinance that allows the city to mow unkempt lawns at the owner's expense may cost student tenants money.
Overgrown lawns subject to city's mowers
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
If you think mowing your lawn is a tiresome but personal affair, ask the Sigma Chi fraternity.
The fraternity, 1439 Tennessee St., had the lawn of its lot across the street moved three times this summer, according to the City of Lawrence weed inspector's office. But none of the residents touched a lawn mower themselves.
Instead, city officials showed up to do the job for them. And soon after, the bill arrived in the mail.
It's a little-known city ordinance, but it can be a costly one, said Ginehaugh Shenoye, chief building inspector for the city. If the city decides to mow a lawn, he said, it could charge the owner up to $100.
And City Ordinance No. 6535 isn't restricted to weeds: Brush, grass taller than 12 inches or any other form of tangled undergrowth on one's property also is illegal.
"Everybody calls it a weed ordinance," Shaughnessy said. "It's not a weed ordinance. It's designed to be aesthetically regulating."
The city does not mow a person's lawn without permission until a few steps are followed, Shaughnessy said. First, either city inspectors will notice the resident's lawn
is unkempt or neighbors will call the city manager's office to complain. Next, the weed inspector's office will send the resident or property owner a certified letter saying that the person has 10 days to take care of the yard. Then, the city will wait. Finally, a crew will show up and mow the lawn — for a fee.
"They should know, when they get the letter, the seriousness of the situation," Shaughnessy said.
Students who lease houses or apartments in houses aren't necessarily exempt, Shaughnessy said. He said the tenant of the leased or rented property could be held liable for the bill depending upon the agreement that person had with his or her landlord.
If the bill is not paid, the charge is added to the resident's or business' property taxes.
The purpose of the ordinance is more than aesthetic, said Jean Stetzel, weed inspector for the city. She said she remembered one yard on the 1200 block of Mississippi Street that caused a safety hazard to passers-by.
"They allowed the weeds to grow so badly that only one person could go through the sidewalk at a time," she said. "If you were in hurry, you'd step off the sidewalk and into the yard and step into some poison ivy."
The Lowest EVERYDAY CD Prices in Lawrence
KIEF'S CDs/TAPES
AND..
- 25% OFF SAVINGS! Get 25% Off Retail ANYDAY with our BUY 5/GET 25 Program.
- LOWEST PRICES ON NEW RELEASES! Every TUESDAY we'll have the week's new releases at Lawrence's Lowest Sale Price. Come at 11 p.m., Mon., Sept. 26 For the Listening Party... Stick Around Til Midnight For The LOWEST LAWRENCE PRICE on R.E.M's "Monster".
DON'T FORGET.
- KIEF'S BUYS, SELLS, AND TRADES USED CDs!!
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913•843•1611 913•842•1438 913•842•1544
4A
Thursday, September 22, 1994
---
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
NICOLAS SHUMP Chicano culture is a large part of American culture. Where are Chicano Studies at this diverse university?
Chicano Studies program is needed at University
On a recent Saturday, I took the entire day off from work. I spent part of it sitting in one of the rooms at the Convention Center of the Holiday Inn listening to papers on Chicano literature. Why? Because there is virtually nothing offered on Chicano culture at KU.
It was really depressing to think that there were more Chicano scholars on that panel than there are at the entire University of Kansas. In the five years that I have spent at the University, there has been a total of one class offered in Chicano culture. One! This one literature class seems to be the extent of the University's commitment to diversity when it comes to Chicano culture. Why are there no history classes? Why are there no
sociology classes? Why are there no American Studies classes, etc. Having talked to professors in these various departments, the best answer seems to be that there are no qualified faculty to teach these classes. Why is this the case?
My argument for a Chicano Studies program is not just another attempt at creating a multicultural campus or another example of political correctness. I believe that without studying the history of Chicanos, it is impossible to have a complete understanding of American history. The history of the United States is inextricably linked with that of Mexico. Before 1848, all of what is called the American Southwest was the northern part of Mexico. Thus it is incorrect to refer
to all Chicanos as immigrants because some of their families have lived in what is now called the United States for over four hundred years. There is also a strong Hispanic legacy in Florida, which was ceded to the United States in the Adams-Onis treaty of 1821. This treaty specified that the United States could have Florida if it renounced its claims to Texas. Unfortunately, this treaty conflicted with President Polk's claims of Manifest Destiny.
Even in Kansas, the Chicanos have had a long presence. In communities like Chanute, Topeka, Emporia, Wichita, Dodge City, Garden City and Liberal, Chicanos have lived and worked for more than seventy years.
Despite the history of the Chicano in
Kansas, they are virtually invisible in the University curriculum. For the present, I am advocating merely a core group of classes taught in various disciplines that could be cross listed as Chicano Studies classes, thus offering students the opportunity to earn a degree in Chicano Studies. Similar programs exist for other minority groups, such as African-American Studies and Native American Studies. Why have Chicanos been excluded? The Latin American Studies program is not enough. Chicanos are not from Latin America. We are Americans. A Hispanic Studies program would be more appropriate because it would cover the experiences of all the various Spanish speaking peoples in the United
States, not just the Chicanos. However it is done, or whatever name it is eventually given, such a program is needed here at the University of Kansas.
Consider the fact that two issues that have been in the news consistently, Cuba and illegal immigration, are the result of the history of the United States and its Hispanic neighbors. Like it or not, the United States cannot continue to ignore the impact that Chicanos and their Hispanic compadres have, and will continue to have, on our country. As the intellectual vanguard of the country, neither can its universities.
Nicolas Shump is a Lawrence senior in comparative literature.
VIEWPOINT
Loss of junior varsity sports damaging to college sports
In an effort to "improve" intercollegiate athletics, the Big Eight Conference has banned all Junior Varsity sports in the conference, effective this year.
For KU, this affected the baseball and men's basketball teams. This decision, however, was both unnecessary and damaging to college sports.
JV teams were always based on the school's willingness to pay. As a result, few JV teams existed. But these JV teams did not create an unfair advantage for those schools. They merely gave more people a chance to play at a competitive level.
These players weren't getting scholarship money to play, nor were they playing all across the nation in front of millions of TV viewers.
But the issue of JV sports is more than a cost and fairness question. JV programs exist for one primary reason: the love to play.
They were looking to play the sport they loved for the school they loved.
Apparently, the Big Eight thinks those students who want to represent their schools by playing JV sports are bad for intercollegiate athletics. That assumption could not be further from the truth.
RICHARD BOYD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
U.S. Postal Service should not change images on stamps
Jazz and blues are important cultural and historical contributions to America.
The Robert Johnson stamp is based on a picture of him holding his guitar, with a cigarette between his fingers.
The artist who prepared the stamp, however, deleted the cigarette.
To honor some of the pioneers of these indigenous musical forms, the U.S. Postal Service has issued a series of stamps depicting, among others, Billie Holliday, Ma' Rainey, and Robert Johnson.
To delete a portion of an image to satisfy the antismoking lobby is inaccurate at best and revisionist at worst.
It is not the business of the Postal Service to protect stamp-buyers.
To insert something into an image for a stamp would be unforgiveable, to take something out is no less of an offense.
The original image, as it has been for over fifty years, should be presented on the stamp and the Postal Service should adopt a policy of remaining true to the original pictures it chooses.
MARK YONALLY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO
Editor
JEN CARR Business manager
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Editors
* News ...Sara Bennett
* Editorial ...Donella Hoarse
* Campus ...Martin Markin
* Sports ...Brian Lamie
* Photo ...Daron Bennett
* Melissa Lacey
* Features ...Troel Carl
* Planning Editor ..Susan White
Design ..Noah Muessen
Asalent to the editor ..Robble Johnson
Editors
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Todd Winters
Regional mgr ... Laureth Gault
National mgr ... Mark Masto
Coop mgr ... Emily Gibson
Special Sections mgr ... Jen Perrler
Production mgrs ... Holly Boren
Regan Overy
Marketing director ... Alan Stigle
Creative director ... John Carlton
Classified mgr ... Heather Nihoua
- Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 300 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 Kansan newroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Jeff MacNellv / KANSAN
DEMOCRATIC
NATIONAL COMMITTEE
UNCLE BILL
WANTS YEN.
TO INVADE
HAUNT!
HUSBAND OF
HILLIARY
POLLS
WE COULD TRY
SENDING HIM OUT
TO CAMPAIGN FOR
REPUBLICANS...
UNIVERSAL
LEOPARD
MODIE
CLASS
TAX CUP
---
Minority-voter apathy is not cured with math
Join me in taking a simple arithmetic test. You need answer only true or false.
Q. The number 55 is bigger than the number 42.
A. False. The number 42 is much bigger than the number 55.
You disagree? That isn't what they taught you in school?
All that means is you are unaware of a highly regarded form of new goofy math.
I'm not talking about the "new math" that popped up in schools a few years ago, confusing the teachers almost as much as the students.
This new goofy math is used by lawyers, judges, politicians and other madcaps to create a new entitlement, which might be described as voting welfare.
Let's say you don't want to register to vote. It's too much bother or it is not part of your lifestyle or it doesn't change anything. Or if you register, it is too much of a hassle to go to the polling place.
Don't worry. You don't have to go through the tiresome fuss of registering or even voting. Thanks to the new goofy math and nursing welfare, you will still be represented by someone who would probably be your choice if
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
MIKE ROYKO
you were willing to endure the pain and discomfort of casting a vote.
This process is laid out in federal court record, where many weird ideas can be found.
It is part of a lawsuit in which black Chicago politicians say they are being shafted by a new ward map that does not give black voters as many aldermen as they deserve.
After the suit was filed, it was tossed out by a federal judge. But a federal appeals court has sent it back for further legal blathering.
Here is the way the situation is described by the appellate court panel:
"The challenged plan created 23
wards in which whites are at least a bare majority of the population, 19 in which blacks have at least a 65 percent majority and 1 in which they (blacks) have 55 percent, and 7 in which Hispanics have at least a 65 percent majority.
"The rule of thumb is that these groups must have at least a 65 percent majority in the electoral district in order to have a reasonable assurance of being able to elect a candidate of their choice."
That is some rule and some thumb. I don't know whose thumber they are using. Maybe they are using a couple of big toes by mistake.
It doesn't seem to occur to the politicians, the lawyers, the judges and the other social tinkers, that if 62.6 percent of the people in a ward can't win an election, the fault lies with that 62.6 percent. The solution is for more of that 62.6 percent to haul themselves to the voting place and vote.
Lucky for these guys they became politicians, lawyers and judges instead of bookies. If they covered bets with Goofymath, they'd be broke or floating in the river.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist for the Chicago Tribune.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Mike Royko, in a column on Sept. 15, asked who was to blame for the tragic life and death of Robert Sandifer, the Chicago youth who was both a suspected killer and a murder victim at age 11. He then listed the usual targets for blame — parents, courts, social service agencies, gangs, politicians, gun laws, drugs, bloody movies, television, rap music, schools, the economy, slavery and our violent and racist society. He left out the biggest culprit of all, the university.
Education could prevent violence
The cultivation of conscience, which is the true solution to crime in our society, cannot take place within the nihilistic secularism that is currently tyrannizing public education. Public schools used to teach morality in conjunction with the family and the church, largely Judeo-Christian values. But this approach has been replaced in recent years with something called "values clarification," "decision making" or the "dilemma model." It is this that is causing the current moral wasteland in our schools, and producing children like Robert.
Research has shown repeatedly that this approach, based on the naive ideas of university social scientists such as Carl Rogers and Lawrence Kohlberg, result in significantly higher rates of crime, drug abuse, sexual activity and racism. Values, conduct, and the prevailing moral tone are established at the top.
To solve the problem of crime in this country, we need to begin with a massive acknowledgement of bankruptcy in the social sciences and immediate exposure of their basic assumptions to reexamination in debate with theologians.
Leonard Magruder
Founder and Director of University Liberation
HUBIE
Letters to the Editor may be submitted to the Kansan newsroom at 111 Stauffer-Flint.
Guest columns may be submitted to Donella Hearne or Matt Gowen at the Kansan.
Letters and columns should include the author's name, signature, address, phone number, hometown, year in school and major.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit any submissions.
By Greg Hardin
WALKING ON CAMPUS, I EXPERIENCE MANY THINGS.
POST-HEY GUYS! LET'S GET HIM!
VOTE FOR ME
WALKING ON CAMPUS, I EXPERIENCE MANY THINGS.
PEST-HEY GUYS! LET'S GET HIM!
HEY, ARE YOU A FRESHMAN?
EXCUSE ME, BUT ARE YOU A FRESHMAN?
ARE YOU A FRESHMAN?
ARE YOU A FRESHMAN?
WHAP!
WHAP!
WHAP!
WHAP!(EXTREME AMOUNTS OF WHAPPING!)
... AND SOME TIMES YES SOMETIMES, THEY ARE GOOD THINGS.
EXCUSE ME, BUT ARE YOU A FRESH-MAN?
VOTE
WHAP
ARE YOU A FRESHMAN?
ARE YOU A FRESHMAN?
MAN? ARE YOU A FRESHMAN?
ARE YOU A FRESH MAN?
ARE YOU A FRESH MAN?
ARE YOU A FRESH MAN?
ARE YOU A FRESH MAN?
ARE YOU A FRESH MAN?
ARE YOU A FRESH MAN?
WHAP!
WHAP!
WHAP!
WHAP!
WHAP!
... AND SOMETIMES,
YES SOMETIMES,
THEY ARE GOOD
THINGS.
(EXTREME AMOUNTS
OF WHAPPING!)
WHAP!
WHAP!
WHAP!
WHAP!
(EXTREME AMOUNTS OF WHAPPING)
...AND SOMETIMES,
YES SOMETIMES,
THEY ARE GOOD
THINGS.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 22,1994
5A
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Aristide disappointed with accord
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — It was an all-out blitz, featuring a 21-gun salute and arm twisting by President Clinton's national security team. In the end, they got the words they wanted from their sometimes aggravating guest from the Caribbean; "Thank you."
But they got little else.
Deposed Haitian president Jean-Bertrand Aristide's discomfort with the no-invasion agreement had been obvious almost since former President Carter and leaders of the Haitian junta reached it Sunday evening in Port-au-Prince.
"In these past three days something has happened in Haiti," Aristide said. "Operation Uphold Democracy was peacefully deployed. President Clinton, this is the result of the decision that you made. This is the result of your leadership. Thank you."
"Good stuff," said a delighted State Department official, who was worried that Aristide might repudiate the agreement because it allows the military chiefs in Port-au-Prince to remain in power for almost a month.
Administration officials have been courting Aristide feverishly, mindful that the agreement would have been a dead letter if he had spurned it. Aristide aides have been busily trashing the accord, calling it treasonous, but, as officials see it, the priest had little choice but to go along with the U.S.
The State Department official said he was unperturbed by Aristide's refusal to endorse the agreement outright or even acknowledge its existence in his Pentagon appearance.
The official, speaking privately, noted that final approval from the Haitian side was given by Emile Jonassaint, 81, named to the presidency last May by his military backers. In Aristide's view, he is Haiti only president, not Jonassaint.
Aristide's aides say the administration has reneged on a pledge to disarm the Haitian military — a pledge they insist was to have been implemented whether U.S. forces entered peacefully or with guns blazing.
Day 3 in Haiti
HAITI INTERVENTION
The U.S. took steps to curb the brutal treatment of pro-democracy demonstrators by Haitian police.
1
DIPLOMATIC ACTIONS
Meeting with Jean-Paul Aristide: U.S. officials brief deposed Haitian president
Embargo:
U.S. will ask the U.N. to lift embargo only after Aristide is reinstated, not immediately as originally stated
Cuba
Ouest Dom. Rep
Port-au-
Prince
Bay
Haiti
Port-au-Prince
Police violence:
Clinton administration calls on Haitian Lt. Gen. Cedras to stop violence against demonstrators
2
MILITARY ACTIONS
Build-up continues
U. S. Lt. Gen. Shelton, commander of U.S. forces in Haiti, meets with Cedras to warn that U.S. forces may step in if he does not reign in police, army and paramilitaries
Locations of violence between police and demonstrators International Airport Port-au-Prince Fort-de-France Port-au-Prince U.S. Embassy Military Headquarters
SOURCE: News reports; research by PAT CARR
Heat, humidity drains Marines
The Associated Press
CAP-HAITIEN, Haiti — They came,
they saw and they overheated.
Asked how operations are going, the standard answer by U.S. Marines who landed here is: "Man, it's hot."
Garbed in heavy uniforms and carrying 50 pounds of gear, the Marines from Camp LeJeune, N.C., have battled dehydration and the searing Caribbean sun from the moment they landed.
A number of troops who came from the air-conditioned USS Wasp amphibious assault ship were lying on cots in a terminal of the dilapidated Cap-Haitien Airport hours after their arrival, IVs dripping fluid into their arms.
The
The Marines, like all the thousands of troops who have descended on Haiti, are hardly wearing the ideal outfit for temperatures in the mid-90s and high humidity.
Over a long-sleeved, heavy cotton camouflage shirt and pants go a 25-pound flak jacket and helmet. Dangling from the belt is a cartridge bag, a gas mask, a butt pack with rifle cleaning gear and MREs, two canteens and a bayonet. High black boots complete the ensemble.
start of
some-
thing
big,
CONGRATULATIONS
To the 1994-95 Freshmen Board of Class Officers:
Ward Cook Vice President
Joy Benedict Treasurer
Bob Schwartz President
Ryan McNeel Secretary
B.O.C.O.
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
NOW OPEN!!
NOW OPEN!!
Downtown Lawrence Off 10th & Massachusetts 913.843.3630
The largest record store in Lawrence 128 private listening stations Espresso Bar·Open late night Separate room for Jazz/Classical music
$2 OFF
The End. Downtown Lawrence 10th & Massachusetts 913.843.3630
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
$2
$2
$2 OFF ANY COMPACT DISC
Must present coupon. Expires September 23, 1994.
Valid on regularly priced CDs of $10.99 or more Limit one per purchase
OFF
6A
Thursday, September 22, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rollerblades
Used & CHEAP
Great skates, cheap!
We RENT skates!
We're selling our old RENTAL fleet.
* quantities limited
1029 Mass.
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
841-7529
Great skates, cheap! We RENT skates! We're selling our old RENTAL fleet.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
25 REASONS TO GO TO
LA FAMILIA III
After Hours
The kitchen's closed but the bar is open
Wed, Thur, & Fri.
25¢ DRAWS
50¢ KAMIS
10:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.
$3.00 cover
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
SEVENTH CENTURY
2015
with student ID.
WED, THUR & FRI 18 & OVER WELCOME
Pipeline productions
-presents-
ADV. TIX
18 & OVER
Monday Oct. 10
The Original Ska Masters
THE SPECIALS -with- LET'S GO BOWLING
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire • Lawrence, KS
913-841-LIVE
ADV. TIX
18 & OVER
Thursday Oct.13 W.A.R. recording artists
THE SAMPLE'S
LIBERTY HALL
Lawrence, KS 913-749-1972
THE MAYBEE
ADV. TIX
18 & OVER
Monday Oct. 17 Elektra recording artists
VIOLENT
FEMMES
-with-
G. LOVE & SPECIAL SAUCE
RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE
Lawrence, KS 91384-2111
Wed. Nov. 2 Capricorn recording artists
311
LIBERTY HALL
Lawrence, KS 913-749-1972
ADV. TIX ALL AGES
Simpson defense suffers setback
The Associated Press
Warrant okay despite 'reckless' mistakes
LOS ANGELES — The detective in charge of the O.J. Simpson double-murder investigation recklessly misstated facts to get a search warrant, but Simpson's estate was suspicious enough to justify a search anyway, a judge ruled yesterday.
The ruling was another blow to the defense, which had fought to get crucial evidence found during the search thrown out.
"I cannot make a finding that this was merely negligent." Superior Court Judge Lance Ita said of the statements made by police Detectiv
Nonetheless, the judge upheld the search, saying the presence of what appeared to be blood at the estate coupled with the discovery of a bloody glove provided probable cause for the search inside the house.
Simpson, 47, has pleaded not guilty to murder in the June 12 slashing deaths of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman. His trial is to begin Monday.
"I have to make a finding that this was at least reckless," he said.
The judge noted that Vannatter, seeking permission to conduct the search the morning after the slayings, wrongly stated:
Simpson left unexpectedly for Chicago the night of the killings, when, in fact, Simpson's trip to Chicago was planned far in advance.
■ Failed to note Simpson returned to Los Angeles voluntarily.
It said the veteran detective had investigated enough murder cases to know better than to make that many misstatements in a search warrant affidavit, which is drafted to persuade a magistrate to allow a search
- Described stains and drops found at Simpson's house as blood or human blood instead of saying that they only appeared to be blood.
Evidence seized in that search included blood in the foyer and bathroom, a receipt for an airline ticket and a baggage tag.
The judge's ruling undermined part of a key defense effort to keep jurors from hearing about much of the evidence gathered inside Simpson's Brentwood home.
Carter continues to be effective mediator
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Even an old nemesis such as Fidel Castro is seeking Jimmy Carter's help these days.
The former president recounted the call from Cuba in an interview with The Associated Press yesterday, during which he also did some fence-mending with President Clinton, whose Haiti policy he has sharply criticized.
"I think part of the legitimacy of our delegation this time was that all three of us had spoken out against some facet of the policy," Carter said. "But I
Athree-person delegation of Carter, retired Gen. Colin Powell and Sen. Sam Nunn worked out the 11th-hour agreement over the weekend that averted a U.S. invasion of Haiti.
don't see anything wrong with it. I'm filled with admiration and thanks for President Clinton for making it possible for us to go."
While praising Clinton in the interview, Carter continued his criticism of the State Department.
When trying to negotiate a settlement, he can't follow "the attitudes of the State Department that has created the deadlock in the first place," Carter said.
He also expressed support yesterday for softening the hard-line U.S. policy against Cuba, telling the Atlanta chamber that "Cuba is no longer a threat to our security."
"I've got to have some element of flexibility."
Castro telephoned him during his country's refugee crisis, Carter said.
Carter said he passed on the Castro conversation to Clinton. He said he's willing to talk more with Castro, but added: "I don't have any plans at all to get involved in the Cuba thing."
"I've got enough to talk about right now," he said in his office at the Carter Center, where he heads an ambitious agenda of peacemaking, help for developing countries and boosting Atlanta's inner-city communities.
Carter has presented a generally positive portrait of Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras, the Haitian military leader denounced by Clinton last week.
He said when he acted as a peace emissary, it's "a ridiculous approach" for him to repeat condemnations and ultimatums and then say: "Now, let's see if we can work out a problem."
Diabetes vaccine may be possible
NEW YORK — The most severe form of diabetes — the kind that requires 700,000 to 1 million Americans to inject themselves with insulin every day — may be triggered by a virus, a study suggests.
If it is a virus and can be identified, scientists may be able to devise a vaccine against type 1 diabetes, the said study's chief author, Massimo Truco of the University of Pittsburgh.
Scientists know that type I diabetes, also called juvenile diabetes, occurs when the disease-fighting immune system destroys insulin-producing cells in the pancreas. But the cause of that attack is unclear.
The new work suggests that the immune system is attacked by a protein on the pancreas cells' surfaces that comes from a viral infection in the cells.
Type I diabetes usually appears in childhood or adolescence.
The Associated Press
Trucco's work is reported in today's issue of the journal Nature. He and his colleagues examined immune system cells taken from the pancreases of two boys who died soon after type I diabetes was diagnosed.
Truco said pancreas cells of both patients were found to have high levels of a protein called reverse transcriptase, which is found only in a class of virus called a retrovirus.
ATHLETIC CLUB
State of the art fitness and health facility
Special Student Memberships!
US OUT!
✓
Graystone Athletic Club, Inc. 2500 W 6th 841-7230
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"EVERYDAY
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
$9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50
DELIVERY HOURS
TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PARTY "10" CARRY-OUT
2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS 1-PIZZA
2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING
2-COKES 4-COKES 1-COKE
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center · Lawrence DINE-IN AVAILABLE · WE ACCEPT CHECKS
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
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
NCGS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am Fri-Sat 11am-3am
KANSAS
Restaurants
1819 W. 23rd - 842-1620
Get the daily prices everyday of the week
BLUMIE SUNS AND AAA
Available at these locations:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint
BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢
2328 S. Iowa St.-842-1200
$3.99 Freshstastes Food Bar
DOMINO'S PIZZA
UNIVERSITY
BOOK
SHOP
25% OFF Any Delivery Order (not valid with any other offer)
BUY1 Menu Item, and get the Second One at 1/2 Price
1116 W23rd
opping $2.60 p.
PYRAMID PIZZA
Jayhawk Bookstore
1830 Convener Rd. Lennox, KS 66044
$1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50 (includes food and coffee drinks)
BRACE'S SHACK SUPP
1008 Massachusetts: A34-0561
10% off any purchase of £2.50 or more
$1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners Before 6 P.M. Tender through
New numbers:
815 New Hampshire-941-7286
Med Pizza $7.95, 2 for $9.95, 1.g Pizza $7.95, 2 for $13.95
1001 W 37TH ST - 1212
One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 each Tax Carry On Only
ESPNESS O'HOUSE
10 E. 9th St-843-3007
FRIDAY GLASS ONION
18, & Chili & Chicb 842-323-2940. 40m. dd, 50t. mdp. 60L. adp.
adts. 75% $8.00. $1g. adp. $1.00. Carry Out Chil
P
401 N 2nd:842-9377-BUY a cheeseburger with fries as a topping for $1.20. purchase for $1.00 Mon then Fri 4-6 pm
$1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day
FULL MOON CAFE
803 Massachusetts-832-0444
PENINSULA FAMILY RESTAURANT
1711 W. 23rd, #42, 0040
82 W 124B-811-2301 FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Cerif
ing Organically Grown) with Any Malt Purche
2907 W 8th-841-1688-FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills)
on purchases of Daffodil Buffalo Shoes
2700 rows!749-2815 FREE Medium Drink with Purchase
2700 rows!749-2815 FREE Medium Drink with Purchase
W2 w2d/43-6153-1101 W1 w2d/43-6153-1200 Hacker
W2 w2d/43-6153-1101 W1 w2d/43-6153-1200 Hacker
Tap on **HOME**. Tap on **MENU**.
Wait, the prompt says "recognize the text and output it exactly as it appears." No, it's just a text block.
I'll use standard text representation for now.
W2 w2d/43-6153-1101 W1 w2d/43-6153-1200 Hacker
W2 w2d/43-6153-1101 W1 w2d/43-6153-1200 Hacker
Actually, the image is too blurry to be clearly read. I will use standard Markdown text for this purpose.
W2 w2d/43-6153-1101 W1 w2d/43-6153-1200 Hacker
W2 w2d/43-6153-1101 W1 w2d/43-6153-1200 Hacker
Retail/Merchandise
ATHLETIC'S FOOT
914 Massachusetts-841-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
24 HOURS JAIL
20% Off Any Purchase Over $2.00 Excluding Rentals
BOBBI'S BEDROOM
2420 Leaves 943 7376
20% OFF Entire Inventory (excludes sale items and outside purchased items)
- Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore at the Courtesy Union First Level in the Burd Union Bookstore at the Courtesy Union
CLIPPAT'ATR'S CLOBET
743 Massachusetts-749-4664
15% OFF Any item (excludes sale items)
745 new Hampshire+43-8282+2.50 discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Lifecycle, System Cleaning with IBM Compatibilities.
13 Massachusetts 64-81-301*15% OFF All Appt* +
FREE Prizefriend T-shirt w/Purchase $2.50 +
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
23rd & Louisiana 832-1700
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item
1420 Crescent Rd-843-3828
10% OFF All 100% Already Published Computer Software
Pro-performance & 24-
LAVANDA BROADCAST
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
JAYHAMN BOOKSTORE
JAYHAWK TROPICAL FISH
844 illus. Suite D=42-850-9500; OFF Whisper Brand PowerFilters, and All Other Brand Underglow Filters
Academia
1420 Crescent Rd-843-3826
10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid
10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill
040 Massachusetts 042-2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
837 Massachusetts-842-2992
20% OFF KU Sweatshirts
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-684-6404
Anx Size Exam Book (Blue Book) $4.99
KANSA AND BURGE UNIONS 8644-8440
<0.00 OFF Aajyah Clothing Item H at Over $200.00
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS:864-4640
10% OFF Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply
WARNING
9th & New Hampshire-841-5324
10% OFF All Skin Care Products
MAURICE'S
708 Massachusetts-841-0334
M.P.C.T.
2340 S. Iowa-842-8564-30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid)
708 Massachusetts-641-1334
15% OFF any regular priced purchases
SAMPLE NUMBER
New Hampshire 641-1334
N1 92 n2d481+8033-1910 Hlash Ave. Suite 184-1704-1
$1.00 OFF Movie Rental (min 1 person) visit
716 Massachusetts B1-817-7200 OFF CDV Tickets, Money
Tuesday & Wednesday 15% Moor Off on Riva Beach
Show Card After Other RECYCLED SOUNDS
82 Massachusetts 614-100-0200 OF All Cotton T-Shirt
& Woman (Organic Cotton, Reincarnated Cotton)
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
704 116th St. 941 8280
822 W 12th Rt-841-0475#42 OFF Any One CD, Tape
822 W 12th Rt-841-0475#42 OFF Any One CD, Tape
/1u 8 w/ $44.00 -1-62b
15% Off Any Non-Worthy Purchase (excluding Stusay)
Lawrence, Ks-885-069*
10% OFF All Sales
RECYCLED MIDDLE CENTER
SPRIMMERMA/WARNAUTTA
1025 N.3 M -832-110
10%OFF Any Purchase
WORK WORD
VIDEO BUS
832 Iowa-749-3507+2 for 1 Video Rental Monday
Thursday (filim one offer ner dav)
20% OFF of all clothing (excluding sale items)
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 8th Bldg - 6845-6955
10% OFF All Parts
ANY OPTICAL
3320 Cannon P-19v-043-058
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
119 Massachusetts hauers483-8444325.00 OFF All Fashion
EyeglassValid Vaidt valid 119 EyeglassLemon Only
EUROPEAN TAN
16W 123R 941-6432 FREE-2 Trees with Purchases
of 7 Tans For $20 and FREE Trial Forms Onl
BUDGET TRAVELS
846 Illinois Suite E+B41-5499
E 841 norgr or $ 90 OEE Chengshu
844 alimons Suite D1-441-5499
$3.00 OFF car or $5.00 OFF Chemical Service
15th & Kas迪兰-832-0281-25% OFF, Initial or Annual Visit Plus 12 Free Condoms
Visit Plus 24 Free Condoms
1033 Massachusetts-748-5363
Any Harbour or Harsley $5.50
Any Harbour $10.00
$35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames wf FREE Adjustment
TWIN OAKS GOLF COURSE
K-10 & County Rd. 1057 (913)543-1747
Buy One SmallBucket of Balls, Get One SmallBulb
ULTIMATE TAN
2449 lows SI. 6142-499+1 FREE Session with the Purchase of a 9 Session Package (Save $5.00)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
119 SQUARE FIRST, 434-4358
119 Stauffer-Flint-864-4358
20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 22, 1994
7A
THE NEWS in brief
WASHINGTON 87-year-old U.S. man accused of Nazi crimes
The Justice Department accused a Massachusetts man yesterday of being "a senior-level perpetrator of the Holocaust" in Nazi-occupied Lithuania.
The accusations came in a suit to take away the U.S. citizenship of Aleksandras Lileikis of Norwood, Mass., an 87-year-old retired publishing company employee.
Confronted by reporters at his home, Lileikis slammed the door after repeatedly saying "No comment."
The complaint says Lileikis headed the Nazi-sponsored Lithuanian Security Police for Vilnius and in that role was a major figure in the destruction of Jews in a capital city known before World War II as a major center of Jewish life.
Since the allegations are in a civil suit, not a criminal charge, Lilikki may leave the United States at any time, said Eli Rosenbaum, acting director of the departments Nazi-hunting Office of Special Investigations. If the court revokes his U.S. citizenship, deportation proceedings would begin.
He was "a senior-level perpetrator of the Holocaust," said Rosenbaum. He is the first senior Lithuanian police official prosecuted in connection with Nazi-period crimes, Rosenbaum said.
U. S. citizenship has been taken away from 50 people accused of participating in Nazi persecutions, and 42 have been removed from the United States.
NONGOMA, South Africa Tribe's adviser widens rift
The king of South Africa's largest tribe picked a chief adviser yesterday who is aligned with the government of Nelson Mandela, widening the rift with Zulu nationalists.
Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini severed ties Tuesday with nationalist leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi, raising fears of renewed clashes in the Zulu homeland.
Buthelezi's Inkatha Freedom Party has strong support among South Africa's 7 million Zulus. But many Zulus support Mandela's African National Congress.
The rivalry between Inkatha and ANC supporters has killed more than 10,000 people in five years. There were fears the rift between Buthelezi and the king could touch off more violence if the king is perceived to be aligning with the ANC.
The South African army dispatched troops yesterday to guard the king, the South African Press Association reported. It was not immediately clear how many soldiers had been sent, and Nongoma was calm.
WASHINGTON TV media booted from court
After a three-year experiment, a judicial panel has acted to keep TV cameras out of federal courtrooms — a decision that was met with dismay by television executives and advocates of greater press freedom.
The vote by the policy-making Judicial Conference of the United States was a severe setback to years of news media efforts to open federal court proceedings to television, as has been done by 47 states in non-federal courts.
David Sellers, spokesman for the conference, said the judges on the panel were concerned about the potential negative impact of TV cameras on jurors or witnesses.
"The bottom line, by about a vote of 2-1, was a concern about jurors, witnesses, potential distractions for jurors and witnesses, whether or not they were more nervous and, in particular, whether or not they feared for any harm," Sellers said.
"One-third of our federal government will remain inaccessible to American citizens," said Brian Lamb, chief executive officer of C-SPAN. "The sad result is that most people's knowledge about judicial systems will now be limited to sensational criminal trials."
CHICAGO
CHICAGO G-string painting gets $95K
The city has agreed to pay $95,000 to an artist whose painting of late Mayor Harold Washington in G-string and bra was removed from an art show by three aldermen.
The city also agreed to give police detailed instructions on when materials protected by the First Amendment may be seized, according to the settlement announced Tuesday.
David Nelson's painting, titled "Mirth and Girth," depicted the city's first black mayor in a bra, G-string, garter belt and stockings. It was displayed in May 1988, months after Washington's death, as part of a private student exhibition at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Aldermen Allan Streeter, Dorothy Tillman and Bobby Rush seized the painting, and the police superintendent then took it into custody. It was returned to Nelson the next day after repeated demands by the American Civil Liberties Union.
The aldermen claimed they wanted to save the painting from mob destruction and prevent it from inciting riots. They agreed to groom and federal it.
They agreed not to appeal a federal court's ruling that they had violated Nelson's rights.
One of the aldermen, Rush, is now a congressman.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Maurice's is now participating in the Kansan Card
15% OFF any regular priced purchases
708 Massachusetts
841-0334
--students come to a university "In search of" many different things: freedom, an education, new friends, success, purpose and meaning in life, etc. In that search, many find answers only as they explore the "spiritual" side of life. Spiritual Awareness Week is being sponsored by KU Religious Advisors and planned by students from a variety of religious groups on campus. Its purpose is to provide a focus on the spiritual side of life and to give students an opportunity to share their own spiritual journeys with each other.YOU are invited to attend these special events:
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!!
Large Pizza
2 toppings
2 drinks
ONE
$8.99
plus tax
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
719 0055
Open 7 days a week
ALI
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749 0055
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
plus tax
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIE
SUA FILMS
September 23-25
Philadelphia
TOM HANKS DENZEL WASHINGTON TWO THUMBS UP
Friday 7:00 and 9:30 pm
Saturday 7:00 and 9:30
Sunday 2:00 pm
THRILL...
to a space ship
from another world!
C
BRILLIANT
3-D
SHUDDER...
at the lury of
thundering avalanche!
SEE... KENDAORPHS who can look like humans or things of terror!
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION
TICKETS $2.50 MONIGNES $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
IT CAMP FROM OUTER
SPACE 3-D
Friday Midnight
Saturday Midnight
A Mexican Tradition
Monday
Tostada, Burrito,Rice or Beans $3.50
Tuesday
Carnita, Side Salad, Rice & Beans $3.50
Wednesday
Veggie Quesadilla, Rice,
Beans & Side Salad $3.50
Thursday
Pork Burrito,Tostada,Rice or Beans
$3.50
Friday
Chicken or Beef Flauta,Rice & Beans
$4.00
Bring your Amigos and Try Our Daily Lunch Specials!
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Malls Shopping Center
23rd & Louisiana
843-4044
RECYCLE!
Your University Daily Kansan
*recycle* • *recycle* • *recycle* • *recycle* • *recycle* • *recycle* • *recycle* • *recycle* • *recycle*
SPIRITUAL AWARENESS WEEK
"IN SEARCH OF...
Candle
Students come to a university "In search of" many
Wednesday, September 21, 7:30 pm.
Pioneer Room in Burge Union
A panel presentation by students from different spiritual backgrounds sharing their spiritual journeys.
Thursday, September 22, 7:00 pm.
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union, 5th floor A mixer for students from all religious backgrounds.
Thursday, September22, 8:30 pm.
Infront of Smith Hall
HARBOUR LIGHTS
1051 Massachusetts
Downtown
A candlelight vigil for religious diversity and understanding.
Rings Fixed Fast!
King Cummings
Jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass Lawrence, KS
D
MOVING?
SPONSORED BY KANSAS UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS ADVISORS
Let
Call 843-8111 Ask for Sales/Service Dept.
Lawrence Paper Company
Solve your moving hassles.
--featuring DINE IN or CARRY OUT PUPS 11am-3am
Sturdy boxes for moving and storage Boxes with handles for easier moving
Large quantities at discount prices
Small quantities - walk-ins welcome
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
*Imports & Domestics*
*Machine Shop Service*
*Parts Departments*
四
Prick Up Your Ears
WED. SEPT 21 TO SAT. SEPT. 24
PICK UP YOUR EAR
Wed. 7:00 PM
Sat. 2:00 PM
Breakfast at Tiffany's
Wed. 9:30 PM
Thurs. 7:00 PM
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH MOVIE CARDS.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
Gay & Leahlan Film Fest Thurs. 9:30 PM
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191
Crown Cinema
TIMECOP $ ^{n} $ 5:00,7:15,9:30
BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
The Lion King®
5:15,730,930
Milk Money®P-13
5:00,715,930
A Good Man in Africa®
5:15,730,945
Clear & Present Danger®P-13
5:00,735
The Client®P-13
5:00,715,930
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
CINEMA TWIN
1110 IOWA 841-519
ALL SEATS
$1.25
Blowm Away™ 5:00,7:20,9:45
4 Weddingus & a Funeral® 5:00,7:25,9:45
Mulligan's
Downtown Delivery Available
Great.Food-Great Music
Acoustic Juice $1 Sam Adams Draws
FRI
Particle Man
$1.50 Wells
SAT
SAT White Trash 2 For 1 Wells
All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged
1016 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 865-4055
8A
Thursday, September 22, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jackson's accuser will not testify
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — The child molestation case against Michael Jackson will hang over the entertainer's head for five more years, authorities said yesterday, allowing the boy who once accused Jackson a chance to change his mind and testify in court.
Jackson won't be charged for now because the boy has refused to cooperate with authorities since reaching an out-of-court settlement with Jackson in February, Los Angeles County District Attorney Gil Garcetti said. Terms of the agreement were confidential, but it has been reported that Jackson paid the boy as much as $15 million.
The investigation began in August
1993, when the boy, now 14, claimed Jackson had sex with him several times during a five-month relationship last year.
Garcetti said charges could be filed against Jackson if the teen-ager changes his mind within the five-year statute of limitations time limit.
"We have a very important witness who has told us 'I'm sorry. I do not want to and will not testify,' Garcetti said. "And I'm telling you that if he steps forward a month from now, two months from now, and says 'Now I want to testify,' we would re-evaluate our case at that time."
Garcetti would not discuss details of the case, saying he didn't want to compromise an investigation that remains open.
The announcement was a relief for
Jackson, who was recording an album in New York.
"I am thankful that the investigation has reached a conclusion. I've continually maintained my innocence." Jackson said in a statement.
Jackson lawyer Johnnie Cochran Jr. said he would have preferred the district attorney exonerate Jackson. "I would have liked a clean bill of health. You always like that."
Attorney Larry Feldman, who represents the teen-ager, insisted the settlement of the boy's lawsuit did not affect his decision on testifying. "There wasn't a deal," he said.
The boy decided not to testify because of stalkers, death threats and constant surveillance by tabloid TV shows, he said.
The molestation allegations were investigated by prosecutors in Los Angeles and Santa Barbara counties. There were more than 400 witnesses, including 30 called before grand juries in the two counties about 100 miles apart.
Jackson, 36, has said the investigation has tormented and humiliated him and his family.
Santa Barbara County District Attorney Thomas Sneddon Jr. said it was "fairly remote that charges will ever be filed."
At one point, Jackson underwent a court-ordered body search that included nude photographs taken to corroborate the boy's allegations.
The photos remain locked in a safe deposit box at a Santa Barbara bank.
Blueprints
1994
the eighth
annual
student
leadership
conference
Building U for tomorrow
Sat. October 1 Kansas Union
9:00 am - 3:30 pm Conference
3:30 pm - 6:30 pm Community Service Project Conference fee is $12 prior to Sept. 23rd Late registration fee is $15 until Sept. 27th by 5:00 pm Register at the OAC office at 400 Kansas Union Questions? Call 864 - 4861
Sponsored by Sprint,
Commerce Bank,
Autonomy Group,
Kansas Union Bookstores
and Student Senate.
WASHINGTON — The United States and Japan began a last-ditch effort yesterday to resolve a series of contentious trade disputes. A top U.S. official warned that the United States would no longer employ a turn-the-other-check policy in trade.
The Associated Press
Lawrence Summers, undersecretary of the Treasury for international affairs, delivered a message as negotiators sought to strike deals to avert trade sanction proceedings.
U.S. aims to even trade with Japan
- Scholarships are available to those who qualify
It has set a Sept. 30 deadline for Japan to conclude successful agreements or face possible U.S. trade sanctions. The administration believes that the market-opening discussions must succeed for the United States to have a hope of narrowing its $60 billion trade gap with Japan.
The Clinton administration is pressing Japan to open its markets in a number of priority areas, including insurance and government purchases of medical equipment.
Summers told a group of business executives yesterday that the Clinton administration would continue to push for market-opening agreements despite complaints by critics who say the result would be a trade war.
WASHINGTON — President Clinton is prepared to offer Russian President Boris Yeltsin more U.S. assistance to dismantle globe-girdling nuclear missiles when they meet here next week.
Clinton, Yeltsin to meet
The Associated Press
The amount will depend on consultations now under way with Congress on defense spending, administration officials told The Associated Press. The aid would be on top of the more than $60 million sent to Moscow and another $200 million appropriated for reducing the Russian arsenal.
The missiles are being dismantled under the 1991 START I treaty.
Even though Russia's economy has leveled off and may even be rebounding, the expense of cutting the long-range stockpile by about one-third under the treaty is more than Moscow can bear, a top Russian security official, Sergei Karaganof, suggested.
In fact, Karaganof said, parliament would reject the 1989 START II treaty, which calls for even deeper reductions, if the accord were submitted now for approval.
Clinton will have Russia's economy very much in mind at the summit with Yeltsin next Tuesday and Wednesday. Administration officials said besides offering more assistance the president will take steps to double American investments in Russia from $1 billion to $2 billion.
Three American business leaders, Jack Smith of General Motors, Jack Murphy of Dresser Industries and Richard McCormick of U.S. West, will participate in one of Clinton's meetings with Yeltsin at the White House.
Even before the summit opens Clinton is moving to ease Russia's access to American markets. He sent Congress a letter Wednesday saying massive emigration of Jews puts Moscow in compliance with Cold War-era legislation and Russia should enjoy most-favored nation trade status indefinitely.
Symbolizing the less tense relationship between the two nations, Yeltsin will be lodged at Blair House, the presidential guest mansion on Pennsylvania Avenue, instead of sleeping at the Russian embassy.
Protesters march through Moscow
The Associated Press
MOSCOW—Thousands of opponents of President Boris Yeltsin, including his former vice president, marched through central Moscow yesterday to mark the anniversary of Yeltsin's decree disbanding the Soviet-era parliament.
The protesters walked arm-in-arm down a broad avenue to a square near the Kremlin, where former Vice President Alexander Rutskoi and others called for mass acts of civil disobedience. Some gathered signatures for a petition demanding Yeltsin's resignation.
The orderly gathering, a year after Yeltsin's decree touched off a parliamentary revolt that led to street battles last October, illustrated the limited strength of the fractured opposition.
4,000 to 10.000. Rallies were also held in St. Petersburg and smaller cities.
Rutksol, a bitter Yeltsin foe widely presumed to seek the presidency in 1996 elections, told the ITAR-Tass news agency that he would not run.
Crowd estimates ranged from
"Until we pool our efforts and create a mass public and political movement, we shall not be able to do anything," he told ITAR-Tass yesterday.
Speakers included communist leaders Gennady Zyuganov and Viktor Anpilov and former Soviet parliament speaker Anatoly Lukyanov. Sazhi Umalatava, a former Soviet deputy, called for the restoration of the Soviet Union.
"We are here to express our indignation and pain over the release of the decree that led to bloodshed," said Tamara Sopezhnikova.
How to interview with the Fortune 500 without even getting out of bed.
OK, graduate-to-be. You can get up early or you can get Career/NET It's simple: You give us your resume in a personal profile on the disk we provide. And we guarantee to deliver it to 10,000 employers (including the Fortune 500) in exactly the form they're looking for. Your Career/NE enrollment kit—a preprogrammed disk and a booklet of step-by-step instructions-is $99.95\* To be in the next nationwide distribution to employers, order today.Call 1-800-682-8539.
ET
Career NET
What's New This Month in THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES?
New Electronic Resources It'snowpossible for KU students, faculty and staff to telnet to the Libraries' LAN (Local Area Network)-which provides access to over 25 databases-from your office or home. For more information, inquire at the Anschutz, Spahr, and Watson Reference Desks or call 864-5530.
*Plus $4.95 for shipping and handling.
Tours of Watson 333 of you took guided tours of Watson last month. For those of you who didn't, check out the audio-cassette self-guided tour of Watson at the RESERVE Desk or pick up a copy of Guide for Readers #1: Watson Library Self-Guided Tour at the REFERENCE Desk.
New Guides for Readers are available on the following topics:
8. Finding Book Reviews (Watson)
9: Biographical Information Sources (Watson)
22: Finding Legal Information (Law Library and Watson)
25: Anschutz Science Library (Anschutz and Watson)
58: Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Resources (Watson)
62: Company Information (Watson and Howey Reading Room)
Free Bookmarks summarizing the KU Libraries' new Borrowers' Code are available at circulation desks in Watson, Anschutz Science, Spahr Engineering Art, Music, Government Documents/Map, and Regents Center Libraries.
New on the Staff Penny Donaldson is the Libraries' new Coordinator of Interlibrary Services. Joyce Pearson is the new Electronic Services & Reference Librarian in the Law Library. Linn Frederikson is the new Library Assistant II in the Kansas Collection.
New Position The Libraries are excited to be recruiting KU's first librarywide Preservation Librarian. While at the same time acquiring and providing access to materials in a wide variety of electronic and non-traditional formats, the Libraries are increasingly concerned about the naturally inherent deterioration of our traditional paper-based collections. Watch for the announcement of our new Preservation Librarian in a forthcoming "What's New?" column.
Currently On Exhibit
In Watson: "Rcme and the Germans as Seen in Coinage" (Through September)
“Read A Good Movie Lately?" (Opening in October)
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"
- 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
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1994
SECTION E
Complete game eluding volleyball team
By Chesley Dohl
Kansas sportswriter
The Kansas volleyball may be experiencing growing pains.
But Kansas coach Karen Schonewild said she wouldn't accept that as an excuse to justify the Jayhawks' 3-9 non conference record.
The Kansas starting lineup, consisting of four freshman, a sophomore and a junior, testifies the need for experience and maturity, she said.
"Everyone is using youth as an excuse," she said. "But that's not it. We haven't been disciplined, and we haven't fought yet. We're expecting other teams to give us things."
"We're not quite where I wanted to be, but we're getting close," she said. "I wanted to be more consistent at this time in the season."
Chonewise planned a full schedule of preseason tournaments to get the Jayhawks prepared for higher levels of competition. Though preseason losses have come to regionally- and nationally-ranked programs such as Southwestern Missouri and Northern Arizona, Chonewise said the team hadn't progressed to her satisfaction.
Aperfect example of inconsistency, Schonewise said, was the match Tuesday night against Wichita State. Kansas started the match with a dismal, unconcentrated 2-15 game. But the Jayhawks made a turnaround and came back to challenge the Shockers in the second game, 13-15.
But with one weekend tournament remaining before the Big Eight season, Kansas is running out of time. A Sept. 28 match at Iowa State marks the conference opener.
Kansas coaches and coaches from opposing teams have agreed that time was the cure for inexperience and development of team chemistry
Schonewise said the Jayhawks would start treating practices as high-intensity game situations.
"Time is not going to get the job done for us," she said. "We need to simulate game experiences in practice."
Julianne Peter / KANSAN
This weekend, Kansas will travel to Lincoln, Neb., for the Arby's Classic, where Kansas will compete against 17th-ranked New Mexico and a strong Pittsburgh volleyball team.
10
Schonewise said the Jayhawks' goal this weekend would be to the combine all of the basics for a complete match.
"In one game we'll serve well, in one game we'll block well, another match we'll hit the ball well — it's a matter of putting it all together," she said. "With each match we're making improvements in one area. But we haven't been able to put together one solid match yet."
Junior outside hitter Jenny Larson said the team was not disappointed with its performance this year.
"Of course we're frustrated," she said. "But I think we're keeping a pretty good attitude. We'd like to do well this weekend since the Big Eight season is coming up. We want to start things off right."
Freshman outside hitter Jill Pfannenstiel attempts to dig a spike during practice yesterday at Robinson Center. The Jayhawks are preparing for the Arby's Classic tournament this weekend in Lincoln, Neb., where they will face nationally-ranked competition.
Quarterback tackles a new job
1
Jav Thornton / KANSAN
For World Foelk
92
A. BURTON
91
JuCo transfer Williams ready to lead Kansas
Kansas junior quarterback Mark Williams talks to the media in the Parrot Athletic Center yesterday.
By Matt Irwin Kansas sportswriter
Mark Williams is a healthy quarterback.
But the Kansas football team's new starting quarterback hasn't always been that way.
Williams, a junior who will start in place of injured senior quarterback Ashelik Preston Saturday against Alabama-Birmingham, knows how Preston feels — except Williams' injury was much worse.
Kansas sophomore will be running back June Henley jumps over the goalline stack for a touchdown against Texas Christian. The Jayhawks' offense will be led by junior quarterback Mark Williams, who will make his first start for Kansas Saturday.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
As a senior in high school, Williams broke his left arm, dislocating the elbow and shattering bone when he tried to run after a bad snap on a point-after attempt.
Just as Preston's injury occurred before he played a conference game, Williams said his injury occurred before his team got into its conference schedule.
Although Williams injured his nthrowning arm, the injury was so bad that he could not play football for a year after his senior season.
But the comparisons end there. Unlike Preston, who is out indefinitely but expected to return for one of the first three Big Eight games, Williams said he was not expected to return that season.
Williams also said colleges that had been looking at him immediately lost interest.
Along, thick scar runs down his left forearm, serving as a reminder of the plate and screws that were placed there to put his arm back together. Six months after the injury, the plate and the screws were taken out. A year later, the arm healed. Williams said.
Williams spent the year after his senior year working at a grocery store
and rehabilitating his arm.
He then decided to attend Diablo Community College in Concord, Calif., 20 minutes away from his house, and try to play football.
Williams succeeded and became the starting quarterback in a run-and-shoot offense.
In passing for 4,491 yards and 32 touchdowns with a completion percentage of 51 percent during his two years there, Williams drew attention from Kansas and UCLA. While at Diablo, Williams said that he did not have full range of motion in his left arm until his second season.
Now Williams is the starting quarterback for a team that lost its senior quarterback before its conference season. He is the healthy quarterback, and he is ready to play.
"Being on the sideline, it was frustrating watching them play," Williams said about the first three games.
Williams said he expected to be redshirted this season unless Preston suffered an injury like this. He said that he had learned the offense by watching the Jayhawks from the sideline.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said that he was impressed with Williams and how much he learned since he transferred to Kansas last spring.
"We knew he was a good passer from the junior college film that we had on him," Mason said.
Mason said Williams picked things up faster than he expected in his first spring practice. Mason also thought Williams was tougher and a better athlete then he expected.
The toughness factor was something Mason said he admired in both Williams and Preston.
"You take a lot of hits in scrimmage," Mason said about quarterbacks who worked with the second team in spring practice. "I thought Williams hung in there really well and competed really well."
Senior offensive guard Hessley Hemmstead said Williams had the
same type of leadership presence as Preston.
"I think one of the things Williams shows intangibly is that leadership skill," Hempstead said. "When he comes in the huddle, I feel the same presence as I do with Asheki."
"Speaking for the entire line, everybody has complete confidence in him."
Roller blade hockey may be new club
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
For Kansas hockey addicts unable to get their fix of power plays and slap shots, help may soon be on the way.
Roller hockey may be coming to the University of Kansas. Bill Jensen, Boston graduate student, said that the proposed roller hockey club was approaching its last hurdle to reaching full club status.
"We have to present the club to Sport Club Council September 29th," said Jensen, who will be president of the club.
The council, made up of officials from Recreation Services and members from other University-sponsored clubs, must then approve the team for official club status. Having completed several necessary steps with Recreation Services, club members said they were optimistic about receiving the council's approval.
The idea for the club came from Jensen's desire to play ice hockey, a sport he found difficult to play in the Midwest.
"I came from Boston, where hockey is real big," Jensen said. "Here, there really isn't anywhere to play hockey."
He said that the expense and problem of finding practice space for ice hockey made roller hockey an attractive alternative. There is only one year-round ice rink in the Kansas City area.
"Ice time can cost $150 for an hour-and-a-half," Jensen said. "The headaches just aren't worth it."
Matt Shatzman, who will act as the club's vice president, agreed that finding ice time was a major obstacle that roller hockey teams avoided.
The club is working with the Lawrence community to find a place to play. Jensen said the city was hoping to schedule roller hockey clinics in November to gage community interest. Jensen said the city was also looking into turning a public tennis court into a permanent roller hockey rink.
Jensen said he wanted to keep the cost of joining the club low — at $15 — because the equipment for the sport was expensive.
Padding, helmets and sticks are necessary items for roller hockey and together would cost about $60.
In-line skates are the most expensive piece of equipment, ranging in price from $109 for used skates to $200 for new skates.
David Jewell, who will act as club treasurer, said the cost would keep people from the sport.
"Roller blade hockey is a lot cheaper than ice hockey," Jewell said. "Besides, people who want to play are willing to pay for the equipment."
Wildcats to play host for Kansas tennis opener
YOUNG
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
Kansa sophomore tennis player Amy Trytek returns the ball during practice at Alvamar Raquet Club.
Women's coach sees tournament as good warm-up
After winning a Big Eight championship and a first-ever doubles national championship, the Kansas women's tennis team is working to make a new name for itself.
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
Last year's team could have been the best team ever in Kansas history, Kansas women's tennis coach Chuck Mebzacher said. But he said he did not want to compare last year's team to this year's team.
"That's not fair," he said. "Last year's team was just last year's team. This team has to create its own identity."
Gone from last year's team, which was ranked seventh in the nation, are four of the top five singles players.
Kim Rogers, Mindy Weiner, and Abya Woods completed their careers at Kansas.
Rebecca Jensen decided to forego her final year of college eligibility to turn professional.
"We lost a ton of experience," Merzbacher said.
The Jayhawks will be looking for leadership from the only senior on the squad, Nora Koves, Merzbach said. Koves and Jensen won the NCAA Division I Women's Tennis National Championship last spring.
"Nora is going to be someone that's going to lead the team as a player," Merzbacher said.
Kim Webster, a transfer from Indiana University, is the only junior on the team. Sophomores include Jenny Atkerson, Chessa Bieri, Heather Heidel, and Amy Trytek, while the incoming freshmen are Maria Abatjoglou, Christie Sim, and Jennifer White, who Merzbacher expects to redshirt this season.
"We have a lot of depth on our team," Trytek said. "We picked up a lot of strong players."
Merzbacher said all of the players must act as leaders this season if the team wants to be successful.
Since the team started practicing earlier this month, the players have already been leaning on each other. Alkerson said.
"The whole team is going to have to be the captain," he said. "Everybody is going to have to draw on each other."
"We want to work together as a team," she said. "I think it's a lot better this year."
Kansas hopes to continue that optism when it opens the season on Saturday at the Wildcat Invitational in Manhattan.
Trytek said the tournament would also gauge how well the team was performing.
The three other teams competing will be Oral Roberts University, Oklahoma State, and the host, Kansas State.
The tournament field is divided into four "flights." Four of Kansas' singles players
"These fall tournaments are really a chance for us to see who is going to step up," he said.
"I think it's going to be a good test to see how we play as a team," she said. "It's going to be a wake-up call too, especially for the freshmen."
were placed in the A Flight, and two were placed in both the B and C flights.
All eight of the singles players will be playing doubles with another teammate competing in the invitational.
"It is going to be a good tournament, just to play some matches," Atkerson said. "It will be a good warm-up for the season."
The tournament's format may set up an interesting situation by the second round, Merzbacher said.
"There's probably a good chance we'll all play each other," he said.
Koves and White' will be the only Jayhawks not participating in this weekend's tournament.
Koves will be playing in several national tournaments this fall, Merzbacher said. Because of an NCAA limit on the number of days a tennis player can compete, Koves will not travel to Manhattan.
Merzbacher said the Jayhawks have had a good fall practice and have started to come together as a team.
"This is one of the best starts I've had as a coach," he said. "They've all risen to the occasion."
2B
Thursday, September 22,1994
ABXΔEФГHI9KLMNOPΘRPΣTΩΣΨZ
A A
Σ Σ
O O
I I
Ω Ω
T T
Π Π
P P
Ψ Ψ
Are you interested in GREEK LIFE?
Panhellenic is sponsoring an information session about
CONTINUOUS OPEN BIDDING
Thursday, September 22
6:30 pm
Daisy Hill Room Burge Union
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ABXΔEФΓHIŸKΛMNΟΠΘPΣTΩΣΨZ
---
WE DELIVER!
Open Daily
10:30 A.M.-
11:00P.M.
15th & Kasold
Orchards Corners
Shopping Center
Lawrence, Ks
MR. GOODCENTS
MR. GOODCENTS
SUBS & PASTAS.
Great subs and pasta at a price that makes
GOODCENTS!
841-8444
Look for our daily specials!
We deliver all day EVERYday!
UP HANDWHEELS
SUS SANDWICHES
OPEN DAILY
10:30 A.M.-
11:00P.M.
15th & Kasold
Orchards Corner
Shopping Center
Lawrence, Ks
MR. GOODCENTS
MR. GOODCENTS
SUBS & PASTAS.
Great subs and pasta at a price that makes
GOODCENTS!
WE DELIVER!
Open Daily
10:30 A.M. -
11:00 P.M.
15th & Kasold
Orchards Corners
Shopping Center
Lawrence, Ks
MR. GOODCENTS
MR. GOODCENTS
SUBS & PASTAS,
Great subs and pasta at a price that makes
GOODCENTS!
841-8444
Look for our daily specials!
We deliver all day EVERYday!
GOOD FOR A
FREE
SIDE OF PASTA
W/ PURCHASE OF ONE OF OUR
"FRESH" SLICED WHOLE SUB
SANDWICHES
(In one coupon per customer per visit)
Dine in or Carry Out Only
expires 10/15/94
Not valid w/ any other offer
15th & Kasold
Orchards Corners
Shopping Center
Lawrence, KS
841-8444
WE
DELIVER!
OPEN DAILY
10:30 A.M. - 11:00 P.M.
10
1
Players still fighting salary cap issue
Both sides remain united as strike struggles onward
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Union head Donald Fehr is not worried about maintaining player solidarity now. He's thinking about next February, when owners might open training camps in an effort to break the strike.
"It's my job to be concerned if there's still a strike at that point," Fehr said Tuesday after briefing 33 players from 19 teams. "I have not had an occasion to doubt the unity and the resolve of the players since this started, and I don't now."
Fehr met with players in Atlanta for 31/2 hours, the start of his seven-city tour, and was to brief players today in Tampa, Fla.
"What's going to happen, I don't know," Fehr said. "I don't think anyone knows. I think we're in man's land. I just hope there is a desire on the other side to try and reach an accommodation before things get a lot worse."
Tom Glavine, player representative of the Atlanta Braves, went into the meeting saying he couldn't speak for other teams.
"I know my guys haven't changed one bit," he said. "I think they fully understand what's on. They are not about to agree to a salary cap or anything that looks like a salary cap."
He came out of the meeting talking about the unity of those who attended.
"Everybody is on the same page," he said. "Everybody is behind it the way we've been all along."
Most of the players left the downtown hotel without stopping for interviews.
"I've got a golf game," said Fred McGriff of the Braves, apparently unconcerned that by the time he got through traffic to a course, it likely would be dark.
Fehr said he wished there could be a way to quickly resolve the strike "so that we can reassure the fans we're not going to have this problem next year."
"That requires them (owners) to want an agreement," he said. "So far, that hasn't been their choice. This is not easy stuff. The owners want to play hardball."
Brett Butler, the Los Angeles Dodgers' player representative, said the meeting was to clarify the executive board's position for players who were relying on news reports.
"Until they're ready to negotiate, all we can do is
inform our players, keep having these meetings and keep them up to snuff on what's going on,"Butler said.
Glavine said no one came up with any new ideas.
"It's up to them to come back and talk to us if they ever want to," he said. "We all love baseball and we all want to play, but we don't want to play under those rules. That's the bottom line. The sooner owners understand that, the sooner we'll get together and get something done."
The sides haven't met since Sept. 9, and Fehr said there are no scheduled talks. The union believes owners will attempt to declare an impasse in bargaining and unilaterally implement the salary cap management they are insisting on.
"This is about breaking the union and getting their power back and ultimately getting a lot of money out of it." Glavine said.
Fehr is to testify today in Washington before a congressional subcommittee investigating whether baseball's antitrust exemption should be removed. Acting commissioner Bud Selig also is to testify.
Seigl's Milwaukee Brewers became the latest team to announce cutbacks, saying Tuesday they will eliminate 30 of 73 employees, or more than 40 percent of the pre-strike staff.
Wildcats prepare to pounce on Gophers
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Kansas State University football coach Bill Snyder has always stressed to his players that playing without emotion leads nowhere.
Last Saturday, it led to a 27-18 win over Rice. Despite their penalties, fumbles, blown coverage and mental mistakes, the Wildcats emerged with a victory and improved to 2-0.
But Snyder said he is trying to prepare the Wildcats for bigger and better opponents, opponents who may capitalize on K-State errors.
After the Rice game, Snyder reminded his players of the 1992 season, when the Wildcats plummeted to 5-6
after posting a 7-4 record the season before.
The players could say, "Well, coach, we still won," but the point is, you can only do that so long. "Snyder said. Rice was an improved team, but we are going to play some teams that are far superior to Rice."
"I tell them, 'Believe me and trust me that we can't take things for granted,'" Snyder said. "Just because we went to a bowl game and we've won a few games doesn't mean we're good enough to walk out on the field and win.
"We've got to claw and scratch and fight for every inch, every snap, every day. That is just the nature of where we are. I just don't want our youngsters to forget where they are. If we do, we're in for sorry times."
K-State will be host to Minnesota at 6:50 p.m. Saturday.
After a 56-3 drubbing from Penn State, the Golden Gophers have rebounded with wins over Pacific and San Diego State. Last year the Wildcats edged the Gophers 30-25.
The Wildcats' habit of playing to the level of the opposition has some players concerned.
"That is a problem," said K-State quarterback Chad May, who completed 19 of 31 passes for 245 yards and one touchdown last Saturday. "One of these times it's going to sneak up and bite us. We need to learn to put teams away early."
Wide receiver Kevin Lockett said the Wildcat offense has been hit-and-miss.
"We've played good in spots and in spots we've been sluggish," he said. "We haven't been playing with great excitement. We have to play well at all times and not just according to who the opponent is.
"We've been practicing pretty much high power," Lockett said. "It's something coach Snyder is trying to put in us. He pretty much got after us after Saturday's game. I think this weekend you'll see a lot more effort and excitement."
Last season at Nebraska, the Wildcats cut the Cornhuskers led to 31-
"We've got to claw and scratch and fight for every inch,every snap, every day."
Bill Snyder
Kansas State football coach
28 in the fourth quarter before falling 45-28. It was the second year in a row that K-State had played Nebraska tough.
In the next two games, the Wildcats tied Colorado 16-16 and beat Oklahoma 21-7.
Hooter's Grill Team
Serving Up Free Hot Dogs (with purchase)
Fri (9/23) 3 - 6 pm
At SHARK'S
Live Remote W/KLZR's Jay Charles Tons Of Prizes!
Lawrence
701 W 9th
(9th and Indiana)
841-8289
FINDING GREAT FOOD IS AS EASY AS
---
123
$1 breakfast, $2 lunch or $3 dinner
If you can count to 3 and know your name, you can treat yourself to some of the best food anywhere, anytime! We invite you to come by and try our All-American Buffet at Naismith Hall.
You can have your choice and it's nutritious too. Our menu will please even the most finicky eater.
So what are you waiting for? Just fill in the coupon and bring it with you. It's as simple as 1,2,3.
$1 breakfast,$2 lunch or $3 dinner Bring this coupon in for our All-American Breakfast, Lunch or Dinner Buffet.
*Offer limited to one coupon per person
Non-Stud.
NAISMITH
Hall
1800 Naismith Drive (Corner of 19th & Naismith, just south of Allen Fieldhouse) 843-8559
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 22, 1994
3B
Colorado to take on Wolverines
No.4 Buffaloes head to Ann Arbor in a match-up with No.7 Michigan
By Rick Warner The Associated Press
The last time Michigan played Colorado, Bill McCartney was in his first year as a Wolverines' assistant coach under Bo Schembechler. But this time, he'll be rooting for the other team when fourth-ranked Michigan meets No. 7 Colorado Saturday in Ann Arbor.
Michigan coach Gary Moeller, who was an assistant with McCartney on Schembechler's staff, has similar praise for Colorado.
"This is a very, very good Michigan team, one of their best in recent years," he said. "We will have to play a great game in all phases of the game to beat them."
"They have talent all over," Moeller said. "They are much more athletically talented than Notre Dame."
Colorado has Kordell Stewart, the nation's second-rated passer, and Rashaan Salaam, who leads the NCAA in scoring and is among the leaders in rushing and all-purpose yardage.
Michigan has Todd Collins, whose 65 percent completion rate is the best in school history; Amani Toomer, the Big Ten's leading receiver; and Tim Biakabutuka, who has rushed for over 100 yards in both games.
It's going to be a high-scoring shootout that won't be decided until the closing minutes. Michigan is a 31/2-point favorite, but the pick here is ... COLORADO 35-31.
TODAY
West Virginia (plus 151/2) at No. 14 Virginia Tech Hokies off to first 3-0 start since 1981 ... VIRGINIA TECH 24-7.
SATURDAY
Pacific (plus 49) at No. 2 Nebraska
Cornhuskers 11-0 vs. Big West ... NEBRASKA 71-0.
No. 13 North Carolina (plus 21) at No. 3 Florida St.
Seminole lead nation in total offense ... FLORIDA ST.
14-21.
44-21
Rutgers (plus 32) at No.5 Penn St.
Lions lead series 20-2. . PENN ST. 55-17.
No. 17 Washington (131/2) at No. 6 Miami
Teams shared 1991 national championship ... MIAMI 24-
17.
Wildcats have won last two games at Palo Alto ... ARIZONA 21-20.
Purdue (plus 22) at No. 9 Notre Dame
Boilermakers 2-0 for first time since 1978 ... NOTRE
DAME 48-21.
East Tennessee St. (no line) at No. 10 Auburn
Tigers' defense scored four TDs against LSU... AUBURN
No. 8 Arizona (minus 61/2) at Stanford
Wildcats have won last two games at Palo Alto ... ARI-
ZONA 01 20
Purdue (plus 22) at No. 9 Notre Dame Boilermakers 2-0 for first time since 1978 ... NOTRE DAME 48-21.
East Tennessee St. (no line) at No.10 Auburn
Tigers' defense scored four TDs against LSU...AUBURN
Colorado vs. Michigan
The No. 7 Buffaloes (2-0) travel to Ann Arbor, Mich., Saturday to meet the No. 4 Wolverines, Michigan leads the series, 1-0.
(National rank. average yards for game for 1994 season)
Metropolis BBS
8320041
Offense
KIM'S ALTERATIONS
QUICK & QUALITY SERVICE
2201-FW25TH ST
(Behind Food 4 Less)
842-6812
Colorado Michigan
4th, 548.5 Total 33rd, 402.0
11th, 289.0 Rushing 52nd, 161.0
1813 (ie), 259.5 Passing 23rd, 241.0
3rd (ie), 51.5 Points scored 28th (ie), 30.0
Defense
Roy Gallop / Knight-Ridder Tribune
Defense
62nd, 352.5 Total 86th, 427.5
61st, 164.0 Rushing 60th, 162.0
40th, 105.25 Pass efficiency 92nd, 143.20
27th, 15.0 Points against 65th (tie), 25.0
Source: National Collegiate Athletic Association
Tulane (plus 29) vs. No. 11 Alabama at Birmingham
Tide rolls over Green Wave . . . ALABAMA 31-0.
Tulane (plus 29) vs. No.11 Alabama at Birmingham Tide rolls over Green Wave ... ALABAMA 31-0.
Southern Mississippi (plus 21) at No.12 Texas A&M
Aggies have won 24 of last 25 regular-season games ...
TEXAS A&M 44-14.
No.16 Texas (minus 71/2) at Texas Christian
Horned Frogs pulled upset in their last meeting at Fort Worth ... TEXAS 28-24.
No.25 Indiana (plus 9) at No.16 Wisconsin
Hoosiers averaging 380 yards per game on ground ...
WISCONSIN 27-17.
No.22 Washington St. (plus 71/2) at No.18 UCLA
Brains rebound from loss to Nebraska ... UCLA 24-10.
Baylor (plus 11) at No.19 Southern Cal
Trojans hand Bears their first loss ... SOUTHERN CAL 21-17.
Houston (plus 371/2) at No.20 Ohio St.
First meeting between schools ... OHIO ST. 48-7.
No.23 Tennessee (minus 5) at Mississippi St.
Vols coming off worst home defeat in 70 years ... TEN-NESSEE 24-17.
Western Carolina (no line) at No.24 North Carolina St.
Wolfpack won last two meetings by combined 112-6 score ... N.CAROLINA ST. 45-0.
Southern Mississippi (plus 21) at No. 12 Texas A&M
44-14.
bifiS
No. 25 Indiana (plus 9) at No. 16 Wisconsin Hoosiers averaging 380 yards per game on ground ... WISCONSIN 27-17.
No. 15 Texas (minus 71/2) at Texas Christian Horned Frogs pulled upset in their last meeting at Fort Worth ... TEXAS 28-24.
Aggies have won 24 of last 25 regular-season games ...
TEXAS A&M 44-14.
No. 22 Washington St. (plus 71/2) at No. 18 UCLA Bruins rebound from loss to Nebraska ... UCLA 24-10. Baylor (plus 11) at No. 19 Southern Cal
fifi's 925IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
Trojans hand Bears their first loss ... SOUTHERN CAL 21-17.
Houston (plus 371/2) at No. 20 Ohio St.
First meeting between schools ... OHIO ST. 48-7.
No. 23 Tennessee (minus 5) at Mississippi St
Vols coming off worst home defeat in 70 years ... TEN-
NESSEE 24-17.
Western Carolina (no line) at No. 24 North Carolina St.
Wolfpack won last two meetings by combined 112-6 score ... N. CAROLINIA ST. 45-0.
FITNESS
STEP UP with BODY BOUTIQUE The Woman's Fitness Facility
STEP UP
with
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Woman's Fitness Facility
60 classes per week and much more
ABSOLUTELY NO
JOINING FEE
-VIP-
1st visit FREE
10 TANS
for only
$20
exp. 10/3/94
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
THE AMERICAN HERITAGE COLLEGE diction·ar·y
NEWEST definitions—over 200,000
MOST photographs and illustrations—over 7,500
BEST usage guidelines—over 480 notes
Houghton Mifflin Company
For a Limited Time
Only
$19.95
(Reg. $21.95)
For a Limited Time
Only
$19.95
(Reg. $21.95)
Need a superior college dictionary at an affordable price?
The AMERICAN HERITAGE COLLEGE DICTIONARY, 3rd ED.
- Accessible
- Up-to-date
- Comprehensive
- More advice on usage
- Most photos & illustrations
- Hardcover, thumb-indexed
KU Bookstores
KU Bookstores Kansas Union, Level 2 University of Kansas Lawrence, KS 66045 (913)864-4431
OREAD
BOOKSHOP
BOOKSHOP
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
For once, a cut in educational spending that actually helps students.
Macintosh® Performa® G36 8/250
with CD-ROM, Apple® Color Plus 14" Display,
AppleDesign® Keyboard and mouse. Only $1,699.00.
Investment that are
Apple PowerBook® 150 4/120. Only $1,257.00
Macintosh® Performa® 636 4/250,
Apple Color Plus 14" Display, AppleDesign®
Keyboard and mouse. Only $1,399.00.
With Apple's special low student pricing, you can get a terrific deal on Macintosh $ ^{*}$ the best-selling personal computer on college campuses today. You can choose the affordable Macintosh Performa $ ^{*} $ which comes complete with lots of powerful software to help get you through college. You can also choose the portable Apple $ ^{*}$ PowerBook $ ^{*} $ or the Power
Macintosh"—the world's fastest Mac." And because Macintosh is still the easiest personal computer, you won't have to dig through complex manuals. Plus, with low student pricing, a Mac is as easy to afford as it is to use. All of which makes it the ideal time to discover the power all college students need.The power to be your best. Apple
POWER
unough.
Apple
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union
technology
center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burge Union * Level 3 * 913/864-5690
© 1994 Apple Computer, Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh, Macintosh Quadra, Performa, PowerBook and "The power to be your best" are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. AppleDesign, Mac and Power Macintosh are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
4B
Thursday, September 22, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sanders wins showdown against Smith in Dallas
The Associated Press
PONTIAC, Mich. — Soft-spoken Barry Sanders won't be drawn into comparisons with Emmitt Smith. Yet his teammates swear there was a special look in his eyes when the Lions lined up against the Cowboys.
Sanders carried a club-record 40 times for 194 yards at Detroit defeated Dallas 20-17 in overtime Monday night. Smith wasn't bad, either, rushing for 143 yards on 29 carries.
But the game clearly belonged to Sanders. He dazzled die-hard Dallas fans with his myriad of start, stop, sideways, hop moves.
"I saw a look in his eyes that I'd think Ive ever seen before," center Kevin Glover said.
"In the huddle, he was smiling and nodding his head like, 'Hey, we're going to win. We're going to get it on tonight."
Herman Moore saw the look even sooner than that. He thought Sanders was different before they ever went on the field.
"Barry wasn't saying anything," Moore recalled. "We joke around all the time before games. But not this time. Barry had this look, like he was saying. 'No more loking around.'"
Being compared with someone is notnung new to Sanders. It has been going on as long as he as been in the NFL. When he came into the league, people were trying to decide whether he was better than Christian Okoye. Then it was Thurman Thomas. Now it's Smith.
In the week leading up to the game the comparisons were being made, especially in Detroit and Dallas. There almost always is a newspaper lying in the bottom of his locker, so Sanders certainly knew what was being written and said.
"I promise I don't get caught up in that." Sanders said. "I think Emmitt is good. But there are a lot of reasons why we had a good game against Dallas.
"First of all, it's easy to get up for a team like the Cowboys. But it didn't really feel like I had the eye of the tiger or anything like that. Also, we had a terrible game at Minnesota the week before. That was some motivation, too."
the 10-3 loss at Minnesota. That's not nearly enough action for him. He knows it, and Lions coach Wayne Fontes knows it. Yet it isn't in his nature for Sanders to complain — especially during a game.
Sanders had only 12 carries for 16 yards in
Fontes vowed to get the ball to Sanders more against the Cowboys. Yet he and Sanders never dreamed it would be 40 times.
It didn't seem like 40, Sanders said.
It didn't seem like 40 to Cowboys coach
Barry Switzer. It seemed more like 80.
"I thought he had more than that," Switzer said. "Barry Sanders is the most dangerous back in the game."
As the game wore on, Sanders never lost his look. When others were gasping for air.
Sanders was taking the football.
"Barry was on," Lions quarterback Scott Mitchell said. "They couldn't touch him. Dallas is very fast, and he made them look bad."
There have been only three better games turned in by running backs in Lions history. Sanders holds the club record with 220 yards against the Vikings in 1991. Bob Hoernschemeyer rushed for 198 in a 1950 game against the New York Yanks, and Mel Farr had 197 in a 1967 game against the Vikings.
In 1934, Dutch Clark matched Sanders with a 194-yard game against Cincinnati.
"It's hard to hold Barry for four quarters, much less five," Dallas safety James Washington said.
THE ROCK CLUB
THUR., SEPT 22
JOHN PAUL &
THE HELLHOUNDS
W. LITTLE JOHNNY & THE
RHYTHM ROCKETS
MOE BLUES BAND
WED., SEPT 28
Vitreous Humor
Sunday Drive
Iris Anvil
FRI., SEPT 23
SMITHEREENS
THUR., SEPT 29
Bon Ton Sol
Accordion Band
SAT., SEPT
24
SECTION
Dinner & Jazz
SUN SUNS
SIMPLEXITY
DRINK SPECIALS
mondays
$3 Domestic Pitchers
$4 Barn Adams & Boulevard Pitchers
$5 Whistaway's Red Barrel Pitchers
mondays
$2.60 Imports
mondays
2 for 1 Everything (except pitchers)
fridays
$1.25 Longnecks
fridays
$1.25 Welts
saturday
2 for 1 Welts
saturday
$1.50 Vodka Welts
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
ADVERGE TICKETS AVAILABLE
AT THE CAFE OR VISITURE
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
For info 913.841.9111
THE ROCK CLUB
THUR., SEPT 22
JOHN PAUL & THE HELLHOUNDS
W. LITTLE JOHNNY & THE RHYTHM ROCKETS
MOE BLUES BAND
WED., SEPT 28
Vitreous Humor
Sunday Drive
Iris Anvil
FRI., SEPT 23
SMITHREENS
THUR., SEPT 29
Bon Ton Sol
Accordion Band
SAT., SEPT 24
SMOCHIN SECTION
Dinner & Jazz!
SIN SPILLS
SIMPLEXITY
DRINK SPECIALS
mondays
53 Domestic Pitchers
14 Ryan Adams & Boulevard Pitchers
35 Whatley's Red Barrel Pitchers
tuesdaydays
52.50 Imports
wednesdaydays
2 for 1 Everything (except pitchers)
thursdaydays
11.25 Longneck
fridaydays
11.25 Walls
saturdaydays
2 for 1 Wells
sundaydays
11.50 Vodka Wells
RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE
ADVANCE THIS AVAILABLE AT THE CAPS OR THROUGH
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
For Info 913.841.9111
contribute to the jean pool
sell your clothing to
arizona trading co.
734 massachusetts lawrence, kansas
(913) 749-2377
16 south ninth columbia, missouri
(314) 499-0420
now buying for winter
open every day!
JOCK'S NITCH
SPORTING GOODS
The Sports Look of Today!
Get Outfitted for Fall
Columbia Sportswear Company
Wigwam Hats
Columbia Guiness Sweater
Cool KU Game Bar Hat
Columbia Jeans
Columbia Jean Jacket
Nike Lined Windpants
K-Swiss Boots
Nike Waterproof Boots
What Every Self Respecting Stick is Wearing
842-2442 840 Massachusetts
Hours: Mon-Wed 9:30-7 p.m
Thurs 9:30-8:30 p.m
Fri-Sat 9:30-6 p.m
Sun 12-5 p.m.
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
contribute to the jean pool
sell your clothing to
arizona trading co.
734 massachusetts
lawrence, kansas
(913) 749-2377
16 south ninth
columbia, missouri
(314) 499-0420
now buying for
winter
open every day!
contribute to the jean pool sell your clothing to arizona trading co. 734 massachusetts lawrence, kansas (913) 749-2377 16 south ninth columbia, missouri (314) 499-0420 now buying for winter open every day!
Get Outfitted for Fall
Columbia Sportswear Company
Wigwam Hats
Columbia Guiness Sweater
Columbia Jeans
Columbia Jean Jacket
Nike Lined Windpants
K-Swiss Boots
Nike Waterproof Boots
What Every Self Respecting Stick is Wearing
842-2442 840 Massachusetts Hours: Mon-Wed 9:30-7 p.m. Thurs 9:30-8:30 p.m. Fri-Sat 9:30-6 p.m. Sun 12:5 p.m.
haircut from Manetamers
shirt from Outfitter's
sandwich from West Coast Saloon
jeans from Outfitter's
AMY ANGLER
CARDMEMBER SINCE AUGUST 30, 1994
"I got me a card and it works real good. I still haven't caught that big bass 'Bessie' but I look good tryin."
It doesn't matter how you spend your time, the Kansan Card can help you spend your money.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
Available at: University Daily Kansan (119 Stauffer-Flint), University Book Shop, Jayhawk Bookstore, Kansas Union (2nd level Courtesy Counter), and Burge Union (1st level Courtesy Counter).
arizona trading co.
winter
JOCK'S NITCH
SPORTING GOODS
The Sports Look of Today!
Get Outfitted for Fall
Columbia
Sportswear Company
Wigwam
Hats
Columbia
Guiness
Sweater
Cool KU
Game Bar
Hat
Columbia
Jeans
Columbia
Jean
Jacket
Nike Lined
Windpants
K-Swiss
Boots
Nike Waterproof
Boots
NIKE
What Every Self Respecting Stick is Wearing
842-2442 840 Massachusetts Hours: Mon-Wed 9:30-7 p.m.
Thurs 9:30-8:30 p.m.
Fri-Sat 9:30-6 p.m.
haircut from Manetamers
coat from Outfitter's
shirt from Outfitter's
sandwich from West Coast Saloon
jeans from Outfitter's
AMY ANGLER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
WEST THROUGH KANSAS 1983
---
lifestyles
Just a kiss
THE FOLKS IN THE GAME
Meghan Doughey / MAMCAM
**Above:** Jason Kurtenbach, Kansas City, Kan., resident, kisses the purple-stained hand of Jennifer Purcell, Lawrence freshman, at the Renaissance Festival in Boston Sunday afternoon, assumes the identity of Debrogail O'Donnell, a dye maker's daughter, at the festival, which runs until Oct. 16. **Below:** Purcell hides her hands behind her bark while sings a single
Going back in time with the dye maker's daughter
By Casey Barnes
Kansan staff writer
Jenifer Purcell, Lawrence freshman, is the dye maker's daughter. If you encounter her in the streets of the Kansas City Renaissance Festival, beware of her dye-stained hands.
In her Renaissance-style dress and flowers in her hair, she slowly walks up to an innocent patron with her hands behind her back. Then she begins to recite her lines.
"Good day. I be Debrogail O'Donnell, daughter of the dye maker. I've been out at the fair all day and not a single man has kissed my hand, and I was wondering if you would do me the honor," Purcell says with an Irish accent.
This is her shtick, which is a small skit she plays as she interacts with the festival's visitors.
It worked on some people, but most did not fall for the trick, she said.
"People usually won't kiss my hands when they see they are purrle." Purcell said.
When she made up her character, her costume and her shick, she learned that women of the Renaissance period were not as independent as women today.
"I wanted to be a dye maker, but women in that period had to be under their father or their husband, so I became the dye-maker's daughter," Purcell said.
Purcell is one of 300 performers who are part of the spirit of the Renaissance Festival, a Kansas City tradition since 1977 and a benefit for the Kansas City Art Institute. The festival runs weeks until Oct. 16.
The atmosphere aims to capture the spirit of the Renaissance period with crafts, food, story telling, singing, games, plays and other events typical of the period.
Perry Griffin, Lawrence resident, said she enjoyed schticks like Purcell's, but was disappointed that there were not more of them.
"There used to be more interacting with the performers," Griffin said. "But now there is more spectating than interaction."
Portraying an apprentice in the Renaissance period, Purcell walks through the streets of the festival trying to bring the 20th-century visitors back to Medieval times.
"I like interacting with the different people, and I like to get away and be somebody else for the day and worry about the problems of someone else." Purcell said. "But it's a little hard to keep the accolade all day."
In addition to portraying another person, Purcell and the other performers are required to learn the customs, manners, accents and class systems of the Renaissance period.
That is information that Purcell, an anthropology major, is used to studying.
In fact, in a contest to see which performer knew the most about the Renaissance culture and the scenario portrayed at the festival, Purcell won first place.
This is Purcell's debut season as a performer at the festival, but she has been a faithful patron in past years.
She does not get paid for her performance. Purcell auditioned for the part last spring, and she practiced at least four times a week this summer.
Her job also includes controlling the crowds during performances and carrying the flag in each day's parade.
"We are basically in character from 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.," Purcell said. "I lost track of how much time I've spent doing this a long time ago. It's hard to stay caught up with working, doing the Renaissance Festival, going to school and still having time for my cat."
1308
Kris Wade, pictured at right, is a singer and songwriter from Kansas City, Mo. She will be one of 16 performers at the songwriters' showcase Thursday at the
Lawrence Arts Center. Her sister, Kelley Hunt,
will also
FABRIOLINI
WEST BROOK, NEW YORK
SHEETMUSIC FESTIVAL 2014
Harvest of Arts Free festival offers everyone the opportunity to enjoy the work of local artists.
perform.
By Casey Barnes
Kansan staff writer
During the weeklong Harvest of Arts festival honoring Lawrence artists, people of all ages and artistic abilities are urged to become involved in the arts.
The Third Annual Harvest of Arts celebration begins Monday and ends Oct. 2.
The Lawrence celebration includes poets, singers, dancers, musicians, storytellers, dramatists, two- and three-dimensional artists, jugglers and more.
"It's nice that it is free so that people that would not naturally go to a poetry reading, for example, might check it out," said Rick Frydman, publicist for the celebration.
All of the events are free, and organizers said they hoped that would lure curious participants to the celebration.
Frydman said the festival would celebrate Lawrence's large amount of talent.
The group believed that art was the biggest attraction to Lawrence, and Ramberg, also a local artist, wanted to help.
Ardys Ramberg, founder of Harvest of Arts,
agreed.
in Lawrence
"There are many different types of artists in Lawrence," Ramberg said. "But I don't like the divisiveness of the arts. I think all artists can pull together for a harvest of arts to help the community."
She said the event was started three years ago after she read two articles about the Vision 20- 20 Community, a group trying to foster tourism
This year's celebration includes KU student Timothy "the typewriter" Jordan, who is performing Monday at Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St., and community mud painting Oct. 2 at the Buford M. Watson Park, 7th and Tennessee streets.
Downtown merchants will display the work of local artists in their storefronts and offer guides to other window art.
"I want to see every person, old and young, who has ever done art, come out and celebrate creative thoughts and action." Ramberg said.
Matt Nusbaum, Topeka freshman, will have his poetry on display at 1019 Massachusetts St. As an English major, he said he took any opportunity to write.
"I think it's a great idea," he said. "People involved in their own community is great."
Harvest of Arts Calendar
Monday, Sept. 26
There will be 30-minute performances from The Renegade Youth Theater, English Alternative Theater and the East Side Comedy Shop starting at 8 p.m. The Typewriter Man will begin about 1.0 p.m., and Lou's Revenge, a rock and jazz band, will be from 11 p.m. to midnight. All of the performances will be at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
The Prairie Wind Dancers, a professional dance company, will present one hour
Tuesday, Sept. 27
performance at 8 p.m. in the Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont streets. The program will feature "Four Patch Suite," seven dances celebrating pioneer women and their works of art.
The Third Annual Harvest of Arts Songwriters' Showcase featuring 16 Lawrence and Kansas City artists will begin at 8 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont streets.
A local pianist will perform from 7 to 10 p.m. in the Eldridge Hotel Lobby, 701 Massachusetts St.
Wednesday, Sept. 28
Friday, Sept. 30
Thursday, Sept. 29
A poetry showcase, featuring area pots,
will take place at 8 o'm. at the Lawrence
Arts Center, 8th and Vermont streets,
The Third Annual Harvest of Arts Film Festival,
featuring local filmmakers' works,
will take place from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St.
There are many activities taking place at the Buford M. Watson Park, 7th and Tennessee streets.
Saturday, Oct. 1
Artists will be displaying and selling their original creations throughout the park. There will be a Children's' Festival for kids ages one through 16 from noon until 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Children should bring their artwork to be sold or displayed in the park.
Activities include a performance by the
Seem-to-be Players, Origami making, a community sculpture, giant bubble blower construction, jugglers, children's musicians, a community mud painting, belly dancers and a "whimsy-shots" photo stage.
There will also be live music from 11 a.m.
to 10 p.m. in the park.
Sunday, Oct. 2
Main stage performers will perform from noon until 6 p.m. at the Buford W. Watson Peirk, 7th and Tennessee streets. There will also be folk music during this time on a stage next to the basketball courts.
Children should bring their artwork to be sold or displayed in the park.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 22,1994 PAGE 5B
KU Life
Lawrence Nightlife Calendar
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Danger Bob with Yah Yah Little Man, 10 tonight,
$3 (18 and over)
Blue Dixie with Lord Groovey, 10 p.m. tomorrow,
$4
Punkinhead, 10 p.m. Saturday, $4
Nova Mobi and Prizes, 10 p.m. Sunday, $4 (21
and over). $5 (18-20)
Open Mike Night, 9:30 p.m. Monday, no cover charge
Communal Living Opportunities Benefit featuring Slackjaw, Helen Grace and Happy Teeiaki 6, 10 p.m. Wednesday, $4 (18 and over)
Cherry Poppin' Dadies with The Eudoras, 10 p.m.
Tuesday. $4
NOTE Showcase, 10 p.m. Thursday, $5
1601 W.23rd St.
River Valley Music Cafe
The Smithereens, 10 p.m. tomorrow, cover charge
John Paul & the Hellhounds, Little Johnny & the Rhythm, Rockets & Moe Blues Band, 10 tonight, cover charge
Mulligan's
Acoustic Juice, 10 tonight, $2
1016 Massachusetts St.
Live Jazz Night, 10 p.m. Tuesday, no cover charge
Acoustic Open Mike Night, 9 p.m. Wednesday,
no cover charge
Dan Bliss and Kurt Stockhammer, 10 p.m. Thurs
day. $2
The Jazzhaus of Lawrence
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Debbie Davies, 10 tonight, $4
L.A. Ramblers with Richard Johnson, 9 p.m
tomorrow and Saturday, $4
Chris Smither, 10 p.m. Wednesday, $4
Chubby Carrier and the Bayou Swamp Band, 10
p.m. Thursday, $5
Full Moon Cafe
803 Massachusetts St.
Mississauga 51.
Kris Wade, 8 tonight, no cover charge
Granada Theater
1020 Massachusetts St.
Al Brown and Inner Force, 10 tonight, $4-5
Monde Disco with D.J. Ray, 9 p.m. tomorrow,
$4-5
Lee McBee and the Passions, and John Paul and the Helihounds, 10 p.m. Saturday, cover charge Club 7, 9 p.m., Sunday, $3-4
'80s Night, 9 p.m. Wednesday, $4-5
Liberty Hall
642 Massachusetts St.
Pavement with Panel Donor, doors open at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, advanced tickets $12.80
---
6B
Thursday, September 22, 1994
VUHARNET
FRANCE
SPORTS
The 928 Mass.
Etc. Downtown
Shop Park in the rear
TM
West Coast Saloon
25C
POOL
Game Day Bus
Late-Night Grill
until 1 a.m.
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Our lunch menu will allow you to come back for dinner.
5.50
4.95
5.50
5.50
Grilled Chicken Salad Platter
Filet of Sole w/ rice pilaf & salad
Boutine Vegetable Pasta
Cajun Reuben w/ french fries & salad
fifi's
This workshop will challenge you to explore personal boundaries. Suggestions will be offered to aid in the development of safety, self-esteem, and positive connections with others.
Fifi's affordable lunches, prices as fine as the dining.
Pencil
Drawing Boundaries
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
Pine Room, Kansas Union
7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.
Facilitator NancyJohnson, MSW,LSCW Private Practitioner
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall. For more information, contact Renee Speicher at 864-3552
Asian Games are clouded with turmoil
TOKYO — When Japan was chosen four years ago as 1994 host for Asia's premier sporting event, it did not take long to come up with a motto: "Asian Harmony."
But as Hiroshima prepares to raise the curtain on the 12th Asian Games that will bring together athletes from 42 countries and territories, the atmosphere has been anything but harmonious.
The Associated Press
Under intense pressure, Lee said he would stay home. In response China has threatened to boycott if Lee does not attend, which would be a devastating move because the Chinese team is expected to be the strongest team to participate in the Hiroshima Games.
The run-up to the Oct. 2-16 Games has been marred by a bitter confrontation between Beijing and Taipei over whether Taiwan's President Lee Teng-hui would attend as a guest of the Olympic Council of Asia.
Though Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama said that receiving Lee would be "difficult," Tokyo tried to remain neutral.
Japan severed diplomatic ties with Taiwan in 1972 to recognize Beijing. But its economic ties with Taiwan continue to be vital.
Opposition lawmakers in Taiwan said that was not enough and that Japan should take an aggressive
stance and stop kowtowing to Beijing.
Beijing pushed Taiwan out of the Asian Games in 1973 by claiming exclusive right to use the name "China." Taiwan returned for the 1990 Asian Games in Beijing, calling its team "Chinese Taipei."
"We'll be glad to see the sports finally begin."
"It's disappointing the way politics can get so wrapped up in everything," said Fumikazu Minami, a representative for the Games' organizing committee. "We try to keep politics out, but it's just impossible.
from such Olympic standbys as boxing and weight lifting to the Asian specialities of the tag-like game of "kabaddi" and the acrobatic soccer-cum-volleyball game of "sepak takraw."
Nearly 5,000 athletes are expected for the Games, which are held every four years. Competition will range
Barring any last-minute surprises,
China will be the team to beat.
Cambodia will be returning to the Games for the first time in 20 years, and five former Soviet republics, including Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, will be making their debut.
In the 1990 Games, China won 341 medals, including 183 gold, easily exceeding South Korea's 181-medal total. Japan was third with 174 medals.
Esquire Barber Service
1st Time $3.99
Customer
2323 Bridge Ct.
First Mcd Building
812-3699
This is the universal sign for peace.
PEACE
This is the universal sign for peace-of-mind.
Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City
P
Pregnancy testing
Sex education FREE
NEXUS
Birth control
NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HOTELS
1420 Kasold Drive, Suite C
STD testing &
treatment
(913) 832-0281
KMS
Orchards Corners
PEEL MITCHELL REDKEN
shopping center
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
Fantastic Fall Special!
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
South Pointe AFTERNOON
- Sand Volleyball Court
JOICO
- SwimmingPool
- Ample Private Parking
MEXICAN CAFE
- Water and Trash Paid
WEEKLY
MARGARITAS AND FAJITAS FOR OVER 2 YEARS!
Carlos O'Kelly's.
MONDAY
WEDNESDAY
$2 Margaritas on the rocks
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
TUESDAY
75c Killians Red Draws
$1 Small Chili ConQueso
$1 OFF ALL Dinner Picados
$2 All Imports
$5 95 Sancho/Monterrey Combo
99¢ Kids Meals
- CARRYOUT AVAILABLE!
Outstanding New Staff!!!
8 3 2 - 0 5 5 0
THURSDAY
$2 Bud Light 23 Oz. Tap
$1.50 Desserts
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
SUNDAY
Hours of Operation:
M-Th 11-11
Fri,Set 11-12
Sun 11-10
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 off Chimis
$2 Bloody Marvs
- TASTE OF THE WORLD BEER CLUBI
707 W. 23rd St.
Savannah
Brooke
Watch Out For Student Specials and New Afternoon Specials
Juicers Showgirls
Totally N* de
Dancers
18 + Welcome
913 N. Second
(Next to Riverfront Square)
841-4122
Featuring
STRIVING FOR EQUALITY FOR MEN AND WOMEN
NOW
NATIONAL ORGANIZATION
FOR WOMEN
VOTER REGISTRATION,
SPEAKERS, PANELS,
LETTER WRITING, FOOD DRIVE
FIRST MEETING: THURSDAY
SEPTEMBER 22, WALNUT ROOM
KANSAS UNION, 6 PM
FOR INFO CALL 864-7337
NATKIN
"We Care For KU"
1907
Health
Fair '94
rnu., Sept. 22 & Fri., Sept. 23
9 a.m.- 3 p.m.
Watkins West Entrance
"Imperial since 1993"
Cholesterol Screening/Percent Body Fat Caloric Needs Assessment/Sirness Assessment Diabetes and Cancer Information/Health Literature Free Nutritional Snacks/Prize Drawing/And More!
DENT HEALTH SERV
864-9500
"Unmarried since 1993
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Mass.
832-8228
Classified Directory
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
100s Announcements
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional
200s
200s Employment
Services
235 Typing Services
Personal
120 Announcements
120 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Classified Policy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs are available and that new newspapers are available on an equal opportunity basis.
X
1
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Americans with Disabilities Act, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
100s Announcements
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, sex, age, 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
300s
Merchandise
105 Personals
THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass.
STERLING JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
LEATHER
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses
SUNGLASSES
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Bausch & Lomb.Rayban, Killer Loops,
i's, Révo, Serengeti, and Vuarnet
In this threatening world, everyone needs a PAAL.
Clip a lightweight PAAL II on your clothing wherever you go.When its
Qi-reader
Quorum Security Life
pin is pulled, the PAL II emits an ear-picking alarm and a bright flashing light, startling an attacker and attracting attention. The light can also be used as a flashlight. The PAL II is your best defense against attack.
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
The technology is Quorum. The opportunity is yours.
- * Contact your Quantum Independent Distributor * *
KUStudent
Adam Redden
(913) 441-4061
110 Bus. Personals
Be kennaker and snippet!
We have pain and stress with massage therapy!
Study Musculoskeletal Health
792 1/2 Massachusetts Suite 216.
Call Ana Lumaris and Laurie Place at 841-1587.
Love? Success? Career?
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer.
Call Anna Lunaria at 841-1867.
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also
inquiring about going abroad.
Olivall Insurance Service. 411/1-72 S Main Ottawa,
Ks 6007 6006-6955.
Tarot card readings.
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
CAPS will offer a therapy group beginning October 11 for men who want to examine and change aspects of their lives.
Men's Group:
Roles, Relationships,
Realities
For information, call 864-2277.
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
Ruth & Kids Discount Floral. Doven arranged roses in vase $19.95. Accept all major credit cards and checks. Open 9-MF, 9-5 Sat. closed Sun. 953 E.23rd 832-0704
Really Listen
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
Call or drop by Headquarters
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open
120 Announcements
CALCULUS: TAKING CONTROL, workshop. Are things not adding up right? Thurs., Sept. 22, 7-8pm 120 Snow, FREE! Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
CALCULUS:TAKINGCONTROL
Are things not adding up right?
Thurs, Sep. 22, 7:00-9:00 pm
120 Snow
FREE!
Sponsored by
the Student Assistance Center
Call Today!
For
Thanksgiving AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules. On Campus Location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 22, 1994
7B
EARTH MYSTICS and GODDESS OF MANY FACES-WORKS shops on Earth-based spirituality, OCT 8-9. Presenter from ST. Louis. For info: Institute of Transformational Studies 1-862-2906
Lose weight and have energy at the same time. I lost 45 lbs. in 3 months, my energy level was great, my appetite was suppressed. All natural, doctor recommended. For a free sample, send name, address and phone number to Beham Research. 504 S. 15th St. Manhattan, Ks. 65022.
Openings for CNA: 3:10-3:50 shift for CNA's full or part-time. Flexible hours. Eudora Nursing Center.
12TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2. 16, 1989 • S. 5, B. 9, D. 7, DISTRICT
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
VAL/BEAVER CREEK
WA GOTTA
BE THE BETT!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
NORTH OOKEE SUN CREWS RETURN
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire SI
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
24 hour telephone answering service is seeking part-time help. Experience helpful, but will train the right person. Immediate shift for weekend immediate doorward shift. Also some morning. Apply in person.
A couple or two individuals to work two weekends a month at a coed group home. Responsible for supervising daily activities of kids. Good learning environment. License, current physical. high school graduate license, current physical. high school graduate Lawrence, KS, or call Ricker Spano at 924-7463. Trinity is anEqual Opportunity employer.
BabySitters needed for a research grant. *45 hr.* Must have experience with babySitting children and Infants, babysitting references, and be a U student. Apply at 4087 Dolle Deadline Sept. 29rd.
Brandon Woods is currently accepting applications for a full-time housekeeper. The qualified applicant must be outgoing, observant, self-motivated, able to work independently and enjoy working in a beautiful facility. We offer health, life and long-term disability insurance, vacation and holiday pay in retirement plan and a competitive salary at 150. Inversness Dr Lawrence KS F O E
Caterers, Kansas University Catering Department,
45.2 hr. 8a. m-3p. Monday thru Friday, week-
ends as scheduled, must have previous food service
experience, able to stand for long periods, lift up to 50 pounds, valid driver's license. Apply
Kansas and Burge Urges' Personnel Office EOE
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
SHIPPING ASSISTANTS NEEDED
Lawrence-based, technical publishing company has a part-time (15-20 hours per week) position available. Duties include shipping orders; stuffing and mailing state-filed documents; and daily mail delivery to and pickup from the post office. Previous experience working with high volume and working as a team required. Ability to maneuver up to 50 pounds and type 50 wpm preferred. Use of our internal critical support team (ASF) 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 please apply online and fill out an application at 1601 West 23rd Street, Suite 200, Lawrence, KS.
R·D
Juicers Showgirls
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly,
working at Lawrence's top adult night spot.
Now hiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+.
Excellent working atmosphere.
Apply in person,
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122
at 7 p.m.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
Part time positions available
CNA
Apply at store today 1029 Mass.
Day, evening and weekend shifts needed. Work with elderly clients in their homes. Reliable transportation required. Call Scott at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association, 845-3738.
CNA CLASSES
Need some extra pocket money? Certified Nurse Aide classes will start Sept. 26. Call Eudora Nursing Center, 521-278 for additional information.
Ask for Sylvia, Mond-Fri.
COLLEGE STUDENTS 10:35-11:15 STARTING
Local branch of nat'l co. Filling immediate entry
level opening. Fait time schedules. 3 days, eyes.
weekends opt. All majors accepted. For info:
841-8695.
Educasiatiste HDFL/Early Education student needed to provide child care in church nursery for 2 hrs. Thurs. evenings and occasionally 4 hrs. Sunday mornings. Call 842-8820.
Eudora U.S.D No. 491 is accepting applications for the following Assistant Coach/Sponsor positions: 7,8 and 9-12 Track, 7,8 and 9-12 Girls Basketball, Wrestling, and FBA. Application information may be obtained by contacting the Central Office. Positions will be filled as soon as possible. EOF
Positions will be fitted as soon as possible. EOE
female vocalist wanted for variety dance band.
Female voice, good performer. Avail immediately. This is a working band, serious inquiries only 749-3649.
Lawrence to KC
Call (913) 381-7909 or (800) 886-9328.
Growing Overland Park, KC-based custom sportwear company seeks out fraternity-sorority member for part time office help. Must have vehicle and be willing to commute from
McDonald's
LOOK WHAT'S COMING!
McDonalds is looking for individuals who would be interested in working at one of our two new restaurants, Downtown and 6th and Wakarausa
Positions Available
Positions Available
• Management
• Crew
• Hostess
• Special cleaning teams
• Late Night closing team
(8p.m.-4a.m.)
• Administrative Assistant
Open interviews Mondays and Fridays at McDonalds on 6th St. from 2-5 p.m.
Wednesdays at McDonalds on 23rd St. from 2-5 p.m.
WE'RE GROWING AND WOULD LIKE YOU TO BE PART OF OUR TEAM.
HOLIDAY INN
The Holiday is recruiting service professionals to join our team! Current openings include:
- p.m. servers
- cocktail servers
- p.m. cashiers
- banquet help
- weekend housekeepers
We offer excellent compensation and benefits,
which include uniforms, meals, tuition reimbursement,
hotel room discounts and much more! Please apply at 200 Macdonald Dr. drce
KARAOKE JD wanted. Responsible, great personality, attractive, M or F. 749-3649.
Laborers wanted for service 28$/hr. Part
Apply in person only 84$ Maple at a
mon. Mam - Sat.
Landscape Company, in Southern Johnson County,
seeking Ft/Pt Employees. Call 341-7681.
Looking for a change while getting an education?
We need an emergency home and be a mother's helper.
Free room and board, plus salary. Own living
address. Details please call 821-280 between 3 and 3 Mon.
**www.usatl.edu/***
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
*T**H**A**S**T**E**R**K**E**S**R**O**N
Excellent income for part-time work!
Mess Doll Daily
is reopening and is looking for food service employees. Duties include both food prep and line cook and part of the new "Dell" cell, apply at Shumun Food Center 1140 Madison Ave., Mid-Fri to 719 Mass. (upstairs, above smokehouse).
Mazzio a Pizza is now hiring waitresses for work during the noon hour. Flexible hours. Must be outgoing, have a positive attitude, and have the ability too smile. Apply in person at 2630 ave.
Now hiring babyailers / childcare providers. Day, eve, and nighttime available. For more info call 843-729-5600 or email us at 843-729-5601.
Office assistant, leasing agent, part-time. Good pay, flexible hours. 841-7827
Needed Immediately; Part time teacher for home day care 10:15/wk. Week, Exp.expl. #481-7581.
Office manager needed at Jon's Notes of RU. Job begins immediately and continues through the school year. Approx 15-20 flexible hours per week and $500/month. Office is closed for all school vacations. Business background NOT required. For more details and contact person/phone see page 43. Attendance at the University Placement Center in the Burge Union. Applications accepted for limited time.
bunce Hick, Jr. N. 90043, Lawrence, KS 80047
*Part-time Help Retail Sales T-Shirt Designer.
Must have previous computer experience prefer-
ence Grelie Draw and Photo Shop. Graphic art expe-
rience required. Must be proficient in sonality and be customer service oriented. Retail sales a plus. Contact Diblet at 812-631-210 or send resume to Express Designs, 8100 E. 22nd N. Bldg 800, suite 10, Wichita, KS 67226
Office position in medical setting. Part-time
approx 15 hrs wk. Morning and/or afternoon
shifts available. General clerical duties, filing,
sorting, typing, billing, etc. Send resume to:
021-624-7538.
WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING TRAVEL COMPANY SEEKING INDIVIDUALS TO PROMOTE SPRING BREAK TO JAMACIA, CANCUN, FLORIDA, & PADRE, FANTASTIC FREE TRAVEL & GREAT COMMISSIONS! SUN SPLASH TOURS 1-800-428-770.
Wanted babyssitter for two children. Ages 3-5,
evenings 3:30:10 am. Light cooking necessary in
home, must be reliable, ask for Michelle and Bob
414-8343. Call anytime before 3:30:30.
Party Animals! University Photography is looking for individuals w/ a professional attitude and appearance who wants to go to parties and get PAID. Call 643-5279 between 10am-3pm.
PAID. Call 643-528 between 10am-5pm.
Waited Nearest Call 746-569 825-ogpa.
Wanted: Caring people who like kids 3-9yr old
minimum of 2 hours of daily, 1 day per week, between
12.30 - Monday - Friday. Daycare volunteers need
12.30 - 12.30 - 5:30. For more information call 622-8215
offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749.
225 Professional Services
Having Trouble Locating that hard to find CD? call or come by Junior's Farm Records 924'i Mass St. • 842-3344 We specialize in hard-to-find CD's
DUL/TRAFFICITCICKETS
OVERLAND and PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0064.
ENGLISH TUITOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature, ESL classes. Highly
experienced and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3313.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFIC-DU'I's
Fake ID'D & alcohol offences
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DOUGLAS G. STROLE
Grolle G, Strole
Sally G, Kesley
16 East 13th
842-1133
International Video Conversions PAL/SEAU/NTSC 2$ for up to 2 hours. Returns return postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer PO box 110 Kaushk Osawa K657 1:800-800-6955.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant
719 Massachusetts, 749-5333
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Promo photography, Headshots, modeling, band photos. BAW and color. Primal Screen 814-6030.
Prompt abortion and contraception services in Lawrence: 814-5716 Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
LSAT Test-Prep For The Dec.3rd Exam
Class Starts Oct. 2nd
1-800-527-TEST
R
701 T
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
Richard A. Frydmar
Attorney At Law
843-4023
701 Tennessee
Free Consultation
Tutoring Available for Russian and Ukrainian.
Reasonable rates. Contact Lacacy at
843-792-8630
235 Typing Services
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages; letter writer types out the contents of a document.
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
For you, check the test.
For anything you need call, MARK!
MARK'T THE GRADE
is the one to call
educates.
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, The
Laboratory of Business Studies, eti-
Laser printing. 855-0063
X
A Word Perfect Waste Processing Service.
Laser Printing Center, Campus Call
DAnne 842-6055
82 Toyota Tercel, AC, AM/FM Cass, 104,000 miles,
5 spd. 2 Dr. Runs Great, good body, Burns oil,
$750/obo, 749-3707.
305 For Sale
4221
300s
Merchandise
*size: Sony CCD-TR8 8 mm camcorder* $650
*Call George at* 749-4332
Honda Scooter in good condition $375 or best offer.
Call 814-1371
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N. 2nd • 841-8903
19th & Haskell • 841-7504
"QUALITY GOODS FOR HOME BREWING"
LAWRENCE BREWER'S SUPPLY
305 E.7TH LAWRENCE, KANSAS 86044 ph.(913)-74-YELAST
dust sell 2 tickets for Bahamas航 and 4 night stay $1,150 or best offer. For details call (323) 876-9999.
Large health Igluana 4 feet long. 865-2471
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only $500. Call Chris at 800-289-5685.
Mastress set, queen never, new used, firm, excellent quality. Cost $389, sacrifice $195, 913/764-1061.
Moving! Must sell new steeper climber exerciser $175 call 842-6512, ask for Dana.
must sell 2 tickets for Dana
--become for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
EARN CASH
ALL YOUR
MONEY GONE?
- Equipment kits starting at $32.00
- 5 gallon batches for .30c a beer
By donating your blood plasma
$15
Today
$30
This Week
Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center
NABI
The Quality Source
816 W.24th
Behind Laird Noller Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F 9-6:30
Sat.10-4
Schwinnis-Black Phantom. Corvette 3 spd, American Woman(s). (Korean War Production). All very good. Corvette 3 spd, 99-9586, 913-3447-5724 We want your used mountain bike. Play Again. Sports 1025 Mass. B41-PLAY
340 Auto Sales
1922 Nissan 2005XII is speed, with sunroof, power windows, and wiwers. 1995/08OBC Call Mike at 887-342-3800.
1985 SAAB Turbor 4 drive 5 spd sun roof pwf etc.
Black/maroon. Repair records. Rebuild clutch
heater valve CV distributor and ignition module.
New muffler. 2 vetres. $2000 OBO. B41-1758
360 Miscellaneous
'81 Honda Express II moped, new carburetor, fuel system. two-speed automatic. Cadillac of Mopers. One owner. 841-508 leave message.
One year-old Iguana for sale. Best offer. 865-5738
370 Want to Buy
Want to buy a used moped or scooter call Sheri at 865-3991.
A
Want to buy Basketball tickets, or sports combo Call Chris 865-9011.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept older homes 841-STAR '7827
120 Tennessee. 2 bkmr, unfurished, utilities paid,
$320. Available Oct 1st. No pet. B322-738
Looking for Love
Lonely, attractive.
3 or 4 bedroom apartments seeking residents to share a long or short term relationship.
Call any time at 843-6446.
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
- On KUBus Route
FURNISHED BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great floor plan, on kBU bus route, NO
RATING
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- Sand Volleyball Court
PETS. Available Now. Call 749-4226.
Quaint, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500. Very remodeled, very clean, W/D, all utilities pd. including cable. $265 mnd. 842-1069 or 832-8298.
- Ample Private Parking
3 bdmr 2 bath, fully furn. Orchard Corner客 r.
4 ame, Mantle on mon bus route. Call Ame, Mantle at 181-8655.
For Rent: Small two bedroom house suitable for one or two people $350 plus utilityuite. No min $69-279
- Water and Trash Paid
Two Bedroom Apartment Now Available at
Salt Lake City.
Lease through July, 879 depay. Call 850-2500
for details.
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED
- On KU Bus Route
* Close to Campus
* Swimming Pool
* Stop By Today!
Signal 749-4226 M-F 9-5
Opportunity 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4
Heatherwood Valley
Apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Available for fall.
- Call 843-4754
- Directly on bus route
- By phone: 864-4358
"Don'tgetleftoutinthecold."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
430 Roommate Wanted
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS 66045
$210/month for 24 hours!
2 Guys need Training. Mar F 3:1pm, 3:2A purr-
nished clean desk. Mar F 5:20am, $200 + util.
W/Call 841-3463 anytime!!!
House mate needed. Close to campus. Lots of
work!
1 or 2 bedrooms in newer 4 bdrm duplex in
W. Lawrence avail now,旷W/D, 2 car garage.
Large rooms, Sept. paid, If 1 person. $280/io,
2 people. $70/mo, David. $468/ixz
House mate needed. Close to campus. Lots of room. Reasonable rent and $'s utilities. Available in the same building.
Ads shown in may be titled to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: 1199 Staff Flair
Stop by the Kanas 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 it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of aple lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
When canceling a 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.
Number of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Rates per line per day
Classifications
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
Cost per time 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
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
140 lot & found 300 for sale
265 helped wane 440 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
135 nursery workers
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Date ad begins: Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification:
Phone:
Address:
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visit
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Account number:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 by Warner Bros. Inc. All rights reserved. Photo supplied
At the Crabbiness Research Institute
8B
Thursday, September 22, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AT LAWRENCE PROMPTCARE, YOU'RE NOT ONE IN A MILLION...
F
At Lawrence PromptCare, we believe you should be treated like a person and not a number.
When you're hurting or ill, waiting in discomfort for long periods of time to see a doctor is irritating. Not only that, but you may be paying the bill for months. Why not
This is an image of a blank space. No text or images are present.
877
select a quicker, more convenient alternative—Lawrence
PromptCare. At Lawrence PromptCare, we see you quickly and many visits are
40 Hwy 6th Street Mississippi
15th Street KU campus
Savard Clinton Parkway
23rd Stree
are trained in general care, acute care industrial medicine. ...the works.Open seven days a week until 11 p.m., no appointment is necessary. You'll be greeted immediately by a nurse and treated fast. Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, lab and radiology services flexible hours and plenty of convenient accessible parking
really inexpensive. We're the ideal alternative to long waits in the emergency room and for those times when you can't see your regular doctor. Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center, equipped to handle just about any emergency that comes up, from a scrape to a break—and full service means from head to toe. Our experienced and board certified emergency medical physicians
make Lawrence PromptCare an agreeable health- care
alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician.
M.T. OREAD
MEDICAL ARTS
CENTRE
865-3997 KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY
√
CAMPUS
CAMPUS
Cigarettes are a pain in the butt for KU custodians. Page 8A
CHILLY
A new recital hall to be built on West Campus will hold a 34-foot tall pipe organ. Page 3A High 61° Low 55° Weather: Page 2A
Weather: Page 2A.
PUBLIC IN
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.104.NO.24
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Fewer students attending KU in Fall 1994
Lawrence campus records biggest drop in enrollment
By David Wilson
Kansan staff writer
Enrollment figures released yesterday for the 20th day of classes at the University of Kansas showed a drop of 1,089 students at KU's Lawrence campus from Fall 1993.
Administrators said a decline in the number of high school students in Kansas was the reason for the drop.
"If you look into the figures, you'll see that the primary drop was in new freshman," said David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs.
There are 480 fewer freshman at KU.
Another factor, Ambler said, was the sharp increase in nonresident tuition. This semester, nonresidents paid 13 percent more tuition than in 1993. Across all grade levels, there are 377 fewer nonresident students this year.
Enrollment at the Regents Center in Overland Park and the Capitol Complex in Topeka offset the decline at the Lawrence campus. They have 298 more students, an
increase of about 20 percent.
Bruce Lindvall, assistant dean at the Regents Center, said the jump in enrollment was expected because the center had added graduate courses in engineering, architecture and business this fall. The center offers 10 master's degrees and one doctorate degree.
"Also, people living and working in Topeka and Kansas City desire advanced degrees," he said.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences lost 899 students from Fall 1993, the biggest enrollment drop out of all of KU's schools. The School of Education lost 126 students, and the School of Journalism lost 80 students.
Enrollment at the School of Engineering increased by 182 students. The School of Fine Arts has 100 more students.
Enrollment at the University of Kansas Medical Center was nearly the same, with a drop of less than 1 percent.
One benefit of the enrollment drop, Ambler said, was breathing space for class sizes. Administrators do not have to worry as much this year about crowded classes and scheduling problems, he said.
David Shulenberger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the
enrollment drop was expected.
"I wasn't terribly surprised," he said. "We have taken in smaller freshman classes the past two years."
But Shulenberger said that in the next few years that trend would reverse.
Projections by the Office of Academic Affairs and the Office of Institutional Research and Planning show that enrollment at KU will rise to more than 28,000 by the year 2002.
"I would expect the same number of freshman next year," he said. "After that, we're expecting dramatic growth."
20th day numbers
Enrollment at the KU's Lawrence campus dropped by almost 4 percent from this time last year, while enrollment at the Regents Center in Overland Park and the Capitol Complex in Topeka rose by more than 20 percent.
Enrollment figures for the past two years;
1993 1994
KU Lawrence 24,886 23,797
KU Med 2,735 2,710
Off-campus 1,241 1,539
Total 28,862 28,046
Source: University Relations KANBAN
Enrollment changes on the way
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Beginning in April, enrollment will be coming to a campus computer near you.
Richard Morrell, university registrar, said distributed enrollment, which will allow students to enroll by computer at several campus locations, should be a reality for students enrolling in summer and fall classes in 1995.
"Initially, we projected that distributed enrollment would be in place when students enrolled in October for Spring 1995 classes," Morrell said. "We won't be ready in October, but I'm very confident that we'll be ready when students enroll in April.
Morrell said the new system would
"Students should be able to enroll at the enrollment center, in the Kansas Union, at the Daisy Hill computer center and in other campus buildings. They could also use their own personal computers with modems."
See ENROLL, Page 6A.
Distributed enrollment
Beginning in April, KU students should be able to enroll from computers across campus. Where will students enroll?
Kansan Union
Ransen Union
Daisy Hill computer lab
smart教室
enrollment center
computer labs in selected campus buildings to be decided upon later
B
at home, using personal computers with modems
Regents Center
Source:
KANSAN staff
research
ALVIN
COURTESY
April Wakefield-Pages, Wichita graduate student, stands with Alvin, a submersible machine she rode in as she studied seasonal changes on the ocean floor off the coast of California.
KU grad student goes leagues under the sea
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Imagine being 4,100 meters below sea level in a 7-foot sphere with two other people for nine hours.
April Wakefield-Pagels, Wichita graduate student, knows the feeling.
From August 15 to 31, Wakefield-Pagels went out 200 kilometers off the coast of central California to study seasonal changes on the ocean floor.
Although Wakefield-Pagels spent most of the time above sea level studying other scientists' findings, she did get one opportunity to see the ocean floor up close.
On the last scheduled day to dive, a position opened up and Wakefield-Pagels, along with another scientist and a pilot, launched Alvin into the Pacific Ocean.
Alvin, a titanium-alloy submersible, was built 30 years ago and is one of six submersibles in the world that can exceed the 4,000 meters below sea level.
"I was happy, surprised and nervous to be able to dive," Wakefield-paddled said. "It was an opportunity that I could not pass up."
"When I found out I was going to go down, I was very frightened," she said. "If the equipment malfunctions or something goes wrong, you're dead."
Wakefield-Pagels said she was explicitly told she would not be able to go below sea level to study before she left on the trip.
Fautin said Smith had been studying the deep sea off of the California coast for five years. Last year, he received a grant to study with the ship Atlantis II and Alvin.
"I asked Ken if April could go because I knew she'd get a lot out of
it." Fautin said.
Smith agreed to let Wakefield-Pagels come aboard for the August expedition.
Wakefield-Pagels said the trip was beneficial to her graduate study of sea anemones at the University.
"I've never been able to see the specimen Istudy while they are collected," Wakefield-Pagels said. "When I receive them, they are in iars with formaldehve."
Fautin said the purpose of Smith's research was to see if there were any kind of season changes in deep sea levels.
"On the surface, seasons are recognized by light and temperature changes," she said "In the past, it was always assumed that there was no way that seasons could change because of the constant cold temperatures and absolute darkness."
The scientist discovered that changes do occur, and Smith will have two more dives to complete his study.
Wakefield-Pagels said that the day trip under the ocean seemed very short compared to the time she spent researching on the ship.
"I started to get nervous when I couldn't see the sunlight anymore," she said. "But when we got the bottom of the ocean and we were able to turn on the lights to examine the floor. I was fine."
"We spent many hours on the ship testing the samples that were collected from Alvin," she said. "When I was actually collecting the samples, the time seemed too short."
When Alvin was launched at 8 a.m.
Aug. 29, Wakefield-Pagels was
weary going down.
While studying the ocean floor, Wakefield-Pagels and the others conducted photo surveying and collected samples.
Wakefield-Pagels said the experience had benefited her study, though she was a little claustrophobic.
"Before you got on Alvin, there was a sign that read 'PB4UGO'" she said. "It would be pretty embarrassing to have to go to the bathroom in such a small area."
INSIDE
Not rolling over
Sophomore running back June Henley and the Jayhawks hope to roll over Alabama- Birmingham in tomorrow's game at Memorial Stadium.
20
HEWLEY
20
Page 18.
Trafficway intended to ease 23rd Street congestion
County officials say route is needed despite concerns
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Early on a weekday morning, the street is filled with traffic snarls, cars idling at traffic lights and semi-tractor trailer trucks thundering down the road.
This isn't New York City or Chicago, or even Kansas City or Topeka. This is Lawrence, where traffic along 23rd Street is reaching the breaking point.
This traffic is the reason Douglas County needs the South Lawrence Trafficway, county and state officials say. More than 10 years in the planning, the trafficway will provide a major thoroughfare for long-distance traffic, which is clogging the city's southern roads, supporters say.
Environmentalists have said the trafficway would destroy the wetlands area south of Haskell Indian Nations University, where the trafficway's eastern half might eventually be built. Haskell students say the trafficway would destroy the land's spirituality. But county officials say the trafficway is the best solution to a traffic problem that's getting out of hand.
The additional traffic comes from Lawrence's growth in population over the past several decades, said John Pasley, project coordinator for Douglas County. The result has been traffic problems on 23rd Street. It's built to handle about 20,000 cars a day but will exceed that sometime in
See TRAFFIC, Page 6A.
CARLTON BAY
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
A time-delayed picture of 23rd Street shows early morning traffic. The proposed South Lawrence Trafficway is expected to alleviate some of the traffic problems that 23rd Street has experienced.
2A
Friday, September 23, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Complete unfinished business quickly or a golden opportunity could elude your grasp. Better times lie just ahead. Let go of certain social inhibitions and become more spontaneous in your personal relationships. Family ties grow stronger. You feel a new contentment. A former romantic or business partner may try to inconvenience you early in 1985. Follow your intuition in affairs of the heart or pocketbook.
By Jean Dixon
T
CLEARENTS BORN ON THIS DATE, pianist Ray Charles, writer Mary Kay Place, sculptor Louise Nevelson, rock star Bruce Srinstein.
♉
ARIES (MHS 21-April 19): Teamwork pays big dividends now. Take care of paperwork. Your instincts are correct where a newcomer is concerned. It is up to you to make the first move in romance.
II
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TAURIS (April 20-May 20). Your mate or business partner goes along with your suggestions. Show appreciation. Come to grips with routine office chores by delegating tasks to reliable associates.
69
π
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Domestic ties can frag if you are overly bossy. You have your own way of doing things and should extend the same privilege to mate. Spend more time with children and pets. Create happy memories.
Q
CANCER (June 21- July 22). You know your own desires but may be mystified about what really matters to your loved ones. This should give you plenty to think about Ursge family members to confide their dreams and hopes.
↳
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You will have your work cut out for you today. New developments on the job scene could have you considering a career change or a return to school. Consult with loved ones before doing anything drastic.
LEO (July 23 Aug. 22) Say neither "yes" nor "no" to a proposed financial transaction. Need more data to make certain you will be getting your money's worth. Showcase your considerable talents as a writer, teacher or poet.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Not a good day for a showdown or public confrontation. Keep your cool if someone acts disobedient or inconsiderate. The afternoon hours look好 for conferences or interviews. Be ready to answer probing questions.
TP
VS
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Arguments could arise at your base of operations. A diplomatic approach will convince hotheads to calm down. Playing the role of peacemaker is more rewarding than you imagined.
VIRGOL (Aug 12-39, 22) The workload may be too heavy for you to handle today. Do not hesitate to ask your colleagues for assistance. When profits rise, everyone benefits! Make overdue changes on the home front this weekend.
Water
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Moderation is the key to good health.
Replacing bad habits with good ones boosts your energy. Things should be looking up for those who have accepted wise counsel. Get your papers in better order.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Putting up additional cash for risky ventures would be foolish. Revise your outlook. You need to le low until you can put your finger on what is impeding progress. Beware of gimmicks, untried methods.
X
PICSCE (Feb. 19-March 20). If others seem inclined to argue, try to find a reason to be elsewhere. With a little ingenuity, you will work things out. The presence of a dear friend could make this evening delightful.
TODAY'S CHILDREN: Graciously and charm are hallmarks of these Libras. They collect friends and admirers wherever they go. They are秘密 about their finances – reluctant to arouse either sympathy or envy. An urge to be extravagant wars with a desire to save for emergencies. These Libras are particularly attracted to exotic, mysterious locales.
Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stuart-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 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.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
ON CAMPUS
International Council will meet at 5 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nesli Isogaren at 864-1973.
Mystery Science Theater 3000 Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. For more information, call Shawn at 842-7998.
KU Hellenic will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Myria Astanioti at 864-2296.
KU Health and Recreation Department will sponsor a traditional Japanese Karate and Kabudo Seminar from 7 to 10 tonight and from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. tomorrow at 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call James Bramble at 842-1346.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor vespers and a concert by Erin Walsh, cellist, at 7:15 tonight at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
Art and Design Department will sponsor a Kansas State University Graduate Art Exhibition from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday at the Art and Design Gallery. For more information, call Margie Kuhn at 864-4241.
Ballroom Dance Club will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Sonia Ratzlaff at 864-1562.
Lutheran Campus Ministry
will sponsor supper and worship at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Pastor Brian Johnson at 843-4948.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor supper and Catholic faculty lecture at 6 p.m. Sunday at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor "Greek Speak," at 7 p.m. Sunday at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call Wendy at 843-0357.
K-Unity will sponsor Sunday silent meditation and readings at 7 p.m. Sunday at Danforth Chapel.
Water Polo Club will meet at 7.p.m. Sunday at Robinson Natorium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873.
Lawrence Symphony Orchestra will sponsor sight reading open rehearsals at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana St.
Amanzaa will meet at 8 p.m.
Sunday at 204 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
For more information, call Carlos Tejada at 864-7060.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate daily Mass at 12:30 p.m. Monday at Danforth Chapel.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor Catholic Law Students at 12:30 p.m. Monday at Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357.
ON THE RECORD
A Lawrence resident lost 32 Kansas City Chiefs tickets valued together at $896 sometime between Aug. 15 and Sept. 10. Lawrence police reported. Police said that the man moved from the Kansas City area to Lawrence in August and that the tickets might have been stolen or misplaced during the move.
A notebook computer and other equipment valued together at $1,502 were stolen Sept. 16 from a KU law student's apartment in Regency Place Apartments, Lawrence police reported.
A 20-year-old KU student'sleg was broken when he was pushed into a swimming pool with only one foot of water at the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, 1540 Louisiana St., Lawrence police reported. Police said an acquaintance of the student pushed him into the pool as a joke during a party. The KU student reported the incident as battery on Wednesday, police said.
Graffiti was spray-painted on a retaining wall behind Adams Alumni Center sometime between Saturday and Tuesday, KU police reported.
Weather
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta Chicago Des Moines Kansas City Lawrence Los Angeles New York Omaha Seattle St. Louis Topeka Tulsa Wichita
HIGH
SATURDAY
TODAY
Cloudy skies and cool with a 30 percent chance of showers.
78° • 65°
66° • 55°
63° • 53°
58° • 46°
56° • 40°
74° • 63°
72° • 64°
61° • 49°
75° • 52°
66° • 55°
57° • 45°
64° • 46°
57° • 46°
Party cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers.
5640
6346
SUNDAY
Partly cloudy and warmer.
7148
$S u o r c e : P a u l S h a i l l b e r k, K U W a t e r W a t e r S ervice : 864-330-300$
$S u o r c e : P a u l S h a i l l b e r k, K U W a t e r W a t e r Service : 864-330-300$
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
14.47
3,837.13
NYSE
0.19
254.52
Shares Traded: 302,870,200
Nasdaq
1,007
↑
Advances
⬅
0.27
760.44
Declines
-
Unchanged
1,155
ASE
0.14
710
454. 91
Since 1907 WATKINS
Health
Fair '94
LAST DAY!
9 a.m.-3 p.m.
West Entrance
Cholesterol Check/Percent Body Fat
Nutritional Snacks/Prize Drawing/More!
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500
Fantastic Fall Special!
South Pointe AFFAIRLITE
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
- Swimming Pool
* On KU Bus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid
Outstanding New Staff!!!
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
"NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY
TWO-FERS PRIMETIME V4 '10'10'
2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS
2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING
2-COKES 4-COKES
842-1212
$9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50
CARRY-OUT
1-PIZZA
1-TOPPING
1-COKE
$2.50
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
KAYMAN
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence
DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
Who says you have to stop to smell the roses?
The PowerBook 540c 4/320
Just because you have an extremely busy schedule doesn't mean you shouldn't enjoy your surroundings. The Macintosh PowerBook 540c 4/320 has all the color, power and portability to allow you to finish those pesky papers and projects anywhere you want. So kick-back on your favorite spot on campus and let the PowerBook 540c 4/320 do all the work. And now you can purchase this portable wonder for only $417000
Who says you have to stop to smell the roses?
The PowerBook 540c 4/320
Just because you have an extremely busy schedule doesn't mean you shouldn't enjoy your surroundings. The Macintosh PowerBook 540c 4/320 has all the color, power and portability to allow you to finish those pesky papers and projects anywhere you want. So kick-back on your favorite spot on campus and let the PowerBook 540c 4/320 do all the work. And now you can purchase this portable wonder for only $4170.00
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 23, 1994
3A
Peers aim for success at Social Welfare
Group gives welfare students support
Julianne Peter / KANSAN
By Tanya Rose Special to the Kansan
Steve Winn remembers what it was like as a new graduate student in the School of Social Welfare.
"Sometimes it was my only glimmer of hope," he said. "I had a guardian angel or a big brother to call on at crunch time."
He felt isolated because he was the only African American and the only male in his classes. But he always had a friend, or "mentor" to call on.
Faculty and students from the School of Social Welfare meet to discuss the "Peers for Success" program
Winn, a second-year graduate student from Topeka, is now offering the guidance instead of receiving it.
He is one of the six "peers" participating in a program within the School of Social Welfare called "Peers for Success." The program was created last fall to benefit minority graduate students entering the master of social work program. Six "peer associates," or second-year graduate students, are hired by the school to act as a mentor and friend to new minority students.
The mentors are available day and night, to answer questions and give advice to new students about classes and potential fears. Three associates work on the Lawrence campus, and three are assigned to the graduate program at the Regent's Center in Overland Park. Each peer associate is in charge of six to eight new students.
Winn said he believed he could be a strong influence and make an impact on the lives of new students. He said so far he had helped the students he is helping go through the enrollment process and helped them fill out scholarship applications.
Lemuel E. Kimes, assistant to the dean and coordinator of the program, said that a large
number of the students entering the masters' program had been away from school for five to 20 years so having a mentor can help tremendously.
He emphasized that while this is a program to help and guide, it does not mean that all new students are expected to have difficulty.
"We don't expect them to have problems." Kimes said. "We just want to make sure there's someone in place they can turn to to help them get off on the right foot."
In order to be chosen as one of the six peer associates, students must demonstrate academic excellence, a willingness to serve others and be approachable, Kimes said. Each is then given a $2,500-a-year scholarship for their services. This is funded by donations to the school.
Ann Weick, dean of social welfare, said that this year an anonymous donor provided $20,000 for this program.
Dorri Scott Eades, second-year Kansas City, Kan., graduate student and peer associate, said that so far she had dealt with questions from students regarding classes, what to expect from certain professors and how their lives would change because of the demands on time.
She said she hoped to be a good resource for students and would like to be instrumental in making their two or three years at KU successful.
Scott Eades said she spent eight to nine hours the first week of the semester getting to know the students. She also obtained used books from old classmates and gave them to new students to use — free of charge.
"Instead of them having to buy a $51 book new from the bookstore, I just called up my classmates and got their used ones for free," she said. "Helping others is part of being a social worker."
Social Welfare's graduate minority enrollment increases
By Tanya Rose
Special to the Kansan
she said.
Minority enrollment in the School of Social Welfare's graduate program is higher this fall than it has been in more than two decades.
Edith Black, assistant dean of social welfare, said the faculty and staff were very pleased with the increase.
Seventeen percent, or approximately 80 of the 450 students in the Master of Social Work program, are minorities, which is a gain of about 30 new minority students.
"This growth is very important, especially within this school, because social workers deal with people of very diverse ethnicity."
Black said faculty and students in the school have done many things in the recent years to generate ethnic diversity.
She said programs in the school such as "Peers for Success," a mentor program and the annual career fair were able to give students the social support they need to make a smooth transition and replace their apprehension with confidence.
"We are every pleased," she said. "We feel that all of our efforts have finally come together."
Ann Weick, dean of social welfare, said this year the school had obtained about $75,000 for minority scholarships. This figure includes everything from fund raisers and
federal assistance to donations from private organizations.
Ortencia Mendez, a second-year graduate student from Lawrence and a recipient of one of these minority scholarships, said that she believed that fundraisers such as an alumni telethon were an essential part of the recruitment of minorities, especially for graduate students.
"A lot of the federal money and funding from the Student Senate go to the undergraduate program, and graduate students get what's left over - if there is any," she said.
Mendez said she also liked the way the school gave social support to those receiving the financial aid.
"Those getting aid have to attend scheduled meetings," she said. "They don't just give you the money and forget about you, and that helps."
Steve Winn, a second-year graduate student from Topeka and a recipient of minority scholarships and a mentor in the peer program, said that between the Peers for Success program and increasing funds, minority enrollment could only keep increasing.
"If these trends continue, the numbers will definitely continue to grow," he said. "Funding is very important because it can get students here, but social support through things like the peer program will keep them here, and that is most important."
KU student rams into car
Kansan staff report
Police said the student was drunk and trying to drive out of the parking lot at about 12:45 a.m. Two acquaintances tried to prevent him from leaving the lot by blocking the entrance with their car.
A 22-year-old KU student was arrested early yesterday morning in the Jayhawker Towers parking lot after biting an acquaintance and ramming his car into another car.
KU police said they arrested the student and charged him with driving under the influence, battery, assault and criminal damage. The student was taken to Douglas County Jail and released yesterday morning on a signature bond, which requires no money.
He then attempted to leave the parking lot by ramming the other car, police said.
Damage was estimated to be $500. No one was hurt in the incident, police said.
The student's blood-alcohol content was. 15, police said.
SUAgets lecture money
Kansanstaffreport
Student Senate voted Wednesday night to give Student Union Activities $8,001 to finance a lecture by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. SUA plans to have Vonnegut speak at the Lied Center in February. He has not yet been contacted by SUA about the lecture.
In other Senate action, a bill concerning financing for Pinch Magazine, an alternative on-campus publication, was tabled. Representatives of the magazine were unclear that a group could only ask for financing once a year for a particular item, said Melissa Leeland, executive secretary for Senate. She said the representatives wanted to ask for money once this semester and once next semester, which is not allowed. Other bills passed by the Senate were:
A bill to fund Latin American Solidarity for $456.
A bill to fund the Student Political Task Force for $604.
A bill to fund The Institute of Public Administration and Policy for $289.
A bill to fund the Costa Rican Student Association for $409.
New recital hall next to Lied will house 34-foot-tall organ
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
In about 18 months, students will have more than 3,000 reasons to visit the new Bales Recital Hall.
The hall, which should be completed by spring of 1996, will showcase a 34-foot tall pipe organ with 3,100 to 3,200 pipes, said James Higdon, professor of organ in the department of music and dance.
Each pipe is for a different key or pedal on the organ, he said. The largest pipe will stand 32-feet tall and will be large enough in diameter for a person to fall into, Higdon said. The smallest pipe will be the size of a pencil.
Higdon said the organ cost about $750,000.
Right now, organ students are using several small rooms and pipe organs in Murphy Hall for practices and recitals, Higdon said.
The new recital hall, which will accommodate about 240 people, originally was designed around the organ because the organ was designed first, Higdon said. The hall will be used for organ classes, student and faculty recitals, small instrumental and choral group performances, master classes and music conferences. A few faculty also will have offices in the hall.
Construction should begin in the
next two or three weeks, said Daryl Beene, senior vice president of property management for the KU Endowment Association. The hall will cost about $2.1 million, excluding the price of the organ.
The hall, which will be constructed by Universal Construction Co., of Kansas City, Mo., will be built next to the Lied Center and will have the same architectural style, Beene said. It will be on the north side of the center, and the two facilities will share part of a lobby.
The University should be able to have an event in the hall and one in the center at the same time, Higdon said.
The hall is named for KU alumni
Dane and Polly Bales, Higdon said. The couple donated $750,000 to build a facility with an organ, in addition to an unnamed amount they contributed to the School of Fine Arts about six years ago.
Higdon said Dane Bales also was the trustee of the Hansen Foundation, a private foundation that supports various activities in Kansas. It donated another $250,000.
Peter Thompson, dean of the School of Fine Arts, is designing stained glass windows for the large windows at the back of the hall.
"Really that is one of the highlights of the hall," Higdon said. "They're going to be magnificent."
Artist drawing of the Bales Recital Hall, which will be located next to the Lied Center.
The Lowest EVERYDAY CD Prices in Lawrence
KIEF'S CDs/TAPES
AND...
- 25% OFF SAVINGS! Get 25% Off Retail ANYDAY with our BUY 5/GET 25 Program.
- LOWEST PRICES ON NEW RELEASES! Every TUESDAY we'll have the week's new releases at Lawrence's Lowest Sale Price. Come at 11 p.m.,
Mon., Sept. 26 For the Listening Party... Stick Around Til Midnight For The LOWEST LAWRENCE PRICE on R.E.M's "Monster".
DON'T FORGET...
- KIEF'S BUYS, SELLS, AND TRADES USED CDs!!
North & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 6604
AUDIORINTRO
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913*843*1811 913*842*1438 913*842*1544
---
4A
Friday, September 23,1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
Foreign policy shouldn't be tool for popularity
CARSON ELROD
Haiti mission is Clinton's latest attempt to put in an early bid for re-election.
Hunter S. Thompson wrote that Bill Clinton "would have played the harp on '60 Minutes' if he thought that it would get him elected." It is for this reason that the recent 11th-hour peace settlements in Haiti represent nothing more than a bid to boost the popularity of a president bent on re-election.
Mr. Clinton probably woke up one morning, read the newspaper and then came to realize that he was about as popular as rurs of "Starman-The Series."
He then called for his advisor, George Snufalupogus, who immediately stormed into the Oval Office with a milk shake and a bucket of chicken for the president.
"Hey there George, I've been thinking..."
"Sir, we really wish that you would refrain from doing that."
"Quiet son, the big cheese is talking."
"Yes sir."
"How should I go about getting re-elected?"
"Oh, yeah."
"How about instituting as many socialist government bureaucracies as you can and then taxing the hell out of people until everyone is a government employee and a vote against us is a vote against their employer?"
After considering his situation, President Clinton came to the conclusion that he needed a sure-fire way to nudge those ratings up at least above
the negative level. (It is true. For a while there we actually had people who did not exist yet that hated Bill Clinton.)
The answer that he came up with was a military jaint to a small, oppressed country. Sure, a quick little military action to reestablish America as the protector of incumbency (Oops, I mean "democracy") would have the American people rallying behind their new tough-guy president.
So of all the places in the world, he picked Haiti. Yeah, Haiti is right up there with Genghis Kahn and the three evil guys in black from Superman II in threats to the world and its people.
Granted, Haiti has a pretty abusive
government. However, in Washington these decisions don't seem to be made on a very moral level. They are made on the basis of how much it will get people saying "Oh, praise be to Bill, the librator of democracy."
If you have any doubts about the president's intentions, look to his speech that interrupted your Thursday night television. Take any one of the president's rationale for military action and think of Cuba.
If we want to protect democracy and free people from oppression in our hemisphere, why are we not there? Because Cuba would be a long and drawn out process. Haiti, on the other hand, would not be. Clinton said, "Hey you mean old dictators, get out" to which they responded "Sure,
no problem. We'll be out in a few months." (Snicker snicker) "Great," thought Clinton. The goal is to get in and out really fast and publicize the heck out of how darn helpful we are.
The United States should make its foreign policy decisions with true moral standards and the commitment to back those standards
Foreign policy shouldn't be used simply to boost popularity when it is low at home. My advice to Bill Clinton is to follow through with liberating Haiti and not just threatening to do so. Only in this way is he going to prove that he isn't just another southern man out for a vote.
VIEWPOINT
Carson Elrod is a Topeka junior in history and theater.
Senate should mandate volunteer hours for funds
Student organizations who benefit from Student Senate financing should be mandated by Senate through a bill and not a resolution to perform one hour of community service for every $100
they receive from Senate.
The large number of volunteers this would make available would not only help hundreds of
community service is that it create a greater good for those who are in need. These organizations are large and have the ability to contribute to the community in return for the money that all students, by way of the Senate, give
COMMUNITY SERVICE
Student Senate should pass a bill to require student organizations that get Senate funds
to do community service in return for the money they get.
people, but it would also go a long way in helping fulfill Senate's mission of improving not only the University community but the local one as well.
However, there seems to be uneasiness among some student organizations about a requirement of community service in order to receive their funds from Senate. Large organizations, such as the Hispanic American Leadership Organization and Student Union Activities, say that the status quo, which does not require student organizations to do community service, should be retained. They say that by forcing members of groups to do community service, the bill would take the spirit out of what should be an enjoyable experience.
them. If student organizations believe that they are incapable of performing the service or it is an unreasonable burden on them.
Their excuse is poor and should be discarded with little concern. The key to
then perhaps they should find financing alternatives.
Many organizations already perform community service, and this bill would create few inconveniences for the overwhelming number of the them. However, a community service bill would set a minimum number of community service hours that have to be performed in order for a group to receive money.
It is not unreasonable for Senate to set certain qualifiers that student organizations must meet before they receive money. In fact, the job of the Senate is to allocate funds in the best possible way to meet its mission. A community service bill achieves this and, at the same time, provides help to those individuals in our community that need the most help.
LANCE HAMBY AND STEPHEN MARTINO FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
JEN CARR Business manager
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
News ... Sara Bennett
Editorial ... Donella Heame
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
Mellissa Lacey
Features ... Tracel Carl
Planning Editor ... Susan White
Design ... Noah Mueller
Assistant to the editor .. Robble Johnson
Editors
Business Staff
Campus mgr Todd Winters
Regional mgr Lauris Guth
National mgr Mark Mastro
Coop mgr Emily Gibson
Special Sections mgr Jen Pierer
Production mgr Holly Boren
Regan Ovary
Marketing director Alan Stiglc
Creative director John Carton
Called mgr Heather Nishaus
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the University's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University "Female" are required.
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.
HOOD
UDK
1994
SOUTH LAWRENCE
TRAFFICWAY
WETLANDS
A ROAD THAT DOESN'T HAVE A RIGHT-OF-WAY
Matt Hood / KANSAN
LETTER TO
THE EDITOR
Precautions can help sleepwalkers
We would like to commend the University Daily Kansan for your accurate, objective and sensitive coverage of the fatal accident of our son Scott McWhorter on April 24,1994. You did an excellent job of thorough, factual reporting, yet you never sensationalized your treatment of the story. We also thank you for your excellent article on sleepwalking, which helped to promote understanding of this often misunderstood sleep disorder.
As students begin the new school year, we would like to remind them again that, although rare, sleepwalking can be extremely dangerous or even fatal. Students or others who learn that someone they know is a sleepwalker should inform the sleepwalker, the sleepwalker's family and everyone concerned with their daily living about their disorder so that their environment can be protected. A sleepwalker's room should be made as safe as possible. Sleepwalkers should not sleep on an upper floor, on an upper bunk or against a window. We would like to encourage anyone who knows a sleepwalker to be especially aware of the sleepwalker's need for a safe sleeping environment.
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert C. McWhorter
Act like a millionaire; wear your faded jeans with holes
There are many ways to measure the economic prosperity of a society; gross national product, manufacturing, growth, exports and so on.
But an entirely new measure has been developed by Dr. I.M. Kookie, the renowned expert on lots of stuff.
"I was idly flipping through a catalog for a clothing company," he said. "It was called J. Crew, which my wife told me was a fashionable kind of outfit.
"I came to the page where they showed blue jeans, the traditional denn pants. First, there was a spanking new pair of blue jeans, wrinkle-free and neatly pressed. They cost $34.
"Then there was a pair that was faded and old looking and had a hole in the knee, kind of a frayed slash. And these cost $44.
COLUMNIST
"Then I flipped to another page, where they sold flannel and denim shirts. And the most expensive ones were faded and had frayed collars.
"I am not the kind of person who is on the cutting edge of fashion, so I found it surprising that a pair of old, beat-up pants with a hole in the knee would cost more than a pair of fine new ones.
COLUMNIST
"Or that the kind of shirt that an honest working man used to wear would cost so much because it looks frayed and worn out.
MIKE ROYKO
"So I did some research on this, and I discovered that it started with very young people of the upper-middle class, which is not surprising, since they are known to be dimwitted and for taking great pride in their sad mental condition.
"It seems that some of their screeching cultural icons who are on MTV wore clothes with holes that made them look like bums and poor urchins, and this became very popular among young people. It is fortunate for the rest of society that none of the stars of MTV wear diapers with doo-doo or we would have a real sanitation crisis on our hands.
"My research also showed that in most prosperous suburban communities, the wearing of neat, new-looking clothes is considered, to use a French phrase, dee-classy. That means it does not have class.
"The goal is to look like a hard-working person or a homeless person, but without having to actually do any hard work or sleep on a grate.
"So now we have the sons and daughters of doctors, lawyers and business tycoons who look like they have just finished a hard day of putting up steel girders, when the truth is that they have just carefully dressed for an evening at the Hard Rock Cafe.
"I have documented evidence of a genuine old bag lady taking pity on a rumpled wretch she saw on the street and offering to share her meager possessions, only to discover that he was a graduate student in the school of business at Northwestern University. Sly lad that he was, he accepted her offer of help, took a set of her long underwear, and was the fashion hit at his fraternity's next shindig.
"All through the prosperous communities of America, old clothing is in great demand. Many young people rush from resale shop to resale shop,
hoping to find he ideal knee-hole or broken zipper fly.
"But at the same time, in genuine working-class communities, the demand remains for new garments.
"So we have a strange coming together. The young and prosperous of our society want to look poor and hard-working, while the working class wants to look prosperous. This explains why so many people of modest means try to dress like professional golfers.
"And so I have developed my Theory of Reverse Prosperity. It holds that a society is in great shape when its most prosperous young people can afford to spend extra money to look like they are downtraden and pretend that they have calluses on their hands instead of their back sides.
"In many parts of the world, a new shirt or pair of stockings is a luxury item out of reach to most.
"Here well-fed people compete to see who can look the most hungry.
"This is proof-positive that we are a great society. Or maybe feeble-minded."
HUBIE
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist for the Chicago Tribune.
SHAFT
— WHO'S THE COLLEGE STUD THAT'S A SEX MACHINE ON THE CHICKS?
— WHO IS THE MAN THAT WOULD RISK HIS NECK FOR HIS BROTHER MAN?
HUBIE!
— DAMN RIGHT.
HUBIE!
— CAN YA DIG IT?
SHAFT
— WHO'S THE COLLEGE STUD THAT'S A SEX MACHINE ON THE CHICKS?
HUBIE!
— WHO IS THE MAN THAT WOULD RISK HIS NECK FOR HIS BROTHER MAN?
HUBIE!
— WHO'S THE CAT THAT WANT TO OUT WHEN THERE'S DANGER ALL ABOUT?
HUBIE!
— THEY SAY THIS CAT IS A BOAD MUTHA — SHUT YOUR MOUTH!
— I'M TALKIN' BOUT HUBIE! THEN WE CAN DIG IT!
Flick!
— HE'S A COMPLICATED MAN THAT NO ONE UNDERSTANDSSS BUT HIS WOMAN—
WHAT THE HECK...?
DAWN RIGHT.
CAN YA DIG IT?
RIGHT ON.
By Greg Hardin
HE'S A COM-
PLICATED MAN
THAT NO ONE
UNDERSTAND SSS
BUT HIS WOMAN
WHAT THE
HECK...?
SHAPT
YAWN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 23, 1994
5A
Faculty evaluations to be revised
By James Evans Kansan staff writer
Students are able to voice their opinions about their professors in faculty evaluation forms handed out at the end of every semester.
But many students said they felt their evaluations were not given much weight in the evaluation process.
"I don't really feel they do much," said Scott Burns, Overland Park junior. "I feel like student opinions aren't worth much to the faculty."
To change students' impressions of faculty evaluations, student leaders and faculty have been working since the summer to change the way the evaluations are used in analyzing professors' performance.
The faculty has been open to giving students a voice in the overall evaluation process, said Sherman Reeves, student body president.
"They are definitely working with us," Reeves said. "The KU proposal
has become the cutting edge."
All Board of Regents institutions are analyzing the faculty evaluation process to create a system-wide policy.
The main student voice in changing evaluation policies is the Student Advisory Council, which is made up of the student body presidents of the six Regents institutions.
Reeves said one recommendation suggested that student representatives be given the opportunity to look at departmental data from evaluations at the end of each semester.
"The deans of different schools will sit down and discuss how the student evaluation forms are being used." Reeves said. He said the discussions would make separate departments more accountable in using student evaluations in the overall faculty evaluation process.
Reeves said the evaluation process would be improved for students because the use of the evaluation would be stated on all evaluation
forms.
John Davidson, professor of physics, has worked on the recommendations. He said he didn't believe the revised evaluation forms would change students' opinions about the process.
"I know that students often times feel the evaluations are not worth the time or the trouble to fill out correctly," Davidson said.
Davidson said the faculty would take the completed evaluation forms more seriously if students filled them out in a serious manner.
"If students are really honest about what they are going to say on the evaluation ... the faculty will be more likely to move a teacher out of the classroom if necessary," Davidson said.
Davidson suggested that student organizations, such as Student Senate, make students aware that it was important to fill out the forms correctly.
He said students would see action from departments if this occurred.
SUITS
BUY ONE
GET ONE
FREE
REGULAR PRICE $299 TO $599.
EASTON'S
E
LIMITED
"TRADITIONAL CLOTHING WITH A DIFFERENCE"
EASTON'S LTD. 649 Main, 849-5755
Blueprints
1. 9. 9. 4.
the eighth annual student leadership conference
Building U for tomorrow
Sat. October 1 Kansas Union
9:00 am - 3:30 pm Conference
3:30 pm - 6:30 pm Community Service Project Conference fee is $12 prior to Sept. 23rd Late registration fee is $15 until Sept. 27th by 5:00 pm Register at the OAC office at 400 Kansas Union Questions? Call 864-4861
Sponsored by Sprint,
Commerce Bank,
Anderson Consulting,
Kansas Union Bookstores
and Student Senate.
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
SENATE
- Scholarships are available to those who qualify
The End of the week.
come hear.
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES NOW OPEN!!
A dog with a big nose and a small tail.
NOW OPEN!!
Downtown Lawrence
Off 10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
The largest record store in Lawrence 128 private listening stations Espresso Bar Open late
6A
Friday, September 23, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
West Coast Saloon
25C POOL
Game Day Bus
Late-Night Grill
until 1 a.m.
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
strike out.
$5.00/hr. lone rentals on weekends.
Jaybowl
KANSAS UNION
kansas union • level 1 • 864-3545
The Barefoot Iguana
open Wed.--Sun.
6p.m. to 2 a.m.
40 kinds of beer &
full bar!
fri. - $1 bud dry bottles
sat. - $1 bloody mary's
sun. - $1 michelob bottles
--daily $1 drink specials--
NEWEST BAR IN TOWN!!
killcrest hopping center 9th & iowa between munchers & baskin & robbins
--check up on your checking or savings account balance
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
itts
Woolrich
ANVILLE
MERCANTILE Account Information It's for you...
Everything you ever wanted to know about your checking account is just a phone call away... 24 hours a day!
The new Account Information Line at Mercantile Bank of Lawrence is like having a teller inside your telephone. Simply dial us up, day or night, input your access code, and you can:
电话
review recent deposits, direct deposits, and checks cleared
电话
look up your loan balance
count the money in your C.D.
STEVE PERRY
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Chat Games Internet Files Fun
Put the Mercantile line to work for you.
电话
电话
Call (913) 865-0210
Contemporary
AT MEMORIAL HALL
STEVE
PERRY
SPECIAL GUEST:
SASS JORDAN
OCTOBER 24
ON SALE
THIS SATURDAY!
0:30AM
MERCANTILE BANK
MERCANTILE BANK
Member FDIC
Mercantile Bank of Lawrence N. A.
Ninth and Massachusetts
Motor Bank, Ninth & Tennessee
South Bank, 1807 West 23rd
Northwest Bank, 3500 West 6th
Mass Street Bank, 647 Massachusetts
South Plaza Bank,
27th & Iowa
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 428
Lawrence, KS 66044 0428
(913) 865 0200
Equal Opportunity
Lender
toad
the wet
sprocket
October 26
On sale
this
saturday!
9:30am
Tickets available at all TICKETMASTER Ticket Centers
including: All Hy-Vee locations, Blockbuster Music,
Record Town, Memorial Hall (Day Of Show Only),
or Charge By Phone:
TICKETMASTER
(816)931-3330
(816) 931-3330
All shows at 8:00PM unless noted.
Currently, students are required to enroll at the enrollment center at assigned enrollment times. With distributed enrollment, each student will be given a start time. The student then can enroll at any time after his or her start time at a campus computer or a personal computer.
ENROLL: Computer convenience
Continued from Page 1A.
allow students greater flexibility when enrolling.
"Computers should be available to students from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m," Morrell said. "There will be some Saturday and Sunday times, too."
Students also will have the option of dropping and adding classes as soon as they have enrolled.
for the official add/drop period, but in the future they will be able to add and drop classes any time after their start times."
"I'd like for students to be able to change their schedules as often as they change their minds," Morrell said. "Right now, they have to wait
Morrell said a possible drawback to the system was security.
"Conceivably, a student could change another student's schedule," he said. "To combat this, all students will enter personal access codes that they select. As a result, I think the risk will be very small."
The University's system was modeled after the enrollment system at the University of Iowa.
Jerald Dallam, university registrar at Iowa, said security had not presented a problem since the system was started in 1990.
"Unless students give out their personal codes, security is not a problem," Dallam said. "Then it is the student's problem for giving him his or
her security."
Dallam said the greatest advantage of the system had been the elimination of enrollment lines.
"Students no longer have to miss classes to make their enrollment times," he said. "Students can enroll at 22 centers across campus. They can enroll when they are at home, and they even can enroll from abroad with a modem."
Jon Kenton, Lansing,junior, said he was excited at the prospect of distributed enrollment. Last semester, Kenton attended a demonstration that allowed students and faculty to view prototype computer screens of the enrollment process.
"It was still in its preliminary stages, but it looked to be pretty impressive," Kenton said. "It's simple to use. If you have any type of computer literacy, you should be all set."
TRAFFIC: County seeks alternatives
Continued from Page 1A.
the next decade, he said.
"It's going to build up to a point where it doesn't work well," he said. "The light may turn green, but you're not going anywhere."
Much of the traffic comes from residents on the west side of the city who drive to the Kansas City area for work every day, he said. Because the KU campus sits in the middle of Lawrence and is closed to through traffic during the day, Sixth and 23rd streets are the only way to move east and west, he said.
The city's problem becomes the county's problem when drivers tired of 23rd Street's traffic try to find alternate routes, Pasley said. He said they sought side streets for short cuts, adding to the traffic on smaller streets and increasing traffic hazards near area schools.
The proposed eastern routes for the trafficway include 31st Street, 35th Street and a route south of the Wakarusa River. Although the county has not made a decision yet on the eastern half, it probably won't go south of the Wakarusa — pending
"We have to have a trafficway of some form," McElhaney said. "Not only do we need it now, but the need is increasing."
But Lena Johnson, representative for the Alliance for Environmental Justice, said the trafficway would encourage development that would slow its ability to move traffic. She said the 45-mph speed limit and the road's size would encourage business to move in beside it.
"What you're going to be getting is a second 23rd Street," Johnson said. "I don't see that it's going to make it any better."
Johnson said her group was planning an anti-trafficyway protest at
Louie McElhaney, the senior member of the Douglas County Commission, was not on the commission when the proposal was first looked at in the mid-1980s. But he said a county-wide vote four years ago supporting the trafficway showed it was needed and wanted by residents.
Source: Kansas Dept. of Transportation
Lancaster City Line
31st St.
estimated
20,000 cars
per day
35th St.
estimated
21,000 cars
per day
South Lawrence Trafficway
estimated less than 10,000 cars per day
Watsonville River
noon tomorrow at U.S. Highway 40 and Douglas County Road 13, where the western half of the trafficway is under construction.
SWASS
ARMY
another environmental study and input from Haskell students, Pasley said. He said traffic studies by the Kansas Department of Transportation showed that nobody would use that route as an alternate.
Tired of Pizza and Tacos? Try the...
Traffic troubles A traffic study by the Kansas Department of transportation shows commuters who clog 23rd Street between Iowa St. and Louisiana St. would be less likely to use the South Lawrence Trafficway if it were south of the Wakarusa River.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Valid Through July 31, 1995
NCGS
ORIGINAL SERIES 2000
FOR THOSE
WHO WANT
A CLASSIC
THAT'S
AFFORDABLE
Sunday Night Student Special
OPEN:
Mon-Sat 10-5:30
Thurs 'til 8pm
Sunday 12-5
VISA, MASTERCARD, DISCOVER, AMEX
12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
$4.99 for any sandwich (includes Freshtastics bar & drink) 10% Student Discount every day on any regularly priced menu item
If your summer whites are looking drab, then pick up a Kansan Card for the Ultimate Tan with the ultimate discount.
The Etc. Shop
928 Massachusetts • 843-0611
ULTIMATE TAN
2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence,KS (913) 842-4949
Traffic troubles
The summer is ending... Did you spend enough time outside?
Pokemon
BONANZA.
Steak·Chicken·Seafood·Salad
2329 Iowa · 842-1200
OPEN TO
THE PUBLIC
KMS SEBASTIAN
REDKEN
Nudeic A.
IMAGE AURA BEAUTY
DISCOVER
RECORDE
VISA
OPEN TO
THE PUBLIC
KMS S SEBASTIAN
REDKEN
Nucleic A.
MAGE AURA BEAUTY WAREHOUSE HAYASHI®
Brosa Lanza & HAIRZONE 841-5885 RUSK
HAIR ZONE AT • BEAUTY • WAREHOUSE
NEX US PAUL MITCHELL JOICO ROFFLER
Specials Good through Oct. 15
REDKEN
1 liter SHAMPOOS AMINO PON GLYPRO-L CAT
$9'95
Recovery Complex Spa Therapy for Stressed Hair
2 oz.
$8'95
PAUL MITCHELL
SHAMPOOL I OR AWAPUHI 32 oz. w/ pump $8'95
REDKEN
CAT PROTEIN TREATMENT 5 oz.
$6'95
OPEN TO
THE PUBLIC
KMS SEBASTIAN
REDKEN
Nudeic A.
MAGE AURA BEAUTY WAREHOUSE HAYASHI*
Breath Lanza WAREHOUSE & HAIRZONE 841-5885 Rusk HAIR ZONE AT BEAUTY WAREHOUSE
REDKEN
1 liter SHAMPOOS AMINO PON GLYPRO-L CAT $9.95
Recovery Complex Spa Therapy for Stressed Hair
2 oz. $8.95
PAUL MITCHELL
SHAMPOO I OR AWAPUHI
32 oz. w/pump $8.95
REDKEN CAT PROTEIN TREATMENT
5 oz. $6.95
JOICO
KERAPRO SHAMPOO ½ liter. $6.95
MAGE ALL PRODUCTS BUY ONE GET ONE 1/2 PRICE
S EBASTIAN SHAPER or SHAPER PLUS 10 oz. $5.99
NEXUS THERAPPE 43 oz. w/pump $14.95
S EBASTIAN CELLO SHAMPOO 32 oz. $9.95
JOICO LITE CONDITIONER ½ liter $7.95
REDKEN LIFT & SHINE FIRM HOLD 8.5 oz. $3.95
Tanza MOUSSE 7 oz. BUY ONE GET ONE FREE
NEXUS
PAUL MITCHELL
JOICO
ROFFLER
SORBIE.™
REDKEN
1 liter
SHAMPOOS
AMINO PON
GLYPRO-L
CAT
$9.95
HAIR ZONE
AT • BEAUTY • WAREHOUSE
Recovery Complex Spa Therapy for Stressed Hair 2 oz. $895 RECYCLING COMPANY
PAUL MITCHELL
SHAMPOO I
OR
AWAPUHI
32 oz.
w/pump
$8.95
PAUL MITCHELL
SHAMPOO I
PAUL MITCHELL
REDKEN
CAT
PROTEIN
TREATMENT
5 oz.
$695
JOICO
KERAPRO
SHAMPOO
1/2 liter.
$695
SPRAY
TREATMENT
FOR HAIR
FUNCTION
PERIOD
DRINKS
IMAGE
ALL PRODUCTS
BUY ONE
GET ONE
1/2 PRICE
SEBASTIAN
SHAPER or
SHAPER PLUS
10 oz.
$5.99
SUBSTANTIUM
CELLO SHAMPOO
32 oz.
$9.95
CELLO SHAMPOO
CLEANS & SHAPES
WITH SULFATE
NEXUS
THERAPPE
43 oz.
w/pump
$14.95
NEXUS
THERAPPE
SOFT + LUBRICANT
BROAD SCREEN CARE
WASH & SPRAY
1.2 fl. oz. (30 ml)
JOICO
LITE
CONDITIONER
1/2 liter
$795
REDKEN
LIFT & SHINE
FIRM HOLD
8.5 oz.
$3.00
ranza
MOUSSE
7 oz.
BUY ONE
GET ONE
FREE
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 23, 1994
7A
NATO strikes back at Serbs
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina
— NATO Jets struck at a Serb tank near Sanjevco yesterday in retaliation for a Serb attack on U.N. peacekeepers.
Boenla
Sarajevo
Attacks near Sarajevo U.S. and British warplanes attacked a Bosnian Serb tank within the exclusion zone Thursday after the Bosnian Serbs fired rockets at U.N. peacekeepers.
Knight-Ridder. Tribune/RON CODDINGTON
Sirijevci
12.5 mile exclusion
zone:
Serb heavy artillery prohibited inside limit
NATO attack:
About 4 miles west of airport
Sarajevo
Airport
Pale
Joblanica
0 Km
It was the fourth NATO airstrike against Bosnian Serb positions in Bosnia's 29-month war, and it reflected international exasperation with violations of a weapons-free zone around the Bosnian capital.
Brig. Gen. Andre Soubirou, U.N. commander of Sarajevo, told reporters that new attacks on U.N. personnel "will be met with the appropriate and proportional military force."
The attack followed a Bosnian Serb assault on an armored personnel carrier manned by French peacekeepers in a northeastern district of the capital and two other attacks on French soldiers. One French soldier was seriously wounded in the attack on the carrier.
In Washington, U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher praised the NATO action. "I think it's a very positive thing that NATO has responded. They've always been ready to respond ... and the response was quick and determined."
U. S. and British planes attacked the Serb tank at sunset about seven miles west of Sarajevo, NATO officials said. It had violated an agreement to keep heavy weapons out of a 12.5-mile exclusion zone around the
Two British Jaguars each dropped a 1,000-pound bomb on the target, and a U.S. A-10 fired a 30mm cannon, NATO representatives in Naples, Italy, said on condition of anonymity. They said the object of the attack — an unmanned tank — was destroyed.
in Harvard and in Stanford.
Gen. Bertrand de Lapresse, commander of U.N. troops in Bosnia and other former Yugoslav republics, told Cable News Network that an empty tank was purposely targeted so as not to cause loss of life.
capital.
Bosnian Serb TV,monitored in
Sarjavej, claimed the NATO planes attacked a civilian target in the village of Dobrosević. The report mentioned no casualties but said Bosnian Serb soldiers would retaliate by attacking U.N. personnel.
U. N. commanders asked for the strike after Bosnian Serbs fired at the French carrier a projectile from an 82mm anti-tank recoilless gun, Soubriou said.
The peacekeepers were observing fighting between Muslim-led government troops and Serbs in the area of Sedenrik, just northeast of Sarajevo.
944 Mass.
832-8228
The Associated Press
international inspection.
United States and N. Korea to discuss removal of nuclear arms
"We're hopeful we can make some more progress," chief U.S. negotiator Robert Gallucci said on arrival in Geneva. Gallucci said the talks, at the U.S. mission to the United Nations' European headquarters, could last a week or more, though no time limit was set.
Red Lyon Tavern
our experts assert that the communist nation already has produced at least one nuclear weapon. North Korea maintains its nuclear program is peaceful.
GENEVA — The United States and North Korea resume high-level talks today aimed at removing the nuclear weapons threat from the Korean peninsula.
The discussions, which began 1 1/2 years ago, have spread to issues such as opening diplomatic relations and technical cooperation. But they remain focused on whether North Korea will open its nuclear reactors and labs to
Red Lyon Tavern 832-8228
Crown Cinema
STEVE MARTIN
A Simple Twist of Fate
PG-13
5:15 7:30
9:45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
5:00 7:15
9:30
THE CLIENT
SUSAN SARANDON
TOMMY LEE JONES
PG-13
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00 LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 ALL DAY
MELANIE GRIFFITH
ED HARRIS
MILK MONEY
PG-13
5:00 7:15
9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
5:00 7:15
9:30
COLOR OF NIGHT
BRUCE WILLIS
JANE MARCH
R
CLEAR PRESENT DANGER
starring HARRISON FORD
PG-13
5:00 - 7:35
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
TIMECOP
VAN DAMME
R
5:00 7:15 9:30
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS
841-5191
BRANDON LEE
One man was chosen...
the CROW
R
5:00 7:30
9:40
CINEMA TWIN
925 IOWA
841-5191
$1.25
5:00 7:20
9:40
SPEED
KEANU REEVES
DENNIS HOPPER
R
Crown Cinema
STEVE MARTIN
A Simple
Twist of Fate
PC-11
THE CLIENT
SUSAN
SARANDON
TOMMY LEE
JONES
PC-11
5:15 7:30
9:45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
5:00 7:15
9:30
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00 LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 ALL DAY
MELANIE GRIFFITH
ED HARRIS
MILK
MONEY
PC-11
COLOR OF
NIGHT
BRUCE
WILLIS
JANE
MARCH
R
5:00 7:15
9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
5:00 7:15
9:30
CLEAR PRESENT
DANGER
starring
HARRISON
FORD.
PG-13
5:00 - 7:35
TIMECOP
VAN
DAMME
R
BRANDON LEE
One man
was chosen...
the CROW
R
5:00 7:30
9:40
CLEAR PRESENT DANGER
starring HARRISON FORD
PC-13
5:00 - 7:35
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
821 5191
TIMECOP
VAN DAMME
R
5:00 7:15 9:30
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS
821 5191
BRANDON LEE
One man was chosen...
The CROW
R
5:00 7:30
9:40
CINEMA TWIN
1015 IOWA EXPLOITER
$1.25
5:00 7:20
9:40
SPEED
KEANU REEVES
DENNIS HOPPER
R
5:00 7:20
9:40
"Two big thumbs up! A great film!"
"The best new American film of the year!"
RED ROCK WEST
R
RED ROCK-Fri & Sun 9:45 Only
Sat - No Showing
EAT DRINK MAN WOMAN-
Daily (4:30), 7:00, 9:30
THE SLINGSHOT-Fri & Sun
(4:45), 7:15 Only, Sat-No Showing!
642
Mass.
749
1912
Theatre 11 is accessible to all persons
SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
KIM'S ALTERATIONS
QUICK & QUALITY SERVICE
2201-FW25TH ST
(Behind Food 4 Less)
842-6812
Keep it Clean
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Keep it Clean
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kipper Cummings
Jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kirk Cummings
gwelve
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
Dickinson
Cinema 6
2319 South Town Street
Trial by Jury ℮ 4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Next Karate Kid ℮ 4:35, 7:15, 9:35
Forrest Gump ℮ 13:20, 7:00, 9:55
Corrina Corrina ℮ 4:30, 7:00, 9:45
Natural Born Killers ℮ 4:30, 7:00, 9:45
Terminal Velocity ℮ 13:45, 7:15, 9:40
$3 Primetime Show (+) Hearing Dolby
Senior Citizen Anytime Impaired Stereo
"Two big thumbs up! A great film!
"The best new American film of the year!"
Gene Sarn, Safer & Lent
RED ROCK
WEST ℮
RED ROCK-Fri & Sun 9:45 Only
Sat - No Showing
EAT DRINK MAN WOMAN-
Daily (4:30), 7:00, 9:30
THE SLINGSHOT-Fri & Sun
(4:45), 7:15 Only, Sat-No Showing!
542
Mass
749-
1912
Theatre it is accessible to all persons
Dickinson
Cinema 6
841 8600
2339 South Iowa Street
Trial by Jury A*4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Next Karate Kid R*4:35, 7:15, 9:35
Forrest Gump P*13-4:20, 7:00, 9:55
Corrina Corrina P*4:30, 7:00, 9:55
Natural Born Killers R*4:30, 7:00, 9:45
Terminal Velocity P*13-4:45, 7:15, 9:40
Primetime show (➡) Hearing Dolby
"Two big thumbs up! A great film!"
"The best new American film of the year!"
Gene Saul, Scott & Erick
RED ROCK WEST
RED ROCK-Fri & Sun 9:45 Only
Sat - No Showing
EAT DRINK MAN WOMAN-
Daily (4:30), 7.00, 9:30
THE SLINGSHOT-Fri & Sun
(4:45), 7:15 Only, Sat-No Showing!
LIBERTY HALL
542
Mass.
749-
1912
Theatre 3 is accessible to all persons
Shark's
1 Year Anniversary
Blowout
Buy 1 Item,
(Excluding Oakley)
Get 1 for 1/2 Price
(of equal or lesser value)
Live Remote
W/KLZR's
Jay Charles
Tons Of
Prizes!
SHARK'S
SURF SHOR
Lawrence 701 W 9th
(9th and Indiana)
841-8289
Hooter’s Grill
Team
Cookin' Up
Free Hot Dogs
(W/Purchase)
3-6 P.M.
8A
Friday, September 23,1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Cigarette butts have become a pain for campus custodians
By Cheryl Cadue
Kansan staff writer
Picking up cigarette butts has turned into an never-ending job for custodians at Wescoe Hall.
has spent more time picking up cigarette butts around Wescoe, which is a popular spot for smokers.
Jirem Brennenbaum, Seneca sophmore, said he sympathized with the custodians and said smokers should clean up after themselves.
To curb the number of cigarette butts thrown in gutters and grassy areas, housekeeping put more cigarette urns near building entrances.
ans. But, she said, the cigarette butts were not a big problem for most custodians.
Wayne Reusch, landscaping supervisor for facilities operations, said the largest amount of cigarette butts were found in front of buildings and around bus stops. He said that the time required to clean up the cigarette butts had increased but that he had not received complaints about the cigarettes creating a mess.
she said.
Vannessa Lamoreaux, Waterville sophomore, said smokers were sometimes forced to throw cigarettes butts on the ground when cigarette urns were put in inconvenient places.
fear they will die of secondhand smoke, so we'll go outside," he said. "But little consideration is given to smokers who now have to go outside."
Dove
My dearest Heather,
I have only two
words for you...
Sexual
Chocolate!
Σ♡, Christy
ΣK ΣK ΣK ΣK ΣK ΣK ΣK ΣK
ΣK Wendy. This week went ΣK
ΣK by quick, I hope you ΣK
ΣK had fun. ΣK
ΣK I wonder if you knew I ΣK
was the one? I'm look-
ing forward to a great ΣK
year! ΣK
Love, Heidi! ΣK
ΣK ΣK ΣK ΣK ΣK ΣK
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Congratulates all the pledges of Sigma Kappa.
Carla--
Uh, huh, huh...your mom
is, uh,huh,huh...uh, a
Weakass. Uh,love your,
uh...uh, huh,huh,
your mother.
Claudia
Isle of View
Your mom,
Amy B.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1994
SECTION B
1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Kansas junior centerfelder Charlene Reyers throws the ball during practice in Anschutz Pavilion. The team was forced to practice in Anschutz yesterday because of the wet weather.
Softball team utilizes its young bench
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas softball team is battered and bruised again.
Kansan sportswriter
The team played through last season with multiple injuries. At times, Kansas had as few as 11 available players, said Heather Richins, sophomore utility player.
With 15 players on this year's roster, injuries may not be as much of a problem.
"The players sitting on the bench are really stronger." Richins said. "The freshmen are good enough to come in and take over."
Junior pitcher Beth Robinson said that everyone was playing well, but that the freshmen had impressed her.
"They definitely don't look like freshmen," she said.
All the players must improve because of the injuries the Jayhawks have suffered this fall, said Kansas softball coach Kalum Haack.
Four players are out with injuries, including senior infielder Lora Richardson, who broke her wrist Monday in a HYPR class.
Two freshmen that have impressed Haack this fall are catcher Kristina Johnson and utility player Michelle Hubler.
"We've got four key people that are out," Haack said. "But one of the real positive things about this year is that we have some depth. They're not just bodies. They're good ball players."
Haack said he was pleased with how the entire team had come together since practice began in late August. All the players have played strong defense and improved their hitting.
"We'll have much more consistent hitting throughout the lineup," Haack said. "Last year, if the top of the lineup didn't get it done, it wasn't going to get done."
Kansas will open its fall season this weekend with the Jayhawks Softball Invitational. The Jayhawks will sponsor the round robin tournament with Johnson County Community College, Kearney State and Washburn completing the field. The first game will start at 9 a.m. Saturday at Jayhawk Field.
Robinson said she knew very little about the other teams playing this weekend.
"They'll give us a good run," she said. "We'll have to work hard no matter what."
This tournament should give the young Kansas team a chance to play competitive softball, Haack said.
"The fall is a time of learning," he said. "I want to get the freshmen some experience at the intensity level that I want them to play at."
Richins said she hoped the Jayhawks could play as a team because they had been practicing together for only a short time.
"We can learn a lot about how we need to adjust," she said.
'Hawks hoping to roll over Blazers
Kansas preparing for Division I-AA UAB no differently
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas football team will play Division I-A Alabama-Birmingham at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Memorial Stadium, but don't expect the Jayhawks to treat the Blazers any different than their first three Division I-A opponents.
"I wouldn't call them completely inferior," senior offensive guard Hessley Hempstead said. "They've got guys who are big, fast and strong. Their two defensive tackles are 285 and 290 pounds. They compare with any team in the Big Eight.
"We'll probably see faster teams in the Big Eight, but defensively they're a good football team. We can't go into the game thinking that if we show up, we're going to win."
Despite the fact that the Blazers' physical attributes match up with some Division I-A schools, their record is only 1-2 coming into the biggest game in Blazer football history. Alabama-Birmingham will play its first game against a Division I-A opponent when it plays Kansas. The Jayhawks are 2-1 after losing to Texas Christian Saturday.
For the Jayhawks, tomorrow's game means nothing towards qualifying for a bowl game because it is against a team that is not Division I-A. Alabama-Birmingham will become a Division I-A team in 1996.
"Iheard they hit real hard, and they're real fast," Blazer freshman running back Thomas Banks said.
It does allow the Jayhawks a chance to heal, improve and gain experience in the case of junior quarterback Mark Williams. Williams will replace senior quarterback Asheiki Preston, who is out indefinitely after suffering an injury against Texas Christian.
"I have some butterflies," Williams said. "But I'm really not nervous. I'm just excited about playing."
Although he was a run-and-shoot quarterback in junior college, Williams said the Kansas offense would not change much because he was in the game.
"I think it's simplified a little bit," Williams said about the Kansas passing attack. "I don't have to make as many checks."
Kansas coach Glen Mason said sophomore running back June Henley would not play so he could rest a bruised shoulder, and that senior tight end Brent Willeford also would not play.
1.
02
HENLEY
20
C. MCKINLEY
Mason said it was imperative that the Jayhawks improve when they play the Blazers.
"You're either getting better, or you're getting worse," he said. "We went the wrong way last week. We need to get going the right way this week."
"We could be leading the country in interceptions," Mason said, referring to the passes the defense has dropped this season. "We had guys in position who didn't make plays."
One area Mason said the Jayhawks need to improve his pass defense. He said they would be tested by Alabama-Birmingham's run-and-shoot offense.
Senior linebacker Steve Harvey agreed that the defense needed to improve against the pass.
"We need to get the coverages worked out," he said. "We've got to pressure on the quarterback. After last week's performance, we've got to step up our game."
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Sophomore running back June Henley barrels over a Texas Christian defender. Tomorrow's 1 p.m. game will not be televised but will be broadcast on the Jayhawk Radio Network. The game will be Kansas' first day game of the season.
Jayhawk Football Listed are the starters for Kansas' offense and defense
Offense
Defense
Micah Laaker/KANBAN
Jayhawk Football: Game 4
Kansas Notes:
A cool afternoon: The Jayhawks will play their first day game of the season Saturday. The Jayhawks next game will be a night game against Kansas State on Oct. 6.
■ Henley hampered: Sophomore running back June Henley will not play against Alabama-Birmingham in order to rest a bruised shoulder. Henley leads the Jayhawks in rushing with 321 yards. Henley has 1,445 career yards and has climbed from 26th to 13th on the all-time list since the beginning of the season. Kansas ranks 2nd in the Big Eight and 10th in the country in rushing offense.
Alabama-Birmingham notes:
Professor as coach: Blazer coach Jim Hillyer is an assistant professor at the University of Alabama School of Medicine and an adjunct associate professor in Alabama-Birmingham's department of Health Education and Physical Education.
**NFL ties:** Blazer senior quarterback John Whitcomb was the backup to Green Bay Packer quarterback Brett Fewre when both were at Southern Mississippi in 1900 and 1991. Whitcomb was redshirted in 1900 and played for Southern Mississippi in 1991 before transferring to Alabama-Birmingham in 1992.
It's in the family: The Blazers' special teams are coached by Hilyer's wife, Lynn Artz, previously a swimming coach.
Motivated to win: Alabama-Birmingham is 1-2 this season, with losses to Alabama State and Jacksonville State. The Blazers defeated fellow Great Midwest Conference member Dayton, 28-10.
From club to classy: Alabama-Birmingham was a club football team in 1899 and 1900. The Blazers will become a Division I-A team in 1966.
Grass roots beginning: Alabama-
Birmingham's athletic program started
from scratch in 1977. Gene Bartow, athletic
director, has led the basketball team to 14
postseason appearances.
Cross country to compete at K-State tomorrow
— Compiled by Kansan staff writer Matt Irwin and Kansas sports information
13
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas cross country team hopes that a change in scenery doesn't bring a change in the team's fortunes.
Meghan Dougherty / KANSAN
Kansas runners want to continue the success they enjoyed two weeks ago during the Jayhawk Invitational when they travel Saturday to Manhattan for the Kansas State Invitational.
The Kansas cross country team practices in the rain at Memorial Stadium. The team will compete in the Kansas State Invitational meet on Saturday in Manhattan.
The men's team defeated the national-champion Arkansas Razorbacks to take the Jayhawk Invitational team title.
Head coach Gary Schwartz said the fact that Arkansas did not bring its top three runners had not diminished the significance of the victory.
Schwartz likened the victory to Kansas beating Notre Dame in football.
He said that few people would care who played for Notre Dame if the Irish lost to the Jayhawks.
"In sports, you have to compete against whoever shows up," Schwartz said. "To be able to beat Arkansas at this point in the season is great."
The victory may boost the men's team into the top 25 when the first national polls are released next week.
"I hope we're not ranked too high in
the poll just because of the Arkansas victory, 'Schwartz said.
Schwartz said he would rather have his team work its way through the polls, he said, than have it given to them on the basis of one victory.
The men's team was ranked third in the District V preseason polls behind conference rivals Iowa State and
Oklahoma State. Kansas will get its first look at the Cowboys, as well as Colorado and K-State, in this weekend's meet.
"I think it'll help out watching them run," said Bryan Schultz, sophomore team member.
The teams will meet again when Kansas runs in the Big Eight Championships, which will be held Oct. 29 on the same course the Jayhawks will run on this weekend.
He said cool temperatures expected this weekend will probably help
"We really want to beat Colorado and Oklahoma," said Schultz. "We're capable of running better than we did two weeks ago."
the team's times.
Senior co-captain Melissa Swartz agreed that running in the cooler temperatures would make for better conditions than the high humidity and 80-degree temperature present at Rim Rock Farm, north of Lawrence.
"This is ideal cross country weather," said Swartz. "I think you'll see the times begin to come down this week."
The women's teamm has inched itself closer to a top-25 ranking with its performance in the Jayhawk Invitational.
The team was ranked second in its district behind Nebraska.
The women's team finished second to Arkansas two weeks ago, but placed four runners in the meet's top 20.
"We're capable of having more runners in the top 20," Swartz said.
"We also want to concentrate on running closer together."
Swartz said that teams do pay attention to the rankings.
"Rankings do make a difference," she said.
"Personally, I would like to go into districts as the underdog."
Schwartz said the two biggest goals for the teams this weekend were to bring team members' times closer together and to get a look at the course before the Big Eight Championships.
2B
Friday, September 23, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS SPORTS
'Hawks set out on road to improve 3-9 record
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
Looking for a way to rectify an allying non-conference record, Kansas volleyball players will have their work cut out for them when they compete tonight in Lincoln. Neb.
Kansas, 3-9, will open Nebraska's Arby's Classic tournament against nationally ranked New Mexico.
And tomorrow, Kansas will meet the 6-4 Pittsburgh Panthers.
With an already challenging schedule, Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said the Jayhawks had "breathed a sigh of relief" when they had discovered they would not play third-ranked Nebraska.
"In years before, the teams would all play, and then the conference teams would meet," Schonewise said. "This year the overall level of play at the tournament is going to be a level higher. They decided to wait until the Big Eight schedule for the conference teams to compete."
The New Mexico Lobos, ranked 17th in the nation, return with a balanced team with five seniors, a junior and a sophomore.
New Mexico coach Laurel Brassy-Iverson said the team played a 6-2 offense, six players are designated hitters and two are setters. The rotation allows for five hitters and one setter to be on the court at any one time.
On the Lobos' team, everyone hits the ball, Brassy-Iverson said.
"We have six players hitting over a .235 average," she said. "We don't rely on one particular player."
In competition last week, the Lobos' leading hitter, Tania Gooley, experienced a career-low hitting percentage. But, Iverson
said, the team came together and found a way to win.
"Tania is a player that stands out for us, but she hit a zero game against Santa Clara," Iverson said. "But the team nicked up the slur."
Iverson said that though she had heard Kansas was a young, struggling team, New Mexico would not overlook the Javahaws.
Iverson said they looked forward to the match with the Jayhawks in order to prepare for stiffer competition on Saturday.
"We go out with respect for each team regardless of who they are," she said. "We take every match seriously. The players know every team is just as capable as another."
"The match against Kansas will be a good warm-up for us," Iverson said. "It will be a good tune-up when we take on Nebraska Saturday."
Kansas will get a chance to scout Pittsburgh tonight before they compete against the Panthers in a match tomorrow afternoon.
Pittsburgh lost only one starter, all-American Ann Marie Lukonie. The five returning starters are experienced, Pittsburgh coach Cindy Alvear said.
"We have one very effective outside hitter and an impressive line-up of three returning seniors, three juniors, four sophomores and one freshman."
Despite the tough competition, junior outside hitter Tracie Walt said the Jayhawks would go into Nebraska with a positive outlook.
"The better the competition, the better overall level of play," she said. "The next time we play a lower level team in the Big Eight, we'll keep that same high level of intensity all through the match."
Women golfers headed to Michigan
The Kansas women's golf team will compete this weekend at the Spartan Fall Invitational in East Lansing, Mich.
The 23-team field will be composed mostly of team's from the Big Ten Conference, said Kansas women's golf coach Jerry Waugh. No other Big Eight Conference teams will compete on the Forest Akers WestGolf Course.
"We're pleased to be able to play on that kind of facility, and it's good competition," Waugh said.
Making the trip for the Jayhawks will be
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
seniors Ann Hobbrook and Michelle Uher, junior Anne Clark and freshmen Beth Reuter and Kimberly Clevenger. Clevenger is a transfer from North Carolina.
Kansas is coming off a ninth-place finish in the Diet Coke-Roadrunner Invitational two weeks ago.
Even though the Jayhawks competed against several traditionally strong teams, Waugh said they performed well.
"It was the best performance we've had since I took over as a coach," he said. "I can't remember when we posted three scores in the 70s. And when you do it once, you can do it again."
WASHINGTON — The baseball players union promised Congress yesterday its strike would end if lawmakers enact a bill that strips owners of their antitrust exemption.
Congress could strike out strike
The Associated Press
Jack Brooks, the Texas Democrat who chairs the House Judiciary Committee, said at the end of a three-hour hearing that he will push for passage of the bill, which would permit players to sue instead of staying on strike.
"As a result of the sorry spectacle the nation has been forced to endure for the last few months and my very grave concerns for the future of the institution, I have come to the conclusion that legislation is now needed to restore the principles of competition and fair play to the business of baseball." Brooks said.
"Weshould never have reached this juncture. Time and time again in the past 20 years, the profit motive of major league baseball has pushed the limits of our tolerance."
The bill, introduced by Representative Mike Synar, D-Okla, on Aug. 18 along with Rep. Jim Bunning, a Kentucky Republican who pitched in the majors, specifies that antitrust laws would apply to any working conditions owners impose on players and that any unilateral conditions wouldn't take effect until a final court ruling on lawsuits filed by the union or players.
"If the Synar bill were passed, I would recommend to them that the strike end," Fehr said.
Union head Donald Fehr said there was an outside chance the World Series could be played this year.
Selig announced the cancellation of the Series on Sept. 14.
If the legislation is not enacted, Fehr saw little hope for a quick agreement to end the strike.
Acting commissioner Bud Selig attempted to avoid direct answers and was questioned sharply by Representatives Synar, Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., and Howard L Berman, D-Calif.
At one point, Berman called the rationales that the owners gave to the committee "a little bit disingenuous." Selig said after the hearing that litigation with the union wasn't preferable to the strike, which has wiped out the World Series for the first time since 1904.
"Spring training is in imminent peril," he said. "We do not know how much of the season will be gone (in 1995)."
Big 12 basketball schedule decided
"That's like asking whether you want to have a problem with your pancreas or a problem with your liver." Selig said.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Big 12 officials decided yesterday on a 16-game men's conference basketball schedule but put off deciding any other issues related to the expansion of the Big Eight.
There was no decision on scheduling for women's basketball.
The Big Eight and Texas, Texas Tech, Texas A&M and Baylor will begin playing basketball in the 1996-97 season and will join in football for the 1996 season. All other sports will be absorbed either this academic year or next.
"In terms of scheduling, we won't have any announcements or definite schedules for the Big 12 until at least Oct. 18," said Bill Marolt, Colorado athletic director.
Among issues still to be decided are a format for football, whether to have a football playoff game between the North and South division champions and possible bowl tieups for the Big 12's second- and third-place football teams.
Oklahoma athletic director Donnie Duncan said athletic directors would begin having monthly meetings, probably on the campuses of the four Southwest Conference schools that are joining the Big Eight.
"These are items that are foundations for us for a long, long time," he said. "If we really acted quickly, I would leave the meeting wondering if we'd done our business properly."
No final decision will be made about the basketball schedule until coaches can be consulted, but officials said that coaches were expected to agree. The plan calls for each school to play a round-robin format with its five division partners and one game per year with the six schools in the other division.
Feud between Dallas coach former coach upsets players
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — With missives being sent from more than 1,000 miles apart, the simmering feud between former Dallas Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson and current coach Barry Switzer is starting to disgust the players.
Johnson, speaking from his outpost in Florida, has criticized Switzer for leaving the team the night before a game to see his son play college football, making practice too much fun and fielding a team that shows a lack of preparation.
Switzer says he cares more about his family than Johnson does, and Switzer's record at Oklahoma shows he knows how to prepare a football team.
The players of the defending Super Bowl champions are becoming less and less amused.
Switzer said yesterday that Johnson's recent remarks about his absence from the team on a Saturday night were conical.
"It's two-week-old news," Switzer said. "My family is important to me. It's well documented football is more important to Jimmy than his family."
Switzer took a plane two weeks ago to Conway, Ark. to see his son, Doug, a sophomore quarterback for Missouri Southern. play in a game.
"We had our team meeting, and I asked the players if there was anything I could do to help beat Houston, and they told me to go on to the game." Switzer said.
Johnson recently told his hometown newspaper, the Port Arthur News, he thought the Cowboys were not focused.
"I keep hearing this stuff about it's so much fun for them to go to practice now," Johnson said. "Well, to my way of thinking, a pro football team is not a country club. Those guys have to be pushed and motivated, and it has to come from the top."
Some players are siding with Switzer in the word barrage.
"I have no problem with Barry going to see his son play on a Saturday night," quarterback Troy Aikman said. "There was nothing he could do to help the team win at the hotel."
BUM STEER
DELIVERY
BBQ Sandwiches, Cheese Burgers,
Grilled Chicken, French Fries, BBQ Ribs
MORE MORE MORE
call 841-SMOK(E)
11:00 to 2:00 & 5:00 to Close Daily
$1 OFF
any delivery
with coupon
$7 min
Juicers
Showgirls
Savannah
Featuring
Totally N*de
Dancers
18 + Welcome
913 N. Second
(Next to Riverfront Square)
841-4122
Brooke
Watch Out For Student Specials and
New Afternoon Specials
Just Look at ALL of These Ways YOU Can $ave Some Cash
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
CARD
Vehicle through July 31 1985
NCCS
Restaurants
AMIGO*8
1819 W. 23rd + 842-1620
Get the daily special prices every day of the week
BEFORE SUN AND AFTER SUN
Available at these locations:
204-800-6000 BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢
1. Buy 1 Menu item, and get the Second one at 1/2 Price
BUY 1 Menu item, and get the Second one at 1/2 Price
2328 S. Hostel 841-620-124
53.99 Fremont Food Bar
DORNING'S PIZZA
832 lowe 841-600-124
FULL MOON CAFE
803 Massachusetts·832-0444
401 N 2nd-842 3-B77U *A chickenie with fried rice as a
guest, price for $1.00 Mon thru Fri 4 p.m*
25% OFF Any Delivery Order not valid with any other offer)
DRAKE'S MACK SHOP
1008 Massachusetts A+43-0561
10% off any purchase at $2.50 or more
234 W 128; 124; 121-310 FREE Coffee of Our House Coffee (Certified Organically Grown) with Amu Mint Pail
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
119 Stauffer Flint
2907 W b8-641-1688-Free Soft Debt (with FREE refill) with Purchase of Fiat 500
FRIDAY GLASS ONION
$1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day
$1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50 (includes food and coffee drink)
**PEAKING PIZZA**
148 & 61/8 Chip & Dip: 84-32, 93-29, 98-25, 104-50, 144-80,
ad tages: 75 up to 82.5; add $1.00 to $1.00. Carry Out Chee's.
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus xax Carry Out Only
**pyraminx games**
1071vv 2026-08-12 17:22
One Pizza with one Topping $2.60 plus tax Carry Out Only
Med Pizza $5.95, 2 for $9.95, LG Pizza $7.95, 2 for $13.95
1116 W23rd
2700 iowa-749-2015-PREEAD Drink with Purchase or Any Price Reg $gain
2700 lowe'749-2615-FREE Mild Drink with Purchase of
Any Reg Price Sandwich
802 W 23rd St/424-818-1010 W 84th St/834-038-2038 Haskell
Ave. 1262 Hardy-Sullivan Taco's for $99 (NO LIMIT)
842 Hardy-Sullivan Taco's for $99 (NO LIMIT)
2222 lowe'841-841-2739
$1.50 OFF Any Sandwich
Retail/March/Area
Jayhawk Bookstore
1520 Concord Rd., Lawrence, MA 64034
ATLANTA'S FOOT
914 Massachusetts-641-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
82 UNITS/$30.00
20% Off Any Purchase Over $2.00 Excluding Rentals
iory (excludes sale it
Purchase Over $20.00 Each
BOBBI'S BEDROOM
2400 E. 10TH ST.
BROOKLYN, NY 10470
743 CLEMENS' CLOSER
*MASSACHUSETTS* 749-6884
15% OFF Any item (excludes sale items)
FRANCE CHRISTIAN MASSACHS
745 New Hamptons-843-3282-125.00 discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade Labor. System Software in IBM Compatible CLEOPATH'S CLIENT
743 Massachusetts-749-4664
10% Off Any Typewriter, Print Ribbon or Print ink Refill
11 Massachusetts 943-4-191-12% OFF All Appet and
3RFREE Francis T-Shirt & Wearpiece @ $2.50
CENTRAL DATA
7.64 New Hampshire-843-322-1520 Discount for Diag-
lone
New York-843-322-1520
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
1420 Crescent Rd. 943-3826
23rd & Louisiana-832-1700
5% OFF Am Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Dirt Item
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
420 Crescent Rd-843-3826
typewriter, Printer Kiosk or
JAYNAWK TROPICAL FISH
464 Illinois, Suite D-842 - 8580 3260 Whitman Brand PowerFilters, and AllOther Brand Underwear Filters
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
JOCKS MITCH
JAYMAWK BOOKSTORE
840 Massachusetts 842-2442
15% Off All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS@864-4640
Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book) $5
KAHSA SPORTS CLUB
837 Massachusetts-842-2992
20% OFF KU sweatshirts
833 Massachusetts-749-4333
15% OFF Non-Sale Gold Chains
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS*864-4640
10% OFF Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply
$1,500 AND BURGER UNIONS 864-8440
$1,000 Any Ayyah Clothing Imitar or Hot Over $2,000
RECYCLED SOUNDS
8th & New Hampshire-841-5324 10% OFF All Skin Care Products
MAUNCHER'S
70 Massachusetts+641-0334
15% OFF any regular priced purchases
2340 S. Iowa 842-854-30% OFF C41 Process (Not Valid)
20 Maccashape® 8 x 40 mm² 0.92% OFF CFA Calculator 20 Maccashape® 8 x 40 mm² 0.92% OFF CFA Calculator
Macaulayz® 8 x 40 mm² 0.92% OFF CFA Calculator 20 Maccashape® 8 x 40 mm² 0.92% OFF CFA Calculator
1741 Massachusetts>749-1605
25% OFF All Monthly Rentals
Lawrence, Ks-685-0692
10% OFF All Sales
BECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
910 2nR 814-1803-1810 110ed Ave. Suite 1,1841-7544
$1.00 OFF Movie Rental (one per visit)
740 Massachusetts-843-3933
15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
716 Massachusetts 4-81-17250-GTF *Magazine* Monster Tumors *Tumor* December 15th & May 19th to Make copies on Bank Baye Sheets
*Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore at the Courteney Counter
*First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore at the Courteney Counter
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
701 W 8th 841 828D
862 W 128 St. B44-947F#32-00FF Any One CD, Tape,
B with RV information (B)
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy)
SPRINHAMWAID/WAMITTA
1025 N 383-612-100
10%OFF All Purchase
unused
VUBE 823 lowe7-1745-3072-1f | Video Rental Monday -
Thursday (limit one offer per day)
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
Services
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 6th H41-8915
10% OFF All Parts
BRADY OPTICAL
BRADY OPTICAL
737 Massachusetts-642-0880
15% Off Complete Eyeglass Purchase
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
OFF Complete Lycgiss Purchaser
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
PROFESSOR
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST
1019 Massachusetts-643-8644-5250 OF All Fashion
Express Fax Number with Valid Phone Number
1019¹Maschinenfuss® 64-33-KA4 125.00€ Ft Al Aaftisch
1019¹Maschinenfuss® 64-33-KA4 125.00€ Ft Al Aaftisch
1019¹Maschinenfuss® 64-33-KA4 125.00€ Ft Al Aaftisch
EUROPEAN TAN
10 W 23x48 W+6232+F2 FREE Tanks with Purchases
of 17 Tans For F2 and FREE Trial Formula One
(1/customer)
MANETAMERS
- 640 mm Suture StuE I-8-E-1499
$3.00 OFF Haircut or $5.00 Off Chemical Service
15th & Kakadu $323-028 or 25% OFF Initial or Annual
Visit Plus 12 Free Folded Cards
Wi-Fi Hotspot
1033 Messaschutt$794-393
Any Haircut or Hairstyle $5.50
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
1 L. NORTON & FREES
$35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames w/ FREE Adjustment
TWIN OAKS GOLF COURSE
K-10, 8 County Rd. 1057/1943/11342-1747
Buy One Small Bucket of Balls. Buy One Small Bucket
2449 lowes St. 82-494-101 FREE Session with the Purchase of a 9 Session Package (Save $5.50)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
140 CENTER PARKWAY
20% OFF Any Private Classified Ad
Email Address: htrc43536
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 23, 1994
NFL
3B
NFL Week Four Preview
A look at the top games this weekend
NFL
Los Angeles Rams
(1-2)
at
Kansas City (3-0)
LINE: Chiefs by 14 1/2
Televised 1 p.m.,FOX
LINE: Chiefs by 141/2
SERIES RECORD — Rams lead series 3-1.
RAMS OFFENSE — RUSH (No.
15), PASS (No. 23), OVERALL (No.
25)
RB Jerome Bettis had his second straight 100-yard game (104 yards on 21 attempts). He is third in the NFC with 258 yards. QB Chris Miller was benched after completing only 8-of-19 passes for just 86 yards last week
CHIEFS OFFENSE — RUSH (No.
PASS (No. 6) OVERALL (No. 6)
Another great game for QB Joe Montana. He threw for 361 yards and completed 28-of-39 passes with two touchdowns. WR Wille Davis leads the team with 17 receceptions and 246 yards (eighth in AFC). The running game has sputtered. BR Marcus Allen
KICKOFF
has 162 yards to lead the team that averages 105.3 yards per game and 3.2 per carry.
RAMS DEFENSE — RUSH (No.
19), PASS (No. 19), OVERALL (No.
21)
The Rams surrendered 454 yards to San Francisco. Cornerbacks Todd Lyght and Darryl Henley couldn't keep up with Jerry Rice and John Taylor, who combined for 18 catches and 250 yards.
CHIEF5 DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 6t), PASS (No. 26), OVERALL (No. 20)
The Chiefs recovered four fumbles and picked off two passes against Falcons. The Chiefs have forced a league-leading 14 turnovers. Defensive backs Dale Carter and Monty Grow each had interceptions against Atlanta.
San Diego (3-0)
at
Los Angeles Raiders
(1-2)
Televised 4 p.m., NBC
LINE: LA b. 2142
SERIES RECORD — Raiders lead
42-25-2.
CHARGERS OFFENSE — RUSH (No. 4), PASS (No. 11), OVERALL (No. 5)
QB Stan Humphries continues to be league's top-rated passer (119.4), and the Chargers continue to make big plays. Humphries leads NFL in average yards a pass (9.91) and hasn't thrown an interception. Martin was this week's receiving star with six catches and 152 yards.
RAIDERS OFFENSE — RUSH (No. 23), PASS (No. 16), OVERALL (No. 21)
The offense gained 529 yards and scored just two touchdowns in first two games. They also had 424 yards and five touchdown against Denver.
Tampa Bay
ROADSIDE
QBJeff Hostetler was 21-of-33 for 338 yards, with four touchdowns and no interceptions.
CHARGERS DEFENSE — RUSH (No. 13), PASS (No. 9), OVERALL (No. 11)
MLB Junior Seau had six tackles, four assists and one sack against Seattle. SStanley Richard had his second interception of the season for a touchdown. San Diego has AFC-leading 12 sacks.
RAIDERS DEFENSE — RUSH
(No. 18), PASS (No. 17), OVERALL
(No. 18)
CB Terry McDaniel scored his second touchdown in as many weeks on 15-yard interception return. He had four sacks against Broncos after just three in the first two weeks. S Eddie Anderson leads team in tackles (5) and had two sacks against Denver.
Pittsburgh (2-1)
at
Seattle (2-1)
Televised 4 p.m., NBC
LINE: Pick 'em
SERIES RECORD — Tied 5-
STEELERS OFFENSE — RUSH
(No. 2), PASS (No. 26), OVERALL
(No. 17)
Tremendous performance as offense piled up 500 yards vs. Colts. RBBarry Foster had 179 of team's 261 yards rushing. QB Neil O'Donnell completed 22 of his 35 passes for 254 yards and two TDs vs. Colts.
Effective in first two games, but struggled greatly last week, compiling only 187 total yards. QB Riek Mirer is fourth-rated passer in AFC (91.3) though he is 12th in yards per pass at 6.53. BR Chris Warren suffered chipped bone in elbow but continued to play and scored conference leading fifth TD).
SEAHAWKS OFFENSE — RUSH
(No. 11), PASS (No. 24), OVERALL
(No. 23)
F
STEELERS DEFENSE — RUSH
(No. 20), PASS (No. 6), OVERALL
(No. 8)
Defense has recovered from poor performance vs. Cowbogs in Week 1. Allowed only 457 yards in last two weeks. S Darren Perry leads NFL in INTS with four.OLB Kevin Greene leads team with two sacks.
SEAHAWKS DEFENSE — RUSH
(No. 5), PASS (No. 13), OVERALL
(No. 9)
Defensive backs are banged up. CB Patrick Hunter is out with a hamstring pull. Hunter is tied with LB Terry Wooden for team lead with two INTs. Wooden, who is off to great start, had 10 tackles and five assists vs. Chargers.
Chicago (1-2)
at
New York Jets
(2-1)
LINE — New York by 7 1/2
Televised 8 p.m., TNT
C
G
JETS
QB Erik Kramer, NFC's second rated passer (107.5), is questionable with shoulder injury. QB Steve Walsh might see time. Kramer has been forced to carry offense with running game averaging 42.7 yards a game. Leading rusher RB Lewis Tillman has 128 yards and is averaging 3.6 yards a
BEARS OFFENSE — RUSH (No.
27), PASS (No. 13), OVERALL (No.
22)
JETS
carry. WR Curtis Conway leads team with 12 catches and 192 yards.
JETS OFFENSE — RUSH (No.
22), PASS (No. 10), OVERALL (No.
11)
QB Boomer Esiason is 13th-rated passer in AFC (70.1) and is tied for league lead with seven INTs. He threw for 293 yards, but had four INTs last week against Miami. WR Rob Moore has 17 catches for 273 yards (fifth in AFC) and TE Johnny Mitchell has 10 for 186.
BEARS DEFENSE — RUSH (No.
28), PASS (No. 15t), OVERALL (No.
24)
Has allowed 72 points and 880 yards in last two games. Has just one sack since Week 1 and only one INT on year. Struggling defense will not be helped with injuries to MLB Dante Jones (leg), OLB Vinson Smith (knee) and DT Carl Simpson (hip). Jones and Simpson are probable. Vinson is questionable.
JETS DEFENSE — RUSH (No.9).
PASS (NO.18), OVERALL (No.17)
Unit missed MLB Marvin Jones as Dolphins ran for 155 yards. Jones is probable. Also, to improve run defense and pass rush they signed free-agent DT Tony Casillas.
Miami (3-0)
at
Minnesota (2-1)
Televised 1 p.m., NBC
1 NNE — Minnesotaby 3 1/2
DOLPHINS OFFENSE — RUSH (No. 7), PASS (No. 3), OVERALL (No. 3)
Had 444 yards and held ball for 34:16. RB Terry Kirby had 100 of team's 155 yards vs. Jets. QB Dan Marino's 117.7 rating and 939 yards are second in AFC. Nine TDs lead conference, as does his 9.58 yards per pass. TE Keith Jackson had six catches for 100 yards vs. Jets.
VAMPIRE
VIKINGS OFFENSE — RUSH (No. 9), PASS (No. 19), OVERALL (No. 15)
Finally broke out vs. Bears. Had 464 total yards. RB Terry Allen ran for 159 yards on 22 carries. QB Warren Moon was 22-for-29 for 236 yards and TD. WR Crie Carter has 20 receptions (tied for fifth in NFC). Had scored only 20 points and one offensive TD before last week.
DOLPHINS DEFENSE — RUSH
(No. 1), PASS (No. 28), OVERALL
(No.25)
Despite missing starters ILB Dwight Hollier and CB Troy Vincent, unit played well last week. Four different players had INTs vs. Jets. Rookie OLB Aubrey Beavers had first INT in first start. Allowed only 59 yards rushing last week and 50.3 per game on season. DE Jeff Cross leads team with three sacks.
VIKINGS DEFENSE — RUSH
(No.2), PASS (No.8), OVERALL (No.
4)
33 points allowed leads NFL. Second in NFL with 12 sacks. Had three vs. Bears last week. Defensive tackles Henry Thomas and John Randle have combined for seven sacks. Vikings have allowed only one rushing TD.
Gale Sayers Saturday, Photo Day Sept.24th
Autographed photos in a plastic sleeve for only $3!*
Register to win an autographed football in a special display case!
40
Pale Sarge
Champion
*Get an 8" x 10" autographed photo of Gale Sayers, College and Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee, for only $3 with the purchase of any Champion sportwear product. Also available individually for $10, or framed for only $59.95.
KU
KU
DOCKSTONES
KU Bookstores Kansas Union, Level Two The only store offering rebates to KU students
Kansas Union 864-464C
23-L
SERIES-II FALL '94 ATTITUDE NOT AGE
SERAPE STRIPE TURTLENECK
Handi knit neck with earthy red, indigo and brown multi-sapeir stripes. $178.
Country Club Plaza, 47th & Broadway, Kansas City
HAROLD'S
IV
4B
Friday. September 23. 1994
NATION/WORLD
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pope cancels U.S. journey
VATICAN CITY — Health problems have finally slowed down history's most traveled pope.
The Associated Press
Pope John Paul II called off his trip to the United States yesterday, capping months of upbeat official reports amid rumors that the Pontiff was ailing.
The Vatican said the 74-year-old pope needs more time to recover from hip-replacement surgery following a fall in his bathroom April 29. The pope was due to leave Oct. 20 for a visit to the United Nations in New York; Yonkers, N.Y.; Newark, N.J.; and Baltimore.
"It's a question of mobility, not health," Navarro said, adding that the pope's scheduled trip to Asia in January was still on.
Vatican representative Joaquin Navarro said the pope had not fully recovered from the fall and needs further physical therapy.
The Vatican repeatedly has said the pope's health is good, expressing dismay over alarms in the media that he suffered from Parkinson's disease or other serious illnesses.
John Paul was an extremely vig
orous 58 when elected the first Polish pope in 1978 by Roman Catholic cardinals. He was wounded in an assassination attempt on May 13, 1981, but eight months later was traveling the world again.
But even the rescheduled was little consolation for many of John Paul's American followers. The Pope had planned to bring his cruisade against abortion and euthanasia to the United Nations during his U.S. trip.
In recent years, his medical problems have increased. Doctors removed what they said was a benign intestinal tumor two years ago. He also broke his shoulder in a fall last Nov. 11.
"I don't mean to sound selfish, but that's next year. If you're looking for some peace in your turbulent world right now, that's another year you'll have to wait for that blessing," said Geri LaGrua, 41, from New York City.
Describing the pope as disappointed, Navarro said John Paul intends to make the trip to the United States in November 1995 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the founding of the United Nations.
Canceled visit disappoints Catholics
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — For Pope John Paul II, the cancelation of his U.S. visit this fall means a lost opportunity to bring his crusade against abortion and euthanasia to the United Nations.
For Roman Catholic churches in the Northeast, it means tens of thousands of parishioners will have to wait another year to see the head of their faith.
Six-year-old Kristina Scarlotta of New York City cried when she heard the news.
"My daughter was getting ready for school and saw it first and started to cry, and I sat there and cried with her," said her mother, Theresa, choking back tears again."1
At St. Hedwig Catholic Church, a Polish-American parish in Trenton, N.J., 200 congregation members had tried for 55 tickets to a papal Mass. The lucky ticketholders had planned to attend in Polish dress.
"I was so sorry that he didn't come," said the Rev. Henry F. Schabowski. "It was a combination of things. First, it's that the pope is the pope, and second for us, as Polish Americans, it was a very special occasion because he's a Polish guy."
Simpson had knife training
LOS ANGELES — A tape of a TV movie for which O.J. Simpson was trained to kill with a knife was seized from his mansion along with a note from his ex-wife telling him never to speak to her again, a detective testified yesterday.
The Associated Press
Detective David Martin said even though the items weren't specified in a search warrant, he took them from Simpson's house because he believed they might link Simpson to the June 12 stabbing deaths of his ex-wife and Ronald Goldman.
With Simpson's trial scheduled to get under way Monday, his lawyers are challenging the June 28 search as too broad and want the evidence thrown out.
Police also spotted a picture of Simpson and Nicole Brown Simpson in happier days. It had been turned face down under his bed.
Detective Otis Marlow saw of Simpson's mansion. "To see a picture of Mrs. Simpson on the ground, face down, was unusual."
"It's immaculate inside there."
"I was aware Mr. Simpson was involved in that series as a Navy SEAL." Martin said. He also noted that in the film Simpson would have worn a cap similar to one found at the scene of the slayings.
Martin said the video of "Frogmen," a movie about a Navy commander who turns to private security work, was seized because police had received tips that it might contain clues to the case.
"We were aware in his preparation for that series he had received some instruction in the use of a knife as a killing instrument," said Martin, adding he believed the video would show Simpson wielding a knife.
Although the warrant sought only a stiletto knife, its packaging and any dark clothing with bloodstains, off-
cers said they felt justified in seizing anything that might point to motive or serve as evidence.
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito has said that if the warrant were used as "a subterfuge for a general search," all evidence seized could be thrown out.
Simpson occasionally grinned and raised his eyebrows during the testimony from detectives. Later, he appeared to be staring at the ceiling.
---
The trial begins Monday with jury selection.
The court session began yesterday with it lashing out at the media for, he said, inaccurately reporting DNA test results.
"I'm so saturated by the irresponsibility of the media that I'm beyond being outraged. I'm almost numb to it at this point," It said. "It's outrageous. It's irresponsible."
House evaluates access law
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — In May 1993, Congress made it a crime to intimidate, injure or obstruct anyone trying to go in or out of an abortion clinic. But since then, a doctor and his escort have been murdered, and clinics continue to be attacked and blockaded.
A House panel questioned Justice Department officials and those working in abortion clinics yesterday about whether the new Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act is being effectively enforced.
"The Justice Department has got to do better," he said.
What they heard prompted Rep. Charles Schumer, D.N.Y., an author of the law and chairman of the House Judiciary subcommittee, to chide officials.
volunteer escort, James Barrett, in July outside a Pensacola, Fla., clinic, said Deval Patrick, assistant attorney general for civil rights.
Since the law went into effect, the Justice Department has filed criminal charges based on its provisions in two cases: a blockade of a Milwaukee clinic and the murders of John Britton, an abortion doctor, and his
But there are many other cases, such as the firebombing in July of a Falls Church, Va., clinic and a Planned Parenthood facility in August in Brainerd, Minn., which was destroyed by arson. Schumer said.
In August, at least nine clinic doctors received death threats, Schumer said, including Joseph Booker, a doctor at the only clinic in Mississippi. He is now under 24-hour protection by U.S. marshals.
Patrick and Jo Ann Harris, assistant attorney general who heads the Justice Department's criminal division, testified that the government had set up a special task force to handle clinic violence and was vigorously pursuing violations of the law.
While abortion clinic staff members contended that the law was ineffective, the panel also heard from several anti-abortion protesters who claimed just the opposite.
Congress bars condom funds
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Congressional negotiators agreed yesterday to bar the use of federal education money for programs that directly promote sexual activity or for condoms for distribution in the nation's schools.
The compromise agreement came as the Senate and House conferees sought to resolve differences on the reauthorization of the nearly $13 billion Elementary and Secondary Education Act, which expires Sept. 30.
If Congress fails to act by the deadline, funding would cease for programs created by the act. Among them is the $6.4 billion program aiding educationally disadvantaged children.
Press secretary may be replaced
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — In a long-anticipated White House shake-up, press secretary Dee Dee Myers is expected to be replaced by State Department representative Michael McCurry, officials said yesterday.
Anxious to improve his imagemaking shop, Clinton also plans to give Communications Director Mark Gearan a new job overseeing planning, strategy, communications and honing of the president's message.
The moves, engineered by Chief of Staff Leon Panetta, would change the public face of the White House. Myers, 33, has been Clinton's press secretary since early in the administration and played a similar role in his campaign.
Panetta wants McCurry to regularly brief reporters, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity. McCurry, a former communications director for the Democratic National Committee, has a reputation as a reliable, knowledgeable representative and — unlike Myers — is included in Clinton's inner circle.
Aides cautioned that Clinton had not taken final action on Panetta's recommendations. The announcement could come as early as today.
Complicating matters has been Myers' insistence that she remain in her current job, saying privately that she would resign rather than take a lesser job. At one point, a senior aide said, Panetta planned to offer her more responsibility, but it was unclear whether Myers would accept any change.
Asked if Myers was upset by the move, a friend of Myers in the White House said, "She's all right. She's a strong person." Yet, the same person said that Myers probably would resign.
haircut from Manetamers
coat from Outfitter's
shirt from Outfitter's
sandwich from West Coast Saloon
jeans from Outfitter's
AMY ANGLER
CARDMEMBER SINCE AUGUST 30, 1994
"I got me a card and it works real good. I still haven't caught that big bass 'Bessie' but I look good tryin."
It doesn't matter how you spend your time, the Kansan Card can help you spend your money.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D.
total damage July 21, 1993
NCGS
Available at: University Daily Kansan (119 Stauffer-Flint), University Book Shop, Javhawk Bookstore, Kansas Union (2nd level Courtesy Counter), and Burge Union (1st level Courtesy Counter)
↓
2
6
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 23, 1994
5B
Dole beats Clinton in survey
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole is capable of defeating President Clinton in 1996, but if Ross Perot runs again, the edge goes to Clinton, according to a new survey.
In a two-way race, the Kansas Republican was the choice of 49 percent of the 1,440 registered voters questioned in the poll by the Times Mirror Center for The People and The Press. Clinton got 46 percent, and 5 percent were undecided.
But if Perot mounts another independent bid for the White House, he would take more votes from Dole than from the president, the survey indicated.
The survey showed Clinton would get 39 percent, Dole 36 percent and Perot 20 percent. In 1992, Clinton won the election with 43 percent of the vote, compared to 37 percent for George Bush and 19 percent for Perot.
Dole's biggest strengths were among white males, college graduates, voters earning more than $50,000 a year and those who are married.
Retired Gen. Colin Powell does even better than Dole, getting 51 percent to Clinton's 41 percent in a head-to-head matchup.
The poll's margin of error was plus or minus 2 percentage points. The survey made public Wednesday is based on random telephone interviews conducted July 12-27.
House speaker in re-election trouble
Associated Press
SPOKANE, Wash. — He's a big man on Capitol Hill, yet House Speaker Thomas Foley could be in trouble at home.
"I like Tom. He's done good for me," Loren "Kay" Morse said yesterday, taking time from listening to Rush Limbaugh to answer a reporter's questions. "I admire Tom, but I think it's time."
In Tuesday's primary, Foley got 35 percent of the vote in his bid for a 16th term, his worst primary
showing in 30 years. The Democrat will face moderate Republican George Nethercutt, who got 30 percent, in November.
Foley's largely rural, agricultural district is generally conservative and Republican. The speaker will also have to deal with the antiincumbency sentiment that led Washington state voters to approve a 1992 term limits measure for members of Congress. Foley has challenged the law in court.
Reno rebuffs governor's demand
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Clinton Administration is accusing California Gov. Pete Wilson, a potential 1996 presidential foe, of playing politics about illegal immigration.
Attorney General Janet Reno rebuffed Wilson's demand that an immigration emergency be declared in his state. And she said yesterday that California had not applied for available federal money to help deal with the flood of arrivals from Mexico.
Illegal immigration has become a major issue in Wilson's re-election
battle against Democrat Kathleen Brown, with Wilson urging President Clinton to declare an emergency so federal funds can be provided to the state.
In making that request Wednesday, Wilson said, "There is no further excuse to delay reimbursing California for the costs of immigration."
Reno released a letter to the governor noting that a declaration of emergency is not needed to gain money from the Immigration Emergency Fund.
Democrats push campaign reform
WASHINGTON — Congressional Democrats, headed for a scary election season, took up the protective banner of reform yesterday with a push to change campaign financing and restrict gifts from lobbyists.
The Associated Press
The Senate voted 96-2 to go ahead with debate on the campaign finance bill, embroiling the chamber in a talkfest that Republicans pledged to carry on for at least 30 hours. Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, threatened to keep the Senate in session all night to burn up the clock.
The immediate issue was whether the House and Senate should work out a compromise bill that would provide for voluntary limits on overall campaign spending in exchange for federal matching funds for candidates who comply and would limit special-interest money flowing into campaigns—a puzzle that has eluded solution for 12 years.
Sen, Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said he hoped to kill the bill and at the same time beat up Democrats over the measure's public financing provisions. "Taxpayer financing of elections is a disaster, and it's terrific for us politically."
The Associated Press
Former hostage wants to see files
WASHINGTON — Terry Anderson wants to see the files federal agencies compiled about him during his seven years as a hostage in Lebanon but says some bureaucrats won't do it without permission from his terrorist kidnappers.
He named 13 government agencies as defendants in the suit he filed yesterday in federal court, seeking to get documents he says are his by right under the Freedom of Information Act.
"The files probably contain some secrets I shouldn't know, and I don't want those." Anderson told a news conference in his lawyers' office.
JCPenney's is Your Jayhawk Apparel Headquarters ...
Friday, Saturday & Sunday All our Kansas Jayhawk Apparel
SAVE 20%
Save on T-shirts, long sleeve fleece, windsuits, hats and our large selection of outerwear from Apex $ ^{\circledast} $ , Proplayer $ ^{\circledast} $ and others.
Remember Great Game Day Savings at JCPenney!
KANSAS
KANSAS
KU
KU
KANSAS
23rd & Ousdahl
HOURS:
Sun. 12-6
Mon.-Sat. 9:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
JCPenney
HONG KONG AND MACAU STUDENT ASSOCIATJON
PRESENTS
THE UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG
HONCHUN FEDERAL UNIVERSITY ASSOCIATION
MJD-AUTUMN FESTJVAL DANCE PARTY
Time: Sat. September 24, 1994, 8:00pm
Place: Kansas Union Ballroom
Fee: Member $4.00
Nonmember $6.00
Door tickets $6.00
Tickets are available in SUA office
Refreshment will be served during the party
HKMSA members please bring your
KUJD with you.
HD
STUDENT
SENATE
HELPING A FRIEND WHO HAS BEEN RAPED OR SEXUALLY ASSAULTED
Thursday, September 29, 1994 Malott Room, Kansas Union 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
---
If someone you know and care about has been sexually assaulted, you may not know what to do or say when you are with the survivor. For a discussion of these and other issues, please join us.
Dr Richard Nelson, Counselor Rachel Lee, Graduate Assistant Counseling and Psychological Services The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall. For more information, contact Rachel Lee at 864-3552
Facilitators:
We've got great heads for hair THE PROFESSIONAL DIFFERENCE Ruth professional training keeps our styles on the edge. Because the smaller we get, the smaller you look. Drop In And Refine Your Fashion It Today. salon MONDE
Orbison Laboratories, Inc 1993 All rights assumed
salon BEAU MONDE
REDKEN
THE POWER BEHIND BEAUTIFUL IMMY
Where the world is Beautiful through You.
15 est thirteen *a* & Lawrence, Ks. (Akhoe the Jonah Book)
Dale Choucher, rpa
(91314-7987)
Glimpy Preorder, rpa
(91314-8034-304)
20% off EASTPAK
EASTPAK
products Today thru Tuesday.
GIANT BACKPACK SALE
Epakw
You can bring an Eastpak bag places you shouldn't go. Because unlike you, it comes with a lifetime guarantee. Waterproof Cardura® Nylon. And it's also available in a variety of colors and styles. Eastpak. Buy it.
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
Serving downtown since 1936
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
Mulligan's
KU Bookstores
Kansas and Burge Unions
The only store offering rebates to KU students
Items already on sale excluded.
featuring DINE IN or CARRY OUT PUPS 11am-3am
Downtown Delivery Available
Great Food-Great Music
$1 Sam Adams Draws
KU
KU
HONESTORES
Kumanai 804-642-9150
FRI
Particle Man
$1.50 Wells
SAT
White Trash
2 For 1 Wells
All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged
1016 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 865-4055
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
Fri. Sept. 23
Blue Dixie
Lord Groovey & the
Psychedelic Zombies
Sat. Sept. 24
_Punkinhead
Brother Mayhem
Mon. Sept. 26
Open Mic KJHK
Sun. Sept. 25
Nova Mob
Priss
--18 + over
6
Tues. Sept. 27
Cherry Poppin Daddies
Hell Cat Trio
The Eudoras
10-20PS
Skateboarding
STEP UP with BODY BOUTIQUE The Woman's Fitness Facility
60 classes per week and much more
ABSOLUTELY NO JOINING FEE -VIP-
1st visit FREE
10 TANS for only $20 exp. 10/3/94
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
Fridays are
Double Print Days
at Jayhawk Bookstore
Bring in any roll of C-41 process color film for developing and get the 2nd same size set of prints FREE!
Jayhawk Bookstore
only at the top of Naismith Hill!
6B
Friday, September 23,1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 843-0611
Ray-Ban
SUPPLIER BY
BALUNCH & LOMB
The world's largest sunglasses
Keep It Clean
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANAN
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 9/30/19
20% OFF ANY PUR
FANTASTIC
SELECTION!
Choose from
over 1,000
frames
SPECTRUM
OPTICAL
THE STUDENT FRIENDLY STORE
A man in a lab coat is sitting at a table with two other men, one of whom is holding a syringe. The man in the lab coat is looking at the syringe while the other man observes him.
Celebrate Oktoberfest GO HAWKS!
GRAHAM'S RETAIL LIQUORS
1906 MASS 843-8186
Maurice's is now participating in the Kansan Card
15% OFF any regular priced purchases
841-0334
708 Massachusetts
SMITHEREENS
RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE PRESENTS
THE SMITHEREENS
FRIDAY, SEPT. 23RD
$4 OFF
LAYER
WITH THIS COUPON
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
FOR MORE INFO 018-541-0111
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC CAFE AND MOLLEIGHARDS
AND TRUST
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
1001 WEST WEST
LAWRENCE, KAYUAN
NO HOME NUMBER 010.941.8111
CABLE AVAILABLE AT IVERVILLE VALLEY
MUSIC CAFE AND MULTIAGRAM
EARN CASH
& HELP OUR COMMUNITY TOO!
$15 TODAY
& $30
This WEEK
Walk-Ins
Welcome
BY DONATING YOUR
BLOOD PLASMA
CALL FOR INFORMATION
NABI BigMedical Center
816 W. 24th
(Behind Laird Neiler Ford)
749-5750
---
Scott's Bruss Apple GRILL & BAR
Scott's Brass Apple GRILL & BAR
ALABAMA-BIRMINGHAM vs. KANSAS
SATURDAY at 1:00pm
Doors open at 10:00, So come in and enjoy a great meal before the game.
After the game come in for a delicious dinner
Great food and drinks specials
GO JAYHAWKS
RAMS vs CHIEFS
SUNDAY
Game Time Noon
Hot Dogs $.50
Chili Dogs $1.00
Big Draws $2.00
Watch It Here!
10 T.V.'s and Big Screen
Hours:
11:00am- 1:30am
Bruss Apple
CHIEF'S ST.
3300 W. 15th St.
841-0033
Brass Apple
GRILL & BAR
Haiti operation to cost $250 million
U.S. troops could leave in December
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. military effort in Haiti will cost the Pentagon about $250 million over the rest of the year, forcing it to ask Congress for more money, Defense Secretary William Perry said Thursday.
He said about 11,000 U.S. troops would be in Haiti by Thursday night as part of Operation Uphold Democracy, and the earliest they could begin to withdraw would be after Haitian parliamentary elections set for December. It is too early to predict when all the troops would be out, he said.
Asked about remarks by LL Gen.
Raoul Cedras, head of the military
junta, that he planned to stay in Haiti
after relinquishing power, Perry said
he believed Cedras and his top aides
would choose to leave, but added,
"We're not going to force them out."
Perry, speaking in Norfolk, Va., after meeting with U.S. sailors and officers of U.S. Atlantic Command, said the cost by the end of September would be about $50 million, plus an additional $200 million through December.
The money is coming from the Defense Department's existing funds but will put such a squeeze on the bud.
The $250 million is what Perry called an incremental expense — the amount beyond what these particular forces would be spending on normal peacetime training.
get that congressional leaders already have been told the department intends to request an extra appropriation, Perry said.
Key House Democrats said they were drafting legislation that would authorize the military action in Haiti but only until Feb. 1 or March 1, when the mission would have to be turned over to an international United Nations force.
On Capitol Hill, lawmakers in both parties vied to place limits on the deployment.
Republican officials said they were likely to have their own proposal, and Rep. Christopher Cox, R-Calif., filed legislation urging Democrats to immediately schedule a debate and vote "upon the scope of and authorization for" the military operation.
Perry said that once Haitian police trained by multinational forces have begun operating and a fair parliamentary election is held, "then I think it's time to consider whether we can begin to pull our forces out."
About 40 percent of the U.N. forces that would remain in Haiti would be American, he said.
Day 4 in Haiti
HAITI
INTERVENTION
Rules of engagement for U.S. troops in Haiti
U. S. military police arrive in Haiti to help curb violent attacks by Haitian police on civilians
Respond with force against any acts of hostile intent
Repel hostile acts with necessary force
May use force to stop,
disarm, detain members of
Haitian military, police or
other armed persons
committing hostile acts or
showing hostile intent
0 N 28
Miles
Cap-Haitlen
Port-au-Prince
Bay
Haltl
Dom.
Rep.
Port-au-Prince
Camp
d'Applicatlon
DISMANTLING HEAVY WEAPONS:
U. S. Special Forces occupy arms camp and destroy heavy weapons, munitions; the heavy weapons unit was instrumental in the 1992 coup that overthrew Aristide
SOURCE: Defense Department; research by PAT CARR
Knight-Ridder Tribune/KUN TIAN
Former officer testifies about Tailhook gantlet
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — A former Navy officer sobbed as she told of being sexually assaulted by fellow officers at the 1991 Tailhook convention.
Kim Ponikowski, her testimony often inaudible, told a federal court jury that several men grabbed her breasts and legs as she tried to make her way along a third-floor hallway at the Las Vegas Hilton to a suite her squadron had rented.
"It was so sick," Ponkowski sad,
her voice shaking. "It was so sick"
booed. It was so unnatural, so bizarre."
Ponikowski said she swung at a man who was grabbing her breasts, striking him in the face.
Another man then pinned her hands behind her back, Poniikowski testified. "There were hands all over my body," she said. "My mind just kind of shut off. Then I was standing alone."
Ponikowski's testimony came yesterday in the federal trial of a lawsuit filed by former admiral's aide Paula Coughlin, who blew the whistle on military aviators' bawdy behavior at the convention.
Coughlin is among about 90 women who claim they were groped and fondled on the convention's final night. A dozen women have filed lawsuits in state and district
"Everyone in the hallway just
Coughlin, who has yet to testify, is suing the Las Vegas Hilton and Hilton Hotel Corp. for an unspecified amount, claiming they should have provided security to prevent the attack. She reached a settlement with the Tailhook Association earlier this month for an undisclosed sum.
court here.
Ponikowski, 26, of Vero Beach,
Fla., is one of those suing the Las
Vegas Hilton and the San Diego-
based Tailhook Association.
She testified she saw no unusual activity on the third floor the first two nights of the event; then on the final night, she went looking for friends at her squadron's suite.
AIDS patient wins discrimination suit
The Associated Press
The department sued the Castle Dental Center in Houston last year for alleged violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act when it told Harrison J. Totten it would no longer treat him.
WASHINGTON — In the first settlement of its kind, a Texas man who tested positive for the AIDS virus will receive $100,000 in damages and penalties from a dentist who refused to continue to treat him, the Justice Department said yesterday.
Dr. Jack Castle, owner of the dental center, must pay $80,000 in compensatory damages to Totten. Castle Dental Center and its management company, Family Dental Services of Texas, Inc., each will pay $10,000 in civil damages.
The suit alleged that after getting braces, Totten was continuing treatment at the center until it learned that he had tested positive for HIV in the spring of 1992.
"At that time, Totten allegedly received a letter stating 'due to the recent discovery of your health problems, Castle Dental Center has decided to cease providing you with orthodontic treatment," the department said.
Sentence upped after cussing
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Derrick Shaw could pay a heavy price for cursing out the judge who sentenced him — an extra 35 to 70 years in prison.
Right after Judge Ricardo C. Jackson sentenced Shaw to a 7 1/2-to-15 year term for a 1993 kidnapping and armed robbery, Shaw yelled curses at him and called the judge a "house nigger," according to a transcript of
Tuesday's proceedings. Both men are black.
Jackson called Shaw, 24, back before the bench and resentenced him to the maximum 42 1/2 to 85 years.
"If the matter ever comes to me for recommendation for parole, I'm going to say 'No,' Jackson told Shaw. "You should serve every second of your sentence because of your contemptuous attitude to the court."
Vietnam colonel declared killed
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — Dorothy Shelton traveled the world for 25 years, seeking some shred of proof that her flyer husband, shot down over Laos, might be alive. Finally, she gave up hope, committing suicide four years ago.
Tuesday, Air Force Col. Charles E. Shelton, the last officially designated Vietnam-era prisoner of war, was declared killed in action.
His status as America's last remaining POW in Vietnam had symbolized U.S. determination to make sure every MIA in southeast Asia was accounted for.
The Sheltons' five children had asked for the change.
"I personally cannot imagine him being alive still," son John Shelton said from his Los Angeles home Wednesday. "We want to put it behind us. It's shaped our lives, and we want to take control and shape our own lives."
Man beat to death over spare change
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Police yesterday searched for a man they said beat to death another man who asked him for 12 cents in a convenience store.
Kenneth R. Revels, 39, of Kansas City, Mo. died early Wednesday, after being attacked shortly before midnight Tuesday inside a Handy Stop store in midtown Kansas City, police said.
Store manager Zubair Khalid said yesterday that the employee working at the store saw the fight and immediately called 911 but did not try to intervene.
"I don't suggest my guys working interfere in something because who knows what (weapons) they have?" Khalid said. "I would have tried to stop it" but cannot ask employees to do the same, he said.
Witnesses outside the store told police the fight began when Revels asked the other man for 12 cents. Instead of looking for change, the suspect shoved Revels on the chest. When Revels grabbed a bottle to defend himself, the man hugged him and apologized.
Call 842-7001 for a consultation today!
We offer treatment for all conditions of the skin, hair and nails including:
Students!
Member of Blue Shield &
Health Net
Wednesday Evening Appointments Available
- Acne
- Tattoo Removal
- Hair Transplants
- Mole & Wart Removal
- *Glycolic Acid Peels
- Spider Vein & Collagen Injections
Dermatology Center of Lawrence Since 1978
Lee R. Bittenbender, M.D.
930 Iowa St. • Hillcrest Professional Building
Lawrence, KS 69044 • (913) 842-7001
泌
THE ROCK CLUB
FRI., SEPT 23 ADV-TIX
SMITHEREENS
SAT., SMITHIN
SEPT
24 SECTION
THUR.
Bon Ton
Accordion Ba
FRI., SEPT 30
Cosmic Freeway
Dinner & Jazz!
SUN., SEPT 25
ALL YOU CAN EAT HERE
AND SALAD PARK
New York City's Grand
Tower & Empire Theater
SIMPLEXITY
MON., SEPT 26
TOE TRUCK
Power & Feel
DRINK SPECIALS
BEER SPECIALS
aonadays
15 Owland Pitchers
14 Sam Adams & Boulevard Pitchers
15 Whitney's Red Barrel Pitchers
aonadays
12.50 Imports
wareandware
2 for 1 Everything (except pitchers)
aonadays
12.50 Longnecks
aonadays
11.25 Wells
aonadays
2 for 1 Wells
aonadays
11.50 Vulka Wells
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE
AT THE CAFE OR THROUGH
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
For Info 913.841.9111
ROCKCLUB
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 23, 1994
7B
RECYCLE
your
Classified Directory
Daily Kansan
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
235 Typing Services
Classified Policv
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. The Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
1
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, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are open.
100s Announcements
105 Personals
THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass.
23 WKS.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendant
LEATHER
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purses
SUNG! ASSES
Bausch & Lomb, Raybay, Killer Loops
1's, Rev. Serengeti, and Vuartnet
In this threatening world, everyone needs a PAAL.
PAAL It on your clothing
where you are now.
pit is pulled, the PAL II emits an ear piercing alarm and a bright flashing light, startling an attacker and attracting attention. The light can also be used as a flashlight. The PAL II is your best defense against attack.
Quorum Securing Life
- Contact your Quantum Independent Distributor -
the technology is
Quorum. The opportunity
is yours.
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
110 Bus. Personals
KUStudent AdamRedden (913)441-4061
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also
Insurance for US citizens going abroad.
Odisha Insure Service. 411 1/2 S Main Ottawa,
K 600771 1009 6066.
Ruth & Kids Discount Floral. Donez arranged roses in vase 193 w/ 95. Accept all major credit cards and checks. Open 9-7 MF, 9-5 Sat, closed Sun. 953 E.2rd 832 0704
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
120 Announcements
300s
Menhandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Macmillanee
370 Want to Buy
EARTH MYSTICS and GODDESS OF MANY FACES-workshops on Earth-based spirituality, OCT 8-16. Presenter from St Louis. For info. Institute of Transparent Studies I 1923-2006.
13TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 7. 16, 1995 • 4. 5, 8, OW 7, RISKIES
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
$168
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
SUNCHASE
"YA GOTTA BE THERE!"
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1-800-SUNCHASE
Lose weight and have energy at the same time. I take a monthly, my energy level was good my appetite was better and I recommended. For a free sample, send name, address and phone number to Beham Research Center.
Openings for CNAs 20-10 shift for CNAs a full or part time. F便利ible hours. Eudora Nursing Center
YOUR ACADAMIC SUCCESS, PART 1: TIMES
control of your time and your life; increase
your reading efficiency, the ability and effectiveness. FREE!
Tues, Sep 27, 9 p.m., 7th edn. Haworth. Presented by
Rebecca Snyder.
YOURACADEMICSUCCESS.PART1:
TIME MANAGEMENT AND
READING WORKSHOP
Get control of your time and your life!
Increase your reading
effectiveness and efficiency.
FREE!
Tues., Sep. 27, 7:00-9:00 p.m.
2023 Haworth
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleton
737 New Hampshire St
140 Lost & Found
FOUND: Fuji Discovery camera on Emery Id.
Contact Jason at 843-7777.
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
24 hour telephone answering service is seeking part-time help. Experience helpful, but will train the right person. Immediate opening for weekend job in New York City. Apply in person Mon./Wed./Fri. at 2441 W. 6th St. Babysitters needed for a research grant $45.35. Must have experience with babysitting young children and infants, baby sitting references, and be a U.S. student. Apply at 4057 Deadline. Sept. 23rd.
Brandon Woods is currently accepting applications for a full-time housekeeper. The qualified applicant must be outgoing, observant, self-motivated, able to work independently and enjoy working in a beautiful facility. We offer health, life and long-term disability insurance, vacation and housing, as well as a competitive salary. Please apply in person at 180 Inverrue Dr., Lawrence, KS E.O. 1E
Caterakers, Kansas Union Customer Dept. Hiring for Thursday, Oct. 6, 1974. Several shifts available. See schedules in Union Personnel Office $4.25/person paid in cash day following employment. Previous food service experience prefers. Catering Instructor / Personnel Office. Level 5. Kansas Union EOE
Caterers, Kansas Union Catering Department,
425 hr., 25 m., 3 pm. Monday thru Friday, week-
ends as scheduled, must have previous food sife
service experience, able to stand for long periods; lift up to 50 pounds, valid driver's license. Apply to Burge and Burge Personnel Office. EOE
CNA
Day, evening and weekend shifts needed. Work with elderly clients in their homes. Reliable transportation required. Call Scott at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association, 843-3728.
Need some extra pocket money? Certified Nurse Aide classes will start Sept. 26. Call Eudora Nursing Center, 542-2176 for additional information.
Ask for Stvia, Morn-Fri
COLLEGE STUDENTS $10.25-11.65 STARTING
local branch of nat i' calo Taking immediate entry level opening Flex time schedules 3.5 days, eyes weeks ends opt all majors accepted. For info 841-8655
Growing Overland Park, KC-based custom sportwear company seeks out expiring fraternity-sorority member for part time office help. Must have vehicle and be willing to commute from
Call (913) 381-9709 or (800) 886-9326
We offer excellent compensation and benefits,
which include uniforms, meals, tuition reimbursement,
mental room discounts and much more.
Please apply at 200 Macdonald Dr. eoei
The Holidome is recruiting service professionals to join our team! Current openings include:
- p. m. servers
* cocktail servers
* p. m. servers
* banquet help
* weekend honeymooners
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
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
Juicers Showgirls
Part time positions available
Apply at store today. 1029 Mass.
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly, working at Lawrence's top adult night spot.
Now hiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+.
Excellent working atmosphere.
Apply in person,
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
McDonald's
LOOKWHAT'S COMING!
McDonalds is looking for individuals who would be interested in working at one of four two new restaurants, Downtown and 6th and Wakarusa
Positions Available
- Special cleaningteams
- Late Night cleaningroom
- Management
- Hostess
- Late Night closingteam
- Administrative Assistant
Wednesdays at McDonalds on 23rd St. from 2-5 p.m.
Open interviews Mondays and Fridays at McDonalds on 6th St. from 2-5 p.m.
- Late Night closing team (8p.m.-4a.m.)
HOLIDAY INN
WE'RE GROWING AND WOULD LIKE YOU TO BE A PART OF OUR TEAM.
We offer excellent benefits including insurance,
tuition reimbursement, meals, uniforms, travel
and hotel discounts. If interested apply at Holiday Inn. EOE.
Holiday Inn is hiring service professionals. Both part-time and full-time positions available as:
• Bartender
• Cocktail servers
• Front Desk Agents
• Weekend Room Attendants
• Restaurant Servers
• Cooks
KAROKE DJs wanted. Responsible, great personality, attractive. For M. F. 749.3849.
Laborers wanted for tree service . 82.5% hr. per
time time. wanted in person only 845 Magea at 7
Mary. 5+ hrs.
Looking for a change while getting an education? We need an energetic fun-loving person to prefer a room with large windows, a Free room and board, plus salary. Own living space with private entity. For details please call 416-297-8530.
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic subscriptions. Sales experience is helpful, but we'll train highly motivated individuals. Evening hours are required. Call the Lawrence commission. Apply between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m.; at the Lawrence Journal World 699 New Hampshire.
Excellent income for part-time work!
is reopening and is looking for food service employees. Duties include both food prep and line cook positions, which will be part of the "new" Deli team, at Shumm Food Co Business between 9am - 4pm Mon - Fri at Crescent House.
Now hiring baby sitters / childcare providers. Duy-
and wend hours available. For more info
contact us at: (800) 653-1222.
Needed immediately. Part time teacher for home day care 10:25, week /week. Exp. repr. #41-7811
Office manager needed at Jon N. Notes of KU. Job begins immediately and continues through the school year. Approx 15-20 flexible hours per week and $500/month. Office is closed for all school vacations. Business background NOT required. Phone number not required. Phone are Jon's notes posting at the University, Placement Center in the Burge Union Application accepted for limited time.
Office assistant, leasing agent, part-time. Good pay,
flexible hours. 841-7827
Mazzio's Pizza is now hiring waitresses for work during the noon hour. Flexible hours. Must be outgoing, have a positive attitude, and have the ability too smile. Apply in person at 2630 lowa
701 Tennessee
Richard A. Frydmar
Attorney At Law
843-4023
WANTED: AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING
TEMPERATURES TO PROMOTE SPRING BREAK TO JAMAICA.
CANCUN FLORIDA, & PADRUE. FANTASTIC MISSIONS SUN
SPALL TURNS 180-426-7710
Wanted: Caring people who like kids 35 years old are required for 2 hours per day, 1 day per week, between 7:30-12:30, Monday-Friday. Daycare volunteers needed from 12:30-5:30. For more information call 842-695-7041.
Wanted babysitter for two children. Ages 3-5.
evenings 3:00 - 10:00. Light cooking necessary in
home, must be reliable, ask for Michelle and Bob
483-634. Call anytime for 3:30pm.
Party Animals! University Photography is looking for individuals w a professional attitude & appearance who wants to go to parties and get PAID. Call 843-529 between 10am, 3pm.
Free Consultation
Part-time Help. Retail Sales T Shirt Designer
must have previous computer experience prefer-
ably Coral Draw and Photo Shop. Graphic artis-
ces experienced. Must have an outgoing perfor-
mance and excellent communication skills
sales a plus. Contact Debbie at 316/683-2100 or send
to Express Designs, 805 Eldridge, NZD 2 Bldg.
Promo photography. Headshots, modeling, banding photos. B&W and color. Prism Screen 841-6030.
Prompt abortion and contraception services in Lawrence 841-5716, Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Office position in medical setting. Part-time
approx. 15 wks/wk. Morning and/or afternoon
shifts available. General clerical duties, filing,
sorting, typing, billing etc. Send resume to:
offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KI students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
225 Professional Services
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
YTFE constitution (816) 349-6944
ENGINELIBrary
ENGINELibrary,
proofreading, literature, BS LISI.
Highly qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3313.
International Video Conversions PAL/SECAM/NTCS
NTCS for up to 2 hours. Includes return
for damaged or lost video tape. For box
50箱 Ottawa K6 60007 1-600-698-0693
DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
235 Typing Services
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964.
Futoring Available for Russian and Ukrainian.
Native speaker. Reasonable rates. Contact Lucy at
843-7582
Donald G. Strobe
16East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-1133
A Word Perfect Wor Processing Service.
Laser Printing Service, Call:
864-325-8788, Austin 862-8788.
TRAFFIC-DOTS
Fake DIE & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
the law offices of
the law offices of DONALD G. STROLE
Prototype word processing service. Quality paper, Applications, resumes, edits, letters, documents.
*TOLL FREE* 1-800-555-3926.
Quality Word Processing Distortions. These, as well as other business letters, et al, printing by the Company.
---
WANT YOU RWORK TO LOOK UP'S BEST?
Put my service to the test.
For everything you need, well,
MAKIN' THE GRAGE
is the one to call.
welcome.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
28 Toyota Tercel, AC, AM/FM Cass, 104, 100 miles,
2 lbs. Directions: Great, good food. Burns oil.
Burns grease.
*Drive a Classic 75 Honda (CB125) $450, Honda 185
Dwin 260. Both low miles and large shape
For Sale. Sony CCD-TD68 8 mm camcorder, $650
Call George at 749-4332
Large healthy Iqanna 4 feet long. 865-2471
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only $500 Call Usra at 800-290-585
Matter set, dress new, never used, firm, excel
sound.
lent quality Cost $89, saverrice $155 913/764 (166)
Megabert PC/MCIA 14-1 Fax Modem for laptop.
Includes information software. Never used,
never installed. I paid $219, will sell for $100. Call
Jon. 843.7523
Moving? Must sell new stepper climber exerciser 175 call b4 842 651, ask for Dana.
340 Auto Sales
**1922 Nissan 200XH 200XH** with sunproof, power windows, and louvres **995* OBO** Call Mike **861**
1965 SABA Turbo 4 dr 4 spd sun roof psc ee,
Black/maran, Repair records. Rebuilt clutch
heater valve CV distributor and ignition module
new muffler, new tire. $2000 OB0. B41-1738
360 Miscellaneous
"81 Honda Express II moped. New carburator, fuel system (two-speed automatic; Cardinal of Mopeds)
One year-old lguarna for sale
Best offer: 865 5738
370 Want to Buy
Want to buy a used moped or scooter call Sheri at 865-3991.
A
Want to buy Basketball tickets, or sports combo Call Chris 865-901.
400s Real Estate
FOREBED ROOM APARTMENT
GREAT floor plan, 2 bath, on RU bus route, NEPGT.
Great kitchen, family room.
405 For Rent
Looking for Love
Lonely, attractive 3 or 4 bedroom apartments seeking residents to share a long or short term relationship. Call any time at 843-6446.
Pets Welcome No Sublease Fee
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid
120 Tennessee. 2 bdmr, unfurnished, utilities paid, $320. Available Oct 1st. not. Pets. 832-3718
3 bdmr. 2 bath. fully farm. Orchard Corners apt. for rent. Spring 95 $215 per man. on bus route. Call
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well warmed apartments at STAR TOWE
For Rent: Small two bedroom home suitable for
you. Call 745-267-287
$850 monthly plus utilities. No
patrons. Call 745-267-287
Swimming Pool
For Sale. College Hill Condo. Why rent when you can own? For info call 1-800-241-147.
South Point Apartments
- On KU Bus Route
* Close to Campus
* Swimming Pool
* Stop By Today!
Equival
Opportunity
749-4226 M-F 9-5
15th & Kasold Sat 10-4
Outstanding New Staff!!!
ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED
Quit, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campas. Some unit bills paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-3590. Room for rent for N/S female. Newly remodeled, very clean, W/D, all utilities pd. including cable $265 mq. #84-1069 or #82-2288.
Two Bedroom Apartment Now Available at **Apex West**, $735 water and trash paid.
Two Bedroom Apartment Now Available at
Aspen West, 4375 water and trash paid
Bellville, 3680 water and trash paid
862-2500
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Available for fall.
- Directly on bus route
*Call 843-4754
"Don't get left out in the cold."
430 Roommate Wanted
1/r roommate needed as from Oct. 1, to share a
bed duplex, 'm丛 from camps on Naiathrim d.
fully furnished. Rent $183+ utilities. Must be a
reasonable reason able Ku student. Call us
4287.
1 or 3 bedrooms in newer 1bem duplex in larger rooms, newer 2bem duplex in large rooms. Nept. apart. If 1 person, $500. If 2 persons, $750.
Guyz need roommate. M o W F. 3 belfm. 2 H fur.
Guys need roommate. M o W F. 3 belfm. 2 H fur.
820 rtw i 841 434-8497?
Females looking for 3rd roommate to live in town.
Bed, rentable, cable paired. Available immediately.
Phone number: (617) 458-2290.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
House mate needed. Close to campus. Lots of room. Reasonable rent and payments. Available at WKU.
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 Kansan offices. Or you may choose to have it filled in your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
(19 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60454
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
When cancelling a card that was adDED 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 apple lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Num. of insertions:
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1:10=$16.50
Classifications
Cost per line per day
IX 1X 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
105 personal
110 business personal
120 announcements
130 entertainment
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form • Please Print
140 lbs & bound 385 for sale
209 help wanted 340 auto sales
222 professional services 366 insurable
225 professional services
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper
Total ad cost:___ Classification:___
Address:
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard
(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 card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
You can lead a horse to water but you can't make him walk on it!
8B
Friday, September 23, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VHARNET
FRANCE
VHARNET
FRANCE
The
Etc.
Shop
928 Mass.
Downtown
Park in the rear
Stretch your money!
Use Kansan coupons
Esquire Barber Service
1st Time Customer $3.99
2323 Ridge Ct.
First Med Building
862-3699
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
September 23-25
Philadelphia
Friday 7:00 and 9:30 pm
Saturday 7:00 and 9:30
Sunday 2:00 pm
TOM HANKS DENZEL WASHINGTON
TWO THUMBS UP
BRILLiant
3-D
TMRILL...
to a space ship
from another world!
SHUDDER...
at the lury of
thundering avalanche!
SEE... XENOMORPHS
who can look like humans
or things of terror!
IT CAME FROM OUTER
SPACE 3-D
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.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
September 23-25
Philadelphia
Friday 7:00 and 9:30 pm
Saturday 7:00 and 9:30
Sunday 2:00 pm
TOM HANKS DENZEL WASHINGTON
TWO THUMBS UP
BRILLiant
3-D
THRILL...
to a space ship
from another world!
SHUDDER...
at the fury of
thundering avalanche!
IT CAME FROM OUTER
SPACE 3-D
Friday Midnight
Saturday Midnight
SEE...XENOMORPHS
who can look like humans
or things of terror!
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
C
GAME DAY JOG SUIT
Value Priced $5800
Shell 100% Silk Lining 100% Nyton
*PLUS*
On Game Day Get A Free Cotton Turtle Neck With Your Jog Suit Purchase
A
Saffees
20 DIFFERENT STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM
Mock & Full Turtlenecks in 6 different colors
Downtown Lawrence
922 Massachusetts - 843-6375
Mon. - Sat. 10:00 to 6:00
Sunday Noon to 5:00
open late every Thursday 'till 8:30
Saffir's • VISA•MASTERCARD•DISCOVER•AMEX
Budget approved for Head Start
WASHINGTON — The House approved funding yesterday for Head Start and other administration priority programs but stalled on a separate spending bill that includes an assurance that lawmakers won't get a raise next year.
The Associated Press
The House, rushing to complete its work before Congress recesses next month for the year, passed the $247 billion budget for the Labor, Health and Human Services and Education departments for fiscal year 1995.
But lawmakers, objecting to several items in the $23.6 billion Treasury, Postal Service and general government budget, sent it back to a House-Senate conference.
The latter bill includes language stating that members of Congress, federal judges, the vice president, Cabinet members and senior officers will not be eligible for a 2.6 percent cost-of-living allowance approved for other federal workers.
Lawmakers, concerned about their poor image among voters, are overwhelmingly opposed to the raise that would have increased their $133,600 salaries by almost $3,500.
The Labor-HHS bill, passed 331-89 by the House, included funding for some of President Clinton's top priority programs, including Head Start, Goals 2000 and the School-to-Work Act, but at levels lower than the administration sought.
Both bills were House-Senate compromise plans that must receive both House and Senate approval before going to the president.
The bill also delays for a year, until July 1995, implementation of a "85-15" rule that would cut off funding for-for-profit trade schools that receive more than 85 percent of their revenue from federal student aid programs.
NEW YORK—The federal courts and the FBI have yelled "Cut!" to TV camera crews that tag along with police and follow them right into suspects' living rooms during a raid.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled earlier this month that law enforcement officers on a raid have no right to bring "reality TV" shows, such as "COPS", into a house without the owner's permission.
The ruling came in an invasion-of-privacy lawsuit brought against CBS after a "Street Stories" camera crew accompanied the Secret Service on a search of a woman's
Courts cut out 'reality TV'
The Associated Press
Shortly before the ruling, the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin warned federal, state and local law enforcement agencies around the nation:"Media participation in enforcement activities that occur in private areas should be specifically prohibited, unless the media obtains consent from individuals occupying those areas."
CBS representative Tom Goodman said the network will no longer send a camera crew into a home without the owner's permission. And, of course, getting permission before a raid is impossible.
home in 1992. CBS never aired the footage and has settled the suit under confidential terms.
Cisneros may be investigated
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department said Thursday it has begun an inquiry into whether a criminal investigation by an independent counsel is warranted over payments HUD Secretary Henry Cisneros says he made to a former girlfriend.
Cisneros acknowledged Thursday that he paid more than $50,000 to his former girlfriend after he took office
The law requires the attorney general to seek the appointment of an independent counsel by a panel of three federal appeals court judges if information about alleged violations of federal criminal law "is specific enough and from a sufficiently credible source."
— something he had denied as recently as July.
In response to questions to Attorney General Janet Reno, the Justice Department said later it is proceeding under the Ethics and Government Act to determine whether information it has received about the payments "warrant a preliminary investigation."
Such independent counsels are now investigating events surrounding the collapse of a savings and loan institution whose owner was a partner of President and Mrs. Clinton in the failed Whitewater land venture and the travels of Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy.
The Justice Department said it "is proceeding as the law requires" after getting information related to material first broadcast by the syndicated television show "Inside Edition" about Cisneros' payments to Linda Mediar.
Cisneros said Thursday he paid the money to Medlar on three occasions after January 1993, when he took over the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Golan settlers get support
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Tens of thousands of Israelis streamed to the Golan Heights yesterday in support of settlers protesting a possible Israeli withdrawal from the strategic plateau.
The demonstration came as a newspaper reported efforts were under way to arrange an Israeli-Syrian summit. The summit might come in October when U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher visits the region.
About 50 Golan visitors heckled legislators from the governing Labor Party who visited a tent where eight leaders, most of them party members, had been on hunger strike for 10 days.
"Look at what you're doing!" said one woman as the law-makers entered the tent in Gamla. "You're destroying this country. You're giving it up!"
Tens of thousands came from all over Israel to Golan to demonstrate their support for Jewish settlements there. A crowd of 4,000 milled around the tent in Gamla, including about 100 Golan cattle farmers.
Three Baltimore cops shot
BALITMORE — Three undercover police officers were shot Thursday by a uniformed officer during a drug raid.
Police had no immediate explanation for why the officer fired on his fellow officers, spokesman Rob Weinhold said. An investigation was to begin immediately.
When police arrived at the east Baltimore rowhouse, a suspect ran out the back door, where several plainclothes officers captured him. As the group came into the house, it was met by shots fired by an officer who had come in the front door.
Weinhold did not know how many shots were fired. One officer, shot in the left shoulder, was in serious but stable condition after surgery. The other two, each shot in the hand, were in good condition. None of their injuries were considered life-threatening.
Alleged spy says he was a U.S. spy
The Associated Press
"If I have to end up behind bars, I want it to be known for whom I was working," said Jeffrey Schevitz, an American expatriate arrested May 3 on suspicion that he spied on West Germany for communist East Germany from 1977 to 1989.
Schevitz, a sociologist and former university professor who moved to
BONN, Germany — A one-time American antiwar activist and alleged East German agent charged yesterday that U.S. intelligence officials were his real spymasters and are now trying to cover it up.
Germany in 1976, demanded the CIA open files he says will prove he was spying on both Germanies at the behest of an American diplomat.
Freed on $65,000 bail Sept. 6. Schevitz wants the U.S. government to intervene with German justice authorities and rescue him from a potentially long prison term.
Schevtiz claims his U.S. control officer wanted him to see whether West Germany had any plans to build atomic weapons and try to infiltrate East German intelligence.
Schevitz said he let himself be recruited by East German agents and had sources in the chancellor's office
in Bonn who fed him information about West Germany.
A call to the CIA public affairs office in Langley, Va., late yesterday was not answered.
But William Colby, CIA director from 1973 until 1976, called Schevtz's story farfetched. "It's very popular when you get in trouble to say, 'I was working for the CIA,'" Colby said.
Schevitz said Colby's denial doesn't surprise him. "They're not going to be able to admit openly" that he was Washington's double agent because that would hurt relations with Bonn, Schevitz said.
Preservatives may have cancer fighter
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Two widely used food preservatives boosted levels of a natural cancer fighter in laboratory animals and appear to do the same thing in humans, a researcher reported yesterday.
When the genes are cranked up, they produce more of the enzyme, which provides better protection against cancer-causing substances in the environment, Dannenberg reported at the International Conference on Cancer Prevention at Rockefeller University in New York.
Advocates of natural foods have long decried the use of preservatives, but Andrew Dannenberg, a researcher at Cornell Medical College, found that the preservatives BHA and BHT "revved up" the gene for an enzyme that helps destroy carcinogens before they trigger tumors.
The results do not mean that foods should be pumped up with even more preservatives, he said. The findings are important because they uncover a cancer prevention mechanism that appears to be part of the explanation for the well-known anti-cancer properties of broccoli, cauliflower and brussels sprouts.
"They are amazing vegetables," Dannenberg said. "They have an amazing array of anti-cancer compounds."
His research shows that at least part of the effect of those compounds comes from reviving up the same gene affected by BHA and BHT.
The gene produces an enzyme called UDP-glucuronosyltransferase or UGT. The study found elevated levels of the enzyme in the liver, kidneys and small intestines of rats fed higher doses of BHA and BHT than were normally found in foods, Dannenberg said.
The plague makes deadly comeback
Associated Press
Bubonic plague, which ravaged 14th-century Europe, was first detected last month in the southern state of Maharashtra. Since then, possibly a more fatal strain of the disease has erupted in the western city of Surat.
NEW DELHI, India — Plague has returned to India after a three-decade absence. Spread by fleas from infected rats, the disease has killed at least 24 people and is threatening to move to a major city.
The outbreak in Surat, which is choked with slums and open sewers, has killed at least 24 people, a health commissioner said Thursday. More than 100,000 people have fled in panic, Press Trust of India news agency said.
The news agency said officials have sealed roads out of affected neighborhoods, but people were still sneaking out. The government has closed schools, colleges, theaters and parks for a week to halt the disease's spread. Unconfirmed reports put the death toll in the city at as high as 60, the United News of India news agency reported.
The outbreak has troubled health authorities in Bombay, a city of 12.5 million people just 160 miles south of Surat. Bombay authorities ordered all hospitals in four districts neighboring Surat to stock up on antibiotics.
Get your Kansan Card today!
Duffy's
Duffy's at the Ramada Presents.
CASABLANCA NIGHT
PALM TREE
"The Only Latin Bar in Lawrence"
Venga a celebrar el dia de: Guatemala,
El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Mexico y Chile con la mejor música Latina.
Every Friday Starting September 9th
Duffy's
In the Ramada Inn 6th & Iowa 842-7030
CHRISTIE'S TOY BOX WHERE THE FUN BEGINS!
CHE
CICLOIDO
*Adult Novelties
*Unusual Greeting Cards
- Unique T-Shirts
- Unusual Greeting Cards
* Exotic Lingerie
- *Over-the-Hill* Gifts
*Video Sales & Rentals*
- "Over-the-Hill" Gifts
*Video Sales & Rentals
Video Sales & Rentals
-Hilarious Party Games
- Hilarious Party Games *
* Sensuous Oils & Lortions *
*Sensuous Oils & Lotions*
*Current Monthly Magazines*
CURRENT FOREIGN Magazines
•T-Back/Thong Swimwear
KU students -Rent 1 movie at regular price and get a 2nd movie for 1c
AMERICAN CHRISTIES TOY BOX
1206 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Ks. 842-4266
BROADCASTING
Recycled Sounds
LOADED
IN LAWRENCE '94
cd release concert
THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE
KJHD
90.7
Saturday Sept. 25th
with Crap Supper, Hatful of Rain,
MERCY RECORDS
On the Glass Onion deck above Recycled Sounds
at 12th and Orea
2:00-5:00
give away, free snacks, discounts, and Live Music!!
107
CAMPUS A clock that hung in KU's first building returns to campus Page 3A. WARMING High 73° Low 49° Page 2A.
勇
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.104.NO.25
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26,1994
ADVERTISING: 8644358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Trafficway protest brings arrest
One woman jailed goes on hunger strike
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
A Lawrence resident was arrested Saturday afternoon and remained in jail yesterday following an otherwise peaceful protest of the South Lawrence Trafficway.
Mary Gray, 39, was arrested and charged with failure to abide by lawful order, a misdemeanor, after she walked about the trafficway construction site at U.S. Highway 40 and Douglas County Road 13 uprooting surveying stakes. She was in Douglas County Jail yesterday on $150 bond. Gray apparently also told friends Saturday
afternoon she was on a hunger strike and would remain in jail until a Douglas County Commissioner came to speak with her.
Gray, an active member of the trafficway opposition, pulled out six stakes before two Douglas County deputy sheriffs, who were supervising the protest, arrested and handcuffed her.
Lena Johnson, a member of the Alliance for Environmental Justice, one of the protest's sponsors, said she had spoken to Gray on Saturday in jail. Johnson said Gray had told her that she would remain in jail and continue the hunger strike until one of the three county commissioners came to speak with her. Johnson said Gray also had declined offers by friends to pay her bond.
"She seems pretty determined to stay down there." Johnson.
County commissioners could not be
Gray could face a maximum penalty of $500 and/or six months in jail, according to state law.
The arrest followed a peaceful protest by about 30 people, including Lawrence residents and KU and Haskell students, who said the trafficway would damage the wetland area south of Haskell Indian Nations University. Haskell students have said the wetlands hold a spiritual value, and environmentalists have said the wetlands are ecologically important because of their diversity.
After lining U.S. Highway 40, protesters formed a circle and spoke on the environmental and spiritual threat of the trafficway, which the state and Douglas County are building to relieve traffic on the city's south side.
"I condemn my race for pursuing the almighty dollar," said Mike Todd, Lawrence resident.
Speaking above the nearby traffic, Jayleen Farrell, Haskell sophomore, told the people forming the circle that they should oppose the trafficway to preserve the land for future generations.
"Do you really want your children to live like that?" said Farrell as she gestured to a child in the circle. "These precious children? I want them to smell. I want them to be able to touch a tree and know what it is."
Terry Huerter, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore and member of KU Environs who attended the protest, said KU students should get involved.
"It's a unique land that's part of our community," he said. "This development could eradicate it."
PROFILE
Harley Davidson
"Vic the Barbarian", also known as Victor Wortman, is well kown in Lawrence for his three-wheeled 1948 Harley Davidson and his free-wheeling attitude.
'Vic the Barbarian' is incurable extrovert
Once known for his wild exploits in Lawrence, "Vic the Barbarian" has cleaned up his act but still has a good time.
By David Wilson
Kansan staff writer
A loud roar rips through the quiet of the afternoon as a three-wheeled 1948 Harley Davidson tears up Indiana Street in a cacophony of engine exhaust.
Sitting astride the antique piece of American machinery is "Vic the Barbarian", certified Lawrence character.
This afternoon, "Vic the Barbarian" is dressed in knee-high black motorcycle boots, jeans, a tight
He swings out of the wide seat of the Harley and strides into Yello Sub, wallet chains and assorted keys dangling from his belt. Everyone in the shop stops eating for a second to look at him.
black T-shirt and a red bandana around his neck. His shoulder-length wavy brown hair frames a pair of aviator sunglasses with a heavy purple tint.
Alternately smirking and smiling, he looks and sounds like a cross between David Lee Roth and Kirk Douglas.
Inside, he spies a woman waiting for her sandwich. He marches up and begins complimenting her in a raspy rendition of French. She is flattered but a little bemused, and she edges away nervously.
He brushes off the rejection with a booming laugh and turns to exchange "hey mans" with a friend he hasn't seen in a while.
"Vic the Barbarian", otherwise known as Victor Wortman, 36, is an incurable extrovert. Nobody who wanders within 10 feet of him escapes his conversational web.
Even in the battered Cutlass he drives when the Harley is out of commission, he keeps the window down so he can vell to passers-bv.
But like the woman at Yello Sub,
not everybody warns up to him
Wortman, who had worked as a doorman for The Hideaway, 106 N. Park St., a bar that closed during the summer, tried to get a job doing the same thing for the recently reopened Hideaway, now a gay and lesbian bar.
See VIC ,Page 6A.
BASILLA
David Novlin, Lawrence resident, protests the Lawrence trafficway at U.S. Highway 40 and Douglas County Road 13.
Traffic study to end problems
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
The congestion caused by cars jamming Jayhawk Boulevard each day during the early evening hours eventually could be alleviated, said a Minneapolis, Minn., traffic consultant.
Rick Nau last week began a six-month study of traffic patterns on and near the KU campus. Nau, a senior associate of BRW Inc., a consulting engineering firm, said he would develop short-term solutions for traffic problems and a long-term transportation master plan.
"For the longterm, I've been instructed to be as visionary as possible," Nau said. "I view my challenge as not being tied to the paradigms of the present."
"We also will take counts of pedestrians and bikes," he said. "The following week, we will monitor turning movements at campus intersections."
Nau, who has served as the traffic consultant for the University of Michigan and the University of Minnesota, said employees of BRW Inc. and some KU students would be paid to collect data for the study. After analyzing the data, Nau will submit his final report in June 1995.
"We will consider expansion of the transit system and alternatives to the bus system for the long term," he said. "In the short term, we'll look at adding turning lanes, may beidy widening the street or rerouting traffic."
Nau met with University and city officials last week in Lawrence. Although he will make only a few brief trips to KU during the next few months, Nau said his continued presence was not imperative for an effective study.
"You don't have to watch the traffic congestion every single day on Nalsmith Drive to understand that there's a problem," Nau said.
Nau said the improvements outlined in his report would be implemented over a period of years.
"I can't say that this study will solve the traffic problems associated with a home football game," he said. "But I do think that we can make some definite improvements."
Greg Wade, site and landscape development manger for KU's office of capital programs, said the study was part of the University's long-range master plan.
"I expect this study to be very comprehensive," Wade said. "This should allow us to make a long-range plan for transportation in the future."
Wade, who is serving as the campus contact person for the study, said the study should address traffic problems such as congestion and parking.
"After the study is completed, we will identify projects and find a funding mechanism," Wade said. "This won't be a simple process, so I would say changes are at least two years away."
INSIDE
INSIDE
TAMPA BAY
Record-setting day Kansas junior running back L.T. Levine and a host of other Jayhawks helped pound the Division I-AA Alabama-Birmingham Blazers 70-0 Saturday.
Record-setting day
Page1B.
KU phone books to arrive this week
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
Trying to get a new telephone directory is at times as difficult as trying to get an extra ticket to a Kansas basketball game.
But later this week, after Facilities Operations employees deliver The University of Kansas Telephone Directory 1994-95 to campus offices, people will be able to book a directory at any one of three area bookstores.
Last week, about 4,500 of the 16,500 telephone directories that were printed were delivered to students who live in the residence and scholarship halls, said Julie Swords, publications coordinator for University Relations.
Later this week or early next week the telephone directories can be purchased at the Mt. Oread Bookshop in the Kansas Union, Jayhawk bookstore, 1420 Crescent and Jay-
"Over the last 10 years the University has gotten free copies into more hands than they used to," said Bill Getz, assistant manager for books at the Mt. Oread Bookshop. "We will try to keep the price at $1.50."
hawk Book Shop, 1116 W. 23rd St., Swords said.
Last year, the telephone directory cost $3 at the Jayhawk Bookstore and $2.50 at the University Book Shop.
Although each bookstore charges for the directory, the University does not pay the publisher to have the book printed, Swords said. For the second consecutive year, the directories were printed by University Directories of Chapel Hill, N.C. In return for the printing rights, University Directories sold advertising space in the yellow pages section.
"We have a small profit margin built in," said Mike Swale, assistant manager.
"We are always working to try and make it more readable," Swords said.
er of the Jayhawk Bookstore. "We don't make much on the books, but it's still a business."
Changes to this year's directory include placement of the emergency telephone numbers on the first page instead of the third page and a cover photo by David McKinney, Lawrence graduate student.
Students whose names appear in the book and are listed incorrectly should refer to listing information on page 173, Swords said. Wrong information occurs most likely because of students not changing their information with the registrar, she said.
"Usually what happens is that students' names or numbers might be wrong one year, but they remember to update it the following year." Swords said.
The University of Rensselaer
Telephone Directory 1994-95
2A
Monday, September 26,1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
皇
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. Your intuition will be especially keen during critical periods. Follow it no matter what the odds and you will improve your success rate in business, financial, and family matters. A longtime love relationship can be strengthened by a new resolve on both sides. You learn a valuable lesson from a difficult experience. Loosen the apron strings when dealing with almost-grown offspring.
By Jean Dixon
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: poet T.S. Eliot, actress Linda Hamilton, singer Olivia Newton-John, physical fitness expert Jack Lalanne
T
♈
II
ARIES (March 21-April 19) The time or money you invest in a project will pay rich dividends. Daily exercise will keep your energy level high. Romance gains momentum when you reveal what is in your heart. Plan ahead.
TAIRUU (April 20-May 20). In your determination to achieve, you sometimes do too many things at one time. Know your priorities. Get better-organized and stick to a schedule. describe a complicated task step by step.
69
♂
8
VII
GEMINI (May 21- June 20) Credit problems cannot be ignored. Discovering something that has been going on behind the scenes could win you a prize. Do not vow to carry on a battle you cannot win.
II
CANCER (June 21 July 22): There is an important difference between you and a competitor. Stick with what you know and eventually you will emerge on top! Service to your community will earn you widespread praise.
↔
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22); A major breakthrough is possible if you continue to apply yourself. Give employees the tools they need and there will be no limit to what you can achieve!
LEO (July 23-August 22): Romance enjoys highly favorable influences this week. A family member's intervention may provide the best solution to a problem. A timely investment will mean lasting financial security.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Do not let a disappointment drag you down. Stand tall and defeat will soon give way to victory. Answer muest's questions before they are asked. Travel is favored. Pursue romance on your own timetable.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You have every reason to be optimistic about the future! Unanimous agreement is needed to make a plan work. Invest in a child and his prospects will improve. There is more to a bargain than meet the eye.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Postpone signing on a project until next week. Take advantage of an offer that will be in effect for a limited time only. Romance will roweinforgurable for those who are truly in love.
vs
Water
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): The grace and charm of a newcomer stirs something deep in your heart. Help children develop a love for excellence and they will find pleasure in meeting high standards. Relax at home this week.
X
PICSCE (Feb. 19-March 20). An associate could behave erratically, putting a business deal in jeopardy. A financial triumph is still possible if you follow your intuition. Get more involved in your community. Say "no" to romance on the rebound.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY'S CHILDREN have quicksilver minds and skim for practical knowledge. At school, they will work hard in the subjects that interest them and skimp on those that bore them. Count on these flexible Libras to change their views and plans often' they respond positively to praise but are put off by reprimands. Wise parents will train these sometimes extravagant shopper们 to be thrifty. Otherwise, they may spend their sizable paychecks as quickly as they earn them. oroscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Kanon, Kenagawa, 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. 6044. 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. 68045.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a discussion group for Catholic Law Students at 12:30 p.m. today at Green Hall.
Japan Karate-Do Ryobu-Ki Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today and tomorrow at 215 Robinson Center.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor Fundamentals of Catholicism at 7 tonight at 1631 Crescent Road.
Yoga Club will meet at 7 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
The National Security Education Program Scholarship, which provides grants to cover expenses of study abroad in certain countries, has applications available at 203 LincolnCincinnati.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor Exploring the Faith at 8 tonight at 1631Crescent Road.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union.
American Meteorological Society will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow at 3092 Malott Hall
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove 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.
Students in Communication Studies will sponsor "Meet the Faculty Night" at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas University. For more information, call Missy Vaskar at 864-3633.
Water Polo Club will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Robinson Natatorium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873.
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor "Drawing Boundaries," a workshop about personal boundaries, at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at 130 Robinson Center.
Asian American Student Union will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at 100 Smith Hall.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Robinson Natatorium.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries and Lutheran Campus Ministries will sponsor Taize - Evening Prayer at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at Danforth Chapel.
A shot was fired from a handgun Wednesday night during an argument in the parking lot of Lawrence Auto Cleaning, 415 North Second St., Lawrence police reported. Police said the argument began at Johnny's Tavern, 401 North Second St., between a fire cleaned business employee and a friend of the owners. The argument was taken to the parking lot about 10:30 p.m., where the shot was fired, police said. Nobody was injured, and all involved had been drinking. No arrests have been made.
ON THE RECORD
Two caretakers for a Lawrence resident with Parkinson's disease stole $21,867 from records and expense accounts over a one-year period, Lawrence police reported. Police said the two Lawrence residents, had altered records. Police said the man's lawyer had discovered the discrepancies but suffered a stroke and was not able to report it until this week. On Friday, police could not find the caretakers.
Weather
TODAY'S TEMPS
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
H I G H L O W
TODAY
TUESDAY
Partly cloudy and breezy. Chance for showers in the morning.
The sun returns!
75° • 57°
61° • 48°
62° • 47°
70° • 49°
73° • 48°
75° • 63°
72° • 62°
68° • 46°
74° • 53°
71° • 51°
71° • 46°
81° • 53°
77° • 52°
7349
Warmer and much drier.
WEDNESDAY
7853
Partly cloudy and seasonal.
7954
Source: Matt Jezewski, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
September 23,1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
NYSE
5.38
3,831.75
NYSE
0.71
253.81
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 366,508,340
2.98
757.46
↑
Advances 891
Declines 1,274
Unchanged 729
-
ASE
0.32
455.23
455. 23
Fantastic Fall Special!
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
South Pointe
Apartments
2166 W. 26th St.
- 2 bedrooms $450 per month
- 3 bedrooms $500 per month
- 4 bedrooms $600 per month
- SwimmingPool
- OnKUBus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
Outstanding New Staff!!!
- Water and Trash Paid
- Ample Private Parking
contribute to the
Carlos O'Kelly's.
MEXICAN CAFE
ean
pool
734 massachusetts lawrence, kansas (913) 749-2377
sell your clothing to
i
16 south ninth columbia, missouri (314) 499-0420
MARCARITAS AND, FAJITAS FOR OVER 2 YEARS!
winter
now buying for
arizona trading co.
open every day!
MONDAY
WEEKLY
756 Killians Red Draws
$1 Small Chili ConQueso
$1 OFF All Dinner Picados
TUESDAY
$2 All Imports
$5.95 Sancho/Monterry Gambo
WEDNESDAY
- CARRYOUT AVAILABLE!
99c Kids Meals
SPECIALS
THURSDAY
$2 Bud Light 23 Oz. Tap
$1.50 Desserts
$2 Margaritas on the rocks
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
SUNDAY
Hours of Operation:
M-Th 11-11
Fri,Sat 11-12
Sun 11-10
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 off Chimis
$2 Bloody Marys
- TASTE OF THE WORLD BEER CLUBI
I
Take a Peek
At What The total look!
9th & Mississippi Can Do For You! 842-5921
$1 OFF
All food items.
All Vegetarian Cuisine
Featuring: Fabulous Smoothies & Juices
Salad Bar & Homemade Soups
Daily Entree Specials...
KU Student Special
You'll Love Our Food!
Hours Mon-Sat 11-9 Sun 12-7
HERBIVORES
JUICE BAR
& DELI
Two-Fer-Tuesday:
9 E. 8th St.
Downtown
Lawrence
729-2477
TWO Veggie-Burgers for the price of ONE (with coupon)
---
Who do you know that is an . . .
OUTSTANDING SENIOR?
We are now accepting nominations for the 1995 Hilltopper Awards
- Anyone may nominate an outstanding senior.
Nomination forms available at 400 Kansas Union (OAC) or 428 Kansas Union (Jayhawker Office).
Nominations must be turned in to 400 or 428 Kansas Union by October 6 at 5p.m.
All nominees will receive an application.
1995 HILLTOPPER
Jayhawker Yearbook 428 Kansas Union 864-3728
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 26, 1994
3A
Karate clinic builds character and skills
Students work toward greater enlightenment
By James Evans Kansan staff writer
Room 130 Robinson Center was turned into a dojo for a few hours Friday and Saturday.
The dojo, a zone of enlightenment, was necessary for a seminar on traditional Japanese martial arts, including karatedo, often referred to as karate, and kobudo, a sub-discipline of karatedo that uses classical weapons.
James Bramble, fourth-degree black belt in Chishen-Ryu karatedo and coordinator of the clinic and seminar, said the purpose of the two-day event was to try to build character in his four students, all members of his Karatedo-Kobud class, through martial arts training. All four of the students have had at least one year of karatedo training.
Bramble's students worked on the their ki, or inner energy, their kokoro, or mental attitudes, and waza, the physical aspects encompassed in karatedo. All of these elements are part of the Chisen-Ryu style of karatedo.
"I'm trying to give them a concentrated dose of all aspects of karate-do," Bramble said.
Bramble said he also had tried to make an impact on his students' characters by teaching them how to use four classic Japanese weapons. He
said that a student must understand karatedo, fighting with the empty hand, before they could use the weapons. A weapon is supposed to become an extension of the hand, Bramble said.
They used a variety of weapons, including the bo, a six-foot staff; the boken, a wooden sword; the sai, a three-prong hand-held spear; and the jo, a 4-foot long staff.
"It's hard training, and you have to exert a tremendous amount of effort when using the weapons," Bramble said.
He said the four students, who have been learning kobudo since the beginning of January, had learned 12 katas, or a series of predefined movements, which encompassed the use of weapons and karated.
Alan Twarog, Lawrence graduate student, said one of the highlights of the seminar for him had been a candelight focusing exercise Friday night.
Each of the members stood around a candle in the dark, and they completely focused their energy on the white light of a small flame. Twarog said the hour-long exercise, in which he performed numerous reverse fist strikes toward the candle, allowed his mind to focus completely on what he was doing.
Steve Goff, Lawrence graduate student, also attended the seminar. He said he had enjoyed it because of the spiritual aspects of the martial arts training.
"We came in as four individuals," Goff said. "And we built a lot of cohesiveness in working together."
TUCKER
TrCi Twarog, Lawrence graduate student, practices a kata, or a series of set movements, to enhance his form during the Traditional Japanese karatedo and kobudo seminar and clinic. The clinic was Friday and Saturday in Robinson Center.
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
A 3-feet-wide and 8-feet-high wall clock, donated by Martha Relph, KU alumna, hangs in a student housing conference room in Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall.
10
Yumi Chikamori / KANSAN
Timepiece returns to University after an auction and restoration
After 76 years, wall clock hangs again in Corbin Hall
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
A University of Kansas alumna Martha Relph, Madison resident, donated a wall clock to the University on Friday, but it wasn't an ordinary wall clock.
The clock, which measures 8 feet high and about 3 feet wide, is believed to be the campus clock that was in North College Hall when the building opened in 1866. North College was the first building on campus.
Ralph said Hessler lived on Alabama Street, next door to Kenneth Ralph, a student at the University and her future husband. In the late 1940s, Hessler showed the clock to Kenneth Relph. It was in pieces and was sitting in bushel baskets, but Relph wanted to buy it. He restored it with the help
The clock was auctioned off in 1918 when the building was demolished. V.P. Hessler, who was a professor in the School of Engineering at the time, bought the clock.
of Joe Relph, his brother.
Hessler sold the clock to the Relph brothers for $25, Martha Relph said. The clock remained in the family until she returned it to the University in April.
Martha Relph said she noticed the clock in an old newspaper article about KU a few years ago and started thinking about bringing it back to campus. She returned it because she felt it was the right thing to do.
When Martha Relph visited campus Friday, she brought several family members with her to celebrate and reminisce about the clock.
Ross Relph, Martha's nephew, said he remembered family members hiding Christmas presents and Easter eggs on the mantel of the clock where he could not reach them.
"I instead of watching television, I watched this clock in my grandmother's house," she said. "I've looked at it a million times, and I always find something special there."
Patricia Relph, Martha's granddaughter, said she also remembered the clock from her childhood.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said the clock was hanging in a student housing conference room in Corbin Hall.
"I've looked at it a million times, and I always find something special
there."
Patricia Relph
Granddaughter of Martha Relph
The residence hall was built on the site of North College Hall, Stoner said, so it seemed appropriate to hang the clock there.
Mac Truong, an employee at Mark's Jewelers, 817 Massachusetts St., restored the mechanical portion of the clock. Richard and Laura Morris, Baldwin, and Norman Boone, Eudora, refinished the clock's wood.
Richard Morrisr said the clock probably was worth $3,000 or $4,000.
"Any KU memorabilia is bringing high dollars at auctions," Laura Morriss said. "Knowing the history of an antique makes it worth a lot more."
Some students have problems with banking
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Not having money is a problem for many college students. And for some, keeping track of what they do have is an even bigger problem.
But bank employees said that with a little financial planning, many of these problems could be solved.
Aolk Strivastava, Lawrence senior, has worked at Bank IV, 900 Ohio St., for six months. He said he had seen many students complain about bank statements, blaming the bank's employees for problems the students created themselves.
"People constantly come in and complain about problems," Srivastava said. "They think that we are screwing up their accounts."
Srivastava said problems were caused by Automated Teller Machine cards and bad checks.
"Students get mad because we only own one ATM," he said. "So if they go to another ATM in town, then they are charged $1 per withdrawn. In a month the charges can really add up."
He said the service charges took money out of the students' checking accounts that the students were not expecting, causing them to think they had more money than they did. In addition, for every bad check written, a $17.50 service charge is taken from their accounts. If the problem is not taken care of, Srivastava said, it could become a vicious circle that becomes harder to get out of.
Srivastava said most of the problems occurred simply because people didn't keep track of every transaction they made.
"The service charges add up," he said. "When their statement comes, they see all of their unanticipated charges and fees, and they want an explanation."
Blake Weichbrodt, an employee at Emprise Bank, 2435 Iowa St., said he saw students come in the bank with problems, but most concerns could be straightened out easily.
"Most understand the charges and budget accordingly," he said. "I do get complaints, but most students have a grasp on their accounts."
Mark Jifford, Derby senior, said he had not had any problems with his account.
"I just make sure that I don't go under the minimum balance," he said, "I always have $100 in my account."
Some students said they found that the best way to keep up with their accounts was to have their parents deal with it.
James Haiar, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, said that he left his account in Omaha with his parents.
"My parents deposit money into my account when I need it," he said. "But they still want me to keep track of how much I spend."
Maggie Antisel, Louisburg sophomore, said that when she came to school she decided to stay with the bank she had used all of her life.
When shopping around for a bank, Antisel could not find a bank with options better than her hometown bank's options.
"The highest monthly service charge I've had is $1.50," she said.
"That's the lowest charge that I could find."
KIEF'S CDs/TAPES
The Lowest EVERYDAY CD Prices in Lawrence
Come at 11 p.m. TONIGHT
For the Listening Party... Stick Around Til Midnight For The LOWEST LAWRENCE PRICE on
R. E.M's "Monster"!!
DON'T FORGET. .. - KIEF'S BUYS, SELLS, AND TRADES USED CDs!!
8th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES 913*843*1811 913*842*1438 913*842*1544
4A
Monday, September 26, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
How do cynics spell relief? I-S-O-L-A-T-I-O-N
MATT GOWEN
Polls reflect overwhelming attitude of cynicism among Americans,but how can
you not be cynical?
After such a "Gump-y" summer, you would think that American good will was at high tide.
Apparently not, at least according to a recent Times Mirror Center poll. There is a wave of cynicism crashing across America, the pollsters have concluded. "America in dark mood," sobbed the headlines. So I asked my good friend Sludge, who prides himself on his pleasant demeanor, if he thought the country should be down in the dumper.
"I dunno. Everything looks fine to me. Of course, I'm not dragging a balsa wood raft out of the Gulf so that I can eat army hash at Guantanamo."
That's a good point, Sludge. America's foreign policy is a source of concern, the poll says. But what about
politics in general? The poll says we are more skeptical of government now than we've ever been.
"Business as usual, I guess. Now that you mention it, though, I guess a country where Ollie North may be headed for the Senate after running a war in Nicaragua..."
You mean, "low-intensity conflict," Sludge.
"... and Marion Barry can come back after getting caught with a big, fat crack pipe is getting kind of messed up."
Symbols of resiliency, perhaps? We ask for people of conviction and instead we get people with convictions, which is not exactly the same thing. But what about television and newspapers, Sludge? More than 70
percent of Americans believe the media hurts the country more than it helps
"Well, usually I just read the sports page."
Really? It sounds like you're fairly well informed.
Don't you mean Haiti?
"I pick up a few things here and there. Don't tell anybody, though. Besides, reading about the Chiefs and the 'Hawks is a lot less stressful than trying to keep track of whatever the frang Clinton and his cronies are doing down at The Bahamas."
"No, not the troops, you glonkierhead. Clinton! I saw it on one of those afternoon news shows. He's been spending his nights with Panetta the boys down at The Bahamas, it's this
new tropical lounge on Pennsylvania Avenue where they put umbrellas in your drinks. Oh, and Gennifer Flowers is the opening act. I guess she's trying to reklink her singing career."
So you don't think we have reason to be skeptical of the media?
"The only thing I'm skeptical about is how the heck Martin Short got his own TV show. What is that all about? It's like a Saturday Night Live/Dave Letterman rip-off without the iokes."
Let's get back to the poll. Only 42 percent now believes government is run for the benefit of all people. The poll also indicates a decrease in sensibilities toward minorities, immigrants, homosexuals and the poor. Are we a nation blinded by hate and
fear, headed for anarchy?
Sludge, you can't live in isolation.
"Look If you watch TV you'll seeive suicides and grisly murders. You'll see transvestites, sex abusers, lunatics and nude pictures of the Royal Family. Read the newspaper and you'll think that the world is about to spill over with people and that the sun is going to turn the planet into a big piece of Kingsford charcoal. Cancel your subscription and turn off the TV, then see what you think."
"You're right. We could see a flick. I think Natural Born Killers starts in an hour. You'in?"
I guess it can't get any worse.
VIEWPOINT
Matt Gowen is a Lawrence senior in Journalism.
More must be done to gain peace, democracy in Haiti
The Clinton administration should be commended for exhaustively pursuing a peaceful policy toward Haiti and avoiding bloodshed. However, talks must continue if democracy and a civil society are to be established in Haiti.
tary groups such as the "Tontons Mocoutes" remain to threaten possible democratic institutions.
These groups must be
HAITI POLICY Many militant groups hostile to democracy in Haiti have been left intact, threatening the possibility of achieving democracy
The agreement between the Carter team and the Haitian junta still leaves the organs of terror intact. The police, military, security organs and paramili-
democratized or disarmed and dismantled, and the Haitians must understand democratic principles if democracy is
to be achieved. To this end, talks must continue with vigor and seriousness with the realization that much remains to be done.
MICHAEL PAUL FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
Students should venture outside of ordinary world
The University of Kansas offers exciting, stimulating and varied opportunities for active engagement in activities of a cultural, spiritual, academic and
recreational flavor.
STUDENT ACTIVITIES
For example, a series of films sponsored by LesBiGayS OK will be featured in the month of
Often, these events are not frequented by KU students. Many students attend KU for four or five years without exploring many activities outside their own cultural or
social group.
September. The months of September and October will be sprinkled with events celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month.
Film series and Hispanic Heritage Month are two examples of the many opportunities for students to get involved on campus.
We should participate in events outside our experience. The implication of this action is limitless: increased
awareness of diverse groups, stimulating peer interactions, an extended knowledge bank — and personal growth.
BARBARA STREETS FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO
Editor
JEN CARR Business manager
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
News ... Sara Bennett
Editorial ... Donella Heine
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
Melissa Lacey
Features ... Treti Carl
Planning Editor ... Susan White
Design ... Noth Musser
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 Sessions mgr ... Jan Perris
Production mgrs ... Holly Boren
Regan Overy
Marketing director ... Alan Stigler
Creative director ... John Carton
Classified mgr .. Heather Niehaus
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
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 Minnesota must include their name and telephone number.
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.
Jeff MacNelly / Chicago Tribune
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
CUBA -
LEAVE IT OR
LEAVE IT
Immorality is in the eye of the beholder
I was making copies, that's all. I wasn't trying to piss anyone off.
I was at the copier in normal attire, which happened to include a T-shirt that depicted two stick figure men above the caption "Adam + Steve." Anymore, I wear the shirt without a second thought. The most anyone has said to me before is "Oh, that's cute" or "I don't get it."
I was just in Watson Library for a scholastic purpose, and I was attacked. Of course, I exaggerate the situation, but it felt like an attack.
I looked around as though she might be speaking to someone next to me—no such luck. "Yes," I replied, looking down at my shirt.
But this woman said something different that caught me completely off guard.
"You know, I really respect you and others who live their lives as who they want to be," she said. "Homosexuals still have to put up with a lot of discrimination"
She noticed me, smiled and walked over to my copier. "Are you gay?" she asked in what seemed like a yell but was a normal tone.
And then I saw it coming from a mile away. "But you should also try to live a moral life," she said.
"Yeah, I know." I was feigning the pitiful fag for dramatic effect.
And before I knew it, she was gone.
CITIZEN
COLUM.NIST
DAVID JOHNSON
But for some reason, I felt really bad and wanted to apologize. Usually when I offend people (more times than I care to count), I never give it a second thought. But what this woman said really got to me.
Fifteen minutes later, I broke out of my awestruck trance and tried to analyze what had just happened, as I often do.
Why did I really wear this shirt? Was it to tell the world that I was proud of my sexuality? Or was it to express my
I figured out that while she was saying that she was tolerant and empathetic, she was offended by the knock at Christianity my shirt made. And she assumed that my intention was to knock Christianity. OK, who wouldn't assume that? I am wearing the shirt.
So on the way home, I began debating with myself.
So now, I do not apologize. Wherever you are, Offended Woman, please don't condemn me. (It would be in vain — I've already been condemned!) Instead, I offer this: It is unreasonable for anyone to completely accept anyone, for whatever reason. We all hold strong opinions. And yes, I do have morals. I just conform to a different set.
distaste for the way I was treated by the majority of the Christian faith. (It's okay to be gay, just don't practice it!)
I grew up attending a Christian church and have read the Bible and all that. I made what I believe to be a proper decision to leave the church, as I had too many questions that too many people could not answer.
Or was it just to make people laugh? Well, I couldn't decide, so I figured that it was all of the above because I felt equally as strong about each of these questions.
But I really do respect people who hold true to their divine beliefs. I really respect David Zimmerman for having the courage to share his views on the same opinion page with mine.
On a campus like this, his views are as, or more, unpopular than mine.
David Johnson is a Coffeyville senior in magazine journalism.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Mistake snubs Hispanic culture
But the United States didn't gain its independence from Canada!!
Yes, that's true, but how would you feel if a newspaper printed an article implying that the United States of America gained its independence from Canada? And if the newspaper printed this on July 5th, a day after the independence celebration?
You would probably like to see a significant correction, not just a small box on the second page. Of course, we all know that no paper would print a thing like that. But if The University Daily Kansan did commit such an immense mistake, the latter is the only recourse that the paper would take, in accordance with any other typo.
Well the Kansan hasn't printed that yet, but it did write something that is just as bad, at least it is for Central American students. On Friday, Sept. 16, the Kansan printed an article "Chancellor opens Heritage Month" that implied the Central American countries gained their independence from Mexico, instead of from Spain as they really did on Sept. 15, 1821.
It is interesting that this appeared in an article related to Hispanic Heritage Month. Just the day before, Thursday, Sept. 15, the Kansan printed an article, "Hispanics hope to show diversity," in which the reporter interviewed some students, including the organizers of the event, who stated they hoped to educate people that Hispanics have separate, distinct cultures. People sometimes lump all Hispanic people into the Mexican culture.
Speaking to the managing editor, Christoph Fuhrmans, I explained the degree of the mistake. He, however, informed me it could be given no more attention than a line in the correction box.
The Kansan has the ability to reach, inform and influence many readers. Hopefully, by the end of Heritage Month, it will.
More consideration should be given to this, not because Costa Ricans are on a self-righteous crusade to promote one historical fact but because an error of this type is indicative of the generalities about Hispanics in this country. Mexico is undoubtedly rich in culture and history, but it is only a part of a multitude of various cultures and countries that form all Latin America.
HUBIE
It is disappointing that the Kansan falls into a misconception of this kind. But even more disappointing is its attitude regarding it. This paper errs, treats it routinely, writes a correction box and then it's back to business.
Gustavo Alvarado San Ramon, Costa Rica, senior Public Relations of the Costa Rican Student Association Uyen Nguyen Overland Park senior Editor's note: The Kansan printed a correction for the Sept. 16 story on Monday, Sept. 19.
Gustavo Alvardo
TRUTH IS STRONGER
THAN FICTION: ON
WED, SEPT. 15.
A JUDGE DECIDED
THAT MCDONALD'S
MUST PAY 81
YEAR-OLD STELLA
LIEBECK $480,000
1
WHOOPS!
WHY? BECAUSE THE OLD LADY SKILLED COFFEE IN HER LAP.
INSTANT REPLAY!
SHE WANTED 2.9 MILLION DOLLARS.
McDONALD'S HAD SOLD HER A "DEFECTIVE PRODUCT."
OF COURSE, THE IMPLICATIONS OF THIS ARE INCREDIBLE.
SONNY! ARE YOU OKAY?
WHOOPS!
I COULD BUY 2.4 MILLION LOAVES OF 10 CERT BREAD!
... UMA, EXCUSE ME, BUT MY COFFEE DOESN'T WORK...
OOF!!
YEAH, ILL SEE YOU IN COURT.
(INSTANT REPLAY)
WHOOPS!
(INSTANT REPLAY)
WHOOPS!
SHE WANTED
2.9 MILLION DOLLARS.
McDONALD'S HAD
SOLD HER A
DEFECTIVE PRODUCT.
COULD BUY 34
MILLION LONGS
OF CREAT
BREAD!
...UMM, EXCUSE
ME, BUT MY
COFFEE DOESN'T
WORK...
By Greg Hardin
OOF!! WSMAIL
!
OF COURSE, THE IMPLICATIONS OF THIS ARE INCREDIBLE.
OOF!!!
SONNY! ARE YOU OKAY?
YEAH, I'LL SEE YOU IN COURT.
SONNY! ARE YOU OKAY?
YEAH,
I'll SEE
YOU IN
COURT.
NATION/WORLD
Monday, September 26, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5A
Haiti gun battle takes 10 lives
The Associated Press
CAP-HAITIEN, Haiti — If history turns on a moment, that moment may have come when Lt. Virg Palumbo halted the men of 2nd Platoon, Echo Company, along the yellow stucco wall of the police barracks on the corner of J and 20th streets as dusk fell on Cap-Haitien.
Palumbo, 24, an intense Naval Academy graduate who speaks in superlatives of his men, his superiors and the Marine Corps, had led his platoon on foot patrol past the barracks earlier Saturday, pausing with great drama to pull a notebook from his flak jacket and take notes.
The Haitian police standing in the doorway watched with barely contained resentment.
"Borjour," Palumbo said pleasantly.
"Bonjour," the Haitians answered, faces impassive.
Palumbo's act of intimidation is known in Marine parlance as "pulling their punk card," a job he clearly relished. He was clearly looking forward to taking his men back to the barracks later that night.
"We're not here for a fight," he said, his sharp hazel eyes peering out from the shadow of his helmet. "We just want to show the military and show the people we're here."
Palumbo's moment in history came hours later as an angry Haitian military policeman raised his weapon at the Marines and a taunting civilian crowd. Palumbo
shot the man, and in a vicious five minutes his men exchanged fire with the Haitian force.
When gunfire gave way to silence, eight Haitians lay dead on the ground, their blood spattered against the yellow walls and gathering in pools in the street. In the intersection, illuminated by the light of an armored personnel carrier, lay a black derby with a red feather, a costume worn in voodoo ceremonies.
Two more Haitians inside the barracks died of their wounds. Another seriously wounded man was taken to the USS Wasp for treatment. Five other Haitians were taken into custody.
Colonel Tom Jones, the Marine commander at Cap Haitien, praised Palumbo's decision to fire.
"The lieutenant acted prudently and rapidly, like he was supposed to," he said yesterday.
The fight sparked an event of larger significance. Twelve hours after the gun battle, the police and their subalterns, long feared by the 75,000 people of Cap-Haitien, abandoned their stations, outposts and barracks, chastened by what had happened the night before.
"They are scared," said Jones.
"And for good reason."
military campus, gathering under the mango and palm trees to honk on the trombones and tubas that had been the property of the army band.
The people poured into the oncehated buildings, grabbing weapons, uniforms, identity papers, furniture, even a skull with a bullet hole. They rushed to the Marines, surrendering the weapons, then ransacked the main
In retrospect, the firefight at the barracks seemed inevitable. Despite unopposed landings by 1,900 Marines on Tuesday, troubles with the police increased through the week.
There were incidents of police attacking individuals. On Wednesday they waded into a crowd of demonstrators, leaving one man badly injured. There were reports of gunfire and threats aimed at Marines, whose positions were shadowed by the plain clothes in their new automobiles.
Palumbo's Saturday morning patrol was shadowed by one of the trucks.
Despite repeated warnings by Jones to Lt. Clau. Claudel Josephat, the local Haitian commander, the incidents continued.
"It was clear he had lost control of his people," Jones said.
Stationed next to the city's hospital, the men of Echo 2nd saw the results of the violence, a 12 year old boy kicked and beaten with an electrical cord until his arms and wore a mass of raised welts, another young boy with machete wounds to his head.
"The Marines are the toughest fighting force in the world. But when my guys see kids hurt, it really gets to them," Palumbo said as he gave a quick tour of the hospital.
U.S. visit to spark investing in Russia
The Associated Press
BRIZE NORTON, England — After a relaxed weekend in the English countryside, Russian President Boris Yeltsin headed yesterday for the United States, where he will try to convince Americans it is safe to invest in Russia.
Yeltsin insists that Russia is ready to do business, dismissing the complaints of critics who say investing in Russia is risky because of organized crime, conflicting legislation and unpredictable taxes.
Yeltsin is to meet President Clinton and address the U.N. General Assembly today in New York. He also will meet in Washington with political and business leaders.
Yeltis wraps up his trip Thursday in Seattle, where he will tour a Boeing Co. facility, take a turn on a yacht and spend time with an American family.
At a joint news conference yesterday, Yeltsin and Great Britain's Prime Minister John Major said they still could not believe how much things had changed since the end of the Cold War.
"I don't think as little as two, three, four, let alone five years ago, there would have been the possibility of such a meeting," Yeltsin told reporters.
He flew to New York from Brize Norton, a Royal Air Force base 55 miles northwest of London.
The two leaders and their wives spent the weekend at Chequers, the prime minister's country residence, north of London. They went for a walk in the woods and dropped in at a pub.
Selection of jurors delivers unexpected hardships
The Associated Press
"People have a personal involvement in this case. Some of them may have been out there on the freeway that Friday afternoon," said Loyola University Law School professor Laurie Levenson.
LOS ANGELES — After three months of endless publicity in the O.J. Simpson murder case, 1,000 people must look inward and decide whether they can be a fair juror.
But as the first stage of jury selection begins today, lawyers on both sides know that no hope exists of finding jurors unaware of the case. Nor would they want such a jury, Levenson said.
"You want someone on this jury who's at least heard about the case, because you want a functioning member of society," she said.
At a minimum, prospective jurors will know that Simpson, a former football star whose fame extended into show business, is charged with the slashing murders of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman.
They will also know that Simpson has declared himself "absolutely 100 percent not guilty" and that he has the best team of lawyers money can buy.
jurors who want to get on the case because of its notoriety and the chance they will become rich and famous as a result.
Jo-Ellan Dimitrius, the jury consultant working for the defense, has pinpointed a new phenomenon in the Simpson case:
"I've never seen it before," Dimitrius said. "In this case, they're coming up to me on the street asking, 'How do I become a juror on the O.J. case?'
Now, Levenson said, many prospects may be facing the reality that they can't afford the time to serve. Of the 1,000 people summoned by Superior Court Judge Lance Ito, more than 700 have already returned one-page questionnaires discussing their availability to serve in a trial which could stretch into 1995.
D6631
Bucky's 32nd ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION!
THE SAVINGS ARE ON US!
DON'T MISS THIS SPECIAL EVENT! STOP IN AND JOIN THE FUN!
AUTHOR
49°C CHEESEBURGERS
39c HAMBURGERS
MONDAY AND TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 AND 27
DON'T FORGET THESE GREAT MENU ITEMS
Sandwich
- Peanut Patrait
• Pork Tenderloin
• Fish Fillet
- Peanut Parfait
OLD FASHIONED DAYS
- Double Cheeseburgers
SANDWICH
- Ice Cream Sundaees
49¢ French Fries
NO FILLERS!
Bucky's Drive-In
has always used
100% Beef
from Choice
Foods
- Ice Cream Cones
• 1/4 lb. Buckaroo
• Roast Beef
• Chickaroo
• Side Salad
We buy our bread fresh daily from Butternut Bakery We use only the freshest products from Fairmont-Zarda
Bocky's
HAMBURGERS
2120 WEST NINTH
come as you are . . . hungry
NO FILLERS!
Bucky's Drive-In has always used 100% Beef from Choice Foods
We buy our bread fresh daily from Butternut Bakery
We use only the freshest products from Fairmont-Zarda
BUCKY'S
HAMBURGERS
2120 WEST NINTH
come as you are ... hungry
BUCKY'S
VISIT OUR DRIVE-THRU SERVICE
ONLY THE BEST SALAD DRESSING & FRENCH FRIES FROM KRAFT FOODS
Bucky's
Bucky's
We buy our French fries from Kraft Foods.
BUCKY'S
VISIT OUR
DRIVE-THRU
SERVICE
Bucky's
HAMBURGERS
2120 WEST NINTH
come as you are . . . hungry
fifty
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
BUCKY'S
VISIT OUR
DRIVE-THRU
SERVICE
fifi's
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Imports & Domestics*
*Machine Shop Service*
*Parts Departments*
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
DATCOVER
My Mobile
Student Friendly We repair Brass, Aluminum, & Plastic Radiators
50
State Radiator
VISA
Henkel, water
A/C service tool
842-3333
Dickinson
Cinema 6
431-800-2555
Street
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAX FILMS
3 Premature Show (1) / Heaving Debt
Senior Citizen Anime / Imagery Sites
Trial by Jury **4*40, 7:20, 9:45**
Next Karate Kid **P**4:35, 7:15, 9:35
Forest Gump **P**10-18, 8:00
Corrina Corrina **P**4:30, 7:00, 9:45
Natural Born Killers **B**4:30, 7:10, 9:50
Terminal Velocity **P**10-14, 7:15, 9:40
MON. SEPT 26 TO WED. SEPT. 28
Japanese ENTWC Film Fest
Tues. 9:30 PM
Wed. 7:00 PM
commit
to
KU
Excellent
36TH DISTRICT
ERIC
SCHMIDT
STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Paid for by the COMMITTEE TO ELECT ERIC SCHMIDT
Glenn, Brian
Wed. 9:30 PM
OKOGE
In the Realm of the Senses
Mon. 9:30 PM
Tues. 7:00 PM
ALL SHARNS IN WOODHURF AND
TICKETS $2.50, MURDITORS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVE CARD:
814-844-6000 SAVE 15%
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
Crown Cinema
VARSITY
HITS MASSACHUSETTS
841 5191
TIMECOORD
5-00 7-15 0-30
BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00
( LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
TIMECOP $ ^{R} $ 5:00,7:15,9:30
Clear & Present Danger PG-12
HILLCREST
825 IOWA
A Simple Twist of Fate **P0-13** 1:15, 7:30, 9:45
Milk Money **P0-13** 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
The Client **P0-13** 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
Color of light ™ 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
CINEMA TWIN ALL SEATS
111/IOWA 841-5191 $1.25
5:00,7:20,9:40
5:00,7:30,9:40
Pipeline productions
ADV. TIX
18 & OVER
-presents-
THE SPECIALS -with- LET'S GO BOWLING
Monday Oct. 10
The Original Ska Masters
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire • Lawrence, KS
913-841-LIVE
ADV. TIX
18 & OVER
Thursday Oct. 13 W.A.R. recording artists
THE SAMPLE'S
LIBERTY HALL
Lawrence, KS 913-749-1972
PARKER HOLLINS
ADV. TIX
18 & OVER
Monday Oct. 17 Elektra recording artists
JOHN HUNTER
VIOLENT FEMMES
-with-
G. LOVE & SPECIAL SAUCE.
RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE
Lawrence, KS. 913-841-9111
ADV. TIX ALL AGES
311
Wed. Nov. 2 Capricorn recording artists
LIBERTY HALL
Lawrence, KS 913-749-1972
6A
Monday, September 26, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FITNESS CENTER
STEP UP with BODY BOUTIQUE The Woman's Fitness Facility
STEP UP with BODY BOUTIQUE The Woman's Fitness Facility 60 classes per week and much more ABSOLUTELY NO JOINING FEE -VIP- 1st visit FREE 10 TANS for only $20 exp. 10/3/94 9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
Attention: Seniors Applications are now available for this year's H.O.P.E. Award
Applications available in the OAC office in the Kansas Union HONOR FOR OUTSTANDING PROGRESSIVE EDUCATOR
B.O.C.O.
B.O.C.O. Sponsored by Board of Class Officers
Board of Class Officers
JOY
601 Kasold
865-4040
Sunday $1.00 off Burgers .75 Draws
Every Chiefs Game "All You Can Eat" Taco Bar.
Monday
$.15 Wing Night
$1.50 Domestic Bottle
Tuesday "All you Can Eat" Taco and Burrito Bar
Wednesday
Mini Burger Night
1/2 dozen $3.95
$3.75 Pitchers
Come Play NTN Trivia!
GIANT BACKPACK SALE
ESTMAX
20% off EASTPAK products Today thru Tuesday.
You can bring an Eastpak bag places you shouldn't go. Because unlike you, it comes with a lifetime guarantee. Waterproof Cordura $ ^{ \textcircled{2}} $ Nylon. And it's also available in a variety of colors and styles. Eastpak. Buy it.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students Items already on sale excluded.
KU
K'U
DOORSSTORES
Kansas Union 864-4540
Burge Union 864-5697
VIC: Incurable extrovert still partying
He worked a few nights at the new bar, but his rambunctiousness offended some female patrons.
Continued from Page 1A.
Kerry Johnson, co-owner of the new Hideaway, was expecting that. She dated Wortman in the late 1970s.
"I think I scared them off," he said.
"He was just as nutty then as he is now," she said. "Some of the women were really upset."
Wortman would agree.
"I adore women," he said. "I treat them like they want to be treated. When I say something to someone, it's to make them smile or feel good."
So Wortman had to go. He now paints houses and does other odd jobs.
Johnson said she understood her customers' complaints but said Wortman's behavior didn't bother her.
"I really don't get offended by him much because he's doing it so innocently," she said.
"He's more famous than infamous now, and that pleases me," she said.
But he doesn't take kindly to being corrected, he said.
Wortman's sister, Gretchen, said Wortman had made progress in shedding his reckless image.
However, the consensus among most people is that Wortman is nothing to fear.
"I'll give them a tongue-lashing like they've never had," he said.
"He showed up at one of my parties with a five-gallon jug of wine and proceeded to drink the whole thing," she said. "He was hitting on all the girls and wouldn't leave. Then he passed out on my porch. He woke up the next morning, offered to cook me breakfast and left."
Jacki Becker, a bartender at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., remembered the day that Wortman crashed her party on Ohio Street.
But that was the old Vic." Becker said. "The new Vic" is sober.
"Ihavent had a drink in a longtime" Wortman said, "I drank O'Doul's."
Wortman now goes to Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and has a cardboard "no alcohol" sign posted on the
front door of his apartment in the basement of a house on Indiana Street, which he calls "The Dungeon."
"I stopped drinking because I wasn't accomplishing anything," he said.
Friends appreciated the change.
"Since he's cleaned up, he's a very good person." Becker said.
"I wasn't a very peaceful hippie," he said. "I had long hair and combat boots. I left the sandals for the guys who didn't have to fight their way to and from school."
"I'mpartying every day.Ilike positivity."
Wortman was born in 1958 in Omaha, Neb. He went to high school in a rough area of Chicago, where his fighting spirit kept him from achieving full hippie-hood, he said.
Victor "The Barbarian" Wortman
Lawrenceresident
He was first christened "Vic the Barbarian" while serving a three-year stint in the Army in the late 1970s.
One day, as his unit was detonating explosives in a warfare training exercise in Alaska, Wortman was late getting out of ditch lined with explosives. When the explosives went off, they sent up a bright red shower of light that illuminated him from behind.
Wortman has lived in Lawrence since 1975, when, as he put it,
"Lawrence was first visited upon my aura."
One night about four years ago at the Bottleneck, the local band Zoom was playing its version of the Journey song "Any Way You Want It."
The moniker stuck and has distinguished him ever since.
Army buddies were mesmerized "Hey, you looked just like a barbarian," one of them said.
Many times during his 19 years in Lawrence, he has had trouble keeping his aura in check.
Wortman, a fan of '70s music, couldn't resist jumping onstage to sing along. Toward the end of the
song, a part of the stage collapsed, sending Wortman into a pile of debris.
Wortman wasn't hurt that time, but his life in Lawrence hasn't been without injury.
On Feb. 7, 1989, Wortman's right leg was crushed when he was hit by a car as he stepped out onto Indiana Street. He was flown to the University of Kansas Medical Center for surgery.
He still suffers from a wobbly ankle and knee and has been on Social Security ever since.
Wortman was drunk at the time of the accident. The accident was one of the reasons he decided to quit drinking, he said.
Wortman did not want to talk about his wife, except to say that one morning he woke up and discovered that she had taken the children and left Lawrence.
Wortman has four daughters, ranging in ages from 7 to 11. All four are half Native American and live on an Indian reservation in Northern California.
Twice a year he hitchhikes out to the reservation to visit them. Between visits he talks to them every week by telephone.
"You couldn't have inherited that from me," he says.
"How's my baby?" he asks one daughter during a weekly call. His voice softens as he talks to them.
Another daughter gets on the phone and tells him she got straight As.
Wortman said he draws strength from his daughters, just as he draws strength from everyone he meets.
"I like to get out and about and enjoy people," he said. "I have a love for life."
Wortman acknowledged that his joie de vie, or love of life, had raised a few eyebrows.
"I'm partying every day," he said. "I like positivity."
"Some people think I'm strange," he said.
These days, Wortman spends much of his time at the Bottleneck or The Tap Room, 801 New Hampshire St., — drinking O'Doul's or Coke, of course.
But luckily for him, most Lawrence residents are happy to have a resident barbarian.
Half-Price for KU and Haskell students.
DANIEL CORTES
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Lied Center Presents
A Concert Series Event
8:00 p.m., Wednesday,
September 28, 1994
Lied Center
PRINCIPAL
DANCERS
of New York City Ballet
This presentation is produced
by Columbia Artists, not
New York City Ballet.
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); and any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3330 or (913) 234-4545; all seats reserved; public $30 and $25, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $15 and $12.50, senior citizens and other students $29 and $24; KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using VISA or MasterCard.
Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Kief's Audio and Video, Laird Noller Dealerships, Payless ShoeSource and W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee.
IT'S ALL HAPPENING AT THE LIED CENTER!
FORE LION CENTER
K
K STUDENT SENATE
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Jayhawk FOOTBALL
KANSAS 72 ALABAMA-BIRM.0
Richard Devinkl / KANSAN
More than 6,000 high school band members from Kansas, Missouri and Illinois participated in the annual Kansas Band Day during a special halftime show at the Kansas and Alabama-Birmingham football game Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
BIG8
SECTION B
SCORES
Kansas St. 35
Minnesota 0
Colorado 27
Michigan 26
Nebraska 70
Pacific 21
Iowa St. 18
Rice 28
Oklahoma St. 17
Tulsa 0
STANDINGS
Overall
Nebraska 4 0
Colorado 30
Kansas 31
Jayhawks knock out Blazers 72-0
Kansas St. 30
Kansas 31
Oklahoma 21
Oklahoma St. 21
Missouri 12
Iowa St. 04
New AP Top 25
The Top Twenty Five teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 24, and ranking in the previous poll.
rank team record pts. pr
1. Florida (31) 3-0 1,509 1
2. Nebraska (22) 4-0 1,493 2
3. Florida St. (4) 4-0 1,396 3
4. Penn St. (3) 4-0 1,369 5
5. Colorado (1) 3-0 1,334 7
6. Arizona (1) 3-0 1,199 8
7. Michigan 2-1 1,145 4
8. Notre Dame 2-1 1,083 9
9. Auburn 4-0 1,008 10
10. Texas A&M 4-0 935 10
11. Alabama 4-0 906 11
12. Washington 2-1 863 17
13. Miami 2-1 791 6
14. Virginia Tech 4-0 735 14
15. Wisconsin 2-1 674 16
16. Texas 3-0 666 15
17. Wash St. 3-0 515 22
18. N. Carolina 3-0 491 13
19. Southern Cal 2-1 462 19
20. Ohio St. 3-0 430 20
21. Oklahoma 3-0 341 21
22. N. Car. St. 3-0 266 24
23. Kansas St. 3-0 175 —
24. Colorado St. 4-0 71 —
25. Illinois 2-1 64 —
Richard Devinki / XANSAN
Others receiving votes: Kansas 41,
UCLA 39, Utah 34, Duke 26, Georgia
29, Syracuse 18, Virginia 18, Mississippi State 13, Baylor 7, South Carolina 2, Stanford 2, Texas Tech 2, Western Michigan 2, Bowling Green 1.
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
8
Senior free safety Kwamie Lassiter tries to strip away the ball from a Blazer wide receiver. The Jayhawks were successful in creating six turnovers in the Saturday victory against Alabama-Birmingham at Memorial Stadium.
Victory is Kansas' third largest point total ever
By Matt Irwin Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas football team defeated an outmatched Alabama-Birmingham team 72-0 on Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
The top two victories were an 86-6 defeat of South Dakota State in 1947 and an 83-0 defeat of Washington University in Missouri in 1923.
The Jayhawks improved their record to 3-1, while the Blazers dropped to 1-3.
Kansas scored 10 touchdowns and kicked one field goal in scoring the third most points and recording the third widest margin of victory in school history.
Junior quarterback poised
Kansas senior defensive tackle Sylvester Wright fell on the ball at the 23-yard line with 10:57 left in the first quarter, setting the tone for the rest of the game.
The Division I-AA Blazers did scare the Jayhawks for at least the first four minutes of the game.
Alabama-Birmingham took the opening kickoff and moved the ball 69 yards to the Jayhawk 11-yard line in eight plays. However, on the ninth play of the drive, Blazer senior quarterback John Whitcomb ran into the running back and lost the ball.
By Matt Irwin
In the second quarter, the Blazer's drive was stopped at the Jayhawk 16-yard line when junior linebacker Keith Rodgers intercepted a Whitchpass.
"They moved the ball on the first series, and I thought, 'Here we go again.' Kansas coach Glen Mason said.
Kansansportswriter
Kansas starting running back sophomore June Heney was out with a bruised shoulder. Despite this, the Jayhawk rushing attack ran through the Blazers for 418 yards on 62 carries using six running backs and junior quarterback Mark Williams.
Mason had little to worry about the rest of the game because his team scored 17 points before the Blazers threatened to score again.
Kansas scored eight of its 10 touchdowns on the ground, and the special teams scored the other two.
good job today." Levine said.
"He took charge and did a really
Mark Williams said he was nervous before his first Division I-A game on Saturday, but an Alabama-Birmingham defender helped eliminate the jitters.
Actually, the Blazers defender knocked out all the butterflies.
On the third play of the Jayhawks' first series, Kansas' junior quarterback pitched the ball to sophomore running back Mark Sanders and was forced to the ground by an Alabama-Birmingham defender.
Kansas was led by junior Manoloito '86 yards on nine carries, including a 65-yard run. Both lion L.T.
Junior running back L.T. Levine, who scored three touchdowns against the Blazers, said that Williams came back to the huddle smiling after the hit.
"It was after the first hit on the first series," Williams said in reference to the moment he lost his anxiety.
See JAYHAWKS, Page 6B.
Williams, who started in place of injured senior quarterback Ashelik Preston, passed for 144 yards and completed nine of 11 pass attempts against the Blazers, a Division I-AA team.
Hilver said he also was impressed.
Alabama-Birmingham coach Jim
Preston suffered a partially collapsed lung and a hairline fracture of one rib on Sept. 17 against Texas Christian.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said after the game he could not detect that Williams was nervous about his first start.
"He was a pretty cool customer." Mason said. "He executed and didn't force the ball. He did exactly what we asked him to do."
Preston said that his lung was fine, but that his rib was not.
Although he has not cleared to play, Preston said he may return for the Oct. 6 game against Kansas State.
"I thought he did extremely well, being his first game out," Hilary said. "He was quick and had a good arm."
Williams also ran for 22 yards when he was scrambling away from defenders and trying to find open receivers. "I think that's one of my talents," Williams said.
Williams doesn't like to evaluate himself, but he said he made some good reads when dropping back to pass.
Williams credited the offensive line for his near-perfect completion percentage.
"I think I made pretty good decisions," Williams said. "I want to be perfect in everything I do."
Sophomore tight end Jim Moore agreed. Moore caught three passes for 71 yards.
"Our offense starts up front," Moore said. "And you can't throw if you don't have a good line."
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
1
3
Sophomore running back Mark Sanders fights off Blazer defenders. Sanders rushed for 61 yards on nine carries. Kansas running backs combined for 418 yards on 62 carries.
How did the Associated Press Top 10 fare?
1 Florida (3-0)
did not Play
Next. at Mississippi. Saturday
2 Nebraska (4-0)
beat Pacific, 10-21.
Next. vs. Wyoming. Saturday.
3 Florida State (4-0)
beat No. 13 North Carolina 31-18.
Next. at no. 6 Miami, Oct. 8.
4 Michigan (2-1)
lost to No. 7 Colorado 27-26.
Next. at Iowa. Saturday.
5 Penn State (4-0)
beat Rutgers, 55-27.
Next. at Temple. Saturday.
6 Miami (2-1)
lost to No. 17 Washington. 38-20.
Next. at Rutgers. Saturday.
7 Colorado (3-0)
beat No. 4 Michigan 27-26.
Next. at No. 15 Texas. Saturday.
8 Arizona (3-0)
lost to Stanford 34-10.
Next. vs. Oregon State. Saturday.
9 Notre Dame (3-1)
beat Purdue 39-21.
Next. vs. Stannford. Saturday.
10 Auburn (4-0)
beat East Tennessee. State 38-0.
Next. vs. Kentucky. Thursday.
Noah Musser/KANSAN
1
2B
Monday, September 26,1994
Big I'v'
Petting Zoo...
804 Mass·843-5000
EDGE PSYCHDTIC
GEAR!
FEATURING "BIG DICK
T-SHIRTS & OTHERS
SEE D. A. S.E. FOR A
FREE BROCHURE
WITH ALL OF THE
LATEST SHIRTS TO:
EXTREMELY TOO
PD BOX 3581
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Mass • 843-5000
RING DAY
Order your college ring NOW.
JOSTENS
AMERICA & COLLEGE WIND™
Date: Mon.-Wed., Sept. 26-28 Time: 10a.m.-4p.m. Deposit Required: $25
Place: Kansas Union Lobby, Level 4 Sponsored by: KU Bookstores
Meet with your Jostens representative for full details. See our complete ring selection on display in your college bookstore.
Order your college ring NOW.
JOSTENS AMERICA'S COLLEGE RING™
Date: Mon.-Wed., Sept. 26-28 Time: 10a.m.-4p.m. Deposit Required: $25
Place: Kansas Union Lobby, Level 4 Sponsored by: KU Bookstores
Meet with your Jostens representative for full details. See our complete ring selection on display in your college bookstore.
Blueprints 1.9.9.4 the eighth annual student leadership conference Building U for tomorrow
Sat. October 1 Kansas Union
Sat. October 1
Kansas Union
9:00 am - 3:30 pm Conference
3:30 pm - 6:30 pm Community Service Project Conference late registration fee is $15 until Sept. 27th by 5:00 pm
Register at the OAC office at 400 Kansas Union
Questions? Call 864 - 4861
Sponsored by Sprint,
Commerce Bank,
Anderson Consulting.
Kansas Union Bookstores
and Student Senate.
* Scholarships are available to those who qualify
MAKE AN IMPACT KANSAS FOOTBALL
KU
KU vs. K-STATE "Under the Lights" ONLY 10 DAYS AWAY
5
The Hawks and The Cats Take Center Stage On National TV Thursday Oct. 6 * Kickoff 7pm MEMORIAL STADIUM
JAYHAWK FOOTBALL UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ALL SEATSARE $25 Or Students GET4 GAMES FOR $30!!
Oct.6 7pm Nationally Ranked
Oct.22 1pm Nationally Ranked
(Night Game)
K-STATE
(Parents'Weekend)
Oct. 29 1pm Oklahoma State
Oklahoma
(Homecoming)
Nov.12 1pm NationallyRanked
Colorado
That dream died on the Blazers' first possession when Alabama-Birmingham quarterback John Whitcomb collided with senior running back Patrick Green, fumbling the ball at the Kansas 16-vard line.
(Senior Day)
Division I-AA Alabama-Birmingham had dreams Saturday of pulling off an upset against Kansas in its first game against a Division I-A opponent.
"That first drive really set the tone," Whitchbom said. "It's hard to say what the outcome of the game would have been if we scored on that first drive."
Let's Fill Memorial Stadium
The first drive was not the Blazers only opportunity to score. Alabama-Birmingham drove the ball inside the Kansas 30-yard line two additional times. The result was an interception at the Kansas 12-yard line and an incomplete pass at the Kansas 20 on fourth down and one.
The fumble ended Alabama-Birmingham's best drive of the day and foreshadowed the 72-0 rout. The Blazers turned the ball over six times.
He said that the game, and the $100, 100 Kansas guarantee that came with it, would help the program when it moved to Division I status in 1996.
CALL NOW864-3141
Despite the margin of the defeat and the Blazers' mistakes, Alabama-Birmingham coach Jim Hilyer said he was glad he scheduled the game.
He attributed the score to Kansas' overwhelming advantage in scholarship players.
Drive Chart Kansas UAB
10 20 30 40 50 40 30 20 10
Key
TD touchdown
FG field goal
MFG missed field goal
S safety
INT interception
F fumble
TU turnover on downs
P punt
11 plays 77 yds.
TD
11 plays 31 yds.
FG
9 plays 79 yds.
TD
P
2 plays 6 yds.
TD
Kickoff
TD
6 plays 62 yds.
TD
13 plays 79 yds.
TD
punt return
1 play 9 yds.
TD
5 plays 60 yds.
TD
4 plays 67 yds.
TD
TU
Clock runs out
Final Score: UAB 0 KANSAS 72
Blazers' first turnover sets tone for game
Ky Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
"This game puts us in front of media that we'd never get if we didn't play here." Hilzer said.
"We really shot ourselves in the foot with those turnovers," Whitcomb said. "This was a learning experience."
"They have 85 scholarship players, we only have 20 scholarship's. Hilary said of the Jayhawks. "In the second half, we just didn't have anyone left to compete out there."
FINDING GREAT FOOD IS AS EASY AS
---
You can have your choice and it's nutritious too. Our menu will please even the most finicky eater.
123
If you can count to 3 and know your name, you can treat yourself to some of the best food anywhere, anytime! We invite you to come by and try our All-American Buffet at Naismith Hall.
$1 breakfast, $2 lunch or $3 dinner
So what are you waiting for? Just fill in the coupon and bring it with you. It's as simple as 1,2,3.
$1 breakfast,$2 lunch or $3 dinner Bring this coupon in for our All-American Breakfast, Lunch or Dinner Buffet. *Offer limited to one coupon per person
Name.
*Offer limited to one coupon per person
Address
Soph
Fresh
Jr./Sr.
Non-Stud.
Offer good through 10/5/94.
NAISMTH
1800 Naismith Drive (Corner of 19th & Naismith, just south of Allen Fieldhouse)
843-8559
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
September 26,1994
3B
Home play challenges golf team
Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's golf team has an appetite for victory.
The team finished in second place last weekend in the Falcon/Cross Creek Invitational. Being only three strokes out of first place might have been the best thing that could have happened to Kansas, junior Alan Stearns said.
"That gets us hungry to win a tournament," he said. As the players head into the Kansas Invitational today at Alvamar Golf Course, 1800 Crossgate Drive, they hope to improve their shot selection, Stearns said. Last weekend the team gave away several shots when they got into trouble.
Instead of opting for the easiest way out, the golfers often tried to do things that were difficult, which led to higher scores.
"There are just some little things you try to work on, course management-wise," Stearns said. "That way we don't maximize our mistakes."
Kansas coach Ross Randall said he has emphasized to the players the importance of each shot in a tournament. However, the weather and other events previously scheduled at Alvamar have limited Kansas' practice time this past week.
"We're anxious and ready to go, but physically we haven't been able to practice as much as we'd like," Randall said.
The weather may also impact play in the tournament, Randall said. Rain the area received last week has left the ground saturated. With soft conditions, players do not get the normal distance out of each club.
Stearns said one advantage Kansas could count on was knowing its home course. They practice on it every day.
"We all know the course really well," he said. "We're a lot more comfortable than other golfers will be."
Stearns said that there was a pressure of being at home, though.
"Everyone assumes you'll just walk away with it," he said.
Stearns placed fourth last weekend in only his second collegiate tournament.
He was two strokes behind the champion after shooting a 69 on the final day of competition. Stearns said he received a big boost of confidence after the tournament.
"It helped my confidence to go out in a college tournament and shoot under par," he said. "It at least lets me know I can do it again."
Volleyball team looks on bright side
Team encouraged despite two losses
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
Despite two weekend losses, the Jayhawks felt little disappointment walking off the volleyball court in Lincoln, Neb., Saturday.
Instead, the Jayhawks breathed a collective sigh of relief after the conclusion of the Arby's Classic, the final weekend road trip of the non-conference schedule, freshman middle blocker Leslie Purkeypile said.
"I think we all felt some relief the week
end tournaments were over," she said. "We played a lot better this weekend and we're ready to start the conference schedule and the tough competition in the Big Eight."
Even though Kansas, 3-11, picked up two more losses, coach Karen Schonewise said the team met the goals it had set for itself going into the tournament.
"We wanted to see good communication, a good blocking game and no balls hitting the floor," she said. "All three goals were met at the tournament."
Kansas played the nationally ranked New Mexico Lobos Friday, losing in three games. Despite starting with 4-15, 1-15 losses, the team battled back in the third game to challenge the Lobo's, 12-15.
"We just came back and things started working for us in the third game."
"They were a good team, but we weren't thinking about them being ranked when we went into the match." Purkevile said.
Schonewise said the Jayhawk's offense and defense came together for the first time this season.
Controlling the offense, freshman setter Trisha Lindgren assisted Purkeypile, who led the team with eight kills against New Mexico.
Defensively, the Jayhawks had to combat a hard-hitting New Mexico team. Junior outside hitter Jenny Larson and sophomore outside hitter Katie Walsh led the defensive effort with 11 digs each and combined for 11 defensive kills.
Friday's solid performance carried over into Saturday as the Jayhawks took the Pittsburgh Panthers into five games, 15-5, 11-15, 15-6, 11-15, 15-7.
Strong defensive play and good blocking
allowed the Jayhawks to turn in their most consistent performance of the season. Schonewise said.
Purkeypile and Walsh Jed the team with 14 kills each.
Defensively, Walsh turned in an equally impressive performance with 16 digs.
Continual improvement and a high level of intensity after this weekend's tournament should have Kansas ready for conference play, Schonewise said.
With weekend tournaments out of the way, Kansas will concentrate on a match against the Iowa State Cyclones Sept. 28.
"We may have lost, but we felt better about things." Purkepvile said.
"We played really good defense this weekend, which is what we've been working on."
BRIEF
Jayhawks clean up in softball tournament
Kansanstaffreport
The Kansas softball team swept through the Jayhawk Invitational Saturday and yesterday, winning all five games it played.
The Jayhawks faced Johnson County Community College in their opening game Saturday. The Jayhawks won 10-5. Both teams had nine hits and five errors. Junior pitcher Beth Robinson picked up the win for Kansas.
Kansas defeated Kearney State in their second game, 8-2. Kansas pounded out 13 hits in the victory. Sophomore Tiffany Blood was the winning pitcher.
On Sunday, Kansas defeated Kearney State for the second time, 6-5. Despite the win, the Jayhawks were outhit 11-8 in the contest.
ne team continued its win streak against Washburn with a 7-0 victory. Robinson had her second win in the two-hit shutout. Kansas committed no errors in the contest.
In Kansas' final game, the Jayhawks dismantled Johnson County, 4-1. Blood had her second win of the weekend as the team outfit Johnson County 9-1.
Previously unbeaten Chiefs fail to score against LA Rams
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — What Chuck Knox calls the best team in the NFL wasn't even the best team in Kansas City on a rainy day when Joe Montana has the flu.
Montana, fighting what Kansas City Chiefs officials called a viral infection, played his worst game of the year and failed to get his team into the end zone for the first time in a 15-year career.
Willie Anderson scored on a 72-yard play off a deflected pass, and the Los Angeles Rams defeated the previously unbeaten Chiefs 16-0 yesterday.
The Rams (2-2) were heavy underdogs, and their coach knew it.
"This is the best football team I've seen in the NFL this year," said Knox, repeating what he's been saying about the Cheifs all week.
"We're playing the best passer in pro football," Rams tackle Jackie Slater said. "We beat probably one of the best teams in the AFC, maybe the best team in all the game."
In another historical oddity, it's the first time the Chiefs were shut out at home since 1985 when the same team beat them by the same score.
The Rams seized a 13-0 lead after the first quarter and maintained command throughout. The Chiefs had opened the season with victories against three NFC West teams — the Saints, 49ers and Falcons — who were all favored over the Rams.
"I don't think in your worst nightmare you could imagine the performance we put on out there today," Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer said.
Montana said his illness had not been a factor in his performance — 18-for-37 for 175 yards and three interceptions. In a storied career that includes four Super Bowl titles and the highest passing percentage in NFL history, he had never before failed to guide his team to a score.
"That doesn't mean anything," he said. "I felt fine. I didn't take any (medication) today."
Jerome Bettis, the Rams' 243-pound running back, picked up 132 yards on 35 carries, going more than 100 yards for the third straight game and helping the Rams (2-2) get rolling on their first possession behind second-team quarterback Chris Chandler.
Tony Zendejas hit a 29-yard field goal for a 3-0 lead, and a few minutes later, Louis Aguiar's 45-yard punt put the Rams on their own 28.
Chandler dropped back and fired over the middle to Jessie Hester, but the pass was high, and Hester leaped and tipped the ball higher.
It flew squarely into Anderson's arms at the 45, and he romped untouched for a 72-yard touchdown play, silencing the sellout crowd and giving the Rams an improbable 10-0 lead with more than three minutes left in the first quarter.
"If you're not playing at the top of your game, this can happen to you," Chandler said. "We had the tipped touchdown. We got some lucky breaks. We got some tipped ball turnovers that you don't normally get against Joe Montana."
"It was one of those days," said Schottenheimer, "that they throw a ball, and we're closing on it, and it deflects off the receiver's hands and goes to a guy who's running loose behind it. It was miserable."
haircut from Manetamers
shirt from Outfitter's
sandwich from West Coast Saloon
jeans from Outfitter's
AMY ANGLER
CARDMEMBER SINCE AUGUST 30, 1994
"I got me a card and it works real good. I still haven't caught that big bass 'Bessie' but I look good tryin."
It doesn't matter how you spend your time, the Kansan Card can help you spend your money.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
With Photography by James
Available at: University Daily Kansan (119 Stauffer-Flint), University Book Shop, Jayhawk Bookstore, Kansas Union (2nd level Courtesy Counter), and Burge Union (1st level Courtesy Counter).
1
4B
Monday, September 26, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Underdog wins WBC heavyweight belt
Lennox Lewis falls in second round
The Associated Press
WEMBLEY, England — Oliver McCall, the sparring partner who would be king, is just that.
McCall, a 5 1/2-to-1 underdog, won the World Boxing Council heavyweight championship in a shocking upet early yesterday morning by knocking down and stopping previously undefeated Lennox Lewis with 31 seconds left in the second round.
"What can I say?" a tearful McCall said in his dressing room after the fight. "I am happy, I am thrilled. We knocked him out."
We did it!"
Lewis admitted to being dazed by a left hook and right hand that knocked him down before about 7,000 shocked spectators in the Wembley Arena.
Then he became bitter.
"I just got caught with a lucky shot and the referee seemed to help him, he really did," said Lewis, the only British boxer to hold even a piece of the heavyweight title in this century. "I wasn't badly hurt," he said.
Dan Duva, co-promoter of the fight, called the action of referee Luge Garcia of Mexico "an outrageous stoppage."
Frank Maloney, Lewis' manager, said he would file a protest at the WBC convention in Seville, Spain, at the end of next month. The WBC board of governors can order an immediate rematch or a rematch after the
new champion makes one voluntary defense.
Jose Sullaman, president of the WBC, said he would be happy to consider a protest.
But, he added "an immediate rematch is seldom ordered."
"If the money is right, I'll give him a rematch and I'll knock him down again," McCall said.
Don King, McCall's promoter, warned that if the Lewis camp was going to protest, he would not get a rematch.
The 29-year-old McCall said he had talked on the phone to former champion Mike Tyson, who is in an Indiana prison, and Tyson told him to keep throwing left hooks.
So, as Lewis started to throw a long right in the second round. McCall threw a left
hook and then crashed hone a right to the chin that dropped Lewis in a heap. He struggled up at the count of "six" and was weaving about when Garcia stopped it.
"The referee couldn't speak English. When you nod your head, it means, yes, you're OK."
"He landed a great right punch," Lewis said. "I tried to get up too fast. I was a little wobbly. But I was really surprised at the referee's decision to stop the fight so earl
Lewis, however, did look badly dazed.
"I am absolutely sure of what I did.
Lennox Lewis was knocked out. To allow more punches to Lennox Lewis would have fatal consequences. My duty is to protect the health of the fighter." Garcia said
"If he had gotten up, he would have gotten knocked out again," McCall said.
Lawrence Community Theatre
1501 New Hampshire • 843-7469
ECM Program Center
1204 Oread • 843-4933
West Coast Saloon
ZPC POOL
Game Day Bus
Late-Night Grill
until 1 a.m.
2222 lowe 841-BREW
Metropolis BBS
839-0041
bounce off the walls.
Jaybroil ARCADE
pinball, pool hall,
video games gallery
864-3545 kansas union level 1
Rings Fixed Fast!
Klazer Cummings
jewels
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
Esquire Barber Service
1st Time Customer $3.99
2323 Bridge Ct.
First Med Building
812-3699
$1 OFF any delivery with coupon $7 min
BUM STEER
THE BUM STEER
BUM STEER
DELIVERY
BBQ Sandwiches, Cheese Burgers,
Grilled Chicken, French Fries, BBQ Ribs
MORE MORE MORE
call 841-SM0K(E)
11:00 to 2:00 & 5:00 to Close Daily
$1 OFF
any delivery
with coupon
$7 min
THE BUM STEER
With 6 seconds remaining, Stewart dropped back and heaved a long pass toward the Michigan goal line, where a group of players from both teams leaped for the ball. It was tipped into the air and caught in the end zone by Westbrook, who grabbed it over the shoulder of Michigan's Ty Law.
"They all jumped up, and I just waited because I knew it was going to come back," said Westbrook, a Detroit native whose parents and high school coach were among the crowd of 106,427 at Michigan Stadium. "It was tipped, and there was no one else around. It was just me and the ball. All I had to do was catch it. I have never had a feeling like this in my life."
Charles Grantham, head of the NBA Players Association, said he has heard talk of a lockout by the league.
CU Buffaloes grab the win
Michigan safety Chuck Winters got his hand on the ball first, but it was knocked away by Colorado receiver Blake Anderson.
Lenses duplicated or made from Doctor's prescription
There have been no negotiating sessions while the players' lawyers continue to pursue relief through the court system. The NBA's position is that the courts should not intervene so the league and players can come to an agreement on their own.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — In a miraculous play reminiscent of Doug Flutie's famous Hail Mary pass in 1984, Michael Westbrook made a diving, 64-yard touchdown catch of a tipped toss from Kordell Stewart on the final play Saturday to give seventh-ranked Colorado a 27-28 victory over No. 4 Michigan.
After Westbrook made the catch, Colorado players and fans stormed the field as the Michigan crowd sat in stunned silence. The pass brought back memories of Flutie's last-play, 48-yard pass to Gerald Phelan that gave Boston College a 47-45 victory over Miami in 1984.
20% OFF ANY PURCHASE
The Associated Press
Labor unrest in the NBA may lead to more lost games
The players' union filed suit in federal court seeking to overturn the NBA draft of college players, restrictions on free agency and the salary cap system, but the court refused to declare them invalid.
"I saw the ball the whole way," Winters said. "I was coming down with it in my hands, but their guy tipped it up."
"We have told players, 'At some point, ownership will test your resolve,'" Grantham told the Tribune.
In-Store Lab
One Day Service
(in most cases)
Choose from over 1,000 frames
FANTASTIC SELECTION!
Colorado tried its version of the Hail Mary, known as "Rocket," on the last play of the first half, but it was intercepted by Winters in the end zone. The second time worked like magic.
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
Deputy Commissioner of the NBA, Russ Granik, told the Tribune, "Our plan is to open training camps, but if ultimately the union won't talk to you, it's tough to rule out any possibilities you might have to consider down the road. It is much too early to making any decisions about anything like that. We still have six weeks before the season starts. Our goal is to reach a new collective bargaining agreement."
players expired at the end of June for the 1993- 94 season.
4 East 7th * Downtown Lawrence * 841-1113 NOT VALID WITH OTHER COUPONS OR OFFERS EXPIRES BOX
The Associated Press
The Chicago Tribune, quoting sources, reported Friday that the NBA is considering a lockout of players, "Probably around Thanksgiving, if no agreement is reached by then."
CHICAGO — The 1994 baseball season is gone, the coming NHL season is in jeopardy, and now basketball's labor unrest could result in more lost games.
The last agreement between the league and its
"It has to be one of the great wins of my career," said Stewart, who broke Colorado's career marks for touchdown passes and total offense. "The coach (Bill McCartney) called the play. I just heaved it up, and it worked."
8
EXPIRES 9/30/94
Split fun!! at the Love Garden
Luscious Jackson!!
Wed., Sept. 28th come to a tea party with capitol recording artists
Tea & celebrity company!
3:30 pm. co-sponsored by
LOVE
GARDEN
CafeTerraNova callfordetails!! 936/2Mass.St.
Sebadoh
Sat., Oct.1st. live performance by
(or Lou Barlowsolo, depending on the whim of Lou)
meet Louis, and hear him play and sing!
cash paid for CDs,LPs,tapes 7 days a week!
3 pm.- free to the public!
This is the universal sign for peace.
PEACE
This is the universal sign for peace-of-mind.
P
Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City
Birth control
Pap tests
STD testing & treatment
Orchards Corners shopping center
Sex education
FREE
Pregnancy test
Pregnancy testing
1420 Kasold Drive, Suite C Lawrence, KS (910) 361-6780
(913) 832-0281
AKΛ • XΩ • AKλ • XΩ • AKλ • XΩ • AKλ • XΩ • AKλ
JON BLUMBAUGH MEMORIAL WHEAT MEET
Chi Omega Alpha Kappa Lambda
Awards:
**Entry:**
Entry fees-$6-Race
$11-Relays
$5-Fun Relay
$4-Simon Says
100% cotton t-shirts will be given to winner of each race. Winner of Simon Says receives trip to Chicago.
October 2,1994 Benefits KU Cancer Research Omega Alpha Kappa L
Meet begins at 9:00 a.m. on October 2, 94.
For questions, call 841-5567 or 841-6094
Schedule:
Sign up on Wescoe beach before Friday September 30,1994.
UNIVERSITY
PHOTOGRAPHY
Shirts Illustrated
BULLWINKLES TRAVEL CENTER 18TH AMENDMENT
THE STUMBLE IN
TRAVEL CENTER
AACC
AMENOMENT
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
river valley music
Cadillac RANCH
Quattro Offroad Horses
AKΛ•XΩ • AKΛ•XΩ • AKΛ•XΩ • AKΛ•XΩ • AKλ
Fridays are Double Print Days at Jayhawk Bookstore Bring in any roll of C-41 process color film for developing and get the 2nd same size set of prints FREE!
Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 843-3826
The summer is ending...
SUNSHINE
Did you spend enough time outside?
2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS (913) 842-4949
ULTIMATE TAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Serial Through June 31, 1993
NCGS
If your summer whites are looking drab, then pick up a Kansan Card for the Ultimate Tan with the ultimate discount.
7
]
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday. September 26.1994
5B
Classified Directory
卫
100s Announcements
105 Personals
110 Bus. Personals
THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass.
STERLING SILK JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bracelets, & Pendants
Backpacks, Belts, Jackets, & Purse
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops,
'i', Reno, Seenegit, and Vuarnet
Be healthier and happier!
Relieve pain and stress with massage therapy!
Student discounts available
at 614-587-8312
Call Anna Laura and Laura Pace at 814-1587
Tarot card readings.
Love? Success? Career?
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer.
Call Anna Lunaria at 841-1587.
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also insurance for US Citizens going abroad.
411% A/S Main Ottawa, Ks 6007 1800-6955
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
RESEARCH PAPER
WRITING WORKSHOP
FREE!
Don't know where to start on that big one?
Wed, Sep 28, 7:00-9:30 pm
4034 Wescoe
Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
Ruth & Kids Discount Floral. Donez arranged roses in vase 193 89. Accept all major credit cards and checks. Open 7-9 MF, 9-5 Sat. closed Sun. 93 83. E.23rd 832-0704
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
120 Announcements
ATTENTION ALL GREENS! Skir for free. We are looking for reps in even house for *Free* Glees. Call 718-634-2500.
Lose weight and have energy at the same time. I lost 45 lbs in 3 months, my skin became less plump, and I recovered. All natural, doctor recommended. For a free sample, send name, address, email to Research 054.1 S151 St. Manhattan, K65029.
EARTH MYSTICS and GODDESS OF MANY FACES-workshops on Earth-based spirituality, OCT 9-8. Presentation from St. Louis. For info: Institute of Transformational Studies 1:862-2006
Openings for CNA: 2-10:30 shift for CNA's full or part-time. Flexible hours. Eudora Nursing Center
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING Workshop. Don't know where to start on that big paper? FREE! Wed, Sep 28, 7:30 p.m, 4034 Wescoe. Sponsored by Awesome Assistance Center.
YOUR ACADEMIC SUCCESS, PART 1: TIME MANAGEMENT AND READING Workshop. Get control of your time and your life; increase your reading efficiency and effectiveness. FREE! Tues, Sep 27, 7-9 pm, 2023 Haworth. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
YOURACADEMICSUCKESS,PART1:
TIME MANAGEMENT AND
READING WORKSHOP
Get control of your time and your life!
Increase your reading effectiveness and efficiency.
FREE!
Tues., Sep. 27, 7:00-9:00 p.m.
2023 Haworth
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
130 Entertainment
13TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2 - 18, 1986 • 4, 5, 8 OL 7 HISTORY
STREAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
VAILBEAVER CREEK
Y GOTE
BH THURSDAY
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1-800-SUNCHASE
MORGAN DOWNS SAIL BURANS ATTED
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
140 Lost & Found
FOUND: Fuji Discovery camera on Emery Rd.
Contact Jason. I834-7577.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Brandon Woods is currently accepting applications for a full-time housekeeper. The qualified applicant must be outgoing, observant, self-motivated, able to work independently and enjoy working in a beautiful facility. We offer health, life and long-term disability insurance, vacation and holiday accommodations, and a competitive salary. Please apply in person at 1019 Inverness Dr, Lawrence, KS, E.O. 1E
Cash Caterers, Kansas Union Catering Dept. Hairy for Thursday, Oct. 6, 1994. Several shifts available. See schedules in Union Personnel Office. Req. Bachelor's degree or equivalent. Previous food service experience preferred. Apply Kansas and Burge Urns' Personnel Level, Level 5, Kansas Union EOE.
Caterers, Union Council Catering Department,
$4.25 hrs. 8.a.m.-3.p.m. Monday thru Friday, weekends as scheduled, must have preived food supplies. Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel Office. EOE.
FNA
Day, evening and weekend shifts needed. Work with elderly clients in their homes. Reliable transportation required. Call Scott at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association. 843-3728.
COLLEGE STUDENTS 40-12-15 LMS STARTING Local branch of nat. i'co. filling immediate entry level openings. Flex time schedule. 3 days, eyes. Flex course options. All majors accepted. For info 841-8695.
Growing Overland Park, KC-based custom sportwear company seeks out fraternity-sorority member for part time office help. Must have vehicle and be willing to commute from
Lawrence to KC
Call (913) 381-9709 or (800) 886-9328.
HOLIDAY INN
The Holiday is recruiting service professionals to join our team! Current openings include:
- Holidomi is a recruiting professional who join our team! Current openings include:
* p.m. servers
* cocktail servers
* p.m. cashiers
* banquet help
* weekend housekeepers
* cooks
We offer excellent compensation and benefits which include uniforms, meals, tuition reimbursement, hotel room discounts and much more.
* Please apply at 200 Macdonald Dr. eoe
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
HOLIDAY INN
We Want You!
Holiday Inn is hiring service professionals. Both part-time and full-time positions available as:
• Bartender
• Cocktail Servers
• Front Desk Agents
• Weekend Room Attendants
• Restaurant Servers
• Cooks
We offer excellent benefits including insurance,
tuition reimbursement, meals, uniforms, travel
and hotel discounts. If interested apply at Holiday
Inn. EOE
KARAOKE DJ Wanted. Responsible, great personality, attractive. M or F. 749-3649.
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic, highly motivated individuals to sell newspaper subscriptions. Sales experience is helpful, but we will train highly motivated individuals. Evening hours are required. Apply by 2 p.m. and 9 p.m., at the Lawrence Journal World 609 New Hampshire. Contact Valerie for more information. B32-7127
Positions available at a major Lawrence lettership on 1st and 2nd shifts. Long & short term positions available. Some weekend hours available. Some phone in home and reliable transportation! Learn about the regulations and build your job skills! Great opportunity to begin earning money for the holidays!
Excellent income for part-time work!
is reopening and is looking for food service employees. Duties include both food prep and line cooking. Some experience required. If you want to be a part of the "new" Dei team, apply at Shmum Food Co. Business Office between 9 am-4 pm - Fri at 719 Mass. (upstairs, above Smokehouse)
Apply today and receive a next week key.
Manpower 211 E. st. Sth., Lawrence, KEOE
www.manpower.edu
Mazzio's Pizza is now hiring waitresses for work during the noon hour. Flexible hours. Must be outgoing, have a positive attitude, and the ability too smile. Apply in person at 2630 fa
Now hiring babystays / childcare providers. Day,
and weekend hours available. For more info:
www.kids4life.com
Office manager needed at Joni's Notes of KU. Job begins immediately and continues through the school year. Approx 15-20 flexible hours per week and $500/month. Office is closed for all school vacations. Business background NOT required. Applicant should have a Bachelor's in Joni's Notes posting at the University Placement Center in the Burge Union. Applications accepted for limited time.
Needed Immediately!: Part time teacher for home day care 10:15 brs. week, Exep.reff. #41-781.
Need a little extra money? Bulsley Distribution distribution is now accepting online routes. Work approximately 2-4 hours every Tuesday. Benefits include 10% savings, 50% savings, Sunflower Cable Vision. Call 843-688-7250.
Juicers Showgirls
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly,
working at Lawrence's top adult night spot.
Now hiring attractive dancers and waltresses 18+
Excellent working atmosphere.
Apply in person,
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
LOCAL WHOLESALE, RETAIL
PETROLEUM COMPANY
1* OFFICE MANAGER
JR ACCOUNTANTA/R, A/P,G/L
2* MARKETING PERSONNEL,
HEAVY PHONES
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR IMMEDIATE OPENING
ABOVE AVERAGE SALARY,
QUIET AUTOMATED COUN-
TRY OFFICE
SEND RESUME TODAY TO:
718 E. 1300 RD
LAWRENCE, KS 66046
Office position in medical setting. Part-time approx. 15 brs/wk. Morning and/or afternoon shifts available, General clerical duties filing, sorting, typing, billing, etc. Send resume to: Janice Heck, 1009 N. 6001d, Lawrence, KS 6047 Parish Adults! University Photography islookup a 'a professional attitude & appearance when working with and get PAID. Call 843-5297 between 10am-3pm.
Racing Enthusiasts
29-Oct. 2 in Tampa. Carpools may be arranged. Many positions involve Sun/Sat hours only. Positions include: Ticket Takers, Gate Attendants, Dressers, and Labor. Come experience drag racing be working outdoors & greeting racing fans at one of the Fastest Tracks in the World!
We are looking for friendly, outgoing, and reliable people who can work the NIRA Nationals, Sept.
WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING TRAVEL COMPANY SEEKING INDIVIDUALS TO PROMOTE SPRING BREAK TO JAMAICA, CANCUN, FLORIDA, & PADRE, FANTASTIC FREE TRAVEL & GREAT COMMISSIONS! SPLASH TOURS 1-408-426-7710
Wanted: Caring people who like kids 3-9 years old
at 2 hours per day, 1 day per week, between 7:30
12:30, Monday-Friday. Daycare volunteers needed
from 12:30-5:30. For more information call 842
Manpower, 211 E.8th St., Lawrence KS. EOE
Wanted babysitter for children. Age 3-5,
evenings 3:10 - 1:00 pm. Light cooking necessary in
the kitchen. Call anytime at 3:30:30m.
Bob 843-6343. Call anytime at 3:30:30m.
701 Tennessee
225 Professional Services
OUI/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
Richard A. Frydma
Attorney At Law
843-4023
< Driver Education > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749.
Free Consultation
DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANASITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
*Call for a free consultation (816) 381-0964.*
ENGLISH TUFOR English courses, writing,
proofreading literature ESL classes. Highly
recommended for English majors.
TRAFFIC-DUY's
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law enforcement
International Video Conversions PAL/SEACM
NTSC. $25 for up to 2 hours. Returns include
postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer
PQ box 310 Ottawa Ksc 6004-1 800-606-6955.
Promo photography. Headshots, modeling, band
photos. B&W and color. Prism Screen 841-6030.
Prompt abortion and contraception services in
Lawrence: 841-5716 Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
hardware for the two $6000 modem with cable and software $50, 794
NALD G. SROLE
Donald G. McRae
16 Eaxt 13th
842-1133
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including macintosh only 500. Call Chris at 800-289-5685.
Megabeta PCUMC14. 14-Fax Medom for laptop.
Includes communications software. Never used, never installed. I paid $219, will sell for $100. Call Jon, 843-7523.
LSAT Test-Prep For The Dec. 3rd Exam
Class Starts Oct.2nd
1-800-527-TEST
X
235 Typing Services
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
Put my service to the test.
Five things you must fail,
MAKIN' THE GRADE
is the one to call.
862-5237
Quality Word Processing Dissections, Thesis,
Business letters, etc.
Laser printing 865-002.
Prototype word processing service. Quality papers. Applications, resumes, editing, letters.
Spell check free. Call 841-6242.
KAPLAN TEST-P
A Word Perfect Word Processing Service.
Laser Printing. Spell Check. Yearbooks. Call
(212) 843-9500.
300s Merchandise
FOR SALE: New Fender Precision Bass w/ s7 rack
available. Contact JE Johnson at 780-5911
82 Toyota Tercel, AC, AM/FM Cass, 104, 100 miles,
Large, good. good. Good. burns Oil,
846, 780-3707.
REP
$15
Todav
EARN CASH
ALL YOUR
MONEY GONE?
305 For Sale
This Week
$30
Futon and Frame, Great Condition. $100 obo. Call
fax 749-0834.
By donating your blood plasma
Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center
NABI
The Quality Source
816 W. 24th
Behind Laird Noller Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F 9-6:30
Sat. 10-4
340 Auto Sales
must sell 2 tickets for Bahamas tours and 4 night
travel $1,500 or best offer. For details call
918-817-1431.
We want your used steel weights and benches. Play It Again Sports. 1029 Mass. 841-PLAY.
1992 Nissan 2005XH XXH with, sunroof, power
water, and lovers. $95/OSO Call Mate 8787.
$139.95.
1985 SAAB Turbo 4 dr 5 spd sun roof wp ec/
Black/maroon. Repair records. Rebuild clutch
manifold. Repair clutch. Rebuild new muftier,
2 new tires. $2000 OBO 84-1738
8 Honda CBR 600 motorcycle red/white. Call 842-
or Honda CBR 600 motorcycle red/white. Call 842-7984
Chev. 2-34 cover *Black Excellent cloth* Only $9,800
cal Kim at 844-606-606.
360 Miscellaneous
'81 Honda Express II moped. new carburator, fuel system two-speed automatic. Cadillac of Mopeds.
Corrigated boxes, moving and storage boxes.
Large quantity pricing & small quantity walk-ins welcome. Call 843-8111 and ask for the Sales Service Department. Cash and carry.
One year-old Iguaña for sale. Best offer. 865-5738
370 Want to Buy
Want to buy a used moped or scooter call Sheri at 865-3991.
A
400s Real Estate
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept elderly homes 841-STAR (2072)
405 For Rent
1230. Tennessee. 2 bdm, unfurnished, utilities paid $320. Available Oct 1st. No pets. Bds 823-2718
3 bdm. 2 bdm. fully furn. Orchard Corners apt for 4 beds. Call Amy Bell at 841-8655. On bus route. Call Amy, Mallia at 841-8655.
ORCHARD CORNERS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
ABEDROOM
Quiel, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments from campus. Some units are paid. OFFICE parked areas.
- 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
For Rent: Small two bedroom house suitable for one or two people $350 month plus utilities. No
For Sale College Hill Condo. Why rent when you can own? For info call 1-800-241-147.
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
Looking for Love
FOUR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great flat, a bath, on RU bus route, NO
Parking. Avail.
South Points AVE 1240
- On KU Bus Route
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- Ample Private Parking
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Swimming Pool
Lonely, attractive 3 or 4 bedroom apartments seeking residents to share a long or short term relationship. Call any time at 843-6446.
Lonely, attractive.
- Water and Trash Paid
Room for rent for N/S female. Newly remodeled,
very clean, W/D, all utilities pd. including cable.
$265 mo. 842-1098 or 832-8258.
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
Two Bedroom Apartment Now Available at Aspen West, KSYS water and trash and cleaning supplies 350-2800
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
- 3 bedroom apartments
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Available for fall.
- Directly on bus route
*Call 843-4754
"Don't get left out in the cold."
1 or 3 bedrooms in newer 4 bdm duplex in
large rooms. Sepnpt.贴人. If person, 250/mm.
Large rooms. Sepnpt.贴人.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60454
1 people, $216.00 | Daycare 1-832-583-8922
1 Roommate needed ASAP to share furnished 3 bedroom apartment, W/D, on bus route, $250 + / utilities. 423-0395
Stop by the Kansas offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: 1191 Staff Fluer
House mate needed. Close to campus. Lots of room. Please call Harmony at 829-3050. Available. Please call Harmony at 829-3050. Available. Please call Harmony at 829-3050. Available. Please call Harmony at 829-3050. Available.
2 Guy Need roommate, M or F, 3 bdrm. 2 BA furnished clean house, 22nd & Mass $250 + util W/D.
Call 641-8439 anytime!
2 females looking for 3rd roommate to live in townhome, $88 rent, cable paid. Available immediately.
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.
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 aile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5 7 lines
8> lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
Cost per tier per day
IX 2X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.10 1.60 1.10 .90 .75 .50
1.95 1.20 .80 .70 .65 .45
1.90 1.10 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.80 .95 .65 .60 .55 .35
Classifications
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Classifications
140 lost & found 385 for sale
202 help warranted 400 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
1 | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Please print your ad one word per box.
No begins: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
Name: Phone: -
Address:_
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
Account number:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:___
The University Datay Kalman,anl 11$^st$ Staffier Flint Hall,Larence,KS.60045
*The University Datay Kalman,anl 11$^st$ Staffier Flint Hall,Larence,KS.60045*
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
9.26
"One day, Wilson, 'I'll be sitting at that desk."
6B
Monday, September 26,1994
图
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass.
832-8228
Our lunch menu will allow you
to come back for dinner.
Grilled Chicken Salad Platter 5.50
Filet of Sole w/ rice pilaf & salad 4.95
Bowtie Vegetable Pasta 5.50
Cajun Reuben w/ french fries & salad 5.50
Fifi's affordable lunches,
prices as fine as the dining.
925 Iowa 84177226
5.50
4.95
5.50
5.50
fifi's
JOCK'S NITCH
SPORTING GOODS
The Sports Look of Today!
Get Outfitted for Fall
Columbia
Sportswear Company
Wigwam
Hats
Columbia
Guiness
Sweater
Cool KU
Game Bar
Hat
Columbia
Jeans
Columbia
Jean
Jacket
Nike Lined
Windpants
K-Swiss
Boots
Nike Waterproo
Boots
Sportswear Company
Wigwam Hats
Columbia Guiness Sweater
Cool KU Game Bar Hat
Columbia Jeans
Columbia Jean Jacket
Nike Lined Windpants
K-Swiss Boots
Nike Waterproof Boots
Cool KU
Game Bar
Hat
Nike Lined
Windpants
NIKE
What Every Self Respecting Stick is Wear-
842-2442 840 Massachusetts Hours: Mon-Wed 9:30-7 p.m.
Thurs 9:30-8:30 p.m.
Fri-Sat 9:30-6 p.m.
Sun 12-5 p.m.
FREE PIZZA
BUY ONE & GET ONE FREE! From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza
(of course!)
SHORE LAND
Jurse!)
Fast & Friendly Delivery
(limited area)
842-3222
14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL)
SPECIAL COUPON
SPECIAL COUPON
PYRAMIDPIZZA
MONDAY MANIA
Buy Any PYRAMID PIZZA & Get
The Second Pizza (of equal value)
FREE!
PYRAMID
"We Piles It On!"
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
FAN SHOP
Live it! Wear it! Love it! KU.
COED NAKED
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
We have Coed Naked Big Johnson & Game Bar Hats. Come in and see our great selection of NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, & MLB merchandise.
842*2992
49'ers 24
Saints 13
Deion Sanders returned an interception 74 yards for a touchdown with 32 seconds left yesterday as San Francisco overcame offensive problems to beat the New Orleans Saints 24-13.
Seattle 30
Steelers 13
Chris Warren rushed for 126 yards and a touchdown and the Seahawks intercepted Neil O'Donnell four times — three in the fourth quarter — in a 30-13 victory over Pittsburgh.
Warren Moon led a Viking 70-yard touchdown drive that was capped by Scottie Graham's three-year run in the fourth quarter, and the Vikings held on for a 38-35 victory against the Dolphins.
Vikings 38
Dolphins 35
Vinny Testaverde threw for three touchdowns, including a 57-yarder to Eric Metcalf and a 65-yarder to Leroy Hoard, as the Cleveland Browns beat the Indianapolis Colts 21-14 yesterday.
Browns 21
Colts 14
Chargers Raiders
NFL Week 4
at a Glance
Bears 19
Jets 7
Stan Humphries, left writhing on his back after throwing a key interception, limped back and led the undefeated Chargers on a long drive resulting in a 26-24 victory against the Los Angeles Raiders.
Jeff George was 22-of-35 for 270 yards and scored two touchdowns to lead the Falcons to a 27-20 victory over the Redskins, their first win at Washington in 11 tries.
Falcons 27
Redskins 20
Not even a team-record 90-yard run by Johnny Hawk could help the inep Jets (2-2), who lost two fumbles, missed two field goals and saw quarterback Boomer Esiason sidelined, in their loss to the Bears.
'Hawks waste no time in routing Blazers
JAYHAWKS: Continued from Page 1.
Levine and freshman Eric Vann scored three touchdowns. They gained 83 yards and 71 yards respectively.
The Jayhawks dominated on the ground. Mason said he even contemplated passing the ball at the end of the game to keep the score down.
"I don't want to run the score up on
kickoff return in school history. Junior cornerback Dorian Brew returned a punt 81 yards for a touchdown, also the fourth longest in school history.
anybody," Mason said.
The passing game also was effective for the Jayhawks.
Mason said he was not as impressed with his defense, which only gave up six yards rushing but allowed 304 yards passing.
Sophomore tight end Jim Moore, who is 6-foot-3 and 235 pounds, was on the end of three Williams passes and totaled 71 yards.
Mason said he was pleased with Williams' performance, completing nine of 11 attempts for 144 yards in his first game as a Jayhawk.
"We worked all week and saw where we thought they were suspect," Moore said of the Blazers' pass defense. "I just need to find some break-away speed."
He said the Jayhawks' pass defense was "average at best."
The Jayhawks' special teams scored a touchdown on the opening kickoff of the second half when junior wide receiver Ashaudai Smith returned the ball 93 yards. Smith's return was the fourth longest
Chihuahua Bohemia Corona
Dos Equis Lager ▽ Pacífico Ciena
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
401 N. 2nd
842-0377
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
WEDNESDAYS!
50¢
DRAWS
$1 ANY-
THING
Excludes pitchers,
doubles and imports.
MONDAY NIGHT!!
until 1AM Tuesday morning!!
REM's & BIG HEAD TODD'S
NEWEST RELEASES
The largest record store in Lawrence 128 private listening stations Espresso Bar by Java Break
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
Downtown Lawrence
Off 10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
NOW
OPEN!
NOW OPEN!
---
SPORTS
The Kansas football team has this week off to prepare for its matchup with Kansas State next Thursday. Page 1B.
CAMPUS
More people are tuning into scanners to follow weather, police and fire activity. Page 3A.
SUNNY AND MILD High 73° Low 47° Weather: Page 3.
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
SAT
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.104,NO.26
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Two-day meeting to examine Russia's future
Global role of Russia highlight of conference
BvAssociated Press
UNITED NATIONS — Russian President Boris Yeltsin told world leaders Monday they must accept Russia as a "great power" and called for a treaty on ending the production of nuclear weapons material.
Yeltsin said he would welcome U.N. involvement in former Soviet states beset by civil strife but warned that "the main peacekeeping burden in the territory of the former Soviet Union lies upon the Russian Federation."
The Russian leader's speech was part of the three-week U.N. general debate, the largest annual gathering of world leaders. About 180 diplomats will speak, including 47 heads of government
Security was extremely tight, with police blocking off the street in front of the building and U.N. guards closing access to two floors.
In an earlier speech, President Clinton praised the cooperation between the United States and Russia and said the two nations were working to reduce their nuclear arsenals.
Clinton also announced the United States was lifting all sanctions against Haiti, except those that would help its military rulers, and indicated he would support the lifting of the U.N. economic embargo.
Yeltsin's plan to limit the spread of nuclear weapons included signing a comprehensive nuclear test ban treaty by 1996, extending the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, regulating weapons sales, initiating a treaty on nuclear security and holding a conference on converting military factories to civilian use.
"There is an urgent need for all nuclear states to participate in the process of reduction and limitation of nuclear weapons," Yeltsin said.
The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Madeline Albright, called Yeltsin's proposals "creative and intriguing," but said the United States would have to study them.
"The fact that we have gone together on this path, and the fact that President Yeltsin is bringing a package here I think is very important," she said.
Yeltsin said the treaty on nuclear security and stability should be signed by the world's five major nuclear powers — the United States, Russia, United Kingdom, France and China.
He also called for ending the production of nuclear materials and nuclear munitions.
Yelstin urged nations to be more active in U.N. peacekeeping and said Russia was prepared to designate troops for a stand-by U.N. force.
(1)
The United Nations has long requested the creation of such a rapid-deployment force that could respond to emergencies without the United Nations first having to ask for troop contributions, a process that has often taken months.
President Clinton addressed the United Nations general assembly yesterday.
KNIGHT-BIDDER TRIBUNE
PETE CAMERON
Deadly drawings
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Barbara Jarvis, Lawrence sophomore, draws a skeleton as part of her Drawing II class in the Fine Arts Building. Jarvis was one of 10 students drawing the skeleton in charcoal yesterday.
Freshmen are focus of new committee to improve KU life
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
A year-old faculty committee will begin interviewing freshmen and sophomores next month to determine how their academic experiences at the University of Kansas could be improved.
The 12 members of the Freshmen Sophomore Academic Experience Committee will visit living groups, conduct focus groups and interview individual students to assess students' perceptions of their education at KU.
The committee, which was formed last fall by the office of academic affairs, is responsible for evaluating and suggesting changes in the academic experiences of freshmen and sophomores.
Jim Hartman, acting chair of the committee and professor of English, said committee members met last year with faculty members, administrators and graduate teaching assistants to discuss what their expectations of freshmen and sophomores were.
"In October, we will begin talking with freshmen and sophomores about their experiences at the University," Hartman said. "We will be talking to some juniors and seniors as well because they can provide a retrospective view and are still close to the experience."
The committee is expected to make its recommendations sometime next spring. Hartman said he hoped the committee could remove unnecessary obstacles from students' educations and impart to students what the University's academic mission and academic expectations were.
Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, committee member and associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the evaluation of the freshmen-sophomore academic experience was a national trend at universities.
"We're concerned with helping students make the transition from high school to college," McCluskey-Fawcett said. "We hope to facilitate students'success."
Issues identified by the committee for consideration include advising, academic preparation and student behavior problems, she said. Some changes recommended by the committee may be implemented as soon as fall 1995.
"I think KU is on the leading edge of improving the academic experience," McCluskey-Fawcett said. "The changes we're making are fine tuning. We haven't found anything horrific so far."
Students want to play a larger role in selecting a chancellor
Kansan staff writer
By David Wilson
Student senators Carey Stuckey and Mark Galus want students to have more leverage in the selection of a new chancellor.
Earlier this month, they co-sponsored a Student Senate resolution calling for more student involvement in the chancellor search, which began this summer with the formation of a 17-member chancellor search committee.
The committee is made up of professors, alumni, nontheaching University of Kansas
staff members and three students. The three students are Sherman Reeves, student body president; Jennifer Ford, Lawrence senior; and Garrett White, a student at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Stuckey said she feared that the three students on the committee would be crowded out by administrators and alumni.
"With only three students, they could be outweighed," she said.
Stuckey and Galus said they realized that the search committee probably wouldn't be reorganized to include more students but said they wanted to send a message to administrators. Don't forget the students.
In contrast to the current search committee, the 12-member committee that found Chancellor Gene Budig in 1981 had four student members.
"We're a big part of the University," Stuckey said. "If we weren't here, the University wouldn't be here."
"We want the chancellor search to involve the student body to the greatest possible degree," he said.
Galus agreed.
Stephen Jordan, executive director of the Board of Regents and a member of the committee, said the Regents wanted to have diverse representation on the committee. Jordan said that Chairman Frank Sabatini and Regent John Montgomery chose the committee members.
"The Regents were trying to balance interests," he said. "I think that students have good representation."
Sherman Reeves, student body president and a member of the committee, agreed.
"They had to make choices," he said. "You can't have a committee that's too large."
Reeves did not agree that students on the committee had been crowded out of the
search process.
"People on the committee respect what students have to say," he said.
The evidence would seem to support Reeves' opinion.
During the last search committee meeting, after Jennifer Ford recommended a wording change in the position description, Chairman Frank Becker joked that she should have written the description in the first place.
"Jennifer and I are very familiar with the governance process," Reeves said. "We bring a different perspective than say, a Frank Becker or a Wint Winter."
INSIDE
Good clean fun?
Student Union Activities is sponsoring a week-long Japanese erotic film festival. The event opened yesterday at Woodruff Andittorium. Page 30A
Mononucleosis takes a toll on student bodies
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
This semester, 25 KU students have been diagnosed with mononucleosis, about one-third more than is usual for this time of year. Physicians at Watkins Memorial Health Center are cautioning students to stay healthy and rest or risk sitting on the academic sidelines for the rest of the semester.
If you’re tired and sick, the reason could be more than midterms and cold weather.
Mononucleosis is a college-student disease, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins. Mononucleosis, a viral infection caused by a herpes-related virus, infects most people between the ages of 15 and 25 but only manifests itself when the body is in a weakened condition.
College students, of whom stay up late, rush from appointment to appointment, eat poorly and drink alcohol, fit that bill, Yockey said.
"That kind of stress takes its toll," he said. "The question is, how far can you push the envelope?"
Although the virus is contagious, most people are at little risk, Yockey said. He said most people already had the virus in their bodies. Those who caught the virus didn't show symptoms until at least three weeks after contraction, he said.
Cold and flu symptoms strike victims of mononucleosis first. The virus also brings an unending feeling of exhaustion, Yockey said.
But from there, the virus can get worse, he said. Once it's noticed, the victim must rest or risk getting even sicker.
"Undiagnosed and untreated, it can lead to severe complications, including death," Yockey said.
The vast majority of victims fall somewhere in the middle, Yockey said. He said no students had died of the virus in the eight years he had worked at the University of Kansas.
"You can't drive, jog, play football or cheer lead," he said. "We've had people step off a curb and rupture their spleen."
Students studying at Wescoe Beach yesterday said the virus was dangerous, but slowing down to avoid it could be difficult for many students.
To recover, victims need to drop part-time jobs, outside activities and any classes they might have fallen behind in to get enough rest to recover, Yockey said. He also said the virus can lead to swelling of the spleen, causing it to rupture if the victim moves too strenuously.
The group most susceptible to the virus is freshman, Yockey said. He said freshman were away from home and placed in an unstructured environment, which can weaken the body.
"You can cut the alcohol, but you can't cut some classes," said Gabriel Riviera, St. Louis freshman. "You have to go to them. Besides taking the bus, I don't think you can get much more rest than that."
Doctor Health Center
says:
The following symptoms could indicate a person has mononucleosis and should go to Watkins Memorial Health Center for a test.
- Fever
- Sinus problem
- Sore throat
- Severe fatigue
A few simple steps could lessen the chance of getting sick from mononeucleosis.
- Exercise
- Get plenty of rest
- Eat healthy
- Cut down on alcohol consumption
Doctor Yockey
47
4
2.
---
2A
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
√
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE! Shun casual romantic encounters while searching for a partner who shares your high ideals. Devotion to a stable home life is a must! Relatives could play a major role in a financial success you enjoy in December. Although business propositions will be plentiful early in 1995, only a few will be worth considering. Your analytical mind enables you to spot the weakness in a highly touted plan. Speak up!
By Jean Dixon
T
CLEEBRITES BORN ON THIS DATE: actor Wilford Brimley, American patriot Samuel Adams, golfer Katy Whitworth, actress Sada Thompson.
♑
**ARIES** (March 24-April 10) A partner could fall victim to wishful thinking now. It is up to you to get things back on track. A gentle approach will work against criticism. B sympathetic.
Ζ
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A legal matter can be settled in your favor. Get your facts and figures straight before you ask someone to represent you. Your dishonesty will attract a soulmate. Do your own dirty work.
69
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Launch a pet project today; luck is on your side. Stick to what you know best. A newcomer may be difficult to read. Why try? Rely on information and people you can check out.
15
🏆
CANCER (June 21- July 22)
Not a good week to take unnecessary risks. Refuse to become entangled in a friend's crazy schemes. Students would be smart to hit the books this evening. Review bank statements for possible errors.
WP
m
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your mate or business partner will go along with your suggestions today. Show appreciation.
Adventure beckons! Delegate household chores to young-sters who want to learn and share.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Your good deeds will not go unrewarded. A romance with an older person could be the real thing. Leave nothing to chance where a business deal is concerned. Meet with new people this evening.
VS
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22):
Creative ideas abound this week. Jot them down for future reference. Self-improvement activities prove more fun than anticipated. Keep any diet and exercise resolutions. News from your family will send your spirits soaring.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
The emphasis today is on teamwork and cooperation. New business will result from a group effort. Seek investment advice from the experts. A former foe could do a complete about-face. Seek the limelight.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21): Search for knowledge and you will find the truth. A business deal shapes up according to plan. Take advantage of a unique career opportunity. New financial options could help a family situation. Persevere.
Water
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Your timing is superb! A last-minute schedule change will work in your favor. Romance is in the air. Use diplomacy to settle any differences of opinion on the home front. Suggest a compromise.
X
**AQUARIUS** (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A work deadline requires your full attention now. Someone challenges you to make a dream come true. Your enthusiasm for a special project could be dampened by someone's comments. Patience is essential for progress.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Others will be happy to make concessions if you explain your situation.
Stay alert! An old friend or relative could hold the key to a major financial or career triumph. Socialize with newcomers tonight.
TODAY'S CHILDREN are full of high jinx and good will! Although their impetuous manner sometimes lands them in trouble, these children have a real knack for talking themselves out of tight corners. Born salespeople, they can persuade the most reluctant or skeptical customer to give their product a try.
toroscopes 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 Students Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today, at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7317.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor a special informational meeting conducted by returnees from Spain at 4 p.m. today at the English Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Bethany Pendleton at 864-3742.
American Meteorological Society will meet at 4 p.m. today at 3092 Malott Hall. For more information, call Robyn Weeks at 864-4547.
Japan Karate-Do Ryobu-Kai Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call Dan Blood at 864-7029.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Jacqueline Flannigan at 864-8219.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Simone Wehbe at 832-1229.
Center for Community Outreach will sponsor an "Into the Streets" informational meeting at 7 tonight at Alcove I in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amber Hughes at 864-3710.
Students in Communication Studies will sponsor a Meet-the-Faculty Night at 7 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Missy Vaska at 864-3633.
Water Polo Club will meet at 7 tonight at Robinson Natatorium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873.
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor "Drawing Boundaries," a workshop about personal boundaries at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Renee Speicher at 864-3552.
** Asian American Student Union will meet at 7:30 tonight at 100 Smith Hall. For more information, call Melanie at 864-6500. ** KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call John Hendrix at 864-5611.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Natorium. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
The Kansan Correspondents will meet at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at room 100 in Stauffer-Flint Hall. The guest speaker will be Mike Kautsch, dean of the of journalism. The Correspondents program is open to KU students interested in contributing to the news-side of the Kansan who are not already on staff. For more information, call Jamie Munn at 864-4810.
ON THE RECORD
About 70 compact discs and other property all valued at $2,170 were stolen from a KU student's car parked in the 900 block of New Hampshire Street about 2 a.m. Sunday, Lawrence police reported.
Two video-game cartridges valued at $70 were stolen when a KU staff member's car was broken into in the 200 block of E. 15th Street about 9:30 p.m. Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
valued together at $2,871 were stolen about 7 a.m. Friday from a building in the 600 block of New Hampshire Street, KU police reported.
A wooden door, electric scale and cordless telephone
A van was stolen Thursday night from the 600 block of New Hampshire Street, KU Police reported. The van was registered to the department of Continuing Education Media Services and was valued at $4,700.48.
A mountain bicycle valued at $550 was stolen at 8 a.m. Friday from Hashinger Hall, KU police reported.
Weather
TODAY'S TEMPS
H I G H L O W
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
WEDNESDAY
TODAY
Mostly sunny and mild.
7347
T L G N | L O W
78° | • 57°
62° | • 50°
69° | • 44°
73° | • 45°
73° | • 47°
80° | • 64°
70° | • 62°
71° | • 43°
74° | • 52°
70° | • 52°
77° | • 43°
80° | • 53°
78° | • 51°
A little milder with some clouds.
7347
THURSDAY
Becoming warmer.
7548
8052
8052
Source: Dennis Fraker, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
September 26,1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
17.83
3,849.58
NYSE
.58
254.39
Shares Traded: 270,830,000
↑
Advances 981
Declines 1,152
Unchanged 731
↓
Nasdaq
3.97
753.49
-
ASE
1.45
453.78
453. 78
HENRY T'S
Bar & Grill
WEDNESDAYS AT HENRY T'S
15¢ WINGS (AFTER 6PM)
$1.50 DOMESTIC LONGNECKS
TUESDAYS AT HENRY T'S
2-4-1 BURGERS
$2.00 33OZ GUSTOS
(BUD, BUD LITE, COORS LITE)
WE ARE YOUR NFL TICKET SO DON'T MISS A GAME!!
749-2999 6th & Kasold
The summer is ending...
Did you spend enough time outside?
ULTIMATE TAN
2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS
(913) 842-4949
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
CARD
Voted through July 31, 1995
If your summer whites are looking drab, then pick up a Kansan Card for the Ultimate Tan with the ultimate discount.
ULTIMATE
TAN
2449 Iowa Suite O Lawrence, KS
(913) 842-4949
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Wildflower July 11, 1995
NCCS
ANNOUNCING TWO NEW CREF ACCOUNTS
YOU'RE LOOKING AT TWO COMPLETELY OPPOSITE, FUNDAMENTALLY DIFFERENT WAYS TO INVEST IN STOCKS.
WE RECOMMEND BOTH.
Whether you want a fund that selects specific stocks or one that covers the market, we're on the same page. Our new CREF Growth and CREF Equity Index Accounts use two distinct strategies for investing in the stock market, but both aim to provide what every smart investor looks for: long-term growth that outpaces inflation*
Introducing the CREF Growth Account and the CREF Equity Index Account.
The CREF Growth Account searches for individual companies that are poised for superior growth. In contrast, the Equity Index Account looks for more diversification, with a portfolio encompassing almost the entire range of U.S. stock investments. It will invest in stocks
TIAA
CREP
Ensuring the future for those who shape it."
in the Russell 3000***, a broad index of U.S. stocks.
Like our CREF Stock Account,which combines active,indexed,and foreign investing,and our Global Equities Account, which actively seeks opportunities worldwide,the new funds are managed by experienced investment professionals. They're the same experts who have helped make TIAA-CREF the largest pension system in the U.S.,managing over $130 billion in assets.
To find out more about our new stock funds, and building your portfolio with TIAA-CREF, just call 1800-842-2776. And take your pick.
*The new funds are available for Retirement Association subscriptions in the terms of your instructor's plan. They are available for All Supplemental Retirement Association.
The **Return 3001** is a registered trademark of the Frank Russell Company. Russell is not a copy of the program of a CBRF Equity Index Account and is not issued with it in any way. For more complete information, including charges and expenses, call 810-549-2732, ext. 5099 for a CBRF prospectus. Read the prospectus carefully before you leave or send money. CREF distributions are distributed by TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services, Inc.
3A
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ballet to help the Lied Center celebrate anniversary
Festivities planned for season opener
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
The New York City Principal Ballet Dancers will help celebrate the first anniversary of the Lied Center's opening tomorrow.
The company, which will perform at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the center, also will begin the 1994-95 season of the center, which opened last Sept. 28 with a performance of "The Secret Garden."
Jackie Davis, director of the center, planned the anniversary festivities.
Davis said that the opening of the center had allowed quality performances to come to Lawrence. She said management companies had become aware of the center's capabilities.
"When the Principal Dancers decided to go on tour, the management called me to see if I was interested," Davis said. "It was a great performance to have on the center's year anniversary."
Before the ballet there will be a dinner at the Adams Alumni Center for the Friends of the Lied Center and the members of the alumni center's Learned Club and a presentation from Jerel Hilding, assistant professor of dance, about the ballet.
Hilding said his presentation would educate people about the history of the ballet company and about what to
"His driving force behind the formation of the ballet was to create a truly American form," Hilding said. "He wanted to employ American personalities into the dance."
Hilding said the ballet company was founded by Russian George Balanchine in 1932.
look for in the dance.
Hilding said Balanchine wanted to add a quick, bold style to the ballet.
He said Balanchine's work had influenced many ballets including the San Francisco Ballet, the Pacific Northwest Ballet and the Joffrey Ballet, which Hilding danced with from 1975 to 1989.
"His work has become the aesthetic for ballet throughout the world," Hilding said. "Other companies have reproduced his work."
Hilding said Balanchine died in 1983 but that his work never would be forgotten in the industry.
"Companies will always take the seeds of what he originally sowed," he said.
Hilding said his presentation before the performance would contrast Balanchine's ballet to other styles.
"The ballet in Europe is heavier compared to the speed of Balanchine's work," Hilding said. "I want to explain to them the contrast and show them what to look for."
Alex Sulzer, Lawrence graduate student, works at the center's box office and said that tomorrow night's performance was close to being sold out. Sulzer said that as of yesterday, about 100 tickets were available.
"I've taken a lot of phone calls for people that want tickets," he said. "There has been a lot of interest."
Those interested in purchasing a ticket should call the Lied Center Box Office at 864-2787.
DANCE 1975
The New York City Principal Ballet Dancers Heather Watts and Lindsay Fischer perform "Apollo."
Police Scanner Codes
Interpreting codes in Lawrence is as easy as following this partial chart.
---
10. 15 Prisoner in custody.
10-27 Request driver's licence information.
10-29 Check record for wanted or stolen.
10-32 Chase, all units stand by.
10-34 Trouble, all units respond.
10-38 Major crime, blockade.
10-40 Fatality report.
19-40 Patent report.
10-94 Bomb threat.
10-49 Send ambulance.
10-85 Fire alarm.
10-90 Crime in progress
'Scanning' the city offers firsthand news
10-08 dot or mass disturbance.
10-08 fall breaks.
Noah Musser/KANSAN
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
source: Lawrence Police
While many people have no idea that the call meant a fight was in progress and officers had arrived at the scene, more people on campus and throughout Lawrence are listening to scanners and learning the language.
In between the crackle of radio fuzz, a police dispatcher calls out a 10-95 on Massachusetts Street. But by the time officers 10-23, everything is calm.
"Everyone from all aspects of the community — men, women, students, adults — are buying scanners," said Chuck Johnson, manager of Radio Shack, 601 Kasold drive.
"A lot of people are interested in what's going on around town," said Sgt. Rick Nickell of the Lawrence police department.
Scanners make it possible to intercept conversations broadcast over public access frequencies. And, according to Lawrence police, people all over town are doing just that.
People listen to scanners to track the course of a
storm, find out where the latest fire has broken out or to find out if their friends or neighbors are being chased by the police.
Ward, a crime and delinquencies studies major said he was considering a career in law enforcement. He said he owned a portable scanner but was planning on buying a more powerful home-base unit.
"I'm from a small town," said Derek Ward, Pittsburg senior. "We'd listen to see if we knew anyone who was in trouble. It's still a lot of fun."
After buying a scanner, people need to learn the codes to decipher what is being said. Nickell said the police department, fire department, emergency squad, weather services and city government all had their own frequencies. So a lack of things to listen to is not a problem.
Police said they were not worried about the proliferation of scanners in Lawrence.
Although some criminals could avoid police by monitoring a scanner, Nickell said the Lawrence police department had been helped by residents listening to the police frequency. He also said there
were a few times people had beaten the police to the scene of an accident, which was something he said people should not do.
According to the Federal Communications Commission, tuning in to listen to people's cellular phone calls is illegal.
Last April, scanner manufacturers had to stop producing scanners that could pick up cellular phone frequencies because those lines were private. Most scanners also can pick up conversations by cordless phone users. Cordless telephone lines are transmitted over two-way radio lines and are not regulated the same way cellular phones are, an official in the Kansas City, Mo., FCC office said.
Regardless of the reason, scanner sales are a steady business at Radio Shack. Johnson said he sold about one scanner a week and that prices ranged from $99 to $400 for hand-held units, portable car units or home-base units. He said the hand-held units were the most popular. Radio Shack also sells a scanner code listing book for $9.99.
As the police would say, 10-24. Finished with the last assignment.
Latino fraternity may not serve its purpose
Kansan staff writer
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
Octavio Hinojosa, Hutchinson senior, wanted to establish a Latino fraternity at the University of Kansas last year.
But when he met several students from other schools at a conference in Chicago last year that were actively involved in a Latino Greek community, he was unimpressed.
"I'm very uncomfortable with the idea," Hinojosa said. "It tends to defeat the purpose of a fraternity."
He said that by establishing a separate fraternity for Latinos, the kinship from participating in a fraternity was lost. Instead, Latinos seemed to form one group against all others.
"A fraternity should be as inclusive as possible. "Hinojosa said.
Although Hinojosa did not pursue the idea when he returned from Chicago
---
HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH
and only a few students have demonstrated an interest this year, he said the desire for a Latino fraternity stemmed from a need to know about the Latino culture.
"Being at this level of education, one wants to know about his or her background," Ilinoja said.
He said that most fraternities on campus did not satisfy the need for Latino culture, especially the need to learn and communicate in Spanish.
When Hinojosa was in Chicago, he spoke with Juan Rodriguez, the former
international president of Sigma Lambda Beta, a Latino fraternity. Rodriguez now is the national vice president of programming for Sigma Lambda Beta.
Rodriguez said the reaction to a Latino fraternity on most campuses was neither opposing nor welcoming. The fraternities already on campus acknowledged that a Latino fraternity existed and accepted the fact.
Sigma Lambda Beta has established chapters at universities in Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Colorado, Texas and Kansas, including Kansas State University.
Carmen Sanchez is the president of Sigma Lambda Beta fraternity at K-State. He said that the fraternity started last year and would be a chapter by Nov. 1.
The chapter has to finish an expansion process developed by the international organization, which includes getting
information from interested students, grade point averages of members and a list of other organizations on campus. Although the fraternity is directed toward the interests of Latino students, all male students are welcome.
Sanchez said the K-State chapter of Sigma Lambda Beta was still debating over whether the fraternity should be affiliated with Interfraternity Council or Black Panhellenic.
Bill Nelson, assistant director of the Organizations and Activities Center and coordinator of greek programs at KU, said he could understand why the fraternity might want to affiliate with Black Panhellenic because Latino fraternities were closer to Black fraternities in number of members.
"Their reason for existence is very similar," Nelson said. "They are providing a support network to students on what are predominately white campuses."
AREA BRIEF Charges dropped against protester
Kansan staff report
A Lawrence resident, arrested Saturday during a protest of the South Lawrence Trafficway, will not be charged in court.
Douglas County court officials said that Mary Gray, 39, would not be charged with failure to abide by lawful order, a misdemeanor. She was released from Douglas County Jail without bond shortly before 3 p.m. yesterday.
Gray was arrested and charged Saturday afternoon after uprooting six surveying stakes following a protest at the traffway's construction site at U.S. Highway 40 and Douglas County Road 13.
Lena Johnson of the Alliance for Environmental Justice said Sunday that Gray had gone on a hunger strike while in jail and would not stop until a member of the county commission visited her. But jail officials said Gray had eaten breakfast yesterday.
Gray could not be reached for comment yesterday
The Lowest EVERYDAY CD Prices in Lawrence
The Lowest EVERYDAY CD Prices in Lawrence
AND...
- 25% OFF SAVINGS! Get 25% Off Retail ANYDAY with our
BUY 5/GET 25 Program.
- LOWEST PRICES ON NEW RELEASES! Every TUESDAY
we’ll have the week’s new releases at Lawrence’s Lowest Sale Price
DON’T FORGET...
- KIEF’S BUYS, SELLS, AND TRADES USED CDs!!
JAZZ FANS!
Choose from Lawrence’s Best Jazz Selection AND
GET $2.00 Off Any Jazz CD with coupon
*Discounted from Kief’s Everyday Low Price
Expires 10/7/94
Excludes Orange Tag Items
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 66044
STUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913·843·1811 913·842·1438 913·842·1544
4A
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1.1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9.10.11.12.13.14.15.16.17.18.19.20.21.22.23.24.25.26.27.28.29.30.31.32.33.34.35.36.37.38.39.40.41.42.43.44.45.46.47.48.49.50.51.52.53.54.55.56.57.58.59.60.61.62.63.64.65.66.67.68.69.70.71.72.73.74.75.76.77.78.79.80.81.82.83.84.85.86.87.88.89.90.91.92.93.94.95.96.97.98.99.100.101.102.103.104.105.106.107.108.109.110.111.112.113.114.115.116.117.118.119.120.121.122.123.124.125.126.127.128.129.130.131.132.133.134.135.136.137.138.139.140.141.142.143.144.145.146.147.148.149.150.151.152.153.154.155.156.157.158.159.160.161.162.163.164.165.166.167.168.169.170.171.172.173.174.175.176.177.178.179.180.181.182.183.184.185.186.187.188.189.190.191.192.193.194.195.196.197.198.199.200.201.202.203.204.205.206.207.208.209.210.211.212.213.214.215.216.217.218.219.220.221.222.223.224.225.226.227.228.229.230.231.232.233.234.235.236.237.238.239.240.241.242.243.244.245.246.247.248.249.250.251.252.253.254.255.256.257.258.259.260.261.262.263.264.265.266.267.268.269.270.271.272.273.274.275.276.277.278.279.280.281.282.283.284.285.286.287.288.289.290.291.292.293.294.295.296.297.298.299.300.301.302.303.304.305.306.307.308.309.310.311.312.313.314.315.316.317.318.319.320.321.322.323.324.325.326.327.328.329.330.331.332.333.334.335.336.337.338.339.340.341.342.343.344.345.346.347.348.349.350.351.352.353.354.355.356.357.358.359.360.361.362.363.364.365.366.367.368.369.370.371.372.373.374.375.376.377.378.379.380.381.382.383.384.385.386.387.388.389.390.391.392.393.394.395.396.397.398.399.400.401.402.403.404.405.406.407.408.409.410.411.412.413.414.415.416.417.418.419.420.421.422.423.424.425.426.427.428.429.430.431.432.433.434.435.436.437.438.439.440.441.442.443.444.445.446.447.448.449.450.451.452.453.454.455.456.457.458.459.460.461.462.463.464.465.466.467.468.469.470.471.472.473.474.475.476.477.478.479.480.481.482.483.484.485.486.487.488.489.490.491.492.493.494.495.496.497.498.499.500.501.502.503.504.505.506.507.508.509.510.511.512.513.514.515.516.517.518.519.520.521.522.523.524.525.526.527.528.529.530.531.532.533.534.535.536.537.538.539.540.541.542.543.544.545.546.547.548.549.550.551.552.553.554.555.556.557.558.559.560.561.562.563.564.565.566.567.568.569.570.571.572.573.574.575.576.577.578.579.580.581.582.583.584.585.586.587.588.589.590.591.592.593.594.595.596.597.598.599.600.601.602.603.604.605.606.607.608.609.610.611.612.613.614.615.616.617.618.619.620.621.622.623.624.625.626.627.628.629.630.631.632.633.634.635.636.637.638.639.640.641.642.643.644.645.646.647.648.649.650.651.652.653.654.655.656.657.658.659.660.661.662.663.664.665.666.667.668.669.670.671.672.673.674.675.676.677.678.679.680.681.682.683.684.685.686.687.688.689.690.691.692.693.694.695.696.697.698.699.700.701.702.703.704.705.706.707.708.709.710.711.712.713.714.715.716.717.718.719.720.721.722.723.724.725.726.727.728.729.730.731.732.733.734.735.736.737.738.739.740.741.742.743.744.745.746.747.748.749.750.751.752.753.754.755.756.757.758.759.760.761.762.763.764.765.766.767.768.769.770.771.772.773.774.775.776.777.778.779.780.781.782.783.784.785.786.787.788.789.790.791.792.793.794.795.796.797.798.799.800.801.802.803.804.805.806.807.808.809.810.811.812.813.814.815.816.817.818.819.820.821.822.823.824.825.826.827.828.829.830.831.832.833.834.835.836.837.838.839.840.841.842.843.844.845.846.847.848.849.850.851.852.853.854.855.856.857.858.859.860.861.862.863.864.865.866.867.868.869.870.871.872.873.874.875.876.877.878.879.880.881.882.883.884.885.886.887.888.889.890.891.892.893.894.895.896.897.898.899.900.901.902.903.904.905.906.907.908.909.910.911.912.913.914.915.916.917.918.919.920.921.922.923.924.925.926.927.928.929.930.931.932.933.934.935.936.937.938.939.940.941.942.943.944.945.946.947.948.949.950.951.952.953.954.955.956.957.958.959.960.961.962.963.964.965.966.967.968.969.970.971.972.973.974.975.976.977.978.979.980.981.982.983.984.985.986.987.988.989.990.991.992.993.994.995.996.997.998.999.100.101.102.103.104.105.106.107.108.109.110.111.112.113.114.115.116.117.118.119.120.121.122.123.124.125.126.127.128.129.130.131.132.133.134.135.136.137.138.139.140.141.142.143.144.145.146.147.148.149.150.151.152.153.154.155.156.157.158.159.160.161.162.163.164.165.166.167.168.169.170.171.172.173.174.175.176.177.178.179.180.181.182.183.184.185.186.187.188.189.190.191.192.193.194.195.196.197.198.199.200.201.202.203.204.205.206.207.208.209.210.211.212.213.214.215.216.217.218.219.220.221.222.223.224.225.226.227.228.229.230.231.232.233.234.235.236.237.238.239.240.241.242.243.244.245.246.247.248.249.250.251.252.253.254.255.256.257.258.259.260.261.262.263.264.265.266.267.268.269.270.271.272.273.274.275.276.277.278.279.280.281.282.283.284.285.286.287.288.289.290.291.292.293.294.295.296.297.298.299.300.301.302.303.304.305.306.307.308.309.310.311.312.313.314.315.316.317.318.319.320.321.322.323.324.325.326.327.328.329.330.331.332.333.334.335.336.337.338.339.340.341.342.343.344.345.346.347.348.349.350.351.352.353.354.355.356.357.358.359.360.361.362.363.364.365.366.367.368.369.370.371.372.373.374.375.376.377.378.379.380.381.382.383.384.385.386.387.388.389.390.391.392.393.394.395.396.397.398.399.400.401.402.403.404.405.406.407.408.409.410.411.412.413.414.415.416.417.418.419.420.421.422.423.424.425.426.427.428.429.430.431.432.433.434.435.436.437.438.439.440.441.442.443.444.445.446.447.448.449.450.451.452.453.454.455.456.457.458.459.460.461.462.463.464.465.466.467.468.469.470.471.472.473.474.475.476.477.478.479.480.481.482.483.484.485.486.487.488.489.490.491.492.493.494.495.496.497.498.499.500.501.502.503.504.505.506.507.508.509.510.511.512.513.514.515.516.517.518.519.520.521.522.523.524.525.526.527.528.529.530.531.532.533.534.535.536.537.538.539.540.541.542.543.544.545.546.547.548.549.550.551.552.553.554.555.556.557.558.559.560.561.562.563.564.565.566.567.568.569.570.571.572.573.574.575.576.577.578.579.580.581.582.583.584.585.586.587.588.589.590.591.592.593.594.595.596.597.598.599.600.601.602.603.604.605.606.607.608.609.610.611.612.613.614.615.616.617.618.619.620.621.622.623.624.625.626.627.628.629.630.631.632.633.634.635.636.637.638.639.640.641.642.643.644.645.646.647.648.649.650.651.652.653.654.655.656.657.658.659.660.661.662.663.664.665.666.667.668.669.670.671.672.673.674.675.676.677.678.679.680.681.682.683.684.685.686.687.688.689.690.691.692.693.694.695.696.697.698.699.700.701.702.703.704.705.706.707.708.709.710.711.712.713.714.715.716.717.718.719.720.721.722.723.724.725.726.727.728.729.730.731.732.733.734.735.736.737.738.739.740.741.742.743.744.745.746.747.748.749.750.751.752.753.754.755.756.757.758.759.760.761.762.763.764.765.766.767.768.769.770.771.772.773.774.775.776.777.778.779.780.781.782.783.784.785.786.787.788.789.790.791.792.793.794.795.796.797.798.799.800.801.802.803.804.805.806.807.808.809.810.811.812.813.814.815.816.817.818.819.820.821.822.823.824.825.826.827.828.829.830.831.832.833.834.835.836.837.838.839.840.841.842.843.844.845.846.847.848.849.850.851.852.853.854.855.856.857.858.859.860.861.862.863.864.865.866.867.868.869.870.871.872.873.874.875.876.877.878.879.880.881.882.883.884.885.886.887.888.889.890.891.892.893.894.895.896.897.898.899.900.901.902.903.904.905.906.907.908.909.910.911.912.913.914.915.916.917.918.919.920.921.922.923.924.925.926.927.928.929.930.931.932.933.934.935.936.937.938.939.940.941.942.943.944.945.946.947.948.949.950.951.952.953.954.955.956.957.958.959.960.961.962.963.964.965.966.967.968.969.970.971.972.973.974.975.976.977.978.979.980.981.982.983.984.985.986.987.988.989.990.991.992.993.994.995.996.997.998.999.
COLUMNIST
Love, passion more important than clean air
COLUMNIST
NICOLAS SHUMP
NICOLAS SHUMP Environmentalism is a luxury not afforded the poor. Human happiness is more important than air.
There has been some discussion recently about the nature of the editorial page. I believe that it is a place for dialogue on important campus issues.
One issue that I have been concerned about recently is the environment and its importance in our daily lives.
While I think that the environment is a important issue for the entire planet, I do not give it the importance that some other concerned individuals do.
I was intrigued by Amy Trainer's assertion that, "No! Nothing is more important than clean air!" Did you get that sports fans? That's right, clean air über alles!
But, is clean air the most important
While admitting that I am environmentally ignorant, I will argue that there is no one definition of clean air.
thing in life? How do we define it? Is it an absolute, or do we measure it comparatively? In other words, is Kansas air considered clean when compared with the air in Los Angeles?
Of course even the folks in Los Angeles or other huge metropolises live with air that is probably not fit for human consumption. So if people can live with air that sucks, can clean air still be considered the most important thing in the universe?
One thing that I consider more important than clean air are basic human needs. Ask a refugee mother in Rwanda whose son is dying of cholera how important clean air is to her. I think that she would rather have a healthy son, don't you.
I submit to the University community that there are a myriad of things that are more important than clean
air.
Or what about other basic human needs, such as shelter, medication, etc. Face it, the environment is a luxury of the rich. I don't know many environmentalists with empty stomachs.
Once you secure your basic human needs for survival the assurance of basic human rights logically follows. Among those rights are freedom, equality and tolerance. Tolerance is
something that KU Environs might need to brush up on.
I mean, who decided that the rights of bikers outweighed the rights of drivers? Tolerance implies that we respect the rights and opinions of others without making arrogant blanket assumptions on the primacy of our position.
Finally, I think that love is the most important thing in life. Life without clean air might be difficult, but I cannot imagine my life without love.
To not be able to come home every day to the love and support of my wife and kids would be unbearable. I live for my family and friends. I do not live
for clean air
Love and passion are what give us the drive to live. The smile on the face of one of my sons. That is was life is all about.
As a parent, I want my children to be able to enjoy a clean environment, but above all I want them to know how much I love them. Trainer may say that nothing is more important than clean air, but I disagree.
For me the most important thing in life is love, "a love that moves the sun and the other stars."
VIEWPOINT
Nicolas Shump is a Lawrence senior in comparative literature.
Former student's conduct deserves to be punished
The latest chapter in the ugly saga of Dan Murrow is also the most ludicrous. Murrow has claimed that he is entitled to a tuition reimbursement because student housing was "trying to go above the law." But Murrow is the one who has violated numerous laws.
obvious that Murrow's actions were far outside the boundaries of acceptable conduct in any setting.
DAN MURROW
Murrow's latest complaint is as groundless as his previous ones. He has claimed that his right to privacy was violated because his
Murrow posted hateful, offensive signs on the front of his Templin Hall door, exposed his buttocks to a security monitor and harassed others by telephone. In doing so, he violated two regulations published in the Student Rights and Responsibilities section of last year's timetable. He intentionally caused "a substantial disruption or obstruction of ...University activities...including employment" (Article 22, C.1). He also sexually harassed via conduct that "has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual's work or academic performance or creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working or academic environment."
Even if Eric Moore, a Templin Hall resident assistant, had not publicly stated that such signs were offensive and potentially threatening, it is
Expelled student would be better off to admit he was wrong and to let the issue rest. The University owes him nothing.
Murrow's most laughable claim is that he was not given the right to peacefully protest. His actions were completely out of the boundaries defined by the Code of Students Rights and Responsibilities. By being threatening and hateful and by obstructing life for residents and workers in Templin, his actions are defined as sexual harassment — not protest.
incident reports were published. But he freely discussed housing reports and letters to Kansan reporters, in a Kansan column and on the radio. He displays a penchant for the spotlight more like Madonna than an embattled protester. Last semester, he claimed that his right to be notified of charges against him was violated by student housing. But Murrow discussed letters delivered to him by the housing department a number of times.
JACK LERNER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO
Editor
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
JEN CARR Business manager
TOM EBLEN General manager. news adviser
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
TOM EBLEN
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Systems coordinator
News ... Sara Bennett
Editorial ... Donella Hearne
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
... Melissa Lacey
Features ... Tracil 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 Maestro
Coop mgr ... Emily Gibson
Special Sections mgr ... Jen Pierer
Production mgrs ... Holly Boren
... Regan Overy
Marketing director ... Alan Stigler
Creative director ... John Carlton
Classified mgr ... Heather Niahua
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the letter's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kentucky or other institutions may also use.
Guest column 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 nailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Sean Finn / KANSAN
DAN MURROW IN KANSAS CITY: OUT OF (OUR) SIGHT,
WKOW IN KANSAS CITY: OUT OF (OUR) SIGHT,
OUT OF (HIS) MIND.
...AND AFTER I MAKE KU
REFUND LAST YEAR'S TUITION, I'LL...
I'LL... UH...
I'LL MAKE 'EM
APPOINT ME THE NEW
CHANCE LDR!
YEAHHH...
I'VE GOT RIGHTS,
Y'KNOW...
Buses, bikes, people should share the road
Consider this column another episode in the debate over the validity of KU on Wheels versus walking and bicycling.
Following the lead of two fellow columnists, I have decided to add some thoughts of my own.
As a bike/pedestrian, I'll admit that being trapped behind a bus and getting a mouthful of smoke is less than appealing.
I won't get into whether KU on Wheels should be axed.
But I don't think getting rid of buses is the answer. Nor is increasing the hours that campus is restricted. In my opinion they are long enough and getting around the restriction is easy enough if you really try. (I know this from personal experience.)
What I do think is necessary is that the vehicles allowed on campus learn to co-exist with those people who choose to walk or ride their bikes.
Sounds simple enough, right? Apparently it isn't. I say apparently because I can't count the number of too-close calls I have had with traffic on campus.
COLUMNIST
I doubt this is all the fault of pedestrians and bicyclists.
Personally, I am one of those bike nerds that actually obeys traffic signs,
COLUMNIST
ERIKA RASMUSSON
and I signal my turns. However, these signals are useless if they are ignored, and in my experience, they often are.
Just the other day, as I was riding my bike to Stauffer-Flint Hall, I stopped at a stop sign, signaled a left turn and was almost run over by a car.
By not being observant, cars and buses threaten the safety of the students and faculty who choose nonmotorized transportation.
Well, OK, it wasn't that close a call, but if I hadn't been paying attention to the fact that the car wasn't paying attention, I could have been hurt.
Isn't that one of the reasons campus was restricted in the first place?
I've thought about riding my bike on
the sidewalk in order to avoid cars altogether, but then I'd have to worry about constantly yelling "on your left!" and mowing down innocent pedestrians walking to class.
And I'd have to maneuver my way around those annoying people who walk in groups that block the entire sidewalk and travel at a snail's pace, as though they don't have class for another hour. That doesn't sound like much of a solution to me.
Ideally, people who ride the buses and drive cars should exist in harmony with pedestrians and bicyclists.
I don't think that is an impossible goal or too much to expect. There shouldn't be a mini war going on between those who ride and those who do not.
What it will take is simply some common courtesy.
All bicyclists should follow the rules of the road, and all automobiles should be alert to those around them.
To ensure the safety of everyone on campus, we must learn to be conscientious and share the road.
Erika Rasmusson is a Minnetona, Minn., senior in magazine journalism.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Going to court beats the lottery
Forget graduating from college.
Forget winning the lottery. Forget claiming your fortune in Las Vegas. The way to get your hands on some serious cash these days is to try your luck in the courts of America. The odds of winning in a courtroom are 50-50. You won't get those odds in Vegas.
The McDonald's Corporation was ordered to pay $2.7 million to an elderly woman from Albuquerque, N.M. The reason...get this, she spilled a cup of McDonald's coffee on her lap while sitting in the drive thru! The judge reduced her "prize" to just $490,000. McDonald's asked for a retrial but was denied. The woman claims the coffee is served too hot and caused her to get burned. For that kind of money you could spill 1,000 cups of coffee on me, and I'd ask for cream and sugar!
Isn't there some rule that says, "If it's your own fault, too bad?" It was her own fault she spilled the coffee in her lap. The woman is a klutz and probably should not be driving. Besides, coffee is supposed to be hot, unless you ask foriced coffee. I cannot imagine what prompted the judge to award her a settlement of any cash amount. She could not have been burned that badly. The cup is only eight ounces, if that. It's not as if the drive-through attendant reached out and took a flame thrower to her legs. My Gosh! No wonder the price of coffee is going up.
The whole concept of suing someone is warped. I tried to sue a landlord for $200 last summer in small claims court, and I lost. I had a legitimate case.
It is cases like the McDonald's coffee suit that back up the courtrooms for years and keep "real issue" cases, like murder, rape, etc., from ever beginning. That woman should be fined for even trying to sue McDonald's.
I'll tell you what the problem is. It's those damn have-you-been-injured-we-can-get-your-money cheeseball-start-your own-budget-law-firm-lawyers who advertise on TV in the early afternoon and subliminally persuade you to call them if you stub your toe at your grandmother's house. Well, maybe it's not subliminal, but something is going on. We, as a society, obviously have way too much time on our hands.
Another quick example, if a burglar breaks into your house, steals your belongings, trips on his or her way out the door and breaks his or her ankle, he or she can sue you because it happened on your property. What the hell is that all about?
Mark Levitz Overland Park senior
HUBIE
LEMME GET THIS STRAIGHT—YOU REAR ENDED U.S. CAUSING THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS DAMAGE TO OUR CAR...
AND THEN YOU RUN INTO OUR MAILBOX, CAUSING WHAT D YOU SAY IT WAS?
"PUNITIVE DAMAGES."
YOUR MAILBOX WAS PLAGED IN THE GRASS RIGHT OFF OF THE STREET! IN BROAD DAYLIGHT! I COULDA BEEN KILLED!
AND ON TOP OF ALL THAT, YOU WANT TO SUE FOR WHAT ELSE?
"EMOTIONAL TRAUMA."
UH HUH.
SO, WANNA SETTLER?
NOPE! SEE YOU IN COURT, SONNY!
WHAP! DÓH!
"PUNITIVE DAMAGES."
V
By Greg Hardin
UH HUH.
UH HUH.
SO, WANNA SETLE?
NOPE! SEE YOU IN COURT, SONNY!
WHAP!
DÓH!
NOPE! SEE YOU IN COURT, SONNY!
WHAP!
DÔH!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 27,1994
5A
Kansan insert ads anger environmentalists
By Jennifer Freund
By Jennifer Freund Kansan staff writer
Environs hopes to stop them, and many students throw them in trash cans and all over campus, but Lawrence businesses continue to buy insert ads in the The University Daily Kansan.
"We have been fighting the UDK for a couple of years now," said Amy Trainer, president of Environs, a campus environmental group. "We've talked about every option with the Kansan, but they act as if 'talking is a dead end.'
However, Tom Eblen, Kansan general manager, said that inserted filers were an option for advertisers that had proven successful.
"This is a business operation," he said. "We will not do anything to put it at risk."
Part of operations includes profits, which Eblen said was vital to the Kansan.
Eblen said 92 percent of the Kansan's revenue comes from advertising.
Jennifer Carr, Kansan business manager, said she would not disclose the percentage of advertising dollars made through insert ads.
However, he said that the Kansan had taken steps to move more of its distribution inside, where environmental concerns could be minimized.
The inserts continue to be popular with businesses, said Cameron Death. Kansan advertising manager
"I think that they're one of the most effective means of advertising," he said.
John Butley, owner of Pizza Shuttle,
1601 W. 23rd St., said he preferred
using insert ads as opposed to ads
that appear inside the newspaper.
"They've been effective," Butyl said. "If you run a print ad in the paper and if it's not big, it gets lost. It's more expensive to run ads in the paper as opposed to filers."
Fliers similar to the ones that Pizza Shuttle uses cost $50 per 1,000 sheets, with a minimum of 8,000 sheets.
Employees at facilities operations also are unhappy about the mess that the filers create.
"When the ads come out, there's always a large volume of trash," Wayne Reusch, physical plant supervisor said. "At times it can be a pain, but we just stop and pick them up."
Carr said environmental concerns had not been overlooked by the Kansan.
Photo Illustration by bv Jav Thornton / KANRAN
"Concerns of Environs and facilities operations, as well as our own concerns, have all come to play," Carr said. "We will start to place our own ads in the Kansan this semester encouraging students to recycle newspapers and the filers."
Environs, a environmental group, is upset with the littering of inserts that is going on around newspaper houses on campus.
Speaker wants health care to cover music therapy
By Tom Erickson Special to the Kansan
The role and inclusion of music therapy in health care reform is a central issue in the field, Bryan Hunter, president of the National Association for Music Therapy, said yesterday.
Hunter, associate professor and coordinator of music therapy at Nazareth College in Rochester, N.Y., spoke to a group of nine students yesterday morning at the School of Education about developments in the field of music therapy, which uses musical recordings and instruments to treat physical and mental illnesses.
Hunter said that under the current health care system, music therapy would not be covered by most insurance programs. But, he said, he hoped music therapy soon would be considered a form of health treatment eligible for coverage.
"I think health-care reform eventually will happen," he said. "It needs to happen. When that time comes, I think music therapy will be in a good place to compete."
Hunter referred to an article on health-care reform that was published in the April 1994 issue of the association's newsletter. It commended President Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton and Congress for their work on making universal heath care a reality.
The article also gave defining principles for health care, which are nondiscrimination, comprehensiveness, appropriateness, equity
and efficiency.
"We are not endorsing any particular plan but parity for mental health services and treatment of other services as well as universal access and portability," Hunter said.
The recent influx of information to the public about music therapy is something to be excited about, Hunter said.
"The idea that it can influence behavior and work as a human force is gaining in public awareness," he said.
Hunter noted that "Good Morning America" had two stories on music therapy on consecutive days last week.
The first story dealt with the work of Linda Rodgers, daughter of famous Broadway composer Richard Rodgers, in producing a series
of audio tapes for people facing major surgeries
"It is another national example of music affecting someone in that situation," Hunter said.
The next day a report aired about an article published in the Journal of the American Medical Association about how surgeons who listened to the music of their choice were able to relieve their stress.
Alicia Ann Clair, professor of music education and music therapy, was pleased with Hunter's visit to the school.
"I think he has done a lot of traveling and has a current perspective on what is going on," she said. "Students are interested in the job market and where things are at."
Origin of funds is an issue in insurance race
The Associated Press
His opponent, Democratic state Rep. Kathleen Sebelius, received more than $37,000 from the Kansas Trial Lawyers Association and its members during the first 71/2 months of this year. Those donations accounted for more than a quarter of the funds she raised.
Todd, the Republican nominee, relies heavily on the insurance industry for campaign funds. He raised almost $29,200 from insurance sources, such as agents, agencies, executives and political action committees.
TOPEKA — Fear of the unknown might be Insurance Commissioner Ron Todd's biggest ally as he tries to raise money for his re-election campaign.
Sebelius is trying to prevent agents, brokers and executives from seeing her as the enemy. But Todd and others see the race as the latest episode in the long-standing political battle between insurance companies and attorneys who make money by fighting them in court.
"Who is going to give to an insurance commissioner's race?" said David Chartrand, whose company publishes an insurance newsletter. "The two groups have the most reason to give are the plaintiff's bar and the regulated industry."
Todd's opponents have attacked his fund-raising practices since he ran for insurance commissioner for the first time in 1990.
But Todd and his supporters are making Sebelius' ties to trial lawyers an issue as well. Sebelius lobbied for the group in Topeka before she became a member of the Legislature in 1987.
"There's always the fear of the unknown," said Gordon Garrett, a Topeka attorney and Democratic activist. "Right now, they (insurance officials) know what they've got and have had for almost half a century. Kathleen is an unknown."
BEAT THE CLOCK!
Time is on your side!
Call Dominos every Tuesday between
5:00 - 7:00 P.M. and the time you call
is the price you pay for any
LARGE 1 ITEM PIZZA
12
5
PIZZA
BEAT THE CLOCK!
Time is on your side!
Call Dominos every Tuesday between 5:00 - 7:00 P.M. and the time you call is the price you pay for any LARGE 1 ITEM PIZZA valid for pickup or delivery.
Game Day special!
buy any large two or more item pizza at regular price and get your second pizza for $1.00.
Valid only on Monday or during K.C. Chief's and K.U. Football games.
Early Week Special!
Valid Monday - Wednesday
Buy any large pizza at regular price and only pay the price of a medium
IN-STORE LIVE VIRGIN RECORDING ARTIST
BEN HARPER TONIGHT!
TUESDAY AT 9:00PM
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
Downtown Lawrence - Off 10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
The largest record store in Lawrence
128 private listening stations
Espresso Bar by Java Break
NOW OPEN!
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
DOMINO S
PIZZA
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 843-0611
Ray-Ban
LUNGCLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
The world's finest sunglasses!
IN-STORE LIVE
VIRGIN RECORDING ARTIST
BEN HARPER
TONIGHT!
TUESDAY AT 9:00PM
The End.
COMPACT DISCS + TAPES
Downtown Lawrence • Off 10th & Massachusetts
913.843.3630
NOW OPEN!
The largest record store in Lawrence
128 private listening stations
Espresso Bar by Java Break
64
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Haitian refugees depart U.S. base return to home
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE — The last time Haitian refugees returned to their homeland they endured the taunts and threats of military goons. But the 221 boat people who stepped ashore yesterday came home to a new situation: a country protected by American troops.
The refugees who sailed into the capital's port aboard the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Northland were the first to return since 15,000 American troops began arriving in this Caribbean nation a week earlier.
Although the Haitians had agreed to be returned from detention at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, they looked glum and confused as they stepped off the cutter and headed toward homes many hoped they had left for good.
Some returnees carried their meager possessions in their arms — a single blanket, or a bundle of clothing. A few smiled and waved at journalists. Most just stared in awe at the soldiers gathered on the pier.
"They are excited about the prospects of coming home, but apprehensive about what they are going to find here," said Cmdr. Jim Decker, skipper of the Northland. "We have done our best to calm their fears."
The refugees were greeted at the dock by U.S. Ambassador William Swing and Lt. Gen. Hugh Shelton, commander of the U.S. operation in Haiti.
The refugees returning yesterday were mostly young men, along with a few women and children and at least three babies. They were housed on the ship's helicopter deck under a blue canvas canopy during the daylong trip from Guantanamo Bay.
There are about 14,000 Haitian refugees at Guantanamo, and the Clinton administration wants as many as possible to agree to go home. A second group left yesterday and was expected here today.
Clinton lifts most Haiti sanctions
U.S. forces greeted treated as friends not foes by Haitians
The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONS — Citing "a moment of opportunity" for democracy, President Clinton lifted travel, economic and most other U.S. sanctions against Haiti yesterday and urged other nations to follow suit.
Clinton told the U.N. General Assembly that lifting the sanctions would hasten rebuilding of the impoverished country and was being done "in the spirit of reconciliation and reconstruction."
He suggested the sanctions were no longer needed, with American and other forces firmly in place in the Caribbean country to enforce the U.S.-brokered agreement to restore exiled president Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power by Oct. 15.
But Clinton said some sanctions would remain in force including a freezing of bank accounts and other assets against Haiti's military leaders and their supporters.
The U.S. government has a list of 600 people with ties to Haiti's military who will remain under the sanctions. officials said.
Madeleine Albright, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, told reporters that leaving the sanctions in place on the military leaders and their associates was designed to turn up the heat on them to leave the country by Oct. 15.
She said the United States would seek a quick vote on lifting remaining U.N. trade sanctions on Haiti, even though it may contain a "trigger" that they would not be fully removed until Aristide is back in power.
The United States is encouraging exiled Haitian parliamentarians to return for a key session tomorrow in Port-au-Prince to consider amnesty legislation, an important step in persuading the military leaders to leave. U.S. forces will provide security for the legislators once the session is convened.
A week after American soldiers and Marines landed peacefully, Clinton said the operation demonstrates that "progress can be made when a coalition backs up diplomacy with military power."
At the Pentagon, meanwhile, Defense Secretary William Perry cautioned that while U.S. troops are being greeted "as friends and not invaders" in Haiti, it is critical that
humanitarian aid begin flowing to maintain that idea.
Taking note of the violence over the weekend in Cap-Haitien, Perry said that U.S. forces have been told to defend themselves and that the Marines involved in the shoot-out had acted within the military's rules of engagement.
He cautioned Congress about setting a specific date for troop withdrawal, saying that would "complicate our military operations."
Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said his committee will take up a Haiti resolution tomorrow, setting a binding date around March 1 for withdrawal.
The limits would apply only to the first stage of the operation to restore Haitian democracy, not the second stage in which a U.N. peacekeeping mission, including some U.S. troops, will move in, Hamilton said.
"In the best of all worlds there would be no date," he said, "but I don't think that's realistic in the current political environment."
Public approval of Clinton's Haiti policies, for example, has fallen by 10 percent since U.S. troopers began landing there, according to a new poll.
Haiti travel looking safe
Adam, owner and manager of Travel 54, a travel agency in Miami's Little Haiti neighborhood, couldn't enter names into her computer fast enough.
The Associated Press
MIAMI — The lifting of U.S. sanctions against Haiti wasn't two hours old and Claudie Adam already had a list of 50 Haitians who wanted to go home.
"I have your name on the list," she called to a man who poked his head in the door. "Don't worry."
"He wants the first plane out," she explained.
President Clinton yesterday lifted most U.S. economic sanctions against Haiti. Commercial airline flights were expected to resume in a matter of days.
"I will be there soon," said Lavarie Gaudin, an executive with Veye Ye, an organization that supports Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who was ousted in a 1991 coup. "Once we know the president will be back, I'll go."
Haitians optimistic as law and order return
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - "Jubilant crowds welcomed American military police yesterday as they set up shop in local police stations.
At the downtown dock, 221 Haitain refugees arrived on a U.S. Coast Guard cutter, having chosen to leave the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. They were greeted by U.S. Ambassador William Swing, given $15 in Haitian money, more than the average weekly pay in Haiti, and taken to the nearby bus station to complete their journeys.
The United States also announced a cash-for-weapons program to start today, hoping to encourage more Haitians to turn guns taken from the hated Haitian army and police over to U.S. troops.
Haitians used to avoid or hurry
past the dreaded building where their neighbors were jailed and tortured. Now many are becoming bolder as U.S. forces begin spreading throughout this city of 1 million.
U. S. officials announced last week that MPs would be stationed at six police stations to work side-by-side with Haitian police and try to reduce human rights abuses. By yesterday, MPs were in at least three stations.
"We came here to make a presence and ... exchange ideas," said Capt. Randy Durdian of the 101st Airborne Division as his men moved into a station in suburban Petionville.
The festive downtown gathering
"We are here to learn from them how to do things in their own structure and show them how to do things in a democratic society so we can make the transition a smooth one."
didn't last long, but it showed Haitians' increasing optimism that a rule of law was being enforced, and that Aristide really may be coming home soon.
At the United Nations, President Clinton lifted travel, trade and most other U.S. sanctions against Haiti yesterday and urged other nations to follow suit. Aristide himself had urged an end to the sanctions on Sunday.
Many Haitians interviewed yesterday in an open-air market downtown were thrilled by the news, anticipating cheaper prices for food and the end of a $50 cap on how much money could be wired from relatives in the United States.
But several Aristide supporters were wary nonetheless that an end to sanctions too soon may hurt efforts to bring back Aristide. "We want Aristide back, too!" said a 36-year-old man named Casseus.
Cap-Haitien
C Gulf of Gonave
Haiti
0 25
Miles
Port-au-Prince
Cap-Haitien
Gulf of Gonave
Haiti
Port-au-Prince
Cap-Haitien
Hospital
Barracks
Police stations
Central Pier
Cap-Haitien Bay
The Associated Press
Health care put on hold until next Congressional session
WASHINGTON — Health care reform, moribund for weeks, was pronounced dead yesterday for this session of Congress by Senate Majority Leader George J. Mitchell.
The Maine Democrat blamed Republicans, saying he had been unable to find the 60 votes needed to end an inevitable GOP filibuster.
"It is clear that health insurance reform cannot be enacted this year," Mitchell told a news conference.
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole denied the Republicans were to blame and said it was overwhelming public opposition, not parliamentary roadblocks, that undid the
Democrats' health plans.
"They never had 50 votes for any of their plans," Dole said.
In New York, where he was attending a United Nations session, President Clinton said of the defeat of his major domestic initiative, "I am very sorry that this means Congress isn't going to reform health care this year. But we are not giving up on our mission to cover every American and to control health care costs.
"Although we have not achieved our goal this year, Hillary and I are proud — and our allies should be proud as well — that we were able to bring this debate further than it has ever progressed."
all the American people, and we have come too far to just walk away now," he added in a statement.
Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, who led the conservative opposition to the Clinton plan and its descendants, said he was "grateful that the president and the Democrats have now abandoned their crusade for government-run health care, at least for this year."
"There is just too much at stake for
He said voters should "express their opinion on health care in the November election by electing or rejecting Clinton allies at the polls."
Other Democrats echoed Mitchell's charges of Republican obstructionism. They said the problems of the 39 million Americans
without health insurance wouldn't disappear, and they would fight for changes next year.
House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., said, "Reforming our health care system is one issue that will not go away." He vowed to "press the fight for guaranteed, affordable health care in the coming Congress."
"Congress has done the right thing by not rushing health care reform," said Richard L. Lesher, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
In pulling the plug, Mitchell ignored advice from liberals who wanted to push forward a stripped-down bill covering children, if only to force Republicans to vote against
it.
The action came one year and four days after Clinton went before Congress to unveil his vision of "health care that's always there"—guaranteed insurance for all Americans regardless of their health or wealth. Hillary Rodham Clinton helped draft the plan and was its foremost saleswoman.
Clinton ran into a wall of opposition from small businesses, the insurance industry and others alarmed by his 1,342-page proposal. It featured mandatory employer contributions, compulsory health insurance purchasing alliances for most Americans and standby price controls on insurance premiums.
WASHINGTON- On the eve of a two-day state visit by Boris Yeltsin, President Clinton said yesterday the United States and Russia have a partnership that is working despite some major differences.
Clinton and Yeltsin addressed the United Nations, four hours apart, to set the stage for their talks at the White House.
Russia's woes are focus of Yeltsin visit
"The entire world has a vital stake in the establishment of a strategic partnership between Russia and the United States."
"Today, Russia is a threat to no one," the Russian president said.
It will be the fifth meeting between Clinton and Yeltsin, coming at a moment of relative strength for the Russian leader. A year ago, Yeltsin disbanded the Soviet-era parliament, triggering street battles that left scores dead.
Yeltsin suggested that the major nuclear powers consider a ban on production of material used in making nuclear weapons. He also urged an agreement by next year banning all nuclear testing. Clinton has suspended such tests.
Madeleine Albright, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., called Yeltsin's proposals creative and intriguing but said they would require a lot of study.
Clinton and Yeltsin are expected to pledge to make further reductions in their nuclear arsenals without negotiating new treaties.
While arms-control issues will be discussed, there will be a heavy emphasis on trade issues, including a White House meeting of Clinton, Yeltsin and senior business executives discussing what Russia needs to do to attract more American investments.
The two leaders also are expected to discuss differences over Bosnia, Russian involvement in former Soviet republics and the expansion of NATO.
Clinton alluded to the disagreements even as he praised ties between the two countries. "This is a partnership that is rooted in democracy, a partnership that is working, a partnership of not complete agreement but genuine mutual respect," Clinton said.
"After so many years of nuclear terror, our two nations are taking dramatic steps to ease tensions around the world," he added.
Clinton said Washington and Moscow recognize they must cooperate to control the emerging danger of terrorists who traffic in nuclear materials.
The two presidents are expected to sign an agreement to begin negotiations this winter on guaranteeing that once nuclear warheads are dismantled, the process is irreversible. They also are to sign an economic-partnership accord on investment and development in Russia.
The Russian leader met with business leaders in New York before traveling to Washington. "He said, 'Come to Russia. Bring technology and capital,'" financier Henry Kravis told reporters afterward. "He's a good salesman."
Yeltsin will be welcomed with pomp and ceremony at a formal White House arrival ceremony today before talks in the Oval Office. He will be the president's guest tonight at a formal state dinner, only the second of Clinton's presidency.
KU EQUESTRIAN
Informational Meeting and Picnic
Thursday September 29 at 6:30
Contact For Information
Jon Koch 864-121 for Jenny Jauber 749-6714
GUMBYS
Pizza
1445 W. 23rd
841-5000
Twosday Special
MapQuest.com
GUMBYS
Pizza
1445 W. 23rd
841-5000
• Get a medium pizza for $1.89 when you buy any Gumby's Pizza at our already incredibly low coupon price. Please mention ad when ordering (limit one per order).
• Additional toppings .94¢ each
• Choice of crust, Original or Whole Wheat
2 10" 1-Item Pizzas
only $4.99 + tax
Please mention ad when ordering
Carry out or delivery
Must present coupon upon receipt
Good only Tues 9/27/94
4pm-2:30am
Rollerblades
Used & CHEAP
We RENT skates!
Great
skates,
cheap!*
We're
selling
our old
RENTAL
fleet.
* quantities limited
1029 Mass.
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
841-7529
Great skates, cheap! We RENT skates! We're selling our old RENTAL fleet.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
You won't be hungry an hour after our buffet
IMPERIAL GARDEN
聚豐園
WE HONOR
KANSAS
The Imperial Garden's affordable buffet has all your favorite Chinese dishes, and you can go back as many times as you want. Just get a clean plate.
Dinner Buffet 6.95
Lunch Buffet 4.95
Sun.Brunch 5.95
841 - 1688
(across from Dillon's on 6th)
UNIVÉRSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
7A
COUPON
EXTRAVAGANZA
THE UNITED STATES
1234325JU
WASHINGTON, U.S.
THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
12th & Oread (above Yello Sub)
Shop 1
Green
Pasta Dinner only $2^{49}
pasta, homemade marinara sauce, garlic toast
With coupon only. Not valid w/other offers
1 offer/coupon/customer. Coupon expires 10/19/94
Yello Sub
1814 W, 23rd
19th and Indiana
Yello Sub for Lunch?
Monday-Friday Lunch Special!
Any 6" sub
only
$2.49
with purchase
of drink
(Up to $96 value)
With this coupon, 1 am to 2 pm only. Not valid with other offers.
1 offer/coupon/person. Coupon expires on 10/10/94
FREE
Medium
Pizza
Single Topping
Extra Toppings 75¢
$5.95 + tax
2 for $9.95
Expires12/25/94 udk
Regular 6" BLIMPIE Sub Sandwich with the Purchase of Any Sub Sandwich of Equal or Greater Value and a Medium Drink.
Blimpie
Please present this coupon before ordering. Not valid if altered or duplicated. One order per coupon. One coupon per customer per visit. Customer must pay any sales tax due.
Not good in combination with any other offer. Cash value 1/100 of $1. Valid until 12/3/1/04.
For Fresh-Sticed Subs.
PIZZA
Shoppe
601 KASOLD
842-0600
FREE
DELIVERY
Large
Pizza
Single Topping
Extra Topping 95¢
$7.95 + tax
2 for $12.95
Expires12/25/94 udk
Large Pizza
$1.00 O
OFF ANY PURCHASE
• Albums • CD's
• Tapes • Posters
ALLEY CAT RECORDS
717 Massachusetts coupon
Lawrence, KS 865-0122 exp. 10-17-94
---
Becky's
2108 West 27th
Park Plaza Center
843-8467
OFFER GOOD WITH ALL STYLISTS
Not Valid With Other Offers
Form 12/21/09
Buy1 Mixed Up Maggie Moo Get1 FREE
Magpie Roof
2540 Iowa
Next to Applebees
Value $2.32
Haircut • $10.00 With Coupon
Next to Applebees
NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing Natural Body Care
PERM $42.00 With Coupon Includes Haircut and Style. Long Hair Slightly Higher.
Grant Declaration by the ACEFT World Organization
10% Off Regular Priced Clothing
Expires October 10, 1994
820-822 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
10% Off Regular Priced Clothing
FREE
Dessert Bar with the purchase of buffetl
Valentino's
Restaurant
Lunch 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Dinner 5 p.m.-9 p.m. 7 days a week
Good only at Lawrence location *Cannot be used with any other offer*
Expires 10-11-94 544 W.23rd 749-4244
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
20% OFF all used CDs and
video games anyday w/coupon
Exp. Oct 10, 1994
Over 5,000 Compact Discs
716 Massachusetts 841-1762
COUPON
BUY ONE VISTABURGER GET ONE FREE
Limit one order per coupon. Onew coupon per customer. Not in valid combination with any other offer. Extra charges for cheese and bacon. Valid after 11:00 a.m.
Auth UDK
Expires 10-27-94
1991 Tuttle Creek Blvd. & 2074 Anderson Ave.
Mahwaihan
1050 Wanamaker in Topeka
1527 W. 6th in Lawrence
VIDEO BIZ.
NEED COMPUTER HELP?
Tutoring CS 200, 256, 300, & 560 PASCAL
evenings after 5 p.m. & weekends.
Training - ONLY $10^{00}/hr.
Vista DRIVE IN 1527 W. 6th
2 Video Tapes and VCR one night rental $5.99
(Good through 12-31-94)
- DOS
* Windows
* Spreadsheets
* Wordprocessors
VIDEO BIZ
9th & Iowa 749-3507
Masters Computing
2201 W. 25th 842-4413
2 Movies for the price of one!
WE HONOR
JAZZ FANS!
$2.00 Off Any Jazz CD*
w/coupon
Choose from Lawrence's Best Jazz Selection
*Discounted from Kieff's Everyday Low Price
KIEF'S COSMES
Expires 1/28
No VAT With
Other Offers
Emergency Dump
Tag Item
24th & Iowa St, P.O. Box 5, Lawrence, KS 60044
HOS & TAPES, MILWAUKEE COMMUNICATION
913-842-1544 913-842-1811 913-842-1408
HAIR EXP
$5.00 OFF
Any Color or Perm
841-6886
25th and Iowa
Not Valid With Any Other Offer.
Expires 10/27/94
$5.00 OFF
Any Hair Design
841-6886
25th & Iowa
Not Valid With Any Other Offer.
Expires 10/27/94.
1. 1
JONES NEW YORK FACTORY STORE
&
THE EXECUTIVE SUITE
$10 OFF any Purchase
of $100 or more.
(on regular priced merchandise only)
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza JNY (913) 865-5100
Lawrence, KS 66044 Expires November 6, 1994 Suite (913) 749-0200
JONES NEW YORK FACTORY STORE & THE EXECUTIVE SUITE
20%OFF
20% OFF
Any Private Party
Classified Ad
When You Use Your Kansan Card
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
KANSAN
NOW ACCEPTING EXP. 10/11/94
UDK
COMIC CORNER
* MAGIC: THE GATHERING
* GAMES MINIATURES
* COMICS OPEN GAMING
10% off Coupon
841-4294 not valid with any other discounts
1000 Mass. St. Suite B, Open Sundays & weekdays until 7:00
Free Medium Drink
with purchase of a
Pita Sandwich
Sub & Stuff
Sandwich Shop
Expires 10-31-94 1618 W23rd
Blimpie
2540 Iowa in Tower Plaza
865-4200
WE DELIVER
WE DELIVER
2540 Iowa in Tower Plaza
865-4200
$1.00 OFF
Any 6" or 12" SUB SANDWICH
Not valid on value menu items. Valid only with coupon.
Not valid with other offers. Good in store only.
COUPON EXPIRES 12-31-94
The Roundtable
All 9 toppings!
Hamburger • Sausage
Canadian Bacon • Onions
Pepperoni • Green Pepper
Black Olives
Extra Cheese
Medium $7.95
2 for $13.95
Large $9.95
2 for $16.95
Expires12/25/94 ndk
Expires12/25/94 udk
PIZZA
Shoppe
601 KASOLD
842-0600
FREE
DELIVERY
Buy any item, get the 2nd item of equal or lesser value
for FREE!
% convenient locations 3 time hours
• 6th & Main Sun, Thurs 10.30- Midnight
• 23rd & Ousdahl Fri 6 Sat 10.30-2.00 am
• 23rd & Haskell
TACO JOHN'S
Lasagna or Manicotti or 1 lb. Spaghetti
Lasagna or
Manicotti
or 1 lb.
Spaghetti
PLUS Garlic Toast
& 32 oz. Coke
$5.25 + tax
Meatballs $1.00 extra
Expires12/25/94 udk
Carnations!
Carnations!
Carnations!
NOW 50¢
Reg.$1.50
Expires 10/11/94
826 Iowa·843-5115
THE FLOWER MARKET
FREE TAN!
WELCOME HOURS
7 @ $20
10 @ $25
15 @ $35
We'll Beat ANY
Local Special
Since 1903
We'll Beat ANY
Local Special
Since 1906
EUROPEAN
TAN HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Gusudahi
(Jobind Parkline)
841-6232
We'll Beat ANY
Local Special
since 1906
EUROPEAN
TAM HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd & Duesholt
(behind Parkline)
841-6232
ENERGIZE
FORMULA ONE
FREE SAMPLE
ENERGIZE
FORMULA ONE
FREE SAMPLE
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Family practitioners on rise
Family practit Fewer grads focus on specialization
The Associated Press
The percentage of graduates planning careers as family physicians, pediatricians or in general internal medicine had plunged from 34 percent in 1983 to 15 percent in 1992.
WASHINGTON — Building on a recent trend, almost a quarter of this year's medical school graduates are interested in becoming general practitioners, not specialists, a survey by the Association of American Medical Colleges reported yesterday.
But last year it rose to 19 percent, and this year it reached 23 percent.
"We are seeing the beginning of a turnaround," said Jordan J. Cohen, president of the association.
Among the nation's 600,000-plus physicians, specialists outnumber general practitioners more than 2-to-1.
Federal health officials have decried that imbalance and argued that Americans would get better health care at less cost if there were more family practitioners and other GPs.
Specialists tend to order more tests and procedures and charge more, without necessarily getting better results, their critics say.
The association itself has embraced a goal that half of all medical school graduates should enter general medicine.
President Clinton's health care reform bill, which was blocked in Congress, would have required that 55 percent of new doctors be trained as generalists or obstetrician-gynecologists.
Thirteen percent of this year's graduates were interested in family practice; 6 percent in general internal medicine and 4 percent in pediatrics.
New method may help wounds heal
Twenty percent of those interested in general medicine said they wanted to practice in rural areas; only 6 percent of all graduates were interested in a rural practice.
WASHINGTON—Large wounds may heal faster when enclosed within a plastic shell and bathed constantly with a solution of skin cells and a growth-promoting substance, researchers report.
In experiments on pigs, scientists at the Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston have found that new skin formed about 25 percent faster when wounds were covered with a plastic chamber that was filled with fluid containing immature skin cells and a growth hormone.
The shell, or wound chamber,
said Dr. Elof Eriksson, "creates an incubator-like environment for the wound." The chamber resembles a clear plastic cup that is stuck by an adhesive on healthy
skin surrounding the wound.
In an experiment reported yesterday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Eriksson and his colleagues said the leak-proof chamber enabled them to keep wounds on pigs bathed with a solution that included cultures of keratinocytes, cells that grow to form skin.
Keratinocytes are now used to grow skin tissue sheets that can be used for grafts to cover large wounds. But Eriksson said the experiment with pigs suggests that a fluid concentration of keratinocytes also works well.
"We inject these cells into the wound chamber, and they settle on the wound and then grow into new skin," said Eriksson. "It greatly simplifies the procedure."
Appealing to youth is a goal of both candidates in state race
Both the Republican and Democratic candidates for secretary of state said yesterday that increasing young people's participation in politics was one of their biggest goals.
The Associated Press
Assistant Secretary of State Ron Thornburgh, the Republican nominee, toured his past participation in the Kids Voting program, which is designed to educate children and get them involved in politics. Thornburgh helped found the program two years ago.
The Democratic nominee, Fran Lee,
praised the program and outlined her proposal to form a "public achievement corps" to get young people involved in politics at the local level.
The two candidates spoke to about 50 high school students during a Kids Voting assembly at the Statehouse. The assembly is part of a series of events in which children in 17 communities eventually will cast ballots in a mock election.
Lee described the secretary of state as the "chief maintenance engineer for democracy in Kansas." She said creating a public achievement corps will build on the work of Kids Voting and teach young people about voter registration drives and campaigns.
Sierra Club changes focus to avoid going bankrupt
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — The Sierra Club is cutting staff and tightening its focus to save itself from extinction.
A drop in donations and membership forced the century-old environmental group's first major restructuring in 22 years.
The reorganization that will begin in 1995 includes reducing the club's efforts on energy conservation and international issues in favor of major campaigns to prevent pollution and preserve open spaces.
The changes will help the 500,000-member group meet its 1995 budget, which at $40 million is $3.7 million less than 1994, executive director Carl Pope said Sunday.
The Sierra Club's financial difficulties mirror the trend facing many environmental groups. Donations also are down for Greenpeace, the Wilderness Society, the National Audubon Society and others.
The Sierra Club expects to lay off some of its 350 employees, but Pope said he was not sure exactly how many. The group also plans a 1995 campaign to sign up 75,000 new members.
The group's net worth has declined from $7.7 million in 1993 to an estimated $6.7 million by the end of this year, and changes are necessary to save the group from going extinct.
"We felt that if we didn't take steps, it might," Pope said. "These are not easy changes for a 100-year-old organization to make. We feel what we need to do is focus."
The club, founded by naturalist John Muir, has kept itself out of bankruptcy by borrowing its $10 million endowment, treasurer Terry Shaffer said. Under club bylaws, that money cannot be used for operating expenses.
Sierra Club executives blamed the problem on the economy and a declining interest in social issues such as environmentalism. Since 1991, more than 100,000 people have dropped their membership and those who remain are giving less.
Beer can collectors congregate at show '70s pastime still has following
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Beer can collecting, that craze of the 1970s before it declined in popularity, is bouncing back, enthusiasts say.
About 35 collectors gathered Sunday at Topeka's Lake Shawnee for a "breweriana" show that involved not just cans but other beer collectibles, including trays, lights and glasses.
"I have 22,000 cans," proclaimed Tom Hull of Tulsa, Okla., a board member of the national chapter of Beer Can Collectors of America.
BCCA president Jerry Trowbridge, standing nearby, laughed and said: "He's a bachelor. You stand in the front room and look up to the ceiling at the cans."
Trowbridge said can collecting was on the upswing.
"In the '70s, it was highly popular," he said. "In the '80s, it wasn't as big a deal, and our membership declined steadily. In the 1990s, we have added to the organization."
Can collecting isn't as simple as it might sound. It takes some ingenuity to add some hard-to-get cans to a collection.
"It's fun and it's time-consuming," said Marc Milner, who helped organize the show.
Milner specializes in Swedish beer cans and does a lot of trading overseas. That means building up a trading network, he said.
"I send a package to a collector in Argentina, and two to three months later I'll get a package back," he said.
In some cases, beer companies test-market beers in select areas, and those cans are difficult to find without contacts, Milner said.
"Coors put out one in the Virgin Islands that's very hard to get," he said.
Most of the collectors travel to shows to find cans, Trowbridge said.
His favorite in his collection is a Krueger beer can. Krueger Cream Ale was the first beer to be put in a can in 1935, Trowbridge said.
Police struggle to solve murder
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — After the legless bodies of two prostitutes and a teenager were pulled from the Missouri River starting in 1986, more than 30 detectives from 10 agencies, including the FBI, tried to crack the case.
And this month the body of prostitute Viola McCoy, 36, was pulled from the river, her legs surgically severed as were those of the first three.
Now Kansas City has formed a special squad to investigate all four slayings. Six detectives and a sergeant have been working 12- to 15-hour days since Sept. 14.
Past investigations into the deaths of Melody Milliner, 24, Kimberly Rash, 19, and Beverille Tracy, 13, yielded hundreds of leads, few suspects and a lot of frustration.
Improved forensic techniques are letting detects check back 15 years into the victims' lives to look for fresh clues and any similarities.
Detectives are keeping most details of the investigation to themselves. And they won't say for certain that the same person has committed all four murders. But retired Kansas City Maj. Gary VanBuskirk said, "You've got to assume that it is."
VanBuskirk supervised the last successful serial-killer investigation by the department — the 1900 capture of the Gilham Park strangler, Ray Shawn Jackson.
Authorities have no solid suspects, and they say the slayer — if there is just one — does not fit the typical profile for a serial killer. They know they lack vital clues.
"If we had a wish, our wish would be to give us a crime scene, a weapon, something that we can work on and get grounded in," said Capt. Gregory Mills, commander of the Kansas City homicide unit.
Half-Price for KU and Haskell students.
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Lied Center Presents
A Concert Series Event
8:00 p.m., Wednesday,
September 28, 1994
Lied Center
PRINCIPAL
DANCERS
of New York City Ballet
This presentation is produced
by Columbia Artists, not
New York City Ballet.
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); and any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3330 or (913) 234-4545; all seats reserved; public $30 and $25, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $15 and $12.50, senior citizens and other students $29 and $24; KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using VISA or MasterCard.
Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Kief's Audio and Video, Laird Noller Dealerships, Payless ShoeSource and W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee.
The University of Kansas Classified Senate and Unclassified Professional Staff Association is presenting a
CANDIDATES' FORUM presenting candidates for the Douglas County area and State of Kansas
Invited candidates include:
Barbara Ballard, Troy Findley, Bill Graves, Eric Schmidt,
Kathleen Sebelius, Richard Schodorf, Jim Slattery, Tom Sloan,
Carla J. Stovall, Forrest Swall, Ron Todd
Thursday, September 29,1994 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Frontier Room, Burge Union
NEW LAND AQUARIUM
IT'S ALL HAPPENING AT,THE LIED CENTER!
Feel free to bring your lunch and please bring questions for the candidates.
STUDENT SENATE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 27,1994
9A
Youth see a Social Security crisis
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Young Americans find it easier to believe in UFOs than the likelihood Social Security will be around when they retire, said a group that surveyed the nation's "Generation X."
The survey, released yesterday, tells a "chilling tale of young people convinced that the social contract between the generations has been dissolved," said the sponsoring group. Third Millennium.
The name refers to the period following the year 2000, when people in the age group sometimes called Generation X will be moving into positions of authority.
According to the poll, just over one-fourth of people between the ages of 18 and 34 believe Social Security will still exist when they retire, compared with 46 percent who think there are UFOS.
Only nine percent of the young people think Social Security will have the money to pay their retirement benefits.
"Despite their faith in UFOs, young people know that the solution to the Social Security funding crisis — and the national debt crisis — will not fall from the sky," said Richard Thau, Third Millennium executive director.
Indeed, a new draft report by the Congressional Budget Office concludes that "no easy fixes to the funding problems of the Social Security system exist."
Right now, the Social Security trust funds take in more than they spend. This year alone, CBO estimates that Social Security will collect about $58 billion more than it will pay in benefits.
But during the retirement years of the baby boomers, the generation of people born between 1946 and 1964, annual benefits will exceed receipts, and the trust funds will be exhausted by 2029, unless changes are made.
The congressional budget experts, in their draft study, conclude that improving the investment returns of Social Security's trust funds or investing to improve overall economic growth will not solve the funding problem.
In its report. Third Millennium said Social Security is "hurting toward its next financial crisis." Serious, structural reform is desperately needed, it said, but the political will to make the difficult decisions has not existed.
"And as public confidence in the retirement system deteriorates, intergenerational conflict becomes an increasingly likely feature of the American public landscape." it said.
Third Millennium said that while Generation Xers had been labeled selfish and self-centered by the media, its survey demonstrated it was the elderly who cared most about themselves, even at the cost of future generations.
Its poll found that one-third of senior citizens think they are getting less than they deserve from Social Security, although their benefits have outstripped their contributions.
According to the poll, just over half of the youth surveyed supported paying benefits based on need and making benefits 100 percent taxable for wealthy recipients.
syste.h:
Social Security vs. UFOs
Percent surveyed who think:
Social Security will exist when they retire
UFOs exist
28% 46%
How to fix Social Security
Percent surveyed who support:
Paying benefits based on need
Wealthy recipients pay 100% tax on benefits
Workers invest part of Social Security taxes in retirement accounts
51% 51%
82%
SOURCE: Third Millennium survey of 500
18-34 year olds, Sept. 8-10, 1994
How to fix Social Security Percent surveyed who support:
Paying benefits based on need Wealthy recipients pay 100% tax on benefits Workers invest part of Social Security taxes in retirement accounts 51% 51% 82%
SOURCE: Third Millenium survey of 500
51%
51%
51% 51% 82%
82%
points. Five hundred Generation Xers and 500 senior citizens were surveyed.
Third Millennium, based in New York, was founded in July 1993 as an advocacy and education group to raise awareness about long-term problems facing America and offer solutions to those problems, Thau said.
Black, Asian and Hispanic men and women occupy only one percent of top corporate jobs.
Those are the discrepancies the Labor Department's Glass Ceiling Commission is attempting to address.
The commission held its fifth and final hearing yesterday with testimony from Lawrence Tisch, the chief executive of CBS Inc.; Connie Chung, co-anchor of the network's evening news; corporate and community leaders; educators and others.
NEW YORK — Women make up about half the work force, yet less than five percent hold positions in senior management of U.S. corporations.
Speaking before the commission, Tisch said CBS had worked hard to promote the concept within the network that a person should be judged on ability alone.
The justices said they will decide whether the small-business affirmative action program — a boon to companies owned by minorities and women — unlawfully discriminates against companies owned by white men.
Consequently, female officers and managers represent almost 40 percent of the work force and minority officers and managers comprise 19 percent.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, jumping the gun on the start of its 1994-95 term next week, agreed yesterday to hear civil rights cases involving school desegregation and involving businesses owned by women and minorities an edge in getting federal contracts.
The case could lead to the court's most important ruling on affirmative action since 1990.
The school desegregation case from Kansas City asks whether courts can require improvements in
The term "glass ceiling" refers to unseen barriers to the advancement of women and minorities in the corporate world.
Supreme Court to start early
student achievement before some court-ordered programs can end.
Commission studies number of women in top jobs
The court also agree to hear arguments in six other cases.
Accepting the cases for review before the official beginning of the court's new term on Oct. 3 gives the lawyers an extra week to prepare for argument.
The court agreed to decide:
—In a California case, whether states may increase the time between parole hearings for all prison inmates, including those who were sentenced when state law required more frequent hearings.
—Whether companies can trademark the color of their products. The case involves a Chicago company that seeks to regain a trademark for the color of the pads it makes for dry-cleaning presses.
—In a Florida case, whether
lawyers can be barred from using the mail to solicit clients until 30 days after a personal injury or death occurs.
—When the government can appeal to federal courts in disputes over benefits awarded to disabled maritime workers.
The affirmative action case involves the federal Small Business Act, which requires government agencies to use their purchasing power to help small businesses. Those owned by historically disadvantaged people receive special help.
The Transportation Department's Central Federal Lands Highway Division gives prime contractors on federal projects a 1.5 percent bonus if at least 10 percent of their subcontracts go to "disadvantaged business enterprises."
Hot water still deep for Espy
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The independent counsel investigating Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy said yesterday that reimbursing the cost of free tickets, lodging and travel—as Espy has done—is not a defense for illegally receiving gifts.
Recently, Espy has made a series of reimbursements for gifts he received and for personal use of a government-leased car.
They have included $700 for four Super Bowl tickets, $6,200 for the vehicle, $450 for lodging at a West Virginia resort, $90 for two Chicago Bulls basketball tickets and $194 for one of his many trips to his home in Mississippi.
Espy's lawyer, former federal prosecutor Reid Weingarten, agreed that reimbursements would not absolve an individual of responsibility for a crime.
Plan limits immigrant aid
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A federal commission will propose that Congress change immigration laws to make families who bring relatives to the United States legally responsible for supporting them.
The plan follows an explosion in the number of immigrants receiving welfare benefits.
Authorized by Congress in 1990 to examine immigration policies and their impact on society and the environment, the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform will issue its first report to lawmakers on Friday.
According to the commission's executive director, Susan Martin, the nine-member advisory panel headed by former Rep. Barbara Jordan debated for days with the complex and politically explosive issues surrounding welfare and immigrants.
In a series of unanimous decisions, the commission will recommend to Congress that illegal immigrants be barred from most public aid, aside from immunizations, emergency medical care, school lunches and child nutrition programs.
"We can't lift the safety net for legal, permanent residents," Martin said in
an interview. "But at the same time, families have to take more responsibility."
Most legal immigrants are the spouses, children, parents or siblings of U.S. citizens and long-term, permanent residents.
If immigrants cannot show they have financial resources or a job in the United States, their sponsors must be able to support them and are required to sign a non-binding affidavit.
The commission also will ask Congress to strengthen immigration laws to keep people out of the country when it is clear they will apply for welfare within the first five years of their arrival.
Congress should also make it easier to deport immigrants with long spells on welfare.
"We should not admit people likely to become a public charge," Martin said. "It should be the extraordinary event, not the routine one."
Records obtained by the Associated Press last year showed that thousands of immigrants apply for aid shortly after arriving in the United States, despite their relatives' promises to support them.
ALWAYS COMPETITIVE PRICE OPTIONS & TERMS
All Award Winning Models In Stock!
BOOKSHELF SPEAKERS
OF THE YEAR
Music lovers and audiophiles agree that loudspeakers influence the sound of your system more than any other component. Although it's relatively easy to make a working speaker - just look at the hundreds of brands available - building a natural sounding loudspeaker capable of reproducing all of music's subtle texture and nuance requires an amazing number of careful choices and decisions.
All are in stock and on SALE...Now!
The '94 Winners
PARADIGM ATOM (11-1) $75.00
PSB ALPHA (11-2) $100.00
BOSTON HD-8 (11-6) $130.00
PARADIGM 3SE-Mk (11-9) $195.00
MIRAGE M-190I (11-2) $120.00
B & W V2002 (11-6) $150.00
PHASE TECH PC-80 (11-10) $290.00
NHT SUPERZERO (11-4) $125.00
M & K SX-7 (11-7) $165.00
SNELL Type K-II (11-11) $375.00
*Bookshelf speakers prices range from $80 to $8,700. Reasonable quality and flexibility start at approximately $100.
ALL AWARD WINNING MODELS IN STOCK
KIEF'S TAPES CDs
AUDIO/VIDEO
24th & Iowa St.P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, Ks. 66044
CD & TAPES IN DODGEVIDEO MEMBERSHIP
913*842*1544 913*842*1811 913*842*1438
KIEF'S TAPES CDs
AUDIO/VIDEO
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
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Nalsmith Hill"
Hrs. 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri., 5-14 Sat., 12-4 Sun. 843-3826
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THE
SUA
EXHIBITION
OF
STUDENT
PAINTINGS
SEPTEMBER 26
TO
OCTOBER 8
KANSAS
UNION
GALLERY
LEVEL 4,
KANSAS UNION
fifi's 925IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food
layhawk
Bookstore
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kerr Cummings
Jewels
749-4333
833 Mass Lawrence, KS
Esquire Barber Service
1st Time $3.99
Customer
2323 Bridge Ct.
First Mile Building
812-3699
layhawk Bookstore
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kirk Cunningham's
Jewelers
749-4333
833 Mags*Lawrence, KS
Rayhawk Bookstore
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
FORTUNE 50 COMPANY NOW HIRING!
1st Time Customer $3.99
2323 Ridge Ct.
First Med Building
862-3699
*Fortune Magazines Most Admired Life Insurance Co. 12 Years Running
*Voted #1 Sales Force in America by Sales and Marketing Management Mag.
*Best Sales Opportunity in America According to Jobs '94
This profession offers freedom and flexibility. The best training in the industry, management opportunities, and income twice the industry average. Work in the business and professional marketplace in the Kansas City area.
Northwestern Mutual Life The Hames Agency
Interview Dates:
Tue. Oct. 11 KU Placement Center-Burge Union 864-3624 Wed. Oct. 12, Thurs. Oct. 13 School of Business Placement Center 864-5591
- 70% of sales force hired off college campuses
- 75% of Hames sales force are KU grads
- Out of 7,000 sales people nationally number 6 and 55 are KU grads
Contact Placement Center to schedule an interview
Information and video on company available in the placement center
lifestyles
The International Students Association has representatives from all around the world. Ironically, it has few Americans.
Take a trip around the world without leaving campus
The foreign students represent 116 countries.
Malaysia has the most representatives with 210 students. The People's Republic of China has the second most,with 203 students India comes in third with 118 students. Taiwan is fourth with 109 students and Japan is fifth with 104 students.
By Susanna Lööf
Special to the Kansan
KU students can take a trip around the world for free. No passports are needed, and the travelers can be back in time for class.
The travel guides are international KU students and the tourist agency is the International Students Association, or ISA.
"Every spring, we arrange 'The Festival of Nations' outside the journalism building," said Girish Ballalla, Bangalore, India, senior and president of ISA. "It is an exposition where international students present information about their countries and going there is like going on a free round-trip all across the world."
The 43-year-old festival is only one of ISA's many activities to promote interaction between people of different cultural and ethnic backgrounds. The association has about 50 active members, but it has more than 500 people, representing about 100 nationalities, on its mailing list.
Many different nationalities meet in ISA, but Ballolla said there are never any problems with tensions between different nationalities, even though some of the members come from countries that are at war with each other or that have hostile relations.
"By understanding the culture, you can see beyond the political aspects," Ballolla said. The relations between Ballolla's home country, India, and Pakistan are tense because both countries claim the possession of Kashmir, but those tensions disappear between Ballolla and his Pakistani friends in Lawrence.
"Doing things together with the Pakistanis in ISA helped me understand their views," Ballolla said.
When talking about ISA, Ballolla wants to dispel a common myth.
"ISA is not a foreign student organization," Ballolla said, stressing each word. "It is an international students organization, and the United States of America is a nation among other nations in the world. I want more Americans to join."
Matthew Roth, Manhattan sophomore and secretary of ISA, joined the association after attending an international party about a year ago.
"I liked what they were trying to do," he said.
Roth got interested in international issues when he spent a few weeks as a volunteer helping build a health clinic in Nicaragua during his senior year in high school.
"I had never been outside of the U.S. before and volunteering sparked my interest in what is outside of the U.S.," he said.
Roth saw ISA as an opportunity to get involved with international activities, and he started attending the weekly meetings. Roth was elected secretary in August.
"Sometimes when I am busy in school and with other activities, being in ISA is stressful," he said. "But it is definitely worth it. Being in ISA gives me a chance to work with all sorts of people and attitudes."
Roth admits that he sometimes felt out of place at the meetings, where most of the participants are foreign.
"But it is not bad," he said, "it is interesting. I am used to seeing the U.S. as this big place with all these people, but ISA has made me realize that we Americans are not the only people living in the world."
The association hosts an international party each semester. This semester's party will be Friday at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 W. Turnup Access Road. The cost is $4.
He said the music, which is a mix of music from all around the world, the dancing and the opportunity to interact with people from different backgrounds made the parties unique.
The association also hosts an American Halloween party each year.
"It gives the foreign students in the association a chance to learn about the traditions in this country" 'Ballalla said'
to learn about the traditions in this country," Ballola said. But ISA is more than parties. During the fall semester, the association arranges a cultural show, which is called International Night. This year's show will be at the beginning of November.
"Last year we focused on European and African cultures, and this year we will focus on North and South American cultures," Ballolla said.
ISA meets every Monday at 6 p.m. at the Kansas Union, in parliors A, B and C.
Japanese Erotic Film Festival opens
THE METROPOLITAN INDUSTRY REPRESENTS THE WORLD OF TIME. IT IS A FILM BY JEFF BROWN, A MEXICAN CINEMAGER WHO WORKS WITH THE ORIGINAL STUDIO. THE FILM DISCUSSES THE GREAT DIVISION OF ENTERTAINMENT FOR HOME AND OUTDOOR, INCLUDING AUTOBOTICS, COMPUTERS, AND TECHNOLOGY. IT IS A NEW EDITION OF A WEB SERIES THAT RUNS ONLINE AND OFFLINE.
By Casey Barnes
Three alternative films offer a unique view of sexuality in Japanese culture.
Kansan staff writer
MOVIE
SCHEDULE
"In the Realm
of the Senses"
is playing at 7
p.m. today and
9:30 Thursday
night.
A woman on the street clutches her lover's lesspenis in the erotic, Japanese film about two lovers who turn their backs on the Japanese military society and embrace their own sexual world.
"Tokyo Decadence" is playing at 9:30 p.m. today, 7 p.m. tomorrow and 2 p.m. Saturday.
But it is not pornography, said Shannon Skelton, Tyler, Texas, senior and coordinator of Student Union Activities spectrum films.
"Okoge" is playing at 9:30 p.m. tomorrow and at 7 p.m. Thursday.
The film, "In the Realm of the Senses," is one of three movies being presented this week in the Japanese Erotic Film Festival, sponsored by SUJA.
"Sexuality is not repressed or hidden in the Japanese culture," Skelton said. "There are different views held on sexuality in every culture and the Japanese have a lot of erotic tradition through art, films, theaters and literature."
the character Sada strangles her lover, Kichi, in the erotic Japanese film "In the Realm of the Senses."
Submitted Photo
"In the Realm of the Senses," a movie involving voyeurism and sexual obsession, is set in 1936. It is about an ex-prostitute who becomes involved with the master of the household where she is employed as a servant. The two quickly reject the militaristic society of Japan to create their own erotic world.
SUA chose three different films that have been played at film festivals around the world. All three films are subtitled and include nudity and sexual acts, Skelton said.
"Okoge" (pronounced oh-koh-gay), is a gay-oriented movie about a menage-a-trois, which is a sexual relationship between two men and a woman or two women and a man. Okoke is a slang term for a female who hangs out with homosexual men. In the film a young woman becomes involved with a young gay man and his older lover. When social pressures cause the two men to break up, the woman helps the younger man find new lovers and is drawn into violence and crime.
"Tokyo Decadence," is a look at the dark underside of Tokyo. A 22-year-old call girl searching for some sense of self worth experiences humiliation at the hands of her clients. It is a statement on modern day excesses and obsessions with sexuality and violence, Skelton said.
Each culture has a different way of expressing sexuality,he said. But front views of nude bodies would not be acceptable in mainstream Japanese culture.
Andrew Tsubaki, professor of theater and film and director of international theater, has not seen the films, but he said that to most people in Japan these movies would not be mainstream.
Tsubaki said that there was a time in 18th and 19th century Japan when women and men would bathe together in public, but today, mixed public bathing would occur only in remote places, such as hot springs.
"Some films will show anything," Tsubaki said. "There is a reaction to a concealment of the past that is now becoming more free, and there may be an overreaction in blue films, or sexually-oriented films."
"Movies are much more commercialized and daring today," he said. "Commercially, film makers are responding to what their audiences want to see."
"We usually do five or six Japanese films a year," Skelton said. "With the erotic films, we are trying to break the stereotype of either a violent Japanese film or a boring epic with little dialogue."
The spectrum films committee for SUA, which features alternative movies, decided last spring
During the summer he saw "Tokyo Decadence" and got the idea for a Japanese erotic film festival.
that KU students might want to see an erotic film festival, but the committee was not sure of the festival's theme, Skelton said.
Anne Sutherland, Bethany, Mo , senior, saw "In the Realm of the Senses" during a taboo film festival in Scotland.
"It's not for the light at heart," she said. "If you're uncomfortable watching other people naked, then I wouldn't go."
Life
News of the Weird
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 27, 1994 PAGE 10A
KU Life
COMPELLING EXPLANATIONS
In August, Edward Musgrove, 32, attacked his estranged wife, a Los Angeles bus driver, as she began an evening route. He grabbed the steering wheel, causing the bus to veer off the road, hit a tree and crashed into a brick wall. The wife was not injured, but Musgrove was hurled full-force through the windshield into the wall and was decapitated.
- Five Florida counties have recently taken out all television sets for jailed inmates in order to deter crime. A Clay County sheriff's deputy said, "Knowing there's no television here, maybe they'll think twice before committing a crime." The Jacksonville sheriff said, "If people want to watch football on TV this fall, they better not get arrested."
- Clint Johnston, 69 and blind, told authorities in Mountain Home, Idaho, in August that the recent charges against him for having consensual sex with two 1.2-year-old girls should be dismissed. Johnston said that, since he could not see the girls, he did not know how young they were.
- Dan Ivy, an unsuccessful Arkansas political candidate who had just switched from Democrat to Republican, was accused recently by his wife, Sarah, in divorce papers that he beat her. Dan denied the charge in July and countercharged that Sarah, who like Dan weighs more than 200 pounds, recently physically beat him because of his decision to switch parties. Dan's attorney explained that Sarah was angry at her husband's change of party because a Republican "has increased pressure" to have a good family life.
LEAST COMPETENT PERSON
WHAT GOES AROUND, COMES AROUND
In February, about a year after one of the World Trade Center bombers returned to the rental agency to get his deposit back on the van used in the explosion, Memphis, Tenn. police arrested a 21-year-old man for burglarizing a home. The man had left a pair of sneakers behind and had returned several hours later, knocked on the door and asked the homeowner, "I was wondering, have y'all seen my shoes? They are red and white Nikes."
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1994
SECTION E
A
Paul Kotz / KANSIAN
Difficult course hurts Kansas
Kansas senior Tyler Shelton chips onto the ninth green at Alvamar Golf Course. This week, the men's team is competing in the Kansas Invitational of which it is the host team.
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
After placing ninth in the Spartan Fall Invitational this weekend, the Kansas women's golf team was not overjoyed.
"I think if we play, not great, but to our capabilities, we can play an 18-hole tournament round between 315 and 320." Waugh said.
Jerry Waugh, Kansas women's golf coach, said the team did not play as well as it could have played. Kansas had a two-day total of 653 in the tournament held in East Lansing, Mich.
Senior Michelle Uher paced the Jayhawks with a 15th-place finish. She had a two-day total of 158. Uher was in seventh place after the first day of competition, but dropped to 15th after registering four double-bogeys in the second round.
"She has been our best player up to now."
Golf KU
Waugh said. "She plays well, and she's a good competitor."
Uber played with a different set of clubs in the tournament. She was forced to
find replacement clubs after an airline lost her clubs last week.
"She had a bad week of not being able to practice and trying to find another set of clubs," Waugh said.
But what affected the team most was the course's difficulty, Waugh said. The course had many blind shots, thus ball placement was vital. Big Ten Conference teams that had played the course before had a definite advantage, he said.
"The degree of difficulty took a little bit away from us," Waugh said. "Local knowledge meant quite a bit."
Sophomore Kimberly Clevenger posted a
170 for the tournament. She agreed that the course was difficult.
"You really needed to be thinking where you were going to put your shot for the next shot," she said.
Clevenger and freshman Beth Reuter were playing in their first collegiate tournament.
Reuter said she was nervous during the tournament, but was not completely dissatisfied with her performance. She shot a 167, the Jayhawks' third best score.
BIG EIGHT FOOTBALL
"I shot around my average," she said. "I wasn't disappointed, but I could have done a lot better."
Reuter said the tournament would serve as a learning experience.
"I know what to expect now, and I know what's expected of me," she said. "It's a character builder."
'Hawks, 'Cats have week off; the rest play on
Sunflower State foes prepare for gridiron battle
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas football team shut out the Blazers 72-0, but will get only one day of rest as its reward.
The Jayhawks will begin preparing today for their Oct. 6 game with Kansas State. The game, which will be the 92nd meeting of the teams, will be a Thursday night game televised on ESPN.
Kansas, which improved to 3-1 Saturday with a victory against Alabama-Birmingham, leads the series 61-25-5. K-State improved their record Saturday to 3-0 by defeating Minnesota 35-0. Both teams have a week off before the Thursday night game.
In defeating Alabama-Birmingham, Kansas coach Glen Mason said that the Jayhawks tried to play everybody who wasn't hurt or wasn't going to be redshirted.
Junior linebacker Keith Rodgers said it was good the Jayhawks had a game like this.
"A lot of guys got a chance to participate in the game," he said. "That gives the team a better attitude."
In preparing for the K-State battle, Mason has closed practice to the media until after the game, setting a tone for the game's importance.
Both teams are expected to contend as one of the top four finishers in the Big Eight Conference, and the game will help decide who finishes in the upper tier of the conference.
"I think it's going to be an exciting night," Mason said. "Football in the state of Kansas is going to be showcased. Hopefully, we'll show that football is alive and well in the Sunflower State."
Because the game is nationally televised and pits two in-state rivals, the outcome could affect more than the teams' seasons.
Dave Gillespie, Kansas recruiting coordinator and tight end coach, said the televised game could mean better recruiting for both teams. And the consequences of successful recruiting on the state and national level could affect the teams' future improvement.
Gillespie, who was Nebraska's recruiting coordinator last season, said that a loss might not hurt the losing team's abilities to recruit
"My experience has been that it probably doesn't hurt you as much as people think," Gillespie said.
10
Sean Crosier / KANSAN
11
**Above:** Kansas senior defensive end Silvester Wright wrestles Alabama-Birmingham senior quarterback John Whitcomb to the ground in the Jayhawks' 72-0 victory on Saturday. **Above right:** Kansas junior quarterback Mark Williams looks for an open receiver in a crowd of Blazer defenders. The Jayhawks have an off-week to prepare for in-state rival K-State on Oct. 6.
Coaches discuss outlook of teams
Bv Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
Colorado football coach Bill McCartney had an emotional homecoming when he returned to the place where he got his start in college football.
By defeating seven-ranked Michigan 27-26 on a last second "Hail Mary" pass, Colorado beat the school McCartney coached at from 1974 to 1981.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
"I was very frustrated prior to that last play," McCartney said, referring to his emotions before quarterback Kordell Stewart threw a 64-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Michael Westbrook on the last play of the game.
"When Kordell launched it, I thought we had a chance. When that last play connected, I guess I was the last one to think it could work."
In a Big Eight coaches briefing yesterday, McCartney said his frustration stemmed from his team's play against Michigan.
"I felt we had the best team," McCartney said. "We just shot ourselves in the foot all day long."
Nebraska's quarterback Tommie Frazier went yesterday to a Lincoln, Neb., hospital for tests on a deeply bruised right calf, Nebraska coach Osborne said, Frazier
played two series against Pacific, a game the Cornhuskers dominated in 70-21.
Coming off a 28-18 loss to Rice, Iowa State will open the Big Eight season this Saturday at Alabama, who was idle last week. In preparing for an 0-4 Iowa State team, the 2-1 Sooners said they were not taking the Cyclones lightly.
"It's critical. It's our first Big Eight game," Oklahoma coach Gary Gibbs said. "We're anxious to get out there."
Iowa State coach Jim Walden said he would be bringing an injury-riddled team into Norman, Okla., and that Oklahoma looked faster on film than other teams the Cyclones have faced.
Missouri, a 1-2 team, will be facing 1-4 West Virginia on Saturday.
BRIEF
Cross country teams place second, third
The Kansas men's and women's cross country teams came in second and third respectively Saturday at the Kansas State Invitational in Manhattan.
The Kansas women's team scored 54 points. The Jayhawks' top runner was Colleen McClimon. She placed fifth overall with a career best time of 18:13.9 in the five-kilometer race.
Conference rival Colorado took first in the women's meet, placing five runners in the top 10 and scoring 20 points.
The team with the lowest score wins in cross country.
The Kansas men's team finished third with 51 points behind Colorado's 43 points and Oklahoma State's 41 points.
Kansas' top runners in the men's eight-kilometer race were David Johnston and Michael Cox.
Freshman volleyball starter is formidable force
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
By Chesley Dohl
To freshman outside hitter Leslie Purkeypile, there's nothing that compares to targeting the opposite side of the court, flying through the air and going in for the kill.
One of her fondest recollections is a testament of her killer instinct on the front row:
Her senior year at a Wamego High School volleyball game, Purkeypile decided to unload her frustrations on the ball.
Kansan sportswriter
She went up, connected solidly and chalked up a kill — right in the face of an opposing player.
"That's a great feeling, though, hitting someone right in the face," she said, blushing red from embarrassment.
Six-foot tall Purkeypile makes herself a formidable force on the Kansas front line, Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said.
"For as many years as I've been here.
we've never had anyone on her size on the left side," Schonewise said. "She has incredible potential as a hitter."
Purkepyleleads the Jayhawk's in hitting percentage this season at. 188, and is tied with junior outside hitter Jenny Larson with 118, kills
---
leslie Purkeypile
Purpikeley is also third on the Kansas volleyball team in service aces with 13, and third in blocking with four solo blocks and 27 block assists.
In other volleyball programs, statistics like these from a freshman would garner only praise from a coach.
But Schonewise said she expected even more production from Kansas' four starting freshman this season.
"She's really not a rookie anvmore."
Schonewise said. "As a freshman, she's played in every match. She's had a month and a half to compete at this level."
With her size, quickness and blocking ability, Purkepyile was originally recruited by Kansas to play the middle blocker position. But Kansas needed more hitting strength on the left side, and Purkepyile filled the void, Schonewise said.
Thanks to her high school career,
Purkeypile is no stranger to high expectations or pressure. At the end of her senior season at Wamego, she was named Kansas Volleyball Player of the Year, Class 4A Player of the Year and was a first team All-State standout.
En route to these honors, Purkeypile led her team to a Kansas Class 4A State Volleyball Championship.
Purkeypile credits her older sister, Kim, a basketball player at Southwestern (Kan.) College, for getting her involved in sports.
"Kim's the type of person who could do anything she wanted to do in sports."
Purpileky said. "I grew up thinking I wanted to be just like my sister."
To compete consistently and play up to her full potential, Purkeypile said she hoped to adopt her sister's competitive spirit.
With all the transitions to college — new school, new coach, new teammates — Purkepyle said she really hadn't noticed much additional pressure.
"It's harder, but you don't have time to think about it," she said. "Here you just go to practice, work as hard as you can and then compete."
Since she came from a strong high school program and a state championship season, Purkeyple said it was hard to accept the Javhawk's early 3-11 record.
Nevertheless, she has high hopes for herself and the future of Kansas volleyball.
"It's really tough now, but this year will pay off," she said. "Next year we will know more about each other, and it will be that much better."
---
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NHL labor talks resume; season still in jeopardy
Issue of salary cap under discussion
The Associated Press
TORONTO — The art of the deal took on a sense of urgency in the hockey world yesterday when the NHL and NHL Players' Association resumed negotiations to avert a postponement to the start of the 1994-95 season.
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman has announced he will postpone the season, scheduled to open Saturday, if a new contract can't be worked out by then.
Bettman and NHLPA executive director Bob Goodenow have each said they want to strike an agreement, but the two sides differ substantially on the major issues.
The most major issue of all is something Bettman will not even acknowledge: a salary can.
Throughout the talks, the rhetoric being employed by Bettman and Goodenow has been strong but tempered, and there is a def-
intite lack of rancor between the two. But that doesn't mean there is a simple solution.
"If Gary calls for a fight, the players are ready for it," Goodenow said over the weekend. "Some of these players fight for a living. They will stick together."
Goodenow met with the Chicago Blackhawks on Thursday in Las Vegas, met Friday with the Boston Bruins and the Tampa Bay Lightning, and met Saturday with the St. Louis Blues.
Bettman and Goodenow, who said he was hopeful the season would open on time, agree that something must be done to keep small-market teams competitive, but they differ on the solutions.
The players have proposed a 5 percent tax on every team's payroll and gate receipts, which they say would raise about $40 million.
Bettman has proposed a luxury tax on teams whose payrolls exceed a league-wide salary average (approximately $15.5 million in 1993-94).
Clubs would pay a 100 percent tax if their spending is less than 10 percent over the average, and 200 percent if more than 10
"If a team is going to pay me $500,000 and then have to pay the league $1 million (in payroll tax), then it isn't going to do it," said Kelly Miller of the Washington Capitals, an NHLA vice president.
percent over.
The threat of a work stoppage comes when hockey is on the rise in the U.S.
A limit on salaries for rookies, salary arbitration and more liberalized free agency rules are other issues being contended.
"I'm not saying this in a boastful way, but with New York winning the Stanley Cup last year, now is the time for the NHL collectively to jump into the spotlight, take the ball and start running," Rangers forward Adam Graves said.
League revenues last season were approximately $700 million, up from $549,305,000 in 1992-93. Salaries also rose, to approximately $440 million last season from $356 million in 92-93.
Last season, 75 players in the NHL — topped by Wayne Gretzky's $8,366,000 contract — made at least $1 million. Just five years ago, there were only three millionaires in the league.
The players felt Bettman's wrath when he said in a letter on Aug. 1 that he would roll back training camp benefits if the contract wasn't in place by the opening of camps on Sept. 1. The players went to camp anyway.
Both the owners and players appear united in their efforts.
"He said he wants to get a deal, but what he did on Aug. 1 certainly doesn't go very far towards getting a deal," Goodenow said of Bettman. "It just makes both of our jobs that much more difficult."
"I know that Gary Bettman has told certain new owners that he would have a salary cap in place by this year," said Bob Corkum, player representative of the Anaheim Mighty Ducks. "He's a hired gun.
"He definitely came here to get a salary cap, and he's not going to fold up easily just because he's getting a little opposition from us."
"The uncertainty of the labor issue certainly is something that no one enjoys, player or coach or executive," said St. Louis Blues president Jack Quinn. "Hopefully that will come to a successful conclusion this week.
Sports facts
Sports salaries
Sports salaries
Highest annual salaries, by sport:
Baseball: Bobby Bonilla, $6 million
Basketball: David Robinson,$5.72 million
Football: Steve Young,$5.35 million
Hockey: Mario Lemieux,$6 million
SOURCE: Associated Press
$ $ $ $ $
Knight-Ridder Tribune
SPORTS in brief
KU
Kansas won first and third place in the second division. In the third division, sophomore Chessa Bieri placed first.
Women's tennis nets weekend wins
Rugby threshes Creighton
The Kansas women's tennis team won championships at the Wildcat/Travelers Express Tennis Invitational in each of the three singles divisions last weekend in Manhattan.
Sophomore Jenny Atkerson the first division with a victory over Kym Hazzard of Oklahoma State. In the third-place match, freshman Christie Sim defeated Kansas State's Divah Watson, Junior Kim Webster clinched fifth place with a victory over Oklahoma State's Kelly Press.
The Kansas rugby team defeated Creighton 114-3 Saturday at the Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
Creighton was never in the game as Kansas built a 64-3 lead at halftime. Mike Swartz led the team with two tries worth five points apiece and four conversion kicks worth two points apiece.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
Tennis star will return to game
Capriati says she is ready to battle again
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Jennifer Capriati's long-awaited return to tennis may be delayed.
The New York Times reported yesterday that Capriati will not play the European Indoors tournament at Zurich, Switzerland, next week because of a groin injury. It was not clear when she intends to play next.
In her last match, Capriati suffered a first-round loss at the 1993 U.S. Open. She had planned to return to the women's tour at Zurich.
"I was always expected to be at the top, and if I didn't win, to me that
Burned out by tennis and despairing over her appearance and relationships, Capriati, who turned pro when she was 13, told the Times she once thought about killing herself.
"I really was not happy with myself, my tennis, my life, my parents, my coaches, my friends. ... When I looked in my mirror, I actually saw this distorted image: I was so ugly and fat; I just wanted to kill myself, really."
meant I was a loser," she said. "I felt like my parents and everybody else thought that tennis was the way to make it in life. They thought it was good, but I thought no one knew or wanted to know the person who was behind my tennis life."
Now, she said, "It's just a game to me now.
Capriati, after having not touched a racket for months, said she realized she wanted to play tennis again last winter.
"It wasn't like I wanted to go back to it yet," she said. "But when I thought about the slams, I always thought, 'I'll be there again.'"
"I don't care about being No. 1, but I'm ready and willing to give it a battle, and that's what sports is all about. There's no ending to my story vet."
On May 16, she was arrested in a Coral Gables, Fla., motel and received a misdemeanor charge of marijuana possession. She went into a 28-day treatment program at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach, Fla.
Last year, Capriati withdrew from her family and in November moved into her own apartment in Boca Raton, Fla. Her legal problems began Dec. 10, 1993, when she was arrested for shoplifting but said she accidentally took the ring from the store.
Jennifer Capriati A look at the career of the teen tennis sensation,
Born: March 29, 1976,
in New York
Resides: Boca Raton, Fla.
Turned pro: March 1990
at age 13
Career prize money:
$1,451,823
Highest singles ranking: 6
Top Grand Slam finishes:
■ Australian Open;
Quarterfinals,'92,'93
■ French Open; Semifinals,'90
■ Wimbledon; Semifinals,'91
■ U.S. Open; Semifinals,'91
Passing shots
Capriati was the youngest:
U.S. Open semifinalist ('91)
Wimbledon semifinalist ('91)
Ranked in the Top 10 ('90)
SOURCE: Women's Tennis Association
Ranked in the top 10 (90)
Grand Slam semifinalist ('90
Grand Slam seed (12th, '90 Wimbledon)
Wightman Cup player ('90)
French Open, U.S. open junior champion; U.S. amateur Hard Court, U.S. amateur Clay Court champion ('BB)
Nebraska player sent to hospital
The Associated Press
LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska quarterback Tommie Frazier was admitted to a local hospital for tests on his deeply bruised right calf, coach Tom Osborne confirmed this morning.
Frazier was admitted to Bryan Hospital in Lincoln on Sunday, one day after No.2 Nebraska's 70-21 victory over Pacific.
Hospital officials said yesterday that they could neither confirm nor deny that Frazier was still in the hospital.
Officials in the Nebraska sports information office said Frazier's status for this Saturday's game against Wyoming would depend on test results and other developments in the next 24 hours.
The preliminary diagnosis was that Frazier has a vascular problem, Osborne said. A vascular problem would involve the circulatory system.
Frazier suffered the bruise in the 49-21 victory over UCLA on Sept. 17.
"Frazier is about the same," Osborne said Sunday. "Apparently it didn't get any worse though he didn't play very long, of course."
Frazier, a 6-foot-2, 205-pound junior from Bradenton, Fla., played only two series in Saturday's game. He led two touchdown drives that took 1:45 and 1:32 in the first six minutes of the game.
"Coach Osborne told me they didn't want to play me very much," Frazier said after the game. "I guess 14 points was enough. That's fine with me."
HAWKPAC MEETING TONIGHT: 8:00
Kansas Union: Walnut Room
HawkPac is an affiliate of the American - Israel Public Affairs Committee and of the KU Hillel Foundation.
Now Available!
KU Bookstore REBATE Over $2,400,000 returned to date.
Now accepting receipts from the Spring '94 semester for rebate payments.
KU
K'U
BOOKSTORES
Ks. Union 864-4640
Burge Un. 864-5697
Receipts (period 95) from cash or check purchases are eligible for a $7% rebate at the Customer Service counter of the KU Bookstores until the end of December, 1994.
KU student I.D. required.
Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
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
Restaurants
1819 W. 23rd - 842-1620
Get the daily special prices every day of the week
BLUMPLE GIRLS AND BALADS
2500 x 885,4000
BUY 1.6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢
Available at these locations:
6 02:48 w8t 14:00 - 0902%
25% Off Any Delivery Order not valid with any other offer)
ESPRESSO'HOUSE
91843-3007
BUY1 Menu Item, and get the Second One at 1/2 Price
401 N 2nd 84-277-BUY a chaseholder with first at reg-
istration for the $1,000 fee on June 30, 2016.
803 Massachusetts@832-0444
$1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Diners Before 6 P.M.
2907 W 8th-641-1688-FREE Soft Drink (with FREE refills)
PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
1711 W 23;843 B940
B24 W 129-814-2310 Crest of Our Cup of House Coffee (Certi
fied Organically Grown) with Amq All Purpose Meal
1006 Massachusetts-843-0561
10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more
SEE ADVERTISING
UNIVERSITY
BOOK
SHOP
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 119 Stauffer-Flint
JOHNNY'S TAVERN
1116 W23rd
- $1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day
PIZZA SHOPPE
电话:842-0600
$1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50 (includes food and coffee drinks)
Med Pizza $5.95, 2 for $9.95, 1g Pizza $7.95, 2 for $13.99
14h & 01o HD-842-3223+0 50m, add lpss 90m, lpss 75m,
add tgs 15m, tgs 85m, add $10m. Caps ($15m)
One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus as Carry Out Only
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
**HURRAY**
2700 town*749-2615 FRI-SUN Drink with Purchase or
A Valor Price Book
162 w/2dtr 82-1851-101 Wison 843-909-2300 Hastell
Ave. 824-5533-1013 Tacor'i Tace for $9 (NO LIMT)
487
1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ka. 66044
Retail/Merchandise
ATHLETIC STREET®
914 Massachusetts-841-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
BARR’S RIVALITY BARS
20% OFF Any purchase (0-149)
20% OFF Any purchase Over $2,000 Excluding Rentals
2429 Iowa-842-7378
745 New Hamilton G43-6282-$12.00 discount for Dearman
Uganda Lateral. $129.95 IBM Compatible
PCs.
131 Massachusetts-844-191-31*1%OFF All Apparel
Free FRIZCE T-shirt $w / Wearpiece $Over 2.50
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
23rd & Louisiana-832-1700
15%OFF Any Pro-Performance 24-Hour Diet Item
typewritten, Printer Ribbon of
JAYNAWK TROPICAL FISH
846 illos tubes. Suide Dk-842-8500>10% GF Whig Brander
PowerFilters, and All Other BrandUndergift Filters
10% Off Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid
www.nyseconference.com
840 Massachusetts-842-2442
15% Off All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
837 Massachusetts-842-2992
20% OFF KU Sweatshirts
AUD BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS+864-4640
Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book) 5¢
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-884-4640
10% Off Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply
KANAS AND BURGE UNIIONS-864-4640
50% Off Amy Clothing Clothing Ht Over $200
2340 S. Iowa 842-684-1006 FOI C14 Process (Not Valid)
LAKEHART RURT PHOTO
2340 S. Iowa 842-684-1006 FOI C14 Process (Not Valid)
708 Massachusetts+841-0334
15% OFF any regular priced purchases
MAURICE'S
708 Massachusetts-B41-0334
HELLE WOMAN
9th & New Hampshire-841-5324
10% OFF All Skin Care Products
HELLE WOMAN
910 N 2nd Bd/843-1910 I 8th Ave. Suite 1814-7544
$1.00 OFF Movie Rental(1 per visit)
622 W 120 St. (841-947-9000) w/ CD, Tape,
or LP (if Vital Value Greater than $5.00)
25% OFF All-Month Rentals
1741 Massachusetts-749-1605
25% Off All Month Rentals
SHARK'S SUPER SHOP
25% Off Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Snacks)
*Second level in the Kansai Union Bookstore at the Courtier Counter
*First level in the Burge Union Bookstore at the Courtier Counter
74 Massachusetts-B43-8933
15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
PRO BUILD
Limited Availability-B43-0682
10% OFF All Aides.
620 Management 641-110-0000, OFF All CATALOG
620 Management 641-110-0000, Off All CATALOG
620 Management 641-110-0000, Recycled Cotton
716 Massachusetts #4-181-720% OFF. OIC: JP, 3pm; Morns: 7pm
Tuesday's Tumult & 11am Tuesday on Buya Book
*Show Card After Offer
receives on resume
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
PRO BUDGET
Lawrence, Ks-8655-0692
10% OFF All Sales
10% OFF All Sales
SPRINGMASTER/WAMUSETTA
1025 N. 304-832-1100
10%OFF Any Purchase
VURO ZERO
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
1116W, 23rd-749-5208
20% OFF of all clothing (excluding sale items)
Services
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 6h8-614-6955
10% OFF All Parts
BRADY ANALYSIS
73 Massachusetts - 842-0880
15% OFF Complete Eyeglass Purchase
HICHLER PHOTO CENTER
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
10x19 Massechus kettle® 84 x 32 mm x 125 cm³ Al Allan Office
10x19 Massechus kettle® 84 x 32 mm x 125 cm³ Al Allan Office
1 W 30x24-641-6223+F2 Tens with Purchase of 7 Tans from 6223 and F2 Trial Formula One
(1/2 customer)
MANETAMERS
846 Illinois Suite E1-441-5499
$2.00 OFF Haircut or $5.00 OFF Chemical Service
15th & Kasell-832-028-125% OFF, Official or Annual
Vip Visit Plus 12 Free Condoms
**R.L.E. STADIUM BANERY**
10th Avenue 1845 W 76th St 863
Anh Vialtor or Hairlse $5.90
K-10.8 County Rd. 1057/1031|5142-1747
Buy One Small Bucket of Balls. Get One Small Bucket
7-134-025-1173
$35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames with FREE Adjustment
FREE IN TIMATE TAM
2419 laws St. 342-498-1 FIRST THESE on
purchase of a 9 Session Package (Saw $5,50)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KARSAAN
10 Stufards FL84 4362
119 Stauffer-Flint-Bm4-4358
20% OFF Any Private Classified Ad
1
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
3B
Brown faces lawsuit from female athletes
The Associated Press
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — A lawyer representing Brown's female athletes said yesterday the university discriminates against her clients, but the school said Brown has the nation's top women's sports program.
The differing opinions came on the opening day of a trial in which the school's entire athletic program is charged with sexual discrimination. This is the first such trial since 1987, when a suit against Temple University was settled after three weeks of trial.
"At a time when universities around the country are slowly waking up to their responsibilities under Title IX, Brown University has attempted to cancel active women's teams, failed to upgrade successful women's club teams to varsity status and provided its male athletes with superior treatment and support," athletes 'lawyer Lynette Labinger said at a news conference before the start of the trial.
Title IX is the 1972 federal law which prohibits sexual discrimination at educational institutions receiving federal funds.
Labinger and other attorneys from Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, a Washington public interest law firm, are representing current and future women athletes at Brown.
They claim the school's decision to cut funding for two women's teams in 1991 was discriminatory and representative of a pattern of discrimination against all Brown female athletes.
But Brown lawyer Walter Connolly Jr. told U.S. District Court Judge Raymond Pettine the school has the "preeminent athletic program for women in the country."
Brown offers 15 women's varsity sports, well above the average of 8.3 for NCAA Division I schools, and has 324 female athletes, nearly three times the average.
"If Brown University can't win this case, I don't believe any university is ever going to win (a Title IX case)," Connolly said.
He said if Brown loses the case, "university after university will be forced to eliminate men's teams."
Members of the Brown women's volleyball and gymnastics teams sued the school in 1992, one year after those teams and the men's golf and water polo teams lost school funding during a round of budget cuts. The teams were reduced to "varsity club status," meaning they were allowed to play an intercollegiate schedule and qualify for postseason competition as long as they did their own fund raising.
Funding for the two women's teams was returned after a December 1992 preliminary injunction was issued in U.S. District Court and upheld by the First Circuit Court of Appeals in April 1993.
Big Eight Leader Board
Rushing Offense
Orc Yds Yds-pg Plays Yds Yds-pg Car Yds Avg Yds-pg
Phillips,Neb 71 617 8.7 154.2
Salaam,Colo 72 410 5.7 136.6
Thompson,Okla St 77 382 5.0 127.3
Hanley,Kansas 59 321 5.4 107.0
J. Smith,Kan St 60 309 5.2 103.0
Freeman,Mo 58 250 4.3 83.3
Moore,Okla 49 241 4.9 80.3
Total Offense
Nebraska 267 1888 471.5 Nebraska 315 2334 583.5 Stewart,Colo 36 221 6.1 73.6
Kansas 220 1288 323.3 Colorado 207 1608 536.0 Allen,Okla 41 200 4.9 68.6
Colorado 193 795 365.0 Kansas 296 1834 458.5 Frazier,Neb 33 248 7.5 62.0
Oklahoma St. 165 608 212.7 Oklahoma 233 1083 361.0 Childs,Neb 31 231 7.5 57.7
Oklahoma 162 577 102.3 Oklahoma St. 212 1080 353.3 Levine,Kansas 33 229 6.9 57.2
Iowa St. 294 795 164.8 Kansas St. 189 958 319.3
Kansas St. 103 379 124.3 Iowa St. 264 1089 272.2
Missouri 104 328 109.7 Missouri 188 793 264.3
Passing Offense
Att Cp Yds Yds-pg Plays Yds Yds-pg Att Cp Yds Td Rating Pts
Colorado 74 49 613 271.0 Kansas St. 198 715 238.3 Stewart,Colo 66 44 750 5 181.1
Kansas St. 86 52 585 195.0 Oklahoma St. 198 870 290. May,Kan St 84 50 574 6 140.5
Oklahoma 81 36 506 168.7 Oklahoma 195 879 293. Preston,Kansas 46 32 351 2 139.3
Missouri 84 52 464 154.7 Nebraska 274 1174 293. Frazier,Neb 44 19 273 4 116.2
Kansas 66 46 541 135.3 Kansas 246 1340 335.0 Handy,Mo 76 48 441 2 115.3
Oklahoma St. 61 21 362 120.7 Colorado 216 1144 381.3 T.Jones,Okla St 57 27 362 2 101.8
Nebraska 68 31 498 112.0 Missouri 225 1148 382.7 McGee,Okla 81 36 506 3 101.7
Iowa St. 60 29 351 87.8 Missouri 270 1620 405. St.Clain,Iowa St 30 13 177 0 86.2
Iowa St. 60 29 351 87.8 Iowa St. 270 1620 405. Doxzon,Iowa St 23 12 132 0 83.0
Last-second Colorado catch crushes Michigan and its chance for title
By Harry Atkins The Associated Press
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Where do they go from here?
That's just one of the questions hanging over Michigan after Colorado's stunning 27-26 victory Saturday before a disbelieving crowd of 104.627 in Michigan Stadium.
"I can't believe it," said Michigan linebacker Steve Morrison. "And I think I speak for a lot of people when I say I never thought anything like that could ever happen."
What happened was that Colorado scored two touchdowns in the final 2:16 of the game. But it was the final score — the winning TD — that brought looks of disbelief to the Michigan faithful and tears of joy to Colorado.
The final touchdown came on a Hail
Mary pass from Kordell Stewart to Michael Westbrook as time expired, a miraculous play of 64 yards.
But that's only the official yardage. Stewart had retreated all the way back to his own 27-yard line when he let the ball fly. Nobody thought it had a chance of sailing all the way to the end zone. But it did.
With the 6-foot-4 Westbrook snagging the ball away from a tangle of bodies falling to the ground in the end zone, all of Colorado's dreams of a national title were resurrected — and Michigan's were dashed.
"It's ridiculous to sit here and even talk about a national championship," Morrison said. "We have no control over it. Our goal is to win the Big Ten championship.
"Yes, it is frustrating. And, yes, it hurts.
But we have to get over it."
The loss dropped Michigan (2-1) from
fourth to seventh in this week's Associated Press college football poll. Colorado (3-0) climbed from seventh to No. 5.
"This is one of the most frustrating losses we've had," Michigan coach Gary Moeller said. "But we just have to work hard and bounce back. We have had a tough schedule. But there are tougher games to come."
Colorado travels to Texas next week. The Wolverines jump into the Big Ten fray Saturday at Iowa, then return to Ann Arbor for games against Michigan State and Penn State in successive weeks.
"If you don't have character on your team, then you might fall apart over something like this," Moeller said. "That's a tough loss. But we have to rebound."
The game was full of great plays. Michigan ran a triple reverse. Colorado had a 51-yard field goal attempt clang off the crossbar.
Colorado, despite losing three of four fumbles, had 514 yards in total offense.
Michigan's Tyrone Wheatley, the preseason favorite to win the Heisman Trophy, made his first appearance since an Aug. 23 shoulder separation. He didn't enter the game until late in the first quarter and was held to 50 yards rushing and one touchdown. It was his 41st touchdown, breaking the school record he had shared with Anthony Carter.
Stewart, the nation's second-ranked passer coming into the game, was 21 of 32 for 294 vards and two touchdowns.
"For me, this was the ultimate victory," said Colorado coach Bill McCartney, a former Michigan assistant who left 12 years ago to take the Colorado job. "Personally, the ultimate victory for the team is that it puts us in a position to win the national title. But there's a long way to go."
Attention: Seniors Applications are now available for this year's H.O.P.E. Award
HONOR FOR OUTSTANDING PROGRESSIVE EDUCATOR
B. O.C.O. Sponsored by Board of Class Officers
SUNDAY SKATING CLUB
Applications available in the OAC office in the Kansas Union
STEP UP with BODY BOUTIQUE The Woman's Fitness Facility
STEP UP with BODY BOUTIQUE The Woman's Fitness Facility 60 classes per week and much more ABSOLUTELY NO JOINING FEE -VIP- 1st visit FREE 10 TANS for only $20 exp. 10/3/94 Hillcrest Plaza 749-2424
9th & Iowa • Hillcrest Plaza • 749-2424
If you can't find the Olympus Microcasette Recorder you want (the 5924 is pictured here) please call 1-800-221-3000 for more information.
The 125 Subject Notebook
OLYMPUS
MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM
Never miss another @porgstuwyxabcdefghijklmn.
OLYMPUS
Pearlcorder S924
AM/FM DIGITAL FM RECORDER
Becoming a Great Dictator
Marine Biology 234
Observing Human Anatomy
Pondering Your Future
The Poet in You
If You Rused the World
Physics 100
Internet French
The Inner Voice
Quoting Kerouac
Cafeteria Cariashn
Geology 105
Mutating Occenities
Psychology 203
Capturing Your Coach
Getting Psyched
Political Science 215
Coffee Time
The Roommate
The Meaning Of Life
Phone Numbers
Hot Phone Numbers
Phone Numbers To Die For
Reminiscing with Yourself
Speech Communications
Outlining a Screenplay
Commissperson 101
Talking While Masticating
Professor Bashir and
Artist Ibrahim
Recording Secretary
Shopping List Reminder
Ennunciation 301
Top 10 Answering Machine Greetings Chilling 405
**Thing You Should Tell Your Parent Confessions to Father**
Mock Interviewing
Massacring Shakespeare
Building Your Vocabulary
Recognizing Reality Recalling Marri. Lennin and McCartney
Soap Opera Analysis
More Electives...
Buy our food bar at regular lunch price of $4.29 and get 1 of 5 selected lunch items for 1¢ more
Offer good Mon-Sat, 11am-4pm
Tired of Pizza and Tacos? Try the...
1¢ Lunch Special
BONANZA.
Staack·Chicken·Socafood·Salad
BACCHINO VISA BACCHINO VISA BACCHINO VISA
2329 Iowa • 842-1200
10% Student Discount every day on any regularly priced menu item
Tuesdays are Double Print Days at Jayhawk Bookstore Bring in any roll of C-41 process color film for developing and get the 2nd same size set of prints FREE!
Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 843-3826
4B
Tuesday, September 27,1994
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Couple charged with child endangerment
Associated Press
PITTSBURGH (AP) — A couple who vanished for more than two weeks, leaving their four children with an eighth-grade baby sitter who used her wits and her own money to care for them, turned up Monday and were charged with child endangerment.
Bonnie Railing and James Figan originally had said they would be gone only three days, and offered no explanation for their 16-day absence. Figar's employer said he was working in New Jersey until Saturday installing floor coverings.
The couple were arrested when they appeared at a custody hearing for the children, who range in age from 2 to 10.
The sitter, 14-year-old Angela Morris, tried to maintain the household,
enlisting the help of friends, skipping
school and keeping the secret from
authorities, hoping to keep the children
out of foster homes.
"In the end, that's what happened anyway," she said in an interview.
The gas had been shut off at the house, so the teen improvised to feed and bathe the youngsters, at one point heating bath water in an electric coffee maker.
Police acting on an anonymous tip came to the house Friday and removed the children. Describing the neighborhood as a well-kept working class area, police said the house was filthy. The baby sitter took the blame for that.
Railing and Figar were arraigned Monday on four counts each of endangering the welfare of a child. Each count carries five years in jail.
Bond was set at $10,000 for Railing and $15,000 for Fignar, and both were being held in Allegheny County Jail.
"It was hard to keep the house clean, especially with the little ones," Angela said.
Bond for Fignar was higher because he also was charged with failing to appear at a hearing earlier this year on a 1993 domestic violence charge.
Family Court Judge Joseph Jaffe ruled Monday the children must remain in foster care at least until another hearing Oct. 4, said Mark Cancilla, a lawyer representing the children.
The couple had no comment as they left the hearing. The children attended, and the oldest was crying, said their grandmother, Dorothy Brooks.
The couple learned about the custody hearing, which was closed, from the children's grandmother, who said she tried to have the children turned over to her last week.
"The kids are obviously quite traumatized after having been removed from their home." Cancilla said.
"But it ended up being extended every other day until it ended up being 16 days," Angela said.
The baby sitter said the couple left their two children, ages 2 and 3, and Railing's two older children, aged 9 and 10, in her care on Sept. 7, with the promise they'd return in three days. Her payment was to be $75.
Last week, Mrs. Brooks had asked police to release the children to her care but was turned down. She said she didn't realize how long the parents had been away or how young the baby sitter was.
Mobster gets sentence reduction
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Salvatore "Sammy Bull" Gravano, the mob turncoat who helped put John Gotti and dozens of others behind bars, got his reward yesterday: 15 years off the 20-year prison term he negotiated for his testimony.
Gravano could be released into the witness protection program as early as next spring. He has already served nearly four years since his arrest.
Judge Leo Glasser said he'd "seen a very significant change" in the former Gambino family underboss and multiple murderer, so he gave him five years in prison, three years' probation and a $50 fine.
He noted that Gravano agreed to testify even though "to cooperate with the government is a violation of the criminal code punishable by death."
The sentence was passed after a hearing at which Gravano was praised by both his lawyer and a
federal prosecutor as a witness and informer who always told the truth.
His cooperation "was not just a hollow attempt to help himself ... but to make amends for his past criminal actions by helping the fight against organized crime," said his attorney, Larry Kranz.
Assistant U.S. Attorney John Gleeson, lead prosecutor in Gotti's 1992 trial, told Glasser that after a career that included 19 murders, Gravano made a decision "to do what he could to help the government. . He abided by that agreement from Day One."
Prosecutors have called Gravano, 49, the best witness ever against other mobsters — notably Gotti, former head of New York's powerful Gambino family.
Self-employed get tax burn
"Gravano has been the most significant witness in the history of organized crime in the United States," U.S. Attorney Zachary Carter said in a 31-page sentencing memo.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Several million self-employed Americans may be in for a rude surprise when they file their taxes next year. They will no longer be able to deduct a penny of the money they pay for health insurance.
The 25 percent tax deduction for the self-employed expired at the end of 1993. Lawmakers in both parties had expected to restore it and provide an even more generous break this year as part of health reform.
But the tax deduction for the self-employed has been buried for now in the wreckage of the health reform bills.
"It's kind of a shock," said Rebecca Anderson, a legislative analyst for the National Association for the Self-Employed. "It was being held hostage to the health care debate. Now we're down to the wire... everyone is saying it's not going to happen."
dent Business. "Not only is there no health care reform, but we lost even the very meager incentive that small, self-employed people had to purchase health insurance."
"It's a crime," said John Motley, vice president for government affairs of the National Federation of Independ-
Corporations can deduct 100 percent of the costs of providing insurance for their employees.
Many health reform bills, including President Clinton's and Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole's, proposed giving the self-employed a 100 percent tax deduction. It was trimmed to 80 percent in a House Democratic leaders' plan and 50 percent in Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell's proposal.
The 25 percent tax deduction, which applied to insurance bought by the self-employed for themselves, spouses and dependents, cost the Treasury about $500 million a year. Expanding it to 100 percent would cost $2.5 billion a year.
More than 12 million Americans are self-employed for part or all of their livelihood, and almost 3 million have no health insurance, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute.
WASHINGTON — After half a century as the main source of development loans, the World Bank is getting welcome competition from private lenders and shifting more attention to human resources and the environment, its president said yesterday.
World Bank to slow lending
The Associated Press
"The world is changing, and the bank is changing with it," Bank President Lewis T. Preston said prior to his departure to this week's anniversary meeting of the 179-nation bank and its sister agency, the International Monetary Fund, in Madrid.
Preston said increased private capital flowing into Latin America, east Asia and other areas is allowing the bank to step aside and concentrate on areas still ignored by private investment.
In recent years, the bulk of borrowing among developing countries has shifted dramatically to private creditors.
According to the Institute of International Finance, which represents major bankers, private
institutions lent $17.4 billion to developing countries in 1990, compared to $35.2 billion by governments and multilateral institutions. This year, the countries' borrowing from private sources is put at $55.5 billion, compared to $19.6 billion from official creditors.
Despite decreasing development lending by the bank, Preston said, budget constraints in the developed world still pose a challenge for the bank in meeting new demands for capital in the former Soviet Union and elsewhere.
"We are prepared to lend in countries that can use the money," said Preston, "but there is no point in shoveling it at countries who could get private-sector funds."
Preston said the bank is willing to provide guarantees against political risks, with private lenders assuming the commercial risk.
This includes bank participation, for example in a toll road project, where the bank takes on the risk of the government meeting its commitments while the private lender assumes the risk of the road having enough traffic to pay for itself.
Financial institutions to help poor
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Regulators yesterday issued the first top-to-bottom overhaul in 17 years of the rules requiring commercial banks and savings institutions to serve minorities and poor people.
A Clinton administration regulator said the new rules stressed performance over paperwork but at least one agency predicted more paperwork for many bankers. And activists complained the government let bankers talk it into watering down an earlier version of the rules.
"In total, it's a big disappointment because we thought we were going to move forward and not just stay
with the same lax regulation we have now," said attorney Michelle Meier of Consumer's Union.
The four agencies overseeing banks and savings institutions released for 45 days of public comment the regulations for enforcing the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977. If approved in final form, they would take full effect July 1, 1996.
Comptroller of the Currency Eugene A. Ludwig, whose agency is part of the Treasury Department and oversees nationally chartered banks, said regulators met President Clinton's July 1993 challenge to simultaneously reduce banks' paperwork burden and hold them to higher lending standards.
For less than a dollar a day both will give you the power you need to survive this semester.
One java, piping bot, no sugar and bold the moo juice.
With an Apple Computer Loan, it's now easier than ever to buy a Macintosh* personal computer. In fact, with Apple's special low interest and easy terms, you can own a Mac" for as little as $23 per month†. Buy any select Macintosh now, and you'll also get something no other computer offers: the Apple student software set. It includes a program designed to help you with all aspects of writing papers. A personal organizer/calendar created specifically for
Macintosh Performa* 636 4/250,
Apple Color Plus 14" Display, AppleDesign
Keyboard and mouse.
Only $1,399.00.
Macintosh Performa 636 B/250 with
CD-ROM, Apple Color Plus 14" Display, AppleDesign
Keyboard and mouse.
Only $1,399.00.
students (the only one of its kind). And the Internet Companion to help you tap into on-line resources for researching your papers. It even includes ClarisWorks, an integrated package complete with database, spreadsheet, word processing software and more. All at special low student pricing. With an offer this good, it's the best time ever to discover the power every student needs. The power to be your best. Apple
Apple
POWER uncooghr.
r to be your Best at KU
POWER
unlockrk.
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union
technology
center
KU
VISA
MasterCard
Discover
union technology center
KU
VISA
MasterCard
Discover
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burge Union * Level 3 * 913/864-5690
Offer expires October 17, 1994. Available only with applicable latex. © 1994 Apple Computer Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the apple logo, Macintosh, Performax and "The power to be your best" are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. AppleDesign and Mac are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. ClarityWorks is a registered trademark of Clarke Corporation. £23 per month is an estimated bonus on an Apple Computer Loan @ $485.81 per system. Price loans and amount are accepted without notice. Student loan refranchiser or representative for current system prices. A 5% loan origination will be added to the required loan amount. The interest rate is variable, based on the commercial paper rate plus 5.5%. For the month of August 1994, the interest rate was 10.0%, with an APR of 13.6%. Your loan term with no prepayment period. The monthly payment should assume no deferment or interest. Students may defer principal payments up to 4 years, until graduation. Delivery will change your monthly payments. The Apple Computer Loan is subject to credit approval.
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
5B
Bosnia embargo under fire
The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONS—Bosnian leaders have asked the United States to reconsider any push for early lifting of the U.N. arms embargo because it could work against them in their conflict with the Serbs, U.S. Ambassador Madeleine Albright said yesterday.
Other U.S. officials told The Associated Press that President Clinton would propose a resolution on Oct. 15, as promised to Congress, but they said it may call for a delay in lifting the weapons ban or ask that it be conditioned on the Bosnian-Serbs' actions in the former Yugoslav republic.
In some parts of the Bosnian government there is growing concern that immediate lifting of the embargo "may not be the wisest idea," said a senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity. He said some Bosnian leaders feared the Serbs might respond with a major offensive.
Clinton devoted only 90 words to Bosnia in his U.N. address yesterday, and what may be most significant was what he did not say: whether he intends to honor his pledge to provide the Muslim-led government with weapons.
Albright, in a news conference afterward, said there were consequences to the Bosnians if the embargo were lifted.
At the same time, Albright acknowledged Clinton was having difficulty persuading Russia to support a lifting of the embargo.
However, she denounced as inaccurate various newspaper accounts that suggested Clinton was searching for a way out of his promise to Congress to propose a resolution to the U.N. Security Council by Oct. 15.
But the ambassador said Russia was trying to persuade Bosnian-Serbs to accept a proposal to end the war. It would require the Serbs to relinquish about one-third of the territory they have captured.
Administration officials said the Bosnians were apprehensive that an influx of weapons, even to their forces, might escalate the conflict in the former Yugoslav republic.
Serbs penetrate U.N. weapons depot
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Underscoring their contempt for the United Nations, Serbs entered a U.N. weapons compound and staged "training exercises" with anti-aircraft guns stored there, officials said yesterday.
"Obviously the situation is tense," Lt. Col. Tim Spicer, a U.N. military spokesman in Sarajevo, said of the Bosnian Serb action Sunday at a weapons depot in Lukavica. "We believe this is a direct result of the airstrike."
NATO jets strafed and bombed a Serb tank near Sarajevo Thursday in retaliation for Serb attacks on French peacekeepers. It was the fourth NATO strike on Serb ground positions this year.
But Bosnian Serbs, hobbled by newly tightened U.N. sanctions for
rejecting a peace plan, seem only to have dug their heels in deeper.
They increased the pressure on HIU.
They increased the pressure on U.N. peacekeepers yesterday by: --denying permission for U.N. helicopter flights or convoys.
—announcing a new requirement that U.N. military vehicles get clearance three days in advance of any movements through Serb-held territory.
—making a veiled threat to shoot at any U.N. planes landing at the airport, dealing a setback to hopes of resuming Sarajevo's vital aid airlift.
Spicer said "a strong protest" was lodged with Bosnian Serbs after they warned Sunday that they could no longer guarantee safety of planes using the Sarajevo airport. A similar threat prompted Pope John Paul II to cancel a planned pilgrimage to Sarajevo this month.
Killer plague spreads through India
SURAT, India — Authorities listed no plague deaths in this industrial city yesterday for the first time in six days, but they reported a disturbing development: an outbreak of plague in a neighboring state.
The Associated Press
Since pneumonic plague was first reported in Surat Sept. 20, at least 51 people have died, more than 450 have been hospitalized and an estimated 400,000 have fled the city. Unofficial death tolls run as high as 300.
Soldiers searched shantytowns for more plague victims and guarded Surat's main hospital to stop infections patients from fleeing. Officials said 56 new plague cases were recorded in the city.
South of Surat, officials in Maharashtra state reported 31 cases of bubonic plague — a less deadly form of the disease that ravaged 14th century Europe and Asia and was known as "the Black Death."
Black Death
Outbreaks of Pneumonic plague, a strain of Bubonic plague, have a 90 percent mortality rate if untreated. A look at the disease:
Plague transmission: Bubonic plague: Two to five days before symptoms start
0 Day 1 2 3 4 5 Day 6
Symptoms
Fever, chills, vomiting of blood, headache, body pains, thirst, pneumonia, bloating, swollen and bursting lymph glands If untreated, causes death within two to six days.
Pneumonic plague
New victim inhales tiny infected droplets coughed up by Bubonic plague victim If unc
Bubonic plague bacterium carried by fleas
Fleas infect rats with bacteria
Symptoms
Fever, chills, vomiting of blood, headache, body pains, thirst, pneumonia, bloating, swollen and bursting lymph glands
If untreated, causes death within two to six days.
Bubonic plague bacterium carried by fleas
Fleas infect rats with bacteria
Rats or fleas bite humans
0 Day 1 2 3 4 5 Day 6
| | | | | | | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |
3
U.N. council to study Rwandan massacre
SOURCE: Dorland's illustrated Medical Dictionary
Annual, research by BRENA SINK, PMK
Medical Annual; research by BRENA SINK, PMK
The Associated Press
RWANDA — The Tutsi-installed government accused the U.N. relief agency yesterday of trying to discourage more than 2 million civil war refugees from returning home.
President Pasteur Bizimungu said the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees failed to provide proof supporting its allegations last week that Tutsi troops massacred Hutu refugees who came back.
Sylvanla Foa, spokeswoman at UNHCR headquarters in Geneva, disputed Bizimungu's charges about the agency's massacre report last week
"Our mandate at UNHCR is to protect refugees," she said. "This study was done to look at mechanisms by which we could speed up the repatriation process. In the course of this we found reason for concern. Our first responsibility is to the refugees and for this reason we brought the findings of this study to the attention of the Rwandan government."
Bizimungu said the UNHCR was trying to derail debate in the U.N. Security Council on how to disarm Hutu
militiamen and former soldiers so it could "keep themselves in jobs."
"There is manipulation somewhere.
... The UNHCR is not neutral. It is playing a negative role. We challenge them once again to show us evidence of bodies," he said.
Bizimungu said he led a government delegation to massacre sites blamed on government troops by the UNHCR, but found only mass graves of Rwandans killed by Hutu militias in April. He said UNHCR officials refused to cooperate in the government's investigation.
African leaders in on-air scuffle
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — The African National Congress called yesterday for an investigation of the Zulu national leader after he and his bodyguards stormed a television studio and scuffed on-air with a political rival.
Home Affairs Minister Mangosuthu Buthelezi's heavy-handed attempt to silence a political opponent was the latest twist in his power struggle with the Zulu king — and evidence of tensions that could explode into renewed widespread fighting.
The scuffle at the South African Broadcasting Corporation's studios in KwaZulu-Natal was broadcast live, and viewers saw a handgun in the hands of one Buthelezi's bodyguards. It was unclear who the gun belonged to, and no shots were fired.
Buthelezi, head of the Inkatha Freedom Party, said Prince Sifiso Zulu threatened him with the gun. But Zulu and SABC chief executive Zwelakhe Sisulu said the gun came from a Buthelezi bodyguard.
"Buthelezi's actions, seen by millions of TV viewers all over South Africa, amount to a frontal attack on freedom of speech and freedom of the press and are incompatible with the provisions of the Constitution," the ANC said in a statement.
Fourteen ANC lawmakers issued a separate statement, saying Buthelezi's behavior was especially troubling because of his status as a Cabinet member.
The Associated Press
Iran looks to Russia for weapons resources
WASHINGTON — The CIA believes Iran will be able to build its nuclear weapons in eight to 10 years, and that it is focusing on Russia as a potential source of key materials and direction, according to the spy agency's chief.
defenses, Iran has put a high priority on acquiring nuclear weapons.
R. James Woolsey, the director of central intelligence, told a Washington think tank that in addition to an aggressive effort to strengthen its conventional
Woolsey spoke to a conference sponsored by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy Friday. A text of his prepared remarks was released by the institute yesterday.
"Iran has been particularly active in trying to purchase nuclear materials or technology clandestinely from Russian sources," Woolsey said. He did not elaborate on the Russian connection, but he added that Iran also is trying to buy fully fabricated nuclear weapons as a shortcut to becoming a nuclear power.
Iran, as a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, has officially forsworn any nuclear weapons ambitions. It has not acknowledged trying to build nuclear weapons.
Woolsey also sounded an alarm about Iraq's military ambitions.
LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION AND ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB
PRESENT THE SECOND ANNUAL EVENT FOR
Stepping Out Against Breast Cancer
A benefit dance to increase awareness
Featuring
THE BENDERS
Let Byron, Johnny, Kevin and Larry bring back all those memories from the '50s &'60s as you dance the night away in support of breast cancer awareness. This year 182,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer and 46,000 women will die. We need your help to get the word out. Early detection saves lives. We must speak out loudly and together.
ALVAMAR COUNTRY CLUB $12.50 PER PERSON/$25 PER COUPLE
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30
8 P.M. TO MIDNIGHT
All proceeds from this event will benefit women who are unable to afford regular mammograms and medical treatment. Tickets available in LMH Administration office during regular business hours.
*For more information, please call 749-6132
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
1-800-527-TEST
Who do you know that is an... OUTSTANDING SENIOR?
We are now accepting nominations for the 1995 Hilltopper Awards
- Anyone may nominate an outstanding senior.
Nomination forms available at 400 Kansas Union (OAC) or 428 Kansas Union (Jayhawker Office).
Nominations must be turned in to 400 or 428 Kansas Union by October 6 at 5p.m.
All nominees will receive an application.
1995 HILLTOPPER Jayhawker Yearbook 428 Kansas Union 864-3728
---
1
Tuesday, September 27,1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Metropolis BBS
839-0041
Make an impression plaques,awards,& gifts
Jaybowl ENGRAVING
864-3545 • kansas union • level I
KMS JOICO
NEXUS BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HARDWARE
520 West 23rd
841-5885
PELL MICHEL REDREN
Dickinson
Trial by Jury R 4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Next Karate Kid P 4:35, 7:15, 9:35
Forest Gump P16-13 8:00, 8:00
Corrina Corrina P10 4:30, 7:00, 9:45
Natural Born Killers P10 4:30, 7:10, 9:50
Terminal Volocity P10-13 4:45, 7:15, 9:40
$3 Primetime Show.(s) Hearing Baby
Senior Citizen Away! Imprested Trees
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
MON, SEPT 26 TO WED, SEPT. 28
Japanese LGNC Film Fest
In the Realm of the Senses
Mon. 9:30 PM
Tues. 7:00 PM
TOUCH DESKBOARD
Tues. 9:30 PM
Wed. 7:00 PM
OKOGE
9:30 PM
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM, ADULTS $1.00
( LIMITED TO SEATING )
SENIOR CIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
1012 MASSAL HOSSETT (841) 6191
TIMECOP $ ^{R} $ 5:00,7:15,9:30
HILLCREST
825/OWA 411-5191
A Simple Twist of Fate PG-13 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
Milk Money PG-13 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
The Client PG-13 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
Color of Night R 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
Glasses & Dress Poses PG-13 5:00, 7:35
CINEMA TWIN
JUILIOWA 841 5191
$1.25
$Speed^{R}$ 5:00, 7:20, 9:40
The Crow $^{R}$ 5:00, 7:30, 9:40
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
Tues. Sept. 27
Cherry Poppin Daddies
Eudoras
18+Over
Wed, Sept. 28
GLO Benifit, Slackjaw
Helen Grace, Happy Teryaki 6
19 + Over
Thurs. Sept. 29
Note Music Showcase, The Lupins
James Graurholtz, The Brandos
18 + Over
Fri. Sept. 30
Stick
Action Man
18+Over
Set. Oct. 1
Sebadoh, 18+Over
Doo Rag
ButterGlory, Adv.Tix
28 HARBOUR LIGHTS
1037 Main Street, Monmouthville
West Coast Saloon
25K POOL
Game Day Bus
Late-Night Grill
until 1 a.m.
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
Belgian official is most likely next head of NATO alliance
The Associated Press
BRUSSELS, Belgium — Belgium's foreign minister, who conducts symphonies in his spare time, gained support of NATO nations yesterday to lead the Western alliance.
At a meeting at NATO headquarters, ambassadors from the 16 member nations offered Willy Claes the job of secretary-general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. He would replace Manfred Woerner, a former German defense minister, who died of cancer Aug.13.
The NATO foreign ministers are likely to formally approve the appointment of Claes this week, possibly during the U.N. General Assembly session in New York.
In a statement, the alliance said the ambassadors asked Claes "if he was ready to serve as NATO secretary-general, if allied governments so decide."
Claes told Belgian radio from New York, "I gave a positive answer."
During a lifetime in Belgian politics, Claes, 55, has built a reputation as a tough negotiator and a shrewd consensus-builder. He is a moderate Socialist who has defended strong ties between the United States and Europe.
His approval is expected to be a formality. The appointment is normally for four years with the possibility of a year extension. Werner served for six years.
As a student, Claes was torn between politics or a career in music. He is a talented pianist and still regularly wields the baton as a guest conductor for Belgian orchestras.
He was born Nov. 24, 1938, in the northeastern city of Hasselt. He won a seat in the national legislature in 1968 and first entered government four years later.
True Math.
your annual savings
AT&T True USA™ Savings
MCI Friends & Family® Basic
$25 $30 $40 $50 $60 $70 $80 $90 $100
your monthly phone bill
It's true—if you live off campus, AT&T True USA Savings really could save you more. Just look up your average monthly long distance bill on the chart, and see for yourself.
You don't have to be a calc professor to see you could save more with AT&T True USA $ ^{ \mathrm{SM}} $ Savings.
Now here's why. AT&T's and MCI's basic rates start off about the same. Then, with Friends and Family, MCI advertises 20% off your long distance calls, but—here's the catch-only if they're to MCI users who are also on your calling circle list. Truth is, two-thirds of most Friends and Family members' calls aren't to those selected people. So the average discount you end up seeing on your bill is only 6%.* Not the 20% you expected.
AT&T True USA Savings is a whole lot simpler. Spend $25 a month, and we'll subtract 20% off your bill.The full 20% not some conditional percentage. Spend $75 a month, and we'l take 30% off. You can save on calls to anyone, anytime anywhere in the good old U.S. of A** No restrictions. No calling circles. No disappointments.
So take a good look at the chart (you can ask a math major for help) and check out who's saving you what. We think you'll find you could be saving a lot more with AT&T Call 1800-TRUE-USA. And get all the savings you expect.
1 800-TRUE-USA $ ^{SM} $
AT&T. Your True Voice."
- Discount off MCI basic rates. Friends & Family provides an extra discount on qualifying calls.
* Discount off AIRT basic residential rates. Available in most areas. Certain exclusions apply.
AT&T
© 1994 AT&T
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
7B
GOP to sign contract with America
Democrats predict revert to Reaganism
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Hoping to thwart a major Republican campaign offensive, the White House warned yesterday the House GOP's platform was "warmed-over Reaganism" that would loot Social Security and Medicare to shower tax cuts on the rich.
The White House attack came a day before more than 300 Republican House candidates, a mix of incumbents and challengers, were to gather on the Capitol steps to sign a "Contract with America" that pledges swift action on a 10-point agenda if voters give Republicans a House majority for the first time since 1954.
The contract promises votes early next year on congressional term limits, welfare reform, new anti-crime measures and an array of spending and economic initiatives, from a balanced budget amendment to tax cuts for capital gains and some families.
"This is a fraud and I think the American people need to know that," said White House chief of staff Leon Panetta. "This is horrendous economic policy," added senior Clinton economic adviser Robert Rubin, who called the GOPpolicy a recipe to revive the huge deficits, higher interest rates and sluggish economic growth of the Bush administration.
To back up the White House push, the Democratic National Committee purchased time for radio ads in 20 markets with competitive House contests. The ads say the Republicans are promising "more tax breaks for the rich, forcing devastating cuts in Medicare and Social Security. It's Republican politics as usual."
Republicans labeled the White House presentation "the big lie" and suggested Democrats were panicked because they felt a Republican tide growing with just more than a month to go before the midterm elections. "They have no agenda now because the American people rejected theirs, so all they can do now is whine and carp," said Ed Gillespie, the House Republican Conference spokesman.
But Republicans refused to say specifically where they would find the cuts to balance the budget, leaving them open to the White House assertion that the document was little more than a political gimmick.
House focused solely on the spending and economic aspects of the GOP document, an area even many Republican strategists concede privately is open to criticism.
In its pre-emptive strike, the White
For example, a cost analysis prepared by House Republicans said there are "no costs" to passing a balanced budget amendment and line-item veto.
Labeling that assertion "a flim-flam," Panetta said it would take at least $743 billion in cuts to balance the budget within five years or $1.2 trillion to do it in seven years.
"Do they not have a responsibility then to tell us where they would find these cuts?" Panetta said.
The Republicans' task would be even harder, because budget rules also require them to pay for the tax cuts promised in the contract, including $56 billion to reduce capital gains taxes and $6.5 billion to raise estate and gift tax exclusions — cuts the White House noted would go predominantly to the wealthy.
All told, Panetta said that balancing the budget and delivering the tax cuts would cost $1 trillion over five years, or $1.6 trillion over seven, and that Republicans had detailed proposed cuts that would cover only a sliver of that.
Reforms to limit lobbying,no more ski trips
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A sweeppackage of reforms banning most gifts to members of Congress and imposing strict new reporting requirements on lobbyists won agreement yesterday from House and Senate negotiators.
The bill appeared to be on a fast track to passage, with action in the House scheduled for today. The Senate is expected to act soon, and supporters said they anticipated no serious opposition.
"This makes a historic change," said Rep. John Bryant, D-Texas, the bill's chief house sponsor. "These limits have never existed before."
At the core of the bill is a requirement that all professional lobbyists, those whose business is to influence government policy, register and disclose who they are working for, how much they are paid and the issues on which they are lobbying.
It would, for the first time, cover not
only the more traditional approach of lobbying in person, but the growing practice of "grassroots" lobbying, generating contacts with Congress by mail, telephone, fax, computer and advertising.
The bill is designed to close loopholes that render the current lobby registration law, in effect since 1947. Of the more than 10,000 lobbyists estimated to work in Washington, fewer than half are registered under that law. And those who do register seldom report meaningful details about their activities.
More explosive than the new lobbying rules are provisions that would ban virtually all gifts to members of Congress from lobbyists and bar acceptance of anything more lavish than a $20 meal from non-lobbyists.
A particular target of Bryant and Senate sponsor Carl Levin, D-Mich., is the free charity golf, tennis and ski outings that have embarrassed lawmakers caught in vacation spots by
Lawmakers still would be able to accept travel expenses if they are related to an official function, such as fact finding or delivering a speech.
television cameras. Those trips, where members of Congress rub elbows with lobbyists, would be outlawed under the bill.
Lobbyists would be barred from giving to a member's legal defense fund, or to a charitable foundation controlled by a lawmaker.
Exemptions from the ban included home-state products given for promotional purposes, inexpensive items like T-shirts, and attendance at certain "widely attended" events like receptions and dinners, and meals and entertainment in a lawmaker's home state.
Public interest groups applauded the bill. Common Cause, the self-styled citizens lobby, called it "amajor breakthrough in the fight to stop lobbyists from financing the lifestyles of members of Congress."
BOSTON — Sen. Edward M. Kennedy is finding himself doing some unusual things this campaign, hanging out with Aerosmith, going negative and running neck-and-neck with a Republican.
The Associated Press
Kennedy to face challenger
Kennedy's opponent is Mitt Romney, an energetic, clean-cut millionaire who is convinced and has convinced other Republican that 1994 is the year Kennedy comes home from Washington for good.
Kennedy hopes they know him as a powerful senator who has fought for education, health care, job training, child care and other issues, and repeatedly steered federal dollars to Massachusetts.
"After many years there are some serious questions being raised, indeed for the first time among his own supporters, about whether it would be best for him to continue or for him to be replaced," said Paul Watanabe, political science professor at the University of Massachusetts-Boston.
Both candidates, for different reasons, are banking on a key premise: Voters know who Kennedy is and what he has done.
"He says longevity, meaning experience, is not a vice but a virtue." Watanabe said. "The prime vulture attached to that clout."
But the picture painted by Romney, son of former Michigan Gov. George Romney, is of an old, out-of-touch liberal who has been in Senate far too long, pushing massive government programs that create problems rather than solve them.
Ronney spent Thursday chatting up Republican fund-raisers in Washington. Nevertheless, to protect his "outsider" image, Ronney says he doesn't want Republican bigwigs coming to Massachusetts to campaign
Earlier this month, the Boston hard rock group Aerosmith performed at a Kennedy fund-raiser.
And, for the first time in 32 years, Kennedy has run negative ads, hitting Romney for his role as a venture capitalist. The two have traded charges for two weeks.
"Ted Kennedy's distorted negative attacks on me are wrong," Romney responded, "and more than anything else, these cynical old-style politics prove he's been in Washington too long."
Senator accused of funneling money
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A Virginia congressman accused Sen. Robert Byrd of "greed and abuse of power" yesterday for steering 27 percent of next year's funds for special road projects to Byrd's home state of West Virginia.
Hours after the charge was leveled by Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., Byrd agreed to pare back the $95 million he had won for his state by an unspecified amount, citing Congress' need to quickly finish its work for the year.
state.
"It shouldn't hang up over one man's petulance," Byrd said in an interview.
In mounting his latest attack against Byrd, who chairs the Senate Appropriations Committee, Wolf was taking on a man whom he and other foes have long accused of funneling a disproportionate amount of federal money to his small, economically depressed
Byrd, the 76-year-old senior Democrat in the Senate, has not exactly been embarrassed by his colleagues' accusations. He became chairman of the appropriations committee in 1989, a panel that controls one-third of the $1.5 trillion federal budget, and unabashedly promised to steer as much money as he could to West Virginia.
By 1990 he already had overseen bills that poured $1 billion into the state.
Of the $352 million for so-called highway demonstration projects that House and Senate negotiators have put in the 1995 transportation appropriations bill, $95 million was to be for West Virginia before Byrd agreed to the reduction. In each of the past five years, Byrd has usually steered at least 30 percent of the road-building money to his state, Wolf said.
Defense budget up for final vote
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — House-Senate negotiators completed work yesterday on a $244 billion defense budget that includes money for the B-2 bomber, the SR-71 Blackbird spy plane and the C-17 transport.
The defense appropriations bill for the fiscal year beginning Saturday includes most of the military priorities laid out by President Clinton in his budget request.
Final votes on the measure in the House and Senate are expected within the next two weeks.
The measure agreed to in the House-Senate conference committee totals $3.5 billion more than this year's defense appropriations budget. But, when adjusted for inflation, it amounts to roughly level funding or even a slight decrease in buying power.
Negotiators resolved several key areas of disagreement between the House and Senate in the Senate's favor. In some areas where the House favored eliminating or sharply reducing funding requested by Clinton, the Senate supported the president's position.
Ex-United Way head faces accusations
The Associated Press
ALEXANDRIA, Va. — The longtime president of United Way, removed from his post over allegations of lavish spending with charity money, was ordered yesterday to stand trial in February on charges he helped loot $1.5 million.
William Aramony has pleaded not guilty to charges he diverted funds to buy a New York City apartment for his girlfriend, among other things.
Aramony, Stephen J. Paulachak, 49, and Thomas J. Merlo, 63, were charged in a 71-count indictment. Paulachak and Merlo also pleaded not guilty. A preliminary hearing was set for Jan. 6.
CD from Recycled Music Center (20% OFF (CD's, Tapes, Movies, Video Games) Tuesday & 15% More (in cash or credit) on Buy Backs • Show Card After Offer)
and movie from Video Biz (2 for 1 Video Rental Monday-Thursday, limit one offer per day) for romantic evening.
necklace from Kizer-Cummings
(15% OFF Non-Sale Gold Chains)
personal ‘love note’ placed in Kansan
(20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad)
late night conversation at Espress O’House
($1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50, includes food and coffee drinks)
G.Q. Smooth
CARD MEMBER SINCE SEPTEMBER 5, 1994
“Winning the heart of my dream girl is not easy. However, with this card it certainly is less expensive.”
It doesn’t matter how you spend your time, the Kansan Card can help you save your money.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
Available for $2 at:
University Daily Kansan (119 Stauffer-Flint), The University Book Shop, Jayhawk Bookstore, Kansas Union (2nd level courtesy counter), and Burge Union (1st level courtesy counter).
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
8B
Tuesday, September 27,1994
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
SIMPSON TRIAL
Twelve-peer primer
Jury selection begins Monday and the process is expected to last at least a month. How process works:
Juror pool compiled:
✓ Tax rolls
✓ Voting lists
✓ Telephone directories
Juror list drawn randomly
Typical trial 50 potential jurors
Simpson trial 1.000
男女
Juror list drawn randomly 50 potential jurors
Written screening: Oral screening:
Jurors are screened
Oral screening:
> Potential jurors answer questionnaire with issues pertaining to case
> Simpson trial:
> Questionnaire expected to run at least 50 pages
▶ Voire dîre: Each potential juror is questioned by defense, prosecution lawyers
Lawyers will select:
Twelve impartial community members
SOURCE: Black's Law Dictionary, news reports,
World Bank; research by BRENDA SIMK
Lawyers can dismiss candidates: because of opinions, interests which challenge the ability to remain impartial
Reasons lawyers can dismiss
▶ *For cause:* lawyers state reason for dismissing candidate
> Peremptory challenges:
limited number of rejections
lawyers can make without
giving justification
男 女
Court labors to find Simpson jury
Media and finances play role in selection
LOS ANGELES - O.J. Simpson quietly sang, "A new day has begun ..." before facing some of his potential jurors Monday as the most-watched murder trial in U.S. history got under way.
Jury candidates were identified only by numbers. The first to be questioned was No. 0032. Simpson wore No. 32 as a college and professional football star, and that didn't go unnoticed.
"I don't know if this is an omen."
said Superior Court Judge Lance Itto.
After questioning potential jurors about whether serving would be a hardship, to excused 112 of the first 219 called.
The judge divided those remaining into groups, those who said they definitely could serve and those who said they might be able to, and then asked them to explain their positions. Sixty-five had said they definitely could serve.
Of the potential jurors called, 212 reported Monday and had to pass a phalanx of news crews, demonstrators and entrepreneurs outside the courthouse, hawking everything from T-shirts and caps to buttons reading: "O.J. Juror Reject, Didn't Make the Cut."
Inside, they gathered in a large 11th floor jury assembly room, and Ito introduced the principal players in the case, including Simpson. The former football star then stood up and said, "Good afternoon."
Simpson sat at a table with his hands in his lap. He tried to make eye contact with the jury candidates, but few looked at him.
He is charged with the slaying deaths of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman on June 12.
"This is probably the most important decision you'll make in your personal life," It told the group. "It's the most important decision of any American citizen. I need a fair jury."
Among those excused were at least one person who was physically disabled and some whose employers would pay for only 10 days of jury service.
"Five dollars a day doesn't quite make it," Ito said of the money the county will pay the iurors.
The trial could last up to six months and some jurors were apparently scared off by the prospect they might have to be sequestered. But the biggest problem, the judge indicated, was financial.
Those who made the first cut were told to fill out a 75-page questionnaire probing their personal lives as well as their attitudes toward the Simpson case. A groan came up when it told the crowd how long the form was.
He warned them that reporters may be reviewing the answers and that anyone who wanted to keep their information confidential should make a note for the judge.
"I don't think you should have to sacrifice the sanctity of your personal life for this case," he said.
Meanwhile, prosecutors asked that Ito delay the individual questioning of jury prospects until after a crucial hearing on the admissibility of DNA evidence. The judge scheduled a hearing for Wednesday to consider the prosecution's request.
Ito has proposed selecting 12 jurors and eight alternates, then sending them home during the DNA hearing.
But prosecutors contend the hearing could take a month, during which jurors would be exposed to publicity and conversations that might prejudice them.
They suggested having prospective jurors fill out the questionnaires, then wait until sometime in November when they would return for personal questioning.
Ito has said he will decide whether to sequester the jury after hearing from the prospective jurors how publicity has affected them.
About 1,000 people have received summonses for the trial. They are being brought into court in smaller groups for lack of space.
Identifying prospective jurors only by numbers, defense lawyers and prosecutors reviewed those the judge initially planned to excuse and offered their own suggestions.
In one case, Ito was going to drop a woman who said she is diabetic and cares for her 85-year-old mother and a husband with heart problems. But defense attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr. asked that the woman be questioned further, and Ito agreed.
The Associated Press
Media trailers filled a nearby parking lot and hot dog vendors competed with caterers who delivered meals to some news organizations.
The station ended up not hiring the performers.
Simpson's court trial creates circus, but no clowns are allowed
"It was a last minute decision ... you can only be so irreverent. We wanted to be involved, but it's not something that is totally congruent to humor," said Steve Perun, program director for KIISFM. He said the ad had cost about $20,000.
LOS ANGELES — A radio station had promised the start of the O.J. Simpson trial yesterday would be a circus. The acrobats didn't make it, but the scene outside the courthouse was still, well, a circus.
Simpson faces two first-degree murder charges in the June 12 stabbing deaths of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman.
crowded the downtown street outside the block-long courhouse. They were kept at bay by orange pylons and rope that carved out an aisle for attorneys and potential jurors to walk down the stairs to the building's entrance.
About 200 people, mostly reporters.
"It's very annoying," defense attorney David Herriford said as he waited for an elevator inside the building. "In the attorney lounge it's the main subject of discussion... Most are concerned about the extra five minutes at the elevator, about pushing through the crowds. It takes longer to get in and out."
On Sunday, the KIS-FM took out a full-page ad in the Los Angeles Times featuring a picture of acrobats and promising a "Media Circus provided by Circus
Among those trying to get into the courthouse were 219 prospective jurors
who were told to appear before Superior Court Judge Lance Ito.
If their voices could be heard above the ruckus, that is.
In a more serious tone, Women Against Violence draped long banners along a wall by the courthouse decrying spousal abuse.
Nearby, James Horton was selling "Free O.J." T-shirts and caps embossed with "Shapiro vs. Clark" scrawled atop two opposing box gloves.
Media swarms to cover O.J.
LOS ANGELES — You saw dozens of them camped outside O.J. Simpson's Brentwood mansion for days on end armed with coolers and satellite trucks, lawn chairs and cellular phones.
"It so often leads to murder," said Stephanie Boggs of West Hollywood. "I think this is an opportunity to get our voices heard and turn it around."
The Associated Press
Well, camp O.J. has moved to the courthouse, concentrating the power of at least 75 news organizations at Simpson trial coverage headquarters and bringing new meaning to the word stakeout.
Live broadcasts have been put in some doubt by Judge Lance Ito's threat last week to limit media coverage, but reporters are here in force to tell the story one way or another.
Straddling the vehicles are massive wood and iron scaffolds built to allow TV networks and their affiliates to tape their reports away from courthouse crowds with downtown as a backdrop.
The parking lot across the street has been rented by the Radio and Television News Association, coordinator of the double murder trial coverage, and is now home to 40-plus satellite trucks and air-conditioned trailers.
Camp O.J. is not without amenities, including five portable toilets (cleaned daily), four 24-hour security guards, daily trash pickup, 600 phone lines and, for some, coffee, donuts and catered lunches.
The cost of bringing the Simpson trial to every living room in America?
Just readying the press rooms cost $500,000, RTNA president Milli Martinez said. Rental of the parking lot next to the quakedamaged Hall of Justice is $24,000 a month. Throw in the cost of electricity, fiber optic cables and the rest and a six-month trial could cost the group $700,000.
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Mass * 843-5000
Over 10 toppings to choose from!!!
Rudy Tuesday
2 10" Pizzas
2 toppings
2 drinks
OND
$8.99
plus tax
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
Home of the Pocket Pizza
BUM STEER
THE SUM STEER
BUM STEER
DELIVERY
BBQ Sandwiches, Cheese Burgers,
Grilled Chicken, French Fries, BBQ Ribs
MORE MORE MORE
call 841-SMOK(E)
11:00 to 2:00 & 5:00 to Close Daily
$1 OFF
any delivery
with coupon
$7 min
Lawrence Community Theatre and SallieMae present
STUDENT DISCOUNT
Thurs. Special
$5 Tickets
JOSEPH
and
Amazing
Technicolor
DREAMCOAT
By Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice
Sept. 23, 24, 25, 29, 30
Oct. 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 9
Thursday 7:30 p.m. $10
Friday/Saturday 8:00 p.m., $11
1501 New Hampshire
Lawrence Community Theatre and SallieMae present
STUDENT DISCOUNT
Thurs. Special
$5 Tickets
JOSEPH
FROM
Amazing
Technicolor
DREAMCOAT
By Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice
Sept. 23, 24, 25, 29, 30
Oct. 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 9
STUDENT DISCOUNT
Thurs. Special
$5Tickets
JOSEPH
and the
Amazing
Technicolor
DREAMCOAT
THE RUM STEER
PEACE
Thursday 7:30 p.m. $10
Friday/Saturday 8:00 p.m., $11
Sunday 2:30 p.m., $10
This is the universal sign for peace.
This is the universal sign for peace-of-mind.
P
Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City
Birth control
STD testing &
treatment
Orchards Corners shopping center
.
Sex education FREE
Pregnancy testing
1420 Kasold Drive, Suite C
(913) 832-0281
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and its related provisions. Acceptance, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination.
Awards:
**Entry:**
Entry fees-$6-Race
$11-Relays
$5-Fun Relay
$4-Simon Says
Alpha Kappa Lambda
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
110 Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
UNIVERSITY
PHOTOGRAPHY
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs
and positions available in this newspaper are
available on equal basis.
Chi Omega
100% cotton t-shirts will be given to winner of each race. Winner of Simon Says receives trip to Chicago.
Meet begins at 9:00 a.m. on October 2, 94.
For questions, call 841-5567 or 841-6094
AKA·XΩ·AKA·XΩ·AKA·XΩ·AKA·XΩ·AKA
Shirts Illustrated
TRAVEL CENTER
BULLWINKLES
Sign up on Wescoe beach before Friday September 30, 1994.
Classified Directory
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, religion, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
JON BLUMBAUGH MEMORIAL WHEAT MEET
October 2,1994 Benefits KU Cancer Research
18th
THE STUMBLE NW
Classified Policv
200s Employment
river valley music
ACFC
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
AMENOMENT
Cadillac RANCH
Champaign-Urbana River
10
100s Announcements
300s
Merchandise
THE ETC. SHOP 228 Mass.
SILVERER SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Jackets & Pendants
LEATHER
Backpacks, Belt, Jackets, & PurSES
Bauch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Looks,
i's, Révo, Sereneget, and Vuarnet
105 Personals
I ♥ YOU!
Allyson
Baby
Jeanette-
You rock
my world!
I ❤ YOU!
Allyson
110 Bus. Personals
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also insurance for US citizens going abroad. Osladli Insurance Service. 411ᵃ S Main Ottawa, Ks 60671-800-608-695.
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
Merchandise
308 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 To Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
FREE!
Don't know where to start on that big one?
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING WORKSHOP
Wed, Sep 28, 7:00-9:30 pm
4034 Wescoe
Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
Men's Group:
Roles, Relationships,
Realities
CAPS will offer a therapy group beginning October 11 for men who want to examine and change aspects of their lives.
For information, call 864-2277.
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
UNLEALL GREEK'S $sr for Free! We are looking for a tutor in Greek and Greek Ski Festival in January. (电话 800-786-3878) EARTH MYSTICS and GODDESS OF MAN FACES-worships on Earth-based spirituality, OCT-8-9. Presenter from St. Louis. For info: Institute of Transformational Studies 1-882-2008.
FUNDRAISING
Choose from 3 different free
or 3 or 7 days. No investm
ent. Earn $25 for your
group plus personal cash
call. Call 1-800-832-0128. Ext. 65
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
9B
YOUR ACADEMIC SUCCESS, PART 1:
TIME MANAGEMENT AND
READING WORKSHOP
Get control of your time and your life!
Increase your reading
effectiveness and efficiency.
FREE!
Tues., Sep. 27, 7:00-9:00 p.m.
2023 Haworth
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
Lose weight and have energy at the same time. I lost 45 lbs. in 3 months, my energy level was great, my appetite was suppressed. All natural, doctor recommended: For a free sample, send name, address and phone number to Beham Research, 19th St. Manhattan, Ks. 66502.
Openings for CNA's 2:10-3:08 shift for CNA's tau-
tion flexible. Hours eduora. Eudura Nursing Cen-
tury.
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING Workshop. Don't know where to start on that big paper? FREE! Wed, Sep 28, 7-9 p.m. 4034 Wescoe. Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2 - 15, 1896 - 4, 6, 8 OR 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
GOTTA
BE THERE!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
NOBODY DOES SKI BREAKS JETTI!
YOUR ACADEMIC SUCCESS, PART 1: TIME
control of your time and your life; increase your reading efficiency and effectiveness. FREE! Tuesday, Sep 27, 7-9 pm, 2023 Haworth. Presented by
PBS.
Call Today!
For
Thanksgiving AIRLINE TICKETS Don'tWait
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules. On Campus Location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
---
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
FOUND. Fuji Discovery camera on Emery Rd.
Contact Jason at 843-5777.
Lost. Large, female hunky. Brown leather collar
Familial. Very upset. Please call 842-1567 if you need
Please call 842-1567 if you need
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Babyssister needed for 2 girls, 749. Part-time. Car necessary. Call 845-3841.
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
CMS THERAPIES OF KANASS
State office for national therapy services company part-time employee assistant for fast-paced office, business-engineered candidate must be capable of handling multiple tasks & responsibilities, be reliable & organized, be able to work independently, & have team attitude. Basic skills handling telephones in business setting, some computer knowledge, past experience, duties during customer service Commitment expected, but we are able to offer schedule flexibility.
Send letter of application, resume,and references to
CMS Therapies
Kathleen Draskovich
2709 lows, Suite C
Lawrence, KS 6500
PLEASE, NO PHONE CALLS
EOE M/F/H/V
COLLEGE STUDENTS $42.15-11.5$ STARTING
Local branch of nat'l caf. Filling immediate entry
level openings. Flite time schedules. 3 days, ever-
days. Weekend opt. All majors accepted. For info
@ 811-9699.
Juicers Showgirls
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly, working at Lawrence's top adult night spot.
Now hiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+.
Excellent working atmosphere.
Apply in person,
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Brandon Woods is currently accepting applications for a full-time housekeeper. The qualified applicant must be outgoing, observant, self-motivated, able to work independently and enjoy working in a beautiful facility. We offer health, life and career counseling. Vacation, holiday pay, a retirement plan, and a salary. Please apply in person at 1501 Inverness Dr., Lawrence, KS, E.O.E.
Cash Caterers, Kansas Union Catering Dept. Hiring for Thursday, Oct 6, 1994. Several shifts available. See schedules in Union Personnel Office. $4.25/per hour paid in cash day following employment date. Apply for position before preferred. Apply Kansas and Burge Unions! Personnel Office. Level 5. Kansas Union EOE
Caterers, Kansas Union Catering Department,
42. 85 hr., m. 3 p.m. Monday thru Friday week-
ends as scheduled, must have previous food service
experience, able to stand for long periods, lift up to 50 pounds, valid driver's license. Apply
Kansas and Burge Urns' Personnel Office EOE.
LOCAL WHOLESALE,RETAIL PETROLEUM COMPANY
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR IMMEDIATE OPENING
1* OFFICE MANAGER
JR ACCOUNTANTA/R, A/P,G/L
2* MARKETING PERSONNEL,
HEAVY PHONES
ABOVE AVERAGE SALARY,
QUIET AUTOMATED COUNTRY OFFICE
SEND RESUME TODAY TO
718 E. 1300 RD
LAWRENCE, KS 66046
We offer excellent benefits including insurance,
tuition reimbursement, meals, uniforms, travel
and hotel discounts. If interested apply at Holiday
Inn. EOE.
HOLIDAY INN We Want You!
HOLIDAY INN
We Wanted You!
Holiday Inn is hiring service professionals. Both part-time and full-time positions available as:
•Bartender
•Cocktail Servers
•Front Desk Agents
•Weekend Room Attendants
•Restaurant Servers
•Cooks
KARAOKE DJs wanted. Responsible, great personality, attractive, M or F. 749-3649.
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic, highly motivated individuals to sell newspaper subscriptions. Sales experience is helpful, but we'll train highly motivated individuals. Evening hours, Monday through Friday. We pay salary + 40% of hourly pay. 6 p.m., at the Lawrence Journal World 690 North Harlem. Contact Valerie for more information. B3-712-71
Excellent income for part-time work!
Positions available at a major Lawrence lettership on 1st and 2nd shifts. Long & short term positions available. Some weekend hours available also. Must have phone in home and reliable transmitters to manage your regulations and build your job skills! Great opportunity to begin earning money for the holidays!
Apply today and check a check next week!
Manpower, 21 E. sth. B.S., Lawrence, KS OE.
www.manpower.com
is reopening and is looking for food service employees. Duties include both food prep and line cooking. Some experience required. If you want to be a Co. Business Office between 9am - 4pm Frant - Fri. Call 516-728-3000.
Mazzio's Pizza is now hire waitresses for work during the noon hour. Flexible hours. Must be outgoing, have a positive attitude, and have the ability too smile. Apply in person at 2630 Iowa.
Native French speaker to informally tutor 8-20; read; play game. Ect. must enjoy kills. 832
Native French speaker to informally tutor 8-9
years of games. ect. Must enjoy kids: 832
8854 or 6454 ms.
Need a little extra money? Bullee Distribution needs help with delivering applications for part-time carriers for delivery services. They can manage 2-3 hours every Tuesday. Benefits include: 10% savings on phone and 50% savings. Sunflower Cable Vision. Call 843-765-1291.
Office manager needed at Jon's Notes of KU. Job begins immediately and continues through the school year. Approx 15-20 flexible hours per week and $500/month. Office is closed for all school vacations. Business background NOT required. For more details and contact person/phone see www.edu.edu or the University Placement Center in the Burge Union. Applications accepted for limited time.
701 Tennessee
Now hiring babybissers / childcare providers. Day.
Support available. For more information call 843-7289.
Needed Immediately; Part time teacher for home day care 10:15 ws./hr. Exp, Exxp.reff. #481-7581.
Free Consultation
We are looking for friendly, outgoing, and reliable people who can work the NHRA Nationalals, Sept.
Wanted babysitter for two children. Age 3-5,
evenings: 9:30am, necessary in
home, must be reliable, able to
hold Bob 843-8334, call anytime before 3:30pm
**WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING**
**TO PROMOTE SPRING BREAK TO JAMAICA,**
**ANCUN, FLORIDA, AND PADRE. FANTASTIC**
**SUMMER MISSIONS! SUN**
**P-LAST TURNS 1-800-484-7750**
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
843-4023
Form Consultation
arranged. Many positions involve Ticket Sat/Sun hours only. Positions include: Ticket Gate, Mature Adult Worker, Labor. Come experience dring race be working outdoors & greeting racing fans at one of the venues.
Tracks in the w Annly today at
Wanted: Caring people who like kids 3-5yrs are needed at Head Start as volunteers for a minimum of 12 hours per week, between 7:30 - 12:30, Monday - Friday. Daycare services from 12:30 - 12:30. For more information call 842-259-6320.
Racing Enthusiasts
DUL/TRAFICTICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANKSAS CITY AREA
ATTORNEY-LAW
ATTORNEY-LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964.
225 Professional Services
Manpower, 211 E. 8th St., Lawrence KS. EOE
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading and editing essays
experienced. Call Alarun 811-333
- Driver Education > offered thru Midweek Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 61-7499.
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald Ströle
16 East 13th
842-1133
TRAFFIC-DUIS' Fake ID' and & alcohol offences divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
RESUMES
•Professional Writing
•Cover Letters
•Consultation
Linda Morton, C.P.R.W
TRANSCRIPTIONS
842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite 201
A Member of
PAW
Professional Association of
Resume Writers
A Member of
PA RW
Professional Association of
Draft Writers
LSAT Test-Prep For The Dec. 3rd Exam
International Video Conversions PAL/SEGAM/
NTSC. $25 for up to 2 hours. includes return
postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer
PO box 310 Ottawa Ksc 6000-1 800-600-6955.
Promo photography. Headshots, modeling, band
photos. B&W and color. Prism Screen 841-6030.
Class Starts Oct. 2nd
235 Typing Services
Prompt abortion and contraception services in Lawrence: 841-5716 D. Linton, M.D.
1-800-527-TEST
A Laser Perfect Word Processing Service.
A Laser Printing and Call Center. Call
Num.: 848-6000-8962
Prototype word processing service Quality papers. Applications, resumes, editing, letters. Spell check free. Call 841-6242
Word Processing Discussions. Thoughts
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Thesee.
Business Letters, Business letters, etc.
Laser printing 865-000-8822
I WORK WHERE TO LOOK IT'S BEEST?
Put me in the best place.
For anything you need at all,
MAKIN THE GRATE
is the one to call.
865-2855
X
Toyota Tercel, AC, AM/FM Cass, 104,000 miles.
Bremerton Good. Great body. Burns oil.
795/820, 748-307.
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only $50. Call Chair at 810-299-5685.
Megabeta PCMLCIA 14.4 Fax Modem for laptop.
Includes communications software. Never used, never installed. I paid $219, will sell for $100. Call Jon, 843-7523.
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
Futon and Frame. Great Condition. $100 obo. Call Jeff at 749-0604.
Macintosh Classic -6k ram 4Mb hard drive $50
$60Mb modem with cable and software $50
FOR SALE! New Fender Precision Bass w/ bstrap
FOR SALE! Contact Jeff Johnson at 749-501-8
and 8 and 1.
Must sell 2 tickets for Bahamas tours and 4 night Florida stay $1,500 or best offer. For details call
EARN CASH
ALL YOUR
MONEY GONE?
NABI
$15 Today
$30
By donating your blood plasma
340 Auto Sales
We want your used mountain bike. Play It Again
Sports. 1029 Mass. 841-PLAY.
819 Nissan 2008 XHX with a screen, with windroof windows, and louvers. $95/OSB. Call McKenzie 877-363-4222.
816 W. 24th
Behind Laird Noller Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F 9-6:30
Sat. 10-4
This Week
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N. 2nd • 841-8903
19th & Haskell • 841-7504
1985 SAAB Turbo 4 dr 5 spd sun roof pwf etc.
black/maroon. Repair records. Rebuild clutch
new muffler. 2 new tires. $300 OBO 81 mile#
87 Honda CBR 600 motorcycle red/white. Call 642
Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center
Chev. Z-24 cover black Excellent label Only $9,800.
call Kik at 844-606-606.
360 Miscellaneous
*81 Honda Express II moped, New carburator, fuel system, two-speed automatic. Cadillac Mopeds of the 70s.
Corrugated boxes, moving and storage boxes.
Large quantity pricing & small quantity walk-ins welcome.
Call 843-8111 and ask for the Sales Service Department. Cash and carry.
One year-old iguanas for sale. Best offer. 865-7576.
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept older homes 841-STAR (7827)
ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED 4 BEDROOM
- On KU Bus Route
* Close to Campus
* Swimming Pool
* Stop By Today!
Equal 749-4226 M-F9-5
Opportunity 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4
1230 Tennessee. 2 bdm, unfurnished, utilities paid, $230. Available Oct 1st. no. pets. B32-2718
3 bdm. 2 bath, fully furn. Orchard Coppers apt. for rent. Spring-Sum 614 a room per month. On bus
parking fee.
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
- 2 bedroom with study
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Available for fall.
- Directly on bus route
*Call 843-4754
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Two Bedroom Apartment Now Available at
the property. Please contact us at
Lease through July 8753 cheque number 885-2500
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500. Room for rent for N/F female. Newly remodeled, very clean, W/D, all utilities pd. including cable. $265 mgr. 804-1698 or 832-8258.
Looking for Love
Lonely, attractive 3 or 4 bedroom apartments seeking residents to share a long or short term relationship. Call any time at 843-6446.
Lonely, attractive.
Spacious three bedroom, 2 bedroom townhouse, with garage and fenceed yard. Sunflower school $735.
*Town-home to rent: 3 bedrooms, fireplace,*
*garage, on bus route. Ask for Holly*
*at 842-1834.*
PetsWelcome
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
South Point
AZAARRAIRII
2166 W. 26th St.
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid Outstanding
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
South Point
ALABAMIA
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid
Looking for Love
Lonely, attractive,
3 or 4 bedroom
apartments seeking
residents to share a
long or short term
relationship.
Call any time at
843-6446.
430 Roommate Wanted
2 females looking for 3rd roommate to live in town
and can pay cable, passable. Available immediately.
843-8577
1 Roommate needed ASAP to share furnished 3 bedroom apartment, W/D, on bus route $5+1+0$
House mate needed. Close to campus. Lots of room. Residential room, also available. Available in room 132-900 at 132-900.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Guys need roommate. M or F or B; bldm, 3 BA furnish
cloister house, $250. Mass: $250. utl: W/D
Call 841-796-8811
How to schedule an ad:
Burbanks 864 4250
Flint, Lawrence. KS, 66045
Need 1 F NS housemate to be shouted 5 bdmr
campus 190/mth+1 Caller Rachi 740-597
www.ndmrcampus.com
1 n/a roommate needed from Ace. 1 to share
a bdrum duplex, $min. from campus on Nais-
sar, furnished. Rent $183+utilities.
Must be a reasonable reasonly KU student.
Call: 686-257-897.
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.
Adh phone number in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
• In person 115 Staff Flirt
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 it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gage lines 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 or check with can 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.
events on W
Num. of insertions:
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
Classifications
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
120 entertainment
Classification
400 lost & found
200 issued
225 hardened lossless services
225 missed lossless services
252 personalized services
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAM POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Phone:
Date ad begin:___ Total days in paper
Total ad cost:___ Classification:___
Address:
Account number:
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 charring your ad:
_ Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
ANTE3KS
© 1984 BROWN, THE DAILY NATIONAL PRESS SYNCIPHER
"Oh my gosh! You know what that is, Mooky? ... My dad had one when I was a kid!"
10B
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AT LAWRENCE PROMPTCARE YOU'RE NOT ONE IN A MILLION...
BONNIE RICHARDSON
At Lawrence PromptCare, we believe you should be treated like a person and not a number.
When you're hurting or ill, waiting in discomfort for long periods of time to see a doctor is irritating. Not only that, but you may be paying the bill for months. Why not
A.
872
select a quicker, more convenient alternativeLawrence
PromptCare At Lawrence PromptCare, we see you quickly and many visits are
60 Hwy 6th Street Mississippi
Dib Street KU campus
Knoll Chionon Parkway University
2540 Street
are trained in general care, acute care industrial medicine. the works.Open seven days a week until 11 p.m., no appointment is necessary. You'll be greeted immediately by a nurse and treated fast. Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, lab and radiology services flexible hours and plenty of convenient accessible parking
make Lawrence PromptCare an agreeable health-care
really inexpensive. We're the ideal alternative to long waits in the emergency room and for those times when you can't see your regular doctor. Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center, equipped to handle just about any emergency that comes up, from a scrape to a breakand full service means from head to toe. Our experienced and board certified emergency medical physicians
alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician.
MT. OREAD
MEDICAL ARTS
CENTRE
865-3997 KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY
---
SPORTS
The Kansas volleyball team opens its Big Eight season tonight against Iowa State in Ames. PAGE 1B.
CAMPUS
Three alternative publications will seek Student Senate funding in the next two weeks. PAGE 3A
PARTLY CLOUDY High 74° Low 50° Weather: Page 2A.
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.104, NO.27
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1994
NEWS S64-4810
School says no to sex this spring
Class falls victim to money dispute
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Students who were planning to take Denis Dailey's human sexuality class in the spring are out of luck. For the first time in the class' 10-year history, Human Sexuality in Everyday Life will not be offered in the spring.
Beginning this academic year, the School of Social Welfare will offer one section of Dalley's undergraduate sexuality class each fall, and the class will not be offered in future spring semesters.
Dalley, professor of social welfare, will teach graduate social welfare classes each spring in lieu of the undergraduate human sexuality course.
Ann Weick, dean of social welfare, said
the decision to eliminate the spring section of the class was made last spring by social welfare administrators after the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences announced it would no longer subsidize the class.
Although the class is offered by the School of Social Welfare, the college had paid social welfare $9,950 per year for the past two years to offer the class.
For two years, the college paid $6,000 of Dailey's yearly salary and $3,950 to Dai-
ley's teaching assistant. Social welfare now will make up the difference in Dalley's salary, but Dalley must teach social welfare classes assigned by the school.
"If the college continued to provide the same funding, we could continue to offer the class twice each year," Weick said. "We need to use our resources for our students."
Although the college had subsidized the
See DAILEY, Page 5A.
Meghan Dougherty / KANSAN
Bryant Freeman, director of KU's Institute for Haitian Studies, discusses Haitian developments. He spoke yesterday in the Kansas Union.
U.S. Haiti occupation upsets KU speaker
Kansan staff writer
By Jennifer Freund
Bryant Freeman, director of KU's Institute for Haitian Studies, said he was disconcerted by the U.S. occupation of Hali in a speech yesterday afternoon.
Freeman, who was living in Haiti during the overthrow of exiled president Jean-Bertrande Aristide, spoke to about 20 people yesterday at the English Room in the Kansas Union.
Freeman said Clinton had made a major error by allowing former president Jimmy Carter to dictate guidelines for the resignation of Gen. Raul Cedras, leader of the military coup.
"Carter went into Haiti as a loose cannon," he said. "Carter dropped all human rights in favor of reconciliation. Carter said he would like Cedras to come to Georgia and teach his Sunday school class."
Cedras and his troops are being blamed for the deaths of 3,000 Haitians, many of whom were Aristide supporters.
Freeman said Carter should not have allowed Cedras to remain in Haiti with his weapons and supporters intact.
Opposite mainly of whom were Alliance supporters. Freeman also said he objected to the Clinton administration pardoning Cedras' criminal activities and unfreezing his foreign bank accounts.
But, Freeman said, despite Clinton's poor performance in Haiti, he supports U.S. intervention.
To come to that decision, Freeman said he balanced a nation's sovereignty with international human rights
"It comes back to international responsibility," he said. "Can genocide and oppression still be permitted?"
He said that he didn't support intervention in far-off countries like Rwanda or Bosnia, but that because Haiti was closer to the United States, the government should help out.
"The U.S. can't control the whole world," he said. "It's a question of proximity. Responsibility begins at home."
But he said the most important reason for support of U.S. intervention in Haiti was slowing the flow of Haitian refugees. He said when Aristide was elected, more Haitians returned to Haiti than left.
See HAITI, Page 5A.
However, Freeman said he was still skeptical about Aris-
INSIDE
Going in Style
INSIDE
Going In Style
Fantasy Coffins, an exhibit at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, showcases the work of Kane Quay; an artist and coffinmaker from Ghana
Page 10A.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
AEROSPHERE
It's a tossup
Eric Fellows, Boulder, Colo., senior, is president and co-founder of the KU Juggling Club. The club meets at 1 p.m. every Monday and 3:30 p.m. every Friday in front of Strong Hall.
DENNIS DAILEY
Dennis Dalley
Position:
Professor of social welfare
Career:
Dailey joined KU's social welfare faculty in 1969. He is a nationally-known sexologist.
Awards:
Dalley won the Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator award in 1993, the Chancellor's Distinguished Teaching Professor award in 1990 and the Outstanding KU Social Welfare Faculty award in 1986.
KANSAN
Source: The Associated Press
Fraternity Expansion
The Interfriency Council is considering an expansion of the number of fraternities on campus. This is the chapter membership for the spring of 1993 and 1994 (not including fifth-year members or those living out of the house).
1993 1994 1995 1996
Theta Beta PI 77 78 Theta Chi 25 27 Sigma Nu 106 94 Triangle 36 30 Phi Delta Theta 94 89 Kappa Sigma 70 59 Delta Chi 97 38 Delta Tau Delta 84 87 Phil Kappa Tau 98 34 Alpha KappaLambda 80 72 Sigma Phi Epsilon 124 112 Lambda Chi Alpha 61 53 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 123 126 Phi Kappa Theta 90 74 Phi Gamma Epsilon 93 89 Alpha Tau Omega 81 75 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 68 72 Upsilon Alpha 78 73 Tau Kappa Epsilon 68 72 Pi Kappa Alpha 78 93 Zeta Beta Tau 78 69 Alpha Epilon PI 35 43 Zeta Beta Tau 78 69 Pi Kappa Pai 79
KU might gain new fraternity, IFC says
By Ashley Miller
Kansan staff writer
The Interfraternity Council general assembly passed an expansion report in April 1994 to consider inviting another fraternity to campus, said Mike Stanley, vice president for membership for the IFC. However, the entire process will take at least two years, from choosing a fraternity to recruiting members for the new chanter.
In a few years, the University of Kansas may add yet another fraternity to the 23 chapters already here.
"A fraternity isn't just going to show up because we passed this," Stanley said.
Right now, the IFC is seeking administrative approval from the Office of Student Affairs and the Department of Student Life.
The approval would mean that IFC would have permission to seek out a fraternity interested in coming to KU. It would notify all national fraternities that the council was expanding, Stanley said. The council would interview the fraternites that responded to the notification, provided that the fraternity met several criteria. This criteria includes having a set number of men interested in the new fraternity by a certain date and grade point averages for each of the potential members.
Mike Ward, IFC president, said the most important criteria a new fraternity needed to meet was securing housing at KU.
IFC asks fraternities to find a house because it indicates that the fraternity will be on campus for more than a few years, Ward said.
He said the expansion, which would include only one fraternity, was approved unanimously by IFC fraternities.
Nelson said the expansion probably would be successful even though there was a decrease in men participating in fall formal rush this year because the number of men fraternities in the spring and summer were higher.
Dave Stras, president of Theta Chi fraternity, said the excitement generated from an expansion would help smaller houses out. Theta Chi only had 27 members as of spring 1994.
Adding another fraternity to IFC would be feasible, said Bill Nelson, assistant director of the Organization and Activities Center and coordinator for greek programs.
The fraternity expansion also was good for the fraternities already here, Nelson said. Expansion draws attention to the Greek system and attracts potential members that otherwise do not have an interest in the entire Greek community.
"It's almost a time of revitalization," he said.
Credit card debt can be alleviated with budgeting
By Shannon Newton
Kansanstaffwriter
Robin Fisher often hides her credit cards from herself.
Michele Kessler, assistant director of Legal Services for Students, said the office has had a lot of students who have came in with credit card problems.
"When I first received my credit cards I was really good at paying them off in full every month," she said. "The longer I have them the harder I find they are to pay off."
Fisher, Columbia, Mo, sophomore, has two credit cards. She has fallen behind in her payments for both.
the ladder. Then they are to pay on.
Fisher is not alone.
She said when students come in it is usually because they have started getting threatening calls and letters from collection agencies.
"We've even had some students that have gotten letters from attorneys saying that a card company has filed suit." Kessler said.
When students come into the office with problems about their credit, it can usually be solved with planning, she said.
"When students come in, we try to plan a budget with them to pay off the cards," Kessler said. "Once they are represented by an attorney, they can't be harassed anymore."
Kessler said because of the Fair Debt Collection Practicing Act, federal law states that third party debt collectors cannot contact the person they are trying to get money from if the person has an attorney. The collectors must go through the attorney. She said the act did not apply to card companies that do their own collecting.
Kessler said that in her experience most credit card companies were willing to let students have payment options.
She said some of these options included having students pay an established monthly fee or allowing students to pay off a percentage of the entire amount due and the
company would eliminate the rest.
"Card companies are willing to work with students because they realize that if they sue them, students don't have the resources to pay it off," Kessler said. "They want options that will bring them their payments."
Kessler said that if problems arise for students because of credit card debts, it does not mean their credit report will be permanently scarred.
Doug Gaddis, Wichita senior said that he wouldn't let himself fall into debt.
"I pay off my credit cards every month," he said. "I will never pay interest rate fees as long as I live."
"When a plan is established for repayment, the student needs to make sure that the credit card companies will contact collection bureau to be sure their name is removed." Kessler said. "After the debt is paid the student should order a copy of their credit report to be sure they don't have bad credit."
Use common sense!
Michele Kessler, assistant director of Legal Services for Students said a little planning could keep students out of revolving credit card debt. Some of her advice is:
Don't get a lot of cards.
Make sure the cards you own do not have a maximum balance beyond your means.
Use credit cards for necessities such as books, not for weekend trips to Cancun.
Check into other options, such as a student loan with lower interest rates, for necessary larger purchases that you can't afford.
Use common sense in budgeting
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
---
2A
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
√
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE: Exercise greater tact and your popularity will soar. If single, you could meet a potential mate while on a business trip. Keep in touch. The financial picture shows definite signs of improvement early in 1995. Be careful not to put all your eggs into one basket. Choosing your business associates with greater care will prevent headaches later on. Remember, many paths will take you to your goals.
BY Jean Dixon
T
CLEEBRINGS BORN ON THIS DATE: famed heart surgeon Dr. Michael DeBakey, actor Corbin Bernsen, artist Grandma Mossa, singer Christie Hynde.
♂
II
ARIES (March 24-19th) Heed your ESP when faced with a tough choice. An employment decision can no longer be postponed. People at a distance are enthusiastic about you long-range plans. Do not let petty comments rile you.
69
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You may feel left on our own devices today. Get in touch with someone whose work you admire. A long-sought goal may not be as out of reach as you think. Persevere!
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Avoid bitting off more than you can chew at work today. Beneficial influences encourage you to put forth your best effort! Be careful not to show impatience with older person's methods. Show respect.
8
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A good day to contact people in positions of power. You need to act promptly on new opportunities. Financial considerations seem less important than emotional factors.
5
m
W
⬅
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Recognize extravagance for what it is. Resist the temptation to spherule. Allowing friends to intrude on family affairs would be a mistake. Develop a flexible mind-set and encourage open discussions.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Refuse to be maneuvered into the middle of an emotional tug-of-war. Do your best to remain neutral. Concentrating on solo projects will bring excellent results at work.
VS
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Be straightforward about what you expect form others. Loved ones at a distance have a lot to talk about. Be tactful if a close friend asks for guidance. Avoid pointing out every recent mistake.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Luck and timing are with you today. A lost object surfaces in an unusual place. For some, fame and fortune will arrive simultaneously. Do not get a swelled head! You still have much to accomplish.
SAGITTIAI (Nov. 22-Dec.
21): Someone may not be
dependable or cooperative as you
hoped. Tackle tough jobs by yourself. Your resourceful attitude will win you friends in high places. Postpone making major decisions until more data is available.
Water
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Smarten up! Pulling rank could backfire. Try gentle persuasion to get your way. Use plenty of discretion when dealing with influential people. If they like your style and attitude, the sky is the limit.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Your intuition plays a key role in your signing an agreement today.
You are able to get through a mountain of work in no time at all! Turn your attention towards home tonight. Show affection.
X
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Do not let a unique financial opportunity slip by. Being in the right place at the right time pays big dividends. Keep up with the latest business trends. Influential people admire your on-target predictions.
TODAY'S CHILDREN are honest, hard-working and self-effacing. Their modest demeanor and sterling character make them well-liked and widely respected. Count on them to receive top marks in school, pay in the business world. Tidy and well-organized, these Virgos are unable to do their best work in a messy or ugly environment. Wise employers will allow these diligent types to decorate their offices the way they like. They have excellent taste!
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 final 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
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
ON CAMPUS
The Student Political Awareness Task Force will sponsor a voter registration drive from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today in front of Wescoe Hall.
The KU Office of Study Abroad and Butler University will sponsor an information session about study abroad in Australia, New Zealand, Ireland or Great Britain at 11 a.m. today on level 2 in the Kansas Union.
OAKS—Non-Traditional Student Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove H in the Kansas Union.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a speech, "The Collapse of Apartheid: Legacies from the Past, Prospects for the Future," by Rev. Kay-Robert Volkwijn at noon today at 1204 Aroad Ave.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel.
Student Subchapter of the American Fisheries Society will meet at 4:30 p.m. today at 3012 Haworth Hall.
Kansan Correspondents will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Frontier Room in the Burge
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Kansas Union. Those interested in attending the meeting should ask for the specific room at the candy counter on level four.
Union.
Native-American Student Association will meet at 7tonight in the southwest lobby of the top floor of the Burge Union.
Student Alumni Association will meet at 7 tonight at Adams Alumni Center.
KU Sail Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
Straight Allies of Lesbians, Gays and Bisexuals will meet at 7:30 tonight at the cataloging conference room in Watson Library.
Water Polo Club will meet at 7:46 tonight at Robinson Center.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.
Christian Bible Fellowship will meet at 8:30 tonight in the southwest corner of the second floor in the Burge Union.
A 1994 Mazda RX7 belonging to a Lawrence resident received $1,800 in damage late Monday night. Lawrence police reported. Police said the car, which was parked at the owner's residence in the 800 block of E. 10th Street, had its sunroof and back window broken.
TODAYS TEMPS
ing his mother in Lawrence earlier this month, Lawrence police reported. Police said the man took his son for a doctor's examination this weekend, where it was discovered that the boy had been sexually abused. The father then reported the incident to the police. Police said they could not comment on suspects in the case
Weather
ON THE RECORD
Atlanta Chicago Des Moines Kansas City Lawrence Los Angeles New York Omaha Seattle St. Louis Topeka Tulsa Wichita
THURSDAY
TODAY
M I G H L O W
Partly cloudy and breezy.
81° • 60°
65° • 46°
70° • 47°
74° • 49°
74° • 50°
76° • 64°
74° • 57°
76° • 52°
69° • 54°
75° • 52°
77° • 50°
85° • 57°
82° • 56°
Continued mild and partly cloudy.
FRIDAY
7450
Partly cloudy and warmer.
7650
7953
Source: Matt Jezewski, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
September 27,1994
A car parked in the parking lot behind Stephenson Scholarship Hall received $250 in damage to its driver's-side door sometime last week, KU police reported. Police did not know what caused the damage.
$
Stock market report
The words "murder for money" were written on the Vietnam Memorial sometime this weekend. KU police reported. Police said the words were discovered at about noon Sunday and cleaned that day at a cost of $200. Police did not say what was used to write the words.
An Osawatomie man reported his three-year-old son had been sexually abused while visit-
Dow Jones
13.80
3,863.04
NYSE
0.48
254.87
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 290,320,000
Advances 1,012
Declines 1,170
Unchanged 713
0.83
754.80
-
ASE
0.36
453.42
*Fortune Magazines Most Admired Life Insurance Co. 12 Years Running
*Voted #1 Sales Force in America by Sales and Marketing Management Mag.
*Best Sales Opportunity in America According to Jobs '94
FORTUNE 50 COMPANY NOW HIRING!
This profession offers freedom and flexibility. The best training in the industry, management opportunities, and income twice the industry average. Work in the business and professional marketplace in the Kansas City area.
Interview Dates:
Northwestern Mutual Life The Hames Agency
Interview Dates:
Tue. Oct. 11 KU Placement Center-Burge Union 864-3624
Wed. Oct. 12, Thurs. Oct. 13 School of Business Placement
Center 864-5591
- 70% of sales force hired off college campuses
* 75% of Hames sales force are KL graduates
Contact Placement Center to schedule an interview
- Out of 7,000 sales people nationally number 6 and 55 are KU grads
Information and video on company available in the placement center
Great skates, cheap!
We RENT skate
Rollerblades Used & CHEAP
*quantities limited 1029 Mass.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
We're selling our old RENTAL fleet.
841-PLAY(7529)
FALL CLASSIC TENNIS TOURNAMENT
PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED TO WINNERS!
Sigma Kappa & Phi Kappa Theta
FREE GIFTS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED!
Tennis
TENNIS
Who: Greek & Non-Greek (Anyone who can hold a racquet!)
What: Tennis Tournament
When: October 14-16
Where: Alvamar Country Club
Why: To Benefit Multiple Sclerosis &
Alzheimers
Questions? Call Sigma Kappa 843-1101 or Phi Kappa Theta 843-8851
---
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
3A
Cul-de-sacs may not be answer to traffic problems
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
A neighborhood in northwest Lawrence will have to endure the city's growing pains for a little while longer.
Last night, the Lawrence City Commission voted 4-0 to deny a request to close off traffic through Arrowhead Drive at its intersection with Peterson Road. Residents had said future traffic from a new housing development north of Peterson Road would use Arrowhead Drive — which is directly south of the development — as a main thoroughfare to Iowa Street.
But the issue the city addressed last night is larger: With so much development on the west side of town, where will all the traffic go?
Linda Finger, city planning director, said studies of older neighborhoods in the city had shown blocking off streets and creating cul-de-sacs — as Arrowhead Drive residents wanted — did little to help the problem.
"What we have to look at, from a community standpoint, is the impact of cul-de-sacing." Finger told the commission.
"We assumed it was a residential street," Mark Warren, an Arrowhead Drive resident, told the commission. "But as the development moved in, people said, 'Well, that's going to be a main街.'"
The plans for the development north of Peterson Road consists of four cul-de-sacs and only one exit, a street that would empty right into Peterson Drive.
But, Finger said blocking off Arrowhead Drive and creating yet another cul-de-sac would only route traffic through other neighborhoods. No matter what happens, she said, neighborhood would get more traffic and children still would be endangered by passing cars.
In rejecting the motion from the Arrowhead Drive residents, commissioners said that they would look at the traffic situation along Peterson Road and discuss how the new housing development would affect it.
"We should look at this in the whole big scheme of things," said Bob Moody, city commissioner.
Bob Schulte, city commissioner, said creating a cul-de-sac out of one street would simply increase traffic in all surrounding neighborhoods. Planning is a better option, he said.
"If you shut off one street, you'll have to shut off others," Schulte said. "Then, everybody's got child safety problems."
In other actions, the commission:
approved an ordinance making Alumni Place south of Stephenson Scholarship Hall a
one-way street. Dave Corliss, assistant to the city manager, said the street already was oneway, but the ordinance provided that a oneway sign be placed there. The street is the main thoroughfare for four scholarship halls and Sprague Apartments.
sent a proposal to annex about 18 acres of land on the corner of Clinton Parkway and Wakarusa Drive to a planning committee. Tim Herndon of Landplan Engineering told the commission that the engineering company, which owned the land, hoped eventually to build a commercial strip mall on the spot.
The land must be rezoned by the commission before the strip mall can be built.
YOU EARN KINGS
STING NO CHANCE
HONING MY RIDE
ON THE TURF
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
Practice makes perfect
Zeke Tolar, Lawrence freshman, attempts to perfect his tennis serve by using a high toss. Tolar was practicing at the courts outside Robinson Center on Monday.
AREA BRIEF
Lawrence police report rape of Haskell student
Kansan staff report
A Haskell Indian Nations University student was raped at a house in the 1800 or 1900 block of Tennessee Street early Sunday morning, Lawrence police reported.
night. At about 3 a.m. Sunday, Nickell said, a 27-year-old Lawrence resident at the party invited her into his room to talk. He then closed the door and raped her, police said.
Sgt. Richard Nickell of the Lawrence police said the 19-year-old student was at a party in the house with some friends Saturday night and decided to stay the
Attempts to contact the suspect in the case had not been successful yesterday, Nickell said. He also said the student could not remember the exact address of the house where the rape occurred.
Alternative media publications seek Student Senate funds
By James Evans
Kansan staff writer
Three alternative media publications are looking for financing from Student Senate to get their publications to the presses.
Who'sinations, Kiosk and Pinch magazines will seek funding in the next two weeks from Senate.
Stephanie Moore, co-president of Pinch, said alternative publications helped provide different perspectives to the campus community. She said Pinch and other alternative media provided a creative outlet for students to explore topics that were not usually seen in conventional campus media.
"A university with only one journalism publication, such as the Kansan, is very limited." Moore said.
Moore said Pinch focused on being a satirical and humorous magazine. She said that in a typical issue, about 25 submitted articles and photographs were printed. The magazine usually is published twice a year.
She said the publication had a policy against advertising. She said she feared advertisers would try to control the magazine's content by pulling advertisements if they did not agree with the magazine's content.
Moore said that the staff was asking for $4,700 to fund the magazine. The magazine's financing only came from Student Senate.
"We consider advertising a possible infringement on the articles we print and a possible source of censorship," Moore said.
Who'sinations, a magazine that offers independent perspectives on intellectual and cultural expression, also is looking for financing.
David Stevens, student senator and sponsor of the Who'sinations bill, said the magazine was asking for $7,625 to print six issues. Each printing would be 32 pages long, and 10,000 copies would printed, Stevens said.
He said the publication provided a service to the University. He said it also gave students a chance to receive hands-on experience.
"Ithink they offer an opportunity to work on a publication," Stevens said. Stevens said Who'sinations' financing was cut last February because students working for the magazine were gaining school credit for their work. Under its guidelines,
Senate cannot finance organizations in which students involved get credit. He said Who'sinations was no longer giving school credit to its staff.
Kiosk, a student literary magazine, also is looking for financing. The publication is asking for $5,581 for two issues.
Holly Naifeh, student senator and sponsor of the Kiosk bill, said the publication, which is oriented to students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, expressed different literary viewpoints.
"It's a very respectable magazine," she said.
Sherman Reeves, student body president, said that the funding the alternative media received from Senate was central to its existence.
"If they didn't get funded, they wouldn't be able to print" he said.
The Senate finance committee will vote tonight on whether to recommend funding for Who'sinations and Kiosk. If the two bills are approved, the full Senate will vote on them at next week's meeting. Pinch magazine's bill already has been approved by the finance committee, and the full Senate also will vote on it next week.
Companies come to find employees
Students find good career opportunities at engineering fair
By Julie Howe Special to the Kansan
University of Kansas students had a chance to gather information about job opportunities yesterday at the 16th annual Engineering and Computer Science Career Fair at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Drive.
About 50 employers attended the fair to provide general information about career options to potential employees, according to Julie Cunningham, director of career services for the School of Engineering. She said about 800 students were expected to attend the fair, which was sponsored by the School of Engineering Career Services Center.
Long Chien, Lawrence junior, said attending the fair to find information about internships for next summer was a good experience.
"I just got here and I already talked to three or four companies," he said.
"I just came to see what I could find out. It's pretty interesting."
Evan Murray, Topeka junior, said that although he was not currently looking for a job, the event was a positive way to get an idea of what opportunities might be in the future. "I think it's good that KU sponsors a thing like this to help the students find out about jobs," he said.
Dawn Ludwick,corporate technical recruiter from DST Systems, Inc. in Kansas City, Mo., agreed that the fair was beneficial to students and employers. She said the company, which develops computer software for mutual funds record keeping, attended about 20 employment fairs per year and hired about 60 people as a direct result. This is the first year the company was represented at the fair in Lawrence, she said.
"We have not hired people from KU in the past, because what was taught at KU did not match what we needed," she said. "But our technologies are changing, so we hope to find some potential employees today."
Kara Kelly, Lawrence junior, said this was the first career fair she had attended.
"It's kind of overwhelming with so many companies," she said. "But the
EXXON
Edmee Rodriguez / SPECIAL TO THE KANSAN
Eulene Horniguez / SPECIAL TITLE
Engineering students were able to contact prospective employers yesterday at the 16th annual Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Career fair.
people are a lot more friendly than I was expecting."
Kelly said she was looking for a summer internship in civil engineering.
The Lowest EVERYDAY CD Prices in Lawrence
AND...
- 25% OFF SAVINGS! Get 25% Off Retail ANYDAY with our BUY 5/GET 25 Program.
- LOWEST PRICES ON NEW RELEASES! Every TUESDAY we’ll have the week’s new releases at Lawrence’s Lowest Sale Price DON’T FORGET. . .
- KIEF’S BUYS, SELLS, AND TRADES USED CDs!!
JAZZ FANS!
Choose from Lawrence’s Best Jazz Selection AND
GET $2.00 Off Any Jazz CD with coupon
*Discounted from Kief’s Everyday Low Price
Expires 10/7/94
Excludes Orange Tag Items
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 60944
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913*843*1811 913*842*1438 913*842*1544
4A
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Computers: Do what I want, not what I sav
COLUMNIST
HEATHER KIRKWOOD Computer poltergeists are not for the faint of heart or for the late of homework.
Computers were supposed to make our lives easier, and usually they do, but sometimes, just sometimes, I think they are more trouble than they're worth.
Computer nerds seem to take pleasure in my technological agony. They are constantly telling me such useful things as, "Your computer is a machine. It will only do what you tell it." Obviously, they have not met my computer.
The other day I was having computer problems. The "innocent" machine was behaving as though it had a mind of its own. It decided I was finished with a file and promptly disposed of my homework somewhere in circuit space.
Fearing that no file was safe, I dug
out the mountain of manuals and started looking for the problem. I should have known this was an exercise in futility. I know better than to think I might open a computer manual and find intelligible English.
After a few hours, I made an emergency call to the computer store.
This was my next exercise in futility. I explained to the techie-voice on the other end that my computer was inhabited by a poltergeist, and I needed an exorcism performed.
Having no sense of humor, this man explained to me that the problem was not my computer; it was me. Being something less than a computer wizard and therefore, in his opinion, something less than human, I was the root of the problem.
After all, he informed me, computers do only what you tell them.
My ego deflated; I followed his instructions, and the poltergeist disappeared.
I know, however, that this is just an illusion. The computer poltergeist thrives on playing games with my mind. It is just lying in wait until once again I trust technology. And then, WHAM! My bits will bite the dust.
It always happens when you least expect it, like when you are sitting in front of your computer, usually about 1:00 a.m., trying to put the finishing touches on some great work of brilliance that you have composed spontaneously and that will be due in only a few, short hours.
It's then, and only then, that the
computer poltergeist, knowing you have been concentrating so intently that you have forgotten to save anything, will eat your labor up like breakfast. Afterwards, as if to belch, it will cause your screen to flash and your keyboard to freeze up. Searching frantically, you will realize there is nothing you can do. It is beyond your control. As you try to push the buttons that do not respond, your computer beeps as if to laugh at you.
It is, of course, your fault. Computers only do what you tell them.
Personally, I think this is the craziest thing of all about computers. What else does what you tell? Vacuum cleaners don't do what you tell them. Neither do dust rags, plumbing or most other people. Actually, the idea
of something doing exactly what you tell it is a foreign concept in the lives of most people. It's no wonder so many of us can't cope.
Of all the wonderful gadgets and gizmos that computer nerds are creating to improve our lives, I wonder if they have any plans for the computer that knows what I meant and not what I said? I want a computer that knows what I want and not what I think I want. That would really be a contribution to society!
Until then, I am on my guard. I know the poltergeist is at work waiting for its next meal. I know this, and so, I SAVED!
VIEWPOINT
Heather Kirkwool is a Wichita Junior in magazine Journalism.
Auditoriums need more accessibility for everyone
In a recent out-of-court settlement, a movie theater agreed to pay a 360 pound woman for failing to accommodate her.
The theater did not provide her a place to sit or allow her to bring in her own chair when the standard theater seats would not accommodate her.
vide a section of seats or a space, such as spaces for wheelchairs, that would accommodate everyone.
This way everyone can enjoy movies, theater and
THEATER SETTLEMENT
Recent settlement involving a woman who was unable to sit in a movie theater displays need for better accommodations.
This settlement draws our attention to the need to provide public accommodations for everybody. It seems a small matter for public places to pro-
The costs of adding such sections to
public places would be minimal.
It would be a small price to pay in comparison to the benefit that all people would be able to appreciate public entertainment.
Embryo research requires clear ethical boundaries
The decision by the federal government to give researchers funds to study embryo development was made without first establishing the e th i c al boundaries necessary to pursue this experimentation.
ability of a child to survive is a good thing, but researchers and the government should be careful.
EMBRYO DEVELOPMENT
Without ethical guide-
Without ethical guidelines, government-funded research could cross the line between fighting disease and playing God.
Supporters say embryos could hold the key to fighting infertility, cancer and other diseases.
Embryos should not be used to genetically alter characteristics such as hair color or sex, and scientists should not randomly
Trying to increase the
experiment with genes.
experiment with genes. If this happens, a situation where the development of a "master race" could possibly happen.
ROBERTA JOHNSON 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
Editors
News ... Sara Bennett
Editorial ... Donella Heame
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Bram James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
Mellasaa Lacey
Features ... Trecel Carl
Planning Editor ... Susan White
Design ... Noah Muser
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 Pierer
Production mgrs ... Holly Boren
Regan Overy
Marketing director ... Alan Stiglio
Creative director ... John Carlton
Classified mgr ... Heather Niahou
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 Karsan 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.
'CYNICAL!'
Oh Sure...
I'll Believe
That When
I See It!
THE NEW
POLL SHOWS
AMERICANS
BECOMING
MORE
CYNICAL
HOOD
UDK
1944
Matt Hood / KANSAN
Pinch magazine deserves funding
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
This letter is in response to Lance Hamby's editorial in the Sept. 20 Kansan about Student Senate's funding for Pinch magazine.
It is clear to me that Hamby has no idea how much money the printing of a magazine costs. Perhaps he should have called a representative from Pinch and asked for a budget breakdown. We asked for $4,700 in order to increase our circulation and to reach more of the student population. Most of our budget is allotted to printing. We should get about 3,000 copies for that amount.
In addition, Pinch magazine is an open and accessible organization. It is student run, and the material is student written. We accept submissions right up until publication. Part of our budget is for advertising in the Kansan, asking for submissions to include more of the student body. How did Hamby reach the conclusion that Pinch is exclusive? He never called me or any of the other staff members to verify this.
Lawrence community a part of campus life, and because not all students live and work on campus, we try to distribute Pinch in student frequented businesses such as Free State Brewing Co., Inc., Arizona Trading Co., and The Jazzhaus. We also put copies in several campus buildings. Hamby did Pinch a great disservice by writing an editorial based on assumption, not fact. If he has any more question about Pinch, I hope that he will pick up the phone. I would be happy to show him the petitions proving that students want alternative press, and $4,700 is all we need to give it to them.
Hamby also picked on Pinch for asking for $4700. Last year, fiscal year 1993, Kiosk received $5,581, and Whositions received $7650. Does Mr. Hamby want the budgets of these fine publications slashed as well?
Stephanie Moore President, Pinch magazine
Since we at Pinch consider the
Campus lots curb KU's motorcyclists
Once the fall semester starts up, parking complaints are "as thick as autumn leaves that strow the brooks In Vallambrosa," but I believe I have a pair of uncommon ones: motorcycle parking.
Although I am sure we are all glad to see the resurfacing of Memorial Drive, I am less than pleased with the height of new curbs. The owner's manual for my 1994 motorcycle cautions against riding over curbs. Would it not have been possible to build some blacktop ramps
to make ascending and descending these cliffs less of a jolt?
But I forgot myself; motorcyclists are second-class citizens.
While the two lots behind Strong and Bailey Halls are my primary ones, I did, rather d park in the lot by Watkins Health Center whenever I needed to use the center. Alas, the Parking Department took a lot that fit four to six motorcycles and made it into spaces for two cars.
But I forget myself; motorcyclists are second-class citizens.
Because they are more gas efficient and take up less space, motorcycles are more environmentally friendly than cars. I should think that the University would encourage the use of vehicles that lessen the overwhelming parking problems on campus. By adding to riding hazards with its extra-tall curbs and by decreasing the number of motorcycle lots, it is, indeed, discouraging riders.
I would like to believe this situation has been caused simply by oversight rather than malicious disregard for motorcyclists, but I have my doubts. Consequently, I ask all other riders on campus to make their concerns known.
Let us not be treated as second-class citizens.
Patrick D. Enright Lawrence graduate student
COLUMNIST
E-mail helps share wisdom
Every once in a while I will come upon something that seems extraordinary. This always seems to happen in the strangest places: in the subway, in bathrooms, on the sidewalk, by pay phones or in pieces of literature.
The most recent bit of enlightenment came to me in a different manner, however: E-Mail. If you have E-Mail you are probably very much aware of all the little chains of information that get passed around. Checking my E-mail messages one day, I found this bit of wisdom, forwarded to me by someone at MIT. Struck by its accuracy, I copied it down to share with all my friends.
We go to classes.
People who go to college are incredible.
We sleep very little.
We read and absorb and are comprehensively tested on heavy amounts of various materials.
Someone is always complaining.
Someone is always complaining. We become attached to do
We drink ourselves into oblivion. We kill ourselves with several types of smoke.
We become attached to close friends.
We cough and keep on smoking. Someone is always sick.
We smother each other. We lean too much.
We know we cannot.
We think often of the past and want to go back.
We have separate lives, families, backgrounds and pasts.
We live totally different from how we used to live.
We are frustrated and sometimes want to give up, but we never stop trying.
We disregard health. We eat awful foods.
We are forced to think about the future.
We reach out for things,yet we don't find them.
We try to sort out our minds, which are filled with studies, worries, problems, memories, emotions and powerful feelings.
We wander the halls looking for happiness.
We hurt a lot.
We keep going though, because — above all else — we never stop learning, growing, changing and, most importantly, dreaming.
Dreams keep us going, and they always will.
All we can do is thank God that we have something to hold onto — like dreams and each other.
Kathy Kipp is a Woolridge, Ill., sophomore in English.
HUBIE
OKAY, SINCE I'VE GOTA GOT TO COURT, IT LOOKS LIKE I NEED AN ATTORNEY.
WHAT WE WE GOT HERE—MY CUSIN VINNY? FROZEN CAVEMAN LAWYER? TOM CRUISE?
FORGET ALL OF THOSEGUYS! I'VE GOT A BUDDY WHO CAN FIX EVERYTHING FOR YA—NO PROBLEM !!!
UH HHHH... NO, THAT'S OKAY.
AW, CMON! HE'S GREAT!
PLEASE?
PLEASE?
NO.
No.
FINE!
WHERE IS HE?
HUBIE, MEET LANCELOT ZOMBIE, LAWYER-AT-LARGE!!
By Greg Hardin
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
5A
HAITI: Speaker doubts Aristide
tide's leadership abilities.
Continued from Page 1A.
"Aristide is totally uncompromising," he said. "That's how he has gotten where he has gotten. Politics is the art of compromise. He says he has learned to compromise, but we don't know."
Freeman said that the Haitian constitution, created with a corrupt leader in mind, would give Aristide little power over the Haitian government.
"There's a weak executive in the constitution," he said. "It never occurred to them that they would have an honest man in power."
But while Freeman has his doubts about Aristide, he said rumors started by Sen. Robert Dole and Sen. Jesse Helms that Aristide was mentally unbalanced were false.
Alain-Philippe Durand, Marselle, France, graduate student, said the lecture was a welcome supplement to television and print news.
"It was different from the news," he said. "It was interesting and much more in depth. I was surprised to learn that Cedras was going to be allowed to stay in power and not have to leave."
Jeff Woodfill, Lenexa senior, said the lecture was interesting, but nothing new.
"My girlfriend is a Haitian studies major, so I already knew a lot about the situation," he said.
DAILEY: No spring sex class for professor
Continued from Page 1.
class for two years, social welfare had offered Dailey's class every semester for eight years before the college began subsidizing the class.
James Muyskens, dean of the college, said the college should not be held responsible for social welfare's decision to eliminate one section of Dailey's class.
But Weick said the school no longer could afford to offer a large class that served few social welfare students. Any KU student may enroll in Dailey's class, and Weick estimated that fewer than 50 of the 500 students in the class were social welfare students.
"The School of Social Welfare can offer as many sections of the class as they want," Muyskens said. "We're not saying he can't teach the course, we just don't feel we should pay for it."
Muyskens said the college agreed to subsidize the class temporarily on a year-by-year basis.
"At this point we have sufficient capacity in college classes that cover similar issues," he said.
Muyksens said the School of Social Welfare received the credit for offering the class, but the college was blamed when a section was eliminated.
"It's ironic to me that we went the extra mile to make the class available to college students, and now we're faulted for not continuing," he said. "If the School of Social Welfare offered it twice a year before, why can't they do it now?"
Dailey said he did not fault the college for the change.
"I think it would be unfortunate if the college came out looking bad," Dalley said.
"I asked whether there were any options that were viable, and there appeared to be none," Dailey said. "I accepted that and found out what my spring teaching assignment was going to be."
Dailey has been uninvolved in the decision-making process and said he simply would abide by the school's wishes.
Dailey is listed as one of the most popular professors on campus in the "Fiske Guide to Colleges" and has received several teaching awards.
Despite his popularity, Dailey said things hadn't always gone his way at the University.
"I'm worried that eventually this class won't even be offered in the fall," he said. "I don't think this is a major political conspiracy. But I think if the University really wanted the class to happen, it would happen."
Hannah Hancock, Lincoln, Neb., senior, said she wished the University could find a way to offer the class in the spring.
"It really disappoints me because I'll graduate in May, and I planned to enroll in the class," Hancock said. "If Dailey is going to be here, the class should be offered."
Wendy Kite, Winnetka, Ill., sophomore, is enrolled in the class this semester and said it was one of the best classes she had ever taken.
"I love this class," Kite said. "The university says they don't have the money to offer the class? That's ridiculous because this subject is one the most important students need to learn."
ALL NATIONAL BRAND BEER
50¢ OVER CHECKER'S INVOICE COST EVERYDAY!
DAILY SPECIAL
BANANAS 19¢ LB.
MILWAUKEE'S BEST REG. OR LIGHT
BEER
649
24 PACK
12OZ
CANS
LIMIT 1
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
MILWAUKEE'S BEST BEER
13OZ CANS
24 PACK
12OZ CANS
$6.99
T-BONE
STEAK
298
LB.
ECONOMY PACK
U.S. NO. 1
MILD YELLOW ONIONS
18¢
LB.
BONELESS TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
188
LB.
ECONOMY PACK
LOUISBURG APPLE CIDER
388
GALLON
FARMLAND JUMBO DELI FRANKS
65¢
1 LB. PKG.
GRANNY SMITH OR WASHINGTON RED DELICIOUS APPLES
49¢
LB.
LARGE 88 SIZE
FRESH BOSTON BUTT PORK ROAST
88¢
FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED APPLE PIES
2 FOR $3
8", 26 OZ.
FARMLAND SAUSAGE
1LB. ROLL ASST. VARIETIES
79¢ EA.
ASSORTED SQUASH
29¢ LB.
MOOSE BROTHERS PIZZA
2 FOR $5
8" STRONG TARTINE
FAIRMONT-GILLETTE LITE ICE CREAM
98¢
1/2 QT. CTN.
WEIGHT WATCHERS ENTREES
4-11OZ
ASST VARIETIES
98¢ EA.
SLICED OR SHAVED TURKEY BREAST
198
LB.
SEA SNACK COOKED SALAD SHRIMP
6OZ. PKG. 1 59 EA.
FROM THE BAKERY SWEET ROLLS
278
12 CT. ECONOMY PACK
ALL NATIONAL BRAND DOG & CAT FOOD BILL.
1 CUP OVER INVOICE COST.
OPEN 24 HOURS
Checkers
LOW FOOD PRICES
23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
GRade AAA.
EGGS 12 OZ PER EGG OVER CHECKER'S INVOICE COST.
Drinkers to Dear Drinking Logic Checkers Invoice Cost.
Fresh Kansas Raised Buffalo Daily.
PRICES SPECIFIED SEPT. OCT. '94
Woolrich.
BEST OF 1892
Woolrich.
MADE IN USA
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts 843-5000
IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... CALL BIRTHRIGHT
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you
843-4821
1246 Kentucky
Monday1-3, & 6-8
Tuesday1-3, & 6-8
Wednesday1-4
Thursday 6-8
Friday 1-4
When you need to shift your course load...
Earn University of Kansas Credit through
Independent Study by Correspondence
Enroll any week day of the year 8am to 4pm.
Stop by Independent Study Student Service 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
¥
Dickinson
Cinema 6
441 ALCO
2319 ROAD
Houston, TX
Trial by Jury $^{B}$ #4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Next Karate Kid $^{P}$ #4:35, 7:15, 9:35
Forrest Gorm $^{P}$$^{B}$ 10:50, 8:00
Corrina Corrina $^{B}$ #4:30, 7:00, 9:45
Natural Born Killers $^{B}$ #4:30, 7:10, 9:50
Terminal Velocity $^{P}$$^{B}$ 13:45, 7:15, 9:40
3 Prismetime Show (s) Heating Poly-
meter Senior Clicks Away! Immerse
Me
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAC FILMS
WED. SEPT. 28 TO SAT. OCT. 1
TEXTO DECEMBRE
Wed. 7:00 PM
Sat. 2:00 PM
Wed. 9:30 PM
Thurs. 7:00 PM
Japanese Electronic Film Fest
Japanese Logic Film Fest
In the Realm of the Senses
Thura
OKOGE
ALL SHOWS IN WOODRUFF AUD.
TICKETS $2.50, MONTHNERS $3.00
FREE WITH SIU MOVIE CARD.
CALL 854-*SHOW FOR MORE INFO.*
Crown Cinema
VARSITY
1015 MAASSAC HUGETTS 841 5191
TIMECOPR 5:00,7:15,9:30
BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00
(UNLIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
A Simple Twist of Fate PG-13 1:5.15, 7.30, 9.45
Milk Money PG-13 5.00, 7.15, 9.30
The Client PG-13 5.00, 7.15, 9.30
Color of Night R 5.00, 7.15, 9.30
Clear & Present Danger PG-13 5.00, 7.35
CINEMA TWIN ALL SEAT
31101OWA 841-5191 $1.25
$Speed^{R}$ $The\ Crow^{R}$
5:00, 7:20, 9:40
5:00, 7:30, 9:40
Canon At WOLFE'S
DAY
SEE THE NEWEST AND LATEST EQUIPMENT New Products just introduced at Photokina, Köln, Germany Shoot Pictures with every exotic, wide and super tele EOS lens USE OUR CANON TEST TENT OUTSIDE THE STORE
COME TO TOPEKA FRIDAY & SATURDAY-
8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Sept.30 & Oct.1
Really See what these Canon Lenses can do. Bring your Canon EOS body or borrow one of ours. TEST FILMS $1. Wolfe's will process the results in 1 Hour at Super Low Price so you can see the results.
Extra Low Canon Day Prices in effect Now!
FACTORY DEMONSTRATORS
Canon BJ-200e Bubble Jet Printer
New Price Was $299
$199^99
- High quality print, near laser quality
- Faster and better graphics than BL300
- Faster and better graphics than BJ-200
• 100 sheet feeder, letter or legal size
CANON
Inkjet Printer
See Canon Computers and Color Printers in action. Computer Outfits on SALE Now
SATURDAY ONLY
FREE CAMERA CLINIC Canon Technicians will clean and check your Canon Camera FREE.
Available 9-4 Saturday Checkups limited to Repairman's capacity so come early!
NEW
$799
CANON
ES70
[
- Built-in video light for true
"O Lux" performance
- Canon 12X zoom and built-in
0.7X wide angle adapter
- 5 mode programmed auto exposure
Canon Cameras on SALE from $490
New and factory demo Canon Products include Canon U.S.A., Inc. limited warranty/registration card
Wolfe's
Cameras, Camcorders & Computers
635 Kansas Avenue Downtown Topeka, KS (913)235-1386
WOLF
Weekdays: 8:30-5:30pm
Thursday: 8:30-8:00pm
Saturday: 8:30-5:30pm
---
6A
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
NATION/WORLD
"Ulstered since 1993"
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Chat Games Internet Hits Fun
fifi's
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
in downstown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Hot Games Internet Hits Fun
Esquire Barber Service
1st Time Customer $3.99
2323 Ridge Ct.
First Mid Building
842-3699
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
Over 10 toppings to choose from!
.357 Special
Wednesday carry out only
$3 small 1 topping
$5 medium 1 topping
$7 large 1 topping
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Open 7 days a week
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Over 10 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
401 N.2nd
401 N. 2nd
842-0377
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
TAVERN LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
WEDNESDAYS!
50¢ DRAWS $1 ANY- THING
Excludes pitchers,
doubles and imports.
50¢
DRAWS
By Donald M. Rothberg The Associated Press
Russia declares Monroesky Doctrine
WASHINGTON — Call it the Monroesky Doctrine. For nearly two centuries the United States has told the world that it will deal with problems in the Western Hemisphere. Now Boris Yeltsin has proclaimed a similar doctrine for the turbulent regions bordering Russia.
It's an idea the Clinton administration is uneasy with but doesn't relect.
"The United States has been muffled in its response" to Russia's assertion of its influence in the former Soviet republics, said Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, a senior Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
When President Clinton welcomed Yeltsin to the White House Tuesday, he kept the emphasis on partnership.
Bosnia and the Middle East are genuinely international efforts. But the savage fighting between Armenian
ANALYSIS
Yeltsin stated his position bluntly in a speech Monday to the United Nations.
and Azerbaijani forces over Nagorno-
Karabakh is of special concern to
Moscow.
In language reminiscent of the doctrine laid down by President Monroe in 1823, Yeltsin told the General Assembly that conflicts in the former Soviet republics threaten "the security of our state."
"We are acutely interested in actively having the world community participate in settling these difficult problems," he said. "However, the main burden for peacekeeping in the territory of the former Soviet Union lies today with the Russian Federation."
"Some people call if the Monroesky Doctrine," said Mark Lowenthal, a Russian expert at the Library of Congress.
Lowenthal said the Russians look at U.S. intervention in Haiti as an example of how the world should work in the post-Cold War era.
Without doubt the United States would respond strongly to any Russian moves against the Baltic states — Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia.
But what about Georgia, Moldova, Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan or Uzbekistan?
At a White House briefing in advance of Yeltsin's arrival, a senior administration official, speaking only on condition of anonymity, said, "We don't accept the concept of spheres of influence." He said that any peacekeeping in the former Soviet republics ought to be undertaken "in accordance with the U.N. charter."
But neither the United States nor other major powers are expressing any enthusiasm for sending troops to quell ethnic fighting in the former Soviet Union.
Clinton. Yeltsin discuss common concerns
WASHINGTON (AP) — With none of the rancor of the Cold War, President Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin sat down in a quiet White House garden Tuesday and struggled over differences about the war in Bosnia and Russian arms sales to Iran.
They made progress on both fronts, officials said. "The transition from the Cold War to parternship is over," said the Russian foreign ministry spokesman, Georgy Karasin.
The session, their fifth in 20 months, came amid a big emphasis on business deals. The United States pledged $525 million in financing and political risk insurance for investments in Russia, leading Commerce Secretary Ron Brown to say the meeting "can truly be called the trade and investment summit."
Additional agreements this week are expected to boost the investment total to $1 billion.
Clinton tried at length to persuade Yeltsin to stop sales of submarines, missile technology, air armaments and other equipment to Iran, which is accused by Washington of sponsoring terrorism. Secretary of State Warren Christopher "there's a resolution in sight on this very difficult issue."
He said Clinton and Yeltsin would continue discussions on the topic Wednesday, but he declined to say how a compromise might be struck.
On Bosnia, Christopher said Clinton will ask the U.N. Security Council
around Nov. 1 to approve lifting the arms embargo against the Muslim-led government but to delay implementing it for months. That eased, at least temporarily, Russian concerns about the war heating up.
During the delay, Christopher said, the United States hopes Bosnian Serbs would reverse their rejection of a peace plan to end the 21/2 year war in the former Yugoslav republic. Clinton is looking to Yeltsin for help toward that end.
Christopher said Bosnian Prime Minister Haris Siliqdzic came to him last Friday and suggested a six-month delay in the flow of arms.
Russian spokesman Karasin said he did not know of any agreement on Russian arms sales to Iran. But he welcomed any delay in weapons
White House party fetes Boris Yeltsin
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The White House strutted its finery yesterday to fete Russia's president at a glittering black-tie dinner that nonetheless had the friendly flavor of two couples who call each other Bill, Hillary, Boris and Naina.
"I really feel good about being here," Yeltis declared in his toast in the regal State Dining Room. "I feel at home."
Clinton's toast was so glowing in its praise of the Russian leader as a defender of democracy that Yeltsin confessed, "I feel a little uncomfortable and embarrassed."
The night began more formally, with the two couples making the traditional stroll down the red-carpeted staircase of the Grand Foyer and a stiffly posed photograph. But the mood quickly warmed as the 130 guests worked their way through the receiving line, Vice President Al Gore leading off the lineup hopping along on his crutches.
Hollywood producer Steven Spielberg, pianist Van Cliburn,
departing Disney president Jeffrey Katzenberg and NBC anchor
Tom Brokaw were among the glitterati illuminating only the second state dinner of the Clinton administration.
In keeping with their desire to showcase American talent, the Clintons selected opera singer Kathleen Battle, the tempestuous soprano fired by the Metropolitan Opera, for the after-dinner entertainment.
And to make their guests feel at home, the Clintons arranged for the Yale Russian Chorus to sing folk songs as dinner guests moved to the East Room for Miss Battie's performance.
Ferry sinks in Baltic; hundreds missing, feared dead
The Associated Press
Finnish navy rescue ships and helicopters were at the scene. At least five other passenger ferries were nearby also trying to find victims in the stormy, dark waters.
Stormy seas and winds topping 56 nph were preventing rescue operations near the site of the disaster, about 23 miles from the Finnish island of Uto off the country's southwestern coast.
uild a
"As far as I know, no others have been rescued." Sedepqris told Finnish radio.
HELSINKI, Finland — An Estonian passenger ferry carrying more than 800 passengers capsized and sank in the Baltic Sea early this morning, and officials said hundreds of people were missing and feared dead.
Only about a dozen people were reported rescued by 5 a.m. (10 p.m. CDT), according to Finnish authorities. They were picked up by the ferry Mariella, said the Mariella's information office, Per Erik Sedenervi.
The sinking occurred sometime after midnight (5 p.m. CDT).
"I think that hopes for (finding others) have gone. I don't think we'll find many more people alive."
The sunken ferry, Estonia, was listed as carrying 679 passengers and 188 crew members, said Finnish Coast Guard officer Ilkka Karpalla. It was en route from the Estonian capital, Tallinn, to Stockholm, Sweden. Karpalla said.
One of the rescued passengers, a Swedish man in his mid-20s, told rescuers the disaster happened too quickly for most people to prepare, according to Sedgervick.
Beautiful
SAVE $139
Body
Annual Membership-first visit
Special rates for graduating seniors! Absolutely NO joining fee!
749-2424
925 Iowa
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
*You can stop your membership over Christmas & Summer
CB
CIVILKC
CHRISTIE'S TOY BOX WHERE THE FUN BEGINS!
- Unique T-Shirts
• Adult Novelties
• Usual Greeting Cards
• Exotic Lingerie
• "Over-the-Hill" Gifts
• Video Sales & Rentals
• Hilarious Party Games
• Sensuous Oils & Lotions
Current Monthly Magazines
• T-Back/Thong Swimwear
KU students -Rent 1 movie at regular price and get a 2nd movie for $1c with valid KUID
1206 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Ks 842-4266
AMERICAN CHRISTIES
TOY BOX
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 for only
$142595 LC 475 4/80 POWER through it.
WARRIOR
LICTX
UNIVERSITY. DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
7A
AT LAWRENCE PROMPTCARE, YOU'RE NOT ONE IN A MILLION...
[Image] A cyclist is riding on a dirt road. The background is blurred, suggesting motion and speed.
At Lawrence PromptCare, we believe you should be treated like a person and not a number.
872
When you're hurting or ill, waiting in discomfort for long periods of time to see a doctor is irritating. Not only that, but you may be paying the bill for months. Why not
select a quicker, more convenient alternative Lawrence
40 Hwy 6th Street Univopple
10th Street Rine Street KU campus
Kuala Climson Parkway 7th Street
PromptCare At Lawrence PromptCare, we see you quickly and many visits are
are trained in general care, acute care industrial medicine. ...the works.Open seven days a week until 11 p.m., no appointment is necessary. You'll be greeted immediately by a nurse and treated fast. Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, lab and radiology services flexible hours and plenty of convenient accessible parking
make Lawrence PromptCare an agreeable health- care
really inexpensive. We're the ideal alternative to long waits in the emergency room and for those times when you can't see your regular doctor. Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center, equipped to handle just about any emergency that comes up, from a scrape to a break—and full service means from head to toe. Our experienced and board certified emergency medical physicians
alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician.
Mt. OREAD MEDICAL ARTS CENTRE
865-3997 KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY
8A
Wednesdav, September 28. 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Human embryo research under review
The Associated Press
BETHESDA, Md. — A federal panel recommended yesterday that the government end its ban on funding of human embryo research, saying very young embryos "do not have the same moral status as infants and children."
Opponents of the research immediately labeled the decision "ethically and morally bankrupt" and pledged to carry their resistance to the floor of Congress.
The 19-member committee of experts selected to advise the National Institutes of Health concluded that fertilized human eggs can be used for
federally funded scientific research within guidelines that limit how long an embryo can be kept alive, the sources of the sperm and egg, and the purposes for the study.
The panel would allow research only on embryos about 14 days or younger.
The action is only the first step in a process directed toward reversing a 15-year ban on federal financing of research using human embryos. A report of the committee will be reviewed in December by another NIH advisory panel, which will then make recommendations directly to NIH Director Harold Varnus.
Varmus, in turn, may draw up the final guidelines for NIH grants for embryo research. NIH officials said it will be at least six months before the agency could start funding research, but at least 70 scientists have indicated an interest in applying for grants
"The basic finding is that it is acceptable public policy to fund research on human embryos, but it should be subject to strict guidelines," said Patricia A. King, a law professor at Georgetown University and a co-chairwoman of the advisory panel.
She said a fundamental conclusion of the panel was that human embryos in the very early stages of development "do not have the same moral
status as infants and children."
King said the panel also concluded that significant and important medical benefits could be achieved by supporting research using human embryos. But, the committee members took pains to emphasize the special nature of such studies.
"An embryo merits significant respect as a developing form of human life," said Ronald M. Green, a professor of religion at Dartmouth College and a member of the panel. But, he said the majority committee concluded that this respect does not outweigh the potential benefits which arise from embryo research.
Republicans to wrest Congress from PACs
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — In the morning, more than 350 Republican House candidates solely signed a pledge to take back Congress from special interests. In the evening, they headed for a $5,000-a-table dinner to raise half a million dollars from Washington's money elite.
In the daytime ceremony on the Capitol steps, GOP incumbents, challengers and open-seat candidates filed past a table draped in red, white and blue to sign a "Contract with America" — a 10-point platform they
pledged to act on early next year, if voters elect a Republican House majority for the first time since 1954.
"Clinton is in such trouble with the American people that our job is to go out and offer a clear, positive alternative," said Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga. "To say, look, we different."
But Tuesday night's gala at a downtown Washington hotel underscored a reality of modern politics: Democrats and Republicans alike depend on some of the same Washington lobbies for campaign money.
"We're not telling you we're Martians," Gingrich said. "I believe we
should have an obligation to raise money. It's perfectly legitimate."
A senior Republican official involved in planning the event said organizers were aware the fund-raiser would open them to charges of hypocrisy, and an internal debate about postponing it raged until several days ago.
As they arrived at the dinner, GOP candidates were greeted by a noisy band of about 100 protesters.
The protesters, who included some Democratic congressional staffers, carried signs with such gibes as "Newt is my shepherd, I shall not
think" and "Newt's contract on America — no to seniors, no to children, yes to special interests."
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee was sending a television crew to film GOP candidates going in, for possible use in Democratic campaign ads.
At the contract signing ceremony, Rep. Dick Arney, R-Retaxes, said Republicans are "united in the belief that the people's House must be wrested from the grip of special interest groups and handed back to the people."
Simpson jury pool shrinks
Developments Tuesday in the O.J. Simpson double-murder case;
O. J.'S SONG: O.J. Simpson explained to reporters that he sang "Memory" from the musical "Cats" on the first day of jury selection because he misses his children. "That song really gets to me because it says, 'touch me' and I can't touch my kids," he said.
SPEEDY TRIAL 222 people out of 446 have passed the hardship phase of jury selection. Superior Court Judge Lance Ito said people might be willing to serve despite the length of the three- to six-month trial because of the "hoopla factor" surrounding it. It wants 28 more potential jurors before he begins questioning them individually.
911 TAPE: An employee from the prosecutor's office interrupted jury selection to give defense attorneys two envelopes and a cassette tape. Deputy District Attorney Mar-
cla Clark asked, "Is that the 911 tape?" But before the employee could answer, reporters were told the leave.
ITO'S BURDEN: Ito said his "biggest burden" is getting a jury selected, and he wants as few distractions as possible. To that end, he delayed for a week an evidence-suppression hearing initially scheduled for Wednesday.
FUTURE SELECTION: Those making the first round of selection were told to fill out a 75-page questionnaire and return to court next month for in-person quizzing by the judge and lawyers. Although it has the right to bar attorneys from asking questions, he indicated Monday that he would allow limited queries from both sides.
CAMERABARRED: Angered that the faces from jurors in other cases have been shown on TV, in violation of the law. It ordered the removal of the pool camera.
Army to use coed combat training
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) —The Army tried it and top brass liked it. Now they're making a co-eed combat training program for raw recruits permanent.
Women and men will train together at Fort Jackson starting next month, after a successful experiment last
The goal is to have 120 men and 120 women in each of two units. The program will be expanded in late October and November. About 40,000 recruits receive basic training at Fort Jackson annually.
year, spokesman Rick Fulton said Tuesday.
U.S. recruits for NAFTA
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The Clinton administration is casting about for new members to its North American Free Trade Accord. What would be more natural than to invite Argentina, a mere 4,000 miles south of the border?
President Carlos Menem, in town yesterday for the 49th U.N. General Assembly, trumpeted the economic achievements of his country since he became president in 1989, saying Argentina's growth rate was third highest in the world behind China and Thailand and inflation just 3.5 percent this year.
There should be a free trade pact from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego, on the southern tip of South America, Menem told 600 businessmen and international investors at the Americas Society.
Besides the United States, the NAFTA members are Canada and Mexico, a free-trade market of 370 million consumers.
Chile has drawn the U.S. administration's eye as a most-likely new entrant to NAFTA, due to its free-market economy, pro-democratic government and strong traditional ties to the United States.
Besides Chile, according to a draft paper prepared this summer by the office of the U.S. Trade Representative, the short-list for new members includes Argentina, Colombia and Venezuela — all in South America.
However, Venezuela is suffering severe economic, social and political problems, and Colombia has a drug-trafficking image that some U.S. lawmakers would be hard-pressed to ignore.
Democrats accuse Whitewater investigator of partiality
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The White House strutted its finery yesterday to fete Russia's president at a glittering black-tie dinner that nonetheless had the friendly flavor of two couples who call each other Bill, Hillary, Boris and Naina.
"I really feel good about being here."
Yeltsin declared in his toast in the regal State Dining Room. "I feel at home."
Clinton's toast was so glowing in its praise of the Russian leader as a defender of democracy that Yeltsin confessed, "I feel a little uncomfortable and embarrassed."
The night began more formally, with the two couples making the traditional stroll down the red-carpeted staircase of the Grand Foyer and a stiffly posed photograph. But the mood quickly warmed as the 130 guests worked their way through the receiving line, Vice President Al Gore leading off the lineup hopping along on his crutches.
Hollywood producer Steven Spielberg, pianist Van Cliburn, departing Disney president Jeffrey Katzenberg
and NBC anchor Tom Brokaw were among the glitterater illuminating only the second state dinner of the Clinton administration.
While black was the hands-down favorite among women's gowns, Mrs. Clinton enlivened the scene with a red chiffon Victoria Royal gown with rhinestone trim at the neck and sleeves.
Black women lack detection of breast cancer
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Black women are more than twice as likely as whites to die of breast cancer, in large part because their disease more often reaches an advanced stage before it is diagnosed, researchers reported.
The study also provided some evidence that cancerous tumors may be more aggressive in black women, but the researchers said the most important
conclusion to be drawn is that early screening for breast cancer is essential.
Part of the problem, the researchers said, is that because of poverty or other factors black women are less likely than white women to get to a doctor for early detection of cancer.
The study, published in today's issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, involved more than 1,100 women, roughly split between blacks and whites, in Atlanta, New Orleans and
Oakland, Calif., who were diagnosed with breast cancer between 1985 and 1986.
The researchers tracked deaths through 1990 and found that black women were 2.2 times as likely to die as white women. Forty percent of the higher death rate was blamed on cancer being more advanced when it was detected.
FUTONS by
Based Manufacturer with 6
Retail Locations
This
Complete Futon
& Frame
Exclusively Hardwood Frames
1023 Mass. St Lawrence, KS
843-8222
Abdiana
FUTON
Eat and Run with us!!
Come try
our new
lunch specials
$3.95!!!
815 New Hampshire
841-7286
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
1031 MASSACHUSETTS STREET, LAWRENCE, KS
841-1960
LIVE JAZZ TONIGHT
Sir Duke
Formerly the
Marqueal Jordan Quartet
$1.50 Wells
NOW
OFFERING
9 BEERS
ON TAP
Jayhawker Yearbook 428 Kansas Union 864-3728
1995 HILLTOPPER
All nominees will receive an application.
Nominations must be turned in to 400 or 428 Kansas Union by October 6 at 5p.m.
Nomination forms available at 400 Kansas Union (OAC) or 428 Kansas Union (Jayhawker Office).
Who do you know that is an ... OUTSTANDING SENIOR?
We are now accepting nominations for the 1995 Hilltopper Awards
- Anyone may nominate an outstanding senior.
WATKIN 1907
Since 1907 WATKIN "We Care For KU"
CPR can save a life.
To sign up:
864-9570.
WATKIN 1907
"We Care For KU"
CPR can save a life.
To sign up:
864-9570.
Oct. 10 & 11 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Oct. 17 & 18 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Oct. 22 Sa 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
Oct. 24 & 25 MTu 6-9 p.m.
Saturday class includes a 30-min. break. Classes cover adult/child/infant CPR using American Heart Association materials. $5 fee for training.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500
VVV
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
vs. Premium Ice Cream
Half the Calories! 80% Less Fat! 33% More Protein!
Plus, I Can't Believe It's Yogurt offers Nonfat and Sugar Free flavors that have No Fat or Cholesterol!
50¢OFF
Louisiana Purchase
23rd & Louisiana 843-5500
Orchards Corners
15th Kasold 749-0440
EXPIRES 10/16/94
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
a medium or large serving!
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
® We Put A Smile On Your Taste
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
9A
Gun buy-back in Haiti getting off to a slow start, only a handful turned in
Cash-for-weapons
The U.S. military is buying weapons from Haitians. The payments are a substantial amount for the average Haitian.
Haiti's per-capita
$340*
*1991 estimate
Payment for rocket launcher:
$300
Payment for handgun:
$50
NOTE: Only working weapons are accepted.
SOURCE: AP, World Factbook
Kun Tian / Knight-Ridder Tribum
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Under camouflaged shelters on a scorching Haitian airbase, American soldiers waited patiently yesterday for Haitians to turn in guns in exchange for cash.
The Associated Press
Patience was required.
Only a handful of weapons dribbled in during the first hours. But in a country where, by some accounts, 75 percent of the population is armed, the United States sees the program as a key to stability.
Prices ranged from $50 for a pistol to $300 for a machine gun — huge sums in a nation where the average daily wage is $1.20. But prices on the street can run up to 10 times what the Americans are offering.
The program, publicized by radio, loudspeakers and leaflets, is supposed to last three weeks but may be extended.
A similar program in Panama after the 1989 American invasion brought in thousands of weapons, from modern military rifles to museum-piece muzzle loaders.
"We don't know how to gauge it this early," said Capt. Andy Mazur of Youngstown, N.Y. "We suspect people will go back and tell their friends that there is credibility here, that we have the cash."
Col. Barry Willey, representative for the American forces in Haiti, said payment could be increased if the program seemed to lag. He urged that it not be judged too early.
The haul in the first few hours included pistols, a World War II-vintage M-1 Garrand rifle and a 9mm Uzi submachine gun, the soldiers said.
"We don't ask them who they are. You have a gun that shoots, we'll buy it, no questions asked," said Pvt. Amos Brown of Honolulu, a Haitian-born Creole speaker working with the program.
Some Haitians questioned the effectiveness of the "Gourdes for Guns" program, named after Haiti's currency, the gourde.
Haitians on the street speculated there could be a reluctance to turn in weapons until Haiti's situation shook itself out, and they knew who was likely to remain in power.
American troops expand their mission from disarming the Haitian military to taking up posts around the Parliament building and City Hall, a day before Haitian lawmakers are to discuss a bill authorizing amnesty for the country's top military leaders.
What's happening in Haiti? Yesterday's Developments in Haiti:
U. S. forces suffer their first fatality, as an American soldier is found shot to death at a hillside mansion being prepared to house Haitian legislators. A Pentagon spokesman said the soldier's death was being investigated as an apparent suicide. The identity of the soldier, from the 10th Mountain Division in Fort Drum, N.Y., was not immediately released.
American soldiers pay cash to Haitians who turn in guns or other weapons, part of an effort to increase security and stability in the streets. Prices range from $50 for a pistol to $300 for a machine gun — large sums in a nation where the average daily wage is $1.20.
About 2,000 people riot at a relief feeding center in Port-au-Prince. The rioters flee when American military police drive up, then resume looting when the MP's leave.
Learn to Fly 842-0000
The United States urges Security Council members to lift U.N. sanctions against Haiti once President Jean-Bertrand Aristide returns to power. A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, says a sanctions-lifting resolution is likely to be passed tomorrow and will take effect following Aristide's return in mid-October.
In Washington, the State Department said it is working closely with "legitimate authorities" to ensure that both houses of Parliament are able to meet in special session today.
wed., 9/28 Vitreous Humor / Sunday Drive / Iris Anvil
thu., 9/29 Bon Ton Sol Accordion Band fr.i., 9/30 Cosmic Freeway
sat., 10/1 Ozeric Tenticles w/Salty Iguanas sun., 10/2 That Statue Moved
mon., 10/3 River Valley Music Showcase wed., 10/5 Mango Jam
wed., 9/28
Vitreous Humor
Sunday Drive
Iris Anvil
DRINK SPECIAL
2 for 1
EVERY-
THING
(except pitchers)
GREAT
MUSIC
FOOD
HUMNS
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
THREE
BANDS!
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
913.841.9111
ADMINISTER TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE CAFE BELOW
YOUR GIFT FROM CLINIQUE
"Above And Beyond," Free With Any $13.50 Clinique Purchase!
Your Gift Includes:
- Advanced Care Moisture Lock Body Formula
- Dramatically Different Moisturizing Lotion
- Beyond Blusher
- Berry Kiss Long Last Lipstick
- Jet Black Naturally Glossy Mascara
- Clinique's Wide-Tooth Hair Comb
a neat travel case.
One bonus to a customer.
CLINIQUE
Shop Sunday 12-5 Monday-Saturday 9:30-5:30 Open'til 8:30 Thursday
CLINIQUE
CLINIQUE
COMPLEXE
Allergy Tested 100% Fragrance Free
Weavers
9th & Massachusetts
WEBDEPT
VISA
MasterCard
DI/COVER
lifestyles
Going in style
An artist from Ghana made a life out of designing fantasy coffins.
TIGER
You can see his airplane (above),his leopard(right), and his Mercedes, cow and crab coffins(all below) at the University of Missouri Kansas City.
Story by Megan Maciejowski Photos by Paul Kotz
Spending eternity in a wooden box may not sound appealing. But a coffin modeled after a Mercedes-Benz could ease the transition between living and breathing and decomposing six feet under the ground.
"A Life Well
Lived: The Coffins of Kane Quaye in Social and Cultural Context" at the University of Missouri-Kansas City Gallery of Art is an exhibit of Quaye's unique artistic vision of his fantasy coffins, which range in form from a crab to an outboard motor.
I
Exhibit director Craig Slaub said the exhibit, which began Friday and ends Oct. 24, had been amazingly popular despite the public's general apprehension about death-related themes.
Subler first became interested in bringing Quaye's work to the university while at a similar exhibit two years ago in Europe. He was in the midst of an in-depth study of burial rights in Ghana and concluded that Quaye's art was reflective of the community's traditions and customs.
"Any time you have a great artist that is able to mirror the community and culture from which he came from, the work is important," Subler said.
coffin, or a person with extreme wealth may have the ultimate status symbol — a Mercedes-Benz coffin.
People in Ghana believe that ancestors play a vital role in the lives of those still living. That's why there is a commitment to a successful burial, which is part of Quaye's work.
The coffins reflect the belief in Ghana that the extent of mourning and posthumous tributes reflect the stature of the deceased. Each coffin is uniquely personal, and its theme is symbolic of the person's work or status. For example, a "sherman might be buried in a fishing canoe
But they aren't being bought by KU students.
Since his death and burial in a gold-trimmed, regular coffin in 1902, Quaye's legacy has been continued by his brother Ben. Ben Quaye's shop turns out six to eight special coffins each month, depending on demand. Prices begin at $3,000 and increase based on material, motif and client.
Most students said they felt that their coffins were unimportant in defining the significance of their lives or in determining their afterives, possibly a reflection of American culture.
Considering growing environmental concerns, many students said they felt that coffins were a waste of trees and space.
But some students did play with the idea of being immortalized by their coffins.
Aspiring musician Jenni Venzke, Loveland,
Colo., freshman, has a fantasy coffin in mind.
"I'd like to be buried in a guitar-shaped coffin, because hopefully by the time I die, I'll be identified with my music," she said.
Dawn Wolf, Billings, Mont., sophomore wants her coffin to be designed like an aquarium because of her love for fish.
O
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
EPTEMBER 28.1994 10A KU Life
Cultural Calendar EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES
Exhibition - "Latter Days of the Law: Images of Chinese Buddhism 850-1850," Aug. 27-Oct. 9 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Jazz Clinic - Hal Galper, guest instructor, 11 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. today in 102 and 328 Murphy Hall.
Jazz Clinic – “The Art of Combo Playing,” 1 p.m. tomorrow in 102 Murphy Hall.
Open House - McQueen Fine Arts Gallery open house featuring Lawrence artists, 6 p.m. tomorrow at McQueen Jewelers, 809 Massachusetts St.
Exhibition - Native American Ceramics from the Southwest Pueblos, Sept. 10-Oct. 23 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibition - Kids' Art Show, Sept. 26-Oct. 3 in Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, Sixth and New Hampshire streets.
Exhibition - "Land and Its Uses: Photographs from the Collection," Sept. 3- Dec. 31 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibition - "Spooner Hall Architectural Drawings," Sept. 17-Nov. 13 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
PERFORMANCES
Lawrence Community Theatre presents "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat," 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St. T. Stickets $11 public, $10 students and senior citizens on Friday and Saturday, $10 public and $9 students and senior citizens on Sunday. Special student ticket rate $5 on Thursday only.
Fall Concert - University Symphony Orchestra,
7:30 p.m. Friday at the Lied Center. Tickets $6
public, $3 students and senior citizens.
Inge Theatre Series presents "Daytrip," 8 p.m.
Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Tuesday and Wednesday at Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets $6 public, $3 KU students, $5 other students and senior citizens.
Visiting Artists Series - Mark Clinton and Nicole Narbon, two planos, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 3 at Swarthout Recital Hall.
Fall Concert - University Concert Wind Ensemble, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 4 at the Lied Center. Tickets $4 public, $2 students and senior citizens.
Doctoral Recital - Dina E. Evans, organ, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 5 at Swarthout Hrecital Hall.
Jazz Concert: The Hal Galper Trio, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 5 at the Lied Center. Tickets $6 public, $3 students and senior citizens.
SPORTS
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
R
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28.1994
Richard Devinki / KANSAM
Kansas junior Slade Adams swings his way to a first-place team finish. The Kansas men's golf team won the Kansas Invitational at Alvamar Country Club yesterday.
SECTION E
Young team up to veteran standards
The team, which is comprised of one senior, three juniors, and one sophomore, triumphed yesterday in the Kansas Invitational at Alvamar Country Club. With a total of 887 strokes in three rounds of play, Kansas defeated Mississippi State by one stroke.
The Kansas men's golf team may be full of inexperienced players, but those players are performing like veterans.
Kansas men's golf comes from behind to win Invitational
Kansas junior Dan Rooney said the team was informed that it was four or five shots down with three holes to play. In the final stretch, Kansas made several birdies, while Mississippi State made numerous bogeys. That swing accounted for the Jayaawk victory.
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
"We just got lucky, I guess," Rooney said.
Rooney said the added pressure of knowing the team was behind helped him.
"I bared down the last four holes and didn't give away any shots," he said. "I like to know where I am, even if it adds a little pressure."
Kansas junior Slade Adams also said knowing the team was behind made him give an extra effort.
"I was glad to hear — to let me know individually what I needed to do," he said.
Adams, a transfer from Texas Christian University, led the team with a score of 222 for three rounds and finished in sixth place.
Adams said he was pleased with his performance overall, but he might have cut six or seven strokes off his score had he putted better. Two factors contributed to Adams'
putting woes.
"Some of it was knowledge," he said, referring to the greens. "The rest was confidence."
Adams was followed by his teammate Rooney, who placed seventh with a total of 223.
"I thought I played pretty well," Rooney said. "I didn't get many puts to fall, though."
Even though the team played at its home course, Rooney said he did not feel he had an advantage.
"You're expected to play well there," he said. "I didn't feel an advantage at all."
Kansas junior Chad Roesler agreed that there was a pressure of playing at home, but the pressure did not outweigh the positives.
"It was more of an advantage than a disadvantage," he said.
Roesler shot Kansas 'third lowest score but was not a member of the varsity squad. He placed 12th, opening the front nine holes of all three rounds with a 35.
"I played well with the exception of the last couple of holes each day," he said. "I had myself in position to do really well."
Several Jayhawks, including Roesler, competed as individuals in the tournament. Their scores were not counted in the team competition.
Roesler played for two years at Garden City Community College before transferring to Kansas. The Kansas Invitational was Roesler's first NCAA Division I competition.
"It was a good opportunity to prove something to myself," he said.
Rooney said Roesler's play proved to him how deep the team was in talent. In addition to the traveling team, there are five golfers that would be playing competitively for many other teams.
"It keeps the competitiveness up on the team," Rooney said. "To have people pushing all the time, it helps the top five."
Motor theft hurts Kansas crew
Incident causes monetary, athletic setbacks for club
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
The weekend theft of two KU Crew outboard motors, valued together at $3,000, has put the rowing team in a tough spot.
The Douglas County Sheriff's Office reported that the two motors were padlocked to a rack at the west end of the parking lot at Clinton State Park when they were stolen.
Sheriff Loren Anderson said he did not know how the padlocks were cut and had no suspects in the case.
The theft was discovered Sunday afternoon when the rowers showed up for practice, said Michael Amick, assistant coach for the team. The motors were last seen at practice Saturday morning, he said.
Amick said the motors were used on boats driven by the coaches during practices at Clinton Lake. He said the coaches would accompany the teams on the water to watch and offer advice.
Amick said the theft was a setback for the team both financially and athletically.
With all its time devoted to practice and fundraising for current costs, the team has little time to raise money for two new motors, he said.
"This is a serious, serious financial setback," Amick said. "We raise all our own money. Every weekend we have a fundraiser."
sions at Kansas football games for money and volunteered for work around the city in exchange for donations.
Keeping the coaches off the water also could hurt the team, which is practicing for a meet on Oct. 9 in Rockford, Il., he said.
In the meantime, Amick said, the only way students could help the team is to keep an eye out for the motors, which are distinctly marked.
VOLLEYBALL
"If you happen to see two outboard motors with 'KU Crew' stenciled across the side, please give the police a call," he said.
Junior outside hitter Tracie Walt, left, blocks the ball during a Kansas volleyball team practice at Robinson Center as freshman blocker Jenny Wiedeke backs her up. The team was practicing yesterday in preparation for tonight's Big Eight conference season opener.
Brian Vanderviert/
KANSAN
Volleyball to open conference play
Kansan sportswriter
Bv Cheslev Dohl
Iowa State volleyball coach Jackie Nunez and Kansas coach Karen Schonewhey ought to sit down for a heart-to-heart talk.
Nunez, who took over a young Cyclone team last year, knows all about the development of a volleyball program.
Tonight the Jayhawks open their conference season against Iowa State at Ames, Iowa, where Nunez is starting her second year of coaching.
"It's so tough at times," Nunez said. "Lots of transition went on last year. You have to get used to a new style, players, coaches, expectations and goals. It's a big adjustment."
"I'm sure that's what Karen and Liz Berg (Kansas assistant coach) are going through now," Nunez said.
Nunez took over an Iowa State team of juniors, sophomores, and freshmen and, despite a fourth-place conference finish, the Cyclones' record was a lopsided 9-19.
After a rough 1993 season, the Cyclones are reaping the benefits this year. They return nine letter winners and six starters from last season, while five freshmen newcomers provide the Cyclone bench with depth.
referring to the Jayhawks' transitional phase. "I empathetic with them. I know just what the team and coaches are going through."
Although Schonewise said she could see the first-year coaching similarities between she and Nunez, she said she wasn't going to overlook the potential for a strong finish to Kansas' 1994 season.
"We're not looking past this season at all," she said. "We just came off some confidence-building matches, and we're just looking to get things done in the conference."
After a year of refining their skills, the Cyclones are in a better position than the Jayhawks coming into tonight's match.
With a healthy 11-2 record this season, Iowa State ranks eighth out of 112 teams in the Midwest Region.
"We've won more games this September than all last year," Nunez said. "They (the players) have a year under their belt playing together. They know our system."
Iowa State junior outside hitters Kirstin Hugdahl and Stephanie McCannon provide the Cyclones with an intimidating front line.
Hugdahl, at 6 feet 1 inch, led the Cyclones in kills per game with 3.07 last year, and was fifth in Big Eight Conference matches with 3.59 kills per game.
McCannon, a 5-foot-11-inch defensive specialist, led the team in digs last season with nearly four digs per game.
Nunez said the Cyclone's muchimproved record this year was a reflection of a more mature, experienced team.
McCannon is a quick, agile player on the floor and is no slouch in the air. She finished with a team-high 306 kills last year, Nunez said.
"We're pretty good on both the offensive and defensive end," Nunez
said. "We have lots of balance, though Stephanie is an incredible defensive player for us."
Coming off two good days of practice, Schonewise said Kansas was looking forward to the matchup with the Cyclones.
"It's the start of a new season, and we're playing with a lot more confidence now," she said. "Communication, blocking and no balls hitting the floor without full-out effort are still our three main goals for the match," she said.
Kansas junior outside hitter Tracie Walt said the Jayhawks had set a team goal to start the Big Eight season with a win against Iowa State. She said the team's confident play last weekend at the Arby's Classic in Lincoln, Neb., was an encouraging factor. Kansas lost both matches, but won two games.
"We hadn't won a game in a long time, and those wins got us back in it," Walt said. "We know what it feels like to win again, and hopefully it's going to carry over."
Football preview: ISU Cyclones
Bv Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
Technically, the Iowa State football team is still in the race for the Big Eight Conference championship, but the Cyclones will have a long road to travel in reaching the conference's upper division.
But what Cyclone coach Jim Walden and his staff do like about their team is that its morale has remained positive.
After losing their first four games, even the Cyclones admit their chances are slim
Walden, who was also concerned about the team's morale, said that the student paper at Iowa State had criticized players unnecessarily.
"The kids are great," said Jim Burrow, defensive backs coach. "They work hard. You wouldn't know by watching practice that this team is 0-4. The morale is there."
"They don't deserve that," Walden said of the criticism. "They're human beings. They just wish to make the students happy. They're trying their best."
Walden almost seems more concerned about his players than his job security. He said that his future had no effect on his concerns for this year's football team.
A. G. B. H.
"They close plants every day, that doesn't
Jim Walden
mean you can't get work," Walden said, comparing his job to that of a blue-collar worker. "I'm not walking the picket line trying to save my job. I'm trying to get things straightened out."
From 1991 to 1993
Iowa State's record was
10-22-1. However,
Walden that lack
Walden said that quitting would undermine what he had taught in 30 years of coaching football. Walden's assistant coaches also are not ready to leave the program.
of success would not drive him away from the program. Someone else would have to tell him to leave.
"Coach Walden is one of the few coaches in the business who has a great record of stability." Burrow said. "We're loyal to him."
"I think I'm a pretty good coach," he said.
Walden has been Iowa State's coach since 1986 — the last time his team started a season 0-4.
A major factor in the Cyclones' winless start has been the multiple injuries suffered
To make matters worse, Walden is leading his team into the Big Eight schedule, the toughest part of its season.
Burrow said that the teams injuries at linebacker made it susceptible to a good rushing attack.
Walden said the running game was struggling because the Cyclones' starting offensive left tackle and both offensive guards were injured.
by the team.
He said that Iowa State's top two quarterbacks had injuries, and two of its top four linebackers were out.
BIG8 CONFERENCE
Kansas, with its proven strength in the running game, most likely will give Iowa State problems when the teams play Oct. 15 in Ames, Iowa, he said.
Burrow said that the team's two defensive backs, who were selected to All-Big Eight teams last season, also were unable to play.
Still, he said the Cyclones' losses could be attributed to many other factors.
LINCOLN, Neb. — Coach Tom Osborne was not ready to give up hope that quarterback Tommie Frazier, who is hospitalized with a blood clot in his leg, would return to the starting lineup this season.
Blood clot to sideline Husker quarterback
The Associated Press
"You count on guys like that for experience and leadership," Burrow said. "But you can never blame it on injuries."
Doctors told Osborne yesterday that the clot behind Fra-
tzer's right knee had been reduced 40 percent to 50 percent since treatment began Sunday.
"It's a good sign the medicine is working." Osborne said.
Osborne said he wasn't certain how long the Heisman Trophy contender would be out. "I don't think it's a done
deal that I miss the rest of the season necessarily," Osborne said.
Frazier, Bradenton, Fla., junior, was a bit more optimistic about his return, according to his mother.
"He'll be OK. He's feeling pretty calm and he thinks he'll get back to football soon," Priscilla Frazier told The Lincoln Star in an interview published today.
Frazier probably will remain at Bryan Memorial Hospital for the next few days, said Osborne, who did not know when Frazier would be released.
Frazier probably would remain on some type of blood thinner, which would prevent him from having contact on the football field because of the risk of internal injury, Osborne noted.
"He's responding very well," said team doctor Pat Clare.
Coach suspends cornerback for three weeks
The Associated Press
BOULDER. Colo. — Sophomore cornerback Deren Tadlock has been suspended for three weeks, Colorado coach Bill McCartney said Monday.
McCartney did not specify the reason for the suspension.
Tadlock already has missed two games this season because of disciplinary suspensions as well as last season's Aloha Bowl trip. He missed the opener against Northeast Louisiana for missing a pre-season practice.
1
He also didn't dress for the Wisconsin game after pleading guilty to a misdemeanor charge of third-degree assault and physical harassment for hitting a woman and pushing her male companion to the ground in early August.
He was suspended from the bowl trip last season after being expelled from his dormitory room for making too much noise.
一
2B
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Players may start new league
Next spring is up in the air for baseball
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Baseball players who attended their union leader's latest briefing said a new league was likely if the dispute between baseball's owners and players would not end by spring training.
"The bottom line is that the owners are trying to break the players' union, and they are not interested in bargaining. I really don't think they care about the fans and what is going on," said Chicago White Sox first baseman Frank Thomas, whose bid for a Triple Crown was curtailed when the season was canceled a month after players went on strike.
Thomas, one of 56 players attending Monday's meeting near O'Hare International Airport, said he expected no wavering by the union.
"You never know," he said. "There could be some guys who jump the line, but I have a feeling that is not going to happen. It would be unheard of, undoing what the players before us did. That's what they're trying to do, make us take a giant step backwards."
Thomas and teammate Jack McDowell have lost big money during the strike. McDowell will lose more than $1 million in paychecks. But they are not ready to cave in on the salary cap that owners want.
"When I broke in, the dollars I'm making now was not even thought of," said McDowell, whose 1994 contract was for $5.3 million. "The salary cap would close that system up. Whether I recoup or not is not what it is about. It's about wrong or right."
There were some brief discussions about starting a new league.
"We have seven or eight options," said Cubs player representative Randy Myers. "What I have been told (is that) there are 10-plus corporations that are willing to sponsor us, and there are a lot of city-owned stadiums where leases haven't been fulfilled.
"We also have a couple of broadcasting stations that are willing to go with us. It's just one of the possibilities."
Player agent Tom Selakovich said the announcement of a players' league for 1995 could be made in about 10 days. But Dick Moss, the agent organizing it, said Oct. 19 is his
"I wouldn't call it a joke," Selakovich said. "People are putting a lot of time and effort into it."
current target date.
Chicago Cubs first baseman Mark Grace said there was a lot of work being put into a players' league.
Some players also said Monday that a threat to bring up minor leaguers to fill out rosters would not work because fans would see the difference in talent.
For now, the players are just waiting and hoping for a breakthrough, which does not look close.
"There is nothing you can do about it," Minnesota's Kirby Puckett said of the strike.
"Just hang in there. I'm doing fine, and I'm sure other players here are doing fine, or they wouldn't be here. It's good to see a big number of guys turn out."
NHL season likely to be postponed
The Associated Press
TORONTO — The NHL season will begin Saturday night unless commissioner Gary Bettman postpones it Friday.
There were strong signs that the start of the season will be delayed. The Anaheim Mighty Ducks canceled their hotel reservations in Dallas for Friday, and the Boston Bruins were looking into booking ice time for playoff hockey in July.
Bettman said a decision will be made Friday so that 12 teams have time to cancel their travel plans to opening-night destinations for Saturday's scheduled start of the season.
While Anaheim might have jumped the gun, the Bruins aren't the only team to inquire about the availability of ice in July.
The NHL and NHL Players' Association are to resume negotiations today. If they pick up where they left off on Monday, things look bleak.
"I think every team is looking to see what dates are open in July," one general manager told the Canadian Press. Had he allowed his name to be used, he could face a fine of up to $1 million under the NHL's gag rule.
One insider said "nothing was accomplished" during five hours of negotiations.
"It is very clear we have a wide difference of opinion," said NHLPA executive director Bob Goodenow. "I think unless there is
flexibility shown by owners, there flexibility is a serious problem, he said.
The threat of a lockout is definitely on the minds of those in the hockey world.
"Like Wayne Gretzky said, it could go three to four months before it is settled," said Rick Toccher of the Los Angeles Kings.
In Vancouver, Canucks coach Rick Ley said the postponement threat had been a distraction to the players.
"They're not quite as intense," said Ley. "It's a big distraction. You hope, with the uncertainties, the players aren't letting up, physically and mentally."
Negotiators for owners and players met in large and small groups trying to find common ground for a collective bargaining agreement on two of three key issues — a tax to help small market teams and salary arbitration.
"It was a free-flowing discussion," said Bettman. "I think it remains formative and constructive."
The NHL is proposing to tax teams that exceed the league's average salary, which was approximately $16 million in 1993-94.
The money would be pooled to help small market teams.
Players resist the proposal because they feel it is a salary can.
"I do not believe in a salary cap in any way, shape or form in any occupation," said Kings goalie Kelly Hurdey.
A recent study of 60,000 athletes at Seattle-area high schools found that the overall injury rate for girls' cross country was higher than any other sport.
Girls' cross country shows top injury rate
Injuries per 100 athletes per season Injuries per 1,000 athletic games or practices
Girls' cross country 61.4 17.3
Boys' football 12.7
Boys' wrestling 49.7 11.8
Girls' soccer 11.6
Boys' cross country 38.7 10.5
Girls' gymnastics 10.0
Boys' soccer 36.4 9.5
Girls' basketball 7.1
Girls' track 24.8 6.2
Boys' basketball 5.5
Girls' volleyball 19.9 5.4
Girls' softball 4.8
Boys' track 17.3 4.4
Boys' baseball 4.2
Girls' fastpitch softball 11.9 2.4
Coed swimming 2.2
Coed tennis 7.0 1.9
Coed golf 0.8
SOURCES; Chicago Tribune, Dr.
Stephen G. Rice, Athletic Health
Care System, Seattle
Knight-Ridder Tribun
Fans getting their fill of 'cupcake' games
The Associated Press
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — On a day when there were marquee games like Colorado-Michigan and Washington-Miami on the national schedule, fans in Alabama were watching their teams devour cupcakes.
At Legion Field, the Crimson Tide beat Tulane 20-10. At Auburn, the Tigers beat up East Tennessee State 38-0.
"I started out at $10, now I'm down to $5," complained Jimmy Jones of Birmingham, a longtime Alabama season-ticket holder, as he stood outside Legion Field trying to peddle four extra tickets. "They're fixing to be free here in a minute."
There are plenty of games like that in the Southeastern Conference, where teams have loaded their scheduling plates with regional turkeys like Louisiana Tech, East Carolina, Northeast Louisiana and Arkansas State.
Tennessee has the only tough nonconference schedule in the SEC this year. The Volunteers lost at UCLA in the season opener and face No. 17 Washington State at home Saturday.
The fans find that explanation hard to swallow, especially a fan like Jones who has to pay $500 just for the privilege of buying season tickets.
The Pacific-10 and Big Ten have eight game league schedules, and their teams still find room for quality out-of-conference opponents. Michigan's slate includes Boston College, Notre Dame and Colorado; Southern California has games against Penn State, Baylor and Notre Dame.
"It's sad we don't play more intersectional games," Tennessee coach Phillip Fulmer said. "But I understand why we don't. It's the eight conference games."
By contrast, Auburn's 38-0 victory over East Tennessee State last weekend didn't quite measure up on the excitement scale.
"When Tennessee played UCLA, I thought, 'Why don't we play a team like that?' said Kendall Hoffman of Birmingham, who attended the game at Jordan-Hare Stadium with her husband and his family. 'I'd kind of like to see them play somebody from a different conference. You know, they say they're better, and we say we're better. Well, let's find out."
Still, the fans keep coming. The SEC set an all-time attendance record last year of nearly 4.9 million, and league stadiums were filled to 92 percent capacity.
Not so long ago, Alabama was playing teams like Nebraska, Southern California and Notre Dame. But that was in the days of the six and seven game conference schedule. The Tide have ventured outside the South for a regular season game since visiting Penn State in 1989.
"I'd rather see us play good games," said Alabama fan Mark Shetton as he entered Legion Field for the Crimson Tide's 20-10 snoozer over Tulane. "I don't think any team ought to schedule those little teams, especially I-AA teams."
Alabama and Auburn have both stooped that low. The Tide open the season with an easy victory over Tennessee-Chattanooga; while Auburn
Alabama and Auburn have both stooped that low. The Tide opened the season with an easy victory over Tennessee-Chattanooga; while Auburn — coping with the financial effects of probation — picked up East Tennessee State to have an extra home game before the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30.
Auburn coach Terry Bowden said he would like to play a tougher schedule, but the school administration mandates seven home games a year. Since the conference games are split evenly home and away, the Tigers must schedule three other teams willing to come to Jordan-Hare without a return visit.
Orioles want La Russia, but so do other teams
Long before he fired manager Johnny Oates on Monday night, Orioles owner Peter Angelos coveted La Russa as the field general for his talent-rich ballclub. La Russa's contract
BALTIMORE — The Baltimore Orioles' wish list for a new manager begins and ends with Tony La Russa. Two Daveys, Johnson and Lopes are among the contenders who will be considered only if La Russa says no.
The Associated Press
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naiamth Hill"
Hrs: 8-7-M-Th., 8-Fri., 9-Sat., 12-4-Bu. #433-8326
with the Oakland Athletics expires next month, at which point he will begin to entertain offers that should net him millions.
Oakland wants to keep him. And several teams, including the Orioles and the Boston Red Sox, want to get him.
5
The Orioles were so eager that they asked Oakland for permission to speak to La Russa before they dumped Oates.
Oakland rejected the Orioles' request. But when word of the inquiry became public, Angelos was forced to announce the decision he had already made — to dismiss Oates.
Jayhawk Bookstore
Because La Russa is the No.1 candidate and his contract doesn't expire until Oct. 7, Angelos won't be naming a new manager anytime soon.
"If one can get a La Russa, why would he want anyone else?" Angelos said. "He's a big name that would be good for this town."
Jayhawk Bookstore
Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228
KA•XΩ • AKλ • XΩ • AKλ • XΩ • AKλ • XΩ • AKλ
JON BLUMBAUGH MEMORIAL WHEAT MEET
October 2,1994 Benefits KU Cancer Research
Entry:
Entry fees-$6-Race
$11-Relays
$5-Fun Relay
$4-Simon Says
100% cotton t-shirts will be given to winner of each race. Winner of Simon Says receives trip to Chicago.
Sign up on Wescoe beach before Friday September 30,1994.
Chi Omega Alpha Kappa Lambda
UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY
Awards:
Shirts Illustrated
BULLWINKLES
Meet begins at 9:00 a.m. on October 2, 94.
For questions, call 841-5567 or 841-6094
TRAVEL CENTER
THE STUMBLE NW
AAC C
18th AMENDMENT
river valley music
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
Caballero
RANCH
Country Western Ranch
Receipts (period 95) from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 7% rebate at the Customer Service counter of the KU Bookstores until the end of December,1994.
KU Bookstore REBATE
Over $2,400,000 returned to date.
KU student I.D. required.
Now Available!
Now accepting receipts from the Spring '94 semester for rebate payments.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Ks. Union 864-4640
Burge Un. 864-5907
Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Department of Music and Dance
Concert Wind Ensemble Robert E. Foster & James Barnes Co-conductors
7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, October 4, 1994
Lied Center
For general admission tickets are available through the KU box offices (Murphy Hall, 864-3982, Lied Center, 864-ARTS, SUA Office, 864-3477); public $4, students and senior citizens $2; VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone orders.
/
---
4
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
3B
Mixed Media by Jack Ohman
1984 Tampa Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
SPORTS
CARD
COLLECTIBLES
YES!
WE HAVE THE
ROBERT SHAPIRO
AND
ALAN DERSHWITZ
ROOKIE CARDS!
Elway's failure as 'Superman' this season stumps Broncos
The Associated Press
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — The Denver Broncos used to win these games, remember?
John Elway would move his team downfield with the clock ticking away, and one chance at the end zone would usually be enough.
Not this year.
For the third time in four games, the Broncos had a chance to win a game in the final minutes, but Elway couldn't deliver. On Monday night, the ball slipped out of his hand — again — and the Buffalo Bills held on for a 27-20 victory.
"A quarterback's not Superman," Denver running back Glyn Milburn said. "He's not going to see everybody open every time. He's got people flying around. It's a tough thing."
Elway may not be Superman, but they used to share a phone booth.
By the Broncos' count, he has engineered the game-saving, fourth quarter drives in his career. But, the only one in the last two years was a three-play, 11-yard drive with more than 10 minutes left against Kansas City last year.
And the three times he has been called upon to repeat the heroics this
season, he hasn't.
—Against the Jets, Denver had a chance to take the lead late in the game but had to settle for a field goal. The Broncos lost in overtime 25-22.
—Against the Chargers, Elway led the two-minute offense to the San Diego 3. He rolled out and went to throw, but the ball slipped out of his hands and was picked out of the air by Junior Seau. Final score: San Diego 37, Denver 34.
—Against the Raiders ... well, you can't blame this one on Elway. Denver lost 48-16 — its worst home loss since 1968.
And now, against Buffalo, the ball slipped out of Elway's hands on a fourth-and-2 with 21 seconds and sailed high over Cedric Tillman's hands and through the end zone.
"The ball slipped on his hands. It's happened twice now," tight end Shannon Sharpe said. "We have to find a way to win close games. We're making too many mistakes, putting ourselves in bad situations."
Bills quarterback Jim Kelly said he was having the same problem on the rainy night.
"It slipped out of my hands probably seven times," he said. "It's one of those things where you really have to concentrate on the grip and the follow-through."
The Broncos, considered Super Bowl contenders when the season started, matched the worst start in their history. They also started 0-4 in 1964, when Jack Faulkner was fired as coach.
Bills linebacker Cornelius Bennett, who had six tackles, two sacks and forced Elway to throw high on the Broncos' final play, consoled the quarterback after the game.
"I just told him, 'You guys are too good to be 0.4. Stick with it,' he said.
"He goes out and burs his butt every time he plays the game."
Thurman Thomas ran for two touchdowns in the last two minutes of the first half and Carwell Gardner added another after Thomas hurt his knee.
The Bills took advantage of two turnovers that bridged the halftime break to score 21 points in 3 minutes, 36 seconds.
Thomas gained 103 yards in 17 carries before leaving with an injured right knee early in the third quarter.
He went in from 16 yards out with 1:54 left in the half and from the 27just 1:36 later after Bruce Smith forced an Elway fumble that Bennett recovered.
Sanders admits he is a father; changes tune
"We did get a momentum swing with the fumble," Bennett said. "But with John Elway at quarterback, you can never say you've got them licited."
PONTIAC, Mich. — Detroit Lions running back Barry Sanders says he is the father of a 5-month-old son, B.J., who lives with his mother in Dallas.
The Associated Press
X
Sanders told the Detroit Free Press in Saturday's editions that the baby was born April 10. His son attended Detroit's football game against Dallas on Sept. 20 with Sanders' parents.
"Ifeel great about it, it'spretty nice," Sanders said of having a son, whose full name is Barry James.
"My position on that has evolved," he said. "I've just changed."
"Ultimately, virginity is something that's up to the individual," he said in an interview done during the summer.
GOLF Unlimited
Arizona: Simms too expensive The Associated Press
Sanders, who told reporters in 1991 he opposed to premarital sex, said he didn't know whether he would marry B.J.'s mother, whom he refused to identify. He said he known the woman for about seven years, since dating her at Oklahoma State University.
TEMPE, Ariz. — Phil Simms turned out to be too expensive for the Arizona Cardinals.
"He wants more money than we've got," Coach Buddy Ryan said Monday about his attempts to land Simms, the former New York Giants quarterback now working for ESPN as a studio analyst. "All he's got to do is check the (NFL) Players Association to see how much money we've got."
But in a recent interview with the Free Press, Sanders said he no longer spoke on that question.
Simms was offered a $1 million deal, but he reportedly wanted a two-year deal worth $2 million a season. One way for the Cardinals to free up that much money would be to release quarterback Steve Beuerlein, who makes about $2 million.
WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER 10% off any
601 Garald Drive, Suite B-103 purchase with KUID
Lawrence, Ks 6949 (excludes golf balls)
612 872 5380
The Associated Press
Monday-Saturday 10-7 Sunday 12-5
Esquire Barber Service
1st Time Customer $3.99 No waiting with appointment
2323 Ridge Ct.at the First Med Building 842-3699
Change Your Routine with
The CRICKETING
The CHICAGO
THE CROSSING!
Wed. Drink Special
C
25¢ Draws
D
$1.00 Big Beers
$2.00 Cover (after 8:00 p.m.)
Open Mon.-Sat. 12 noon-12 midnight
NEWATMOSPHERE
Deck
Pool Table Darts
100 Disc Jukebox
The
CHRISTING
518 West 12th Street (at the end of campus)
The CROSSING
CD from Recycled Music Center (20%
OFF (CD's, Tapes, Movies, Video Games)
Tuesday & 15% More (in cash or credit) on Buy
Backs •Show Card After Offer)
and movie from Video Biz (2 for 1
Video Rental Monday-Thursday, limit one offer
per day) for romantic evening.
Espress
O'House
KANSAN
necklace from Kizer-Cummings (15% OFF Non-Sale Gold Chains)
personal 'love note' placed in Kansan (20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad)
G. Q. Smooth CARD MEMBER SINCE SEPTEMBER 5,1994
late night conversation at Espress O'House ($1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50, includes food and coffee drinks)
"Winning the heart of my dream girl is not easy. However, with this card it certainly is less expensive."
It doesn't matter how you spend your time, the Kansan Card can help you save your money.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
Available for $2 at:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
University Daily Kansan (119 Stauffer-Flint), The University Book Shop, Jayhawk Bookstore, Kansas Union (2nd level courtesy counter), and Burge Union (1st level courtesy counter)
---
4B
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Miami feels the heat; trade talk gets mixed reactions
The Associated Press
MIAMI — Ascender Rony Seikali blasted the Miami Heat for off-season inaction, a report surfaced yesterday that the team was considering a trade for Portland Trail Blazers All-Star Clyde Drexler.
The deal, which would send guard Harold Miner to Portland, has received a mixed reaction within the Heat organization, according to the Sun-Sentinel of Fort Lauderdale. Neither team would confirm the trade talks.
The 32-year-old Drexler said he heard about the negotiations from "a good source" and added that he wouldn't oppose such a deal.
Seikaly, meanwhile, was angered by the Heat's failure to retain free agent guard Brian Shaw, who signed last week with the Orlando Magic.
Selkely joined a chorus of critics complaining about the Heat's failure to make any off-season deals.
While Drexler would give Miami a bona fide superstar, his scoring average and shooting percentages have dropped precipitously in the past three years, from 25 points on 47 percent shooting in 1991-92 to 19.2 and 43 percent last season. He has also been injury-prone during that span.
Drexler is scheduled to make $1.8 million next season, but has an $8.75 million balloon payment due for the 1995-1996 season. The balloon payment had been cited as a reason Drexler probably would stay in Portland.
Miner, a first-round draft pick in 1992, averaged 10.5 points per game last season and has had problems with Heat coach Kevin Loughery. Miner's agent reaffirmed his client's dissatisfaction with the Heat.
ASHBURN, Va. — Norv Turner never made it a secret that Heath Shuler was going to be his quarterback. Yesterday, Turner made it official.
The Associated Press
Shuler, the Washington Redskins first-round draft pick this year, will replace veteran John Friesz as the starter against the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday.
Turrer said that he based the decision on a combination of Friesz's recent performances and his feeling that Shuler was ready to play.
Redskins change quarterbacks
"Even though we've been very productive in the passing game and gotten a lot of positives out of it (with
Fries); we're still making the errors that are keeping us from getting done what we want to get done," Turner said.
"And if we're going to have those errors, I'd just as soon be having those errors with Heath and making progress that way."
Shuler said he was glad finally to get the chance to start.
"I'm just glad to get the opportunity to play and step in and get on the winning side again," he said.
The Redskins are 1-3 after four games with Friesz as the starter. Friesz's strong showing in the team's second game at New Orleans caused Turner to postpone plans to start Shuler in the third game.
Shuler remained on the bench as Friesz threw for 476 yards and had six touchdowns in two games, against the New Orleans Saints and the New York Giants.
Turner replaced him with Shuler for the final two possessions of the game.
"I'm disappointed for John, because I think John Friesz has played awfully well and given us a lot of positive things, gotten our offense off to a good start." Turner said. "I just felt at this time it was the right thing to do."
Turner said the luxury of having Friesz kept pressure off Shuler while he learned the Redskins' offensive scheme.
$200
OFF AN AT&T
COMPUTER!
Get $200 back by mail when you purchase any one of 12 select AT&T Computers by 12/34/94.
New Product:
AT&T Communicator Multi-Media System
• 48GX, 33MHz
• 4Mb, 210Mb
• Sound Card
• Mouse
• Fax/Modem
• CD-ROM
• DOS, Windows
• Multimedia Software
• Stereo Speakers
• Monitor not included
only
$1,097
w/rebate
only
$1,097
wrebate
Informational Meeting and Picnic
Thursday September 29 at 6:30
Contact For Information
Jon Koch 864-1211 or Jenny Jauber 749-6714
$200 OFF AN AT&T COMPUTER!
Get $200 back by mail when you purchase any one of 12 selected AT&T Computers by 12/30/94.
New Product:
AT&T Communicator Multi-Media System
• 486SX, 33MHz
• 4Mb, 210Mb
• Sound Card
• Mouse
• Fax/Modem
• CD-ROM
• DOS, Windows
• Multimedia Software
• Stereo Speakers
• Monitor not included
only $1,097 wirebate
ConnectingPoint
COMPUTER CENTER
813 Mass • Downtown Lawrence • 843-7584
JOCK'S NITCH
SPORTING GOODS
The Sports Look of Today!
Get Outfitted for Fall
Columbia Sportswear Company
Wigwam Hats
Columbia Guiness Sweater
Cool KU Game Bar Hat
Columbia Jeans
Columbia Jean Jacket
Nike Lined Windpants
K-Swiss Boots
Nike Waterproof Boots
What Every Self Respecting Stick is Wearing
842-2442 840 Massachusetts
Hours: Mon-Wed 9:30-7 p.m.
Thurs 9:30-8:30 p.m.
Fri-Sat 9:30-6 p.m.
Sun 12-5 p.m.
Comedy in Lawrence. Thurs. Sept.29
Featuring
Fabian Shepard-
You've seen him on M.T.V., Comedy Central and Herman's Head
Also appearing is KU's Mark Mallouk
LA FAMILIA III
After Hours
The kitchen's closed but the bar is open
10:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.
Wed, Thur, & Fri.
25¢ DRAWS
50¢ KAMIS
Wed, Thur & Fri 18 & OVER WELCOME
925 IOWA (BEHIND ALVIN'S) 749-5039
Comedy Show Special-
$6.00 singles and
$10.00 couples
KU EQUESTRIAN
Informational Meeting and Picnic
Thursday September 29 at 6:30
Contact For Information
Jon Koch 864-1211 or Jenny Jauber 749-6714
New Product:
AT&T Communicator Multi-Media System
• 486SX, 33MHz
• 4Mb, 210Mb
• Sound Card
• Mouse
• Fax/Modem
• CD-ROM
• DOS, Windows
• Multimedia Software
• Stereo Speakers
* Monitor not included
ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER
813 Mass • Downtown Lawrence • 843-7584
JOCK'S NITCH
SPORTING GOODS
The Sports Look of Today!
Get Outfitted for Fall
Columbia Sportswear Company
Wigwam Hats
Columbia Guiness Sweater
Columbia Jeans
Columbia Jean Jacket
K-Swiss Boots
Nike Waterproof Boots
What Every Self Respecting Stick is Wearing
842-2442 840 Massachusetts Hours: Mon-Wed 9:30-7 p.m. Thurs 9:30-8:30 p.m. Fri-Sat 9:30-6 p.m. Sun 12-5 p.m.
Comedy in Lawrence.
Thurs. Sept.29
Featuring Fabian Shepard-
You've seen him on M.T.V., Comedy Central and Herman's Head
Also appearing is KU's Mark Mallouk
LA FAMILIA III
After Hours
The kitchen’s closed but the bar is open
10:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.
Wed, Thur, & Fri.
25¢ DRAWS
50¢ KAMIS
WED, THUR & FRI 18 & OVER WELCOME
925 IOWA (BEHIND ALVIN’s) 749-5039
Grab an IBM PC and TAKE OFF
The Student Desktop ValuePoint 425SX/Si
$1399
The ValuePoint "Si" is the perfect entry-level system.
For performance:
• Intel® 486SX/25MHz chip
• 212MB' hard drive
• 4MB RAM (expandable to 64MB)
For flexibility:
• VESA local bus
• 14V Color Monitor (with a maximum diagonal viewable screen size of 13")
• 3 slots, 3 bays
• Software including Microsoft Office, Academic Edition including Word for Windows, and Excel
For flexibility:
• 4.82 pounds
• VGA monochrome screen
• PCMCIA support
• Save hundreds of dollars with preloaded software including Microsoft Works, SoftNet FaxWorks", and introductory software to online services
• Backpack carrying case by PORT
Also standard: 1-year limited warranty*, 30-day moneyback guarantee*, DOS & Windows™ preloaded
Buy an IBM personal computer for college and you can fly-TWA anywhere in the continental U.S. during the 1994-95 school year for a mere $125* each way (based on a round trip purchase). To get in flight, call us today.
And don't forget to ask about our affordable financing plans, specially designed for a student budget.
IBM.
IBMPC To order call today!
Direct 1 800 426·7341
Offer available to any college-bound high school senior, college student, faculty and staff who purchases IBM personal computers from now through December 31, 1994. Orders subject to availability. Prices listed are PC Direct prices for educational discount-qualified customers. Prices subject to change. Reseller prices may vary. IBM may without written notice. Offer available in this U.S. only. Valid for any TWA destination in the continental U.S., Puerto Rico andights originating from Honolulu to Los Angeles for travel September 1, 1994 through June 30, 1996. Seats are free. Fees are non-refundable and not refundable, and cannot be combined with any other discount certificate or promotional offers. Offer not valid on TWE. 14-day advance purchase. Blackout dates and certain other restrictions apply. Complete details will be shown on certificates. MB stands for 1 million bytes when used to describe hard drive storage, total use capacity may vary based on operating system environment. For information regarding IBM's limited warranty and moneyback guarantees, ask your Sales Representative or call 1 800 426·7341. Copies are available upon request. IBM and ThinkPad are registered trademarks and Valuation Point and Technology It is a trademark of Trans World Airlines, Inc. PC Direct is a trademark of Ziff Communications Company and is used by IBM Corporation under license © International Business Machines Corporation, 1994.
JOCK'S NITCH
SPORTING GOODS
The Sports Look of Today!
Get Outfitted for Fall
Columbia
Sportswear Company
Wigwam
Hats
Columbia
Guiness
Sweater
Cool KU
Game Bar
Hat
Columbia
Jeans
Columbia
Jean
Jacket
Nike Lined
Windpants
K-Swiss
Boots
Nike Waterproof
Boots
NIKE
What Every Self Respecting Stick is Wearing
842-2442 840 Massachusetts Hours: Mon-Wed 9:30-7 p.m.
Thurs 9:30-8:30 p.m.
Fri-Sat 9:30-6 p.m.
Sun 12-5 p.m.
Wigwam Hats
Columbia Guiness Sweater
Columbia Jeans
K-Swiss Boots
Cool KU Game Bar Hat
Columbia Jean Jacket
Nike Lined Windpants
Nike Waterproof Boots
Comedy in Lawrence.
Thurs. Sept.29
Featuring
Fabian
Shepard-
You've seen him on M.T.V.,
Comedy Central and
Herman's Head
Also appearing is KU's
Mark Mallouk
Comedy in Lawrence.
Thurs. Sept.29
Featuring
Fabian
Shepard-
You've seen him on M.T.V., Comedy Central and Herman's Head
Also appearing is KU's Mark Mallouk
LA FAMILIA III
After Hours
The kitchen's closed but the bar is open
10:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.
Wed, Thur, & Fri.
25¢ DRAWS
50¢ KAMIS
WED, THUR & FRI 18 & OVER WELCOME
Comedy Show Special-$6.00 singles and $10.00 couples
925 IOWA (BEHIND ALVIN'S) 749-5039
Bernard S. Leclercq
LA FAMILIA III
After Hours
The kitchen's closed but the bar is open
10:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.
Wed, Thur, & Fri.
25¢ DRAWS
50¢ KAMIS
Comedy Show
Special-
$6.00 singles
and
$10.00 couples
WED, THUR & FRI 18 & OVER WELCOME
925 IOWA (BEHIND ALVIN'S) 749-5039
Grab an IBM PC and TAKE OFF
The Student Desktop ValuePoint 425SX/Si
$1399
The Student Notebook ThinkPad 340
$1499
The ThinkPad™ 340 offers desktop power in a lightweight notebook package.
For performance:
• 486SLC2/50MHz processor
• 125MB hard drive
IBM PC
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
5B
Studies show college costs rising
The Associated Press
BOSTON — The average tuition at America's four-year colleges rose 6 percent this year, and studies show a growing share of the money is going toward public relations instead of toward teaching.
Although the increase was twice the inflation rate, it was also the smallest since 1989, according to the College Board, an association of 2,800 higher-education institutions.
According to the board, average tuition is now $11,700 at four-year private schools and $2,686 at four-year public schools, bottl 6 percent increases over last year.
The cost of two-year private institutions rose 5 percent; to $6,511, and two-year public colleges, 4 percent, to $1,298.
When room, board, books, supplies and transportation are added in, the
average total cost of a college education comes to $18,784 for resident students at four-year private schools and $8,990 at public schools.
Separate government statistics also show that the proportion of money used by colleges for instruction, libraries and maintenance is shrinking, and the amount spent on public relations, marketing and fund-raising is increasing.
"We're paying more and getting less than we got 10 years ago," said Stephanie Arelonion, president of the U.S. Student Association. "We're learning from videotapes in some instances. It would be nice to see the professor sometime."
ing to the U.S. Education Department.
Also, federal grants and loans have not kept pace with demand, forcing colleges to give their own scholarships. Warren said. School spending on scholarships and fellowships rose 70 percent from 1982 to 1992, accord-
During the same period, the proportion of their budgets that colleges spent on instruction fell from 32.4 percent to 30.7 percent, the department said.
On the other hand, administrative budgets increased 45 percent at private universities and 26 percent at public universities, the Education Department said.
"It raises the question of what educational institutions are here for," said James Perley, a biology professor at the College of Wooster in Ohio and president of the American Association of University Professors.
But Warren said many of the increased administrative costs are going to counseling and job placement services, which he said college students are demanding.
Alcohol may help heart tick
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Get some exercise, quit smoking, skip the double cheese-burgers—and have a couple of beers every day?
Doctors are debating whether moderate alcohol consumption should be part of the prescription for a healthy heart in light of another study that suggests drinking can reduce the risk of a heart attack by stimulating the production of t-PA, an enzyme which is produced by the body and breaks down blood clots. Blood clots that lodge in the coronary arteries can cause heart attacks.
Each year, 5 million Americans are diagnosed with heart disease.
But even the chief researcher of the latest study, cardiologist Dr. Paul Ridker of Harvard Medical School, is reluctant to recommend that patients drink.
"I certainly don't want to be quoted as saying patients should be drinking alcohol," he said. "What would really be exciting would be to find a way to stimulate t-PA production but without the side effects of alcohol."
However, an editorial accompanying Ridker's study in today's issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association suggests that doctors can steer a middle course, working with selected patients to give them the benefit of alcohol's heart-protecting qualities while avoiding the risks
associated with heavy alcohol consumption, including liver disease cancer and drunken driving.
"The key theme is to tailor the message to each individual, in the same way that counseling is given on diet, physical activity, sexual practices and so on." the editorial stated.
One of the editorial's writers, Dr. Thomas A. Pearson, a cardiologist with the Columbia University School of Public Health, said more elaborate studies were needed to confirm Ridker's work, but there was already enough evidence to offer some guidance to doctors.
The study of 631 doctors found a direct link between alcohol consumption and the level of t-PA. The enzyme was at its highest among people who had two or more drinks a day
Theeditorialrecommendscarefully screening out potential problem drinkers, limiting consumption, ruling out alcohol for patients with a variety of diseases that could be worsened and insisting on follow-up visits.
Other doctors say the dangers of drinking are so grave that alcohol should never be used as preventive medicine.
"Alcohol causes such severe societal problems that an endorsement could just skyrocket potential health problems," said Dr. Richard Carroll, a cardiologist at Loyola University Medical Center in suburban Chicago.
Flu shots offered at some drugstores
CHICAGO — Pickling up some aspirin, deodorant or shampoo at a Walgreen drugstore? Now you can add a flu shot to the list.
A new program announced yesterday will make the shots available at almost 2,000 drugstores in 30 states and Puerto Rico.
Doctors recommend preventative influenza shots for people 65 and older, children with asthma and those suffering from chronic disorders.
Nurses will give the shots at each Walgreen drugstore at least one day between Oct. 1 and Oct. 22, Walgreen Co. representatives said. The shots will cost about $10. No appointment or prescription is necessary.
Both Lawrence Walgreen locations plan to participate in the program.
The National Institute on Aging encourages older people and those with certain chronic diseases to get a flu shot in the early fall.
Side effects, such as a low fever or redness at the injection site, sometimes occur. But the dangers of flu and possibly pneumonia are greater than the shot's side effects, it said.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SCHINDLER'S LIST "A SURVIVOR CELEBRATES LIFE" ZEV KEDEM
"Spielberg did a remarkable job recreating what happened, but the reality was much worse. There is no way to express the terror, the evil around us."
Free Lecture - 8:00 p.m.
Monday, October 3, 1994
Kansas Union Ballroom
Ticket Policy. On Thursday, September 29, and Friday, September 30, vouchers for the lecture will be made available with KUID only. Each KU student, faculty or staff member will be allowed two vouchers per his/her KUID. This will be on a first-come, first-served basis. Vouchers will be available at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union from 8:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. on the above listed dates. On Monday, October 3, any remaining vouchers will be made available to the general public from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. On the night of the lecture, each voucher will be honored at the Kansas Union Ballroom door from 7:00 p.m. until 7:45 p.m. At 7:45 p.m., the vouchers become invalid. Any remaining tickets will be given out at the Ballroom on a first-come, first-served basis.
THE LAWRENCE
JEWISH
COMMUNITY
CENTER
For more information, call the SUA box office at 864-3477.
DEPARTMENT OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION
HILLEL
ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY RESIDENCE HALLS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
MASS STREET MUSIC
1347 Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS
The finest in acoustic instruments including: Martin, Bourgeois, Lowden, Larrivee, Goodall, Santa Cruz (913)843-3535(800)747-9980
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
1091 Massachusetts
Downtown
What happens if you refuse to take a breathalizer test when stopped for a DUI?
No driving for one year.
Legal Services for Students
148 Burge • 864-5665
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
SENATE
Grand Royal
Grand Royal
Luscious JACKSON
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIE
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tonight-9 p.m.
Wednesday, September 28
Juscious
JACKSON
Grand Royal
Juscious
JACKSON
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAX
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
TOMMY
KU Ballroom $6 with KUID $8 General Public SUA Box Office Kansas Union 864-3477
OLYMPUS
Pearlcorer S924
MICROCASSETTE RECORDER
(Actual Size)
"Power is knowledge." (Batteries not included)
Keep your brain charged. Start talking into an Olympus Microcassette recorder. It gives you more power to memorize, summarize, analyze, fantasize, and fully realize your own brilliance. It also takes notes five times faster than you can write them, read them, correct them, and rewrite them. Inside the classroom or out, an Olympus Microcassette™ Recorder helps keep your mind on.
OLYMPUS
MICROCASSETTE'SYSTEM
Never miss another opqrstuwxyzabcdefghijklmn.
Available at Camera America 1610 West 23rd Street, Lawrence, Kansas 60640 • Wolf's Camera Shop 635 Kansas Averior, Truckee, Kansas 66603.
And Other Fine Stores. If you can't find the Olympus Camera™ recount you will (the 8924 pictured here) use 1-800-282-3040 for information
6B
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
take a hike.
WILDERNESS DISCOVERY
Jaybowl
kansas union • level 1 • 864-3545
804 Mass * 843-5000
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizer Cummings
jewels
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
West Coast Saloon
2FC
POOL
Game Day Bus
Late-Night Grill
until 1 a.m.
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
Jury selection began yesterday in the Nasons' trial on more than two dozen charges including child neglect.
BEND, Ore. — Dennis and Diane Nason adopted scores of abused, disabled and unwanted children from around the world, filling a 33-bedroom farmhouse. Mother Teresa was among their admirers.
older children; falsifying records to adopt more children; and siphoning off $10,000 in contributions.
If convicted of the most serious count, racketeering, they could get 20 years in prison and $100,000 in fines.
The Associated Press
Among other things, the Nasons are accused of letting three small children die neglected in their beds, one from starvation and two from a form of dysentery; using a cattle prod to discipline
raised by some of the children. At public hearings, the Nasons heard accusations they shocked kids with a cattle prod and kept children in cages.
The Nasons started their family with three biological children, then adopted two daughters in 1968 and 1970. In 1974, they adopted a 4-year-old girl scarred by a gasoline fire. Helping children no one else wanted became a religious mission Mrs. Nason described in her book, "The Celebration Family."
Last November, the Nasons were indicted.
MOVING?
Let
Couple faces more than two dozen charges in mysterious adoption cases
Lawrence Paper Company
Solve your moving hassles.
Rancher Richard Patterson, who served on the board of the non-profit Great Expectations Inc. that advises the Nasons, believes they're innocent.
Sturdy boxes for moving and storage Boxes with handles for easier moving Large quantities at discount prices Small quantities - walk-ins welcome
In 1991, police and social workers began investigating allegations of abuse
Call 843-8111
Ask for Sales/Service Dept.
Mulligan's
featuring DINE IN or CARRY OUT PUPS Grill 11am-3am
"They just tried to help people. They're just guilty of having too many kids," he said.
Downtown Delivery Available
Great Food-Great Music
FRI
Lonesome
Houndogs
THUR
Dan Bliss
& Kurt
Stockhamme
$1.00
Boulevard
Draws
$1.00 Pabst
Blue Ribbon
$1.50 Wells
SAT
Bindlestiffs, 2 for 1 Wells
$1.00 Pabst Blue Ribbon
All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged
1016 Massachusetts
Downtown Lawrence
865-4055
Tuesday, October 4
11 a.m.-6 p.m.
KS Army National Guard Armory
200 Iowa
Call 1-800-279-5943 to schedule an appointment or stop byl
Donors receive a coupon for a pint of their favorite flavor of Baskin-Robbins frozen dessert.
Baskin Robbin Ice Cream & Yogurt We provide blood for Lawrence Memorial Hospital TOPEKA BLOOD BANK
kata 077
Pint for
Pint
K N O W M V X D
B Z T T D G H L
I P W H 0 P G D
I L J K E C N F
O M Z C O D E $^{\text{SM}}$ E
dial
1 8 0 0
C A L L
A T T
ALWAYS COSTS LESS THAN 1-800-COLLECT.
Hello? Want the lowest price for a collect call? Lower than that other number? Then dial this one. Because THE CODE always costs less than 1-800-COLLECT.
Your True Voice.
$ \textcircled{1} 9 9 4 $ AT&T FOR ALL INTERSTATE CALLS.
AT&T
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
7B
More refugees leave Rwanda
The Associated Press
GOMA, Zaire — In a grim sign that the Rwandan crisis is far from over, the flow of refugees fleeing violence in their country is picking up again.
After weeks of trying to convince refugees it is safe to leave the squalid camps in Zaire and return home, U.N. officials say more refugees are now coming out of Rwanda than are going back.
The latest arrivals tell similar stories of killings, arrests and harassment by the army of the new Tutsi-led government.
Martin Semanza, a 20-year-old with bloodshot eyes, told The Associated Press yesterday that Tuti soldiers killed his parents and three younger brothers as they fled toward Zaire.
Another young refugee, Sebuhinja Rukeratabaro, said he saw a truck filled with the bodies of Hutus arrested by Tutsi troops.
It is impossible to verify the stories of young Hutus, who are among the newest refugees to arrive in Zaire. But their stories are consistent with a recent internal report by the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, which found an "unmistakable pattern of killing and persecution" of Hutu refugees returning to Rwanda.
The report caused such a furor that Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali imposed a gag order on U.N. officials yesterday to stop them from discussing it. Boutros-Ghali also ordered a full investigation of the revenge killings.
Hutu militias massacred at least 500,000 Rwandans, most of them minority Tutis, earlier this year.
Plague continues to spread in India
NEW DELHI, India — A huge banner proclaimed "Plague Control Room" at the capital's train station, and police stood by yesterday to rush the sick to the hospital. There, feverish sufferers shivered while awaiting care; one alling man tried to sneak away.
The Associated Press
Officials urged calm, but as plague spread from western Surat to New Delhi and across the nation to Calcutta, authorities also escalated efforts to find the sick, rush antibiotics to pharmacies and spray insecticide to kill disease-carrying fleas.
TV broadcasts advised that the plague can be treated with common antibiotics like tetracycline — drugs available in India without a prescription.
But some pharmacies in New Delhi and Bombay ran out of antibiotics, and New Delhi officials released a list
of 200 stores that were well-stocked and would be open 24 hours a day. In Bombay, officials raided two pharmacies because they were selling antibiotics at black-market prices.
For the first time, confirmed cases of pneumonic plague were reported outside Surat, the port in Gujarat state that an estimated 400,000 people fleed after the disease struck a week ago. Nine cases were reported in New Delhi and Calcutta, hundreds of miles east of Surat.
At least 54 people have died in Surat, including three yesterday. Unofficial estimates put the death toll as high as 300.
Twenty people, most of them from Surat, were admitted to the Infectious Diseases Hospital in New Delhi, and two tested positive for pneumonic plague. Dr. R.C. Panda said.
The current plague outbreak is the first in India in 30 years.
Pakistan China Nepal Surat Calcutta India Bombay Bay of Bengal Medras Indian Ocean Sri Lanka 400 Miles
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Children in cockpit may have led to crash
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — "Daddy, can I turn this?"
The cockpit tapes record a chilling scene: the pilot's children getting a flying lesson just before the Airbus jet crashed, killing all 75 people aboard.
"Get out! Get out!" Captain Yaroslav Kudrinsky shouts more than a dozen times to his 16-year-old son, Eldar, who was in the captain's seat when the plane began to plunge.
The transcript of the desperate final minutes before the March crash, published this week in the magazine, Obazrevatel, reveals that the Aeroflot crew almost succeeded in saving the plane.
But the presence of the children and the crew's unfamiliarity with the foreign-built Airbus helped doom the flight, according to the tapes and an aviation official's analysis.
The magazine would not identify its source for the black box transcript.
Aeroflot and Airbus officials said they could not comment until investigation of the March 22 crash in Siberia is complete.
A source close to the probe, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the transcript appears accurate, though not complete or official.
The scene quickly turns terrifying,
however, when the captain's son
The tapes show that in the half-hour before the crash, Kudrinsky gave up his seat to his 12-year-old daughter, Yana, and then his son.
"Daddy, can I turn this?" Yana asks as she sits at the controls.
"Daddy, raise me up," she asks, apparently trying to see better. Her father points out stars and city lights and warns her not to push any buttons.
Russian International Airlines, Aeroflot's international arm, has disputed that children were in the cockpit during the flight from Moscow to Hong Kong.
takes the wheel.
"Turn it! Watch the ground as you turn," the captain says. "Let's go left." Turn left! Is the plane turning?"
"Great!" savs Eldar.
But four minutes later, he asks,
"Why is it turning?"
"It's turning by itself?" his father asks.
"Yes!"
Then the copilot shouts, "Guys!" as the plane begins to dive.
There is a low whistling sound and a roar. For the next two and a half minutes, the tapes record the crew's frantic efforts to regain control of the plane.
State air-safety investigator Vsevodolov Ocharov was quoted in the Rossiksiev Vesti newspaper yesterday as saying the children were just one factor in "a chain of events and fateful circumstances."
The transcript shows the copilot finally shouting, "There's the ground!"
The Associated Press
Jordan renounces links to West Bank
A statement issued by Prime Minister Abdul-Salam Majali said Jordan was also dismissing hundreds of employees of nearly 40 religious sites in the West Bank.
AMMAN, Jordan — Jordan renounced its religious links to the West Bank yesterday in a move apparently aimed at avoiding further conflict with the Palestine Liberation Organization, but maintained its spiritual claim to Jerusalem.
The statement, read on national television, stressed that Jordan would continue to "support the Palestinians by all means and ways, and will not allow any side to harm the deep-rooted relations between the Palestinian and Jordanian people."
Palestinian officials and West Bank Muslims welcomed the announcement.
Relations between Jordan and the Palestine National Authority, which administers the self-rule areas of Jericho and the Gaza Strip, grew strained after Jordan and Israel signed a declaration July 25 in which Israel acknowledged Jordan's special role in caring for Jerusalem's Muslim sites.
Fashion world's dirty laundry aired
The Associated Press
ROME — Corruption has stained most of Italy's icons, from Fiat to soccer. Now, like tomato sauce on a ball gown, it is marring the world of fashion.
Days before the semi-annual shows in Milan, big "moda" names like Armani, Ferre and Versace are appearing in courthouse corridors instead of glittering runways.
Prosecutor Antonio Di Pietro, who has spearheaded 21/2 years of corruption probes, is questioning the royalty of "ready-to-wear" in
his investigation of payoffs to tax inspectors.
Newspaper reports say he and his investigators have found evidence of $650,000 in payments by fashion firms, so inspectors would overlook irregularities or tax evasion.
Giorgio Armani and Gianfranco Ferre were questioned Saturday. The timing — just a day before the opening of the spring-summer shows — stirred up talk of a propaganda campaign against fashion.
The shadow of the probe is bound to hang over the shows.
Bosnia rescinds demand
UNITED NATIONS — Bosnia's president dropped his long-standing demand that the United Nations immediately lift its arms embargo against his government and said yesterday he would accent a six-month delay.
The Associated Press
If Bosnian Serbs continue to reject an international peace plan, Izetbegovic said he wanted the Security Council to pass a resolution that would lift the embargo against his government.
Speaking to the U.N. General Assembly, President Alija Izbetebovic said he would agree to the delay if U.N. peacekeepers remained in Bosnia, the Serb blockade of Sarajevo was lifted immediately and U.N. safe areas for Bosnian civilians were expanded.
Britain and France, which have the largest peacekeeping contingents in Bosnia, have threatened to withdraw their troops if the embargo is lifted, saying more arms would only fuel the conflict. Russia also opposes lifting the embargo.
Bosnia also is worried that if the embargo is lifted, U.N. peacekeepers will withdraw and Bosnian Serbs will overrun eastern Muslim enclaves like Bihac and Srebrenica.
A withdrawals would also hamper efforts this winter to feed and care for about 2.7 million Bosnians who are dependent on outside assistance.
The need to lift the embargo is not considered as urgent as it once was because the Bosnian army is manufacturing arms and receiving smuggled weapons through Croatia, now its ally against the Serbs.
Power restored in Bosnian capital
The Associated Press
cuss threats against U.N. peacekeepers after the air strike.
The U.N. commander in Bosnia said he was optimistic that general utility services, including water and gas, would be restored gradually as Bosnian Serbs ringing Sarajevo got over Thursday's NATO air strike on one of their tanks.
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Electricity was restored to hospitals and other priority users after a 13-day cutoff.
Lt. Gen. Michael Rose met yesterday with Bosnia Serb leader Radovan Karadzic in Pale, the Serb stronghold east of Sarajevo, to dis
Rose said he came away with no security guarantees that would allow the United Nations to reopen the Sarajevo airport to vital relief flights. But he said he was optimistic the airport will be reopened "before too long."
The cease fire in place in Sarajevo since February has been unraveling recently, with increased fighting and sniper fire in the city. Serbs also have disrupted water, electricity and gas service, an especially worrisome move as cold weather approaches.
Supporters criticize Mandela
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Nelson Mandela campaigned for president on a promise his African National Congress would stop the "gravy train" of government corruption and special privileges
Now critics, even his supporters, are charging that the ANC only wanted to stop the train long enough to get on.
Mandela's uncharacteristic prickliness on the issue shows his sensitivity at being perceived as just another politician raiding the public coffers.
On Monday night, he lashed out at longtime ally Archbishop Desmond Tutu for complaining about the new parliament's approval of large salary increases for itself.
"A respected leader was unable to resist the temptation to jump on the
bandwagon," Mandela said of Tutu, a fellow Nobel Peace Prize winner for his work against apartheid.
Tutu shot back quickly, telling The Associated Press yesterday that the nation's first black president was "showing he's just like any other politician."
Under the former white-led government, President F. W. de Klerk was paid about $81,700 a year. However, De Klerk paid no income taxes, an exemption lifted by the new government. After taxes, Mandela will take home about $115,400.
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"EVERYDAY
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
842-1212
Members of the new parliament get salaries of about $54,400 — up from $37,300 under the old government.
TWO-FEET 1 PRIMETIME PARTY "10" CARRY-OUT
2-PIZZA 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS 1-PIZZA
1-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING
2-COKES 4-COKES 1-COKE
$9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
ATHLETIC CLUB INC
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
State of the art fitness and health facility
Special Student Memberships!
KANSAS
√
US OUT!
Graystone Athletic Club, Inc.
2500 W 6th 841-7230
Wednesday, October 5, 1994
Pine Room, Kansas Union
7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.
Rachel Lee, Graduate Assistant, The Emily Y婷 Women's Resource Center
and
Peer Educators, Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program
Sponsored by the Emily Y婷 Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall.
For more information, contact Rachel Lee at 864-3552
Rape is a serious problem that affects everyone, women and men. Research shows that approximately 1 in 6 women have been sexually assaulted by the time they leave college. These women are your friends, partners, and sisters. To learn more about rape and how it can be prevented, join us for this discussion.
Campus Interviews October 10, 1994
OLDE, America's Full Service Discount Broker $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $ is looking for motivated people to establish a career in the brokerage business.
YOU CAN HELP STOP SEXUAL ASSAULT
OLDE offers:
12-18 month paid training program Potential sixfigure income Excellent benefits
DISCOUNT STOCKBROKERS
Member NYSE and SIPC
An Equal Opportunity Employer
If you possess excellent communication skills, general market knowledge and the desire to excel, sign up for an on-campus interview on October 10, 1994 in the Career Center.
1 800 937-0606
If you are unable to arrange an interview call: 1800937-0606
or send resume to:
OLDE Discount Stockbrokers
National Recruiting
751 Griswold Street
Detroit, MI 48226
OLDE
EARN CASH
& HELP OUR COMMUNITY TOO!
$15 TODAY
& $30
This WEEK
Walk-ins
Welcome
BY DONATING YOUR
BLOOD PLASMA
CALL FOR INFORMATION
NABI
The Country Source
NABI BigMedical Center
816 W. 24th
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
749-5750
"Winners" by Oly
WINNERS GET
yello sub!
LOS ERAS GET...
subway...
WE HAVE GET to
PRACTICE MORE!
PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT...
yello sub makes PERFECT
SUBS!!
WINNERS GET
yello sub!
8B
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Social Security reforms proposed
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Senior Democrats issued a painful prescription yesterday to rescue Social Security from insolvency: Raise taxes, cut benefits, and move back the retirement age.
Under their plans, future generations would sacrifice the most, not the politically powerful seniors whose retirement benefits far outstrip their contributions to Social Security.
The lawmakers, Reps. Dan Rostenkowski of Illinois and JJ. "Jake" Pickle of Texas, have proposed separate legislation to keep Social Security from going broke by 2029, as the baby boom generation retires.
A t&a hearing of the House Ways and
Misla b审情于公事家及 Society Secu-
rium
rity, Pickle and Rostenkowski said Congress could make modest changes in the system now that will preserve and protect it well into the 21st century.
"I find reform today preferable to severe benefit cuts, staggering tax increases or means-testing in the future," Rostenkowski said.
Both his plan and Pickle's would raise the retirement age. Under current law, starting in the year 2003, the age for retirement with full benefits will be 65 years and two months. By the year 2027, when people born in 1960 will be retiring, the age will be 67. Rostenkowski's proposal accelerates the increase in the retirement age, while Pickle's would gradually lift it to 70.
Rostenkowski's bill also relies on tax increases and smaller benefits
beginning in the next century, but includes a one-time cut in 1995 of about $3 a month for current recipients.
"Given the generosity of the current program — where nearly every current beneficiary gets back much more than he or she put in — I don't think that is an unreasonable burden," Rostenkowski said.
Pickle's proposal would also reduce benefits to the spouses of working Americans and award cost-of-living increases every other year, rather than yearly, except in years of high inflation.
These provisions would be phased in beginning in 2000 and would not be fully effective until after 2022, and none would significantly affect retirees and workers nearing retirement, he said.
WASHINGTON — The House agreed yesterday to freeze congressional pay for a second straight year and fund the National Endowment for the Arts, a favorite target of conservatives.
The Associated Press
The $23.5 billion Treasury, Postal Service and General Government budget for fiscal 1995 includes a 2.6 percent cost-of-living pay raise for federal workers.
But with anti-Washington sentiment running high this election year, the lawmakers included language in the bill barring any increase in their $133,600 salaries. Federal judges, Cabinet and subcabinet officers and the vice president also are excluded from the pay raise.
House agrees to fund NEA
As part of the $13.6 billion Interior Department bill, the NEA was budgeted $168 million for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1. It was $3 million less than the administration requested but still a victory for the much-beleaguered agency, which funds art and cultural programs around the country.
The interior spending bill was passed on a voice vote.
As in past years, conservatives sought to eliminate NEA funding or make sharp cuts, arguing that the group has sponsored programs with pornographic or distasteful themes.
The House approved the Treasury bill, by a 360-53 vote, only after trimming $157 million from the same House-Senate compromise bill it rejected last Thursday.
Workers strike at GM plant
The Associated Press
FLINT, Mich. — Up to 11,500 workers went on strike yesterday at a key General Motors Corp. complex, shutting off the flow of parts needed to keep many other GM plants running.
As many as 100,000 other GM workers could be idled within 48 hours, a union leader warned. A subcontractor in Tennessee shut down within hours and 6,550 workers in Lansing were told not to report today.
Welder Dave Falting translated that 'as he walked a picket line: "They speeded up the lines and don't have enough people to do the job."
The United Auto Workers walked off the job at the huge Buick City complex, complaining of production speedups, safety problems and subcontracting.
GM would not speculate on the walkout's effect, which comes in the middle of a production and sales boom for the world's No.1 automaker.
Both sides said they expected to be back at the table this morning.
The Buick City complex assembles
Buicks and Oldsmobiles and makes a number of parts that are shipped to GM car assembly and component factories across the United States and Canada.
"Within 24 to 48 hours we're going to shut down most of the assembly plants," costing GM millions of dollars a day, UAW Local 599 president Dave Yettaw said.
Among the parts made at Buick City, consisting of about two dozen factories, are torque converters for the automatic transmissions that go into most GM cars.
Without the converters, transmission plants will close. Without transmissions, assembly plants will close.
Parts plants run by subcontractors that supply GM plants were first to feel the strike's ripples.
GM doesn't want to hire people whose jobs would last longer than the sales boom. New, permanent UAW employees cost GM more than $42 an hour in pay and benefits after three years, twice or three times the labor costs of some nonunion outside contractors.
Suburbia no longer paradise
The Associated Press
BOSTON — The number of children living in poverty is going up faster in suburbia, once a world of prosperity and promise, than it is in big cities or rural areas, researchers said.
For the population as a whole, the proportion of children living below the poverty line rose 49 percent from 1973 to 1992, said researchers at the Tufts University Center on Hunger, Poverty and Nutrition Policy, who examined Census Bureau data.
In rural areas, the share of children in poverty grew 36 percent, and in the inner city, 56 percent, they said. But in the suburbs, the increase was 76 percent.
"There's been a wholesale transformation of the American economy," Tufts researcher J. Larry Brown said. "Half of our families are experiencing declining wages, and the other half are those who have always been struggling near
poverty."
Brown and co-author John T. Cook cited three reasons for the increase in poverty among children in the suburbs: declining wages; families moving from inner cities to suburbs; and larger suburbs, extending out into what previously had been rural areas.
In 1973, about 8 percent of suburban children were members of families below the poverty line, defined then as $4,540 for a family of four. In 1992, when the poverty line had risen to $15,355 for a family of four, that had risen to 13.8 percent.
The poverty rate overall is higher for children than adults, according to census figures. In the United States, 15 percent of the population lives below the poverty line, but 25 percent of children are poor. In suburbs, 9.7 percent of people are poor, compared with 13.8 percent of the children.
Law might make it easier to get visas
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A new rule taking effect Saturday will make it easier for thousands of people in the United States illegally to complete processing of visas for permanent residence
Under current law, any foreign national who entered, worked or remained here illegally must return to his or her native country in order to obtain an immigrant visa that will allow return to the United States.
"We anticipate about 100,000 persons will qualify for this in the coming year," said Rick Kenney, spokesman for the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
The new law does not require the applicant to return to country of origin while the visa process takes place.
The change in rules was included in an appropriations bill for the 1995 fiscal year, which begins Saturday, but it was interpreted by some as a new amnesty program for illegal aliens. Because of the confusion, the INS issued a clarification of the rule.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Clinton administration is refusing to defend an experiment testing whether Wisconsin, with its generous public benefits, has become a "welfare magnet" to low-income families from other states.
Legal Action of Wisconsin has sued to stop the project in federal court, claiming that it unconstitutionally infringes on the rights of the
Project to test Wisconsin welfare program
poor to travel and migrate freely. A similar welfare experiment in California was rejected by a federal appeals court on those grounds.
Wisconsin launched its "two-tier" experiment in July in four counties.
The federal Department of Health and Human Services approved the pilot project under former President Bush. But HISF now says it will not help Wisconsin defend the demonstration in court.
Under the plan, low-income families who apply for welfare within six months of moving to Wisconsin are paid benefits equal to those in their home state, whether they are higher or lower than those in Wisconsin.
After six months, those families will be paid what other Wisconsin residents receive — $517 a month for a mother and two children. By comparison, Illinois pays $382 and Mississippi $120.
Nuclear waste remains afloat off N.C.
The Associated Press
WILMINGTON, N.C. — Ships carrying nuclear waste from Europe will remain offshore while South Carolina faights in court to keep them from docking, the Energy Department said yesterday.
The state is challenging a federal appeals court ruling allowing the Energy Department to store the hundreds of spent fuel rods at the Savannah River Site weapons near Alken, S.C.
In the meantime. Energy Secretary
Hazel O'Leary, "as a courtesy to the state, has for a short time delayed delivery," representative Jayne Brady said.
The ships were three to five miles off the North Carolina coast late yesterday, said Ron Shackelford, executive director of the Wilmington-based environmental group Coastal Alliance for a Safe Environment.
the weapons-grade uranium is waste from nuclear reactors in Austria, Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—The nation's 30 million insured aren't the only losers from the collapse of health reform. The high hopes that many physicians, hospitals and even insurance companies had placed in a major overhaul also have been dashed.
The American Medical Association had lobbied furiously for special protections to guarantee the patients' right to choose their doctors and to prevent big insurance companies from arbitrarily cutting physicians out of their networks. For now, that battle is lost.
Small businesses dodged a bullet in helping to kill President Clinton's proposal to make all employers help pay their workers' premiums. But they also lost a chance to join government-assisted purchasing pools to get a better price on the high premiums many small businesses now pay.
The academic health centers would have gotten billions of dollars each year in new federal revenues under Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell's plan. The denise of reform leaves them back at square one.
Even before the White House launched its crusade, teaching hospitals were worried that belt-tightening and the shift to managed care by big insurers and employers would cost them patients and revenues.
The most obvious losers are the 15 percent of Americans with no health insurance and the millions more with inadequate coverage.
Health care reform hopes shattered
Some 81 million Americans — nearly a third of the population — are said to have preexisting conditions that make getting or keeping insurance a constant worry.
While Congress had retreated weeks ago from Clinton's goal of guaranteed coverage for every American, all of the health bills had promised to curb abusive insurance company practices and make it easier for Americans to stay insured when they changed jobs or got ill.
"The three big problems that brought about this debate are only going to get worse," said Drew Altman, president of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a think tank that specializes in health policy. "The number of uninsured will increase. The middle class problems and fears about their insurance will get worse. And health care spending will continue to grow to ever scarier numbers."
The National Federation of Independent Businesses, which helped galvanize the fierce small business opposition to any compulsory health insurance contributions by employers, said it felt both "disappointment and relief" at the outcome.
Drugs, weapons in schools
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Junior high students are more likely than high schoolers to be involved in weapons offenses at big city schools, but drug and alcohol abuse is more common among the older teens, urban educators reported today.
Two percent of teachers in the cities' public schools feel unsafe during the day, twice as many as in the suburbs, the Council of Great City Schools said. After school hours, the figure jumps to 15 percent in the cities and 5 percent in the suburbs.
In a 1992-93 report card on the state of urban education, the council said more than half the school systems it represents have gang and crime prevention programs; all the districts have programs to address drug and alcohol abuse.
The council asked school superintendents to assess their progress toward meeting a set of eight education goals. Based on that survey, the council said that although some improvement has been made in such areas as parent involvement, big-city school systems still have a long way to go.
House extends assassination review
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The House sent the president a bill yesterday extending for a year the John F. Kennedy Assassinations Records Review Board.
The board, established in 1992, is responsible for examining hundreds of thousands of Kennedy-assassination documents and deciding whether they can be made public.
use the Federal Supply Service and the U.S. mail under the same conditions as other government agencies, and requires all employees to qualify for the necessary security clearances before they take office.
The board was formed with the aim of speeding the release of records pertaining to the 1963 assassination. It is not authorized to conduct another investigation into the death of the president.
Meanwhile, a new group called "Coalition on Political Assassinations" on Monday announced a conference in Washington Oct. 7-10 to "give the American public a professional assessment of the documents and evidence released so far."
Child molester info hotline started
The bill specifies that the board can
The Associated Press
Gov. Pete Wilson signed legislation yesterday that requires the state Justice Department to maintain a 900-number that members of the public will be able to call to get information
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Starting next year, Californians will be able to call a number for a small fee and learn if someone is a convicted child molester.
Supporters say the new law, which takes effect Jan. 1, will enable parents to better protect their children by determining if a neighbor has a history of child molestation.
about child molesters.
Calls to the number will cost about $4 for the first minute and $2 for each additional minute, although charges could drop if the volume of calls increases.
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
Available at these locations:
Restaurants
AMIGO'S
1819 W.23rd • 842-1620
1819 W. 23rd · 842-1620
Get the daily special prices everyday of the week
BLUMPIE SIRS AND SALE!
BUY 1 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79¢
UNIVERSITY
BOOK
SHOP
2007 W 6th-B141-1884-FREE Soft Drink (with FREE reflies)
2329 I.P. Staunton-I4-122 83.99 Fresnillo Food Bar
DOWNING'S PIZZA
8329 I.P. Staunton-I4-122 83.99
FRANCE
1116 W23rd
dert not valid with any other offer
803 Massachusetts@b32-0444
$1.00 OFF Sandwiches and Dinners For P.M.
Funeral Service
119 Stauffer-Flint
1006 MAACH'S SNACK SHOP
1006 Massachusetts-843-0561
10% off any purchase of $2.50 or more
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
GLASS ONION
ESPRESS O'HOUSE
10 E. 9th St B43 3007
Makers
401 N 2nd Bd-8477-BLY BUY cheeseburger with wffs at reg.
cooking.com
**Makers**
391 N 2nd Bd-8477-BLY BUY cheeseburger with wffs at reg. cooking.com
115 New Hampshire-641-7286
BUY! 1M Item, and get the second one at 1/2 Price.
115 New Hampshire-641-7286
$1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50(includes food and coffee drinks)
PERKINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
1714 W. 32ND, 8420 0040
$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 W 23rd+842.1212
824 W 120H 814-2310 FREE CUP of Our House Coffee (Certi
Oliven Greenwheat) Amah Patch Milk
601 Kasold+842-0600
3x6in (15cm) FF 51
PYRABNID PIZZA
layhawk Bookstore
107 W 381P 2621
One Pizza with One Toppings $2.60 each to carry Out Only
**PASTA PIZZA**
1489 & Ohio Chloe-842-323-7800, 509-461-66.00
1489 & Ohio Chloe-842-323-7800, 509-461-66.00
at $7.50 per cup, ad libitum. $1.00 per cup.
*Second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore at the Courtesy Counter *
*First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore at the Courtesy Counter
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
HUMMIE
2700 town*749-2615 FRANCE Drink with Purchase at
HUMMIE Cafe.
1620 8 w242d&8-1610 1101 w434d&8-3090 2004 Huawei
1620 8 w242d&8-1610 1101 w434d&8-3090 (NO LIMIT)
Huawei Tac® for iOS 9 (NO LIMIT)
Retail/Merchandise
ATHLETES' FOOTBALL
914 Massachusetts-B41-6966
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
BORN VIRTUE'S HOME
20% OFF Any Purchase Over $20.00 Excluding Rentals
BOBBI'S BEDROOM
2429 laurie843 7378
6 INVENTORY (includes size and quality product items)
CENTRAL DATA
CLEPRASTA'S CLOSER
743 Massachusetts-749-4664
15% OFF Any Item (excludes sale items)
135 Massachusetts 94-3-18-11*15%OFF All Appt+
1 FREE Friie Shirts *1 Worth $2.99 Over $2.99
745 New Hampshire+643-3282-225.0 Discount for Diagnostic, Upgrade, Labor System, Load IBM Computers
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
15% OYA肯安 Pro-Performance & 24-Hour虐利 it屎
***
84d Illinois. Suite D-842-5850-325, OFF Whisper Brand PowerFilters, and All Other Brand Underwater Filters.
10% Off Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
JUCKS WITCH
840 Massachusetts-842-2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
JAYTHA BOOCHSTONE
1420 Crescent Rd-843-3826
10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid
KU BOOKSTORE
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
837 Massachusetts-842-2992
20% OFF KU SWEATshirts
**10 BOOKS FOR 1 VEHICLE**
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS*864-4640
Any Size Exam Book (Blue Book) $4
IKU BOOKSTORE
ID BURGE UNION
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS*864-4640
10% Off Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply
WATERPROOFING
INQUIRY $ 708 Massachusetts+841-0334
14% OFF any regular price purchase
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS 684-4640
50 OFF Any APPWACK Clothing Item On Hover $20.00
2340 S. Iowa 842-854-6100 FIREFORE 001 FIREFORE
2340 S. Iowa 842-854-6100 FIREFORE 001 FIREFORE
(No Valid Process)
HERLE BURMAN
9th & New Hampshire-641-5324
10% OFF All Skin Care Products
500w Card After Offer
RECYCLED SOURCE
910 N 2nd/bd 843-1819/1910 Hotel Ave. Suite 1844-1754
$1.00 OFF Movie Rental (one per visit)
716 Massachusetts 84-1-720-1680 OFF CEF, Metcalf, Massachusetts
Tuesday & 1/5% More on Buy Backs
OUFFITTERS
740 Massachusetts-683-3933
15% OFF Any Regular Priced Item
620 Massachusettes; 84-1100-1020; OFF AIT Conto T-Shirt
620 Massachusettes; 84-1100-1020; Replacement Cotton
620 Massachusettes; 84-1100-1020
Lawrence, Ks-865-0692
10% OFF All Sales
HIGH SCHOOL DEPT.
15% Off App (any time)
/101 www.ulc.co.uk
15% Off App (any time)
(excluding Stuarty)
622 W 128 Nb +841-947542-80 OFF Any CD, Tape
and DVDs from the SAMSUNG TV $348.00
TO PURCHASE
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
104 W. Otho 314 SRBQ
SPRINGMAID/WASGUTTA
1025 N. 3rd-832-1100
%OFF Any Purchase
832 iowa749-35072 for V1 video Rental Monday
Thursday (limit one per day)
20% OFF of all clothing (excluding sale items)
Services
BRADY OPTICAL
737 Massachusetts-642-0880
15% OFF Complete Eyeglass Purchase
CARLOS PACIFIC HEALTH CENTER
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
CRANDON & CRANDON OPTOMETRIST
CHAIRMASTER & CHAIRMAN OF HISTORY
1019 Massachusetts 843-3844+125-000 All Fashion
Eyeglass Frames Valid with PRESCRIPTION Lenses Only
EUROPEAN TAN
160 I W 23rdq48-6323-F2 Tans with Purchase of 7 Tapes for FO4 and FREE Trial Formula. Onl
customer
MANETAMERS
40 mln oz $5.80 GW ¥3.00 OD Off Haircut $0.00 Of Chemical Service
PLANNED PARENTROOM
15th and Kasidol-032-8281-25% OFF Initial or Annual
Viapt Plus 12 FREE Condoms
LC.C. SUPPORT BARNERY
1038 Main St. #363, $363
Any Heirloom or Hainley $5.90
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
$35.00 OFF Lenses and Frames w/ FREE Adjustment
TWIRN DAKS GOLF COURSE
K-10.8 County Rt. 1057, #113/15342-1747
Buy One Small Bucket of Balls. Buy One Small Bucket
2429 low St. SL-4249-189 | FREE Session with the Purchase of a 8 Session Package (Save $5.00)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KARSSAN
19 Stuart Flint 864.4352
119 Stauffer-Flint-864-4358
20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
9B
Classified Directory
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for房车 or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, nationalism or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 (FHLAs) and requires an education, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
I
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are closed.
100s Announcements
105 Personals
THE ETC. SHOP 928 Mass.
STERLING YEAR JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Jackets & Pendants
LEATHER
Backpacks, Belt, Jackets, & Purse
Bausch & Lomb Rayban, Killer Llores,
's Revo, Serenegit, and Vuarnet
110 Bus. Personals
$ 50 wash now! Independent laundromat, 26th and
Away. Across the street, south of Dairy Queen
Open伞 on 12 midnight!
For take a bath with us and for a massage.
Relieve pain and stress with massage therapy!
Student discounts available.
*Massachusetts Suite 216*
*Chicago Suite 307* Place at 841-1567
225 Massacre of St. 226 Call Ann Lumaria and Laura Pace at 841-1587
Tarot card readings.
As featured in the U.D.K. and 105.9 The Lazer Call Anna Lumaria at 641-1587.
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also insurance for US citizens going abroad.
Insurance for US citizens going abroad
Oklahoma Insurance Service 411 + S Main Ottawa,
Oklahoma
TERM PAPER DUE! Order "The Ultimate Term
Book" and get a FREE copy of *Write a Great Paper in ONE Day*. Essential resource for students and professors. Money back guarantee + $15 to G. Toler. 4865 Sei 41, Del QUA 7311
RESEARCH PAPER
WRITING WORKSHOP
Don't know where to start on that big one?
FREE!
Wed, Sep 28, 7:00-9:30 pm
4034 Wescoe
Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
Men's Group: Roles, Relationships, Realities
For information, call 864-2277
CAPS will offer a therapy group beginning October 11 for men who want to examine and change aspects of their lives.
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
Lawrence's Best and Biggest
BOOK SALE
Most Books 35 to 50 cents
Fri., Sept. 30, 10 a.m.-8 p.m
Sat., Oct. 1, Noon-5 p.m.
Sun., Oct. 2, Noon-5 p.m. "Half Price Day"
Mon., Oct. 3, 5-9 p.m.
"$3 a Grocery Bag Night"
7th and Kentucky Lawrence Public Library Garage and a Big Tent
Sponsored by Friends of the Lawrence Public Library
120 Announcements
EARTH MYSTICS and GODDESS OF MANY FACES-workshops on Earth-based spirituality, OCT 8-9. Presenter from St. Louis. For info: Institute of Transformational Studies. 1-862-2006.
ATTENTION ALL GREEK-ES *ki: for free* We are looking for repls for every house for All Greek Skribe.
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING Workshop. Don't know where to start on that big paper? FREE! Wed, Sep 28, 7:30 pm, 4034 Wescoe, Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center.
11TH ANNUAL
10TH ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2. 16, 1998 • 4. 8, 9, 10, 7 HIGHLIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
168
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
YA GOTTA
BE THERE!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1-800-SUNCHASE
NORDOO DOES SKI BREAKS BETTER!
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 p.m Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
140 Lost & Found
FOUND a young, de-clawed, calico cat around
a fence. No collar. Call Dave at
407-815 for information.
Lost. Large, female husky. Brown leather collar
with a zipper. Very upet.
Please call 846-1975 if found or seen.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Baby sister needed for 2 girls, 7&9. Part-time. Car necessary. Call 843-3841.
Caterers, Kansas Union Catering Dept. Hiring for Thursday, Oct. 6, 1994. Several shifts available. See schedules in Union Personnel Office. $4.25 per hour in cash day following employment. Previous food service experience pre-employment. Personnel Office, Level 5. Kansas Union EOE.
CMS THERAPIES OF KANSAS
State office for national therapy services company part-time office assistant for fast-paced office, manage patient care and staffing candidate must be capable of handling multiple tasks & responsibilities, be reliable & organized, be able to work independently, & have team attentive; accept training, have experience setting, some computer knowledge, past experience general office duties, customer service. Complement, but we are able offer schedule flexibility.
Send letter of application, resume,and references to:
CMS Therapies
Kathleen Dravokish
2706 lora, Suite C
Lawrence. KS 60046
PLEASE, NO PHONE CALLS
EOE M/F/H/V
COLLEGE STUDENTS $10.25-11.65 STARTING Local branch of nat'i ca. filling immediate entry level openings. Fee time schedules. 3 days, ever days. Weekends opt. all majors accepted. For info 841-8955.
HEALTH CARE HELP NEEDED If you are a CNA or have completed your basic nursing skills classes, you are needed to assist elderly people in their homes.
This job requires you to have dependable transportation and work approximately 20-25 hours/week. Hours run between 4:00 & 8:00 pm on weekdays, plus 4:00/hour every other week.
Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association 3363 Missouri, Lower Level Lawrence, RS or call Scott 843-3728. Holiday Inn We Want You! Holiday Inn is hiring service professionals. Both
Holiday Inn is hiring position professionals. Both part-time and full-time positions available as.
*Bartender
*Cocktail Servers
*Front Desk Agents
*Weekend Room Attendants
*Restaurant Servers*
*Cooks
*Banquet Help
We offer excellent benefits including insurance, tuition reimbursement, meals, uniforms, travel and hotel discounts. If interested apply at Holiday Inn. EOE
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic, highly motivated individuals to sell newspaper subscriptions. Sales experience is helpful, but I train highly motivated individuals. Evening classes are required for full-time commission. Apply between 2 p.m. and 6 p.m., at the Lawrence Journal World 609 New Hampshire Contact Valerie for more information. 832-712-71
KARAOKE JD wants. Responsible, great per sonality, attractive. M or F. 749-3649.
**Hard cover**
Positions available at a major Lawrence letter-
shop on lst – and shifts. Long – short term pos-
itions available. Some weekend hours available
is reopening and is looking for food service employ-
ments both with prep and line cook-
ing. Some experience required as part of the "new" Deli team, at applum At Shunmur Food Co. Business between 8am - 4pm Mon - Fr.
through Saturday from 10am to 6pm.
Apply today and receive a next week call:
211 E. ht. St., Lawrence R.S.OE.
Miss Sipressi
Native French speaker to informally tutor 8-yr.
old; read, plenish games, etc. Must enjoy kids J
J
Native French speaker to informally tutor 8 yr-
ad boys and girls. play games. must enjoy kids 632
855 or 844
*recommendation* *narr*
build your job skills! Great opportunity to begin
assignment money
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR IMMEDIATE OPENING
LOCAL WHOLESALE, RETAIL
PETROLEUM COMPANY
Need a little extra money? Bulleuse Distribution distribution is now accepting applications for part-time carriers for delivery work. Work approximately 2-3 hours every Tuesday. Benefits include: 89% savings on Journal World and 50% savings Sunflower Cable Vision. Call 843-6958
1* OFFICE MANAGER
JR ACCOUNTANTA/R, A/P,G/L
2* MARKETING PERSONNEL,
HEAVY PHONES
ABOVE AVERAGE SALARY,
QUIET AUTOMATED COUNTRY OFFICE
END RESULTS
718 E. 1300 RD
LAWRENCE, KS 66046
SEND RESUME TODAY TO:
Office manager needed at Jon's Notes of KU. Job begins immediately and continues through the school year. Approx 15-20 flexible hours per week and $500/month. Office is closed for all school vacations. Business background NOT required. For more details and contact person/phone see on job posting at the University Placement Center in the Burger Union. Applications accepted for limited time.
Needed Immediately; Part time teacher for home day care 10:15, week. Exp. reff. #41-781. Now hiring babyisfers / childcare providers. Day, eve, and wknd hours available. For more info call (323) 694-2611.
Juicers Showgirls
Explore the horizons of making $1,000 + weekly,
working at Lawrence's top adult night spot.
Now hiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+.
Excellent working atmosphere.
Apply in person,
913 N. Second, Lawrence,
7 p.m.-2 a.m., or call 841-4122 after 7 p.m.
Part time, flexible hours. Apt. maintenance painting,
cleaning, etiquette. $.50 per hour 749-7568
We are looking for, outgoing, and reliable people who can work the NIRA Nationals. Sept.
29-Oct in 2 topae. Carpools may be arranged. Many positions invite Sat/Sun hours only. Positions include: Ticket Takers, Gate Attenders, Parking Attendants, and General
Labor. Come experience draig drag racing be working outdoors & greeting racing fans at one of the locations.
Wanted babySister for two children. Ages 3-5,
evenings 3:00-1:00 a.m. Light cooking needed in
home, must be reliable, ask for Michelle and Bob
843-6334 Call anytime before 3:30 p.m.
Manpower, 211 E. 8th St., Lawrence KS EOE.
Wanted: Caring people who like kids 3-5yrs are needed at Head Start as volunteers for a minimum of 2 hours per day, 1 day per week, between 7:30-12:30, Monday-Friday. Daycare volunteers needed from 12:30-5:30. For more information call 842-2515.
WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING
TO PROMOTE SPRING BREAK TO JAMACIA,
CANCUN, FLORIDA, & PADRE, FANTASTIC
MISSIONS! SUN
SL-PLAST SHIPS 1-900-426-7710
225 Professional Services
< Driver School > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
International Video Conversions PAL/SECAM/NTSC. $25 for up to 2 hours includes return postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer PO box 310 Oakts Iowa K5067-1 800-800-6955.
Promo photography. Headshots, modeling, band photographs. B&W and color. Prism Screen 841-6030.
Prompt abortion and contraception services in Lawrence: 841-5716. Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant
BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice
DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES GREEN
AUTHOR OF THE
Call for a free consultation 381-964-0961.
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
R
701 Ter
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
Junior's Farm Records 9241 Mass St. 842-3344 We specialize in hard-to-find CD's
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Having Trouble
OUZ/DUI Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
ENGLISH TUTOR English courses, writing,
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 811-335
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 811-335
call or comeb
235 Typing Services
LSAT Test-Prep For The Dec.3rd Exam
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kesley
16East 13th 842-1133
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID 1 & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
The law offices of
BONALDO STROLE
A 'Word Perfect Word Processing Service.
Laser Printing, Campus. Call,
DeAnne #8-6853
CLIP THIS AD
Quality typing/word processing/indexing Lazer
Class Starts Oct. 2nd
printing. Free access.
Prototype word processing service. Quality papers. Applications, resumes, editing, letters.
Collection #622.
Prototype Word Document.
1-800-527-TEST
Quality Word Processing Dissertations, Theses,
Business Letters, Business letters, etc.
Laser printing 850.000
print YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
X
305 For Sale
183 Ford LTD, 6 cylinder wagon, AC, AT, PB,
cruise, i.e., great engine, rough body, needs water
for running.
Put my service to the test.
For anything you need at all.
MAKIN' THE GRATE
is the one to call.
86-573-2400
1900 Honda CBR 120RF, only 1,000 miles, perfect
condition, must sell, $5,000/OBO; Call
841-1055 or 864-7063
4 Eagles Tix for sale. Fri night $75 ea. Good seats.
749-0796.
Bridgeset mountain bike. Immaculate, upgraded pedals. Mime seed with Titanium tails. Ride on carpet.
FOR SALE! New Fender Pickup Bass w/ slap
Contact Jeff Johnsen at 748-501
between 8 and 5.
Futon and Frame. Great Condition. $100 obo. Call
Jeff at 749-0834
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Chris at 808-269-5685.
Megahertz PCMA14.1.4 Fax Modem for laptop.
Includes communications software. Never used,
never installed. I paid $219, will sell for $100. Call
Jon. 843-7523.
Must sell 2 tickets for Bahamas航线和 4 night
past stay. $1,500 or best offer. For details call
(800) 359-5670.
Panasonic Word Processor 3.5" Floppy Disc Drive Accu Spell Plus Daisy Wheel Printer $50.00
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $9.98
CLEARANCE $9.98
910 N. 2nd • 841-8903
19th & Haskell • 841-7504
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Ticket for EAGLES for Fr. Sept. 30 at SAINT STOCK AMPIHETTE $45.00 or BEST WHATSOEVER
4221
Trek 7000 Aluminum Mt bike for sale. KIra indoor road bike trainer. Call 814-9940. Ask for
We want your used mountain bike. Play It Again Sports. 1025 Mass. 841-PLAY.
1922 Nissan 2005 XH. speed, with sunroof, power windows, and louvers. $95/OSO | Call Mate at 877-344-2600.
1985 SAAB Turbo 4 dr 5 spd sun roof pwr ec,
black/Marackon. Repair records. Rebuild clutch
heater valve CV distributor and ignition module
new rooftier 2 remotives. $4000/UOA 16328
82 Toyota Tercel. AC, AM/FM Class, 104,000 miles.
Good, good. Good, good. Burial oil,
8750, 709-3707
8220, 709-3708
87 Honda CBR 600 motorcycle red/white. Call 842-794-81
Chev. Z 24.conv black Excellent cond Only $9,800.
Kim at kia 644-6066
360 Miscellaneous
Heatherwood Valley
Corrugated boxes, moving and storage boxes.
Large quantity pricing & small quantity walk-in
welcome. Call 843-8111 and ask for the Sales Service
Department. Cash and carry.
家
One year-old Iguana for sale. Best offer. 865-5738.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Apartments
- 3 bedroom apartments
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500. Room for rent for N/S female. Newly remodeled, very clean, W/D, all utilities p. including card. $265 ma. 842-1698 or 832-8258.
- 2 bedroom with study
120 Tennessee. 2 bdmr, unfurnished, utilities paid, $320. Available Oct 18, not. pets 832-2718
bdmr. 2 bdmr. Farm or Orchard Corners apl. for
50 miles. 50 miles. On bus route. Call Amy Melanie at 841-3855.
4 BEDROOM
- Available for fall.
- On KU Bus Route
* Close to Campus
* Swimming Pool
* Stop By Today!
Equal Housing 749-4226 M-F9-5
15th & Kasold Sat10-4
- Directly on bus route
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well kept older houses 841-STAR/1927
Sublet to May 31. 2 Bdroom at Birchwood Gardens. 1800 block Kentucky. All street parking, own fight laundry. AC. No pets. $375 per month-negotiable. 843-0929
ORCHARD CORNERS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
4 BEDROOM
- Call 843-4754
Town-home for rent. 3 bedroom, fireplace,
encclosed porch, garage, on bus route. Ask for Holly
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Sobtet : Furnished room aval. Oct. 1st. Newly painted on bus route. Phone: 9-584-6000. Evening hours:
Trailridge Apts. - 2500 W. 6th Now taking deposits for second semester for studios and 3 BR townhouses. Call for appl. 843-7333 Two Bedroom Apartment Now Available at Aspen West. $735 water and trash paid. Lease through July. $735 deposit. Call 865-2500
Lonely, attractive,
3 or 4 bedroom
apartments seeking
residents to share a
long or short term
relationship.
Call any time at
843-6446.
Pets Welcome
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
South Point
ALABAMA
2166 W. 26th St.
843-8446
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Ample Private Parking
- Water and Trash Paid Outstanding
Outstanding NewStaff!!!
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1 / n s roommate as from Oct. 1 to share a
bdum duplex, $5min. from campus at Nsmith Dr.
fully furnished. Rent $183+utilities. Must be a
reasonable reasonably KU student. Call
685-4297
2 females looking for 3rd roommate to live in town
from rentable cable Paid. Available immediately.
842-761-0911
House mate needed. Close to campus. Lots of room. Reasonable rent and 1/4 utilities. Available now. Please call Harmony at 832-9960.
1 Roommate needed ASAP to share furnished 3
rooms. W/D, W on bus route, $250+.
842 rooms.
Need 1 F NFS housestate to share b.5bmr campus
190/mth + itl. Cail Rebal 749-5671
2 Guys need roommate M. or F. b. or lhm. 2 BA fur-
niture house hotel! & Mass $250 =- utl. WD Call 841-739-5678
Stop by the Office offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on the MasterCard or Visa.
Ads phoned in may be billed by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made
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 their expiration date.
Classified Information and order form
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by or with cash are not available.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
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 1X 2X 3X 4X 5X 6X
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:
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form • Please Print:
Classifications
1401倚&found 305 for sale
269 hw helped 340 aux sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
275 training services
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper.
Total ad cost:___ Classification:
Total ad cost:___ Classification:
Address:
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
Account number:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 6604
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Iggy! This is your mother!... Please Iggy--give yourself up! I know you don't mean to be throwing rocks at your own hive!
9. 28
10B
Wednesday, September 28, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Dillons
FOOD STORES
You'll *3000 W. 6th *1015 W. 23rd *1740 Massachusetts
You'll
*3000 W. 6th
*1015 W. 23rd
*1740 Massachusetts
Kansas University
Embroidered Jacket
Full Zip or Pullover
Red, Royal, Navy, Forest Green or Striped
$39.99
What We've Done In Lawrence
Get A FREE Turkey For Shopping Dillons!
(See In-Store Details.)
Market Coupon -
Aberdeen Farms
16 oz.Bacon
79¢
Coupon Good 9-28 thru 10-4, 1994.
Limit One Per Customer
Bakery Coupon -
50¢ Off
Any Crusty Bread
Coupon Good Thru Oct. 25, 1994.
Lay's/Wavy Lay's/
Ruffles Potato Chips
Super Size 18 oz. to 20 oz.
Assorted Varieties
$2.89
Coke Classic
Caffeine Free
Diet Coke, Diet Coke,
Sprite or Diet Sprite
12 pack,
12 oz. cans
$2.99
Rocky Top Pop
12 pack,
12 oz. cans
Assorted Varieties
$1.98
Tomb-Stone Pizza
18.25 oz. - 23.6 oz.
Assorted Varieties
$2.99
Soft'n Gentle Bath Tissue
4 Roll
79¢
Dillons Pretzels
10 oz. Stix, Twists,
Rods or Petite Twists
Buy One Get One FREE!
From Our Seafood Department-
Mirabel Chilean Sea Bass $9.99
2 lb. Frozen ea.
Create-A-Print
Create your own print from the negative you bring. Print sizes from 5"x7" to 11"x14" plus panoramic enlargements. Enlarge the whole print or just a portion!
(Available only at our 3000 W. 6th and 1015 W. 23rd locations.)
8"x10"
Enlargement
$4.99
with one hour developing
From our Deli...
-Full Service Catering: For one stop planning-ordering-and delivery call 843-7648.
-Be sure to stop by our new cappuccino and espresso bars in our stores at 3000 W. 6th & 1015 W. 23rd.
Sidari
12 oz. Fettuccini or Linguini
Buy One, Get One Free
Combination Plate
Chicken Chow Mein, 1 Egg Roll
Choice Of Fried Rice
$3.49 save 50¢
Luncheon Special
$3.49
Pharmacy Coupon-
$5.00 Off
Any New Or Transferred Prescription
Void with other prescription offers.
Limit one coupon per prescription.
Prescriptions less than $5.00 are free.
What Weve Done In Lawrence
COLLEGE BREAKFAST
foodClub
BASTED
Young Turkey
WITH GIBLETS
PRODUCTION BY PACIFIC LITERATION
NON-GMO WWW.FOODCLUB.COM
Rollins
Since 1928
Lay's Ruffles
SUPER
Potato
Chips
SUPER
s - B
Dellows
MIDLANDS
Coca-Cola CLASSIC
GREENA DIET Coke
GREENA DIET Coke
GreenA DIET Coke
Sprite
12 PACK
ROCKY TOP
COLA
WHERE TASTE PICKS THE BEST SELLING BEER
TOMBSTONE
SAUSAGE & PEPPERONI PIZZA
Softin Gentle
4 Rolls
Pearl Bathroom Tissue
Pretzel Petites TASTY & CRUNCHY
Pretzel Stix TASTY & CRUNCHY
Pretzel Twix TASTY & CRUNCHY
Pretzel Rods TASTY & CRUNCHY
Buy One GetOne FREE!
A MIDDLE-AGE MAN
THE MAN WHO LOST A FIRST BILLION DOLLAR IN THE MEN'S WORLD
AND WHAT HAPPENS TO A MAN WHO LOST A FIRST BILLION DOLLAR IN THE MEN'S WORLD?
BY JOHN R. KAUFMAN
AND JIM HARRISON
PUBLISHED BY CATHERINE PARKS
SINCE 1983
THE MAN WHO LOSS...
GIDARNI
FINEST TEA
BASIC THERAPEUTICS
PETIT COCOE
LINGOLI
TIS MADE
NATURAL WORLD WIDE
Free
CHINESE KITCHEN!
$349 save 50¢
Available only in our stores at 3000 W. 6th & 1015 W. 23rd
DILLONS PHARMACY
Void with other prescription offers.
Limit one coupon per prescription.
Prescriptions less than $5.00 are free.
Preferred providers not included.
Coupon expires 10/31/94
CAMPUS
SPORTS
County administrators say a proposed 1 percent sales tax is badly needed. Page 3A
WARMER
AAAAAHHH
Kansas tennis players will compete today in the ITA National Clay Court Championships. Page1B High 85° Low 60° Weather: Page 2A.
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.104.NO.28
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1994
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(UPSP 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
University addresses child care needs
New center would ease overcrowding burden
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
A new child care center could be constructed and opened at the University of Kansas as early as Spring 1997.
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said the University recently hired a consultant, Rafael Architects of Fairway, to conduct initial planning for the center. The consultant will assess child care needs at KU and study possible sites for a new child care center.
"The University has a responsibility to provide a reasonable amount of child care, and it is apparent that we are in need of more child care," Meyen said. "We are still in the initial planning stages, but optimally we could open a new center in Spring 1997."
The consultant will work with the executive vice chancellor's child care task force to analyze the needs and wants of KU students, faculty and staff. The 24-member task force was appointed by Meyen in March 1993 to consider long-range child care needs of the KU community.
Although the consultant and the task force are making preliminary plans for a new child care center, Meyen said the University had not obtained approval for the project from the Board of Regents or the Kansas Legislature.
"I am hopeful that we will receive approval for the facility during the 1995 legislative session." Mewen said.
State funds will not be used for the project. A new center would be financed by student fees, user fees and private funds.
Meyen said he could not speculate on where
a new center would be located.
"We don't have many available building sites on campus," he said. "A new center isn't going to be on Jayhawk Boulevard, but we're not looking at major off-campus sites."
Ann Eversole, head of the child care task force and associate dean of student life, said she hoped the task force could make some preliminary recommendations to Meyen later this semester, but several issues had not been resolved.
Eversole said the results of a survey administered by KU's Institute for Public Policy and Business Research would reveal the opinions
of faculty, students and staff. The survey will be conducted during the next several weeks and the results will be reviewed by the task force.
"Everyone knows there are huge child care needs, but it's a matter of deciding the details." Eversole said.
An essential detail that has not been decided is who will operate a new child care center.
Hilltop Child Development Center provides the most comprehensive child care on cam-
MUNRCH
VAZH
University program tracks butterflies
See CHILD CARE, Page 7A.
Local children help with task
Second-grade Jared McDonald examines a monarch butterfly that he tagged with the help of his teacher, Kathy Davis. McDonald was one of a group of Hillcrest Elementary students that visited a monarch butterfly laboratory in Haworth yesterday.
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Jeremy Coons wants to watch his caterpillar turn into a monarch butterfly.
"I'm going to stay here all day until it becomes chrysalis," he said, referring to the third stage of metamorphosis.
Coon, a second-grader at Hillcrest Elementary School, is one of many students nationwide who is learning about monarch butterfly migration habits by participating in a program coordinated by Chip Taylor, acting head of the University of Kansas' entomology department.
In the program, students capture and tag monarch butterflies so that Taylor can track the monarch's migration habits. Coon's class is taking an extra step by growing its own monarchs and studying their life cycles.
The class also visited a lab in Haworth Hall yesterday where Taylor raises and studies monarchs.
"A few years ago the monarchs were not as abundant, so we decided to get the public involved," Taylor said. "We solicited schools and individuals to get involved."
Taylor started the program three years ago because he was interested in the migration of the monarchs.
Taylor said the project helped people connect with nature.
"People want to be a part of something larger than they are," he said.
Taylor said that when the project first began 100 schools nationwide were involved in the tagging. Now, more than 500 schools are involved.
"We've exceeded our estimated goal of participants," Taylor said. "We thought we would have 10,000 students, but now we have 20,000 students in 30 states."
Taylor said he estimated that
67,000 monarchs had been tagged so far.
Taylor said that when the program first began, it cost about $2,000. But because of the program's growth, it is budgeted this year at $25,000.
The money comes from contributions from individuals and corporations, he said. The University also donates some money. It is used for preparing kits sent to the people across the
The kits include tags with an identification number and Taylor's name, address and telephone number printed on them. The tags instruct people who recover the butterflies to call Taylor and report where they were found. Taylor said that he only received calls about the recoveries of one or two butterflies per every thousand tagged.
nation who participate in the program.
People capture the butterflies and fasten the tags, which are coated with a special glue, to one of the butterflies wings. While tagging a butterfly, people hold their wings together so not to break them.
Kathy Davis, who teaches Jeremy Coon's class at Hillcrest, said her students had tagged about 50 butterflies so far. The class does most of its tagging during its recess and lunch.
"Sometimes if there are a lot of monarchs outside our window, I'll let them go outside for a few minutes," Davis said.
The students also are planning to tag the monarchs that they raise, Davis said.
"It will be interesting to see how the students react," Davis said. "But I think they understand that the monarchs are not pets."
Hallway robbery
This shows crimes in residence haits broken down by type for 1992, 1993, and 1994 (1994 numbers are January through August only).
Crime 1982 1983 1984
Vandalism 42 47 20
Phone harassment 60 45 26
Arson 4 4 1
Trespassing 3 1 5
Drug charges 5 9 6
Rape 1 0 3
False Alarms 19 13 5
Assault 24 21 9
Theft 131 112 76
Source: Staff research
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Residence hall crime on decline
By Ashley Miller
Kansan staff writer
Crime in the residence halls is on the decline, according to KU police reports.
Figures reported by KU police through August 1994 show that the number of crimes such as vandalism, arson and assault in the halls was growing smaller.
KU police Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek said that there wasn't a way to measure why the number of crimes was decreasing, but KU police and student housing, which includes Jayhawker Towers, had increased the number of safety programs presented to students in the residence halls this year.
The programs stress the importance of being conscience of strange behavior and of what is happening in the hall, Rozmiarek said. One of the best things residents can do is identify early in the semester who lives on their floor.
"Just because someone is walking up there doesn't mean they belong up there," she said.
Rozmiarek also said that residents needed to realize that their room was their home and to lock the doors even if they were just going to dinner.
The most common crime in the residence halls reported to the KU police is theft. Seventy-six of the 219 thefts committed at the University in 1994 occurred in residence halls.
Ozrmalei said rape still was the least-reported crime. Rape victims may report the incidence to another source, such as student housing or a counseling hot line but often did not contact the police, she said. There were
See CRIME. Page 7A.
INSIDE
Day trippin'
"Daytrips," a play presented by University Theatre, explores age-related Alzheimer's disease and dimentia.
Page 8A.
INSIDE Day trippin'
1980
Good chancellors must be great fund-raisers
Kansan staff writer
There is a saying in fund-raising circles: People don't give money to institutions, they give money to people.
By David Wilson
At the University of Kansas, that person — the one foremost in the minds of generous alumni and legislators — is often the University's chief executive officer, the chancellor.
Those close to the issue of fund raising at KU say that the University's next chancellor should be a consumate money-raiser, able to schmooze a state legislator, remember an alum's name and juggle a call from the governor in a single bound.
Jim Scaly, assistant to the chancellor,
said the ideal chancellor would be able to convince state legislators that higher education was a necessity, not a luxury.
"Public support is fragile," he said. "It's
easy to lose support when there are so many conflicting demands on the treasury."
Marlin Rein, University director of governmental affairs, said there were just as many conflicting demands on the chancellor.
CHANCELLOR: The universities of Oklahoma and Nebraska have completed searches for new chancellors. Page 54.
"The chancellor has an awful lot of constituencies," he said. "Included among those are the Board of Regents, who the chancellor reports to. Finally, there is the governor and the legislature."
Rein said the chancellor was KU's No. 1 diplomat to all those constituencies.
"To those groups, the chancellor personifies the institution," he said.
And if support from the legislature is fragile so is support from private individuals and companies.
Martin said former Chancellor Gene Budig, who is now president of the Major League Baseball's American League, had been the driving force behind Campaign Kansas, a statewide private fund-raising effort that netted more than $260 million.
Martin said that the Campaign Kansas money — and the almost $40 million given to the University last year — financed such things as library acquisitions, student scholarships and distinguished professorships.
"In higher education, private fund-raising is essential," said Jim Martin, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association. "And the chancellor is undoubtedly the chief fund-raiser."
"There is little doubt that Campaign Kansas would not have been successful without a chancellor with a strong suit in fund-raising," he said.
Becker said that before Budig was hired, he did not have much fund-raising experience.
Frank Becker, a KU graduate from El Dorado and chairman of the chancellor search committee, said the search committee would rely on face-to-face interviews to determine whether the next chancellor would be a good fund-raiser.
"If you look at Chancellor Budig, his history of fund-raising was not outstanding," he said.
4.
But it wasn't long before Budig proved his money-raising mettle to the Kansas Board of Regents.
Sometimes, proving that mettle took little more than smooth small talk.
"Conversational skills are very important," Martin said. "Chancellor Budig had that. He always made the individual across the table from him feel comfortable."
2A
Thursday, September 29, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
✩
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE: Projects involving inventions or travel will have great success now. Start or expand a business in December. Friends or relatives may offer to provide financial backing, get promises in writing. Certain legal documents may need revision early in 1995. Use overseas business contacts judiciously. A change of residence or employment is likely next spring. A timely real estate purchase could put you on easy street.
By Jean Dixon
T
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE* actress Anita Ekberg, "Today" show cohost Bryant Gumbel, rocker Lee Jerry Lee, actress Marianne Kahn.
8
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Old friends prove to be your most loyal allies in business. Trust them with your future. Romance enters an entirely new phase. Keep a tight rein on your temper. Be open to new ideas.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Getting involved in a power struggle would be a mistake. Be firm if others ask you to take sides. You need some pampering tonight.
Make sure a romantic relationship is on a two-way street.
♊
15
m
69
GEMINI (May 21-20):
Some confusion over details could slow progress. Do not be afraid to ask personal questions.
Secret transactions will not help your cause. Romance blossoms when you and mate take time to smell the flowers.
♥
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): A wonderful day to launch new projects. Rely on your own efforts to carry you through. Distant affairs are more lucrative than in the recent past. Leave the evening free for reading or a hobby.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Domestic affairs could take precedence over business today. Ask loved ones to keep expenses down. An unexpected development will make the evening both happy and memorable.
a
CANCER (June 21- July 22) Friendship and romance are in the spotlight. Correct a wrong impression by being more discreet. You would be wise to take greater interest in your future financial security. It pays to play a waiting game.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21): A special friend may be trying to tell you something. Become a better listener. This pal cold hold the key to your future success. Show more devotion to those closest to your heart. Love conquests all!
VS
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Welcome news arrives from someone at a distance. Working at home is especially productive for writers or artists. A personal relationship is sorely tested.
WP
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). A financial problem is easier to solve than anticipated. A confusing domestic situation will require extra caution. Nip self-doubt in the bud. Catch up on minor household repairs this evening.
WATER
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Romance and a new career venture could be closely linked. Be careful not to go overboard when entertaining strangers. Save your generosity for your family.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Accept new responsibilities with good grace and you will be considered for a promotion. Your wonderful manners help you quickly win allies in new social situations. Continue to be discreet about previous romantic involvements.
X
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Additional skills will make you a more valuable employee. Be patient with a friend who may be going through hard times. Participate in a community event.
TODAY'S CHILDREN: Even as tots, these Libras will be very aware of other people's feelings. Tactful and considerate, they make friends wherever they go. Astrong sense of justice makes them fearless advocates for the downroden. Count on their eloquence to touch the consciences of even those who consider themselves cynics. A career in law or politics is possible, but so is a life of humanitarian service. These Libras are eager to practice what they preach!
Horsescopes 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
KU Literary Club will meet at 5:15 p.m. today at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jack Lerner at 749-5225.
KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Brad Bernet at 832-2157.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Parliars in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
Latin American Solidarity will sponsor "Haiti Today" at 6:30 p.m. today at 1204 Oread Ave.
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor "Helping A Friend Who Has Been Raped or Sexually Assaulted," at 7 tonight at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Rachel Lee at 864-3552.
Rock Chalk Revue Promotions Committee will meet at 7 tonight at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tom Field at 864-4033.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a presentation by Jill Brandenburg about her medical airlift to Bushkeel, Kyrgyzstan at 7:15 tonight at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
Campus Crusade for Christ will sponsor "College Life," at 7:30 tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kent McDonald at 749-0943.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-9529.
LesBiGayS OK will meet at 7:30 tonight on the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Eric Moore at 864-3091.
KU Democrats will sponsor speeches by Barbara Ballard, Troy Findley and Forest Swall, all local candidates for state representative, at 8 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ted Miller at 842-4596.
ON THE RECORD
The fitting of an underground fire sprinkler water pipe popped off Tuesday night behind Dyche Hall, said Mike Richardson, facilities operations director. Construction work was being done for the Dyche Hall addition, and one of the contractors had removed a section of dirt, which exposed the pipe, Richardson said. There were more than 100 pounds of pressure in the pipe, and after the ground was moved away the pipe fitting broke off, he said. The fitting was repaired yesterday morning.
Uninvited guests got into an argument that later escalated into a fight at a KU student's apartment late Saturday night in the 1100 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported. Police said the woman who lived at the apartment received 20 stitches to
her right forearm after she was hit with a broken bottle. She was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, police said.
Personal items and cash valued together at $75 were stolen from a KU student's car about 4 a.m. Tuesday in the 2500 block of W. Sixth Street, Lawrence police reported.
A compact disc player, cellular phone and five compact discs valued together at $700 were stolen from a KU student's car parked in the 500 block of Fireside Drive about 11 a.m. Tuesday, Lawrence police reported.
A KU staff member's purse and its contents were stolen from a room in Fraser Hall about 12:30 p.m. Monday, KU police reported. Police said the items were valued at $481.50.
CORRECTION
A story about mononucleosis on Page 1 in Tuesday's Kansan incorrectly stated that people with the virus should not drive. Students can drive but should avoid strenuous activity.
Sunny and much warmer with South winds at 10-15 m.p.h.
62° * 58°
70° * 55°
80° * 59°
96° * 61°
85° * 60°
75° * 62°
70° * 55°
84° * 58°
65° * 51°
80° * 64°
87° * 62°
90° * 64°
90° * 64°
Sunny and warm with a breezy southwest wind.
SATURDAY
Sunny and warm.
TODAY
8560
8763
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
8862
Source: Glenn Martin, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
87 63
September 28,1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
Weather
15.14
3,878.18
NYSE
1.50
256.37
FRIDAY
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 329,650,000
↑
HIGH LOW
↓
Advances 1,400
3.87
759.24
Declines 809
-
Unchanged 659
ASE
2.77
456.19
Pale Ale Porter Stout Pilsner
(Your Brew Here)
BREWING
Everything needed to put your own signature on a style of BEER!
LAWRENCE BREWER'S SUPPLY 305E.7th St.(913)74-YEAST
State of the art fitness and health facility
Orchards Corners
Graystone Athletic Club, Inc.
2500 W 6th 841-7230
√
US OUT!
Louisiana Purchase
ATHLETIC
CLUB
23rd & Louisiana 843-5500
Special Student Memberships!
a medium or large serving!
I Can't Believe IV's
Yogurt!
® We Put A Smile
On Your Taste
50¢ OFF
EXPIRES 10/16/94
Plus, I Can't Believe It's Yogurt offers Nonfat and Sugar Free flavors that have No Fat or Cholesterol!
vs. Premium Ice Cream
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
SENATE
Half the Calories! 80% Less Fat! 33% More Protein!
presents Environmental Activist Humanitarian PaulColeman
STUDENT KU ENVIRONS
presents
at
4:00 Friday, September 30 Ecumenical Christian Ministries
1204 Oread
1204 Oread (south east corner of 12th & Oread) He is a future recipient ofa United Nations Environmental Program award for his humanitarian efforts.
Jayhawker Yearbook 428 Kansas Union 864-3728
1995 HILLTOPPER
Co-sponsors are ECM and Student Senate
O
G
Who do you know that is an . . OUTSTANDING SENIOR?
We are now accepting nominations for the 1995 Hilltopper Awards
$ \diamond $ All nominees will receive an application.
Anyone may nominate an outstanding senior.
Nominations must be turned in to 400 or 428 Kansas Union by October 6 at 5p.m.
$ \spadesuit $ Nomination forms available at 400 Kansas Union (OAC) or 428 Kansas Union (Jayhawker Office).
WATKINS
ATKI
"We Care For KU"
Gynecology Services With the Student in Mind
The Gynecology Clinic at Watkins offers comprehensive, expert services at reduced cost compared to off-campus facilities. Gynecology services include:
- contraceptives and contraceptive counseling
- Pap smears
- treatment for sexually transmitted diseases
- infertility counseling
- infertility counseling
PRESENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
3A
Thursday, September 29, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Commissioner takes heat from students
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
The fler being distributed around campus this month begins with the words, "Why would I want to register to vote? There's at least one person who hopes that you won't."
According to the flier, that person is Jim Chappell, Douglas County Commissioner. To back up the claim, the flier quotes Chappell from a radio interview on July 18 discussing a sales tax proposal on the Nov. 8 ballot.
But Chappell said yesterday that the quote was taken out of context by local media and misrepresented his view of KU students.
"It's like whispering to the first person in line, then going to the end of the line and hearing how the story has changed," he said.
The flier, which encourages students to register to vote, quotes Chappell from a radio interview on KLWN, a local AM radio station:
"There are 25,000 people ... who come here and live for nine months and pay no taxes here, and they are a major contributor to our jail population and to our municipal court population and to our court system, and those people don't pay anything for that. If there is a way to bring them into the tax equation and at the same
The flier is being distributed by the Student Political Awareness Task Force, a Student Senate organization that wants to encourage students to register to vote.
time not raise everyone else's property tax, then I think the sales tax is the way to go."
Since the flier was printed, the Lawrence Journal-World and the Kansan both have printed items saying Chappell had called KU students "transients," although neither quoted him directly.
But Chappell said the backlash was unfounded. He said he never called KU students transients and did not imply that they were.
"The students are the best thing to ever happen to Lawrence and Douglas County," Chappell said. "We have the jewel of Kansas up on the Hill."
The Kansan acquired a tape that contained only the part of the interview that was quoted in the flier. It proved Chappell said what the flier claimed he said.
But Chappell said had the rest of the 15 minutes been heard by students who took offense, his views on students would have been fairly represented. He said they used county facilities and paid for those services through taxes passed on in rent and grocery prices.
"In that way, they pay property taxes like everybody else," he said.
Before becoming a commissioner, Chappell owned several apartment complexes around the city that housed students. However, he said, he had sold all but one since getting into politics.
Marc Wilson, co-coordinator of the Student Political Awareness Task Force, said the quote was a clear-cut statement, no matter what preceded or followed it in the original interview.
"It's pretty plain what it means," said Wilson, Hiawatha senior. "Nobody's putting words in his mouth."
Wilson said one of the intents of the task force was to get students interested in local politics. He said politicians such as Chappell would continue to write-off students unless they got involved.
"Students don't participate" Wilson said. "They don't seek out those contacts. And without registering to vote, they have no say."
To that end, the task force will set up a voter registration booth every Wednesday in front of Wescoe Hall and every Thursday in front of the Kansas Union until the Nov. 8 election. Wilson said most students were eligible to register.
Sales tax to fund new prison
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Sometime during the debate between a Douglas County official and a KU student group, the proposed sales tax on the Nov. 8 ballot got lost.
But to county and Lawrence officials, the proposed sales tax is a necessity. Issues such as jail overcrowding, high property taxes and funding for social services won't go away, officials say, and something will have to be done soon.
The county proposed a one-cent sales tax on every dollar's worth of merchandise sold in the county, said Craig Weinau, county administrator. If the tax passes, a compact disc marked $15 would be sold for $15.15, not including state sales tax.
The money is badly needed, Weinaug said. The county must pay for a new jail, which already is overcrowded and must be alleviated by law.
"We need to build a bigger jail," Weinaug said. "It's going to happen whether we like it or not."
Plus, state law prohibits counties from raising property taxes beyond a certain level—a level the county has reached, said Jim Chappell, county commissioner.
The money would go for capital improvements to the county's four towns. Lawrence would use the money for parks and recreation improvements. Both Lawrence and the county would use some of the money to pay for community health agencies.
Chappell said that while the sales tax would affect students, raising property taxes eventually would as well.
"If property taxes are raised, Mr. Dillons is going to raise the price of eggs to pay his rent," he said.
Should a one-cent sales tax pass the ballot on Nov. 8, it would pay for various city and county projects in increments. It would raise $7 million each year.
Just the tax ma'am
$12.2 million Lawrence
$11 million
improvements. Construction of
$8.2 million Expansion of
a larger jail.
Remaining funds will be used by Baldwin City, Eudora and Lepton for capital improvements and relief of property taxes.
Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center and the Visiting Nurse;
METROBLA TOWN
KANSAN
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Brent Helliker, Kansas City, Kan., senior, helps Bonnie Cable, Lawrence senior, register to vote. The Student Political Awareness Task Force, which was in front of Wescoe Hall yesterday registering students to vote, has distributed fliers that condemn County Commissioner Jim Chappell for a comment he made during a radio interview.
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity house faces possible destruction by city
Daron Bennett / KANSAN
The Alpha Phi Alpha house, 1014 Mississippi St., faces possible demolition if fraternity members do not present a reconstruction plan to the city. The house has been abandoned by the fraternity for four years.
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
The Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity nus about six weeks to decide what to do with their house at 1014 Mississippi St.
The house, which has been abandoned by the fraternity for about four years, is in a state of almost complete disrepair. Windows have been knocked out, doors are missing and the roof is gone. The top few stairs have collapsed and broken furniture is scattered throughout the first floor.
"That house is totally open from the third floor to the basement," said Gene Shaughnessy, chief building inspector for Lawrence.
Gayle Weyland, an environmental inspector for Lawrence, said a resolution for Nov. 8 had been submitted to the city commission by the city's building inspection office about the house. A resolution is an order setting a meeting time to discuss a problem. At that time, the owners of the house may tell the commission if they plan to do anything with the house.
If someone representing the fraternity does not appear at this meeting, the city is free to do whatever it wants
with the property, Weyland said. The city probably will hire a contractor to demolish the property.
The city does not have to notify the fraternity of the demolition, Shaughnessy said. However, it did have to notify Alpha Phil Alpha of the resolution on Nov. 8. A notice was sent to the fraternity's graduate chapter, Beta Lambda in Kansas City, Kan., because that chapter owns the house.
Two resolutions already have been filed concerning the Alpha Phi Alpha house. The first was adopted in January 1983 and the second in November 1990. Then, in January 1991, a representative of Alpha Phi Alpha's graduate chapter presented a reconstruction plan for the house to the city commission. Alpha Phi Alpha was permitted to keep the house, but the plan was never completed.
As temperatures drop, those people build fires, which also creates an immediate hazard because there isn't much left of the house.
Shaughnessy said that it would not take long for a fire in the house to grow out of control and spread to
neighboring houses
"There is evidence that fires have already been set in the house," he said.
Guy Howard, vice president of Alpha Phi Alpha, said the fraternity did not know that the house was being discussed in November. The graduate chapter had not notified the KU chapter yet.
"We're not going to let the house just be taken from us," Howard said.
Alpha Phi Alpha plans to create a reconstruction plan for the house to take to the Nov. 8 hearing, Howard said. The seven active members of the fraternity plan to attend.
"It's not that we don't care about the house," he said. "It's very historical to us. We just don't have the finances right now."
Alpha Phi Alpha is the first Black fraternity on campus to have a house. If the fraternity does use the house again as housing, Howard said chapter meetings would be held there and Alpha Phi Alpha would invite high school students to visit Lawrence and see the fraternity.
"Those are the type of things the house has been used for in the past," Howard said.
LOW EVERYDAY CD PRICES!
KIEF'S CDs & TA
BUY 5 CDs
25%OFF
MFG. LIST.
NEW & USED CDs BUY,SELL & TRADE
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 86044
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDS & TAPES
913·843·1811 913·842·1438 913·842·1544
KIEF'S
CDS & TAPES
4A
Thursday. September 29. 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
Victorian town loses heritage to newer facilities
CHRIS STONG
Change has invaded the Lawrence and made the town into just another product of the'80s.
Clanging hammers and shouts of surveyors ring through neighborhoods as the crews of Douglas County mark off property boundaries. Their spray guns hiss, dividing up Lawrence as they demarcate bits of ordained ground. Similar sounds echo across Lawrence as advocates of change claim an invisible hand commands the work.
The '80s have arrived in Lawrence. Outdated expansionist policies and unrestrained desire for business to grow is now sucking the lifeblood from what used to be an historic community.
Now little more than a bedroom community or outlet mall exit, Lawrence is being divided, and its history pushed aside to make room for
the new monuments to come. The new style is utilitarian and cost effective but not particularly aesthetic.
Perhaps there is some hidden reason in that. No one struggled for any of this newness. They never put thought into it. No artisans worked. Accountants merely calculated the results in a worn-out system that had not yet failed but never once proved any more than unimaginative.
Superhighways and strip shopping malls, tract housing and soft fascism.
The invisible hand is making everything the same: corporate-franchise deco.
realtor who suggests that the home is no longer desirable. Why? The hand-built stone foundation is not the mode of building anymore. The high ceilings are cold in the winter, and the trees in the yard exclude a driveway.
The process begins: a house is abandoned, the elderly couple who lived there moving on. The executors of the house decide to sell and consult a
She advises the nice executors that the house is no longer marketable, despite the fact that every other house on the block in the same style, Victorian, the kind with a little history, is rented out.
It would sell if "zoned for duplexes." Buldoze all the handcrafted work and history of the house, making a beachhead in the neighborhood for further construction of the sort and sell. This curious process is acceptable, but who wants to live merely acceptably?
End of story? Not exactly. The new tenants will have no trees next year. A duplex won't fit on the lot otherwise. The neighbors will see an average, prefabricated, sterile, white duplex out of the neighborhood style.
The city loses part of its Victorian heritage, and as the process goes on, the city is subdivided and sold off to anonymous owners who care more about quick turnaround and increased profit than culture or heritage.
Change does not mean, nor has it ever meant, the same thing as progress.
These late blooming '80s business techniques are uprooting the entire town. Every new house has the same floor plan.
Walking through downtown, it doesn't seem to be a city block long, and as soon as McYouKnowWho moves in it will take forever to get past it. Wal-Mart moved, not because the old store was not environmentally safe enough, but because they want to be on the freeway exit when the wetlands have been "relocated."
No one mentions how boring the great towers of venture capital look on the outside or what the people feel like working inside — only how free and rich the people are. They say interstates and towering banks are modern-day cathedrals.
Not this American.
VIEWPOINT
Party politics don't work in making the best choice
As Congress prepared to adjourn, with health-care reform suffocating in partisan politics, Kansans stressed a positive
witnessed a move toward breaking this cycle in the state. On Friday, former Republican gubernatorial candidate Gene Bick-
Among politicians, sharp divisions between party lines make change
forward" by supporting whom he considers the more qualified candidate.
Chris Stong is a Lawrence senior in philosophy.
GOVERNOR'S RACE
GOVERNOR'S RACE Gene Bicknell has set an example all voters should follow in supporting the candidate and not the political party.
slow illustrated by the health-care movement. During elections, many people vote for a certain opposed to a
nell endorsed Democratic candidate Jim Slattery.
GOP officials argued that Bicknell was breaking a unity pledge; Bicknell said he was attempting to "make a step
Bicknell sets a bold example to be followed in the November elections. Voters must look beyond labels and see individual credentials.
certain candidate.
ERIC MADDEN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
Health-care reform's fate is sign the system works
The Democratic leadership in Congress admitted Monday what the rest of the nation already knew: Health-care reform is
dead, at least for this year.
Some type of health-care reform should be made. However, considering the significant economic impact that a reform
should be praised.
During the 1992 election, health-care reform seemed like a simple goal. Yet, two years
HEALTH-CARE REFORM Health-care reform is
later, no significant progress has been made. This lack of action should not be blamed on our democratic process. Instead, the process
package would have, it is better that Congress continue discussion into next year and get a good plan,rather
noticed but the debate should continue into next year to ensure the nation gets the best possible plan.
than push through hap hazard reform now. America deserves high quality health-care reform. This delay will only help us get it.
RICHARD BOYD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO Editor
CATHERINE ELLSWOKtm Systems coordinator
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
CAMERON DEATH Retail sales manager
CHRISTOPH FUHRMANS Managing editor
JEN CARR Business manager
News ... Sara Bennett
Editorial ... Donella Heame
Campus ... Mark Martin
Sports ... Brian James
Photo ... Daron Bennett
... Mellissa Lacey
Features ... Traci Carl
Planning Editor ... Susan White
Design ... Noah Mueller
Attention to the editor .. Robble 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 mgr Holly Boren
Regan Overy
Marketing director Alan Stigle
Creative director John Carton
Classified mgr Heather Niahs
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.
Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
HEALTH CARE REFORM:
HEART MONITOR
Matt Hood / KANSAN
DOLE CLAIMS REPUBLICANS DIDN'T KILL IT :
LIE DETECTOR
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Compassion is way to salvation
Geez, Mr. Zimmerman, can we beat that bible just a little harder? I'm a pretty easy going guy, but it really chaps my hide when close-minded people try to push their beliefs upon others, completely disregarding what those people believe in.
I once got in an argument with a couple of bible-beaters who denounced my point of view on religion. They said I was going to burn in Hell because I don't believe Jesus Christ is the only way to salvation.
In your last column you referred to the Salvation Army as having lost its way. I can't quote passages from the Bible off the top of my head, but don't the actions of the Salvation Army preach the Gospel? And in the "eternal scheme of things," how can you say that filling the starving bellies of the poor is useless because they are going to burn in Hell anyway? How do you know?
The Salvation Army is still doing what all Christians are called to do, and that is to have compassion for others less fortunate and help them out as best they can. The Salvation Army doesn't need to overtly preach the Gospel. If it is going to shove something down people's throats, why not let it be food?
Jay Lisondra Overland Park senior
Wetlands debate prompts practical, moral questions
The wetlands/South Lawrence Trafficway debate has been one of the most important and contentious in Lawrence in a number of years. It also illustrates one of the main dichotomies in our society today: the relationship and conflict between religion and government. This dichotomy has existed in various forms since the dawn of western civilization.
For those of you who felt Western Civ to be a waste of time, try rereading Sophocles, Black Elk and Aldo Leopold in light of this wetland debate.
COLUMNIST
The central question in this debate is whose rights should prevail?
Do we come down on the side of progress and side with Douglas County, or do we join forces with the environmentalists and Native American students from Haskell, who have their own compelling reasons for abandoning the project?
图 3.20
How seriously do we consider the arguments of the Haskell students, who claim that the wetlands have a spiritual value? Can you quantify this spiritual value or is its qualitative significance sufficient to stop this project?
NICOLAS SHUMP
What about the environmental impact of this project? Again, how can this be put into qualitative terms? Should it even be necessary to quantify the environmental damage, or are the two sides in this debate just comparing apples and oranges?
Will the eventual solution be acceptable to all parties involved?
And finally, what good is civil disobedience in this case? Does it actually accomplish anything?
These questions plagued me a few years back when I was involved in my own act of civil disobedience at
Offutt Air Force Base near Omaha, Neb. I was part of a group of nearly 60 people who were planning to trespass in a protest against Desert Storm.
We protested; we were arrested and nothing changed, as recent events in Somalia and Haiti have shown.
Nevertheless, I feel that by merely protesting the rationale for the Persian Gulf action, we allowed our voices to be heard.
Civil disobedience is the most telling sign of a society's commitment to democracy.
Only a society that is confident of its mandate can allow itself to be criticized. I am encouraged to see that civil disobedience is alive and well here in River City.
Mary Gray's recent action brought all of those feelings and questions back. I imagine that many people will feel that her action will actually solve nothing.
It is quite possible that she would have sat in jail without her wishes being met. She might have remained on a hunger strike indefinitely without the slightest interest shown
by the Douglas County commissioners. I hoped that this was not the case. Mary Gray's courageous act forced the county to listen to her.
I applaud her willingness to go to jail for her beliefs, especially considering that she did it alone. I had company at least.
But I also hope that Mary Gray does not stay alone for long. I hope that other protesters would consider joining her in some future protest. I hope that the Douglas County jail is overrun by protesters who believe in the same cause as Mary Gray. Why? It's not because I think that it will be cool or hip.
No, I hope that others will join Mary Gray because the Douglas County Commission needs to understand that there is a significant group of people who oppose this South Lawrence Trafficway.
Exercise your right to civil disobedience. It's the only way to ensure that you don't lose it.
Nicolas Shump is a Lawrence senior in comparative literature.
HUBIE
ORDER! ORDER
IN THE CURT!
WE WILL NOW
TAKE OPENING
REMARKS IN THE
CASE OF THE TWO
CRITERIES OLD
PEOPLE VS. HUNGER
YOUR HONOR, TODAY
IT WILL BE MY EXTRARENG
PLEASE TO PERSONALLY
DESTROY LIFE AS WE
KNOW IT FOR THE
DEFENDANT—
ORDER! ORDER IN THE COURT!
WE WILL NOW TAKE OPENING REMARKS IN THE CASE OF THE TWO GROTHIEST OLD PEOPLE VS. HUBBIE
YOUR HONOR, TODAY IT WILL BE MY EXTREME PLEASURE TO PERSONALLY DESTROY LIFE AS WE KNOW IT FOR THE DEFENDANT —
BY PROVING WITHOUT ANY SHIELD OF DOUBT THAT HUBBIE MAPLICUSLY AND RECKLESSLY WRECKED HIS 1949 LAMBORGHINI DIABOID INTO THE PEAR END OF THIS POOR ELDERLY COUPLE'S BEST-UP YELLOW 1969 CHEVOLET IMPLA —
AND THEN STALKED THEM TO THEIR PLACE OF RESIDENCE AND CAUSED DAMAGE TO THEIR MANLBOX MICH, BY THEWAY HAD MAIL IN IT AND IS THEREFORE A FEDERAL OPENS, IN RETRIBUTION FOR THEIR WALKING AWAY ALIVE.
PRETTY STRONG STUFF, PROSECUTOR! DOES THE DEFENSE WISH TO MAKE A STATE-MENT?
uh???
IM GONNA KILL YOU I SWEAR IT!
By Greg Hardin
A man with a large head is running across the floor. He appears to be in a dynamic, action pose. The background consists of a flat, neutral color with some abstract shapes that suggest movement or speed.
uh???
I'M GONNA KILL YOU I SWEAR IT!
Woo Woo!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 29, 1994
5A
Interns gain experience, help society
By James Evans
Kansan staff writer
Rob Vaught was tired of the norma academic methods of learning.
Vaught, Winfield sophomore, signed up for the Community Internship program coordinated by the Center for Community Outreach, which is under the direction of Student Senate.
COOKS CENTER
agencies for the internships.
The program, which starts this week, placed eight KU students with local nonprofit organizations to experience a professional work environment.
Yuki Chikamori / KANSAN
Vaught said he wanted to work on his political science degree outside the classroom to see if he was really interested in politics. He was placed with the Roger Hill Volunteer Center, 211 E. Eighth St. The center is a United Way organization that works with other nonprofit groups.
"I just wanted to get involved in the community, politically or otherwise," Vaught said.
He said he wanted to work with people in situations that were not typical of classroom learning.
Lanaea Heine, coordinator of Roger Hill Volunteer Center, talks to Rob Vaught, Winfield sophomore, about "Kid's Voting Day." Yesterday was his first day of internting at the center.
Vaught and the other interns will be paid $5 per hour. The Center for Community Outreach uses money from the Educational Opportunity Fund and federal work study money. It also solicits funds from the nonprofit
Lanaea Heine, coordinator at the Roger Hill Volunteer Center, said Vaught would be helping coordinate the Kid's Voting Lawrence program. The program, run through the Lawrence School District, lets students cast votes alongside adults in the Nov. 8 election.
"I try to mold the internship to the expectations and needs of the student," Heine said.
Heine said Vaught would be learning how to coordinate up to 300 volunteers, do media relations work and get office experience.
All eight internships are designed for the students' career interests. Some other agencies that are employing the interns are the KU Habitat for Humanity, Brook Creek Learning Center and Community Children's Center.
The internship experience, which is 10 hours a week for 10 weeks, helps in building lasting relationships, Heine said.
"Students are going to build friends and relationships that they don't expect, and they last for a long time," she said.
Heine said that she had worked with interns from the Center for Community Outreach since its inception six years ago and that she had learned a
lot from her interns.
"I tend to learn more from the students then they learn from me,"Heine said.
She said the students often had more computer skills.
Lorraine Claassen, director of the community internship program, said
"I want to make it part of their lifestyle," Claassen said. "Society can't function without volunteerism."
she wanted the program to give students practical work experience while sparking their community service interest.
KU EQUESTRIAN Informational Meeting and Picnic Thursday September 29 at 6:30 Contact For Information Jon Koch 864-1211 or Jenny Jauber 749-6714
PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES
- Complete GYN Care • Pregnancy Testing
• Depo Provera & Norplant • Tubal Ligation
• Abortion / Tubal Ligation (1 procedure)
- Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff - Modern State Licensed Facility PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974
4401 W. 109th (I-435 and Roe) 1-800-227-1918
Overland Park, KS
TOLL FREE
COMPREHENSIVE 345-1400 health for women
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!!
Large Pizza
2 toppings
2 drinks
ONLY
$899
plus tax
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Open 7 days a week
OU, NU know well the perils of KU's chancellor search
The University of Nebraska and the University of Oklahoma know what the KU chancellor search committee is going through in finding a chancellor.
By James Evans
Kansan staff writer
"You have to keep the committee small or you'll run into problems."
During the past three years, both universities have gone through the process of locating the ideal person to lead their universities into the future.
In April, Oklahoma hired former governor and current U.S. senator of Oklahoma David Boren to become its 13th president. He replaced Richard Van Horn, who retired to return to teaching in the school of business at Oklahoma.
Lynda Kaid, vicechairwoman of Oklahoma's search committee, said
that the 17-member committee felt Boren fit the mold of what the university was looking for in a president.
"We thought he had the leadership capabilities we were looking for," Kaid said. "He had an understanding of academics and working with students and faculty."
Kaid said the search committee also liked Boren's educational background. He was on the faculty at Oklahoma Baptist University for four years and had a doctorate from the University of Oklahoma College of Law.
Kaid said the committee wanted to find someone who could deal with the multifaceted position of president.
"We wanted someone who could be an inventive leader, bring together the multiple constituencies involved
with the university and be able to work with outside constituencies."
Kaid said the search attracted 100 candidates for the position. She said the candidate pool was made up of candidates with academic backgrounds and private industry experience.
Nebraska participated in a president's search in 1991. The search was started because the then-president, Martin Massengale, left to become the president of the University of Nebraska system, which includes all NI campuses.
The Nebraska committee was made up of two students, one undergraduate and one graduate student, two outside alumni, seven faculty members and one administrator.
Perlman said.
The only problem the search committee had was keeping the search confidential, Perlman said..
"The Omaha World Herald was able to find out two of the final candidates by calling all the provosts in the country," Perlman said.
Perlman said the World Herald's investigation didn't affect the final selection.
Perlman said he had no real recommendations in running a chancellor search.
The KU chancellor committee will meet tomorrow to look at the current candidates who have shown interest in the chancellor's position.
"There are so many ways of doing a successful search, and it really depends on the environment of the school."
FUTONS by
Based Manufacturer with 6
Retail Locations
This Complete Futon
& Frame
Exclusively Hardwood Frames
1023 Mass. St Lawrence, KS
843-8222
Abdiana
Futon
FROM THE DIRECTOR OF "THE HAND THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE"
MERYL STREEP·KEVIN BACON·DAVID STRATHAIRN The vacation is over.
THE
RIVER WILD
UNIVERSAL PICTURES PRESENTS A TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY PRODUCTION A CURTIS HANSON FILM MERYL STREEP
KEVIN BACON DAVID STRATHAIRN "THE RIVER WILD" JOSEPH MAZZELLO JOHN C REILLY JERRY GOEDSMITH JOE HUTSHING
BILL KENNEY ROBERT ELSWIT LIONA HERZBERG AND RAY HARTWICK DENIS O'NEIL DAVID FOSTER AND
LAWRENCE TURMAN CURTIS HANSON AL UNIVERSAL PICTURE
OPENS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30TH AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAK
SHEEN UNIVERSITY OF RANSBURG
SCHINDLER'S LIST "A SURVIVOR CELEBRATES LIFE" ZEV KEDEM
T
"Spielberg did a remarkable job recreating what happened, but the reality was much worse. There is no way to express the terror, the evil around us."
Free Lecture - 8:00 p.m.
Monday, October 3, 1994
Kansas Union Ballroom
Ticket Policy On Thursday, September 29, and Friday, September 30, vouchers for the lecture will be made available with KUID only. Each KU student, faculty or staff member will be allowed two vouchers per his/her KUID. This will be on a first-come, first-served basis. Vouchers will be available at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on the above listed dates. On Monday, October 3, any remaining vouchers will be made available to the general public from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. On the night of the lecture, each voucher will be honored at the Kansas Union Ballroom door from 7:00 p.m. until 7:45 p.m. At 7:45 p.m., the voucher become invalid. Any remaining tickets will be given out at the Ballroom on a first-come, first-served basis.
for more information, call the SUA box office at 864-3477.
THE LAWRENCE
JEWISH
COMMUNITY
CENTER
HILLEL
DEPARTMENT OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION
ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY RESIDENCE HALLS
STUDENT
UNION
ACTIVITIES
6A
Thursday, September 29, 1994
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Faulty seals, bow door likely cause of ferry disaster
The Associated Press
TURKU, Finland — Fridgi waters and raging winds turned the Baltic into a sea of death for more than 800 people when a ferry suddenly listed and sank in a storm early yesterday. Authorities said 141 others survived.
In one of the world's worst maritime disasters in recent years, helicopters and ships searched for survivors and bodies off Finland's southwestern coast. They checked dozens of black-and-orange rafts from the ferry Estonia bobbing in the surging waters, but many were empty.
Officials said it was too early to say what caused the ferry to sink shortly after midnight about 25 rules from Uto island.
A surviving crew member said water started pouring through the Estonia's front cargo door and the ship rolled over and sank quickly.
Swedish safety inspectors had criticized the seals on the door before the ferry left Talium, Estonia, on Tuesday evening for the 230-mile trip to Stockholm, Sweden. But they said they did not spot anything dangerous.
"We saw nothing that gave us a hint that something would go wrong," one of the inspectors, Ake Sjoblom, told Swedish television. "If we had, we would have sounded the alarm immediately."
Raimo Tillikainen, the Finnish coast guard commodore coordinating the search, said four ships would remain in the area last night, but he held out no hope more survivors would be found.
Finnish police counted 141 survivors of the 964 people aboard, leaving 823 people missing and presumed dead.
It was not immediately known whether the ferry's captain survived
bers. It was less than half-full.
Tillikaina said the Estonia carried
7116 passengers and 188 crew mem-
More than half the passengers came from Sweden, and the nation of 8.5 million people was in mourning yesterday.
The first word of the ferry's trouble came shortly after midnight, after it radioed Estonian authorities: "We are sinking! ... The engines have stopped!"
Survivors described scenes of panic as the ferry listed and started sinking in pitch darkness amid 35-foot waves. The water was 54 degrees and winds were blowing around 55 mph.
Some news reports said the ship went down in five minutes, while others put the time at closer to 30 minutes.
Ship's engineer Henrik Stillace, 24, said that the bow door was not properly closed and that water started pouring in.
Twenty helicopters and 15 ships joined the search.
herry catastrophe
More than 800 people are presumed dead in Wednesday's sinking of a ferry traveling between Estonia and Sweden.
M/S ESTONIA
Norway
Sweden
Stockholm
Turks
Tallinn
Estonia
Latvia
Russia
Heliopters searched for survivors.
Denmark
Malaysia
Poland
Ukraine
0
100
Miles
Map area
Juancho Cruz / Knight-Ridder Tribune
Baltic Sea swallows ship, 823 passengers
Source: News reports
The Associated Press
STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Thirty minutes after the sea began pouring into the ferry Estonia, it was all over. For most of the 964 people aboard, there was no chance to save themselves before the ship was swallowed by the frigid, raging Baltic.
"Mayday...Estonia," the ship's radioman called. "We have listed 20 degrees to 30 degrees and have blacked out."
Six minutes later, the ship disappeared off Swedish radar screens.
From survivors' accounts and news reports, the final minutes of Scandanavia's worst maritime disaster, in which more than 800 people died:
The German-built ferry leaves the dock in Tallinn, the Estonian capital, at 7 p.m. Tuesday bound for Stockholm. The passengers included 70 police workers from Stockholm attending a union seminar, 21 teenagers from a Bible schooland 56 retirees on a group excursion.
too heavily in nearly 20-foot waves.
At about 8:30 p.m., the ferry runs into heavy weather. The band stops playing because the ship is swaying
Many of the passengers retire, some to cabins nine decks below the bridge, to sleep out the rest of the 230-mile journey.
Sometime after mudnight, engineer Henrik Sillaste, watching via closedcircuit television, notices water coming in from the front bow door. Thinking it's rain water, he and the other engine room workers turn on the ship's bilge pumps.
Fifteen minutes later, the Estonia's pumps are overwhelmed. The 28 trucks, two buses and several cars in the hold are inundated.
Nenee Kauk wakes up in his cabin in blackness, throws on his clothes and runs out onto the deck. People are dashing up the stairs to the decks where the lifeboats are stored. The weak and elderly are left behind.
Crew members help panicky passengers into lifeboats. Some people are bleeding from hitting their heads
The Estonia is listing 30 degrees off center. Two of the ship's four engines shut off. Sillaste and his two co-workers abandon the engine room, climbing up a shaft to escape.
as the boat shifted. Kaik grabs a life jacket. As he does, the boat falls completely onto its left side, and the smokestack hits the water.
At 1:24 a.m., from his post on shore, Finnish Coast Guard LL. Ilkka Karpala hears the Estonia radioman's mavdav call.
A group of passengers form a human chain across the steeply slanting deck, passing lifebackes to people who have fallen into the water.
A second ship responds, asking for the ferry's location.
"I don't know, because we had this blackout," the radioman says. After a few seconds of silence, he comes back and gives coordinates.
Just after 1:30 a.m., the ship disappears off radar.
Karppala does not hear what Estonian radio reports as the 14-year-old ship's final call of distress: "We are sinking! ... The engines have stopped!"
As the ship sinks, stern-first in waters more than 180 feet deep, most passengers have failed to reach the deck. Forty covered lifeboats make it into the turbulent 54-degree water.
Democrats struggle as elections loom
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — In a depressing election season for Democrats, Sen. Kent Conrad is one of the lucky ones never mentioned on the growing list of endangered incumbents.
"A majority of the time, I vote with the Republican leader, Bob Dole," Conrad says in his latest television ad. "I support the president when I think he's right ... and I oppose his policies when they are wrong for North Dakota."
Consider it insurance against a Democratic meltdown.
With just 40 days to Election Day, Democrats see trouble — and Republicans opportunity — everywhere they look.
The climate was supposed to be bad for Democrats this year, because of historical trends in midterm elections, festering antigovernment and anti-incumbent sentiment and President Clinton's sub-par public standing. But even the party's pessimists say it's worse than they believed possible,
and the Republicans hardly disagree.
GOP pollster Bill McInturff said, "I've waited 15 years for this to happen. The world has turned."
After all, many Democratic incumbents have been hamstruck from a campaign standpoint because Congress is in session in Washington, and experience and deeper campaign bank accounts often tilt races toward incumbents in the end.
Given all that, some Republicans are beginning to suggest Election Day might bring a powerful GOP tide, one of those rare swings in politics where one party wins a bunch of races it shouldn't.
Still, Democrats acknowledge that if elections were held today, they likely would suffer a debacle, probably losing control of the Senate and coming perilously close to the 40-seat loss that would give Republicans a House majority, too.
Clinton, Yeltsin reducing arms
The Associated Press
"We're succeeding in tackling some hard challenges." Clinton said at upbeat East Room news conference with Yeltsin.
WASHINGTON — In a bargain between ever-closer friends, President Clinton and Boris Yeltsin pledged yesterday to sharply accelerate the dismantling of thousands of nuclear weapons. The Russian president also promised not to sign new arms deals with Iran.
Indeed, there were agreements on American investment in Russia, space collaboration, customs cooperation and joint efforts to combat crime. In all, deals were signed for up to $1 billion in ventures in Russia.
However, the most important accord concerned nuclear arms.
The United States and Russia agreed to speed up nuclear cutbacks under the START II agreement once it is ratified. Clinton said the move would shave several years from the timetable; Yeltsin said perhaps seven years or more.
The treaty, reached last year, calls for reducing long-range nuclear warheads to 3,000-3,500 on each side by 2003.
There were doubts in Moscow that the Russian parliament would ratify START II because of the expense of dismantling missiles and the military's attachment to some of the weapons. Yet, American officials said they were confident of ratification.
The U.S. Senate has not approved the treaty either.
The war in Bosnia remained a point of dispute, with Yeltsin saying Russia firmly opposes lifting an arms embargo on the Muslimled Bosnian government, as Clinton proposes. However, both sides got some breathing room after the Muslims suggested a six-month delay on any action.
925 IOWA
841-7226
fifiy
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
Dickinson
Cinema 6
641 Main St
2319 South Lowndes Street
Trial by Jury R #4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Next Karate Kid P#4:35, 7:15, 9:35
Forrest Gump P#13-10, 8:00
Corrina Corrina P#4:30, 7:00, 9:45
Natural Born Killers P#4:30, 7:10, 9:50
Terminal Velocity P#13-4, 45, 7:15, 9:40
3 Pintimete Show! (1) Healing Baby
Scientific Citizen Anime! Healing Stereo
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
WED. SEPT. 28 TO SAT. OCT. 1
Japanese Exotic Film Fest
In the Realm of the Senses
Thurs. 9:30 PM
Tokyo Occidence
Wed. 7:00 PM
Sat. 2:00 PM
OKOGE
Wed. 9:30 PM
Thurs. 7:00 PM
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
WED. SEPT. 28 TO SAT. OCT. 1
Japanese DVD Film Fest
In the Realm of the Senses
Thurs. 9:30 PM
Tokyo Decendence
Wed. 7:00 PM
Sat. 2:00 PM
OKOGE
Wed. 9:30 PM
Thurs. 7:00 PM
ALL SHOWING IN WOODBURR AUD.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-5-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 P.M. ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
10:15 MAASSAL HUSETTS 841 5191
TIMECOP® 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841 5191
A Simple Twist of Fate PG-13 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
Milk Money PG-13 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
The Client PG-13 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
Color of Night® 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
Clear & Present Danger PG-13 5:00, 7:35
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 841 5191 $1.25
Speed® 5:00, 7:20, 9:40
The Crow® 5:00, 7:30, 9:40
PROSTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00
(UMIDATED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSAS HUSETTS 841-5191
TIMECOP® 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
A Simple Twist of Fate PC-13 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
Milk Money PC-13 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
The Client PC-13 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
Color of Night® 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
Clear & Present Danger PC-13 5:00, 7:35
CINEMA TWIN
1110 IOWA 841-5191 $1.25
Speed® 5:00, 7:20, 9:40
The Crow® 5:00, 7:30, 9:40
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
September 30, October 1 & 2
Schindler's
List
Friday 8:00
Saturday 8:00
Sunday 2:00 pm
D.C. CAB
Friday Midnight
Saturday Midnight
THE LIST IS LIFE. THE MAN WAS REAL.
THE STORY IS TRUE.
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
September 30, October 1 & 2
Schindler's
List
Friday 8:00
Saturday 8:00
Sunday 2:00 pm
D.C. CAB
Friday Midnight
Saturday Midnight
THE LIST IS LIFE, THE MAN WAS REAL
THE STORY IS TRUE
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
FINAL DAYS!!!
PORTRAITS
FREE
with your KUID
Thursday and Friday
9 a.m. - Noon,
1 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Rotunda
Strong Hall
ALL STUDENTS WELCOME!
Questions?
Call 864-7357
FINAL DAYS!!!
P O R T R A I T S
FREE
with your KUID
Thursday and Friday
9 a.m. - Noon,
1 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Rotunda
Strong Hall
ALL STUDENTS WELCOME!
Questions?
Call 864-7357
PORTRAITS
Creative Concepts
Mon. Oct. 10 - Sat. Oct. 29
Kansas Union Gallery
Level 4
Gallery Hours:
Mon.- Sat. 10-4
Sun. 12-4
pick up applications at the
SUA office
applications due Wed., Oct. 5
Student Exhibit of Graphic Art
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAK
INTEGRITY OF KANSAS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 29,1994
7A
By Manny Lopez Kansas staff writer
KU law grad to fill district attorney spot
The creation of a fifth division in the Douglas County Courthouse landed a KU Law graduate a new job.
Roselle Orr, a 1992 graduate of the KU Law school, will leave her private practice in Lawrence to become the
county's 10th staff assistant district attorney Monday.
"It is always a welcome addition when we can bring someone in from private practice," said Jerry Wells, Douglas County district
Rosella Orr
attorney. "Roselie is already a competent lawyer and will make a competent prosecutor."
Orr, who was selected from a field of 45 applicants, will be primarily in charge of prosecuting traffic cases.
cases involving people with mental illnesses and misdemeanor cases, Wells said.
"I'm a very compassionate person, and I take issues very seriously," Orr said. "I still care about people even when I will be handling their cases at the worst part of their lives."
Working with the other members in the district attorney's office was one thing Orr said she was looking forward to.
"Ireally respect the DA's office here in Lawrence," Orr said. "The other judges, attorneys and clerks are good people, and I look forward to working with them."
Before joining the district attorney's office, Orr had a private practice in Lawrence where she specialized in family law. Orr said she had handled divorce cases and child custody cases as well as some criminal matters since her practice opened in 1992.
Wells said Orr's private practice experience would help her assimilate and immediately take part of the case
load from her associates in the office. While Orr will fill a newly created position, most of the attorneys who join the Douglas County District Attorney's Office stay for some time.
load from her associates in the office
"The average term of an assistant district attorney in Douglas County is about 11 years," Wells said. "That fact is excellent for the community."
The division Orr will be working in at the courthouse, along with three others, handles a variety of cases. The third division is responsible for divorce and most juvenile cases.
Orr's ties to KU and Lawrence are not new. Although she was born in Lawrence, she was raised in Chapman, which is between Junction City and Abilene. She later moved back to Lawrence to attend the University of Kansas and graduated with a psychology degree in 1988. In her spare time, she does manicures at her salon, Foxy Fingers, 900 Indiana St.
"I'll miss the freedom of private practice," Orrsaid. "Still, I am looking forward to the structured atmosphere in the DA's office."
CHILD CARE: Facility projected by Spring 1997
Continued from Page 1A.
pus, but it is unclear whether Hiltop will operate a new center.
Martha Langley, co-director of Hilltop, is a member of the child care task force. She said the task force had not offered a recommendation on the issue.
"We certainly hope that Hilltop will be in the new facility," Langley said. "But there has been no recommendation to include Hilltop."
Hilltop, a nonprofit corporation, is not part of the University.
"I feel like the task force generally has been supportive of Hilltop," she
said. "But it's not been stated whether we would run a new center, and it needs to be clarified."
Meyen said the issue of who would operate a new facility simply had not been addressed yet.
"I'm not saying Hilltop won't run it." Meyen said. "At this point, I have not heard anyone arguing against Hilltop."
Meyen said a new facility would accommodate at least 200 children. Langley said 170 children were enrolled at Hilltop, or the equivalent of 140 full-time children.
"Additionally, we always have between 150 and 200 children on our waiting list," Langley said.
Langley said children could spend up to two years on Hilltop's waiting list.
"I was told not to expect an opening at Hiltop until Spring 1996," Lewis said. "KU should have planned ahead so that parents wouldn't have to go through this."
Andrea Lewis, Denver freshman, added her daughter's name to Hilltop's waiting list last spring. She said that KU needed to act quickly in building a new child care center.
"It feels like the University has put me in a hopeless situation," Lewis said. "There's not an immediate solution at this point, so I guess I'll just have to wait it out."
CRIME: Crime decrease attributed to awareness programs
Continued from Page 1A.
entered a residence hall.
three reported rapes in 1994 in the residence hall system.
Trespassing in a residence hall was the only crime to show an increase in 1994. Rozmiarek said trespassing usually meant that a student evicted from the student housing system had
dent reports with student housing.
"The residence halls are a place where we like to think these things don't occur, but they do," said Jonathan Long, an assistant director of student housing.
Long said that liquor violations were the most common crimes in the halls, but they often weren't reported to the police. Most students filed inci-
In 1933, there were 299 liquor law violations in the residence halls, he said, not including violations filed with the KU police. Student housing numbers for 1994 were not available.
"We continue to see either more alcohol violations or more violations due to the consumption of alcohol." Long said.
Albert Brooks Brendan Fraser
the Scout
He was praying for a miracle.
What he got was Steve Nebraska.
Twentieth Century Fox Presents
A Ruddy/Morgan Production A Michael Ritchie Film
Albert Brooks -Brendan Fraser The Scout
Dianne Wiest Music Composed by Bill Conti
Executive Producers Herbert S. Nanas • Jack Cummins
Based upon the New Yorker artide by Roger Angell
Screenplay by Andrew Bergman
and Albert Brooks & Monica Johnson
Produced by Albert S. Ruddy and André E. Morgan
Directed by Michael Ritchie
PG-13 PARENTS STRONGLY CAUTIONED
Children Must Be At Least 14 Years Old By Law Or Under Parental Care
©1994 Twentieth Century Fox
SUNFLOWER
OUTDOOR
& BIKE SHOP
804 Mass * 843-5000
WITH THE INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION I.S.A.
BACK TO SCHOOL PARTY AT THE HOLIDAY INN!!
WITHTHE
FRIDAY 30TH SEPTEMBER
ADMISSION $4.00 (UNDER 21)
THE PARTY STARTS AT 8:30 PM!!
YOU ARE WELCOME TO BRING YOU OWN MUSIC.
Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228
FORTUNE 50 COMPANY NOW HIRING!
Committed
to
KI
Excellence
ERIC DISCHIDT
SCHMIDT
STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Fold for her by the COMMITTEE TO ELECT ERIC SCHMIDT
Clint Burman, Treasurer
*Fortune Magazines Most Admired Life Insurance Co. 12 Years Running
*Voted #1 Sales Force in America by Sales and Marketing Management Mag.
*Best Sales Opportunity in America According to Jobs '94
Northwestern Mutual Life The Hames Agency
This profession offers freedom and flexibility. The best training in the industry, management opportunities, and income twice the industry average. Work in the business and professional marketplace in the Kansas City area.
Interview Dates:
Tue. Oct. 11 KU Placement Center-Burge Union 864-3624 Wed. Oct. 12, Thurs. Oct. 13 School of Business Placement Center 864-5591
- 70% of sales force hired off college campuses
- 75% of Hames sales force are KU grads
- Out of 7,000 sales people nationally number 6 and 55 are KU grads
Contact Placement Center to schedule an interview
Information and video on company available in the placement center
CHECK OUT THIS WEEKEND!
THUR URBAN SAFARI live reggae!
FRI: MONDO DISCO
w/ DJ Ray Velasquez
SAT: the KELLEY HUNT band
EVERYSUNDAY CHIEFS! ON OUR 25 FT. SCREEN!!
SUNDAY NIGHT: CLUB 7
GRANADA
1020 MASS. ST. DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
913-842-1390
ALVIN AILEY REPERTORY ENSEMBLE SYLVIA WATERS·ARTISTIC DIRECTOR
SEPTEMBER 30·8 P.M.
TOPEKA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER The George Neese Gray Performance Hall
$19, $15, $11 PLUS TAX -
GROUP DISCOUNT AVAILABLE
TPAC BOX OFFICE: BTH & QUINCY
OPEN NOON TO 5 P.M.
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY
CALL 297-9000 OR 1-800-949-8722
SPONSORED BY
Payless
Shoe
Source
NG
ENTER
Performance Hall
AVAILABLE
& QUINCY
RIDAY
949-8722
espiro & Smiths
marz Schiller
programs and artists are
Diana Smailwood & Kevin Bowiebeen in Shapiro & Smith's Three Dances with Army Blankets. Photo: Beatrix Schiller
Due to the nature of performing arts, all dates, programs and artists are subject to change without notice. Handling charge on mall orders.
Theater and Music
MOTHERS·DAUGHTERS·GRANDDAUGHTERS
Top photo: Erin Kessler (left), Palatine, ill., junior, plays a woman who has Alzheimer's disease in the play "Daytrips." Laura Zabel, Manhattan sophomore, plays Kessler's daughter and caregiver. Bottom photo: Amy Steinhaus (left), San Pedro, Calif., senior, is made up to be a 70-year-old woman for a dress rehearsal with the help of John Garretson, Overland Park sophomore. Steinhaus plays a woman with dementia. Photos by Yumi Chikagori
University Theatre presents "Daytrips," a play about age-related diseases and family
By Casey Barnes Kansan staff writer
Rose is 70 years old. At night her mind is full of delusions of her dead daughter. She remembers her father and how she shoved her, but who
does not remember her grand-
daughter's name.
Rose (played by Amy Steinhaus, San Pedro, Calif., senior) suffers from dementia, a disease that causes the loss of mental abilities such as thinking, reasoning and remembering.
The University Theatre is addressing the frustrations of caring for loved ones with dementia and Alzheimer's disease in "Daytrips," a contemporary play by Jo Carson that opens Friday in the 1994-95 Inge Theatre Series at the University of Kansas.
In a drama about duty, commitment and old-fashioned love, three generations of Southern women struggle with family life after tragedy strikes.
When and Where
The huge Theatre Series,
"Daytrips," will be presented
Sept. 1 through Oct. 2 and Oct. 4
through Oct. 8 in the huge Theatre
at Murphy Hall.
General admission tickets are
available through the KJ box
offices (Murphy Hall, 986-3282,
the Lied Center, B64 ARTS, and
SUA, 884-3477). They are $0 for
the public, $3 for KU students and
$5 for other students and senior
citizens.
The story is told through the eyes of a woman who takes care of her mother, who has Alzheimer's disease, and her grandmother, who suffers from dementia. Sally Shedd, Ozark, Ark., doctoral student, is directing the cast of four women in a drama she calls beautiful.
"It's about conflict," Shedd said. "It's about
people struggling with a way of life, which is not pleasant. It's about loving what used to be your mother, and now she is gone. You have to say 'My mother is dead, and now I am caring for a shell that used to be my mother.'
Shedd said the drama had been a learning experience for herself and the cast.
During the rehearsal process, they met with local caregivers and Alzheimer's patients to ask questions about euthanasia and depression.
Erin Kessler, Palatine, III, senior, plays the mother who has Alzheimer's disease.
Kessler said that after meeting an
Alzheimer's patient, the disease was not as depressing as she thought it would be.
"It's depressing that old people can be such little kids, but it is nice to see the sparks of happiness in their eyes," she said.
Shedd said that caregivers often experienced fatigue, guilt and frustration when dealing with the effects of these diseases on their loved ones.
There are scenes in the play when these emotions cause all-out fights, she said, but the play is not depressing.
Lark Oxler, Lenexa junior, is part of the makeup crew and has seen the play during rehearsals.
"There is humor in the play because there has to be a break in the absurdity to enjoy their childlikeness," Oxler said.
The actresses also studied relationships between mothers and daughters, including their own.
"There is something special about the link between mothers and daughters," Shedd said. "It makes me appreciate my own mother a lot more."
Shedd said the playwright, Carson, was also a caregiver, which helped her write about Alzheimer's and dementia and the nature of caregiving from personal experience.
THE MARIMBA
THE
Linda Maxey practices the marimba for tomorrow night's concert at the Lied Center. Maxey will be playing with the University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra in its season debut performance.
A Lawrence marimbist will play at the KU Symphony Orchestra's season debut
By Casey Barnes
Kansan staff writer
Linda Maxey plays her music with emotion.
The concert marimbist and Lawrence resident said that making people feel her music was important to her.
"If you can relate to the emotions of your audience and involve the human element, that is what people will remember about your performance," Maxey said.
She plays the marimba, which is a unique percussion instrument made of a wooden keyboard and pipes. Many people compare it to the xylophone, Maxey said, but it is higher in pitch and more mellow in timbre.
What they might also remember is her instrument.
Maxey will play her marimba in the season debut of the University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra. She will join the 81-piece student symphony at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Lied Center.
"Linda is a wonderful marimbist," he said. "She is marvelous to work with, and she learned the whole piece by heart, which defies my imagination."
Maxey began playing the marimba at 6 and is now known as one of the foremost marimbala players in the world, said Brian Priestman, conductor of the orchestra.
Maxey will be featured in "Concerto for Marimba and String Orchestra," by Peter Katzlow, one of three acts to be performed by the orchestra tomorrow.
Because of the amount of pieces that have been written for the marimba, Priestman said that the instrument had suddenly achieved great importance in the musical world.
And so has Maxey.
Her first major performance was in New York at the age of 11. She also was the first marimbist to be signed by Columbia Artists Management Inc.
"I am well known as a concert marimbist because I am unique in my profession," Maxey said. "Very few people can make a living, just playing the marimba. Most people play it, just as a percussion instrument."
Maxey spent the summer playing the marimba in Portugal and has also released her first compact disc.
Although she has played with orchestras worldwide, she said that she enjoyed working with the University's orchestra and attributed its high quality and level of artistry to Priestman.
"Brian makes a difference," Maxey said. "He brings a level of professionalism to the orchestra because of his ability."
Priestman, who is known as a musicologist, lecturer, teacher and television personality in several parts of the world, said that other universities in the Midwest offer no real competition for the orchestra.
"It is a University-wide organization that involves all students from all over the University, not just music students," Priestman said. "The orchestra is getting a wider reputation all over the Midwest"
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 29 1994 PAGE 3A
KU Life
Life
Lawrence Nightlife Calendar
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
NOTE Music Showcase with The Lupins, James Graurrholtz and The Brandos, 10 tonight, $5.
Stick with Action Man, 10 p.m. tomorrow, $6 or $7 for 18 and over.
Open Mike Night, Monday, no cover charge
Waterson 10 n m Tuesday $3
Sebadoh, Butter Glory and Doo Rag, 10 p.m. Saturday, advanced tickets $7 (18 and over). Omar Mike Alight
Hellos Creed, Amputatoate and Love 666, 10 p.m.
Wednesday, $6.
Truckstop Love and Smudge, 10 p.m. Thursday,
$4 (18 and over).
1601 W. 23rd St.
River Valley Music Cafe 1601 W.23rd St.
Bon Ton Sol Accordian Band, 10:30 tonight, cover charge.
Cosmic Freeway, 10:30 p.m. tomorrow, cover charge.
Ozeric Tentacles and Salty Iguanas, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, cover charge.
That Statue Moved, 9 p.m. Sunday, cover charge Mango Jam, 10:30 p.m. Wednesday, cover charge
Squibcakes, 10:30 p.m. Thursday, cover charge
Full Moon Cafe
803 Massachusetts St.
Beth Scalet, 8 tonight, no cover charge. Blue Grass Night, 8 p.m. Wednesday,no cover charge.
The Jazzhaus of Lawrence
9261/2 Massachusetts St.
Chubby Carrier and the Bayou Swamp Band, 10 tonight, $5.
Floyd's Funk Revival, 10 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday. $4.
Monkey Meet, 10 p.m. Thursday, $4.
Mulligan's
1016 Massachusetts St.
Dan Bliss and Kurt Stockhammer, 10 tonight, $2.
Lonesome Hounddogs, 10 p.m. tomorrow, $2.
The Bindlestiffs, 10 p.m. Saturday, $2.
Live Jazz Night, 9 p.m. Tuesday, no cover charge.
Acoustic Open Mike Night, 9 p.m. Wednesday, no cover charge.
Granada Theater
1020 Massachusetts St.
Urban Safari Reggae, 9:30 tonight, cover charge. Harvest of the Arts Film Festival, 7 p.m. tomorrow, no cover charge.
Mondo Disco with D.J. Ray, 9 p.m. tomorrow, $4-5
Club 7, 9 p.m. Sunday, $4-5.
80's Night, 9 p.m. Wednesday, $4-5.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1994
SECTION B
96
Photos by Sean Crosier / KANSAN
Gang tackle
Above: Kansas freshman linebacker Lamar Sharpe hangs on tightly to Alabama-Birmingham senior running back Patrick Green. At night: Jayhawk teammates close in and clean up, Kansas has a bye this week, but its next opponent will be Kansas State.
38
Football preview Missouri Tigers
When the Kansas football team and the rest of the Big Eight Conference play the Missouri Tigers this season, they will be facing a changed Mizzou team.
After compiling a 15-38-2 record from 1989 to 1993 under former coach Bob Stull, the Tigers hired Larry Smith. Smith directed Southern California to a 44-25-3 record from 1987 to 1992, including five trips to postseason bowls.
By Matt Irwin
"I think teams that have seen us on tape from our first two games may not think we'll be as prepared as we're going to be," said Missouri linebacker Travis McDonald.
Despite Missouri's 1-2 record, it is now a more physical team with Smith as coach. McDonald said.
Smith's proven record perhaps is the reason why Missouri players believe they can surprise some Big Eight teams.
Kansan sportswriter
"We're going into the season one game at a time," McDonald said. "We've talked a lot about beating the team we're playing physically, and physically beating the man you're playing against."
McDonald said Smith's positive approach also was effective.
As the Big Eight season approaches, the Tigers are starting to perfect their coaches' ideas. McDonald said.
"He's brought in a real positive attitude," McDonald sai'. "No matter what happens he stays positive. But he steps in at the right time."
Smith said that because the lineup had changed so much during the first three games, the Tigers' week off gave them time to work together. But Smith warned that there would still be some changes for Saturday's game against West Virginia.
"As a coaching staff, we continue to experiment and look at people," Smith said about changing the lineup. "You can practice all you want, but
BIG8 CONFERENCE
until you get up against an opponent,
that's when a players' true performance comes out."
"We had some communication problems in the first couple games," he said. "Everything looks good. I think we will click this weekend."
This week will be when the Tigers finally find a lineup that will click, McDonald said.
McDonald said the Tigers hope to peak by the fourth or fifth game of the conference season. But he said as a team with a new coach, it could take longer.
The Tigers have an irregular 12- game schedule that ends in Hawaii on Nov. 26. Missouri ends its Big Eight season against Kansas on Nov. 19, but the team looks to its game Saturday with West Virginia as critical before entering the Big Eight season.
"I think this is a key game for both of us for the rest of the season," Smith said of both teams.
Mizzou schedule Current record: 1-2
Cyclones breeze by Kansas
date team score
Sept. 3 Tulsa 17-20 (L)
Sept. 10 at Illinois 0-42 (L)
Sept. 17 at Houston 16-0 (W)
Oct. 1 West Virginia
Oct. 8 Colorado
Oct. 15 at Oklahoma State
Oct. 22 Nebraska
Oct. 29 at Iowa State
Nov. 5 at Oklahoma
Nov. 12 Kansas State
**Nov. 19** Kansas
Nov. 26 at Hawaii
By Chosley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas volleyball team may have out-hit Iowa State last night, but the Cyclones' dominated the Jayhawks through discipline.
"When we stayed disciplined, we were winning the game," Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said. "But when we weren't disciplined we were losing."
VOLLEYBALL
Kansas put up a fight, as it opened the Big Eight Conference season against a regionally-ranked Iowa State team.
record fell to 3-12.
Although Kansas out-hit the Cyclones with a. 198 hitting percentage to Iowa State's .161, Kansas still lost in three games, 13-15, 9-15, and 11-15.
"We started the games very well, but they would just make several runs at us." Sohonew said about the Jay-
Chonewise said she was very pleased with the Jayhaws' hitting
Junior outside hitter Jenny Larson had only one error on the night, connecting for 12 kills and a .500 hitting percentage.
The combined play of Iowa State junior outside hitters Kirstin Hugdahl and Stephanie McCannon sealed the victory for the Cyclones. Hugdahl and McCannon turned in almost identical performances, with 12 kills each on 38 and 37 attempts respectively.
performance. But she said inconsistent play, service errors and ball handling errors caused the Jayhawks to lose its first conference match.
Junior outside hitter Katie Walsh led all hitters for Kansas with 14 kills and she was just as effective digging up nine Cyclone spikes.
Kansas failed to win its first conference match away from Lawrence. But the Jayhawks will get a chance to redeem themselves at home Saturday night when they play the Oklahoma Sooners at 7:30 in Allen Field House.
hawks inability to pull ahead on the scoreboard.
P
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
Kansas senior Nora Koves returns the ball during tennis practice yesterday. Koves is one of two members of the women's team that will be competing in the National Collegiate Clay Court Championships which takes place Thursday through Sunday in Jackson, Miss.
Clay courts to challenge 'Hawks
Nation's best await players
Bv Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
Four members of the men's team will be participating in the tournament, coach Michael Center said. Junior Reid Slattery and senior Martin Erkinson will play singles, while senior Manny Ortiz and junior Victor Fimbres will play in the doubles division.
Members of the Kansas men's and women's tennis teams begin competition today in the ITA National Clay Court Championships in Jackson, Miss.
Kansas women's tennis coach
Chuck Merzbacher said senior Nora Koves will play in the singles competition. Koves and her doubles partner, sophomore Amy Trytek, will also compete.
The biggest challenge facing the players will be the clay surface, Center said. Matches on clay are traditionally slower paced than ones played on hard courts. The footing and the bounce of the ball are different.
Players that are invited to the tournament are the best in the country. Center said. The top two singles players and the top doubles team out of each region are invited to attend.
Many players from Europe, including Eriksson and Koves, grew up playing on clay courts, but Kovs said that did not mean they preferred it.
"You've got to run down every single ball," she said. "It's kind of like a
mind game."
Merzbacher said he thought moves would be seeded as one of the top eight players.
1 munk she's a dark horse to win the title," he said.
Koves has not played in many competitive singles matches in the last two years. During that time, she competed in doubles with Rebecca Jensen, who gave up her senior season at Kansas to turn professional. Koves-Jensen played in the tournament last year, losing in the semifinals.
Since Jensen's departure, Koves and Trytek were paired together. Merzbacher said Koves had to recognize the difference in chemistry this year.
"She has to now be the leader on the doubles court," he said. "Nora just has to understand it's hard to replace
Rebecca"
Even though Koves and Trytek have had a limited amount of practice time together, Koves said, she has realized that she must communicate and guide Trytek.
Trytek is recovering from a hip-lex or injury she sustained three weeks ago while working in the weight room. She re-injured it last weekend at the Wildcat/Travelers Express Invitational and was forced to pull out of the competition. Trytek said the combination of cool weather, not having her hip wrapped and not warming up enough resulted in the injury.
Even if the injury is still bothering her during the National Clay Courts, Trytek said she would play through it.
"I'm just really psyched for the tournament," she said. "It's a great opportunity for me."
Bowling team attempts to change sport's stereotype
By Alex Drude
Kansan correspondent
Jaybowlers in preparation for season's home opener
Michael Fine wants people to know that his bowlers are not necessarily all beer drinkers who eat pretzels.
Fine, bowling club coach, said that he disproved of that stereotype of bowlers and that most members of the bowling club team were athletes who had played competitively in many sports throughout their lives.
Because of this, Fine said he believed team members, called Jaybowlers, were people who wanted to take the next step from recreational to competitive bowling.
"Many bowlers belonged to junior leagues and did individual competition," he said. "This gives
Like other club sports, travelling or competing in tournaments requires independent funding, he said.
However, Fine's teams do not have the sort of funding that many other sports do, including non-revenue sports.
them an opportunity to continue."
The bowling team is young, Fine said, and consists of no seniors on the women's or men's team. Consequently, Fine said he was interested mostly in the team learning technique and having fun.
Intercollegiate bowling at Kansas is funded partially by the Kansas Union. The club also schedules fundraisers throughout the year.
"I'm less worried about (team members) winning tournaments than becoming better bowlers," he said.
The Jaybowlers start their season at 11 a.m. Oct. 2 at the Jaybowl in the Kansas Union against Central Missouri State.
In order to get to the national championship tournament, Jayhawk bowls practice by playing 25 to 50 games a week at the Jaybowl, in which they are videotaped for further review of technique. From this they try to raise their base knowledge of the game.
In past seasons, Jaybowlers have been nationally ranked. The Kansas team belongs to a conference in which two of the teams are the defending men's and women's national champions and runners-up.
If Jaybowlers raise their base knowledge of the game enough during the season, they might be invited to one of two end-of-the-year tournaments, one of which is the equivalent of the NCAA basketball tournament. The other is the equivalent of the NIT basketball tournament.
Being invited to the former, which is run by the Young American Bowling Alliance, requires winning one of 10 tournaments held throughout the year or by finishing high enough in National
Tournament qualifiers.
To qualify for either of the tournaments, the team must also finish high enough in the Great Plains Intercollegiate Bowling Conference (GPIBC).
The six teams in the GPIBC besides Kansas are Wichita State (the defending men's and women's National Champions), University of Nebraska-Lincoln (the defending men's and women's runners-up), University of Nebraska-Omaha, Central Missouri, and Emporia State.
invitation to the other tournament, sponsored by the Association of College Unions-International, can be achieved by finishing fifth or higher in the regional bracket. The regional division in which Kansas would compete is made up of several other Midwestern teams.
Fine said he welcomed anyone who was interested in joining the club team, as long as they "treated bowling as a sport." Interested bowlers should contact the Jaybow at 864-3545.
I
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
Kansas junior bowel Pacheco practices at the Jawbow.
2B
Thursday, September 29, 1994
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Auburn kicks off weekend
Colorado travels to Texas continuing its tough season
The Associated Press
Do you believe in miracles? Colorado certainly does after beating Michigan last week on a last-second Hail Mary pass.
Still, the fifth-ranked Buffaloes hope it doesn't come down to the final play Saturday at No. 16 Texas.
Texas, a seven-point underdog, should be more competitive this year. ... COLORADO 34-24.
THURSDAY
a 150 lb. dog who has 11 straight over Wildcats ...
Tigers have won 11 straight over AUBURN 48-0.
SATURDAY
rommie Frazier won't play, but it won't matter ... NEBRASKA 49-7.
SATURDAY
No. 1 Florida (minus 19) at Mississippi
Gators averaging 58 points a game ... FLORIDA 31-7.
Wyoming (plus 40) at No. 2 Nebraska
Tommie Frazier won't play, but it won't matter ...
No. 4 Penn St. (minus 47) at Temple
Owls haven't beaten Lions since 1941 ... PENN ST. 62-
14.
Oregon St. (plus 22) at No. 6 Arizona Wildcats allowing only 36 rushing yards per game ... ARIZONA 34-10.
No. 7 Michigan (mlans 18) at Iowa
Wichita back from Colorado loss ...
MICHIGAN 38-17
Stanford (plus 15) at no. 8 Notre Dame
lost five games in series ... NOTRE
DAME;83-21
Texas Tech (plus 19) at No.10 Texas A&M Aggies have won 22 in a row at home ... TEXAS A&M 31-10
Georgia (plus 51/2) at No. 11 Alabama
Bulldogs topple the Tide ... GEORGIA 17-14.
UCLA (plus 12) at No. 12 Washington
Huskies are hot, Bruins are not... WASHINGTON 28-14.
Colorado vs. Texas
The No. 5 Buffaloes (30) travel to Austin, Texas. Saturday to meet the No. 16 Longhorns (3-0). Texas leads the series, 4-3.
(National rank, average yards per game for 1994 season)
Offense
Defense
5th, 536.0 Total 38th, 378.6
11th, 265.0 Rushing 38th, 180.3
10th, 271.0 Passing 46th, 198.3
8th, 43.3 Points scored 28th (tie), 31.3
72nd, 381.3 Total 60th, 359.7
58th, 161.7 Rushing 38th, 129.3
74th, 126.6 Pass efficiency 31st, 101.15
34th (te), 18.7 Points against 45th (te), 20.7
Roy Gallop / Knight-Ridder Tribune
No. 13 Miami (minna 20) at Rutgers
No. 13 Miami (minus 20) at Rutgers
Hurricanes have won 66 straight over unranked foes
34-29
No. 14 Virginia Tech (minus 6) at Syracuse
Hokies off to best start since 1981 ... SYRACUSE 21-
20
No. 15 Wisconsin (minus 71/2) at Michigan St.
Badgers No. 2 rushing team in nation ... WISCONSIN
24.17
No. 17 Washington St. (plus 41/2) at Tennessee
Cougars haven't given up a touchdown this season ...
WASHINGTON ST. 14-10.
No. 18 North Carolina (no line) at SMU
First meeting ... N. CAROLINA 42-7.
Oregon (no line) at No. 19 Southern Cal
Ducks haven't won at USC since 1971 ... SOUTHERN
CAL 34-14.
Negative publicity surrounding Tiger seems unwarranted
Clothes don't make the man
By Jim Litke The Associated Press
Turned out in a white stretch limo, purple pinstripes and gold-rimmed sunglasses last week, Lou Whitaker looked more like someone on his way into the Academy Awards than a striking ballplayer ducking into a union meeting in Tampa, Fla.
Unfortunately, the getup didn't just make headlines on a slow news day. It also made the Tigers' second baseman look like something he definitely is not: another greedy soldier in the war of attrition that has replaced baseball.
"It's the way the thing got blown out of proportion that I took exception to." Whitaker's wife, Crystal, said.
It wasn't just the car or the clothes that made her husband such a convenient target, or even what he said when asked how his admittedly grand entrance would go over with the fans: "I make money," Lou said. "I've got a Rolls Royce, limo, big house ... What's going to make me look bad?"
"Until the pictures came out, and the stories portrayed him that way, what have you ever heard, bad or negative, about Lou Whitaker? Nothing."
"Here's a man who worked hard year after year, for 18 years, to earn everything he has. And after all that, to be remembered for something as insignificant as how he arrived, or what he wore. It just isn't fair," she said.
More than anything, what made Whitaker look bad was our short
ANALYSIS
memories. Soured by a strike that pits uncaring billionaires against mostly uncaring millionaires, we are only too willing to believe the worst about the whole list of them. But in failing to make distinctions, or at least not caring whether distinctions are worth making, we have done him a great disservice.
Whitaker is one of the good guys and always has been. When he broke into the majors in 1977, the minimum salary was $19,000. Starting the next season and for every season after that (excluding the strike-shortened, 1981 season) he never played less than 127 games. Over that span he made a couple of All-Star teams, won a few Gold Gloves, and averaged .275 with 13 home runs and 58 RBIs. He also became — as he pointed out — very, very rich.
More to the point, however, Whitaker did all those things as self-effacingly as a ballplayer can. He never called attention to himself with his mouth and never bitched or moaned about how much he was making.
"I don't remember who said it," Crystal said at one point, "but the best description I ever heard about Louis was the guy who called him a tumbleweed. You know, he rolls into work, does his job and rolls out so quietly nobody notices."
This is not to say her husband is not a proud man. Whitaker felt so betrayed by last week's stories that rather than defend himself, he simply clammed up. But a story told by an old friend sheds light on just how deeply he was stung.
When the Tigers' organization tried to sign him in 1974, scout Bill Lajose made several trips to Whitaker's Mar-
"Here's a man
Crystal Whitaker
Wife of the Tigers' second baseman
tinsville, Va., home but came away empty-handed each time. Sitting on the family's front porch one day, Lou's mother finally took pity in Lajoie and explained her son's hesitation. It seems Lou didn't have a decent suit of clothes to wear and was too embarrassed to travel anywhere without one.
In a one-woman crusade, Crystal started making calls and wrote an editorial for the newspaper in Lakeland, Fla., where the couple and their four daughters live during the off-season. She pointed out that if any owner arrived the way Lou had, no one would have noticed. She also noted that the family-owned limo, which might look out of place at union meetings or the drive-thru at McDonald's, is very useful in her line of work, which is running a record company.
"But I guess looking back, if we had any intuition what kind of headache it would cause, Lou would have worn the cutoffs and raggedy T-shirt he gardens in. And," she said, "he would have driven up in something like a hot-dog truck."
Rollerblades Used & CHEAP
We RENT skates!
Great skates, cheap!
- quantities limited
We REN
1029 Mass.
841-7529
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
AKΛ • XΩ • AKΛ • XΩ • AKΛ • XΩ • AKΛ • XΩ • AKΛ
JON BLUMBAUGH MEMORIAL WHEAT MEET
October 2,1994 Benefits KU Cancer Research
**Entry:**
Entry fees-$6-Race
$11-Relays
$5-Fun Relay
$4-Simon Says
Chi Omega Alpha Kappa Lambda
Meet begins at 9:00 a.m. on October 2, 94. For questions, call 841-5567 or 841-6094
Awards:
100% cotton t-shirts will be given to winner of each race. Winner of Simon Says receives trip to Chicago.
Schedule:
Sign up on Wescoe beach before Friday September 30, 1994.
Awards:
BULLWINKLES 18TH AMENDMENT
UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY Shirts Illustrated THE STUMBLE INV
BULLWINKLES TRAVEL CENTER 18th AMENDMENT
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP river valley music Cadillac RANCH Country Western Star
UNIVERSITY BOOKSHOP
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP river valley music Cadillac RANCH
A B C
This Offer Is Cut & Dried.
At Great Clips, our stylists give you the look you want, every time. Every Great Clips stylist is specially trained to give you a salon-quality cut or perm, without the salon price. So come to Great Clips, and let our stylists cut you a great deal. Guaranteed.
Great Clips for hair
Guaranteed Satisfaction. Guaranteed Style. $^{\mathrm{TM}}$
Great Clips for hair.*
ZOTOS $ ^{\circ} $Perm
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
Not Valid With Other Offers.
Offer Expires 10/09/94
Limit one coupon per customer
Good at 130W. 6h
Available at these locations:
HAIRCUT AND BLOW DRY $4.99 Reg.$9
Includes shampoo,
cut & style.
Appointments
Recommended.
Not Valid With
Other Offers.
Offer Expires
10.09.24
Limit one coupon per
customer.
Great Clips for hair.
Restaurants
UNIVERSITY
BOOK
SHOP
1819 W. 23rd + 842-1620
Get the daily special prices every day of the week
BLUMPLE BUSS AND BALLADS
2450 rows @ $85,400
$5 OFF Any Perm
Good at 1530 W.
6th.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
119 Stauffer-Flint
DONACIA
2329 S. St. Iowa St.-842-1200
$3.99 Freshfacts Food Bar
DONACIA PIZZA
2044 866-684-4000
BUY 1 | 6" Cold Sub Sandwich, get 1 for 79g
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044
BUY1 Menu Item, and get the Second One at 1/2 Price
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
25% Off Any Delivery Order(not valid with any other offer)
11:00 OFF Sandwichs & Dinners for 6 P.M. Tuesdays
- second level in the Kansas Union Bookstore at the Courtier Counter *
* First Level in the Burge Union Bookstore at the Courtier Counter *
401 N 2nd,942-9777-BYUY Business Manager with first name
Kevin and last name Lloyd for $1.00/month for 6-9 months.
$1.10 OFF Any Purchase Over $35.90 cocktail food and cocktail drinks
24 W 12H 8M 121-313 FREE Cup of Our House Coffee (Cert
Originally Grown in Greece) New Malt Package
JOHNNY'S TAVERN
PIZZA SHOPPE
601 Kasold-842-0600
GLASS ONION
Med Pizza $7.95, 2 for $9.95, l.g Pizza $7.95, 2 for $13.95
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1803 W 23rd St. R12, 4B4F
1006 Massachusetts+843-0561
10% off any purchase o$2.50 or more
1418 & 1419 PAGANO PIZZA
1418 & 1420 HAWAII 32.350 $16,501 $16,501 $16,501
ad购 75e; usb 75e; ipad 10e; ad购 10e; iPad One Only
One Pizza with One Topping $2.60 plus Carry Out Only
$1.00 OFF Any Entree, Anytime, 24 hours a day.
PENSINS FAMILY RESTAURANT
1711 W3-842 9040
2907 W 88-h41-1888-FREE Soil Drink (with FREE edible)
fruit juice)
182W 23rd/cr/181-110T 943d-8036-2309 Haskell
182W 23rd/cr/181-110T 943d-8036-2309 Haskell
825-5453-3-5533 Tac's for 'm' (NO LIMIT)
(NO LIMIT)
2700 lowe 749-815-29F1 Medium Drink with Purchase of Any Real Price Sandwich
Retail/Merchandise
ATHLETIC'S FOOTBALL
914 Massachusetts-841-6968
15% OFF Regularly Priced Shoes
8 BARS & 2 DOOR ROPES
20% Off Any Purchase Over $25.00 Excluding Rentals
BOBBI'S BEDROOM
2420 Iowa*642-7378
20% OPEN ENERGY INVENTORY (includes make and order process costs)
INFORMATION
**CLEPATINA'S GLENST**
743 Massachussetts - 749-4664
15% Off Any Item (excludes sale items)
745 New Hampshire 843-328-3230 Discount for Diagnostics,
474 Upgrade Labor, System or IBM Computers
149 South Carolina 843-328-3230
FREE Francis T-Shirt w Purchase Over $2.50
GENERAL NUTRITION
GENERAL NUTRITION CENTER
23rd AAL Louisiana 832-1700
24hr LooShaan@csi61700
15%OFF Any Pro-Performance & 24-Hour Diet Item
MAYHAWK TROPICAL FISH
10% OFF Any Typewriter, Printer Ribbon or Printer Ink Refill
4d Illinois. Suite D-042-9850-20%, OFF Whirlbrand Power filters, and Allergen-Based Underground Buffers
1420 Cleverman Rd 6043-630
10% OFF All Academically Priced Computer Software
840 Massachusetts-842-2442
15% OFF All Footwear, Excluding Sale Items
JAYNAWK BOOKSTOCK
1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826
10% OFF Any Reference or Study Aid
JOCKS NITCH
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-864-4840
Ansx Size Book (Blue Book) $4.
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
837 Massachusettss*842-2992
20% OFF KU SWaushirts
BOOK 1 OF 4
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS-964-4640
10% Off Any Art, Engineering or Drafting Supply
KANASA AND BURGE UNIONS 08-64-4404
05 OFF AnyAY Clothing item Ht Over $200
108 Mosaquebachre94-81343
15% OFF any regular priced purchase
BIGGER BROOM
9th & New Hampstead-814-5324
BESLEE BOUMMAN
9th & New Hampstead-Hampstead-51324
10% OFF All Skin Care Products
2340 S. Iowa 842-8844,10% OFF CM1 Process (Not Valid
with Hours Expense Limit)
N 192 N 264 - 8633 - 1810 I 544L Ave. Suite 1/844 - 7544
$1.00 OFF Movie Rental (1 each per visit)
NATURAL WAY
SOUND CARD ANTI OVER
RECYCLED SOUNDS*
718 Massachusetts 841-782-200% OFF OCC - Eggs, Meringues,
Tumitsis & Tumitis %15 AMSTERDAM BUY Baskets
10% OFF All Sales
RECYCLED MUSIC CENTER
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
704 N. Oth. 841 B29B
202 Mandarin Hotel 84-110-000 FD OFF AIR Cots-T-Shirts
& Wearables (Organic Green) COFFEE & Released Cots
822 W 129 St-8414-0475-50 OFF One Ace CD, Tape
LP With Power Value Greater than $5.00
SPRINGMAID/WAMSUTTA
1025.N 3rd-832-1100
10%OFF Any Purchase
15% OFF Any Non-Sale Purchase (excluding Stussy)
832 lowa*749-350?*2 for 1 Video Rental Monday
11 16W.2150749-3200
20% OFF of all clothing (excluding sale items)
Services
B.C. AUTO & CYCLE
510 N 6thh-841-6955
10% OFF All Parts
BRADY OPTICAL
BRADY OPTICAL
737 Massachusetts-842-0880
15% OFF Complete Eyeglass Purchase
LASER CORRECTION SYSTEM
1% OFF Complete Eyeglass Purchaser
GHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
3320 Clinton Pkwy+643-0367
Initial Consultation at No Charge (Usually $30-$70)
CHAIRMASTER & CHAMBER OPENSITE
1019 Massachusetts +834-364-8200 OFF All Fashion
Eyeglass Frame Valid with PRESCRIPTION Lenses Only
10 WTs 23:d84-6132-1032-F2 Trees with Purchases of 7 Trees For $2 and FREI Trail Formula One
MANNETAMERS
Wilmington EA 8414
644 Illinois Suite 814-5499
$3.00 OFF Haircut or $5.00 Off Chemical Service
15th & Kasolek -832-029-12%& OFF! Offest刊
Visit Plus 12 Free Condoma
RLC * STADium HARBERY
10%& OFF! Harbery $683
Alox harbery $5.80
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
4.5, 7th St; 841, 1112
$35.00 OOF L艾爭賠及 Farniture R/ FEERU Assimilium
Tumour L艾爭賠及 Farniture R/ FEERU Assimilium
TWIN OAKS GOLF COURSE
K-10 County Rd. 1057/1031{8134}2147-1747
Buy One Small Basket of Balls. Buy One Small Basket
ULTIMATE TAN
2494 lows St. $14-4989 *1* FREE Session with the Purchase of a 9 Package (Shipment $5.50)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
119 Stauffer-Flint-664-4358
20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday. September 29,1994
3B
NHL talks stall as players refuse deal
NHL payrolls
Biggest, smallest National Hockey League team payrolls,
in millions of U.S. dollars:
Largest
St. Louis $23.5
Los Angeles $23.4
Pittsburgh $20.1
Detroit $19.1
Buffalo $19.0
Smallest
Florida $11.7
San Jose $11.3
Tampa $10.5
Ottawa $9.3
Edmonton $9.2
SOURCES: National Hockey League Players Association, The Hockey News
James Smallwood and Roy Gallop / KRT
Commissioner,union dislike new tax plan
The Associated Press
TORONTO — National Hockey League commissioner Gary Bettman seems resigned to the fact that the start of the season will be postponed. Players are not giving him any reason to think otherwise.
Bettman gave the players' union a new proposal during eight hours of negotiations Tuesday, but union boss Bob Goodenow described it as "unacceptable."
"We still have a lot of work to do, and I am getting concerned that time is getting short," said Bettman before he headed back to New York to await a call from Goodenow to see if and when talks will resume.
Bettman has said he will decide tomorrow whether to postpone the start of the season, which is scheduled for Saturday.
The NHL's new proposal deals with a tax plan to help finance small-market teams. Goodenow called it a variation on an old theme.
Los Angeles Kings defenseman Marty McBorley warned that the players are ready stay out the whole season if owners do not budge on the issue of taxing salaries.
"We're prepared to shut it down," he said, in reference to the season.
Goodenow said it's becoming clearer to players that Bettman's ultimate goal is to cap salaries.
"The real focal point now is a system that really acts as a cap on salaries, especially for the top payroll teams in the league," Goodenow said. "The problems with that are significant ... unacceptable."
Players have proposed a 5 percent tax on salaries and revenues, with the proceeds being pooled to help small-market teams.
"We do not think that their proposal makes sense or works to accomplish the objectives we have," Bettman said. "They continue to believe that it does and that is one of the problems we have."
Hockey salaries
"We have never been proposing a salary cap," he said.
Bettman objected to players portraying his proposal as a salary cap.
'93-'94: $525,000
Average salaries of National Hockey League players since the 1981-82 season:
'93-'94: $525,000
'81-'82: $97,350
'81 '87 '93
SOURCE: National Hockey League Players Association
Roy Gallop / Knight-RidJer Tribum
'Huskers face quarterback crisis without Frazier
The Associated Press
LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska's star quarterback Tomie Frazier was released from a Lincoln hospital yesterday after treatment dissolved a blood clot behind his right knee.
Frazier declined interviews but issued a statement of thanks to the fans, doctors and his teammates through the Nebraska University sports information office.
"I feel good, and I am anxious to see my teammates," Frazier said.
Frazier also has been given permission to exercise, although physical contact is forbidden due to the blood-thinners he has been receiving.
Since Frazier is definitely out for Saturday's game against Wyoming, coach Tom Osborne is forced to go to Plan B. B as in Berringer, Brook Berringer.
"I've really felt everybody was behind me at practice when we found out," Berringer said. "But I hate to have taken the job this way. I feel sorry for Tonnie and hope he gets back soon."
Tommie Frazier has been such a presence as quarterback at Nebraska that the Cornhuskers have had trouble recruiting players to his position.
Tony Veland, who was listed No. 1 ahead
Some have left school and others have made a switch to other spots on the Cornhusker squad.
of Frazier in the spring of 1992, was one of those who switched.
Injuries played into Veland's decision to move from quarterback to safety, and now that he has found a home as the No. 1 safety for Nebraska, he isn't overjoyed with the possibilities of moving back.
That's what Osborne has to consider now that Frazier is sidelined indefinitely with a blood clot in his leg and the Huskers are down to one scholarship quarterback — Berringer.
Behind Berringer are walk-on sophomore Matt Turman and freshmen Adam Kucera and Ryan Held.
ed fall camp as a student manager. Held was a wide receiver until about two weeks ago.
That brought Osborne back to Veland, who has been taking some snaps in practice just in case more injuries further deplete the quarterback position. The thought doesn't thrill Veland.
Kueca played quarterback in high school at Lake Havasu City. Ariz., but start-
Veland told The Lincoln Star that he can't help but feel as though he's being bounced around like a pinball.
"I'm not going to say I'm necessarily happy with it, but I'm just trying to do what's best for the team," Veland said. "Hopefully Tommie will be all right in a couple of weeks."
NCAA schools now can choose test requirements
The Associated Press
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. — The NCAA Presidents Commission, hoping to avoid a second showdown with the Black Coaches Association, voted yesterday to let schools in a few special cases choose between their own freshmen SAT requirements and the NCAA's.
Given full authority to set their own test score standards, schools could do away with those requirements for a few athletes who don't qualify to compete as freshmen. They still couldn't compete, but they could get scholarship aid and practice.
However, the commission also amended its earlier plan to let athletes who don't meet freshmen eligibility requirements earn a fourth year of eligibility through academic achievement.
"Those who don't meet the standards are very small in number," Judith Albino, head of the commission, said at a news conference. "We also recognize the differences among our schools and the need for institutional autonomy when it comes to working with students who are at risk academically."
A year ago, the BCA lost a bitter convention fight with the commission over basketball scholarship limits and threatened a boycott of basketball games. That dispute is now on hold, but many black coaches and educators have long opposed standardized tests, saying they're racially discriminatory.
As announced yesterday, the commission would require high school graduates to complete 13 core courses — math, English, sciences, etc. — instead of the present 11. It also would retain test score requirements under a sliding scale that allows higher grade point averages to compensate for lower test scores.
For example, a 2.0 GPA in the core courses would be acceptable with a 900 SAT for the athlete to be eligible as a freshman.
No one making less than a 700 SAT or 17 ACT would qualify.
Under the commission's new proposal, a partial qualifier would be defined an incoming student who has a 2.5 GPA in the 13 core courses but doesn't have a 700 SAT score or 17 ACT.
Those students could be admitted, receive scholarship help and practice as freshmen if they meet the SAT or ACT standards of the school that enrolls them. That would vary widely according to school, conference and region, and could be lower than the school's standards for non-athletes.
NOTHING SEEMS TO WORK.
Try some white space in your next ad. And don't forget to place it where students look first.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Nothing works better.
Cut Your Own Deal!!
Save 10% to 30% OFF Everything In-Store!!
Choose from our large selection of Men's and Women's Sportswear. Then... Pick A Card and SAVE
10 J 4 A
Hurry In, Sale Ends Soon!!!
OUTFITTERS
740 MASSACHUSETTS • 843-3933 • OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAYS
The Barefoot Iguana
DAILY $1 DRINK SPECIALS
Open Wed.to Sun.6 p.m.to 2 a.m. Hillcrest Shopping Center·9th & Iowa (between Muncher's & Baskin-Robbins)
40 Kinds of Beer & a fully stocked bar
B
Body
Build a Beautiful Body
SAVE $139
Annual Membership-first visit
Special rates for graduating seniors!
Absolutely NO joining fee!
749-2424
925 Iowa
BODY
OUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
*You can stop your membership over Christmas & Summer
BUSTER
PYRAMID PIZZA "TO THE RESCUE"
PRICE • BUSTER
VALUE MENU
Saves You Money
WITH PYRAMID PIZZA'S EVERYDAY SUPER SAVERS
A WHOLE LOT MORE FOR A WHOLE LOT LESS – WHAT A DEAL!
We've created these special 10" pizza values for special people like you... our campus customers.
So hurry on down and pick one up or give us a call for Free Delivery. Why not? Now they're both delicious and affordable!
842-3232
14th e3 Ohio "Under the Wheel"
WE WANT TO PUT OUR PIZZA WHERE YOUR MOUTH IS!
P.S. This ain't no Cardboard Pizza
10" PYRAMID PIZZA SUPER SAVER
Offer not valid on mondays
OneZee
1 10" Pizza
2 Toppings
1 Pepsi
$5.42
TwoZee
2 10" Pizzas
2 Toppings
2 Pepsi
$9.89
ThreeZee
3 10" Pizza
1 Topping
4 Pepsi
$12.97
PYRAMID PIZZA "TO THE RESCUE"
PRICE•BUSTER
VALUE MENU
Saves You Money
WITH PYRAMID PIZZA'S EVERYDAY SUPER SAVERS
PYRAMID
LE
"
Laughing Boy
OneZee
TwoZee
4B
NATION/WORLD
Thursday, September 29, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clinton vows to get GATT through Congress
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton insisted yesterday that Congress must pass a tariff-cutting, 123-nation world trade accord this year, even if it requires a rare lame-duck session of the Senate.
"This is the biggest trade agreement in history. It's the biggest worldwide tax cut in history, by reductions of tariffs . . . I think it's important to pass it," he said at a news conference with Russian President Boris Yeltsin.
The House is expected to pass the
accord, negotiated under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, with little difficulty. But Sen. Ernest Hollings, D.S.C., is threatening to delay action in the Senate.
"If for some reason the Senate does not pass it, then I will urge that they stay in session and simply go on recess for the election break and come back after the recess and pass GATT," Clinton said.
Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, said he supports the president's efforts to enact GATT this year and will work with him to get it done.
The Constitution gives the president power to call special sessions of either or both chambers of Congress on extraordinary occasions. Aides to
"This is plainly in our interests," Clinton said. "It will create hundreds of thousands of jobs. And I'm going to do whatever I can, within the law, to get this done this year."
Clinton's statement came only hours after Hollings told reporters he would keep the accord in his Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee long after Congress'
planned Oct. 7 adjournment.
Hollings told reporters at a news conference that there was no chance at all that he would allow his panel to vote.
Meanwhile, two key committee votes yesterday to send the GATT bill to the House floor. The Ways and Means Committee vote was 35-3; the Energy and Commerce Committee cleared it on a voice vote.
Senior members of the Ways and Means panel predicted it would pass the House next week by a large bipartisan majority.
Mexican official assassinated
The Associated Press
MEXICO CITY — A young man assassinated a key official of Mexico's ruling party yesterday, rocking a country already buffered by a turbulent year of violence and rebellion.
Jose Francisco Ruiz Massieu,
secretary-general of the institu-
tional Revolutionary Party was
shot in the neck after getting into
his car following a breakfast at
party headquarters. Shattered
glass from the passenger side
window was strewn on a side street off
the busy Paseo de la Reforma
boulevard.
Abank guard tackled the gunman and turned him over to police. Officials identified him as an Acapulco resident but did not give a motive for what President Carlos Salinas de Gortari described as a hideous crime.
"This is a day of mourning for all Mexicans," said President-elect Ernesto Zedillo.
The killing shocked officials still recovering from the March 23 assassination of PRI presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio, shot at a Tijuana campaign rally. Zedillo, his successor, won the
Aug. 21 presidential election and takes power Dec. 1.
Both Zedillo and Salinas were at the Hospital Español where Ruiz Massieu, his shirt ripped open and soaked with blood, was rushed after the shooting. Doctors said Ruiz Massieu had no pulse on arrival and was pronounced dead at 10:30 a.m., an hour after the shooting.
Mexico also was shaken this year by a New Year's uprising by Mayan Indians in southern Mexico, a wave of kidnappings of businessmen and narcotics-related violence.
Despite the turbulence, the party, which has governed Mexico since 1929, was able to gain 50 percent of the vote in the national election. Widely feared post-electoral violence failed to materialize.
The assassination of Ruiz Massieu, No.2 in the ruling party, jolted Mexico again just as the country appeared to be settling down.
Deputy Attorney General Mario Ruiz Massieu, the slain man's brother, announced the death. He is in charge of prosecuting drug traffickers for the federal attorney general's office, which has the suspected gunman in custody.
Lawmakers return to Haiti to begin work on rebuilding
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haitian lawmakers cast aside years of fear to reunite yesterday — under the protection of American soldiers — and try to build a democratic society.
But gunshots slowed the first few steps toward democracy, with pro-army militiamen firing on marchers who support the return of elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. One man was critically wounded.
The shooting broke out just blocks from the seaside Legislative Palace, where politicians met under U.S. guard to begin work on an amnesty for the military leaders who ousted Aristide three years ago.
Amnesty for the coup and the human rights abuses that followed was part of a last-minute deal between the ruling junta and an American delegation led by former President Carter.
U. S. officials have strongly backed an amnesty to defuse violence by desperate Haitian soldiers, who fear retribution if Aristide returns.
As American troops wearing camouflage fatigues looked on, several of the returning lawmakers hugged
friends who greeted them as they stepped off a Boeing 737 jetliner from Miami.
"We don't want (army chief Raoul) Cedras! It is Aristide we want!" the crowd sang as a band played.
"We are happy about the amnesty bill," said one well-wisher, Nene Dordilus, surveying the scene. "These guys can finally leave, and we can go on."
Before they left Miami, several of the returning lawmakers said they opposed granting the military rulers amnesty but would go along with it in order to restore the elected government to Haiti.
At least six anesthetics proposals have been prepared, and there was no estimate when, or even if, the lawmakers would reach agreement.
In another move toward democracy, Port-au-Prince Mayor Evans Paul announced he would return to City Hall today after spending much of the past three years in hiding.
Aristide supporters planned huge demonstrations Friday to coincide with the third anniversary of Aristide's overthrow.
Fifty-four of 79 deputies and 11 of 17 senators attended yesterday's parliament session.
Perry attacks NATO policy
SEVILLE, Spain — NATO should respond "with compelling force," not just tit-for-tat, against Bosnian Serb aggressors, Defense Secretary William Perry said yesterday at a two-day meeting of NATO defense ministers.
Perry said he hoped to persuade his counterparts to support a wider use of air power to respond to Bosnian Serb defiance of safe havens and other international agreements concerning the former Yugoslavia.
"When we go in, I want to go in with compelling force, force new
necessarily just proportionate to the act that was taken but enough to make it clear that there's a heavy price to pay for violating these rules that NATO has established." he said.
Stepped-up air assaults would not only prevent violations by Bosnian Serb forces but also would blunt their advantage on the ground in heavy weapons, Perry said.
Perry said he saw no support among the European allies for lifting the arms embargo against the embattled Balkan region. Countries such as France, Spain and Britain are concerned about the safety of their own U.N. peacekeepers in Bosnia.
Serbs end two-week power cutoff
The Associated Press
12 trucks and 30 British peacekeepers they had held for a week.
SARAJEVO, Electricity, gas and water were restored to most of Sarajevo yesterday after a two-week cutoff by Bosnia's Serbs, but gunfire on the Bosnian capital picked up.
One U.N. source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Bosnian Serb military officials were refusing to talk to the United Nations and making unacceptable demands that could keep Sarajevo's airport closed indefinitely.
Bosnian Serbs have begun demanding fuel from any U.N. vehicles moving through the Mount Igman area south of Sarajevo, threatening to "paralyze all U.N. movement on that mountain," Labarsouque said.
Serbs did release a U.N. convoy of
Despite the tension, electricity and natural gas service, cut off 13 days ago, were restored to most of the city after Serbs permitted repair missions to proceed.
Water service also began returning yesterday evening.
U.N. plan for Rwandan refugees stalls
The Associated Press
KIGALI, Rwanda—The United Nations called off its program to return refugees to their homes in Rwanda yesterday, as U.N. investigators began looking into allegations of revenge killings by the new government's army.
The United Nations suspended convys that were to have taken up to 4,000 refugees a day, mostly Hutus, from camps in southwest Rwanda back to other parts of the country.
Officials said there were not enough people willing to go in the convoy.
"We had many indications people were waiting for transport, and we thought we wouldn't be able to cope, but something has obviously happened," said Maj. Jean-Guy Plante, the U.N. military representative in Kigali.
The U.N. High Commission for Refugees last week accused troops of Rwanda's new Tutsi-led government of carrying out reprisal killings against Hutus.
For less than a dollar a day both will give you the power you need to survive this semester.
One java, piping hot, no sugar and bold the moo juice.
With an Apple Computer Loan, it's now easier than ever to buy a Macintosh personal computer. In fact, with Apple's special low interest and easy terms, you can own a Mac" for as little as $23 per month! Buy any select Macintosh now, and you'll also get something no other computer offers: the Apple student software set. It includes a program designed to help you with all aspects of writing papers. A personal organizer/calendar created specifically for
Investment that are
Apple PowerBook® 150 4/120.
Only $1,257.00.
students (the only one of its kind). And the Internet Companion to help you tap into on-line resources for researching your papers. It even includes ClarisWorks, an integrated package complete with database, spreadsheet, word processing software and more. All at special low student pricing. With an offer this good, it's the best time ever to discover the power every student needs. The power to be your best.* Apple
POWER thought.
APPLE
Apple
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union technology center
KU Apple
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burge Union * Level 3 * 913/864-5690
*Offer expires October 17, 1994; available only while supplies last. ©1994 Apple Computer, Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh, Performa, PowerBook and "The power to be your best" are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. Mac is a trademark of Apple Computer, Inc. *Carrie Worths* is a registered trademark of Apple Corporation. $12 per month is an estimate based on an Apple Computer Loan of $14.71 per for a Performa® 636 price. Prices and loan amounts are subject to change without notice. See your Apple Campus Refresher or representation for current option prices. A 5.5% loan origination will be added to the required loan amount. The interest rate is variable, based on the commercial paper rate plus 5.5%. For the month of August 1994, the interest rate is 10.10%, with an AMP of 11.56%. Bower year term loans may not include any prenuptial penalty. The monthly payment shown assumes no depreciation or interest. Students may defer monthly payments. The Apple Computer Loan is subject to credit approval.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 29, 1994
5B
CIA officers punished in spy case
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Eleven senior CIA officers were reprimanded for failing to spot Aldrich Ames' eight years of spying for Moscow, but no one at the agency will be demoted or fired for the lapses, CIA Director R. James Woolsey said yesterday.
Woolsey disclosed that "approximately three dozen" U.S. intelligence operations were compromised by Ames, who sold secrets to the Soviet Union and later Russia starting in 1985. Woolsey said 12 U.S.-paid agents were killed as a result.
"The consequences have been horrid," not only for the CIA and the American taxpayers but also for "those who helped us overseas and who in a number of cases were, in effect, murdered by Ames." Woolsey
told reporters at CIA headquarters.
The CIA chief also met in closed session with the House Intelligence Committee to explain his decisions on disciplinary action and to discuss the findings of a CIA inspector general's investigation of the Ames case. Some in Congress had called for strong penalties against those held to blame in the Ames case.
Woolsey disclosed that a junior officer in 1985 discovered that Ames had not reported some of his contacts with Soviet officials in the United States. Because officers in Ames' position are judged in part on the number and frequency of their contacts with potential Soviet sources, his failure to report these encounters should have been a warning signal.
The management official who failed to act on the 1985 sign reported by a
junior officer is one of the 11 senior officers whom Woolsey gave letters of reprimand.
Woolsey's disciplinary decisions broke down this way;
brought in.
—Four officers were given "very serious" letters of reprimand normally accompanied by reproms for early retirement or outright dismissal. Three of these four, however, already have retired, and the fourth is due to retire in a few days. None of the four will be permitted to work for the CIA in the future. Sometimes retired officers become paid consultants to the agency after they leave.
—Seven other officers were given lesser remitments.
—Of the seven given lesser reprimends, three already are retired. Woolsey said they retired for reasons unrelated to the Ames case.
Developments yesterday in the O.J. Simpson case;
Simpson trial's latest developments
The Associated Press
JURY SELECTION: The first phase of jury selection is nearly completed, with 257 having passed initial screening.
NO INTERRUPTION: Superior Court Judge Lance Ito refused to interrupt, jury selection for a hearing on the admissibility of DNA evidence. Prosecutors asked for the break, saying they feared a mistrial if jurors were exposed to publicity from the hearing. No date has been set for the hearing.
BRIEF BANTER: O.J. Simpson again spoke to pool reporters covering the hardship phase of jury selection. He indicated that he had
seen news reports about his singing of "Memory" and said: "I've got to watch what I say to you guys. If I say it, I know I'll read it tomorrow morning."
GRAND JURY: Simpson's assistant, Cathy Randa, was called for a third time to testify before a grand jury investigating Simpson's friend, Al Cowlings, who drove the white Bronco during the slow-speed chase. Also called to testify were a couple who first spotted the Bronco on the freeway.
O. J. VIDEO: Playboy next month will release a 68-minute workout videotape Simpson completed a week before the double-slayings. The $15 video includes a scene of Simpson playing basketball with Brian "Kato" Kaelin.
Mission to Haiti is approved
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haitian lawmaker casts aside years of fear to reunite yesterday under the protection of American soldiers—and try to build a democratic society.
But gunshots slowed the first few steps toward democracy, with proarmy militiamen firing on marchers who support the return of elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. One man was critically wounded.
The shooting broke out just blocks from the seaside Legislative Palace, where politicians met under U.S. guard to begin work on an amnesty for the military leaders who ousted Aristide three years ago.
Amnesty for the coup and the human rights abuses that followed was part of a last-minute deal between the ruling junta and an American delegation led by former President Carter.
U. S. officials have strongly backed an amnesty to defuse violence by desperate Haitian soldiers, who fear retribution if Aristide returns.
liner from Miami.
As American troops wearing camouflage fatigues looked on, several of the returning lawmakers hugged friends who greeted them as they stepped off a Boeing 737 jet-
"We don't want (army chief Raoul) Cedras! It is Aristide we want!" the crowd sang as a band played.
"We are happy about the amnesty bill," said one well-wisher, Nene Dordilus, surveying the scene. "These guys can finally leave and we can go on."
Before they left Miami, several of the returning lawmakers said they opposed granting the military rulers amnesty, but would go along with it in order to restore the elected government to Haiti.
At least six amnesty proposals have been prepared, and there was no estimate when, or even if, the lawmakers would reach agreement.
In another move toward democracy, Port-au-Prince Mayor Evans Paul announced he would return to City Hall today after spending much of the past three years in hiding.
Aristide supporters planned huge demonstrations Friday to coincide with the third anniversary of Aristide's overthrow.
Fifty-four of 79 deputies and 11 of 17 senators attended yesterday's parliament session, giving both houses a quorum for the first time since fisticuffs broke up a session in January.
Cold War tests leave trail of mystery victims
Some people died as a result of secret tests that "sound like something out of a science fiction novel," Conyers, D-Mich., said at a hearing by the Government Operations subcommittee on legislation and national security.
WASHINGTON — Thousands of Americans were subjected to secret chemical and germ warfare tests during the Cold War era, but their names and fates remain largely unknown, a congressional panel was told yesterday.
The Associated Press
"Today individuals who were injured in these experiments are still trying to find out the truth about what happened," said Rep. John Conyers, chairman of the House Government Operations Committee.
Early this year, President Clinton created an advisory committee to uncover information about secret radiation tests, notify the people who were exposed and help them seek compensation.
Conyers urged the President to extend that committee's power to cover other types of Cold Wartests as well.
Between 1940 and 1974, experiments were performed on at least a half-million individuals, including 210,000 people exposed to radiation, according to research by the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress.
inmates, hospital patients, mental patients, members of the military and others. Some had no idea they were subjects of experiments; others volunteered but weren't told of the risks involved.
It is difficult for those who believe they were harmed to seek compensation from the government because so few records are available.
The tests were conducted on prison
For example, the GAO found that some 100 people received LSD at five universities through tests financed by the Air Force, Frank C. Conahan, assistant comptroller general of the GAO, told the subcommittee.
It is unclear who the subjects were or whether they knew they were being given the drug, he said.
Time is running out for Congress to pass amendments
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Congress shipped the 10th of its 13 annual spending bills to President Clinton yesterday, but began targeting a remaining measure for end-of-session amendments ranging from the baseball strike to Haiti.
little urgency to most members of Congress, though it is one that must be enacted.
"We don't have any more vehicles for our amendments," said Sen. William Cohen, R-Maine. "We don't have another chance to pass legislation."
With lawmakers hoping to go home for a month of campaigning starting Oct. 7, the eleventh-hour amendments were being aimed at the bill that controls the District of Columbia's budget. The measure is of
But some were more sympathetic to the district's government.
"It may be a bill of convenience to a handful of senators, but imagine the inconvenience to the city if we don't have public schools, or garbage collection, street cleaning," said Sen. Conrad Burns, R-Mont.
With fiscal 1959 ready to start Saturday, the Senate gave final approval to three bills: a $247 billion measure financing labor, health and education programs; a $13.6 billion bill for the Interior Department and cultural programs; and a $23.5 billion legislation for the Treasury, Postal Service and some smaller agencies.
And the House sent the Senate yet another measure, providing $88.3 billion measure for transportation programs.
Congress to alter campaign financing
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — House and Senate Democrats reached an agreement late yesterday on a bill to reform the way political campaigns are financed, but the accord may have come too late for passage this year.
Senate Republicans have been filibustering the bill, which still has not been sent to a formal House-Senate conference. A make-or-breake vote to end the filibuster was scheduled for tomorrow morning.
To succeed, Democrats would have to muster 60 votes, three more than they got when a similar vote was tried on Tuesday.
The bill's fate apparently hung on whether three of five Democrats who opposed it, could be persuaded to switch their votes.
The agreement came after the two chambers agreed on a new $6,000-per-election-cycle limit on the amount that a political action committee can give to a House or Senate candidate.
The Senate had called for a total ban on PAC money. House members, who depend more heavily on interest-group contributions, called for leaving the current $10,000 limit untouched.
GM strike creates strange car mix The Associated Press
DETROIT — General Motors Corp. slowed the spreading effects of a strike at a key parts-making complex yesterday by changing the mix of cars and trucks it builds.
By evening, parts shortages caused by the walkout by 11,500 workers at the Buick City complex in Flint had forced two other GM plants to shut down.
If the strike continues more than a week or so, shortages of those components could shut down most of GM's North American operations and force the layoff of hundreds of thousands of workers.
CD from Recycled Music Center (20% OFF (CD's, Tapes, Movies, Video Games)
Tuesday & 15% More (in cash or credit) on Buy Backs • Show Card After Offer)
and movie from Video Biz (2 for 1
Video Rental Monday-Thursday, limit one offer per day) for romantic evening.
necklace from Kizer-Cummings
(15% OFF Non-Sale Gold Chains)
personal 'love note' placed in Kansan
(20% OFF Any Private Party Classified Ad)
late night conversation at Espress O'House
($1.00 OFF Any Purchase Over $3.50, includes food and coffee drinks)
G. Q. Smooth CARD MEMBER SINCE SEPTEMBER 5,1994
"Winning the heart of my dream girl is not easy. However, with this card it certainly is less expensive."
It doesn't matter how you spend your time, the Kansan Card can help you save your money.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
Available for $2 at:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Available for $2 at. University Daily Kansan (119 Stauffer-Flint), The University Book Shop, Jayhawk Bookstore, Kansas Union (2nd level courtesy counter), and Burge Union (1st level courtesy counter).
+ . + .
6B
Thursday, September 29.1994
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
Serving downtown since 1936
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We repair
Brass, Aluminum,
& Plastic Radiators
Heaters, water pumps, and
A/C service tool!
842-3333
MOTION
DISCOVER
VISA
O
Mulligan's
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Imports & Domestics*
*Machine Shop Service*
*Parts Departments*
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
featuring
Esquire Barber Service
featuring DINE IN or CARRY OUT PUPS Free 11am-3am
Great Food-Great Music
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
1051 Massachusetts
Downtown
1st Time Customer $3.99
2323 Bridge Ct.
First Med Building
812-3699
Downtown Delivery Available
THUR Dan Bliss & Kurt Stockhamme
FRI
Lonesome
Hounddogs
$1.00 Pabst
Blue Ribbon
$1.50 Wells
$1.00 Boulevard Draws
SAT
Bindlestiffs, 2 for 1 Wells $1.00 Pabst Blue Ribbon
UNDERCOVER hastedies for all occasions!
All shows Acoustic/or Unplugged
Tuxedo teddy shown is $26
MARGARET CUNNINGHAM
1016 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 865-4055
UNDERCOVER
The pink building 21 W.9th
EARN CASH
A HELP OUR COMMUNITY TOO!
$15 TODAY
& $30
This WEEK
Walk-ins
Welcome
BY DONATING YOUR
BLOOD PLASMA
CALL FOR INFORMATION
NABI BioMedical Center
816 W. 24th
(Behind Laird Noller Ford)
749-5750
WASHINGTON — Day after last week, Washington sat down to an uneasy breakfast with Rosa Lee Cuningham, and learned about her half century of blighted life in blighted neighborhoods.
Washington readers shocked by sad tale
The Associated Press
On the front page of The Washington Post, the city read how Rosa Lee taught a grandson, 10, to steal a winter jacket from a trade shop. "Just walk on out the door. It's your coat."
How she would sell her urine, when it was clean, to other clients of a methadone clinic when they feared their samples would show traces of drugs.
How, to pay off her daughter's drug debts, she sold crack herself one Saturday, but gave so many free samples
And how she engaged in prostitution, and one night acquiesced when a customer asked for sex with her daughter, 11. The daughter became a prostitute.
The Post played "Rosa Lee's Story" big, shoving aside other news to make room for it on page one for eight days. The stories ran 30,000 to 35,000 words, enough to fill a 175-page book.
A city used to crisis was jarred by the attackers.
to the daughter and a son that she didn't recover her costs.
The reporter for the story, Leon Dash, spent four years interviewing Rosa Lee.
The Post has gotten more than 5,000 calls, most of them disapproving, said Dash's editor, Steve Luxenberg.
"They want the Post to do something," Luxenberg said. "They want a happy ending."
He said readers wanted the Post to
offer solutions to the problem.
Many of the approving calls, he said, came from social workers, court workers, police and psychologists, saying the region did not understand the extent of the problem and the series would help.
But many dismuyed readers, both black and white, complained that the stories perpetuated stereotypes.
"It's degrading to black women," said Deborah Martinez, 37, who grew up in Washington, daughter of a key-punch operator at the Census Bureau. "Drugs were around when I was in school, but I'm not a drug addict. You choose your lifestyle."
Post ombudsman Joann Byrd, who
receives reader complaints, said the readers most common question was: Why were these stories running?
"I'm beginning to think that journalists are the only ones who believe a news story needs no objective beyond giving people information," she wrote.
She said Leonard Downie, the paper's executive editor, anticipating critics, stacked up 11 positive stories about blacks the Post had published during a six-week period.
Each day the series ran, the Post carried a separate piece that explained that Dash's work was intended to tell a story that statistics alone could not: "the interconnections of racism, poverty, illiteracy, drug abuse and crime, and why these conditions persist."
Mystery bench's arrival welcomed by town
The Associated Press
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — One onlooker called it a beautiful act of vandalism. Another guessed it was the work of a "rogue intellectual."
Somehow, a finely crafted red granite bench bearing a passage from Virginia Woolf's 1928 novel "Orlando" has appeared in a public park.
"Somebody who liked to think put this here," said Pat McEleaney, who read the inscription aloud to her husband.
And no one — or next to no one — knows who put it there.
"I suspect a woman was behind this," said Pam Varley, who walks her dog through the park every day. "It's a womanly quote. It is a womanly quote.
author. and it's a womanly idea.
"A rogue intellectual. There are plenty of those in Cambridge."
Whoever was responsible, the city decided yesterday that the monument could stay.
"With all the negative press that's out there, to see someone do something like this is a really positive gesture," said Mike Nicoloro, managing director of the Water Department, which owns the land.
foot surface of the bench seems to have been written for the place. It comes from of Chapter 5 of "Orlando": "There are wild birds' feathers—the owl, the nightjurs. I shall dream wild dreams. I should at peace here with only the sky above."
Kay Hudgins, who visited the clearing amid the pine trees, said it proved her theory that somebody's ashes had been spread there. She called it a "beautiful act of vandalism."
Whoever was behind the caper had to haul the 600-pound monument down a steep embankment.
The inscription chiseled atop the 4-
The stone and the inscription cost at least $2,000, according to a local monument supplier who was not involved.
University of Chicago student faces possible deportation
The Associated Press
Whether he returns is up to an immigration judge.
SAN DIEGO—Rafael Ibarra enjoyed his freshman year at the University of Chicago, and the school is eager to see him back for his sophomore year.
Today, four days before classes start, the biochemistry major has to see a judge who could deport him.
And it's because he gave an honest
answer on his college applications.
Ibarra, 20, graduated from Point Loma High School in 1993 as his class valedictorian, winning full scholarships from top colleges around the country.
When it came time to fill in applications, he acknowledged that he is still a citizen of Mexico and not a legal resident of the United States, despite living in this country since he was 6.
The University of Chicago said it would take him anyway, on the condition he try to legalize his status.
Barrar reported to the Immigration and Naturalization Service and asked for a student visa. But the INS said he didn't qualify since he had already attended U.S. schools, and it started deportation proceedings.
The INS judge must weigh several factors, including the hardship that deportation would create and how well Ibarra has assimilated.
"We really want him back," said David Owens, Ibarra's advisor.
So far, 400 of the babbing toys have been found along 500 miles of Alaskan shoreline, and that is helping researchers trace wind and ocean currents.
"This is serious science," said Curtis Blesmesmert, an oceanographer at Evans-Hamilton Inc., a consulting company in Seattle. "We are learning a great deal."
Some 29,000 rubber ducks, turtles and other bath tub toys spilled overboard 10 months ago in the North Pacific when a freighter carrying the cargo on its deck was hit by a storm.
SANFRANCISCO — in this age of computers, lasers and orbiting satellites, scientists are learning from rubber duckies.
0
Rubber duckies float for science The Associated Press
A preliminary study of the duckle migration was published this month in EOS, official journal of the American Geophysical Union, by Ebbshemer and computer modeller W. James Ingram Jr. of the National Marine Fisheries Service in Seattle.
They also analyzed an earlier example of oceanographic science when 61,000 Nike shoes fell off a ship in 1990 and floated toward the West Coast.
West Coast Saloon
ZSC
POOL
Game Day Bus
Late-Night Grill
until 1 a.m.
2222 Iowa 841-BREW
749-4333
Kier Cummings
Jewelers
BELGIUM
Rings Fixed Fast!
Information Table
Recognition. Scholarship. Leadership.
National Honor Society
MEXICAN CAFE
September 28-30 Kansas Union 4th floor
Career Opportunities.
Golden Key
F
MARGARITAS AND FAJITAS FOR OVER 2 YEARS!
MONDAY
$7 Killians Red Draws
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 Off ALL Dinner Picados
Carlos O'Kelly's.
TUESDAY
$2 Margaritas on the rocks
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
$2 All Imports
$5.95 Sancho/Monterry Combo
99c Kids Meals
- CARRYOUT AVAILABLE!
WEDNESDAY
8 3 2 - 0 5 5 0
THURSDAY
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
$2 Bud Light 23 Oz. Tap
$1.50 Resorts
$15.95 Fajitas for 2
SPECIALS
SUNDAY
$1 Small Chili Con Queso
$1 off Chimis
$2 Bloody Marys
Hours of Operation:
Hours of Operation
M-Th 11-11
Fri,Sat 11-12
Sun 11-10
- TASTE OF THE WORLD BEER CLUB!
We're Trying To Get You Into Bed
...A Tanning Bed.
...A Tanning Bed.
Worried about the "Freshman15?"
ENERGIZE
With Nature's Nutrition™
FORMULA ONE
Look Better. Feel Better.
Have More Energy
FREE SAMPLE
(Ask For Gerry)
Tanning Packages
7 a $20 10 a $25
15 a $35
Unlimited Tanning
1 mo. $39
2 mo. $59
EUROPEAN
TAIL HEALTH & HAIR SALON
Southern Hills Center
(Behind Perkins)
841-6232
The CROSSING
The CRICKING
THE CROSSING!
Change Your Routine with
618 West 12th Street
(at the end of campus)
D
Thur. Drink Special
$1 Night
C
The CRASHING
$1.00 Bottles/24 oz.Swillers $2.00 Cover (after 8:00 p.m.) Open Mon.-Sat. 12 noon-12 midnight
NEWATMOSPHERE
Deck
Darts
Pool Table
100 Disc Jukebox
The CRICKETING
thu., 9/29 Bon Ton Sol Accordion Band
fri., 9/30 Cosmic Freeway
sat., 10/1 Ozeric Tenticles w/Salty Iguanas
Sun., 10.2 That Statue Moved
mon.. 10/3 River Valley Music Showcase
wed., 10/5 Mango Jam
thu., 10/6 Squibb Cakes
thu., sept. 29
DRINK SPECIAL
$1.25
LONG-NECKS
Bon Ton Sol Accordion Band
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
1601 W. 23rd
Lawrence, KS
913.841.9111
ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE CARE OR THURSDAY
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 29, 1994
7B
Classified Directory
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against gay individuals, religion, sex education, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 which makes it illegal to advertise or display real estate for sale based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
1
Our readers are hereby assured that all jobs and housing insurance papers are available on our website. We provide an opportunity basis.
100s Announcements
105 Personals
THE ETC. SHOP 122 Mass.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hoops, Bells, & Pendants
Backpacks, Backs, Jackets, & Purces
Bausch & Lomb, Rayban, Killer Loops
Reeve, Reeengeten, and Varnet
110 Bus. Personals
$ 50 wash now! Independent launderette; 28th and
43rd floors, the south, street of Dairy Queen
Open to 12pm on Wednesdays
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
Be healthy and happier!
Relieve pain and stress with massage therapy!
Student discounts available
1245-0763-9681, 1245-0763-9616
Cali Al Amaura LAura Paace at 841-1587-186
Tarat card readings.
Love? Success?
Serenity? Success in the L.A. U.K. and 105 The Lazer.
Call Anna Lunaria at 841-1587.
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also insurance for US students going abroad
Kansas City, Kansas 1/2 I/S Main Ottawa.
K6 6007 100-06-0695
Men's Group:
Roles, Relationships,
Realities
CAPS will offer a therapy group beginning October 11 for men who want to examine and change aspects of their lives.
Watkins Health Center 864-9500
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
TEM PAPER DUE? DUE Order "The Ultimate Term Paper Method. How to Research, Outline and Write a Great Paper in ONE Day." Essential resource for students and professors. Money back guarantee. Send 513 to G. Toler, 4685 SE 4, Del City, KO 73115.
Lawrence's Best and Biggest BOOK SALE Most Books 35 to 50 cents
Fri., Sept. 30, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Sat., Oct. 1, Noon-5 p.m.
Sun., Oct. 2, Noon-5 p.m.
"Half Price Day"
Mon., Oct. 3, 5-9 p.m.
"$3 a Grocery Bag Night"
Sponsored by Friends of the Lawrence Public Library
120 Announcements
ATTENTION ALL GREEEKS: Skir for free at
www.greeeks.org
FESTIVAL in January. Call (800) 579-4360
Greeek Festival in January. Call (800) 579-4360
EARTH MYSTICS and GODDESS OF MANY FACES-workshops on Earth-based spirituality, OCT. 8-9. Presented from St. Louis. For info: Institute of Transformational Studies 1982-2006.
SKI COLORADO
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2, 19. 1865 • 4, 9, B, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENBRIDGE
WAL/BAER CREEK
$168
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1-800-SUNCHASE
NORODY OWNS THE BREAKS BETTER!
Call Today!
For
---
Thanksgiving AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules. On Campus Location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
140 Lost & Found
FOUND A young, de-clawed, calico cat around
a large rock. No collar. Call Dave at 821
8715 for information.
Lest: Large, female hunky. Brown leather collar with tag inside. Very upet, very wet. It found in a corner.
200s Employment
Male Female
205 Help Wanted
HEALTH CARE HELP NEEDED
HEALTH CARE HELP NEEDS
If you have basic nursing skills classes, you are needed to assist elderly people in their homes. You need to dependable transport and work approximately 20-25 weeks/hour. Hours run between 4:00 & 8:00 on weekdays, plus 6/8 days on every other week.
EOE
Please apply at
Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association
3363 Missouri, Lower Level
Lawrence, KS
854-729-7072
Babyitter needed for 2 girls, 78.6. Part-time. Care necessary. Call 845-3841.
HELP WANTED! Intramural Floor Hockey and Volleyball officials need. Part time employment. No experience necessary Call 841-3546
HELP WANTED: Person to drive Chrysler Van to and from campus. For more information, call Julie at 841-9108 or 844-6095.
necessary. Call 843-3841.
Caterers, Kansas Union Catering Dept. Hiring for Thursday, Oct. 6, 1994. Several shifts available. See schedules in Union's Personal Office. $4.25 per hour paid full-time. Employees with food service experience prefer. Apply Kansas and Burge Union Personal Office, Level 5, Kansas Union. EOE.
1* OFFICE MANAGER
JR ACCOUNTANTA/R, A/P,G/L
2* MARKETING PERSONNEL,
HEAVY PHONES
LOCAL WHOLESALE, RETAIL
PETROLEUM COMPANY
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR IMMEDIATE OPENING
ABOVE AVERAGE SALARY,
QUIET AUTOMATED COUNTRY OFFICE
SEND RESUME TODAY TO:
718 E. 1300 RD
LAWRENCE, KS 66046
Interested in setting yourself up with a great work situation for next semester? We have it for you.
Part Time Sales
RETAIL
down, she down, and we it won't let you amend it open late December in downtown Lawrence at opening late December in downtown Lawrence at
2. If you are interested in a cook's position at this time and would be willing to committee to our Topeka store for training purposes, then we are interested in you!
3. Call in Lawrence at 832-200 or in Topkata at 232-800 between the hours of 9 and 11a.m. or 2 to 5 p.m. M-F, and we'll set up an interview time for you.
Hey, you!
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic high school students to apply for the position. Sales experience is helpful, but we train highly motivated individuals. Even though born in New Hampshire, they apply between 29 m. and 69 m., at the Lawrence Journal World 690 New Hampshire.
Positions available at a major Lawrence lettership on 1st and 2nd shifts. Long term short term positions are also available. Must have phone in home and reliable transferee skills to build your job skills. Great opportunity to begin work.
KARAOKE DJ wanted. Responsible, great personality, attractive. M for F: 749-369-384
COLLEGE STUDENTS $14.25-11.65 STARTING
Local branch of nail! co. Fill immediate entry
level openings. Flex time schedules. 3-5 days, even
if vacant. Opt. al-majors accepted. For
info 841-9066.
Apply today and receive a next week! Manpower, 218 E. mth. I, Lawrence. KEO.E.
Move to Dallas home to the Cowboys. Young couple in Dallas, TX seeks qualified, energetic, responsible, mature person, 18-34 years of live family and a passion for learning. Apply to January. Light cooking, errands and a competitive Salary. Please send resume and references to 690 Beacon Hill Copell, $715 or by contact 214-304-896
is reopening and is looking for food service employees. Duties include both food preparation and cleaning if you want to be a part of the "new" Dei team, apply at Shmum Food Co. Business hour between 10am - 5pm - Mon - Fri (8am - 7pm).
Excellent income for part-time work!
Native French speaker to informally tutor 8-yr-
girl in French games, etc. Must enjoy kids
kids n = 1944-52
kids n = 1943-47
State office for national therapy services company part-time office assistant for fast-paced job, business-oriented with fun activities and handling multiple tasks & responsibilities, be reliable & organized, be able to work independently, & have team attitude. Work in a setting, setting, some computer knowledge, past experience general office duties, customer service. Complement, but we are able to off-site schedule flexibility.
Native French speaker to informally tutor 8-yr
children in games, etc. Must enjoy kids.
Bachiller en Éducation (9th or 10th)
@ bpu-645-464
Need a little extra money? Bullseye Distribution distribution is now accepting applications for payday loan rates that are approximately 23 hours every Tuesday. Benefits include: 89% savings on Journal World and 80% savings on Bullseye World.
Now hiring babysitters/ childcare providers. Day,
Saturday & Sunday, available for more info.
443-728-7860
Office manager needed at Jon's Notes to KJ. Job begins immediately and continues through the winter with a variety of opportunities and 800/month. Office is closed for all school vacations. Business background 749 required. Req. Master's degree in Business Administration. Jon's Notes posting at the University Placement Center in the Burger Union. Applications accepted
earning money for the holidays!
Audi today and reschede a check next week!
Part time, flexible hours. Apt. maintenance paint-
ing, cleaning. @ 5.50 per hour 749-7586.
CMS Therapies
Kathleen Draskovich
2708 Iowa, Sute
Lawrence, KS 68046
WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING
TRAVEL COMPANY SEEKING INDIVIDUALS
CANCUN, FLORIDA, PADRE. FANTASTIC
FREE TRAVEL & GREAT COMMISSIONS SUN
SPLAH TOURS 1-842-426-7710
PLEASE, NO PHONE CALLS
FOE M/F/H/V
Work for VILLEROY & BOCH, an established fine china and crystal retailer. Fabulous opportunity for Part-time Sales positions at our Lawrence, KS location. We are looking for people who know what it means to give outstanding customer service and enjoy working with the finest quality products. We offer a competitive salary, flexible schedule, an outstanding employee discount and a great group of people to work with. Please call (913) 843-8999 to arrange an interview.
Villeroy & Boch
Send letter of application, resume,and references to :
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, 1 Riverfront Plaza, Suite 109, Lawrence, KS 66044
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
Wanted: Caring people who like kids 3-5yrs old are needed at Head Start as volunteers for a minimum of 2 hours per day, 1 day per week, between 7:30-12:30. Monday-Friday. Daycare volunteers needed from 12:30-5:30. For more information call 842-2815.
R
7013458000
225 Professional Services
International Video Conversions PLA/SECAM/NTSC. $25 for up to 2 hours. Includes postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer PO box 310 Kansas Ks 6905 1-600-806-6953.
Promo photography. Headshots, modeling, band photos. B&W and color. Prism Screen 841-6600.
Proptom abort and contraception services in Lawrence: 841-5754. Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
<*Driver Education* > offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
OUJ/ DUJ Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
Free Consultation
235 Typing Services
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
General Practice
DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
A Word Perfect Word Processing Service.
Laser Printing, Spell Check, Near Campus, Call
(800) 694-5100.
Call for a free consultation (810) 361-0964.
ENGLISH TUTOR. English courses, writing,
proofreading, literature, ESL classes. Highly
qualified and experienced. Call Arthur 841-3133.
Landor Penitent
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
**Prototype word processing service. Quality**
**phone book resume, edits, lettering,**
**check free Call Service.**
Quality Word Processing Dissertation, Thesis,
effective paper. Business letters, etc.
earn printing 865-000-7411
X
CASE printing booklet
WANT YOUR WORK TO LOOK IT'S BEST?
Put my service to the test.
For what thing you need at all,
MAKIN THE GRATE
is the one to call.
865-2955
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/Tenant
300s
Merchandise
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
305 For Sale
1987 Honda Elite Moped.
Tough looking, but reliable.
$275 B. O. B. 832-0979.
1990 Honda CBK 1800®, only 1,000 miles, perfect condition or maintenance must sell: $5,000/BOB; call (312) 678-6544.
**85" Ford LTD, 6 cylinder wagon, AC, AT, PB**
tilless, tilted, grain engine, rough water, needs water
to drive.
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-1133
4 Bagles Tix for sale. Fri night $75 ea. Good seats.
490-706
Honda Miyaja V45 V 760 Excellent condition
laptop £1300,包税. Leave a message at (913)
212-848-5240
FOR SALE: New Fender Precision Bass w/ strip
$25 negotiated. Contact Jeferson at 749-560-
3181
runion and Frame. Great Condition. $100 obo. Call Jef at 794-0604.
Guitars, Electric. Fender strat Esquire USA, hard case $300. Assembled Gibsonophone, soft case $695. Gibson, electric guitar.
Macintosh Classic-MR ram, 40MB hard drive 850+
200ppm ram with cable and software 500
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only 500. Call Chars at 829-808-2685.
Panasonic Word Processor 3.5" Floppy Drive Disc Spell Plus Dual Wheel Paper $35.00
*******
MIRACLE VIDEO
FALL ADULT VIDEO
CLEARANCE $7.88
910 N. 2nd * 841-8903
19th & Haskell 841-7504
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
ticket for EAGLES concert SEPT. 30 at SANT
OFFERM HALF THE CATERER JULY 40 BEST
OF AFFERM
Trek 7000 Aluminum Mt bike for sale Krieret
road bike trainer Kit call 841-949. Ask for
phone number
We want your used weight weights and benches. Play It Again Sports. 1029 Mass. 841-PLAY.
340 Auto Sales
1982 Nissan 200XH XCH with, sum of wreer,
power windows, and lovers. **955/OSO Call Mike** 85480375600
1855 ASAB Turbo 4 dr 5 sdp sun roof peel
2095 ASAB Turbo 4 dr 5 sdp sun roof peel
heater valve DISTRIBUTOR and ignition module
heater valve DISTRIBUTOR and ignition module
Toyota Terrace, AC, AM/FM Cass, 104,000 miles, 3dp. 2 lb. Durea Great, good body, Burns oil.
87 Honda CBR 600 motorcycle red/white. Call 824-7984.
www.honda.com
Chew. Z-4-cav Black Excellent cond. Only $9,800.
call KM at 864-6066.
360 Miscellaneous
Corrugated boxes, moving and storage boxes.
Large quantity pricing & small quantity walk-ins welcome. Call 843-8111 and ask for the Sales Service Department. Cash and carry.
One year old iguanas for sale. Best offer. 865-5736.
400s Real Estate
behind me. 3 bdmr. 2 bath, fully turn. Orchard Corners apt. for rent-Rest $95 9215 a room per month. On bus route, Call Amly at 841-5863.
Nice, quiet. 3 barm. All appliances, low utilities, no fireplace. (garage available) 614-606 Sculptured Cheap Appliance 614-606 Sculptured Cheap Appliance
405 For Rent
For Rent: MORNING STAR for
Heatherwood Valley
Apartments
- On KU Bus Route
* Close to Campus
* Swimming Pool
* Stop By Today!
Equal 749-4226 M-F 9-5
Badged Opportunity 15th & Kasold Sat 10-4
- 3 bedroom apartments
- 2 bedroom with study
- Available for fall.
- Directly on bus route
ORCHARD CORNERS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
4 BEDROOM
*home-town for rent 3 bedroom, fireplace, enclosed patio, garage, on bus route,助兴 Holy Mary
"Don't getleftoutinthecold."
*Call 843-4754
Sublet to May 13. B 2Broom at Birchwood Gardens, 1800 block Kentucky. All street parking, own fight laundry, AC. No pets. $375 per month-negotiable. 843-9292
Trairidge Apta - 2500 W dth
taken to take the picture at www.studio and bk second floor for kit prices at: 873-333.
Spacious three bedroom, 2 bath townhouse, with garage and fence yard. Sunflower school, 4735.
Sibelt : Furnished studio aval . 841 tk 1st Newyark, on parked Phone : 9-841-6000 - Evening hours
Looking for Love
Lonely, attractive, 3 or 4 bedroom apartments seeking residents to share a long or short term relationship. Call any time at 843-6446.
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
South Pointe
AFFILIATED
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
*Swimming Pool
*On KU Bus Route
*Sand Volleyball Court
*Ample Private Parking
*Water and Trash Paid Outstanding New Staff!!!
430 Roommate Wanted
Two Bedroom Apartment Now Available at
Twelve West St. in Brownsville.
To receive July 8, $75 deposit. Call 865-230-1900
- By phone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
1 Rommata need ASAP to share furnished 3 bedroom room, W&D, on bus route; $250
Female roommate (non-sitting) needed for large 2 br apartment to camp $200 per week.
- by phone: 804-522-1630
Ads paid in them may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Adds for Fiat:
Store in the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Need 1 T NHS housemate to share beak. 5 bdm
190th/mth - call Call Rachael 748-3962
campus
Females looking for 3rd roommates to live in town,
rent, cable paid. Available immedi-
ately.
Classified Information and order form
- By Mail: 119 Straufer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
You may print your accounted order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
**Refunds:** attesting a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Reduced on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check with cash are not available.
Calculating rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agate lines the ad occupies). The cost to calculate, the motility, the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Num. of insertions:
Num of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Rates
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 1.95 .65 .60 .55 .35
Deadline
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to
publication.
Classifications
105 personal 140 bus. lt found 305 for sale
110 business persons 205 help wanted 340 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
130 management 235 client services
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:
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
Name: Phone: ___
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 Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit cards:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Call mom on Wed.
Tues. Get under Billy Dunlins Bed.
Friday Hide in Pauly Schmidt Closet.
Sat 7:00 Dinner at Stephen King's
Mindy Hide on Dary Wheeler Cellar.
Daily visit Dormo.
On monster refrigerators
1
8B
Thursday, September 29,1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AT LAWRENCE PROMPTCARE YOU'RE NOT ONE IN A MILLION...
DAD'S BICYCLE
At Lawrence PromptCare, we believe you should be treated like a person and not a number.
When you're hurting or ill,waiting in discomfort for long periods of time to see a doctor is irritating.Not only that,but you may be paying the bill for months. Why not
1. **Define the problem**.
In this problem, we are given a set of points and need to find the shortest distance between any two of these points. The points are represented as pairs $(x_1, y_1)$ for $x_1 < x_2$ and $(x_2, y_2)$ for $x_2 > x_1$. We also know that the maximum absolute difference between any two points occurs when they are at the same point. Therefore, our goal is to minimize the total distance between all pairs of points.
2. **Gather data**.
Create a table with three columns: point $x_i$, point $y_i$, and their calculated distances ($d_{i,j}$).
| Point | Distance |
| :--- | :--- |
| (1,1) | 0.5 |
| (2,2) | 1.5 |
| (3,3) | 2.5 |
3. **Analyze the data**.
To solve this problem, we can use a graphical representation. Draw a graph where the x-axis represents the points, and the y-axis represents their respective distances. Add nodes to the graph corresponding to each pair of points $(x_i, y_i)$. Connect these nodes by lines if the distances are equal.
4. **Calculate distances**.
Calculate the distances between each pair of points using the distance formula:
$$d_{i,j} = \sqrt{(x_i - x_j)^2 + (y_i - y_j)^2}$$
5. **Sort the distances**.
Sort the calculated distances in ascending order.
6. **Find the minimum distance**.
The smallest distance will be the shortest distance between any pair of points. This is the solution to the problem.
7. **Verify the solution**.
Check if the sorted distances meet the condition that the maximum absolute difference between any two points occurs at the same point. If it does, your solution is correct.
8. **Report the result**.
Provide the shortest distance between any two points in the table, along with a brief explanation of how you arrived at the solution.
select a quicker,more convenient alternative-Lawrence
872
40 Hwy 6th Street Mississippi
15th Street KU campus
Chinon Parkway Unimass
23rd Street
PromptCare. At Lawrence PromptCare, we see you quickly and many visits are
are trained in general care, acute care industrial medicine. ...the works. Open seven days a week until 11 p.m., no appointment is necessary. You'll be greeted immediately by a nurse and treated fast. Prompt evaluations, courteous and timely service, lab and radiology services flexible hours and plenty of convenient accessible parking
make Lawrence PromptCare an agreeable health-care
really inexpensive. We're the ideal alternative to long waits in the emergency room and for those times when you can't see your regular doctor. Lawrence PromptCare is a full service urgent care center, equipped to handle just about any emergency that comes up, from a scrape to a breakand full service means from head to toe Our experienced and board certified emergency medical physicians
alternative to long waits in the emergency room or when you can't see your regular physician.
MT. OREAD
MEDICAL ARTS
CENTRE
865-3997 KASOLD & CLINTON PARKWAY
CAMPUS
Political candidates expressed their views on a variety of topics at a forum yesterday. Page 3A
CAMPUS
SUNNY High 87° Low 60° Weather: Page 2A.
A KU student and professor travelled to a former Soviet republic as part of an airlift. Page 3A
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
KAI
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.104,NO.29
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1994
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Four killed, 50 injured in Haiti
Grenade thrown into pro-democracy crowd
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — In a bloody attack on the U.S. orchestrated return to elected rule, a grenade exploded yesterday in front of a pro-democracy demonstration, killing at least four Haitians and wounding 50.
Hundreds of people fled in panic, leaving the dead and injured in a circle on the ground. U.S. soldiers and military police who spied in to investigate detained three
men after firing more than 200 rounds into a warehouse.
But after they left, chaos reigned. Hundreds of Haitians looted the building of bags of cement, wooden pallets for fuel, even iron bars pulled from the foundation and graations ripped from windows.
Survivors wailed along the dusty stretch of seaside Harry Truman Boulevard.
"Are we never going to stop dying? Are we never going to stop suffering?" cried a 26-year-old woman, looking at the wounded. She identified herself only as Jesula.
One U.S. soldier cradled a seriously wounded Haitian man, yelling: "Hang on, buddy! Hang on, buddy!"
The U.S. military counted 50 people
injured and taken to Haitian and U.S. military hospitals, said Army representative, Maj. Ken Fugett. There were no reports of American casualties.
Among the injured were four children, including a 9-year-old boy.
A U.S. official said on condition of anonymity that at least four and as many as nine people were killed.
Earlier, The Associated Press and Red Cross officials counted three dead at the scene, including a man who was run over by a U.S. Army Humvee jeep. It was not known whether he was still alive when he was hit.
The violence may complicate efforts to ensure a peaceful transition between army
leaders and elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, ousted in a 1991 coup.
"We are not going to wait!" people shouted.
Angry chants of "Cedras has to leave!" arose after the explosion, referring to army chief Raoul Cedras, who has agreed to step down by Oct. 15.
n here was no immediate claim of responsibility, but marchers widely blamed pro-army gunmen who have slain thousands in political violence since soldiers deposed Aristide three years ago yesterday. Many grenades are known to be in private hands, and disarmament has been a priority of U.S. soldiers seeking to aid the transition to democracy.
UNION
The Buzz on the Bees
Ryan Kruse, Watertown, S.D., freshman, kills bees in the KU Concessions refreshment trailer in front of Wescos Hall with what he calls, "The Bee Smasher."
Story by Colleen McCain Photos by Paul Kotz
Throngs of bees swarm around campus
You'd better beware. The buzz around campus is that bees have invaded.
They seem to be everywhere — hovering above trash cans and swarming around innocent pinickers.
Ryan Kruse, Watertown, S.D., freshman, works in the KU Concessions booth in front of Wesco Hall. The battle against the bees is a constant one, he said.
"Are bees a problem? They're a total pain," Kruse said, wielding a flat, gray object labeled "The Bee Smasher."
Kruse said he made the Smasher by folding a newspaper and covering it with duct tape.
He also was armed with a spray can of
wasp and hornet killer.
"I'm forced to use the smasher about once every 30 seconds," Krusse said. "The bees swarm around your face until you just have to kill them."
"They're drawn to the pop machine," he said. "I swear they all live in a bush behind here. They don't seem to sting anyone, but they won't go away."
A layer of dead bees — victims of the Smasher — coated the floor of the booth near Kruse's feet.
Orrey Taylor, head of the entomology department, said that bees would sting only if provoked.
"We're seeing honeybees and yellow jackets right now," Taylor said. "They're
not likely to sting you unless you physically hit them."
"They've been here all along," Taylor said. "But yellow jackets feed on soft-bodied insects, and honeybees are attracted to flowers. There aren't many flowers or insects right now, so they're attracted to our food and pop."
Taylor said honeybees and yellow jackets became more bothersome in the fall because they had little to feed on in colder months.
Honeybees and yellow jackets become more of a problem during dry falls. But this fall hasn't been that unusual, Taylor said.
"Yellow jackets tend to be a little bolder than the honeybees," he said. "Theyellow jackets actually will land on your pop can when you're drinking."
Karrie Hayes, Topea sophomore,
found that her can of Pepsi was a yellow
jacket magnet yesterday.
"I've never had this much of a problem before," said Hayes, who was eating lunch behind Wescoe. "I don't know why there are so many this year."
Hayes repeatedly had to flick yellow jackets off the top of her pop can. Finally, a yellow jacket climbed inside the can and down into the Pepsi.
"I can't drink this anymore," Hayes said. "These bees are out of control."
julianne Peter / KANSAN
Scot Hill, Andover senior, explains his reasons for starting the group Kansens for Term Limits.
KU student fights for term limits
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Between sleeping and studying, Scot Hill fires faxes across the state and takes calls on his 1-800 telephone line in his Phi Kappa Theta fraternity house room.
And people who meet the Kansans for Term Limits executive director when he travels around the state usually are surprised to find out he is a 22-year-old KU student.
"People say, I didn't think you were so young," said Hill. Andover senior. "They don't connect young people to politics anymore."
But Hill is a highly politicized student. A former editor of the defunct conservative campus newspaper The Oread Review, Hill is now the sole leader of Kansans for Term Limits. He also works with political operatives across the state, has helped place referendums on city ballots and has $7,000 of support money from a national term limits organization.
Hill, who wasn't interested in politics until he came to KU in Fall 1990, said he became interested in term limitations last spring after talking with a friend. He now helps residents in Kansas towns get term limitations on city ballots as referendums, he said. He also pays people in many Kansas towns to circulate petitions calling for local referendums on election ballots.
So far, Hill said, his organization has helped put term limits on the Nov. 8 ballot in eight Kansas cities and will have referendums on the ballot in 30 cities in time for the April election. All the referendums target city officials.
Hill said his efforts had been successful in several towns. More than 16,000 Topeka residents signed a referendum petition that the local government currently is considering, he said.
Term limits have a mass appeal, Hill said. He said voters liked them because they removed politicians who were too tied up with their positions.
"The young people like it because it gets out people who don't meet our needs," he said. "They've been in so long that they're out-of-touch."
Despite success in other cities, Hill's efforts in Lawrence have run into a legal brick wall. Earlier this month, the Lawrence City Commission declined to place a referendum on the Nov. 8 ballot imposing a two-term limit on city commissioners. Gerald Cooley, city attorney, had told commissioners the proposed ordinance on the referendum would not stand up to state law.
A week later, Bob Stephan, state attorney general, agreed with Cooley.
But Hill said the city was simply looking for an excuse to keep the referendum off the ballot, and he would try again for the April ballot.
for the Aphrodite ballet.
John Nalbandian, city commissioner, said he disagreed with Hill. Nalbandian said Lawrence commissioners rarely served longer than eight years.
"He can't even name a commissioner who has had more than two terms," Nalbandian said. "It's a solution looking for a problem, but the problem does exist."
INSIDE
HAVE A NICE DAY
Running for distance
Parking lot by KANU to be closed off in October
The Kansas men's and women's cross country teams, ranked 18th and 22nd respectively, will travel to Arkansas for a tournament this weekend. Page 18.
By Ashley Miller Kansan staff writer
In a few weeks, Sue Hale will be parking her car and walking to work instead of pulling up outside the front door.
Hale, a secretary at KANU radio station, usually parks in the lot between the KANU studio and the Art and Design building, but the lot will be closed off to faculty and students sometime in October.
"I wasn't happy, but I don't think anything can be done about it," Hale said.
Donna Hultine, assistant director of the parking department, said the department was closing the lot because construction was beginning on Hoch Auditorium. The construction company will need the parking
lot for its own vehicles.
Hultine said the construction, which will be done by Di Carlo Construction Co. of Kansas City, Mo., would take about two years to complete.
Right now, the parking lot next to KANU has 16 spaces reserved for faculty with blue permits. Art and design students often are dropped off there to turn in projects or to work late at the studios.
The disabled parking spaces in the lot near KANU will have to be relocated, Hultine said. The parking department also plans to meet with the radio station and Art and Design to look at alternative parking for faculty and staff members.
The lot near Lindley Hall still will be available for faculty parking.
Hultine said a parking booth was
Huline said she didn't think faculty or students were upset about losing the parking lot or having a booth monitor the traffic.
"They know Hoch has to be reconstructed." Hutten said.
being built across from Murphy Hall at the corner of 15th Street and Nailsmith Drive to keep out unnecessary traffic as the company took more than 10,000 loads of dirt away from the site. The booth will be in operation weekdays from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
"A lot of people just get dropped off and picked up there," Storms said.
However, Sarah Storms, St. Louis sophomore, said she thought cutting off the parkinglot and building another booth was a bad idea. Bad weather forces art and design students to use the parking lot to get close to the building.
Do not enter
The parking lot between KANU and Art and Design will be closed in October to begin construction on Hoch Auditorium. A booth at the corner of 15th Street and Naismith Drive will monitor traffic to the lot.
Parking lot to be affected!
New parking attendant booth
MUHCHY
Malamilk Drive
Micah Locker/KANBAN
---
2A
Friday, September 30, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
五角星
Horoscopes By JeanDixon
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE. A new beginning gives you a fresh hope. You have more career and business options than you realize. Stick close to home at Christmas. A deeper understanding of what motivates other people will lead to progress on the work front. Curb a tendency to focus only on your own needs. Travel could have its romantic moments. Get to know someone really well before making a commitment.
T
CLEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE, actress Angie Dickinson, singers Johnny Mathis and
Martin McConaughley author Tommy Cantone
♉
II
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Events behind the scenes capture your attention. Let your ideas and wishes be known through an intermediary. Secret transactions can be rewarding. Romance should be exciting for both marriages and singles.
69
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A newcomer you meet socially can be very helpful. Make a business presentation in writing. Distant developments give you an opportunity to improve your finances. By changing your methods, you will make real headway.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Agreements negotiated today promise long-lasting benefits. Deal with top people, not their representatives or secretaries. Friends could be in a difficult mood tonight.
8
15
WP
CANCER (June 21- July 23): A good day to set a new course financially. Influential people will offer their support. Take a firm stand with family members who tend to be extravagant. Events at a distance aurise your curiosity.
LEG (July 23-Aug. 29) You receive some fantastic news! Avoid crowding about your good luck. Instead, be grateful to those who have helped you. Deeds mean more than words to someone you hope to impress.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) A favorite companion fills your thoughts, you may even be thinking about marriage. Today's events point out a need for further reflection. Do nothing in haste.
M
♠
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): A new job could mean lots of travel. Unsubstantiated rumors have your co-workers on pins and needles. Continue to meet all deadlines. A missed mortgage or rent payment could spell trouble.
V3
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21).
Although something that happens today seems unfortunate, it will work out for the best. Make a real effort to change a less-than-attractive attitude. Putting yourself at someone's service helps you make amends.
SAGITTARUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Lend your support to a group dedicated to progress and reform. A close friend makes valuable suggestions; consider them carefully. Keep a financial enterprise on firm footing by reinvesting the profits. Become someone's mentor.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Recent pressures may have caught up with you, leaving you worn out. Rest.
By late afternoon, you will feel rejuvenated and ready for an evening out. Dine with good friends in a favorite restaurant.
水
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): All will go smoothily if you curb a tendency to overreach to criticism or project your views too forcefully. Show your sense of humor when dealing with your co-workers. Good will is contagious!
X
ON CAMPUS
PICSCE (Feb. 19-March 20). Someone's reluctance can be overcome if you appeal to their better nature. Constructive activities win you the approval of those in high positions. If you cannot handle all the paperwork, hire someone who can.
TODAY'S CHILDREN are intelligent, charming and pretty conventional. Although they may secretly admire people who behave eccentrically, they dislike attaching attention to themselves. A good head for figures makes the Libras excellent salespeople, accountants and budget directors. Careful attention to good nutrition will keep them in robust health. Luckily, their aversion to extreme behavior usually protects them against overindulgence in food and drink. Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kanan (USP5 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 final 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.
Volunteer: 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 Chanel.
Mystery Science Theater 3000 Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. For more information, call Shawn at 842-7998.
KU Performing Arts will sponsor the University Symphony Orchestra at 7:30 tonight at the Lied Center. Tickets are $6 for the public and $3 for students. For more information, call 648-845.
KU Rock Climbing Club will meet at 9 tonight at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mike Gee at 841-8277.
Association for Chinese Language and Culture will sponsor basic Chinese classes for children and KU students at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow and 3 p.m. tomorrow at 2027 Learned Hall.
■ KLZR Radio, Cycleworks, Sunflower Bike Shop and Amigos will sponsor the Lazer River Cup Mountain Bike Race at 9 a.m. Sunday at Lawrence River Trails, 8th and Locust streets. For more information call Jeff Kress at 842-5306
KU Cultural India Club will sponsor Navratri Dance Festival at 8 p.m. tomorrow at 1204 Oread Ave. Admission fee is $2. For more information, call Paul Bajaj at 842-7990.
Ballroom Dance Club will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Sonia Ratzlaff at 864-1562.
Lutheran Campus Ministry will sponsor Supper and Worship
Water Polo Club will meet at 7 p.m. Sunday at Robinson Natorium. For more information, call David Reynolds at 749-1873.
at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Pastor Brian Johnson at 843-4948.
Lawrence Symphony Orchestra will sponsor sight-reading open rehearsals at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana St.
Amanza, Spectrum of Students in Journalism, will meet at 8 p.m. Sunday at 204 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Carlos Tejada at 864-7060.
National Security Education Program scholarship applications are available in 203 Lippincott Hall. The programs provide grants to students for study abroad in certain countries. For more information, call Karen Stansifer at 864-3742.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 11 a.m. Monday at 4006 Wescoe Hall.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate daily Mass at 12:30 p.m. Monday at Danforth Chapel.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a discussion group for Catholic Law Students at 12:30 p.m. Monday at Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357.
Japan Karate-Do Ryobu-Kai Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. Monday at 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call Dan Blood at 864-7029.
Union director adds new job
CAMPUS BRIEF
Jim Long, director of the Kansas and Burge Unions, will soon have a second title: associate vice chancellor for student affairs.
Long, who will continue to be director of the Kansas and Burge Unions, will represent the Office of Student Affairs in the planning, construction and renovation of residence halls and other student housing.
Jeff Weinberg, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs, said the University's recent spurt of new buildings caused a need for the position.
Long also will work with Design and Construction Management and the Office of Capital Programs.
"No one in the University is better equipped to handle the responsibility," Weinberg said. "The fact that he has overseen a multimillion-dollar renovation of the Kansas Union has indicated his ability to manage."
Weather
Long has been director of the Kansas and Burge Unions since 1985. He will be appointed to his new position on Oct. 1.
Kansan staff report
TODAYS TEMPS
TODAY
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
Seattle
St. Louis
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
SATURDAY
HIGH LOW
Sunny skies and windy.
83° • 63°
75° • 56°
76° • 58°
86° • 62°
87° • 60°
75° • 62°
69° • 55°
84° • 54°
65° • 54°
88° • 66°
87° • 60°
88° • 68°
90° • 62°
Continued warm with partly cloudy skies.
Partly cloudy and mild.
SUNDAY
8760
8558
Source: Paul Shalliberg, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
8255
September 29,1994
$
Stock market report
Dow Jones
23.89
3,854.29
NYSE
1.22
255.15
Nasdaq
Shares Traded: 302.011.000
1.20
758 81
↓
↑
0 Down
Advances 874
Declines 1,267
Unchanged 720
758. 81
-
ASE
0.27
456.47
FUTONS.
FUTONS by Abdiana
Based Manufacturer with 6 Retail Locations
This Complete Futon
& Frame
$399
Exclusively Hardwood Frames
1023 Mass, St Lawrence, KS
843-8222
Abdiana
FUTON
GNC,that's the vitamin store, right?
10-8M-F 10-6SAT
1-5SUN
23rd & Louisiana
Right! General Nutrition Center is America's number one vitamin store. But we're a lot more. GNC is the place for healthy products that can help you look and feel great. And everything we sell is satisfaction guaranteed, or your money back.
GNC GENERAL NUTRITION CENTERS Where America Shops for Health
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
842-1212
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"EVERYDAY
TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PARTY "10" C
2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 1-PIZZAS
2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING
COOKIES
$20.00 $4.50 $20.00
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
$9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50
Use your Kansan Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax.
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence
DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
VIVA VIVA
WEEKLY SPECIALS IN STORE!
One-Year Anniversary Sale!
During the Month of October
Buy One Item At Regular Price, Receive one at
30% Off*
*Second Item must be of equal or lesser value.
CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET
743 Mass, 749-4664
M-W 10-6 • Thurs. Sat. 10-8 • Sun. 12-5
*Alternate Health Professions
*Interview Process
For more info. call the Pre-Med Office at 864-3667 or stop by 110 Strong Hall
Wednesday, Oct. 5, 7:00 pm Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
BEST FRIEND
INFORMATION MEETING
ATTENTION PRE-MED STUDENTS
USEFUL for Freshmen & Sophomores IMPORTANT for Juniors ESSENTIAL for Seniors who have not yet submitted Fall '95 applications
*Application Procedures
KU advisors will discuss:
Representatives from KU Medical School and KU advisors will discuss:
*Admission Requirements
O
Who do you know that is an ... OUTSTANDING SENIOR?
We are now accepting nominations for the 1995 Hilltopper Awards
Anyone may nominate an outstanding senior.
Nomination forms available at 400 Kansas Union (OAC) or 428 Kansas Union (Jayhawker Office).
Nominations must be turned in to 400 or 428 Kansas Union by October 6 at 5p.m.
$ \◆ $ All nominees will receive an application.
1995 HILLTOPPER
Jayhawker Yearbook 428 Kansas Union 864-3728
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 30, 1994
3A
---
HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH
Professionals give Hispanics job tips
Two speakers at the Young Hispanic Professionals Forum last night at Dyche Hall told students to make contacts in the professional world, dress for success and expect an insensitive comment or two from co-workers.
By David Wilson Kansan staff writer
Chris Hernandez, a reporter for WDAF-TV Newswatch 4 in Kansas City, Mo., and Veronica Martinez Sellers, a clerk for U.S. district judge Fernando Gatian, both said landing a job after graduation from KU was only the first step in building their careers.
"I got hucky," Hernandez said. "I was working two weeks after graduation. But advancing from there was much tougher. You have to be on top of your game."
Hernandez said his high-profile job made him a role model for the Hispanic community — an honor he hadn't expected.
"I wasn't ready for that," he said. "Sometimes you're working so hard to get your own career going, you don't realize your community needs you."
But while he was a role model to some people, others were still trying to determine his ethnicity.
"I had one co-worker — not the brightest person — say, 'You know, Chris, you just don't look like a Mexican," he said. "That's something you're going to face on the job."
But Sellers said being a minority could be an advantage.
"A lot more employers are trying to look like they're diverse," she said.
Political candidates discuss several issues at forum
Qualified admissions and public employee salaries among topics debated
By Jodie Chester
Kansan correspondent
Barbara Ballard pulled double duty yesterday.
Barbara Ballard pulled double duty yesterday. Ballard, associate dean of student life and incumbent state representative of the 44th district, represented herself and Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jim Slattery yesterday at a candidate's forum in the Burge Union.
Ballard and eight other candidates and incumbents spoke about a variety of topics including abortion, state employee salaries and qualified admissions in front of about 20 people.
Ballard said she supported the Quality Performance Accreditation system that was being implemented in public high schools and thought that admission standards would not discriminate against students.
Eric Schmidt, the Republican candidate running for the 46th Kansas House district, which includes portions of KU, agreed that waiting until high school to determine reading and writing ability was too late. He said that qualified admissions
Bob Kennedy, who represented Kathleen Sebelius, explained that the Democratic candidate for insurance commissioner wanted to explore how to involve universities in the insurance industry.
would eliminate the high drop-out rate and control the cost of colleges.
"We would like a partnership between companies and colleges to work on training programs because this would encourage companies to locate here," Kennedy said. "This type of program also would encourage economic development because new companies would mean more jobs."
Most audience members were from the University of Kansas Classified Senate and Unclassified Professional Staff Association, which sponsored the forum. The groups said they were concerned with a cost-of-living raise for state employees because some salaries fall below the poverty level.
Troy Findley, Democratic candidate for the 46th Kansas House district, said that the solution was to build salaries into the budget instead of waiting until the final appropriations bill when salaries received whatever money remained.
Jason Mora, Olathe junior, said he attended the forum because he was a political science major and wanted to hear the candidates' views.
"I was impressed with Ballard," he said. "You can respect her integrity, and I understand why she is running unopposed."
UNITED STATES
Julianne Peter / KANSAN
Troy Findley, Democratic candidate for the 46th district; Eric Schmidt, Republican candidate for the 46th district; and Bob Kennedy, who represented Democratic insurance commissioner candidate Kathleen Sebelius, took part in a political forum yesterday at the Burge Union.
KU student helps take much needed supplies to Kyrgyzstan
By Shannon Newton Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
supply lifts to countries around the world
Jill Brandenburg never thought she would visit the Soviet Union when she was growing up.
"I was raised to think that the Soviet Union was the big, bad bear." Brandenburg said.
trandenburg became involved in the project after helping obtain various pharmaceuticals through the pharmacy school.
But Brandenburg, Parsons senior, did go to what used to be the Soviet Union this summer. From July 15 to July 31, she traveled with 19 other people to give the people of Kyrgyzstan, a former Soviet republic, donated medical supplies.
The trip was sponsored by Heart to Heart International, a nonprofit organization based in Olathe, and the University of Kansas Medical Center. Heart to Heart International is a relief organization that coordinates medical and food
"The school helped obtain supplies, and I did some investigation to get further involved," she said.
Tom Volek, assistant professor of journalism also participated in the airlift.
Volek said KU and Heart to Heart had realized that Kyrgazstan needed medical and pharmaceutical supplies. So in February, they recruited doctors, pharmacists and interested people to go to the country to distribute the supplies.
The trip cost each participant $2,700.
Volek said that since the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991, the country had faced economic problems, and it had a shortage of medicine.
While in Kyrgyzstan, the participants were responsible for unloading the 70 tons of supplies from a U.S. State Department DC-8, reload the supplies onto a truck and deliver them to a warehouse.
While in Kyrgyzstan, Brandenburg was able to communicate with the people of the country through interpreters and learned about the hardships the people had faced since the new democratic government was established
She said all the people had a positive attitude about the future and showed little despair.
"They would always tell me that if they could make it through the next five years, they would make it," she said.
Brandenburg said her trip was one she would never forget.
EN AIR TRANS COUNTRY
"In the end, two different worlds worked together," she said.
COURTESY
Volunteers unload medical supplies at an airport in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, as part of a relief effort co-sponsored by University of Kansas Medical Center and Heart to Heart International, a nonprofit relief group based in Olathe.
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
vs. Premium Ice Cream
Half the Calories! 80% Less Fat! 33% More Protein!
Plus, I Can't Believe It's Yogurt offers Nonfat and Sugar Free flavors that have No Fat or Cholesterol!
50c OFF
Louisiana Purchase
23rd & Louisiana 843-5500
Orchards Corners
15th Kasold 749-0440
EXPRESSED 10/16/2014
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
a medium or large serving!
$\textcircled{R}$ We Put A Smile On Your Taste
The CROSSING
The CRYING
Change Your Routine with
THE CROSSING!
Fri. DrinkSpecial
C
D
$1.50 16 oz.Railers Open Mon.-Sat.12noon-12midnight
NEWATMOSPHERE
Deck Pool Table Darts 100 Disc Jukebox
The CHARTING
618 West 12th Street
(at the end of campus)
The CROSSING
8th ANNUAL KICKBALL ATS
TOURNAMENT
To Benefit Juvenile Diabetes UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS October 1,1994
LOW EVERYDAY CD PRICES!
KIEF'S CDs & T
MFG. LIST.
25%OFF
NEW & USED CDs BUY,SELL & TRADE
... KIEF'S CD Specials. . R.E.M. / $ 10^{88} $ Big Head Todd / $ 12^{49} $ Liz Phair / $ 12^{49} $ Lots of other Super Sale Specials. ..
KIEF'S
& TAPES
4th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, Ks 0604
AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO CDs & TAPES
913•843•1811 913•842•1438 913•842•1544
4A
Friday, September 30, 1994
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLUMNIST
Course evaluations shouldn't be confidential
NICOLAS SHUMP Putting the power of evaluating teachers directly in the hands of students would foster more honest results.
For all those committee members trying to figure out how to make the course evaluations relevant to students, here's the answer. Let the students control the evaluations. I dutifully complete my evaluations for every course, but I wonder how effective the process is, considering only the teacher and perhaps department heads will read them. Now, if the evaluations were made public to the student body, the process might actually seem worthwhile.
This was how the evaluation project was done at the college I attended before KU. A group of students was responsible for collecting evaluations for each course on campus. The next step was to organize these evaluations by class and section numbers.
It was a relatively simple process. However, it allowed for students to be open about their experiences in the classroom. Furthermore, they were allowed to express their opinion in words, not in quantitative terms or by scales (ie, 5-4-3-2-1). Most evaluations that I have completed have only one section for "additional comments."
This method is the only true way to determine the efficacy of individual faculty members. Granted, some evaluations would be nothing more than a steady stream of profanities and/or complaints by disgruntled students unhappy with their grades. I would hope that the editors would exercise their authority and choose representative comments from
among those collected. However, if a particular teacher or a particular class was receiving consistently negative comments, that would be a good indicator that a change might be necessary. Furthermore, it would allow students to have a better opportunity to choose their schedules and could possibly cut down on the add/drop traffic since students would have an idea of the nature of the class and instructor.
Some might object to such a subjective method of evaluation, but I have had faculty members tell me in no uncertain terms to avoid particular teachers and/or classes.
To illustrate my point, there is a class offered here at KU that includes, as a mandatory class project, the celebration of menstruation. Those of us who are estrogen-challenged might want to avoid this particular class. This type of information is not available to students under the current system. As it is, the current system of evaluation does not put a premium on holding the teachers accountable to the student population. Let's face it, no department head is going to feel comfortable making changes in teaching assignments based on a few negative reviews. But, if these negative reviews were a matter of public knowledge, such a change might be justified more easily. Or to take another scenario: What if students read that Professor X's class on Subject Y was the academic equivalent of Dustin Hoffman's interrogation in
"The Marathon Man." Such knowledge would probably result in low enrollment in that section. This would either force the department to drop that class or replace that instructor or both. Whatever the outcome, the students would benefit.
As the latest U.S. News & World Report shows, colleges and universities are having a tough time attracting students and are having to rethink their educational methodology and philosophy. One suggestion I have is to shift the balance of power in favor of the students. So to Sherman Reeves and fellow committee members. Give the power to the people!
ficolas Shump is a Lawrence senior in comparative literature.
VIEWPOINT
GOP 'Contract with America' presumes voter ignorance
The Republican party has signed on the dotted line. The GOP has a "Contract with America."
Republicans signed a contract encouraging the
people to kick Republican congressmen out of office if they fail to work for the best interest of the general population.
exposed to slanted, negative information that flashes across the screen than a reasoned exchange in a person-to-person debate.
Even though politicians have been engaging in
CONTRACT WITH AMERICA
Though Republicans
have taken a step toward cleaning up political campaigns, voters must choose more intelligently.
The GOP has chosen to campaign on what it believes to be its merits with a strong political platform.
Voters watching a war between parties are shortchanged in the election process.
This is a refreshing change from the past when both parties based campaigns on the apparent faults of their opponents.
The world of politics would be a much better place if both parties took on, and stayed with, the practice of promoting themselves instead of bashing their enemies.
We are forced to make decisions where the presumed notion is that one candidate is the lesser of two evils.
Politicians know that voters are more apt to be
Candidates have spent the better part of almost four decades learning the system of quick-hitting television sound bites and advertisements.
deception since the invention of organized society, it has reached high tide in recent years, and the GOP should
be encouraged to continue using respectable campaign tactics.
But unfortunately the GOP failed to camouflage the intention of its contract.
The American people do not need the signature or permission of a congressman to vote them out of office.
All they need is to register to vote and show up at the polls.
What America does not needs is a contract from its employees allowing the employers to fire them.
Bad politicians have remained in office because U.S. voters have become apathetic and uninformed.
Political publicity stunts are expected and inevitable, but the GOP has shown us they do not need to be viciously aimed at the opponent.
All candidates for all offices should keep that in mind.
But more than anything Americans need to care.
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
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
Mellasa Lacey
Features...Tracal Carli
Planning Editor...Susan White
Design...Noh Muser
Assistant to the editor...Robbie Johnson
Editors
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Todd Winterts
Regional mgr ... Laura Guth
National mgr ... Mark Masto
Coop mgr ... Emily Gibbon
Special Section mgr ... Jen Pierer
Production mgr ... Holly Boren
... Regan Overy
Marketing director ... Alan Stiglio
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 are required to provide this information.
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.
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE Foreign policy lacks guidance
SCIENTISTS CONFIRM:
ONLY 1.1 BILLION YEARS OF LIFE ON EARTH REMAIN
"IT'S NOT THAT I'M AGAINST HEALTH CARE REFORM;
I JUST DON'T LIKE YOU RUSHING ME LIKE THIS."
President Clinton is the architect of the most incoherent foreign policy in postwar America ...
Sean Finn / KANSAN
When the foreign policy of the world's superpower is reduced to little more than the sum of the parts of its domestic lobby groups, it can be argued that the country forfeits its moral authority, even though it is a superpower no longer...
Clinton has set himself the task of refashioning NATO in the amorphous image dreamed up for the organization by such leaden strategists as Anthony Lake, his National Security Adviser, and Warren Christopher, his nominal secretary of state.
The vision of American foreign policy-makers has been astonishingly blind to the fact that NATO is the only institution in the post-Cold War world with the full panoply of political and military capacity to meet new challenges effectively. As a consequence, there is the real prospect that the pattern of cooperation that has served America as well as it has served the countries of Europe will weaken over time, leaving fit the that is effective in its wake.
The Times London
Clinton is a crafty gambler at the 'craps game' of politics
Say what you will about the commander in chief of the United States Armed Forces.
But when it comes to rolling the dice in the great crasp game that is politics, Bill Clinton can be my shooter every time.
Call him waffling, shortsided and ignorant of the delicate workings of foreign policymaking. You can even call him unfit to rule.
Consider the events that led up to the dramatic showdown and settlement forged by the diplomatic mission to Haiti recently;
So he turned to trying to stem the tide of humanity that was literally drifting helplessly on the seaby somehow making the deplorable conditions in Haiti less dangerous, even livable, again.
After the flawed policy of imposing international sanctions on a country already toiling under the massive burden of political persecution, widespread disease and economic destitution dramatically increased by the flow of refugees, the Clinton administration reversed its policy of granting the Haitian "boat people" political asylum.
GUEST COLUMNIST
I think it's fair to say that the president was never comfortable with this shift in policy, and it certainly offered no solution to the politically-charged issue of immigration.
10
When negotiations finally broke down and the problem the Clinton administration inherited from the Bush presidency had moved to the front burner of the international scene, Clinton acted.
it was an immense political gamble, and one that, had it failed, would have left Clinton with no other option than to initiate an invasion that neither the
In what may become a political watershed for the troubled administration, the president first drew out the big stick and then sent a former president turned freelance diplomat to whisper in the ears of Haiti's military leaders.
majority of the American people nor the Congress wanted.
This for a president who is, at the moment, about as unpopular as a popularly elected leader can be.
Yet the president's brinkmanship has, at least for now, avoided the possibility of the slaughter of thousands of Haitians at the hands of U.S. troops in the streets of Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince.
And the action, though woefully tardy, also may give Clinton a much needed boost in credibility and confidence.
Boldly naming Jimmy Carter, Sen. Sam Nunn and retired Army Gen. Colin Pointer as point men in the last ditch effort at a peaceful settlement was not wholly popular within the administration itself.
That the president overcame the objections of Secretary of State Warren Christopher and others is a positive sign that he is capable of intelligent, clear headed foreign policy decision-making.
It is true that many questions still remain, and in many ways, the biggest challenges in Haiti are yet to come.
The triad of negotiators could not have been more perfectly balanced or suited for the task.
What does the United States do now that troops are safely on the ground? How long should the United States maintain an armed presence on the island?
There are certainly no guarantees that life in a country that has never truly known democracy will not return to the days of murder and despotism, even if all goes as planned and free elections are conducted again next year in Haiti.
These are tough questions that have no clear answers, but they are questions that must be handled swiftly, morally and competently.
The uncertainties of the post-cold war world provide both pitfalls and opportunities for the United States, not only in Haiti but around the world.
In the meantime, Clinton has some more chips on the table to work with and a little more time to prove that he's more than just lucky.
When it is practical, the United States must seek a peaceful means of promoting freedom and democracy, even if that means the demonstration of the will to act on any threats it makes.
Brian Blankenship is an Overland Park Junior in English and history.
HUBIE
YOUR HONOR,
THE PROSECUTION WOULD
LIKE TO CALL
ITS FINAL
WITNESS.
WE CALL THE
LITTLE DEMON
FROM HELL,
STUB, TO THE
STAND.
ME?
OH GOD!
?
OKAY.
YOUR HONOR, THE PROSECUTION WORD LIKE TO CALL ITS FINAL WITNESS.
WE CALL THE LITTLE DEMON FROM HELL, STUB, TO THE STAND.
ME?
OH GOD!
?
FEEL FREE TO STAND, MR. STUB.
OKAY.
IS IT TRUE, MR. STUB, THAT YOUR GOOD FRIEND HUBIE HAD STALKED MY CLIENTS FOR MONTHS EVEN YEARS, WITH THE FOUL INTENTION OF WRECKING THEIR LIVES IN ONE 2-4-HOUR TIME PERIOD?
IS IT ALSO TRUE THAT HUBIE SKIES SCHOOL TO WATCH BARNEY, LIKES LAWRENCE TELEVISION COMMERCIALS AND THINKS THAT BARNEA STREIGASD DESERVES ALL OF THE ATTENTION SHE DRAWS TO HERSELF?
ABSOLUTELY.
THERE'S NO QUESTION HE'S CRAZY, YOUR HONOR.
WHAT? YOU'LL BELIEVE THAT FROM A DEMON??
GH
STAND, MR.
STUB.
OKAY.
By Greg Hardin
MADNESS
ABSOLUTELY.
THERE'S NO QUESTION HE'S CRAZY, YOUR HONOR.
WHAT? YOU'LL BELIEVE THAT FROM A DEMON???
GH
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. September 30,1994
5A
Money rejected for magazine
By James Evans
Kansan staff writer
Who sinations, a student run magazine, might not make it to the presses this year.
Last night, a Who'sinations bill asking for $7,650 was killed in the Student Senate finance committee. In order to get any money from Senate, the publication's staff would have to submit a new bill.
The committee vote on the bill ended in a tie. The bill needed a two-thirds vote to be presented to Senate for approval.
The staff of Who'sinations asked for the money to print five issues. One issue would be printed in the fall, three in the spring and one in the summer. Each issue would have 10,000 copies printed. Last year, Who'sinations printed 13,000 copies of each issue.
In February, Senate cut Who'siations funding because students working for the magazine were receiving schoolcredit for their work. Under its guidelines, Senate cannot finance organizations in which students involved get credit.
Jon Schark, Lawrence senior and an editor of Who'sinations, said that advertisers were reluctant to place ads since the publication had not been printed since February.
Derek King, off-campus senator, said he voted against the bill because he had seen evidence of the staff's lack of responsibility. He said he had seen a late payment notice last year on a bill at Copy Co. Inc. that Who'sinations did not pay.
King also said the bill asked for too much money. He said it would be more appropriate for Who sinations to ask for less money and print one less issue.
"I'm not against Who'sinations," he said. "I'm against giving them $7,600 for five issues."
Schwark said that he was not optimistic about obtaining funding from Senate.
"I'm not sure we'll resubmit the bill," Schwark said.
But, he said that if the magazine did not get financed by Senate, it would not be published.
The Center for Community Outreach announces a new program:
Gain valuable experience serving on advisory boards throughout the Lawrence community!!!
YOUTH ON BOARD
YOUTH ON BOARD will place interested students on community and municipal boards to serve as ex-officio members for the 1994-1995 school year.
Applications now available in the Student Senate Office 410 Kansas Union
for more information, contact Jennifer Ford (864-3710)
Second Annual FREE Gravel Tour
Come ride your bike with us. Enjoy the beautiful Kansas countryside.
Food catered by the Community Mercantile
COMMUNITY
WELCOME
Autumnal Rumble
Sag, support & maps provided by RICK'S BIKE SHOP
LAWRENCE'S
NATURAL FOOD
GROUCK
Bike
Where: Community Mercantile
When: Sunday, October 2
Time: 12:00pm
What to Bring: Helmet, water & your ATB
Rain Date: October 9
MERYL STREEP·KEVIN BACON·DAVID STRATHAIRN The vacation is over.
THE
RIVERWILD
UNIVERSAL PICTURES PRESENTS A TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY PRODUCTION A CURTIS HANSON FILM MERYL STREEP
KEVIN BACON - DAVID STRATHAIRN "THE RIVER WILD" JOSEPH MAZZELLO - JOHN C. REILLY * JERRY GOLDSMITH * JOE HUTSHING
BILL KENNEY * ROBERT ELSWIT * LIONA HERZBERG AND RAY HARTWICK * DENIS O'NEILE * DAVID FOSTER AND
PG 13 PARENTS STRONGLY CALIFIED
LAWRENCE TURMAN * CLRTIS HANSON A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
OPENS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30TH AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU.
Imagine super-natural color that actually improves hair's condition. For brilliant body and sensual shine, in a host of fetching shades, including Clear, Shades EQ.
Why even think of using anything else?
Ask for it today.
that
thinks
it's a conditioner
Shades EQ
Conditioning Color Gloss
Haircolor
salon BEAU MONDE
15E. 7th
(above the Java Break)
Ginny Proctor
843-3034
REDKEN
Dahl Chester
749-7687
REDKEN
FINAL DAYS!!!
PORTRAITS
( )
Smiley Face
FREE with your KUID Thursday and Friday
9 a.m. - Noon,
1 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Rotunda Strong Hall
Questions?
Call 864-7357
ALL STUDENTS WELCOME!
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
9 Boors on lap
1031 Masonhusefts
Downtown
Rings Fixed Fast!
King Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass Lawrence, KS
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Imports & Domestics*
*Machine Shop Service*
*Parts Departments*
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
Some people say students
make awful pet owners.
We don't buy that. What's important is our willingness and ability to make commitments to the pet that depends on us:
- I will keep my pet for the full length of its life.
- I have my landlord's permission to keep a pet.
- My roommates/family endorse my owning a pet.
- I have planned for my pet's care during vacations.
- When I move, my pet will move with me.
- I have time to care for and socialize my pet.
- I can afford to *and will* spay or neuter my pet.
- I can keep my pet safely restricted to my property.
- I will provide proper food, exercise and love.
Lo
Lawrence Humane Society
1805 E. 19th, Lawrence • 843-6835
We want you to make a friend for life.
October is Don Month at the I have budgeted for veterinary visits and vaccinations
Dog with leash
Ad paid for in part through
Ad paid for in part through
Plan-More!
PRO PLAN
Aak about our food offer
KMS SEBASTIAN
REDKEN
Nudeic N.
IMAGE AURA
OPEN TO
THE PUBLIC
KMS S
SEBASTIAN
REDKEN
NudecA.
MAGE AURA BEAUTY
Brocato Lanza WAREHOUSE
Specials Good
Oct. 15
SILVER & HAIRZONE'
841-5885
KMS SEBASTIAN REDKEN
NEXUS
PAUL MITCHELL
JOICO
ROFFLER
SORBIE.
SORBIE
NEXUS
PAUL MITCHELL
Brocatto
Specials Good through Oct. 15
scripts
WAREHOUSE
&HAIRZONE
841-5885
REDKEN
1 liter
SHAMPOOS
AMINO PON
GLYPRO-L
CAT
$9'95
HAIR ZONE
HUCKS
AT • BEAUTY • WAREHOUSE
Rusk
$995
10.
Recovery Complex Spa Therapy for Stressed Hair 2 oz.
$8.95
RECOVERY COMPLEX
CANNELLE
WATERPROOF
HAND TOWEL
PAUL MITCHELL
SHAMPOO I
OR
AWAPUHI
32 oz.
w/pump
$8.95
PAUL MITCHELL
SHAMPOO I OR WIPER
JOICO
REDKEN
CAT
PROTEIN
TREATMENT
5 oz.
KERAPRO SHAMPOO $ _{1/2} $ liter.
YOU HAVE LUCK!
IMAGE
ALL PRODUCTS
BUY ONE
GET ONE
$695
$695
1/2
SERBASTIAN
SHAPER or
SHAPER PLUS
10 oz.
$599
SHAPER HALF SPRAY
SERATIAN
CELLO
SHAMPOO
32 oz.
$9.95
$599
S.
SEDASTIAN
NEXUS
安贞井
OLEO
MONTANA
UNIVERSIDAD
NACIONAL DE
CABEZA
1946
JOICO
NEXUS
THERAPPE
43 apz.
w/ pump
$14.95
LITE CONDITIONER
1/2 liter
$795
NEXUS
INTERNATIONAL
COMPETITION
NEXUS
INTERNET
FESTIVAL
10.25 - 10.30
800-746-9960
www.nexusinter.net
$795
BARBATES
100% PURE
3x
REDKEN
LIFT & SHINE
FIRM HOLD
8.5 oz.
$3.95
tanza
MOUSSE
7 oz.
BUY ONE
GET ONE
FREE
ALWAYS
REPAILMENT
STOCKED ON LINE
TOTAL SIZE 100 ml
19.99
6A
Friday, September 30, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We repair
Brass, Aluminum,
& Plastic Radiators
Heaters, water pumps, and
A/C service too!
842-3333
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Massachusetts
832-8228
VISA
DONNA MARSHALL
Discover Our Difference Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa 841-6886 Hair Experts Design Team
COSTUME CONNECTION
Barb's Vintage Rose 650 RENTAL COSTUMES! for adults and children
NEW! Stoneage people, frog prince, Mae West, Rock Stars
Plus: Storybook characters, Starwars, Star Trek, and all the old favorites!
Also: accessories, make-up, wigs, etc.
927 Massachusetts 841-2451
--fri.. 9/30 Cosmic Freeway
sat., 10/1 Ozeric Tenticles w/Salty Iguanas
sum.. 10/2 That Statue Moved
mon.. 10/3 River Valley Music Showcase
wcd., 10/5 Mango Jam
thu., 10/6 Squibb Cakes
fri., 10 7 Lonesome Hounddogs with Blueshead Beggers
fri., sept 30 COSMIC FREEWAY DRINK SPECIAL 2 for 1 Wells! RIVER VALLEY MUSIC CAFE 1601 W. 23rd Lawrence, KS 913.841.9111 GREAT MUSIC FOOD TIMES A DINNER TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE CAFE ON TERMINAL
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
COMPAQ 850
Intel 486DX/2 50mhz processor
4mb RAM
270mb Hard Drive
Dual Floppy Drives
2400/9600 bps FAX/DATA modem
3 year warranty, 24 hour, 7-Day Customer support
MS-DOS 6.x.
Windows3.1,Tabworks,Microsoft Works for Windows,Win-Fax Lite, Quicken for Windows,Symantec Game Pack,Microsoft Entertainment Pack and America Online.
$1,489.00 PLUS TAX
your computer source at the top of Naismith Hill!!
BEST
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Road
843-3826
Police hone skills at weeklong seminar
By Manny Lopez
Kansan staff writer
THE UNIVERSITY OF BARBELL
Police are trained to handle pressure situations on the street. But managing schedules, the media and office work requires skills not always stressed in police academy.
To help officers hone those skills, KU police, Lawrence police and the FBI cosponsored this year's Central States Law Enforcement Executive Development Seminar.
The conference, which has taken place at the University for the past four years, is designed to help sheriffs and police chiefs from six Midwestern states learn effective management techniques to use within their departments. It also is designed to teach participants better ways to work with their communities, said Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek of the KU police.
FBI officer Alan Malinchak speaks to a group of police officers on "Managing Difficult People." Officers from 35 departments around the Midwest are attending a weeklong seminar on law-enforcement management, which began Monday at the Adams Alumni Center.
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
"This seminar is a capsule of the longer program," said Maj. Ralph Oliver of the KU police, referring to a similar three-month long FBI training session in Quantico, Va.
Oliver said many of the officers came to this seminar because they could not afford to leave their home offices for more than a week.
The seminar began Monday at the Adams Alumni Center. Classes were taught by former, present and future FBI instructors from Quantico. They taught classes on topics such as media relations and legal issues for the police executive, which are the two most popular classes, Oliver said.
The 35 attendees at this year's conference came from sheriff's offices and police departments in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, Oklahoma and Illinois. Oliver said several people were turned away because of a lack of space, and officers who had previously attended to conference were not
allowed to attend again.
Although officers spent the week role-playing, taking notes and learning, the week was not just
"We have people here from Kansas City, Mo., and from small western Kansas sheriff's offices," Oliver said. "They not only get background information and materials, but they also get to network."
business. Oliver said the out-of town officers were treated to pizza and entertainment and were given suggestions about where to go in Lawrence. Lodging was provided by the city, and the conference was free to the officers.
The officers will have a graduation ceremony at noon today.
NIKE
STARTS TODAY!
SALE ENDS
SUNDAY, OCT. 2
$5-$40
OFF
ATHLETIC SHOE SALE
Shoes for the Family
Save on Athletic Footwear for
Men, Women and Children
NOW 34.97 Mission
NOW 64.97 Converse® Run & Slam Blk/White/Blue only
SALE $42 Teva® Contour Sandal for Men & Women
SALE 41.2 Reebok® Cr
STARTS TODAY!
SALE ENDS
SUNDAY, OCT. 2
L.A.GEAR
Racbok
adidas
USA
KETS
Nike® Kid Mission Basketball Shoe Reg. $50
Converse® Run & Slam Blk/White/Blue only Req. $99
Teva $Contour Sandal for Men & Women Reg. $60
Regular prices appearing in this app are offering prices only. Sales may or may not have been made at regular prices. Percentages off represents savings on regular prices. Savings off the prices available prior to Sun, Oct. 2. Entire line sales. Rockpool® shoes. Nike® Air Tech products, children's Strike Rite® shoes, SmartValues.
Special Bundle and exclusions excluded
VISA
© 1964, JCPenney Company, Inc.
23rd & Ousdahl
Hours: Sun. 12-6:00 p.m.
Mon.-Sat. 9:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Reebok $ Aurora Crosstrainer for Women Reg. $55
JCPenney
DOING RIGHT
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 30,1994
SECTION E
Congress trying to squeeze in baseball
Committee approves letting players sue
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Orel Hershiser was back on the hill yesterday — not the pitcher's mound but Capitol Hill, pleading along with other players for Congress to strip baseball owners' of their antitrust exemption.
And for the first time since the U.S. Supreme Court created the exemption in 1922, a congressional committee approved a bill to partially remove it.
While Rep. Pat Williams, D-Mont., said at the subcommittee hearing he would "raise absolute legislative hell" if the strike continued into 1995, it appeared unlikely that any baseball bills would become law this year.
Congress is set to adjourn next week and Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, has
been unable to get the Senate to consider similar legislation.
"Ithink we want to put this league and the players on notice that the antitrust exemption they enjoyed is on its deathbed," said Rep. Mike Synar, D-Okla, after the House Judiciary Committee approved his bill by a voice vote.
"It's a significant step forward," said union head Donald Fehr. "Momentum is building, and it's building quickly."
Hershier, appearing before a separate panel, testified before Congress for the
second time in eight days as lawmakers pushed for an end to the strike, which began Aug. 12 and caused the first cancellation of the World Series since 1904.
The exemption prevents players from suing owners, leading the union to strike in order to prevent management from imposing a salary cap. NFL football players gained liberalized free agency only after they filed a successful antitrust suit.
Synar's bill would eliminate the exemption if owners unilaterally imposed work rules.
VOLLEYBALL
Jayhawks want win in Big Eight
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan sportswriter
Oklahoma and Kansas, both 0-1 in the Big Eight Conference, will meet at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at Allen Field House in a battle to even their conference volleyball records.
The Jayhawks, 3-12 overall, and the Sooners, 8-4, want their first Big Eight victories after suffering losses to conference opponents Wednesday night.
Sophomore outside hitter Katie Walsh said the desire to counter the Jayhawks' loss with a victory would be incentive to play well Saturday.
"If we're going to win, we need to start passing better," she said.
Walsh said that the Jayhawks were working well as a team, but that the little things, such as technical serving and passing errors, were hurting their performance.
State defeated Kansas in three games, 13-15, 9-15 and 11-15, in Ames, Iowa, Wednesday night, while Oklahoma lost in three games to Colorado, last year's conference champions.
Kansas coach Karen Schonewise said that she was pleased with the Jayhawks' performance against Iowa State, but that the team was capable of a lot more.
"We played very well against Iowa State, but we just need to step up our game a little more," she said. "We're a pretty good defensive team, but we need to be more concerned with our offensive game."
Schonewise said the Jayhawks would have to refine their passing, serving and blocking to compete with a tall Oklahoma team. The average height on the Sooners' team is 6-foot-1.
"Oklahoma is very similar to Iowa State in that they're a big block team and an experienced team," Sonehence said.
Oklahoma assistant coach Amy Farber said the Sooners were an even more balanced team this season than last year's 21-15 team.
"We're currently playing three freshman in our starting line up," Farber said. "We're a young team combined with some experience."
(1)
an Dougherty / KANSAN
Senior David Johnston stretches at Memorial Stadium before cross country practice. The team is preparing for the Chili Pepper/NCA pre-meet this Saturday in Fayetteville, Ark.
Runners to see red in Arkansas
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The goal for the Kansas cross country team this weekend is to catch the red uniforms. The men's and women's teams will compete tomorrow in the Chili Pepper/NCAA premeet at Fayetteville, Ark.
"It seems like all the big teams like Wisconsin, Oldahoma, Oklahoma State and Arkansas have red uniforms," said sophomore team member Colleen McClimon. "We've been joking that all we have to do is go after the red uniforms."
This weekend's field of teams will be composed of many teams expected to compete in the NCAA championships, which will also be held in Fayetteville on Nov. 21.
"Every year the team that plays host to nationals has to hold a meet," Kansas assistant coach Steve Guymon said. "It gives other teams a chance to see the course they may have to compete on."
The meet will feature 10 of the nation's top-25 women's teams including No. 1 Vilanova. The Jayhawks' women's team enters the meet ranked 22nd in the nation, while the men are ranked 18th.
The race is big and it could help the Jay hawks if they win, Guymon said.
One criteria the NCAA uses to determine the championships' at-large bids is a team's record against ranked opponents. At-large bids are given to teams that don't finish in the top two in their district meets.
"This race also gives us a good chance to see where we are compared to some of the best teams in the nation." Guymon said.
McClimson said the fact that top-ranked competition will be at the meet helped to motivate the team to perform well.
"It totally pumps me up," she said. "The whole atmosphere at practice is more intense."
McClilmon said that the team tried not to pay attention to the polls despite its importance later in the year.
The men's team goal is to prove that the victory against top-ranked Arkansas in Lawrence in the first meet of the season was not a fluke.
Kansas defeated the Razorbacks by two points at the Jayhawk Invitational.
"At this point in the year you have to take the rankings with a grain of salt." she said.
The Razorbacks left their top three runners at home for that meet. All three are expected to compete this weekend.
"I was kind of surprised that Arkansas was still ranked No. 1," Gumman said. "I thought the rankings showed that this is one of the best distance conferences in the nation."
The men's poll had four Big Eight teams ranked in the top 25. Iowa State led the conference at No. 2 and earned six firstplace votes. Oklahoma State and Colorado were ranked 13th and 14th, respectively.
Senior runner David Johnston said, considering the difficulty of the Jayhawks' district, this meet could have added importance.
This meet will give the Jayhawks their best opportunity of the season to defeat a large number of ranked teams. Nine top-25 teams will compete in the men's race, and four additional schools competing received top-25 votes.
"We want to beat as many of the teams as possible," Johnston said. "But we still have to look at it as one meet."
With most teams competing at full strength, this meet looks to be Kansas' toughest competition before the conference and national meets later in the year.
"This will give us a good test," Johnston said. "I think we ready."
BIG8 CONFERENCE
Football preview: Colorado
By Matt Irwin
Kansan sportswriter
"It's better to be lucky than good," is often heard from coaches whose teams win games miraculously.
The Buffaloes are undefeated after three games, including a 55-17 demolition of 15th-ranked Wisconsin and a 27-26 last-second defeat of seventh-ranked Michigan.
But in the case of fifth-ranked Colorado, the Buffaloes have been both lucky and good this football season.
Colorado hopes its luck and skill lead it to victory when it travels to Texas tomorrow to play the No. 16 Longhorns.
Colorado coach Bill McCartney said the Buffalooes had designed a schedule that would help them prove how good they were.
This weekend, Colorado will play the last of three games against nonconference, top-20 teams. The Bufaloes start the Big Eight season on Oct. 8 at Mts.
Colorado schedule
Colorado Schedule
Record-3-0
Date team score
Sept. 3 NE Louisiana 48-13(W)
Sept.17 Wisconsin 55-17(W)
Sept.24 at Michigan 27-26(W)
Oct. 1 at Texas
Oct. 8 at Missouri
Oct.15 Oklahoma
Oct.22 Kansas State
Oct.29 at Nebraska
Nov. 5, Oklahoma St.
Nov. 12 at Kansas
Nov. 19 Iowa State
souri, but follow that immediately with three more games against ranked teams. Colorado will play home games against No. 21 Oklahoma and No. 23 Kansas State. The Buffaloes then play at No. 2 Nebraska on Oct. 29. On Nov. 12, Colorado will face another team that received votes in the Associated Press poll — Kansas.
"That's the kind of schedule we want to play," said Colorado quarterback Kordell Stewart. "It makes us want to be prepared and practice hard."
McCarthy agreed that Colorado wanted to play a schedule that would allow it to show whether it was worthy of the national championship. But he stressed that his players need to put each win behind them.
After the Buffaloees dismantled Wisconsin, McCartney called the game a, "big, emotional victory." He said Colorado's victory against Michigan on a Hall Mary pass from Stewart to wide receiver Michael Westbrook was also emotional — so emotional it had prompted Stewart to say he wanted to marry Westbrook.
"We're going to try and take care of that today in practice," McCartney said jokingly after the game. "I think we'll have them tie the knot today."
He said the Buffaloes' fifth-place ranking was a good position in the poll despite his team's defeat of two highly ranked teams.
"That'a great ranking this early in the year," McCartney said. "Our opportunities are still in front of us. Texas is 11th in the coaches' poll." That's a big game.
Although Texas is ranked lower in the AP poll than Wisconsin and Michigan are after their losses to Colorado, McCartney still fears the Longhorns.
"I'm impressed with them," McCartney said. "Their offensive line is particularly good. It's going to be difficult to defend them."
McCarney said he was happy coaching an undefeated team through a tough schedule.
"We've tried to arrange games with really good universities," McCartney said. "It's what we think college football should be. It's not something we have to do. It's something we want to do."
SSM
Ram Eddings, third from right, founder of the national rugby team Gray Wolves, passes the ball during a rugby game. Eddings and members of the team are running across the country promoting rugby.
Paul Kotz / KANBAK
Rugby players traveling nation
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Organizer hopes to appeal to minorities
That is the message that Ram Eddings, founder of the national rugby team Grey Wolves, and members of the Grey Wolves hope to promote in their run across the country.
Eddings, a California native, was in Lawrence Wednesday as part of the run, which will take nearly four months to complete.
Rugby is a sport for everyone.
4.
Eddings said that the trip, which started July 17 in Inglewood, Calif., would end in mid-October in Washington, D.C., where he hoped to present autographed rugby game balls to President Clinton.
"We've traveled almost 1,600 miles since we started this," Eddings said. "We expect to end up in Washington on Oct. 15."
The Grey Wolves, which Eddings founded in 1991, is a national rugby team that is composed of minority players from around the nation. The goal of the group is to broaden
what Eddings said was the narrow appeal of the sport to minority and youth communities.
He said that rugby could have a strong appeal to youth unable to play other sports.
Xentho Hatton, publicity coordinator for the Grey Wolves, joined the club in 1991 after he graduated from Kansas State.
"We want to promote rugby, especially within the minority community," Eddings said. "We try to go into a community and help tie the local clubs to the youth and minority groups."
"I saw a lot of students that couldn't play sports like football or basketball," Hatton said. "After I introduced them to the sport they would say, 'Hey, I can play this game.'"
He said he thought rugby was a sport that could channel the athletic talent of many minority college students.
Eddings said that the Grey Wolves stopped in some cities to talk to minority youth groups and to promote rugby.
"We talk to youngsters about conflict resolution and violence, and we promote rugby in general," he said.
Ramon Fewell, a team member who is helping Eddings with the trip, said he thought rugby could help youths deal with the problems they faced.
"In football you play the game and go your separate ways," Fewell said. "In rugby the host team takes its opponent out for food and drinks. That's traditional in the sport all over the world."
"This sport has a camaraderie that you don't find in any other sport," Fewell said. "It's like one big family where no one really feels a loser."
He said rugby players felt closer to each other than athletes in many other sports.
Kansas rugby coach Dominic Barnao said he thought groups like the Grey Wolves could help the sport gain the same popularity it had in other countries.
"In New Zealand, every kid grows up with a rugby ball in hand," Barnao said. "In the U.S., it's predominantly a college sport."
Barnao said he thought the team would help broaden the sport beyond the college crowd.
"This helps to move the sport beyond just one socioeconomic group," he said.
Eddings said that because rugby players were easily accessible to younger people, they had the chance to inspire young athletes.
"One of the biggest goals of our group is to be positive role models for younger players," he said.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 30,1994
NFL
2B
NFL Week Five Preview
A look at the top games this weekend
NFL
New York
Giants
(3-0)
at
New
Orleans
(1-3)
GIANTS
The Saints could luck out here. The Giants really aren't good enough to be 4-0, and they may be without Rodney Hampton for another week.
Still, Dave Brown has yet to make any major mistakes at quarterback and, more importantly, Dan Reeves hasn't made any.
The Saints are having problems on the field, too. The more they lose, the fewer tickets they sell. And there's less noise for which with the opposition has to contend in the Superdome.
The fans want Jim Mora's head, but Mora can't play quarterback, and he's never really had anyone who could.
Dallas (2-1) at Washington (1-3)
Remember this: The year the Cowboys were 1-15, their win was in Washington over a good Redskins' team.
So anything goes in this series.
With a week off, Dallas should be ready after an embarrassing, nationally televised loss at home.
What Washington has is a coach who knows them well. Norv Turner, the Cowboys former offensive coordinator, has decided that a team going nowhere might as well go with the future, with rookie Heath Shuler replacing John Friesz at quarterback.
Mixed Media by Jack Ohman
IF JOHN MADDEN WAS
A COMMENTATOR ON C-SPAN...
WHACK! THE
BILL GETS OUTTA
COMMITTEE! DOINK!
ONTO THE HOUSE
FLOOR! BOOM!!!
10-6
10-6 OMNAN
Miami (3-1)
at Cincinnati (0-4)
There's no doubt for whom the Shula women will be rooting this week.
When Don's Miami Dolphins play Dave's Cincinnati Bengals in the first matchup in any sport between father and son coaches, the three Shula daughters will be rooting for the Bengals, of course.
David Shula, at 0,4 needs the win a lot more than his dad in Sunday night's game at Riverfront Stadium.
"All three have dropped subtle hints: 'Dad, I hope you understand, we're going to be pulling for Dave,'" said Don Shula. "And I understand."
"They're sitting in seats I'm giving them, so they'd better be pulling for us," added Dave Shula.
But Don Shula is in no mood to let up on his son, whose record is 8-28 in two-plus seasons.
The Dolphins lost in Minnesota last week falling to a record of 3-1. How David would love that record. And, like last year, injuries are mounting. Terry Kirby, the team's best running back, is probably out for the season, and the comerback situation is very thin.
But that's nothing compared to what the Bengals are going through. They lost one of their few shots for a win last week, falling 20-13 to previously winless Houston.
G
Green Bay
(2-2)
at
New
England
(2-2)
For a coach who would question if a sunny day with 60-degree weather was a good day to play football, Bill Parcells, New England Patriots coach, made a big admission when he said, "We're in the race a little bit."
His plavers go further.
"We look at each other and say, 'I'm ready to win,'" said pose tackle Tim Good.
The Packers are an enigma, perhaps because Brett Favre remains a cross between a quality quarterback and a kid still learning the position.
He looked like the former last week, but that was against Tampa Bay.
LG
Do not play this week
Chiefs
Seattle (3-1)
at Indy (1-3)
CORNISH
The Seahawks could be legitimate playoff contenders, particularly if Rick Mirer and Chris Warren continue to balance out the offense so well.
They need this win to position themselves for what could be three rough division games next month: one at home against Denver, one at San Diego and one at Kansas City.
The Colts haven't done anything since beating Houston on opening day because Marshall Faulk isn't getting his running room.
That's not Faulk's fault. Jim Harbaugh's receivers are dropping the ball, and the lack of a passing threat allows defenses to cram the line of scrimmage.
Houston (1-3) at Pittsburgh (2-2) Monday night
TEXAS
This isn't what ABC had in mind when it grabbed this game for Monday night.
To explain the situation another way, the Oilers probably are not as good as their record. Their win over Cincinnati last week was hardly a model of how to win a football game. Cody Carlson gets more credit for playing with a separated shoulder and less credit for his performance as quarterback.
Pittsburgh has a major problem. In each of the Steelers' four games, they have fallen behind by at least 10 points early on. That forces the Steelers to pass, and quarterback Neil O'Donnell was intercepted four times trying to bring them from behind last week in Seattle.
PE HARBOUR LIGHTS
1201 Illinoisouth
Bancrowne
BE HARBOUR LIGHTS
145 1 Mansheshweta
Bhandari
925 IOWA
841-7226
fifty
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
fifty 925 JOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
fifi's
Saturday
Roctober 1st
3:30 pm-
it's
Live!
Lou
Barlow
plays & sings!!
Free to the
people!!
LOVE
GARDEN
936 1/2 Mass. St.
(upstairs)
843-1551
Open till 8 Thurs.
"In the heart of denver."
LOVE
GARDEN
9361/2 Mass. St.
(upstairs)
843-1551
Open 11:08 Thurs.
"in the heart of downtown"
Mulligan's
featuring
PUPS
Girl
DINE IN
or
CARRY OUT
11am-3am
Downtown Delivery Available
Great Food-Great Music
THUR
Dan Bliss
& Kurt
Stockhammer
$1.00
Boulevard
Draws
FRI
Lonesome
Hounddogs
$1.00 Pabst
Blue Ribbon
$1.50 Wells
SAT
Bindlestiffs, 2 for 1 Wells
$1.00 Pabst Blue Ribbon
All shows Acoustic/ or Unplugged
1016 Massachusetts
Downtown Lawrence
865-4055
Mulligan's
STUDENT KU ENVIRONS SENATE presents Environmental Activist Humanitarian Paul Coleman
at
4:00 Friday, September 30 Ecumenical Christian Ministries 1204 Oread (south east corner of 12th & Oread) He walked 8,000 miles from Ontario, Canada to Rio de Janeiro Now he is walking from San Francisco to Sarajevo He is a future recipient of a United Nations Environmental Program award for his humanitarian efforts. Co-sponsors are ECM and Student Scho
the AUTO MEDIC inc.
Alternatives!!
AUTO MEDIC inc.
or Call:
When you have car trouble,you can...
2. Find a ride to & from the garage.
1. Call a tow truck & take a cab.
3. Cancel life as you knew it.
AUTO MEDIC inc.
We Make House Calls!
We'll repair your car on the spot using quality parts and offering competitive prices and guarantee.
VISA
CARTE CINEMA
MONOPRO
Call 842-0384
Weaver's 9th & Massachusetts it's here! it's calvin klein!
one one one one one one one one one one one one Calvin Klein one
cK one fragrance, a clean, contemporary scent with a refreshing new point of view. an intimate fragrance you need to be near to smell. for a man or a woman, a fragrance to share, cK one. eau de toilette 6.7 fl oz $50.00,eau de toilette 3.4 fl oz $35.00. skin moisturizer 8.5 fl oz $20.00,body massage 3.4 fl oz $15.00. Fragrances.Phone orders to 843-6360
Calvin Klein
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 30, 1994
3B
New Kidd in town excites Dallas
By Jaime Aron The Associated Press
DALLAS — Despite the hype, Jason Kidd looked like any other rookie during his first few workouts with the Dallas Mavericks.
He hung on every word from coach Dick Motta, then repeatedly double-checked his duties with the assistant coaches to make sure he got everything right.
When he ran the offense, Kidd appeared hesitant. It was as if he were waiting for his mind to tell his body where to look, what to do and when to do it.
For 90 minutes, he went through those motions. Not once did he look one way and pass the ball the other direction.
He hardly even did anything as fancy as dribble the basketball between his legs.
This is the Jason Kidd that has been making highlight films since high school? The same one who turned the University of California back into a basketball force?
Without a doubt.
It's just that, for now, he's putting aside some of the flash to make sure he gets down all the fundamentals he needs to one day become a great pro, maybe even as good as or better than his idol Evin "Magic" Johnson.
"I've worked very hard to get to this point," said Kidd, who officially debuts when training camp opens Oct. 7.
"The time has come. A lot of people have been talking about it for a long time, and now they can stop talking and see what I'm capable of doing at this level.
"Right now, I'm just trying to learn the different plays. It's more of a decision, where I have to be, and who I pass to. In time, that will all disappear. I'll know exactly where to go with the ball."
The Mavericks knew exactly where they wanted to go when they got the second pick in this summer's draft.
They practically salivated at the chance to take Kidd, then made him the first of the top eight picks under contract when he signed a $54 million, nine-year contract on Sept. 3.
While his basketball ability never was in doubt, Kidd's character became the big issue between the lottery and draft.
Over those five weeks, Kidd was involved in a hit-and-run accident that he fled on foot and was accused of slapping a woman. The mother of Kidd's child also sued for increased child support.
His summer got worse when he was caught in a controversy over his desire to be a Maverick. Motta said
Kidd promised to have been at the first minicamp, yet Kidd skipped it because he wasn't under contract.
I thought I withstood the storm," Kidd said. "It goes along with the territory of being a person who's looked upon not just in your community but across the nation."
The nation has been looking upon the 6-foot-4, 215-pound Kidd since his high school days at St. Joseph in Alameda, Calif., and especially when he kick-started the Cal program and led it to the last two NCAA tournaments.
nests.
At the same time, the Mavericks were becoming the worst team in the NBA.
Dallas wants to have the last laugh now by turning their failure into a nucleus of Kidd, Janal Mashburn and Jim Jackson. Team officials have made no secret that they expect Kidd to pull it all together.
He's already played with or against Johnson, Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen and other NBA superstars, making him one of the least-awed rookies around.
"I don't think I'm intimidated, but I still have butterflies going out there because it's a new situation," Kidd said. "I think a lot of people will definitely come at me hard because of all the attention I've received."
Kidd isn't burdening himself with
pressure. Although he knows a lot of people are counting on him, and he wants to deliver, he also wants to have fun while learning the league and his teammates.
"I think a lot of people expect me to pick up where I left off in college," said Kidd, who led the nation last season with 9.1 assists per game. "The people who know the game know it's a learning experience, especially your first time around."
Motta said he figures it would take Kidd at least two years and maybe even three before he was really comfortable in the NBA. Motta used the development of New Jersey's Kenny Anderson and Seattle's Gary Payton as examples.
Still, the Mavers don't want to wait. They've already put up billboards advertising "The New Kid in Town," and he's signed a lucrative deal with Nike, although he's not sure how they plan to market him.
Kidd says he hasn't spent much of his newfound riches. He did donate $46,000 to a Dallas church to install a basketball court for a midnight league. He plans to build houses in Dallas and Oakland.
"I'm excited." Kidd said. "I'm glad to be here, and I'm happy to be in the city of Dallas. They've welcomed me with open arms, and I want to show that this team is ready to play."
KANSAS BRIEFS
Softball team changes plans
Kansan staff report
The Kansas softball team knows how it feels to be dumped.
The team was scheduled to play in the Creighton Invitational, which begins today. But it was dropped from the competition.
Instead of taking the weekend off, the Jayhawks will compete in a tournament on Saturday and sponsor a doubleheader on Sunday, said Gayle Luedke, Kansas softball assistant coach.
Saturday, Kansas will play in a
round-robin tournament sponsored by Johnson County Community College, Kansas City Kansas Community College and Missouri Valley Community College also will compete.
The Jayhawks will return to Lawrence Sunday for two games with Pittsburg State. The double-header will start at 2 p.m. at Jayhawk Field.
Kansas started the fall season last weekend with the Jayhawk Invitational. The team had a 5-0 record in the tournament.
Tennis team begins tournament
Kansan staff report
The Kansas men's and women's tennis teams opened competition in the ITA National Clay Court Championships yesterday in Jackson, Miss.
Senior Nora Koves, who is seeded third in the tournament and eighth nationally, won her opening-round match 5-7, 6-3, 6-3. She defeated Erica O'Neill of Syracuse. O'Neil is ranked 19th nationally.
Reid Slattery was defeated in an opening-round match. Arizona's Jan Anderson defeated Slattery 6-2, 6-2. Slattery entered the consolation round after his loss.
The women's doubles team of Koves and sophomore Amy Trytek and the men's doubles team of senior Manny Ortiz and junior Victor Fimbrez also competed yesterday, but their results were unavailable at press time.
Koves and Trytek are ranked 14th nationally.
On the men's side, Kansas junior
- Compiled by Kansan staff writer Jenni Carlson
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Music and Dance
Department of
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hmw: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri., 8-14 Sat. 12-4un.
843-3826
University Symphony Orchestra Brian Priestman, conductor
with Linda Maxey, marimba soloist
7:30 p.m. Friday, September 30,1994 Lied Center
Layhawk
Bookstore
General admission tickets are available through the KU box offices (Murphy Hall, 864-3982. Lied Center, 864-ARTS, SUA Office, 864-3477); public $6, students and senior citizens $3; VISA/Mastercard accepted for phone orders.
Our lunch menu will allow you to come back for dinner.
Cajun Reuben w/ french fries and salad ... $5.50
Chicken Szechuanese w/ rice pilaf and salad ... $5.50
Blackened Red Snapper w/ rice pilaf and salad ... $5.50
Pesto Chicken Pasta ... $5.95
Fifi's affordable lunches prices as fine as the dining.
fifi's
841-7226
D
Jayhawk
Bookstore
1st Time
Customer $3.99
2323 Bridge Ct.
First Mid Building
812-3699
Esquire Barber Service
Saturday $1.00 Peppermint Schnapps Shots $2.50 22 oz.Bud Light Bottles
BULLWINKLE'S
1344 Tennessee
843-9726
Monday-Sunday 3pm-2am
Come Down To The Bull Friday After Class
Friday $1.25 Cans $1.00 Burgers
Specials
Woolrich.
SINCE 1863
NATURALWAY
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts
843-5000
Women's Jacket
Savannah
Juicers Showgirls
Featuring
Totally N*de Dancers
18 + Welcome
913 N. Second
(Next to Riverfront Square)
841-4122
Brooke
Watch Out For Student Specials and New Afternoon Specials
For the Power user!
The Power Macintosh 6100/60 8/250/CD
The Power Mac 6100 60 8250 CD with Apple Color Plus 14" Display, Supra 14.4 Lc fax/data Modem and Design Keyboard now only
$2335^{95}
union technology center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
804-653-1234 (phone) 804-653-1234 (email)
4B
Friday, September 30, 1994
---
SUNFLOWER
Woolneth.
DICKINSON
THE VICTOR
11
Corrina Corrina PG 4:30, 7:00, 9:45
Natural Born Killers R 4:30, 7:10, 9:50
Forrest Gormt PG 4:30, 7:00, 9:55
Jason's Lyric R 4:35, 7:15, 9:40
The River Wild PG 7:15, 7:20, 9:35
Terminal Velocity PG 4:45, 7:15, 9:40
$3 50 Adults Before Hearing Baby
8:00 P.M. Impaired Speech
"DELECTABLE!"
TAMARIS TOWN TRADE CENTER
EAT
DRINK
MAN
WOMAN
© 1984 The National Gallery Company
42 alphis new mill.
EAT- Today (4:30) 7:00, 9:30
Sat-Sun (4:30) 7:00 ONLY
RED ROCK WEST
RED- Today (4:45), 7:15, 9:45
Sat-Sun 9:45 ONLY
It's Hip To Trip.
It's Hip To Trip.
London $638*
Paris $635*
Tel Aviv $1038*
Mexico City $438*
Tokyo $905*
Bangkok $935*
Fees are round trip from Seattle City. Restrictions
apply. Items are not included and fees are subject to
change. Call for other worldwide destinations.
Council
Travel
1·800·2COUNCI
1·800·226·8624
Call for a FREE
Student Travels magazine!
Council Travel
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (513) 841-LIVE
Fri. Sept. 30
Stick
ActionMan
18+Over
Sat. Oct. 1
Sebadoh
Butter Glory, Doo Rag
18+Over/Adv. Tix
Mon. Oct. 3
Open Mic
Tix on sale Now:
The specials 10/10
Paladins/ScentheSkids 10/12
Cop Shoot Cop 10/18 Velocity Girl 10/29
Corrosion of Conformity 10/29
At Liberty Hall
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
Sept. 30
The Samples 10/13
311 11/3
SUAFILMS
September 30, October 1 & 2
Schindler's
List
Friday 8:00
Saturday 8:00
Sunday 2:00 pm
THE LIST IS LIFE. THE MAN WAS R
THE STORIES TREE
AL. SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-5-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
D.C. CAB
Friday Midnight
Saturday Midnight
Crown Cinema
PRINCESS CARABOO
PHOEBE CATES
KEVIN
KLINE
5:00 7:15
9:30
STEVE MARTIN
A Simple
Twist of Fate
[FC-1]
HILLCREST
OWA 841-5191
92510
5:15 7:30
9:45
MELANIE GRIFFITH
ED HARRIS
MILK
MONEY
PC-D
"The Scout' Hits A Comedy Home Run!" Albert Brooks Brendan Fraser
7:15 Only
the Scout
PG-13
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
5:15 7:30
9:40
starring
HARRISON
FORD
FC-D
5:00 7:35
I will be there to help you every time.
THE CLIENT
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
SUSAN
SARANDON
TOMMY LEE
JONES FC-B
5:00 9:30
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 P.M. ADULTS $3.00 LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 ALL DAY
TIMECOP
VAN
DAMME
R
5:00 7:15 9:30
BRANDON LEE
One man
was chosen...
The
CROW
R
9:40 Only
KEANU
REEVES
DENNIS
HOPPER
R
SPEED
5:00 7:20
9:40
BORN TO GO WILD PG
BACK TO SCHOOL PARTY
BABY'S
DAYOUT
CINEMA TWIN $1.25
311/DOWA 841-5191
5:00 7:15
NATION/WORLD
AT THE HOLIDAY INN!!
Tired of Pizza and Tacos? Try the...
WITH THE INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION (I.S.A.)
FRIDAY 30TH SEPTEMBER
ADMISSION $4.00
THE PARTY STARTS AT 8:30 PM!!
YOU ARE WELCOME TO BRING YOUR OWN MUSIC
at BONANZA.
Steak·Chicken·Seafood·Salad
Sunday Night Student Special
$4.99 for any sandwich (includes Freshtastics bar & drink) 10% Student Discount every day on any regularly priced menu item
BANK OF MICHIGAN
MICHIGAN
WISCONSIN
KANSAS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DISCOVER
2329 Iowa · 842-1200
confirmed rescued.
Wreckage of Baltic Sea ferry not yet found
The Associated Press
TURKU, Finland — Salvage workers using sophisticated electronic equipment scoured the Baltic Sea for the wreck of the Estonia without success yesterday, as the death toll from the ferry disaster tipped 900.
Swedish and Finnish maritime officials ordered inspections of all their ferries for bow door problems similar to that reported by a surviving crew member, who said water rushed in through the door of the cargo hold.
Bjorn Erik Stenmark, Sweden's maritime safety director, said since the accident, shipping companies had been telling him they had experi-
About 90 bodies had been recovered, the Finnish coast guard said.
ensured similar problems in the past but had not reported them.
"The huge catastrophe with the sinking of the Estonia perhaps could have been avoided if the ship owners had followed the law and reported earlier close calls with ferries of the Estonia-type construction," Stenmark said.
The surging waters stymied investigators, who had hoped to use an ultra-sophisticated robot to examine the wreck and try to locate bodies.
The Finnish Interior Ministry issued a statement saying: "All ferries ... which fly the Finnish flag will be subjected to inspections ... within a week. Special attention will be paid to cargo doors, front and back, and to alarm and monitoring systems."
The latest provisional death toll provided by Finnish authorities stood at 909, while 140 people were
Helicopters and ships from Finland and Sweden continued to crisscross the area where the Estonia sank, but rescuers did not expect to find any more survivors of one of the world's worst maritime disasters. The water temperature was 46 degrees.
STREETSIDE RECORDS
The 515-foot Estonia had been on a voyage from Tallinn, Estonia, to Stockholm, Sweden, at the time of the disaster. More than half the victims were Swedes.
Look for the
Modern Reality NEW MUSIC FROM THE EDGE.
simister dane
dane
Including:
sinister dane
display in store
48 MONTHS / WHERE'S MY PARADE
STAINED GLASS / ODALISQUE
COLUMBIA
JEFF
BUCKLEY
Including:
MOJO PIN
GRACE
ETERNAL LIFE
HALLELUJAH
COLUMBIA
ON SALE!
GRACE
oasis
oasis
Definitely Maybe
including:
epic
SUPERSONIC / LIVE FOREVER / SHAKERMAKER
10234567890
VELVET CRUSH
TEENAGE SYMPHONIES
TO GOD
including:
CREATION
HOLD ME UP / MY BLANK PAGES
TIME WRAPS AROUND YOU
1403 W. 23rd • 842-7173
Stay Streetsmart · Shop Streetside
LET YOUR
CAR DO
THE
BROWSING
ON THE
1 station
See store for details
Keep It Clean
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
203 Help Wanted
204 Professional Services
205 Tying 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, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in the newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes certain laws regarding discrimination 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
written in this newsletter in this newspaper are
available on equal opportunity.
100s Announcements
IT
THE ETC. SHOP 222 Mass.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Rings, Hookies and Pendants
LEATHER
Backpacks, Belt, Jackets, and Purses
UNGLASTERS
Busseel & Bussel
I's, Revo, Serengeti, and Vaartner
105 Personals
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
Stretch your money! Use Kansan coupons
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 Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 30, 1994
PARKING
Keep it Clean
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
$ 8.50 wash now! Independent laundromat. 26th and
lowa, Iowa street, south of Dairy Queen.
Six months old. $149.00
Medical Insurance for Foreign Students. Also Insurance for US citizens going abroad. Oakland Insurance Service. 411/2 S Main Ottawa. KA 60077 1800-600-6955.
TERM PAPER DUE! Order "The Ultimate Term Paper." A good paper is one outline and a note on how to prepare it in ONE Day. A resource for students and professors. Money back guarantee. Send $15 G., Toller, 406 S., dL.
Lawrence's Best and Biggest BOOK SALE Most Books 35 to 50 cents
Fri., Sept. 30, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Sat., Oct. 1, Noon-5 p.m.
Sun., Oct. 2, Noon-5 p.m.
"Half Price Day"
Mon., Oct. 3, 5-9 p.m.
"$3 a Grocery Bag Night"
7th and Kentucky Lawrence Public Library Garage and a Big Tent
Sponsored by Friends of the Lawrence Public Library
120 Announcements
ATTENTION ALL GREEEKS - Skip for free! We are
at Attention All GREEEKS - Skip for free! We are
in January at Attention All GREEEKS - Skip for free! We are
in January at Attention All GREEEKS - Skip for free! We are
in January at Attention All GREEEKS - Skip for free! We are
EARTH MYSTICS AND GODDESS OF MANY FACES-workshops on Earth-based spirituality, OCT 8-9 Presenter from SL Louis. For info: Institute of Transformational Studies 1-862-2006.
YOUE ACADEMIC SUCCESS, PART 2: MEMORY AND NOTE TAKING Workshop. PART 3: how to take notes that help you learn while you listen and review FIREWORKS. Part 4: Aske Wesen the Student Assistant.
Recycled Soundsc
Bully Pulpet, and That Statue Moved!
Pick up the new Panel Door,
Bullet Pulpet, and That Statue Moved!
12th & Oread
841-9475
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2. 15. 1996 • 4. 8. 0 ON 7 NIGHTS
TRADE BUY SELL Cd's LPs & Tapes
CHRISTMAS
SKI
COLORADO
BREAKS
JANUARY 2 • 15, 1890 • 4, 5, 6 OR 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
Summer
VA GOTTA BE HERE!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
300 SUNCHAES
*800-GOLF-SUNCHAKE*
MARIOH GOLF & SUNCHAKE MOTTO
Sunday, May 14th
BE THERE!
YOUR ACADAMIC SUCCESS, PART2:
MEMORY AND NOTETAKING
WORKSHOP
Learn how to listen more effectively and take more useful notes.
FREE!
Tues, Oct4, 7:00-9:00pm
4034 Wescoe
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
140 Lost & Found
FOUND A teenager, de-clawed, calico cat around Tennessee and 10th area. No collar. Call Dave at 212-579-3864.
Least: Large, female hunchy. Brown leather collar.
Most: Small, female hunchy. Family very upset.
Call 842-1491 if found.
130 Entertainment
FREE POOL DAILY
3-8 pm Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
LOOKING FOR SOME EXTRA MONEY?
The Lawrence Journal World is seeking enthusiastic, highly motivated individuals to sell newspaper subscriptions. Sales experience is helpful, but we'll train highly motivated individuals. Evening hours, Monday, Wednesday and Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., apply by app. 2p. m., and 6p.m., at the Lawrence Journal World 609 New Hampshire.
Contact Valerie for more information. 832-712-712
Tail Sorters
Excellent income for part-time work!
Positions available at a major lawerence letter on sit 1st and 2nd shifts. Long & short term positions available. Some weekend hours available also. Must have phone in home and reliable transport! Learn about postal regulations and build your job skills! Great opportunity to begin
earning money for the local school.
Apply here (mail to: S. Browne, next week)
MAHVANI, 21 E. 8th St., Lawrence, KS EOE.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
Interested in setting yourself up with a great work situation for next semester? We have it for you.
We're Willie C's, and we are ittybitty and
opening late December in downtown Lawrence at
10am.
2. If you are interested in a cook's position at this time and would be willing to commute to our Topeka store for training purposes, then we are interested in you!
3. Call in Lawrence at 832-2500 or in Topka at
232-8800 between the hours of 9 and 11 a.m. or 2 to 5
p.m. M.F. and we'll set up an interview time for
Part Time Sales
RETAIL
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR IMMEDIATE OPENING
BLET WANTED "Person to drive Chrysler Mini-
bike" with more information,
all rule at 841-910 or 844-900.
*
need a little extra money? Bullseye Distribution distribution is now accepting applications for part-time carriers for delivery routes. Work approximately 2-8 hours every Tuesday. Benefits include: 89% savings on Journal World and 50% savings Sunflower Cable Vision. Call 843-9896
Cash Caterers, Kansas Union Catering Dear,
Hiring for Thursday, Oct. 6, 1998. Several shifts available.
See schedules in Unit Personnel Office.
$4.25 per hour paid in cash day following employer
recruitment. Apply to KSA and Burun Ursus pre-
ferred. Apply Kansas and Burun Ursus
personnel Level, E. 5. Kansas University EOE.
Drummer wanted for establishment dance band. All star wanted, responsible, good job. MBT ENT
Work for VILLEROY & BOCI, an established fine china and crystal retailer. Fabulous opportunity for Part-time Sales positions at our Lawrence, KS location. We are looking for people who know what it means to give outstanding customer service and enjoy working with the finest quality products. We offer a competitive salary, flexible schedule, an outstanding employee discount and a great group of people to work with. Please call (913) 443-8999 to arrange an interview.
BELF WANTED! Intramural Floor Hockey and
rollball officinals needed. Part time employment
Send letter of application, resume,and reference to ;
State office for national therapy services company part-time office assistant for fast-paced office. Provide training and attitude. The quality candidate must be capable, be reliable and organized tasks & responsibilities, be reliable & organized, be able to work independently, & have team attention. Properly set up, maintain, setting, some computer knowledge, past experience general office duties, customer service. Commitment expected, but we are able to offer sch
COLLEGE STUDENTS $12.35-11.65 STARTING
Local branch of all i. co. filling immediate entry
level openings. Flex time schedules. 3 days, ever.
addresses. Opt out all majors. Accepted for:
oil 841-9098
Office manager needed at Jon's Notes of KU. Job begins immediately and continues through the school year. Approx 15-20 flexible hours per week and $800/month. Office is closed for all school vacations. Business background NOT required. For more details and contact person/phone see Jon's notes posting at the University Placement Website. Applications accepted for limited time.
HEALTH CARE HELP NEEDED If you are a CNA or have completed your basic nursing skills classes, you are needed to assist elderly people in their homes.
Now hiring baby sisters/ children caretakers Day.
Phone: 870-249-3286 available. For more information call 870-249-3286
CMS Therapies
Kathleen Draskovich
2706 Iowa, Suite C
Lawrence K66046
PLEASE, NO PHONE CALLS
EOE M/F/H/V
1* OFFICE MANAGER
1R ACCOUNTANT/A/R, A/P,G/L
2* MARKETING PERSONNEL,
HEAVY PHONES
LOCAL WHOLESALE, RETAIL
PETROLEUM COMPANY
Native French speaker to informally tutor 8-yr.
children with game etc. Must enjoy kids.
8653 or 1454-952
8653 or 1454-952
CMSTHERAPIES OF KANSAS
**AHAORE DJs Wanted. Responsible, great personality, attractive. M or F 749-3049.**
Part time, flexible hours. Apt. maintenance painting, cleaning, etc. $5.50 per hour 749-7688.
Terraced Construction Co has openings for general laborers. Call 842-8829 if interested.
**women opening and is looking for food service employee**
*Duties include both food prep and line cook*
*Prepare meals for guests, prepare food*
*part of the new" Deli team, apply at Shumun Food*
*Co Business between bam -pm, Mon -Fri at*
*6am, Monday through Friday.*
Move to Dallas for the Cowboys. Young couple in Dallas, TX seeks qualified, energetic, responsible, mature person, 18-30 years a live in many cities. Apply by May 24th, 2015. January. Light cooking, errands and a competitive Salary. Please resume Texas and references to @99 Bescom Hill Copell, Texas $150 or bi-214-304-7696
native French speaker to informally tutor 8-yr-old; read, play games, etc. Must enjoy kids 25+
Villeroy & Boch
Please apply at Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association 3363 Missouri, Lower Level Lawrence, KS
or visit us online at www.douglascounty.org
This job requires you to have dependable transportation and work approximately 20-25 hours/week. Hours run between 4:00 & 8:00 pm on weekdays, plus 6 hours/day for every week off.
ABOVE AVERAGE SALARY,
QUIET AUTOMATED COUN-
TRY OFFICE
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, 1 Riverfront Plaza, Suite 100, Lawrence, KS 66045
landscape positions available through fall. Full and part time, weekdays and weekends, flexible tours possible. Salary negotiable. Call George Jeborne Landscape Education at 843-2893.
RIVER VALLEY
MUSIC
CAFE
Mass Street Deli
718 E. 1300 RD
LAWRENCE, KS 66046
SEND RESUME TODAY TO:
COMING THIS SUNDAY!
1601 W. 23rd 841-9111
$2.00 off
WANTED! AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING
PROMOTE SPRING BREAK TO JAMACA,
CANCUN, FLORIDA, A PADRE, FASTANTE
ASHP THOUROUS 1086-490-7571
SUN ASHP THOUROUS 1086-490-7571
225 Professional Services
offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
THATSTATUEMOVED
Call for a consultation (816) 301-2944
**ENGLISH TUTOR:** English courses, courses offered by the University. Highly punished and experienced Call Arthur 841-3313
**international Video Conversions PAL/SECA/NTSC:** to up to 2 hours. includes return postage & handling. Worldwide Video Transfer services available.
***
Reunion Performance
That Statue Moved
10/2/84
TRAFFIC-DUIT'S
Fake ID L&D & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DUL/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KASANS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Drink Special:
$1.50 Vodka Wells
From photography. Headshots, modeling, banding.
From B&W and color. Primal Screen 814-6309.
Prompt abortion and contraception services in
Lawrence 841-5716. Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
k
701 Tenne
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney At Law
843-4023
Donald G. Strole Sally G.Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133
82 Hondra Magna, MAGA 99. *Excellent condition*
Blue light. *B1300 abc. Leave a message at* 1933
7465 RTE, 7465 LRU. (See 7465 RTE)
Free Consultation
CULL/DUIL Traffic Tickets Criminal Defense
Prototype word processing service. Quality papers. Applications resumes, edits, letters.
235 Typing Services
4 Rugers Tix for sale. Fri night £75 es. Good seats.
740-796.
Quality typing/word processing/indexing. Lazer
printing. Free estimate. Call 842-721-721
contours, Electric; Pedder stirrer Esquire USA hard
case soft case Call 844-231-4000 for sale
soft case Call 844-231-4000 for sale
A Word Perfect Work Processing Service.
Laser Printing and Computer Call. Campus Call.
Anne 842-796-5100
Anne 842-796-5100
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
Quality Word Processing Distributions, Themes,
term-papers, Resumes, Business letters, etc.
Y
Futon and Frame. Great Condition. $100 obo. Call
Jef at 750-984-0911.
Honda Spree $295, bundy curtiens $88, color
tv./VCR 300. Microsoft windows 3.1 (installation
kit).
83" Ford LTD, 6 cylinder wagon, AC, AT, PB
84" Ford LTD, 6 cylinder, rough body, needs water
440; 550-610
300s Merchandise
CLIP THIS AD
305 For Sale
1987 Honda Elite Moped
Tough locking, but reliable.
$275 B.O.B. $32-0979.
Desks (all sizes) $25-$75, Sofas and chairs $25 and under good selection styles and colors Call $84-116
1990 Honda CBR 1000R, only 1,500 miles, perfect
car condition must sell: $62,900/OBC; Call
814-160 or 814-7000
Macintosh Classic 4 M-brm, 40 M-brk hard drive
8500, 1600mb with cable and software 8500
Ticket for EAGLES concert SEPT. 30 at SATN
OFFERS at THEATER PLAT. Sept. 40 at BEST
OFFER
MACINTOSH Computer. Complete system including printer only $50; Call Chris at 839-268-5985.
Panasonic Word Processor 3.3" Floppy Drive Disc Accu-Speed Plus Dairy Wheel Price $5.00
Trak 7000 Aluminum MT bike for sale. Krietler
tour road bike trainer. Bk149-841 Aikwu .496
EARN CASH
ALL YOUR MONEYGONE?
$15 Today
$30
This Week
By donating your blood plasma
Walk-ins welcome Lawrence Donor Center
NABI The Quality Source
816W.24th
Behind Laird Noller Ford
749-5750
Hours:
M-F9-6:30
Sat.10-4
340 Auto Sales
1982 Nissan 300XH 20XX, with sunroof, and lovers, $99.00 OB. Call Mike at 887-265-1224.
1985 SAAB Turb 4 dril 5 spd rw庙 pw ee;
Black/maroon 4. drill Repair records. Rebuild clutch
heater valve CV distributor and ignition module.
New muffler, new tires. 20100 OB0.841-738
Toyota Terexil, AC AM/FM Cans 104,000 miles
Toyota Terexil, Great good body, Burns oil,
790/abs, 264-3077
87 Honda CBR 600 motorcycle red/white. Call 842-794-1824
88 Mustang GM. 50 l. fuel every cruise, 32K miles, gray. looks, runs great. 883-291, after 5
B M W 2001 1974 excellent condition Mag wagles,
new tretina CD steroid. Call for information
360 Miscellaneous
Chev. 2-24 conv. Black Excellent cond. Only $9,800.
call Kik at 844-6066.
Corrugated boxes, moving and storage boxes. Large quantity pricing & $ small quantity walk-in welcome. Call 843-8111 and ask for the Sales Service Department. Carry and cash.
370 Want to Buy
One year-old Iguana for sale. Best offer. 865-5738.
1 twnicket for the EAGLES CONERT on Saturday 10/15J Call 749-2894 & leave message
400s Real Estate
WANTED!!
31hrm. 28th, fully hallway. Orchard Cotters apt. for rent-Spring $95 $215 a room per month. On bus route, Call Amy!Melanie at 641-8855.
For call-Amy!Melanie Hill at 641-8855 when you use the library card. Call Amy!Melanie Hill at 641-8855 when you use the library card.
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
For Rent: MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments and well furnished house (2008)
405 For Rent
Nice, quiet. 2/3hrm. All appliances, low utilities, deposits, deposit fees. $46/mo (garage avail.) 1/2hrm. No fees. 1/2hrm. No fees.
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500. Room for rent for NFS女 Nelly female, very clean, W/D, all utilities pd. including cable. $285 m. 942-1099 or $32-8258.
FOR BEDROOM APARTMENT
Great area with route, NO
PETS. AVAILABLE NOW Call 764-8284
- 2 bedroom with study
Apartments
- Available for fall.
Spacious three bedroom, 2 bath townhouse, with garage and fence yard. Sunflower school, #738.
- 3 bedroom apartments
- Directly on bus route
4 BEDROOM
- On KUBus Route
* Close to Campus
* Swimming Pool
* Stop By Today!
Equality 749-4226 M-F 9-5
Opportunity 15th & Kasold T-10-4
Submit to May 31. 2 Bldroom at Birchwood Gardens. 180 block Kentucky. All street parking, own fight laundry, AC. No pets. $375 per month-negotiable. 843-929-093.
- Call 843-4754
"Don't get left out in the cold."
Subtit: Pursued in hotel iav 10.1; Newly
painted, on paint route. Phone 9-854-6000; Evening
time.
ORCHARD CORNERS COMPLETELY FURNISHED 4 BEDROOM
Trailridge Apta - 2000 W 6th
Now take the train to Bristol Central for a 3-hour bus service (444) 813-7531
(444) 813-7530
Town-home for rent. 3 bedroom, fireplace,
patio, garage, parking on bus route. Atk for Holly
at 541-180.
Looking for Love
Lonely, attractive, 3 or 4 bedroom apartments seeking residents to share a long or short term relationship. Call any time at 843-6446.
Two Bedroom Apartment Now Available at
the address 7235 W. 10th St.
Times through July, $775 deposit, host-phone
805-260-9560.
Pets Welcome
No Sublease Fee
South Pointe
2166 W. 26th St.
843-4446
2166 W. 26th St.
843-6446
Outstanding NewStaff!!
- Swimming Pool
* On KU Bus Route
* Sand Volleyball Court
* Ample Private Parking
* Water and Trash Paid
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
430 Roommate Wanted
Female roommate (non-smoking) needed for
month +1; call 749-6711. $200 per month.
+1: Call 749-6711.
T females looking for 3rd roommate to live in town
84, rent-cable, cable pailed. Available immediately.
84, rent-cable
Step by the Kaiser 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.
Aids phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
1 Roommate need ASAP to ship furnished 3
bathrooms, W/D, on bus route, $250 + t
pensions, 48-65.
Calculating Rates:
Cim N/S roommate need ASAP to support 4 bed
roommates + utilities / large enough to close camp. Call 79-848-2630
By Mail: 191 Sutter Furt, Lawn, KS 46030
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 Via account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
**Refunds:** Investigating a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Fees on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check with cash are not available.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day injections and the size of the ad (the number of agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
BlinkBox Numbers:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kanaan office for a fee of $4.00
Num. of insertions
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Cost per line per day
I2X 1-3X 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
Classifications
Example: 3 lines for 5 days — 3 lines X 5 days X $1.10=$16.50
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
140 lon & found
205 help wanted
240 car sales
225 professional services
360 miscellanea
255 typing services
1 | | | | | | |
2 | | | | | | |
3 | | | | | | |
4 | | | | | | |
5 | | | | | | |
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Date ad begins: Total days in paper.
Date ad cost: Classification:
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:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Forget it! Forget it!
Everything I write is
just so much bleating!
Sheep authors
6B
Friday, September 30, 1994
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-822 $^a$
Immigration NOW!
National Honor Society Do You Quality?
Professional Work Visits • Permanent Residency
• Acupunture • Students • Embassy Admissions • Wearies
• Green CAREN • An Immigration Matters Worldwide
Special Immigrant: DEADLINE APPROACHING
414 U.S. Courts
BELL & ABSTRACTS
IMMIGRATION LAW CLINIC
2022 Sullivan, Blds. 302, R. Kansas City, ND 64119 USA
Toll Free (877) 262-5255 • FAX (877) 421-1244
Free Toll Fax (877) 421-5255 • FAX (877) 421-1244
Workforce Concerns, Patient Input, Remembrance Help, Total Cost This All and Save
Move To Help Me
UNDERCOVER has teddies for all occasions!
Tuxedo teddy shown is $26
UNDERCOVER
The pinkbuilding 21 W.9th
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
1031 Michigan Boulevard
Doronto
AKA •XΩ •AKA •XΩ •AKA •XΩ •AKA •XΩ •AK
A K Λ
X Ω
A K Λ
A K Λ
X Ω
A K Λ
X Ω
A K Λ
X Ω
A K Λ
X Ω
JON BLUMBAUGH MEMORIAL WHEAT MEET
October 2, 1994
Benefits KU Cancer Research
Chi Omega Alpha Kappa Lambda
**Entry:**
Entry fees-$6-Race
$11-Relays
$5-Fun Relay
$4-Simon Says
Sign up on Wescoe beach before Friday September 30, 1994.
Schedule:
Schedule:
Meet begins at 9:00 a.m. on October 2, 94.
For questions, call 841-5567 or 841-6094
Awards:
Awards:
100% cotton t-shirts will be given to winner of each race. Winner of Simon Says receives trip to Chicago.
UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY Shirts Illustrated THE STUMBLE NOW
BULLWINKLES TRAVEL CENTER 18th AMENDMENT
river valley music
AKΛ·XΩ • AKΛ · XΩ • AKΛ · XΩ • AKΛ · XΩ • AKΛ
Build a Beautiful Body
SAVE $139
Annual Membership-first visit
Special rates for graduating seniors!
Absolutely NO joining fee!
749-2424
925 Iowa
BODY
BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
*You can stop your membership over Christmas & Summer
*You can stop your membership over Christmas & Summer
Cur by Java Break
A K Λ
X Ω
A K Λ
A K Λ
X Ω
A K Λ
X Ω
A K Λ
X Ω
THE NEWS in brief
WASHINGTON
Purer heroin becoming popular drug for some
Heroin hitting the streets of America is cheaper, pureer and more lethal than ever, and recent reports of celebrity use threaten to make heroin the new drug of choice, top drug officials told a Congressional panel yesterday.
"The availability of higher purity heroin has meant that users can now choose to snort or smoke instead of injecting it," Lee P. Brown, the nation's drugpolicy director, told a House Judiciary subcommittee. "As a result, heroin is more socially acceptable among a whole new group of people. The fear of injection and injection-borne diseases, such as HIV-AIDS and hepatitis, is reduced, and some of the stigma is removed."
地球
Brown said the most increased heroin use in America was found among those who were already hard-core drug users. They are cocaine users adding heroin to their habit or heroin users using more and more of the narcotic because they can get purer doses of the drug for less money than two decades ago.
WASHINGTON
Trade talks with Japan go down to the wire
The Clinton administration predicted yesterday that 15 months of negotiations aimed at lowering the $60 billion U.S. trade deficit with Japan will go down to the last minute.
President Clinton summoned his top trade advisers, including U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor, to "review the state of play and to look at options," White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers told reporters.
Japanese Foreign Minister Yohei Kono and Trade Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto were scheduled to arrive in Washington today for one last attempt to reach agreement before a midnight deadline imposed by the United States.
Kantor's office has already scheduled a news conference for noon tomorrow, indicating that the final negotiating session could well last all night.
A week ago, Clinton told Kono that the United States would not hesitate imposing economic sanctions if it does not achieve satisfactory market-opening deals.
WASHINGTON
House says no to free lobbying lunches
"This bill says no to the freebie-seeking members of the House of Representatives... a small minority of this House that create a bad impression for the rest of us," said Rep. John Bryant, D-Texas, the measure's primary sponsor.
The House voted yesterday to end the age-old practice of lobbyists buying meals and entertainment for members of Congress, part of the most sweeping rewrite of lobbying laws in nearly half a century.
The bill imposing strict new gift rules and tightening reporting requirements on lobbyists may be the only major survivor in what had been an ambitious reform agenda pushed by President Clinton and congressional Democrats.
The measure, a merger of the toughest provisions in separate House and Senate bills, was approved on a vote of 306-112. It was sent to the Senate, where backers say no serious opposition has surfaced.
But the vote belied the difficulty of steering the bill to passage. The measure barely survived an earlier procedural vote, 216-205, after an attack led by Republicans.
House members rejected last-minute arguments from conservative Christian groups that it would infringe their rights to lobby on moral issues by requiring them to report grassroots lobbying activities.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
CHRISTIE'S TOY BOX WHERE THE FUN BEGINS KU students -Rent 1 movie at regular price and get a 2nd movie for 1c with valid KUID
CTB
MADRID
- Unique T-Shirts • Adult Novelties
• Unusual Greeting Cards • Exotic Lingerie
• "Over-the-Hill" Gifts • Video Sales & Rentals
• Hilarious Party Games • Sensuous Oils & Lotions
• Current Monthly Magazines • T-Back/Thong Swimwear
1206 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Ks.842-4266
32-L
AMERICAN
CHRISTIE'S
N. E. CO.
JOY BOL
KILIM WESKIT VEST
Our exclusive red kilim patterned cotton vest with tie back closure and button front. $158
Chestnut pigoude five-pocket jean with zipper front, button closure. $125
SERIES-II | FALL '94 | ATTITUDE NOT AGE
Country Club Plaza, 47th & Broadway, Kansas City
HAROLD'S