CAMPUS
Two social welfare students help care for AIDS patients as part of their field work. Page 3A
CAMPUS
Study abroad students are warned about reports of sexual harassment in France. Page 7A
COOL High 57° Low 43° Weather: Page 2A
KAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
CHILLY
VOL.104.NO.147
TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, MAY 1, 1995
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
The Dirty Half-Dozen
Farmland Inc., M-Pact, FMC Corp., Davol Inc., Lawrence Technology, UARCO Inc.
These Lawrence-area industries are cleaning up their acts. Or are they?
Photos by Edmee Rodriguez
I
n 1993 Douglas County's top six polluters spewed, leaked and trucked enough pounds of pollutants into the environment around Lawrence to fill the beds of 695 full-size Ford pickups. But Lawrence's dirty halfdozen are not as dirty as they used to be.
In 1993, Douglas County-based companies emitted 2,796.12 pounds of pollutants into the environment around Lawrence, according to the latest Environmental Protection Agency reports available. Just three years before, in 1990, however, they emitted nearly twice that — 4,418,946 pounds, to be exact.
Have Lawrence and Douglas County companies really begin to clean up their acts? Yes, according to the numbers the companies have reported to the EPA. But finding out where the pollution is coming from, where it's going, and how bad it is for people and the environment can be tricky.
Although Farmand Inc., a nitrogen fertilizer manufacturer, is still the No. 1 polluter in Douglas County, the amount of toxic emission the company eliminated between 1900 and 1993 was more than everyone else in Douglas County added together. Hallmark Cards Inc., the fourth largest polluter in 1990, dropped off the list completely in 1992.
But the picture isn't completely rosy.
Other company, such as FMC Corp., an industrial chemical and machinery manufacturer, and Davol Inc, a disposable medical product manufacturer, did not immediately climb aboard the cleanup bandwagon, apparently. Both companies posted increases in pollution from 1900 to 1993. Davol Inc. increased almost 800 percent in three years, offsetting Farmland's big improvements. The company maintains that almost all its toxic materials are transferred offsite to be recycled, and do not reach the environment.
And even with the overall reductions, toxic emissions in 1995 still included some nasty chemicals.
- Ammonia, aifiable gas that can be fatal if in airborne concentrations of 3.000 parts per million. Ammonia is irritating to the eyes, nose and respiratory tract in smaller doses.
*Methanol, a lethal kind of alcohol that can cause blindness and acidosis in smaller doses.
- Ethylene oxide, an extremely flammable and cancer-cause compound that burns the skin and eyes and can depress the central nervous system.
Farmland Inc. alone released a million pounds of ammonia into the air in 1993, and Davol Inc. emitted almost 4,000 pounds of ethylene oxide. Farmland and FMC Corp. combined accounted for the entire half a million pounds of methanol released into the environment in 1993.
1993 — the latest report — was the seventh year that companies across the nation were required to report emissions of about 330 designated toxic chemicals under section 313 of the Emergency Planning and the Community Right-to-Know Act.
The law requires corporate emissions reports on materials that go into the air, into the water, landfills, underground injection, and chemicals that were transferred to other off-site locations. At the end of each year the EPA tabulates the totals for each county and compiles Toxic Release Inventories, or TRIs, for each company. Since the EPA is a government agency, the data from these reports is public information and can be obtained by writing the eight regional EPA offices. TRI data is also available yearly on CD-ROM at the government documents library in Malott Hall.
All of Kansas is in Region 7. The Region 7 EPA office is located in Kansas City, Kan.
The toxic emissions data from 1994 will not be available until this July.
Why the drop in emissions?
M
any people believe the trend toward
clearing up toxic emissions is a direct result of simply requiring companies to report pollution. In fact, many companies did not know how much of the toxic chemicals they were losing up the smokestack and down the drain until the law required them to count escaped chemicals.
Some of the chemicals the companies use are expensive to buy and use, and releasing less is cost effective.
When they found out what they were losing, the theory contends, they cleaned up their act.
"People were not aware, even the managers, of how much toxic chemicals were being released,"
See DIRTY, Page 5A
1932
Yumi Chikamori / KANSAN
Gene Budig chats with Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, and Gary McEachen, an attorney from Kansas City, Kan., at the School of Education's national board dinner.
Budig gets honor in his return to KU
By Teresa Veazey Kansan staff writer
Underneath the blue cloth with a big gold bow stood a little boy.
The little boy, a statue of bronze, was holding a baseball glove in his hand, and the name on the glove was Budig.
The statue was unveiled Saturday night at the Lied Center as part of a tribute by the School of Education to Gene Budig, president of baseball's American League and former chancellor of the University of Kansas. Budig also was a professor in the School of Education.
Budig designated the $250,000 endowment for the School of Education.
"It was directed to the School of Education to establish the Gene A. Budig teaching professorship," said Karen Symms Gallagher, dean of the school. "He took the full $250,000 and designated it as a teaching professorship."
Under the program, professors would receive $12,500 for one year. Professors receiving the professorship would be full-time, tenured faculty who had been with the school at least five years and who had been recognized by students and peers as good instructors.
"I take enormous pride in my association with the School of Education," Budig said. "I was active in a number of student-related committees."
Budig, who was chancellor for 13 years, taught several classes in the school, including organization, administration and financing of higher education. Budig said he also lectured on journalism ethics for the School of Journalism.
"I always enjoyed the association with the students," Budig said. "They reminded me of the central purpose of the University."
Budig it said it was important that major administrators at KU teach so that they did not lose direct contact with the students. He was pleased that Robert Hemenway, who will become chancellor in June, would be teaching through the department of English.
"I think he was an excellent choice," Budig said. "I am anxious to be supportive of him and his endeavors here."
Several of Budig's friends and former colleagues were pleased to see him return to KU and accept the award.
"He was here for 13 years, and it feels a little hollow without him," said David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs. "He became part of the persona of the University."
Del Shankel, chancellor of KU, said it felt great to have Budie back at the University.
"He was one of our great chancellors," Shankel said.
INSIDE
INSIDE
31
Defense reigns supreme
The Kansas football team's offense has been revamped, but Saturday's Blue-White game showcased an intense Jayhawk defense.
Rain doesn't shrivel Day on the Hill crowd
8,000 show up for annual concert
By Ian Ritter
Kansan staff writer
It wasn't quite like Woodstock, but it did rain, and it was pretty cold.
About 8,000 people were at the seventh annual Day on the Hill, said Jamie Plesser, live music coordinator for Student Union Activities. The event took place yesterday on the northwest lawn of Campanile Hill.
When the rain started to come down, mud clods started to fly in the mosh pit during headliner Matthew Sweet's set. The clods spurred a huge assortment of garbage that filled the air and even
tually made its way toward the state.
The band also faced rain at a Saturday gig in Omaha,Neb., Sweet said.
"Piece of shit," said Sweet to a fan who hit him in the back with a trash item.
"It got all our pedals wet, so stuff would start crapping out periodically," he said of the Omaha rain.
Sweet and the other three musicians in his band must not have been too upset, though. They entertained the crowd with a three-song encore of their guitar-driven, alternative pop.
Other bands that played Day on the Hill were Kansas City's Lou's Revenge, Lawrence's Bastard Squad and Kansas City's Tenderloin.
Emie Locke, lead singer and harmonica player for Tenderloin, said
"It's nice — a lot of slamming kids, a good time," he said.
At one point in Tenderloin's set, the crowd started pelting the band with quarters.
that he enjoyed the show and that it was relaxing.
"It was cold at first, and then 1
"I asked for a couple of quarters, and we got barrared like bullets," Locke said.
Locke — who said he asked for the quarters so that he could shoot them out of his large belly — said that a roadie with the band made $19 from the crowd's donation.
Locke, who often shakes his fat for crowds at Tenderloin shows, eventually stripped out of his satin, lime green clown body suit, down to a pair of black shorts.
BERTO MAYORAL
See HILL, Page 8A
Ernie Locke,
lead singer for Kansas City
band Tenderloin,
dances on stage
during a set at
Day on the Hill.
Jarrett Lane/KANSAN
2A
Monday, May 1, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
✩
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE! Your excellent memory will help you prosper in business. Research projects bring favorable results and additional income. Your keen powers of perception allow you to head off trouble before it occurs. December will be a very special month for romance. Show your sentimental side. Travel and new employment opportunities beckon early in 1996.
CLEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: singer Jody Collins, jockey Steve Cauthen,
By Jeane Dixon
CLEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: singer Judy Collins, jockey Steve Cauthen,
singer Rita Coola, writer Robbie Ann Mason
T
ARIES (March 24-April 19) Along with a plan that will bring you closer to a cherished goal. Listen when old friends offer words of wisdom. Keep daily expenditures down. Earmark a certain sum for a special purpose.
♂
II
TAURIS (April 20-May 20)
Conventional methods are favored today. Work done at home will go quickly. Eliminate the unnecessary from your busy schedule. Friends will be glad to help shoulder a burden if you let them.
69
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Financial gains will result from your taking the initiative. Get in touch with distant contacts to firm up an agreement. Pursue legal matters. Commitments made now will prove long-lasting.
2
CANCER (June 21-July 22) An old score may at last be settled to your satisfaction. Try not to act too pleased with yourself. The financial picture remains somewhat confusing. You may need to pursue romance with more zeal.
W
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Get in touch with someone who occupies a position of power and influence. A bit of good luck is headed your way. Secret support comes from old friends. Manage your funds more effectively.
15
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22); Influential people like the way you think and work. Your business acumen helps you meet an important deadline. New fame and fortune will follow. Keep your own counsel about emotional or financial concerns.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Carefully weigh both sides of a serious issue before coming to a decision about what to do next. Stay on top of your personal life. Unforeseen difficulties can be easily hindered if you stay alert.
m
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
You have a special glow about you now. Others respond favorably to your aura of success.
Avoid sounding vague in business talks. Have important facts and figures at your fingertips.
SAGITTARUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21): Others may come to you with a complex problem. Your optimism helps to revive everyone's spirits. Take care of your health. You may be asked to take part in an interesting experiment.
Arrow
CAPIRCORN (Dec, 22-Jan, 19): Your physical and emotional resilience win you widespread admiration. Avoid pushing yourself too hard. An attractive member of the opposite sex enters your life.
VS
Water
Keep your wits about you! A
*wild' idea just may work.
Prominent people will be
impressed. Enroll in night
classes or a weekend seminar
on computers.
ON CAMPUS
X
PIGSCE (Feb. 19-March 20):
Sudden success is possible.
Be discreet when dealing with the media. Use your influence with friends to help them get on with their lives. An old alliance could be resurrected now.
Romance is favored.
TODAY'S CHILDREN are faithful and steadfast, almost impossible to sway once they have made up their minds! Count on them to stick by their friends through thick and thin. These Taureans have a high regard for order and will tackle their work in a systematic fashion. Eager to share their ideas and talents with people they love, these Taureans often go into business with a family member or close pal. The ideal partner will share their strong organizational skills. Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 60645, 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, KA 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, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Applications for summer and fall Kansan editorial staffs are available in 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The applications are due tomorrow. For more information, call Jamie Munn or Heather Lawrens at 864-4810.
LesBiGay Services of Kansas has peer counseling available year round for people who are gay, lesbian, bisexual or unsure. For more information, call 843-4506.
KIOSK staff members will be distributing free copies of KIOSK: KU's Art and Literary Magazine from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. m.today and tomorrow at the Kansas Union and in front of Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Jack Lerner at 749-5225.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
International Studies will sponsor an informational meeting about Fulbright and Graduate Direct Exchange Grants for Study and Research Abroad at 4 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Hodgie Bricke at 864-4141.
Multicultural Resource Center programming committee will sponsor a "Taste of KU" committee meeting at 4 p.m. today at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Pamela Kanda at 842-7388.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mark at 842-4713.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jennifer Beck at 865-0984.
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.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor Exploring the Faith at 7 tonight at 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
KU Yoga Club will meet at 7 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus will sponsor Fundamentals of Catholicism at 8:10 tonight at 1631 Crescent Road.
KU Crew will sponsor a fundraiser at 9:30 tonight at Mulligan's, 1016 Massachusetts St. For more information, call Reuben Anderson at 865-0925.
For more information, call 843-0357.
OAKS-Non-Traditional Student Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Mike Austin at 864-7317.
Center for East Asian Studies will sponsor "China Symposium 1995" at 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ashley Cheung at 864-3849.
BI-onc will sponsor a potluck cookout at 6 p.m. tomorrow at 929 Tennessee St. For more information, call Chris at 864-3091.
Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an Eating Disorders Support Group at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the second floor conference room in Watkins. For more information, call Sarah Kirk at 864-4121.
Christian Science Student Organization will sponsor a Weekly Forum, "You Are Perfect Right Now!" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove I in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Trace Scheltz at 843-6049.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call John Hendrix at 864-5861.
KU Meditation Club will sponsor group meditations at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Ravi Hikatur at 832-8789.
KCBT Student Ministries will sponsor a Bible Study at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Adam Decaturat 841-1683.
Amnesty International will sponsor a letterwriting session at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St. For more information, call Simone Wehbe at 842-5407.
Lutheran Campus Ministry will sponsor Taize prayer at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Pastor Brian Johnson at 843-4948.
Weather
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
St. Louis
Seattle
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
HIGH IOW
TODAY
TUESDAY
NIGH LOW
80 ° ° • 59 °
56 ° ° • 40 °
51 ° ° • 39 °
47 ° ° • 40 °
57 ° ° • 43 °
69 ° ° • 59 °
59 ° ° • 48 °
54 ° ° • 37 °
53 ° ° • 44 °
66 ° ° • 48 °
51 ° ° • 40 °
63 ° ° • 46 °
54 ° ° • 41 °
TUESDAY Partly cloudy and warm weather returns
Cool weather continues with a 40 percent chance of rain
5743
6552
WEDNESDAY
Partly cloudy and warm
6854
Source: "Tomato Hawk" Scott, KU Weather Service
6854
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's windshield was broken Thursday in the 1000 block of Emery Road, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $300.
A KU student's dashboard was damaged in the 2500 block of West Sixth Street after someone tried to remove the car stereo, Lawrence police reported Friday. Damage was estimated at $100.
A KU student's mountain bicycle was stolen Friday from an enclosed porch in the 1300 block of New Hampshire Street, Lawrence police reported. The bike was valued at $200.
A KU student's mountain bicycle was stolen Wednesday from a bike rack on the west side of Malott Hall, KU police reported. The bike was valued at $344.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 1, 1995
3A
Students learn while helping AIDS victims
By Novelda Sommers Kansan staff writer
Ingrid Backus knows her friend Michael's days are numbered.
Michael has AIDS. He is one of Backus' clients at the Wyandotte County AIDS Project.
Michael is one of the reasons Backus, Kansas City, Kan., senior in social welfare, isn't afraid of death anymore.
"Death doesn't scare me," Backus said. "It's the pain and what they go through before they die that scares me."
Tarita Triplett, Hazelwood, Mo., senior, knows Backus' days with Michael are numbered, too. Class is almost over, and both women will graduate in May. They have worked at the Kansas City, Kan., YWCA for two semesters to fulfill the 560 hours of practicum experience required for a bachelor in social welfare.
The hours can be fulfilled with an agency such as the Social and Rehabilitative Services, or within the School of Social Welfare, assisting professors with research.
"It will be hard to leave because I know I will never see some of them again." Backus said.
Mark Stowell, director of the the Wyandotte County AIDS Project, said having the two students work for him was risky because they were not permanent employees. He said clients were often reminded that Backus and Triplett would be leaving.
"We talked about closure all along, so that the clients don't feel like we're pulling the rug out from under them," he said.
But those aren't the only worries connected with working on the project.
Triplett said that some of her friends and family thought she was in danger of contracting HIV from working with the clients. Even she was worried at first.
She said that she wanted to work for the AIDS Project because she knew her clients would come from a variety of backgrounds. Most of the people who ask for help are poor, but that is where the similarity ends, Triplett said.
"They come from all different backgrounds. Some of them are on probation, some are drug abusers and alcoholics," she said. "They are young and old, men, women and little children. Some of them are very open about it, and some don't tell anyone."
The work Backus and Triplett do sounds benign.
They connect clients with services offered by other agencies, such as transportation, medical care and counseling. Right now, the project helps 49 clients, the largest case load of any of the AIDS projects in Kansas. But, clerical as it may sound, the job can be an emotional roller coaster.
Michael, whose last name could not be used because the AIDS Project guarantees confidentiality, said that the uncertainty was the hardest part about living with AIDS.
"I feel good one day, then I get sick one day, and I don't know if that is going to be the time I end up in the hospital," he said.
Early in April, one of Backus' clients did die. She said visiting him in the hospital when she knew he was dying was scary. She didn't know what to say.
"Part of me was praying he would die because of the pain he was going through, and his partner was suffering too. There was almost a sense of relief when he died." Backus said.
BETHELL & DAVID
Stowell said that even though the death was sad, it was a good experience for Backus because social workers often confront death. He said that he had even started to enjoy going to funerals.
"It allows me to meet part of a client that I never got to meet," he said. "It's kind of neat to hear about them, how they were when they were whole and not ill."
But for now, death does not weigh heavily on Backus' mind. Saying goodbye to clients while they are still alive does.
"You get really close to them. They are the neatest, neatest people," she said. "I have one client who has the best outlook. He lives for each day. He has made me see that I've got to enjoy what I have now."
Ingrid Backus, Kansas City, Kan. senior, left, and Tarita Triplette, Hazelwood, Mo., senior have worked at the Kansas City, Kan., YWCA for two semesters helping people infected with the AIDS virus. Paul Katz
Backus said sometimes it was difficult not to get angry with some of the clients who still engaged in risky behavior or did not take care of their health. She knows they will die, but she also knows their lives can be prolonged if they take care of themselves.
"There are some who are alcoholics, and alcohol weakens the immune system. You want to shake them and say, 'You know what? You're getting closer to your death!'"
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
A MODEL OF THE HISTORIC CITY OF NEW YORK
Paul Kotz /
KANSAN
ABOVE: Backus and Trippelt look over the handwork of one of their clients who constructed a train set in his apartment. Part of their duties include traveling to clients' homes to discuss problems and evaluate their progress.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
RIGHT: Backus and Triplet have shared their client experiences with each other to help each other and learn from their 560 hours of practicum experience.
KU
Memorial award is established
KU student learns to cope with brother's death.
The Minority Engineering Program in the School of Engineering presented an award in memory of Hermann Luke Friday night at the Burge Union.
The award was given to Gerardo Prado, Fenton, Mo., senior. Prado is an honors student majoring in architectural engineering and a member of the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers.
"The Herman Luke Award is our way of honoring one of our own," said Florence Boldridge, director of the Minority Engineering Program.
Boldridge said that Lucke epitomized high academic standards and quality. She and students in the program decided to create an award in Lucke's name to be given to a student who embodied those things, she said.
Hermann Lucke was an honors student in physics and was named outstanding senior in physics last semester. He was also a member of the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers and the Hispanic American Leadership Organization.
Karin Lucke recovering from December tragedy
By Paul Todd Kansan staff writer
Herman Lucke Sr. still goes to work every day. Annie Lucke still sets the table at dinner time. And Karen Lucke goes to rehabilitation for two hours three times a week.
For the Lucke family, life still consists of comfortable routines.
But sometimes, forgetting just for a moment. Annie sets the table for four.
"I still wait for him," she says. "I don't have words — he was my son. We had wonderful communication. We all loved each other so much."
For Karin Lucke and her parents, life is slowly returning to normal. It has been almost four months since Hermann Lucke Jr. died in a car accident in Chile. The Luckes were visiting family in Santiago, Chile, last December. When Hermann died, he was a senior at KU majoring in physics and engineering.
Karin, a KU junior at the time, has almost fully recovered from the broken neck and leg she suffered in the same accident that killed her brother during Christmas break.
Last week was the first since Karin returned from Chile that she didn't have to go to therapy every day. Most of her therapy is speech training — not for her voice, but for her memory. There is a period of time from last summer until January that she can't remember, including the trip to Chile.
"To 'see it is reality," she says. "I've just had to believe it."
She remembers all the
Karin Lucke
people she knew before last summer and has occasional flashes of events that happened during the amnesia period.
Karin's doctors say that time will narrow the gap in her memory. But as that gap approaches the accident, she is somewhat frightened.
"I'm not really concerned with remembering the accident," she says. "But some things I would like to know, especially the last great days with my brother."
"I have to keep hope to keep on living without getting into a depression — he was not at all a quitter," she says.
"I feel like the amnesia is a protection for me," she says. "Because I can't remember, I have to work hard."
But Karin said the memory loss could be God's way of keeping her safe.
Karin plans to return to KU in the fall. She is
already taking French lessons — her fourth language — from a family friend, and will probably enroll in a summer class at the University of Missouri at Kansas City. She hopes to take three classes and to continue playing the viola in the KU Orchestra this fall. She has played the viola some already, but her arm is still weak.
But she has yet to decide if she will live alone at KUlike she used to.
"Last year, I never really was alone because my brother was always there," she says.
Annie Lucke says the family's faith has helped it through the tragedy.
"We've gotten a lot of support from our church family," she says. "We are Christian people, and we know he's in a good place."
Herman Lucke Sr., who graduated from KU in 1989, said that the family's church sent a pastor and his wife to Chile after the accident to support them and that the church family still helps them cope.
"Our church kept sending strength over every kind of distance," he says.
But Karin kept the family going most of all.
"Just the fact that Karin was miraculously saved," he says. "Just the fact that we had to take care of her."
Annie Lucke took a leave of absence from her job to be home with Karin. She missed her daughter, she said, because she loves her company.
"Ive rededicated my life to Karin now," she
says
Returning to Chile, though, is something the Luckes don't often think about.
Their roots are here now, in America, but many of their relatives still live in Chile.
"I have family there — my parents," Annie says. "It's going to be difficult, but I know I will go back again someday."
Herman Lucke Sr. said the family had to resist the temptation to go into seclusion. They try to share as much as they can with people, and to talk about Hermann Lucke Jr.
People all over the world have been praying for the Luckes, he says, especially friends and family here in America.
"We have so many blessings," he says. "That, in the end, is what really matters. There's a normal temptation to try to forget, but we don't and we'll probably never forget."
For Karin Lucke, the past few months have cleared up questions she had about life and death.
"Mostly I've come to realize how mortal we are," she says. "Because of my faith, that realization is like a solid rock. Before I would probe and question, but now I am so thankful that I know where Hermann is."
Now the challenge lies not in her weakened arms and legs or her partial memory, but someplace else.
"The challenge is that we all will reunite," she says. "It seemed so long, but not really now. I just can't wait to see him again."
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4A
Monday, May 1, 1995
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE: GTA UNION
Unionization vote prompts petty response from Topeka
Kansas Senator Gus Bogina recently led the drive to cut the 3.5 percent salary increase for Kansas GTAs out of the omnibus appropriations bill, employing an impressive use of flawed logic and juvenile pettiness.
Legislators argued that GTAs were overpaid and that faculty members at KU needed the raises more than their assistants, citing statistics that show GTAs at KU make 101 percent of what GTAs at peer institutions make, whereas faculty members make only 89 percent.
This line of argument is flawed for two reasons. First, the Legislature's idea of salary increases as a zero-sum game is wrong. GTA salary increases don't take anything away from the faculty increases. Secondly, if legislators really believed faculty salaries should have priority, why didn't they give faculty a larger pay increase when they killed the GTA
Sen. Bogina has made no secret about his opposition to a union in the past, and now it looks as if he intends to follow through.
increase?
Certain Legislators obviously are more concerned with hurting GTAs than helping other faculty. Unfortunately, many administrators correctly predicted a hostile response from the Legislature if GTAs succeeded in unionizing. However, this response may indicate why GTAs need an organized voice in Topeka. Although this board has voiced its opposition to unionization, now GTAs have unionized all parties involved must deal with the decision professionally.
If the Legislature intends to retain its hostile attitude toward GTAs at KU, the lobbying power of the union will become even more important.
STANTON SHELBY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
THE ISSUE: AMERICORPS
Programs shouldn't be cut without fair examination
in their effort to make effective budget cuts, the House has voted to slash the financing for 1995 AmeriCorps, the program the Clinton administration has called the new domestic Peace Corps. However, the House made this decision before they even heard one word of testimony from the leaders of the program.
The vote called for the financing of AmeriCorps to be cut to $160 million, an amount that Eli Segal, chief executive officer for the Corporation for National Service, said would virtually destroy the program
The House Republicans need to realize that just because something is not included in their Contract with America does not mean that it is an ineffective program that should be eliminated. If they wish to continue to have support from their constituents, they must be able to prove they have carefully examined the needs of every program before they
Funding for AmeriCorps was cut by the House,but Congress should realize good programs exist outside of 'Contract'
decrease financing.
Although making cuts in the budget is important to Congress, it should be sure that programs that are meant to improve the quality of life in America are preserved. AmeriCorps, which allows students to use their education to gain experience through volunteer work, is one of these.
Segal is optimistic because AmeriCorps has received bipartisan support from the Senate. The Senate has restored most of the money for the program by setting financing at $470 million. For the sake of this program, let's hope the Senate prevails over the House.
And in the future, let's hope Congress makes a little more effort in examining a program before deciding its fate.
CRAIG LANG FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
OKLAHOMA CITY
ARIZONA
Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Oklahoma bombing is tiny compared to global images
Since the bombing of the federal office building in Oklahoma City, I have been glued to my television, watching rescue workers feverishly dig through piles of rubble, hoping against all hope for a miracle. I have become transfixed on the images of pain and anguish, and I have been moved.
The death, suffering and rubble shouldn't be shocking, but it is. After all, images of bombed buildings, dead or hurting children and grieving families really aren't new. They have been on the nightly news for years. These are the pictures that have captured my undivided attention.
I am not alone. Across America the bombing in Oklahoma City is the topic of conversation. Our hearts go out to those affected as we realize, in surprise, it could have happened in any of us.
Somehow some of us believed that the Midwest was encased in a protective bubble that made it more wholesome and protected than the rest of the country. We knew that really wasn't true, but it was the Norman Rockwellian notion to which we clung.
OKLAHOMA CITY
But the world is a place of balance. Even though it may be hard to believe without hindsight, something lost means something gained.
Pearl Harbors
OKLAHOMA CITY
While our Midwestern image of relative safety was blown to pieces by this bomb, we can still take something positive from the experience.
There are the obvious things, like a heightened sense of community or a healthier perspective of being content with the present. Then there are
NWKHYYMGNGBHCE
KANSAN STAFF
Bombing in war or peacetime isn't supposed to happen anywhere, but it does. It's justified in many ways, including politics, security or religion — it doesn't matter. Bombers always think they have a good reason for their actions.
While we are looking for logic from the chaos or reason in the madness of what happened, perhaps we can remember how cruel and cowardly bombing seems the next time we shrug it off in some distant corner of the world. After all, we are all human beings, each worth no more than the other. If even a few of us learn to value each other accordingly, then something good might grow out of tragedy.
HEATHER
KIRKWOOD
We tend not to react to the same events elsewhere because they happen to people caught up in struggle. "Isn't it a shame those people can't learn to get along," we say from the comfortable protection of our living rooms. We might publicly say we are sorry about all that is happening to them, but we really don't care. We just go on with our daily lives and forget, except for the few glimpses we get on television.
The danger is that we inadvertently blame the victims. We expect them to put up with this sort of thing all the time, and we blame them for the violence. Why is the Oklahoma bombing shocking? Because it wasn't supposed to happen to us, here in the peaceful Midwest. But why not?
might do to make ourselves safer. But there is one thing that has been missing from the radio talk shows and the dinner table discussions.
again or what we might do to make ourselves safer.
"I don't know what I'd do the first time someone wouldn't touch me because they knew that I had AIDS."
The Oklahoma City bombing, while horrible, is a relatively small blip on the radar of global, manmade death
destruction.
carnage, but I have realized this week how dangerous that idea is.
STAFF COLUMNIST
—Claire Henderson to her mother about her fear of being discriminated against.
JENNIFER PERRIER
Business manager
MARK MASTRO
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
Somehow we have been able to watch the pictures of Beirut, Baghdad and Sarajevo while eating dinner or talking about weekend plans. But we should ask ourselves why? Is it because those are pictures of far away places and Oklahoma is close to home, or is it something more?
We have watched the same things happening day after day for years, but those images never moved us like these have.
I thought it was a form of coping. It would be too emotionally draining to get caught up in all the world's
For me, Oklahoma might as well be on the other side of the earth. I don't have friends or family there, and I probably wouldn't go there. It's a place on a map or pictures on the news. So why is my psyche moved by pictures of bombing in Oklahoma and not the rest of the world?
"She would be nowhere without the cue signs she's just a face." Devon Haase, Lawrence junior, about Ricki Lake.
Heather Kirkwood is a Wichita junior in journalism.
— Erika Oliver, off-campus senator, after winning the Outstanding Student Senator award about speaking her mind.
"Either you can accept things the way they are, or you can try to change them."
"The rock diva doesn't play well in Lawrence. This is the incubation stage of the rock world."
Business Staff
QUOTES OF THE WEEK
— Brett Moisman, owner of the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
Campus mgr ...Beth Pols
Regional mgr ...Chris Branaman
National mgr ...Shelly Falvale
Coop mgr ...Kelly Connealy
Special Sections mgr ..Brigg Bloomquist
Production mgrs ..JJ Cook
Kim Hyman
Marketing director ..Mindy Blum
Promotions director ..Justin Frosolone
Creative director ..Dan Gier
Classified mgr ..Lisa Kuieth
"They're not the fastest animal in the world, but when they start going after you and digging you out. you're at their mercy."
the practical things, such as how we might prevent this from happening
STEPHEN MARTINO
Editor
DENISE NEIL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH
Technology coordinator
Editors
Tom Swearingen, director of exhibits at the Natural History Museum, about badgers.
News...Carlos Tejada
Planning...Mark Martin
Editorial...Matt Gowen
Associate Editorial...Heather Lawrenz
Campus...David Wilson
Colleen McCain
Sports...Gerry Fey
Associate Sports...Ashley Miller
Photo...Jarratt Lane
Featured Photo...Kurt Zits
Features...Nathan Olanon
Design...Brian James
Freelance...Suan White
—Compiled by Kansan staff the week of April 24
STAFF COLUMNIST
NICOLAS SHUMP
After spending semesters in classes with
stand what sustains these extra-ordinary individuals throughout the years. And an even more pressing question is why did these same people try so hard to discourage me from seeking a similar vocation.
And finally, I would like to offer general thanks to all of my teachers throughout the years who have seen some talent in a shy and often lazy student. Without their encouragement, I never would have been in a position to write these words.
Finally, I would just like to mention all of the professors who have inspired me in my own choice to pursue the teaching profession. They are in no certain order: Professor Jan Kozma, Associate Professor Robert Anderson, Associate Professor Michael Shaw, Assistant Professor Thomas Tuozo, Professor Robert Antonio, Assistant Professor Shirley Hill, Assistant Professor Sherry Velasco, Professor Robert Blue, Professor Richard Kay, Assistant Professor Leonardo Villalon, Assistant Professor Beverly Mack, Associate Professor Cheryl Lester, Professor Robin Schulze, Professor Emeritus George Wedge, Assistant Professor Richard Colyer, Professor William Scott, and Professor Elizabeth Schultz, who has fought tirelessly and valiantly for the Comparative Literature Program.
these unsung heroes, I knew that this was my calling. Yet it was these same people I wanted to emulate who were trying to discourage me. Still, behind their admonitions was a hopeful glint in their eyes, which betrayed their secret wish that I ignore their advice. In their heart, they hoped that I would join their ranks. My experience with professors has only reinforced my decision to pursue my vocation, perhaps as a form of gratitude.
I would like to take this time to thank them for their service, which, as we should now realize, is not done for financial gain.
Nicolas Shump is a Lawrence senior in comparative literature.
I have, all my life, wanted to under-
Foremost is Professor Norman Yetman, who was vigilant in his insistence that I return to school. He then served as my adviser and also gave me my first teaching job, for which he is extraordinarily grateful. I would also like to thank Assistant Professor Juan Velasco, who has shown me a path for post-baccalaureate studies. Velasco is an exceptional scholar and dedicated teacher. Two other professors who have been friends and mentors through my time here are Professors Roberta Johnson and Ted Johnson. I will cherish the mentoring I have received from both of them. I would also like to thank Rocio Muñoz-Dunbar and Rhonda Lewis of the Dean's Scholars program for the four semesters that we have spent together. I know that this will be valuable for me in graduate school. I also would like to thank Dean James Muyksen and Professor Kathleen McJuskey-Fawell for their commitment to the Dean's Scholars program, and thanks to Associate Professor Beverly Davenport-Sypher for continuing their work.
Future teacher encouraged by example set by professors
I can think of few professions as noble as teaching. The rewards are few. Spending long hours poring over a stack of papers is hardly romantic. So then, what possesses people to devote themselves to such a life of thankless anonymity?
MIXED MEDIA
By Jack Ohman
IF "JEOPARDY" MERGED WITH "NIGHTLINE"...
...I'M SORRY,
MR. SECRETARY.. THAT
HAS TO BE PHRASED IN
THE FORM OF A QUESTION...
All Rights Reserved.
ABC NEWS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 1, 1900
5A
KANSAS RIVER ACCESS
CONSTRUCTED BY
KANSAS FISH & BAMF
A flammable gas that can be fatal if in air-borne concentrations of 3,000 parts per million. Ammonia is irritating to the eyes, nose and respiratory tracts in smaller doses.
Ammonia —
The pollutants: Examples of released chemicals and their effects
A lethal kind of alcohol that can cause blindness in smaller doses.
An extremely flammable and cancer-causing compound that burns the skin and eyes and can depress the central nervous system — the most dangerous of all pollutants released.
Amounts released in Douglas County in 1993:
Ammmonia: 1,317,750 pounds
Ethylene oxide: 3,760 pounds
Methanol
508,843 pounds
The Dirty Half-Dozen
Lawrence-area industries-cleanup or cover-up?
Continued from Page 1A
said Jacquelyn Ferguson, EPA Region 7 environmental engineer. "For the business, it is like throwing away raw materials; so it is in the business's best interest to conserve chemicals."
Brian James / KANSAN
Also, Ferguson said many companies changed their processes, and now use chemicals that are not on the required reporting list.
The lists also made pollution bad public relations.
Karl Birns, KU professor and former Kansas Department of Health and Environment employee, said public pressure was a factor in reductions, particularly with large companies, because the reports became a yardstick by which the community could measure a company's efforts.
"It brought things out publicly and allowed companies to see that they were having problems," he said.
"The law increased their level of visibility." Bims said. "The companies wanted the ability to reduce emissions to get out of reporting, and become less visible."
Allan Holiday, technical supervisor for Farmland's Lawrence plant, agreed.
"We lowered our TRI emissions because we wanted to do it," he said. "And improve our image if we can."
They modified the way they operate equipment, and quit selling a dry nitrogen fertilizer because the drying process left behind polluted water which had to be drained off as waste.
"The TRI program gives you specific goals to shoot for," Holiday said. "That's what the EPA saw and we saw."
Because of its efforts, Farmland received two awards from the EPA. One was for sharing a new cleanup system with competitors around Kansas and the United States.
Several Douglas County companies have been participating in a joint effort to clean up their emissions since 1990. About six large Douglas County polluters are enrolled in the 33/50 program, a program to voluntarily reduce their toxic emissions by 33 percent by this year and by 50 percent by 1995.
Farmland, Inc. is ahead of schedule, but another participating company, Davol Corp., seemed to be sliding backwards in the 1993 data.
Their toxic emissions, mostly ethylene oxide and ethylene glycol, two of the nastier chemicals on the list, jumped from 22,000 pounds in 1990 to 170,000 in 1993 — an increase of almost 800 percent.
But in 1983, about 135,000 pounds of Davol's ethylene glycol were never released into the environment, and were transferred to a recycling center. Ethylene glycol can be used and reused by corporations for different processes.
Chloroflourocarbons, or CFCs, and ethylene oxide — two chemicals which accounted for the rest of Davol's emissions — have in fact been
reduced steadily in accordance with the 33/50 program.
Dan Scheck, plant manager for Davol, said the company made costly changes to eliminate its need for CFCs and added acid-based scrubbers to its plant to reduce the amount of ethylene oxide it needed.
"At that time our production volume increased tenfold," he said.
He said the chemical was not a suspected carcinogen.
But Scheck disagreed with toxicologists from the University of Kansas Medical Center on just how dangerous ethylene oxide was.
"Of the epidemiological studies that I have seen, none of them support that," he said.
Between 1990 and 1993, FMC Corp. did not make significant reductions in toxic emissions. Paul Studebaker, FMC environmental manager, said that since 1993 the plant has added a scrubber, and that he plans to reduce methanol emissions.
Problems with TRI reporting
T
T the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act has some holes in it.
The law does not outlaw the toxic chemicals, it merely requires that companies report their emissions. That means a major spill by a company of one of the chemicals on the reporting list would
not be punishable under the law, but failing to report the spill could get them in real trouble.
Companies report the emissions with no independent intervention. And many companies don't even bother to report emissions. The punishment for non-compliance is nothing more than a small fine the equivalent of a mouthwashing with some toxic soap.
Karl Birns, lecturer in environmental studies and former manager of the Kansas Right-to-Know program of the KDHE, said the program was "soft reporting," and the gov-
sions being emitted from year to year. The rest come from non-manufacturing companies — like farm fertilizers that pollute the Kansas River.
Under the law, companies with fewer than 10 employees are not required to report their emissions, and companies using less than 10,000 pounds of a chemical on the reporting list are not required to report at all, he said.
He said smaller community companies such as self-service car washes, auto customizers and metal finishers held and emitted toxic chemicals, but not enough to report to the EPA.
"That's not a real major problem, at least that we are aware of," she said.
But, Ferguson said, most companies do report as required.
The maximum fine for not reporting emissions is $25,000, but Ferguson said the EPA would rarely go to that level.
"The companies don't want that against them, especially with the public knowing," she said. "We consider the size of the company and their ability to pay."
But the EPA could fill some of the holes in the law.
Ferguson said the EPA was concentrating on adding chemicals to the reporting requirements. As a result, 286 new chemicals have been added to the required reporting list for 1995.
She said that adding businesses other than manufacturers would be the next step in making the law more solid.
Service-type businesses, dry cleaners, mining companies and local municipalities, such as the Lawrence wastewater treatment plants, could be
"It's a 'Have you stopped beating yourwife?' kind of question."
Birns also said the toxic emissions on TRIs accounted for only about 10 percent of all emis-
"Unless something led the government to believe the company's figures were not correct, they would just throw the numbers into the computer," Birns said.
ernment had no way to know whether a company was reporting accurately or not.
KarlBarms
former manager of the Kansas Right-to-Know program, on why it is difficult to assess improvement in pollution management
Baruch has become an eminently monitored by the Clean Air Act and have to report some emissions to the PPA.
Jean Waters, air toxic engineer with the Pollution Prevention Institute at Kansas State University, said businesses that emit more than 10 tons of a certain chemical or 25 tons of a mix of chemicals would have to get a permit from the KDHE for emissions. "They have to pay to pollute," she said.
underthese standards
Has pollution in and around Lawrence lessened, or are there dangers hidden inside factory canisters, hidden drain pipes and farmers' fields?
"Data is not really available to give a quantitative answer to that kind of question," said Karl Birns. "It's a 'Have you stopped beating your wife?' kind of question."
But do
n't drink the water.
T the Kansas River slips through town quietly. It looks healthy enough from the bridges that cross it, but everybody knows not to drink the water.
By Paul Todd Kansan staff writer
Whv?
Kansas waterways are in a sorry state
Farmland Inc. still dumps diethanolamine, ammonia and ammonium nitrate into the Kansas River. Fact is, Farmland accounts
the amount of pollutants dumped into the Kansas and Wakarusa rivers has not shown the same reductions as the air around Lawrence.
In fact, the Kansas River is in sad shape.
And although the total amount of reported toxic releases into the water around Lawrence lessened in three years, the decline was not nearly as drastic as the decrease in air pollution.
for all the pollutants dumped into the river that were reported to the EPA in 1993 - almost 660,000 pounds of toxic chemicals.
Fish from the river can be consumed only in very limited quantities because of pollution. Chlordane, a chemical pesticide no longer used by farmers, is still in the river in high quantities, and it accumulates in fish tissue.
But the chemicals that Farmland dumps into the Kansas River are not what makes late-night dips in the river a health hazard.
According to a 1994 Kansas Department of Health and Environment report, 97 percent of the streams in Kansas do not "support all designated uses," which include domestic water supply, recreation and aquatic life support. The main reasons for this are dangerous chemicals from farming, industrial discharge and feedlots, and suspended and dissolved sediments in the river because of dredging and damming.
The Kansas River is only an indicator of the water quality problems in Kansas.
Atrazine, a fertilizer, also collects in high quantities in the river.
"It ought to be a major source of embarrassment for the state," he said. "And it ought to make them angry and demand change."
that because 97 percent of the water in Kansas did not meet designated use requirements under the Clean Water Act, the Council on State Governments has ranked Kansas 50th in the nation for overall water quality.
Bill Craven, state lobbyist for the Kansas Natural Resource Council and the Kansas Sierra Club, said
And if matters were not murky enough, on April 18, American Rivers, a national river conservation organization, placed the Kansas River on its list of the 10 most endangered rivers in America.
Craven was present to hand out the dishonors in Burcham Park, next to the Kaw.
Total emissions from the top pollutants
Below is a list of the companies that released a large amount of pollution into the environment in Douglas county from 1990 to 1993. Farmland Industries, Inc. released the most pollutants of any company during that time.
( in lbs. )
Four million
4,133,610
93.5 percent
Famland Industries Inc.
Three million
3,909,029
90.9 percent
2,096,863
74.7 percent
Two million
2,456,680
85.2 percent
One million
The other major polluters ...
(in lbs.) 1990 1991 1992 1993
225,000
Davol, Inc.
200,000
175,000
150,000
FMC Corp.
125,000
100,000
75,000
50,000
Hallmark Cards, Inc.
25,000 (0 lbs.)
(in lbs.) 1990 1991 1992 1993
225,000
200,000
Davol, Inc.
175,000
150,000 FMC Corp.
125,000
100,000
75,000
Hallmark Cards, Inc.
50,000
25,000 (0 lbs.)
Brian James / KANSAN
You can breathe the air ...
The air above Mount Oread is actually pretty clean, at least by Environmental Protection Agency and Kansas Department of Health and Environment standards.
The KDHE, however, does not have a conclusive air quality report on just how healthy the air is.
A drive down Kansas Highway 10, at 10, can look
By Paul Todd Kansan staff writer
drive down prairies night way 10 at night can look like a scene from a Sherlock Holmes movie. But all that fog seeping from the Farmland plant is just that — fog.
"I is the air safe and everybody could breathe it with no effect." Greg Crawford, public relations officer for the department of health and environment, asked.
The answer is probably not, but only people with specific problems with certain chemicals in small doses could be affected by Lawrence's air he said.
Karl Rozman, professor of pharmacy and toxicology at KU Medical Center, sits on the national committee that determines healthy limits for chemicals.
He said ammonia, the No.1 pollutant in the air around Lawrence, was dangerous only in large doses.
The body makes a lot of ammonia anyway, and it can process ammonia much easier than other chemicals, he said.
"The threshold limit value is 25 parts per million," he said. "Nobody should be exposed to a higher value than that."
The threshold value limit is the amount of the chemical that a person could be exposed to for eight hours a day, seven days a week without harmful effect.
Rozman said the threshold for ethylene oxide is only 1 part per million. The chemical has caused cancer in laboratory animals and is a suspected human carcinogen. If air or water had a large amount of ethylene oxide mixed in, and a person breathed or drank it, it would be like drinking antifreeze. Rozman said.
Ethylene oxide, produced mostly by Davol, Inc., is much more toxic.
But the 4,000 pounds of ethylene oxide that Davol emitted last year into the air is not even close to a toxic amount when released into air and wind during an entire year, he said.
Lawrence is no Denver when it comes to air pollution. Douglas County's problems come at ground—and water—level.
Air and water pollution in Douglas County. 1990-93
990
3. 5 million
[Total amount in brackets]
3. 0 million
[3,310,118]
1992
2. 5 million 2.0 million
1993
Air pollution
1. 5 million
Water pollution
[2,335,745]
1. 0 million
[959,639]
[652,145] [659,600]
[817,468]
500. 000
[817,468]
Brian James / KANSAN
6A
Monday, May 1, 1995
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Great Gifts
for the Grad!
• Watches
• Striking Silver
• Jewelry
• Bracech & Loomb
• Barbat Swatchcases
• Aviator & Horse
• Snowbell Gloves
• Ringer Pops
• Leather Bag & Bucket
• Leather Belt & Suspenders
• Skin Care
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841-7226
925 IOWA
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Cleopatra Is Having Her Spring Sale
Get Your Last Minute Spring Fashions at Cleopatra's Closet
• All Swimsuits 25% Off
• Selected Spring Merchandise 20%-30% Off
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This is the universal sign for peace-of-mind.
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KU student helps organize benefit at the Granada
Bands help bomb victims
By Brian Vandervliet
Kansan staff writer
Todd Simms hopes that four Lawrence bands and a crowd will bring help to bombing victims in Oklahoma City.
Simms, Leavenworth junior, heard about the Oklahoma City disaster while listening to his car radio. Like many students, he was disheartened.
But rather than sit by and watch CNN updates, Simms decided on a plan of action. He has organized a benefit show with the help of four local bands: Blueshead Beggars, Rhinoceros, Lonesome Hound dogs, and The Carson Shoeffy.
"They're all good bands, and they're all really good guys just for doing the show and donating their time." Simms said.
The show will begin at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. Tickets will cost $5, with proceeds going to the American Red Cross of Oklahoma City.
"This is my way of helping out, and I'm sure there are other college students that feel the same way," he said.
With the help of friends, Simms has spent the last two weeks calling bands, pinning up fliers and collecting donations for a raffle from local businesses. Compact discs, dinner
Oklahoma City EXPLOSION
How to help
Four local bands will be playing a benefit concert to help the Red Cross of Oklahoma City.
The acts:
Blueshead Beggars Rhinoceros
Lonesome Hounddogs
The Carson Sheoffy
Where and when:
The show begins at 7:30 p.m.
tomorrow at the Canada Thea-
ter, 1.020 Massachusetts
St. Tickets cost $5.
"It's a chance for a lot of people to help. And they'll get something out of it. It's not like we're going out there with a can saying, 'Give $5, please.'" Todd Simms benefitorganizer
certificates and a futon will be given away during the show.
"Everyone we've run into has met us more than halfway," he said.
Yesterday, Seth Winnerman, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, pinned filers for the event around campus and Massachusetts Street. He said that promoting the event had been fun and that he was glad to help.
Andy Nelson, bass player for Rhinoceros, formerly the Which Doctors? said that the band volunteered because the show was a chance for
it to play in addition to helping a good cause.
"Those people need support as much as anyone," he said. He added, "The Granada is a righteous place to play."
Simms said that he hoped to raise about $700 from the event.
"I think it'll be a great show," Simms said. "It's a chance for a lot of people to help. And they'll get something out of it. It's not like we're out there with a can saying, 'Give $5 please.'"
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 1.1995
7A
Harassment a problem abroad
By Ileana Perez-Burgos Special to the Kansan
Nicky David, Cucamanga, Calif., senior, and two friends were waiting for the bus after watching a movie in Besancon, France, when two cars slowed down in front of them. One stopped half a block away, and before the group knew it, a man was masturbating in front of them.
David yelled to her friends to leave and began dragging them to the central bus stop.
David's experience is not unusual. Mary Elizabeth Debicki, director of Study Abroad, said more students in France have complained of harassment this year than ever before. About half of the 21 students in France reported harassment incidents, ranging from a professor using offensive language in class to catcalls and being followed on the street.
"We need to encourage students to look at the cultural differences more than we've ever done before," she said.
Debicki said some students were not prepared for certain cultural differences and as a result were not
taking necessary precautions.
"Students studying in France are not used to men following them on the street and speaking to them and flirting with them," she said. "They're not equipped to deal with this. They think the advances are far more dangerous than the person giving the advances."
Students' concerns were serious enough that program assistant Laura Leonard traveled to France in December to talk to the students about their security worries. Study Abroad also revised the orientation information in order to better prepare those students leaving in September.
"France is not Disneyland or a safer place because violent crime is lower," Leonard said. "We want students to have realistic expectations."
Standing in front of students at their first study abroad orientation on Saturday, Leonard suggested using the buddy system.
"We don't recommend that you stand alone in a phone booth at 3 o'clock in the morning to make up for the time difference between the U.S. and where you are," she said.
"If you're going to be there, drag somebody out of bed to be there with you."
Leonard said the group leaving in September was better prepared to deal with harassment and crime, in part because of suggestions from the students in France now.
A crime and safety section was added to the France orientation packet. Precautions were included in the housing and transportation information.
However, the students never mentioned harassment or asked questions about it. Leonard said that at this point, students were concerned with the things that were going to be new — not with situations they also worry about in the United States.
"They don't often think that perhaps harassment will take a different form in another country," Leonard said.
She said that students who weren't comfortable with the language might feel threatened by someone's tone and not know how to respond.
"Pay attention to your personal security because if you don't, nobody will," she said.
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The KU Chapter of Amnesty International wishes to thank the following businesses and organizations for their donations and support during our Write-A-Thon and throughout the year.
Recycled Sounds Glass Onion Fifi's Java Dive Terra Nova Bookshop Natural Way The Bay Leaf Recycled Music Center Arizona Trading Company Rick's Bike Shop Escumenical Christian Ministri
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Internet simplifies the job hunt
By Robert Allen
Kanean staff writer
Job hunting on the Internet has been made easier for KU students, and they don't even need e-mail accounts.
The University Placement Center in the Burge Union has collected various job-hunting sites on the World Wide Web and put them together into one, easily accessible source.
Kansan staff writer
Mike Heuring, assistant director of the center, spends hours every week surfing the 'net and looking for more job information sites to add to KUfacts, a campus-wide information system.
"I want people to know that our office has put this together and linked all the sites for them," he said. "It already exists on this campus."
To find this wealth of career infor-
After entering KUfacts, select Departmental Information from the main menu. Next, select University Placement Center (UPC). Included in the center's information are places to find jobs and job search information on-line.
"Whenever I show this stuff to students, they go nuts," Heuring said. "Once they realize this exists, it opens a world to them."
Using the various menu selections, students can search for jobs by city or state, by occupation, by company, by major or by using
many other criteria. Information on how to conduct interviews, create resumes or write cover letters also is available. Students also can search for internships on-line.
mation, students can use either their home computers and modems or use the computer center's equipment. KUfacts can be accessed through a web browser such as Netscape or Mosaic, both of which are available at the computer center. It also can be accessed through an e-mail account by typing 'KUfacts' at the prompt.
“It’s a lot more convenient because I've also looked through the papers,” she said. “The process is a lot easier on the computers because it's all there in front of you.”
Michelle Stewart, Lenexa senior, said she preferred the ease of computer searching to old methods.
Heuring said that employers were advertising on the Internet more frequently.
"Employers are saying, 'Why do we need to spend so much money on recruitment when employees can come to us?" he said. "We've seen a drop in the number of recruiters that come to campus. You can reach millions of people with one ad."
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8 PM Saturday April 29: Vote for "Maggie May" by Jennifer Bradley, or "Birds of
8 PM Sunday April 30:
Vote for "Maggie May" by Jennifer Bradley, or "Birds of Passage" by Kevin King. Directed by Ron Wilson. Vote for "The Wallpaper" by Crystal McWhirt, or "Distant Tremors" by Caran Snitz. Directed by omofolabo Ajayi-Soyinka. The two winning babies get paired in one final performance.
8 PM Monday May 1:
ALL PERFORMANCES AT 100 SMITH HALL — ADMISSION FREE
8A
Monday, May 1, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
RUA
Jarrett Lane / KANSAN
ABOVE: More than 8,000 people filled the northwest lawn of Campanile Hill to participate in the Day on the Hill concert yesterday.
ABOVE RIGHT: A box of ear plugs rests in the grass inside the barricade at the Day on the Hill concert. Several concertgoers in "the pit" wore ear plugs to protect their hearing from the loud music.
RIGHT: Thousands of people gather on the northwest lawn of Campanile hill to hear headliner Matthew Sweet and several other area bands.
HILL: 'A great time for a free concert'
Continued from Page 1A
started sweating and having a good time and not caring, " he said.
Brad Burke, Topeka sophomore, and Steve English, Lawrence resident, also found an innovative way to keep warm during the event.
They brought a large, brown-and-yellow-flowered couch to Day on the Hill.
"One of the guys brought it into the lot with his truck, and we carried it up." Burke said.
Burke said that the combination of the couch and the tarps over it made for a very warm seat.
"I think it's a great time for a free concert." Burke said.
Plesser said that he was happy with the turnout.
"With it being moved to a Sunday to a new location, we were unsure about the kind of crowd we would have." he said.
Day on the Hill has taken place south of the stadium in previous years.
Two people were carried away in stretchers during the show after being injured in the mosh nit.
Plesser said that other than the injuries, the biggest problems that people faced was the loss of pagers and keys.
THE
YOUNG
LIVE
ON
CHANGE
Student Union Activities coordinates and finances the majority of the event. Other KU organizations that contributed included Student Senate, the Board of Class Officers and the Association of University Residence Halls.
Lisa Perry/ KANSAN
"It was cold at first, and then I started sweating and having a good time and not caring."
Ernie Locke
lead singer for Tenderloin
A
Edmee Rodriguez / KANSAN
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Election fills SenEx posts; Faculty, students to govern
Kansan staff report
New members of the University Senate Executive Committee were elected last week.
The faculty members,were elected by the University Council, and the student members were elected by Student Senate.
Alan Black, professor of architecture and urban design, has been elected president of the University Council and University Senate for 1995-96.
Alan Pierce, non-traditional senator, was reelected vice president of the University Council and University Senate.
Jack Davidson, professor of physics and astronomy, will serve as chairman for the Senate Executive Committee and the Faculty Executive Committee for the 1995-96 fiscal year. Stevie Case, residential senator, was elected vice chairwoman of the Senate Executive Committee.
Other faculty members of SenExare:
Bob Minor, religious studies
Kathleen Neeley, libraries
Bob Nunley, geography
Lloyd Sponholtz, history Student members are:
Kim Cocks, student body president
Jason Angilan, graduate student senator
Grey Montgomery, Nunemaker senator
University Council is made up of 99 faculty members, who serve three-year overlapping terms, and 12 students. Six faculty members and three student members from University Council make up the Senate Executive Committee, or SenEx, which sets the agendas for meetings of University Council and University Senate.
The chairman of SenEx ultimately is responsible for the governance system. SenEx also is responsible for writing charges and appointing faculty to University Senate, Faculty Senate and University Council committees.
Tuition bills due in August
Kansan staff report
A reminder from the Office of the Comptroller.
Bills for the fall semester's tuition and fees will be mailed by the Comptroller's Office in mid-July. Payment must be received by August 1.
Students can drop payment off in person or mail it. If students mail the bill, however, it must be postmarked by July 28.
Students have two options.
They can either pay tuition and fees in full by the August 1 deadline, or they can pay a $250 deposit plus a $10 service fee by August 1 and pay the rest later.
Students who choose to pay the
deposit must pay the rest of their bill on either August 17 or 18 in the fifth floor of the Kansas Union. The hours will be 9:30 a.m to 3 p.m. both days.
If the bill is not paid by then, the student's enrollment will be dropped, their $250 deposit will be forfeited, and they will lose their optional fees, which pay for sports tickets, bus passes and yearbooks. Students will have to go through late enrollment once the bill is settled.
Also, students who do not pay anything by Aug. 1 will have their enrollment dropped and lose their optional fees.
All tuition and fee information can be found in the Fall 1995 Timetable of Classes.
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*Differed Apple Computer Loan offer begins June 2, 1995. No payment of principal or interest will be required for 90 days. Interest accruing during the 90-day period will be added to the principal and will bear interest which will be included in the repayment schedule. Monthly payment is an estimate based on a total loan amount of $24,931, which includes an annual purchase price of $21,468 and a 6.0% loan for the forgiveness of the G15 system shown above. The monthly payment for the total loan described above would have been $38. The interest variable is based on the commercial paper rate plus $3.5%. For example, the month of February 1995 had an interest rate of 15.7% with annual percentage rate (APR) of 3.53%. The monthly payment and the APR allow a 90-day differentiation of principal and interest as described above, and no other difference of principal and interest does not include state tax. Product prices, product availability, money and sales taxes may vary. The Apple Computer Loan has an 8-year term with no prepayment. It offers three options: Apple Performance, Powerbook, Laptower sales. Other Software to "be your power" are registered trademarks of Apple Computer. Powerbook Macintosh and iMac are trademarks of Apple Computer. All Apple products are designed to be accessible to individuals with disabilities. To learn more, visit us (US, LBS) or 800-763-8323/870 or 800-763-8323/870.
SOFTBALL Kansas split this weekend's series against Iowa State, ending the season with its first losing record since 1988. Page 2B
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, MAY 1. 1995
SECTION B
57 49
Jerel Harris / KANSAN
Kansas outside linebacker Chris Jones, No.49, and several other members of the defensive team race for the ball after quarterback Derick Milgrim fumbled during Saturday's Blue-White spring game.
Yearly battle marks end of spring practice
Blue-White game displays new offense
By Tom Erickson Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Glen Mason ended Saturday's Blue-White game with about 10 minutes left in the third quarter.
He wasn't angry or upset about the way the offense and defense played, but he said the team had done what he wanted it to. The Kansas defense beat the offense 58-46, using a point system created by Mason.
"Today's game was about the same as last year." Mason said. "We're not dealing with live play but instead different situations, I
wanted to keep playing, but we didn't want to risk any injuries.
Alate-game fumble by the offense helped the white team win. The defense got 14 points for the play, seven for causing the turnover and seven more for doing it inside the 20-vard line.
Mason said the players had been excited and intense on the field.
"They played a lot of good football," he said. "There was a lot of crisp, intense hitting, and the defense kept the quarterbacks on their toes."
Fans who braved the wind and rain got to see the Jayhawks' new passing game and 3-4 defense. Senior quarterback Mark Williams, named as Kansas' starter after spring practices, and junior Ben Rutz, a transfer from Northeastern Oklahoma A&M, spent most of the time running the new offense.
Two big changes that were evident immediately were the swing passes to the running backs and the
many plays called out of the shotgun position.
Williams said the more he worked with the new scheme, the better things got.
"I feel very confident," he said.
"I'm still trying to learn a new thing,
but things went well today."
Rutz, who has been adjusting to both a new school and a new offense, said being No. 2 to Williams was not much of a problem.
"There won't be any conflicts," he said. "We're both still learning, and there will be good competition for the starting job."
Senior running back LT. Levine finished with 76 rushing yards, including an impressive 49-yard run in the second quarter which set up a touchdown for the blue team. Levine also had two receptions for 14 yards.
But the most productive offensive player was junior June Henley, who scored three touchdowns and
grabbed three passes for 28 yards.
"Everybody is selling in to what we are doing," Henley said. "We want to go all the way. Our goal is to win the Big Eight Championship."
Henley praised the work of several of his teammates in spring practice.
"Both of our quarterbacks are good," he said. "Now we will wait and see who the starter will be. The linemen have come a long way from the first spring practice to today."
The new offense helps to make Henley and his teammates become more multi-dimensional players.
"The defense can't just key on me," Henley said. "We really spread everybody out."
Saturday's game was the 15th and final practice for Kansas this spring.
25 31
The players will continue to work out individually until the first day of fall practice on August 10.
Jerel Harris / KANSAN
Kansas freshman running back Julius Bruce takes a pitch and runs around the outside of the offensive line as defensive back Luke Richesson zeros in for the tackle.
BRIEFS
Kansas relay teams place high in Iowa
DES MOINES, Iowa — The Kansas relay teams turned a few heads this weekend at the Drake Relays, one of the stiffest competitions for collegiate athletes.
Kansas' success started with a fourth place finish in the men's 4x400-meter relay team — made up of Eugene Coleman, Nathen Hill, Brian Martin and Joe Pickett — in a seasonal-best time of 3 minutes; and Coleman, Hill, David Cooksey and Pierre Lisk took fourth in the 4x100-meters with a time of 40.68.
N
The women's 4x100-meter quartet — Diamond Williams, Latanya Holloway, Micheal's Edwards and Natasha Shafer — placed fourth with a time of 45.53 seconds. The women's sprint medley team of Shafer, Williams, Dawn Steele-Slavens and Kerri Woolheater also finished fourth with a time of 3:58.23.
Other notable finishers were Melissa Schwartz, sixth in the women's 1,500-meters; Shafer, third in the women's 100-meters; John Bazzoni, third in the men's pole vault; and Jeff Dieterich, sixth in the men's lavelin.
The Jayhawks' next meet is the Big Eight Conference championship on May 15-16 in Ames, Iowa.
Tennis coach wins award
"Anytime you get an award, it's exciting," Center said. "When I get an award, it is because the team is doing well. I have to credit them because their successes are my successes."
On Friday, Kansas men's tennis coach Michael Center was named the Region V Coach of the Year for the second straight year.
Kansas outfielder Brian Turney gets tagged into a second base by Nebraska shortstop Darin Petersen. Kansas won yesterday 11-4 but lost the three-game series 2-1.
Compiled from Korean staff reports.
Bingham chalks up 800th win
Games against Missouri and Iowa State were canceled because of rain, and Kansas lost the first two games in this weekend's series with the Cornhuskers.
Bingham, now 800-493-2 in his 22-year coaching career, said the milestone was not something to dwell on.
After three rainouts and two losses, Kansas coach Dave Bingham got his 800th career victory yesterday against Nebraska 11-4.
"Inow have 800 wins, but there are also almost 500 losses to go with it," he said. "I'm afraid that's just me. I enjoy the wins, but hate the losses. Getting 800 wins is not something you try for. Instead, you just try the best you can to win."
By Tom Erickson
After the Cornhuskers scored a single run in the first inning, the Jayhawks sent 12 men to the plate in the bottom half of the inning, scoring seven runs off Nebraska starter Alvie Shepherd (2-3). Shepherd, who is used primarily as a reliever, lasted just 2/3 of an inning but stayed in the game as the designated hitter.
Nebraska's record fell to 29-19 overall and 11-12 in the Big Eight Conference. Kansas improved to 17-31 and 8-17.
Kansas sophomore pitcher Robert Garola (3-5) scattered 14 hits across nine innings for his first complete game of the season.
"Coach Bingham said in our postgame meeting that Nebraska's hits were timely hits," Garola said. "After that, I came back and got them out. It didn't hurt to get seven runs in the first off Alvie. That really helped me out a lot."
Kansan sportswriter
Garola also avoided one of the Jayhawks' major problems this year — the big inning. Nebraska, after one run in the first inning, added only single runs in the third, fourth and sixth innings.
Defense also aided Garola. The Jayhawks didn't commit any errors after two in Friday's game and another on Saturday. Nebraska won the opener 7-2 and won Saturday's game 17-13.
"We had a lot of opportunities to put the game away that we lost, but the kids came with two outs in the sixth and scored four times," he said.
"The defense played great," Garola said. "I'm glad they did, because I'm not a guy who will strike out people, so I need their
help a lot."
When Nebraska cut the Jayhawks' lead to 7-4 in the sixth inning, the offense returned with four more runs. Bingham said the rally was positive, especially after losing a 13-6 lead the day before.
Kansas ended its season series 1-4 with Nebraska and will need at least one win
Kansas 11. Nebraska 4
JAHYAWKS (17-31)
ss DeMarco 3 1 2 r h rbl
2b Kliner 2 1 0 0
2b Wilhelm 5 1 1 1
dh English 4 1 1 1
ph King 1 0 0 0
cf Byrd 3 2 2 1
1b Headley 4 1 2 1
lf Turney 2 2 1 1
rf Igou 3 1 1 2
c Meadows 3 1 2 2
Totals 30 11 12 11
'MUSKERS (29-19) ab r h rbl
3b Dalton 5 2 3 1
ss Petersen 4 0 1 0
lf Erstad 5 0 1 1
rf Motley 5 0 2 0
p/fdh Sheperd 4 0 0 0
cf Jenkins 5 1 3 0
1b Meyer 5 1 1 0
c Johnson 3 0 1 1
2b Wuffing 4 0 2 0
Totals 40 4 14 3
Kansas IP H R ER BB SO
Gerola 9.0 14 4 ER 5 4
Nebraska IP H R ER BB SO
Shepherd 0.2 5 7 7 4 1
Couter 5.2 5 7 4 6 1
Strasser 0.2 2 0 0 1 0
Gomes 1.2 0 0 1 0
DP Nebraska 2 LOB Kansas 7, Nebraska 12
2B Jenkin, Meyer, Mayer, Byrd, Meadows,
Turney 3B Dalton, English SB DeMarco 2
in the final two Big Eight games with Missouri to earn a spot in the conference tournament.
Garola said today's win could start some momentum for the Jayhawks' post-season hopes.
Kansas continues its homestand at 7 tonight with a make-up game with Rockhurst College at Hogland-Maupin Stadium. The Jayhawks will open a two-game series with Missouri at 7 p.m. tomorrow.
1
2B
Monday, May 1, 1995
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'Hawks put spin on Cyclones
Softball team wins two games at Ames
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
After being swept by Iowa State on Saturday, the Kansas softball team returned the favor yesterday.
The Cyclones won both games of Saturday's doubleheader 8-2 and 11-0. The Jayhawks rebounded, though, and won the final two games of their season 6-0 and 7-2.
Kansas junior Beth Robinson pitched two complete games yesterday and moved her record to 12-9.
In yesterday's first game in Ames, Iowa, Robinson scattered three Cyclone hits. Iowa State managed singles in the first, second and fifth innings but could not mount an offensive charge.
The Jayhawks put their first run on the board in the fourth inning. Kansas freshman Michelle Hubler led off the inning with a single and moved to second base on a Lora Richardson sacrifice bunt. Hubler scored when freshman Kristina Johnson doubled.
Kansas added to its lead in the sixth inning when 10 batters stepped to the plate. The first five of those scored and gave the Jayhawks their 6-0 victory.
Robinson and Kansas continued their winning ways in the second game. The Jayhawks struck first, scoring one run in the third inning. But the Cyclones struck right back and scored two runs in the bottom half of the inning.
Meanwhile, Kansas added three runs in the fourth inning and three in the fifth, Iowa State walked four Jayhawk batters in the fourth, and two of those walks forced in runs while the bases were loaded.
Those two runs were all that Iowa State could muster. Robinson only allowed one more hit during the game.
A two-RBI double off Kansas freshman Sarah McCann's bat highlighted the Jayhawks' three-run fifth inning. The hit capped McCann's 2-1
Kansas 6, Iowa State 0
Sunday's softball box scores
JAYHAWKS
ab r h rbl
lf Morgan 2 0 1 1
3b McCann 3 0 0 0
ss Hubler 4 2 2 0
1b Richardson 2 1 0 0
c Johnson 4 1 1 1
dh Wenger 3 0 2 1
rf Herrera 2 0 0 0
cf Reyes 3 0 2 2
2b Richins 3 0 0 0
p Robinson 0 0 0 0
ph Holland 1 0 1 0
pr Kirkwood 0 1 0 0
ph Blood 0 1 0 0
ph Fitzmorris 1 0 0 0
Totals 28 6 9 6
CYCLONES
2b Osborne 1 0 0 0
ss Balakshin 3 0 1 0
p/dh Nease 2 0 0 0
2b Nelson 3 0 0 0
1b Hogan 3 0 0 0
3b Wagner 3 0 1 0
c Miller 3 0 1 0
rf Danilson 2 0 0 0
cf Connolly 2 0 0 0
p Lobel 0 0 0 0
pr Seggerman 0 0 0 0
Total 22 0 0 0
Kansas IP H R ER BB SO
Robinson .7.0 3 0 0 2 1
iowa State IP H R ER BB SO
Nease 5.0 8 5 6 2 1
Lobel 2.0 1 1 0 2 0
O Eobson, Balakshin, Hogan JOB Kansas
7, Iowa State 42 BJ Johnson, Wenger
for-3 performance in the game, and Kansas secured a 7-2 victory.
The Jayhawks' two wins yesterday ended their regular season at 19-23 overall and 5-15 in the Big Eight Conference.
But it looked like the Jayhawks were headed toward victory on Saturday. During the first inning of the opening game, Hubler hit her fifth
However, two losses on Saturday assured the Jayhawks of a losing season. This season marks the first time since softball coach Kalum Haack came to Kansas in 1988 that one of his teams posted a losing record.
Kansas 7, Iowa State 2
JAYHAWKS ab r h rbl
c Johnson 2 2 0
3b McCann 3 1 2
hs Huber 2 1 1
1b Richardson 3 0 1
dh Wenger 3 0 0
cf Reyes 4 0 1
rf Herrera 2 1 2
2b Richins 3 1 1
lf Kirkwood 1 0 0
p Robinson 0 0 0
dp Holland 1 0 1
pr Fitzmorris 0 1 0
lf Morgan 1 1 0
Totals 25 7 9 7
| CYCLONES | ab | r | h | rbl |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 2b Osbome | 4 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| ss Batakshin | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| dh/p Nease | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| if Nelson | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 1b Hogan | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 3b Wagner | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| c Miller | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
|rf Danilson | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| cf Connelly | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| p Dully | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 26 | 3 | 5 | 2 |
Kansas IP H R ER BB SO
Robinson 7.0 5 2 1 1
Iowa State IP H R ER BB SO
Dully 3.2 4 2 4 5 3
Nease 2.1 5 5 3 1
E. Johnson, Reyes, Wagner DP Iowa State 1
LB Kansas B, Iowa State 5 S2 Richardson
Nease BF PfzMorns, Richins, Johnson,
McCann
home run of the season. Kansas led 1-0, and Hubler set a record for the most home runs hit by a Kansas freshman.
The Cyclones returned fire in the bottom of the first inning. A Brenna Miller grand slam gave Iowa State a 4-1 lead that it never relinquished. The Cyclones took the series' first game 8-2.
They went on to sweep the Jayhawks with a 11-0 victory in the second game.
Kansas managed only two hits during the game while Iowa State exploded for five runs in the second innings alone.
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Monday, May 1, 1995
1995 NBA PLAYOFFS
3B
Phoenix, Charlotte strong in first round
Hornets sting Bulls 106-89
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Larry Johnson scored 25 points and Alonzo Mourning had 23 plus 20 rebounds to help lead the Charlotte Hornets past the Chicago Bulls 106-89 yesterday and even their first-round playoff series.
Both players overcame slow starts to key a big second half by Charlotte as the best-of-five series moves to Chicago for Game three tomorrow night.
A Chicago team that seemed to be hitting everything in the first half lost its shooting touch in the second. In the second half, the Bulls missed 30-of-42 field goal attempts, and even 32 points from Michael Jordan couldn't help them.
With a 79-74 lead entering the fourth quarter, Charlotte scored 12
straight points to go up 91-76 with 7:18 to play. Dell Curry capped the run with a three-pointer and an 18-footer.
Meanwhile, the Bulls missed six straight shots during a stretch in which Jordan shot an air ball from behind the three-point line with nobody near him.
He came back with three straight three-pointers to cut the lead to seven with 3:31 remaining, but Chicago couldn't get any closer. As the clock wound down, Mourning and Johnson were hugging and slapping hands.
Scottie Pippen, who scored only eight points in the Bulls' 108-100 overtime win on Friday, finished with 18. B.J. Armstrong added 13 for Chicago.
NBA PLAYOFFS
Johnson and Mourning took control of the game in the third period, leading a 14-3 spurt that gave the Hornets a 73-67 lead with 2:37 left in the quarter. Charlotte went to its big lineup, adding Robert Parish on the front line, and the Bulls didn't make a field goal for 5 1/2 minutes.
Eastern
Western
1st rnd. Semifinals Finals
Finals Semifinals 1st rnd.
Orlando S. Antonio
SERIES TIED 1-1 *S. ANTONIO LEADS 1-0
Boston Denver
Charlotte Seattle
SERIES TIED 1-1 SERIES TIED 1-1
Chicago L.A. Lakers
Indiana Phoenix
INDIANA LEADS 2-0 PHOENIX LEADS 2-0
Atlanta Portland
New York Utah
SERIES TIED 1-1 NOTE: "Denotes a late game last night that would affect series. First round is best-of-five games; all others are best-of-seven. Team with better regular season
Cleveland SERIES TIED 1-1 Houston
Blazers burnt lose 103-89
The Associated Press
PHOENIX — Charles Barkley and A.C. Green punished Portland on the backboards, and Kevin Johnson led the way down the stretch as the Phoenix Suns beat the Trail Blazers 103-94, pushing Portland to within one game of elimination from the playoffs.
The Suns lead the first-round series, which moves to Portland on Tuesday night for Game three, 2-0.
Barkley had 25 points and 13 rebounds, and Green had 20 and 15. Each had six on the offensive boards as the Suns, outbounded in each meeting with the Blazers during the season, held a 47-35 edge in this game.
Johnson, who scored 28 points,
had seven rebounds of his own to
help Phoenix win its seventh
straight against the Blazers.
Gerry Fey and Knight-Ridder Tribune
Rod Strickland had 26 points and 12 assists for Portland, and Harvey Grant scored 21.
The Blazers came from nine points down in the second period to lead 57-53 at halftime and went up 63-53 in the first 1:10 of the third quarter.
But Johnson, who had 11 points in the quarter, scored seven during a 19-6 Phoenix surge.
Wayman Tisdale got the lead back for Phoenix, 70-69, with a jumper in the lane with 4:06 to play.
In the final minutes, Barkley had three baskets and Johnson hit four free throws to send the Suns to an 80-74 lead entering the fourth quarter.
After the teams matched baskets over the first part of the period, Green hit a basket and four free throws for a 95-85 lead with 4:18 left.
In a 44-second span, Johnson made the Suns' only basket of the final five minutes, then four free throws for a 103-89 lead with 1:09 to go.
Cavs tie series with Knicks
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — Given that the overmatched Cleveland Cavaliers have been overcoming long odds all season, their playoff victory in New York should have come as no surprise to people that have followed the team this far.
The Cavs, all but given up for dead after New York dominated them 103-79 in the playoff opener Thursday night, tied the series 1-1. Cleveland beat up on the Knicks 90-84 at Madison Square Garden on Saturday, stealing away the
momentum as well as the home-court advantage in Game three in the best-of-five series.
Games three and four will be at Gund Arena on Monday and Thursday nights.
"It's turned it into a best 2-out-of-3," Cavs coach Mike Fratello said. "You still have to go out and win your games at home, and New York beat us here twice this season."
Perhaps the Cleveland victory will serve only as a wake-up call for New York, clearly the superior team on paper.
The Knicks' 55-27 record during the regular season was 12 games better than Cleveland's 43-39 mark, and they are far more seasoned in big games.
The Cavs had lost eight straight playoff games before winning Saturday.
Yet the Cavs have parlayed the role of underdog into an advantage all year, particularly during the first few months before opponents grew accustomed to their painfully deliberate offense and the relentless, double-teaming defense.
The Associated Press
ORLANDO, Fla. — Anybody who didn't give Boston a chance against Orlando was dead wrong.
The Celtics rebounded from the worst defeat in the franchise's storied 49-year history with a stunning 99-92 victory yesterday that not only evened the first-round playoff series 1-1 but wrested the homecourt advantage from the heavily favored Magic.
Games three and four of the best-of-five matchup will be played at Boston Garden on Wednesday and
Celtic magic strikes in Orlando
Friday, meaning at least two more games are left at the storied arena, which is being closed after the season.
Orlando had the best record in the Eastern Conference during the regular season, but lost its last seven road games. The loss was only the third at home this season for the Magic, who were 29-0 at Orlando Arena against Eastern Conference opponents before yesterday. But that didn't mean anything to the Celtics, who have a proud tradition that includes a record 16 NBA championships.
Dominique Wilkins, Bee Brown and Sherman Douglas paced the turnaround less than 48 hours after the Magic destroyed the Celtics 124-77 on Friday night.
Wilkins scored 24 points on 10-for-17 shooting, Brown added 21 and Douglas finished with 20 points and 15 assists. The Celtics held the Magic to one field goal in the last five minutes, Dennis Scott's three-pointer with five seconds to go.
Anfernee Hardaway led Orlando with 26 points. Shaquille O'Neal had 22, but the Magic never got O'Neal into the offensive flow.
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Even though he's been booed, pitcher Tom Glavine says he'll stay on as the Atlanta Braves' player representative until there's a new collective bargaining agreement.
"I don't think it would be fair for me to abandon that position and put somebody else in as the player rep before something was resolved," he said Friday night at Dodger Stadium.
"I plan on seeing it through until there is an agreement," Glavine said. "And once there is one signed, I'll probably look long and hard about giving up my player rep duty on a daily basis. I'm still the alternate National League rep, and I think I would continue in that role."
Glavine was booed Thursday in Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium before his first start of the season.
"I'm not real sure I could get somebody to do it, anyway," he said. "But it's my obligation to see it through and then, when there is something done, hopefully sell somebody else
on the fact that we've got a four-, five- or six-year agreement and they won't have much to do for that period of time."
Glavine, a three-time 20-game winner as a pitcher, replaced Dale Murphy as the Braves' player representative after the 1990 lockout. Glavine was the only player who wanted the job.
"I didn't get into it to get into a strike situation and I certainly don't want to go through what I went through again," he said, "but I don't have a problem with being a player rep."
"I've actually enjoyed the learning process of being a player rep." Glavine said, "and the reasons I got into it were to learn about a lot of the different things that go on that affect players off the field and when their careers are over."
Glavine, 29, admitted he had entertained thoughts of quitting last summer.
"I didn't think it was fair to thrust somebody into that situation who wasn't familiar with it," he said.
Baseball salaries drop following strike; expected to rise
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The average salary in baseball declined nearly 10 percent following the players' strike, but the drop was caused largely by expanded rosters.
A study released Saturday by The Associated Press showed the average was $1,073,582, a drop of 9.7 percent from the $1,188,679 average on opening day last season.
But following the strike, teams began this year with 28-man rosters instead of the usual 25. Most of the extra players earn the major league minimum of $109,000. Subtracting three players a team at the minimum raises the average to $1,173,498, a drop of just 1.3 percent.
Only once since free agency has the average salary dropped for an entire season. In 1987, during the owners' conspiracy against signing free agents, it dropped $86 to $412,454.
"Obviously," acting commissioner Bud Selig said, "the clubs have made some adjustments to their losses and the economics of the past year, and in many clubs' case the last two, three and four years."
Under the salary-cap system owners implemented from Dec. 23 to Feb. 5, 21 teams over their caps would have been forced to cut their payrolls by $56.2 million. But owners rescinded the cap under pressure from the National Labor Relations Board.
Usually the average salary declines during the season as veterans are released and replaced by younger players. But it figures to rise this year because the rosters will go back to 25 on May 15.
Top Baseball Salaries
the 1995 salaries for the 32 major league baseball players making $5 million or more. Figures were obtained by The Associated Press from management and player sources. Figures include salaries and pro-rated shares of signing bonuses.
Player, Club Salary
1, Cecil Fielder, Det $9,237,500
2, Barry Bonds, SF 8,000,183
3, David Cone, Tor 8,000,000
4, Joe Carter, Tor 7,500,000
(tie) Kerr Griffey Jr., Sea 7,500,000
6, Frank Thomas, WSox 7,150,000
7, Mark McGwire, Oak 6,900,000
8, Jeff Bagwell, Hou 6,875,000
9, Cal Ripken Jr., Bal 6,871,671
10, Lenny Dykstra, Phi 6,200,000
(tie) Kirby Puckett, Min 6,200,000
(tie) Ruben Sierra, Oak 6,200,000
13, Jose Canseco, Bos 5,800,000
(tie) Matt Williams, SF 5,800,000
15, John Olerud, Tor 5,750,000
16, Barry Larkin, Cin 5,700,000
17, Roger Clemens, Bos 5,655,250
18, Will Clark, Tex 5,647,726
19, Gary Sheffield, Fla 5,625,000
20, Roberto Alomar, Tor 5,500,000
(tie) Greg Maddux, Atl 5,500,000
22, Juan Gonzalez, Tex 5,400,000
(tie) Jack McDowell, NYY 5,400,000
24, Bret Saberhagen, NYM 5,362,990
25, Bobby Bonilla, NYM 5,300,000
(tie) Danny Tartabull, NYY 5,300,000
27, Darren Daulton, Phi 5,250,000
28, David Justice, Atl 5,200,000
29, Jose Rijo, Cin 5,125,000
30, Robin Ventura, WSox 5,100,000
31, Doug Drabek, Hou 5,000,000
(tie) Mark Langston, Sea 5,000,000
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STUDENT
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
SENATE
4B
Monday, May 1, 1995
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vietnam celebrates new era
The Associated Press
HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam — Twenty years ago, Communist tanks rolled down a broad avenue and smashed through the gates of the South Vietnamese presidential palace to seize power and reunite the country.
Yesterday, more than 10,000 soldiers, students and children paraded down the same broad, leaf boulevard carrying flowers and balloons and posing for pictures with their former enemies — Americans
— to celebrate the anniversary of the war's end.
No recriminations were heard against the United States, which Vietnam now wants diplomatic and trade ties with. Mayor Truong Tan Sang opened the ceremonies by praising the patriotism that led so many to their death, but never even mentioned the United States.
North Vietnam seized power from the last remaining officials of the U.S.-allied government on April 30, 1975, ending a war that cost more than 3 million lives. Most Americans had fled the city only hours earlier in a desperate helicopter evacuation.
Yesterday, Vietnamese scrambled to have their pictures taken with American journalists and tourists, and once past the reviewing stand, soldiers flashed peace signs and thumbs-up at an American veteran with a camera.
"It was like they were happy just to see me," said Jeff Fredrick of Tallahassee, Fla., who had part of his right leg blown away in 1968 by a mine. "I look at it detached, as a celebration of their independence. How could I hold a grudge?"
The friendliness is more than just official policy. To many Vietnamese, Americans coming back represents the return of commerce and tourism and revival of normal ties with the West after years of relative isolation.
Behind the smiles, however, Vietnamese emotions run deep about a war that set brother against brother.
"This celebration is for the winners," said a former southern army officer surnamed Tran, one of many still angry over the punishment meted out to them by the victorious North after 1975.
Even some Communists question whether their leaders threw away lives needlessly in open attacks against the mighty U.S. military machine, attacks such as the 1968 Tet offensive. A teacher burst into tears when asked about her memories of the war, explaining that many relatives fought in the war and not all came back.
Unlike in the United States, where the war has been openly and hotly debated, the Vietnamese have never been allowed such catharsis.
But across the spectrum of political views, Vietnamese young and old were emphatic in agreement that they never want another war.
"Never — never," said Tran, 54. "No one dares to say that terrible word."
Nguyen Van Xich, 60, used to set booby traps for American soldiers as a Communist guerrilla. "My sole wish is to keep the peace in this land," he said yesterday. "I'm so afraid that one day my son and daughter will have to fight a war again. I would do anything to prevent that."
Mayor Sang's speech emphasized the achievements of peace, especially the new burst of economic development in Ho Chi Minh City, called Saigon before 1975. Vietnam's economy stagnated for the first decade after reunification, but free-market reforms since the late 1980s have brought marked new prosperity.
That was reflected in the lavishness of the anniversary celebrations, which residents said were the biggest and most lighthearted ever.
militia marched in the parade, there were no tanks or other armaments, and most of the marchers were civilians who waved tiny paper Vietnam flags, flowers or balloons.
Although hundreds of soldiers and
The emphasis was on youth — the parade included 1,000 young men and women born in that year of peace, 1975. Elementary school children danced with stuffed animals and teens in track suits performed a bouncy disco number under a banner reading, "Healthy, young and beautiful."
Most of the city's 5 million residents could only watch the parade on television. As is common for such events in Vietnam, the parade route stretched only three long blocks and the sidelines were completely filled with participants awaiting their turn to march.
Security cordons kept out the general public. For them, a second parade was held last night with dozens of brightly lit floats, including a popular one featuring a large mechanical dinosaur that roared and swayed.
Merrymakers rode beside the floats on motorbikes, jamming the city center and creating a blue haze of exhaust fumes. Other Saigonese strolled through parks to watch magic shows and listen to crooners perform jazzy versions of war-era songs. Music poured from crowded sidewalk restaurants.
In the capital of Hanoi, meanwhile, people lined up for a mule to pay respects at the mausoleum of former revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh. Outdoor loudspeakers throughout the city played patriotic and revolutionary songs.
Ho Chi Minh City officials gave about 70 convicted criminals early jail releases in honor of the day, part of a nationwide amnesty program that is to include 4,000 prisoners by year's end. Authorities refuse to say if people failed for criticizing Communist rule will be among those released.
KENT, Ohio — Thirteen seconds of gunfire. Thirteen students dead or wounded.
The Associated Press
Kent State remembers shooting
Twenty-five years later, Kent State University still remembers the four students killed and nine others wounded by National Guard troops during an anti-war protest on May 4, 1970, with ceremonies and symposiums.
This year, as it has every year, Kent State will memorialize and moralize, hoping to extract something positive from 25 years of tears.
But now, with a generation of students who weren't even alive when Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandy Scheuer and Bill Schroeder were killed, undergraduates exploring the shootings must search for a link to a generation they know best as their parents.
"It's almost impossible to imagine what it was like, even if you heard the stories and even if you know all the different sides," said Stephanie Campbell, 20.
A junior majoring in biological anthropology, Campbell is co-chair of the May 4th Task Force student group. No student member of the group had been born when the shootings took place, and none were on campus in 1990 for the 20th anniversary of the shootings.
"It is difficult to even imagine a government that would bring soldiers onto the campus, let alone shoot at the citizens," Campbell said. "For some of us, it's like trying to imagine the Civil War — you can come up with definitions, but no real meaning."
"But I have never met anyone on this campus who doesn't feel something, even when talking about the barest facts."
Former Gov. James A. Rhodes had ordered the National Guard to restore order in Kent after student protests against the invasion of Cambodia spilled into the streets. Shop windows were broken. Bottles were thrown at police and at firefighters battling an arson fire at the campus ROTC building.
The shootings — and the deaths of two more students 10 days later at Jackson State University in Mississippi — galvanized the anti-war movement and stunned the nation.
On the morning of May 4, as student protests raged around them, a group of about 100 guardsmen opened fire.
The Pulitzer Prize-winning image of 14-year-old Mary Ann Vecchio, her arms raised in horror as she knelt over the body of Jeffrey Miller, is seared into the national memory.
Rhodes and 27 guardsmen signed a statement in
1979 expressing regret, but he will not discuss the subject now and declined to be interviewed.
In Professor Tim Smith's class on government affairs reporting the journalism students agree the shootings were a watershed event. But for most of them, Kent State is a history lesson.
"The way I feel about it is, I need to know what happened May 4, the same way I need to know about what happened in the Revolutionary War," said Jim Llewellyn, 24.
"You learn history, maybe so you don't repeat it. Just because I'm a Kent State student, that doesn't mean I need to know more than anyone else about it. I really think they jam it down your throat."
But to a graduate student who introduces himself as "Don Fred, relic," the answers to May 4 are still undiscovered, and the lingering doubts create their own relevance.
"I heard the shots on May 4. And on that day I was very conservative. I believed in my government very strongly," said Fred, 45. "Now, I very strongly believe the shootings were ordered by President Nixon. The question is, when are we going to dig up the proof?"
In 1990, the university dedicated a $100,000 memorial, a granite plaza designed by Chicago architect Bruno Ast. The memorial did little to quiet critics, including Alan Canfora of Barberton, who was wounded in the wrist in the shootings.
Canfora still attends May 4 Task Force meetings and runs a private educational foundation devoted to the shootings.
"I think it's true that because most students weren't born in 1970 that they look at the war and the Kent State incident as strictly historical information," Canfora said. "But, at the same time, I found that many of today's students remain concerned about the war and the Kent State murders."
Canfora said students remain committed to social change.
"Times have changed and the issues have changed, but students remain just as idealistic, just as principled and just as motivated as we were in the 1960s," he said. "The environment, women's rights and freedoms, racism, tuition increases and the current attacks by the Republican Congress on student aid — I think these are the issues of the 1990s that are going to provoke a student movement which may well surpass the 1960s."
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Monday, May 1, 1995
5B
NRA calls agents 'thugs'
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — The National Rifle Association's top official defended the inflammatory language his organization has used about federal agents, saying Sunday that references to "jack-booted government thugs" were accurate.
"Those words are not far, in fact they are a pretty close description of what's happening in the real world." NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
The NRA's attack on federal agents in a fund-raising letter has been cited as an example of the kind of rhetoric that creates a climate for violent acts such as the Oklahoma City terrorist attack. LaPierre insisted that's not the case.
"That's like saying the weather report in Florida on the hurricane caused the damage, rather than the hurricane," he said.
But Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., appearing on ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley," said the NRA "needs to get a little image repair job." Dole criticized an NRA computer bulletin board that provides bomb-making instructions, saying there are already "enough people out there who know how to make bombs."
Attorney General Janet Reno, also on NBC, demanded that critics of law enforcement officials be specific in their charges. "I think the most damaging thing that we can do the country is to talk in generalies or in pictures terms."
Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware,
he ranking Democrat on the Senate
Judiciary Committee, said he guessed that two people would resign from the NRA for every one who joins as the result of the antigovernment rhetoric.
But LaPierre denied there was any dissension in the 3.5-million-member group over the stridency of its positions. The Washington Post reported Saturday that there was a division between the old guard interested in conservation and firearms education and hardliners who are concentrating on defeating gun control legislation.
He said there was no dispute in the leadership on the need to investigate alleged abuses by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and to protect gun ownership.
The six-page NRA letter signed by LaPierre and sent earlier this month singles out lawmakers who are pressing for gun control legislation and says: "It doesn't matter to them that the semi-auto ban gives jackbooted government thugs more power to take away our constitutional rights, break in our doors, seize our guns, destroy our property, and even injure or kill us."
It goes on: "Not too long ago, it was unthinkable for federal agents wearing Nazi bucket helmets and black storm trooper uniforms to attack law-abiding citizens."
The NRA is demanding congressional hearings into what LaPierre said was "a major trend toward abuses" by federal agents of constitutional guarantees against unreasonable searches and seizures.
groups, and let's see who's right or wrong. If you want to end the climate of fear and suspicion in the country, get it all out in front of the public, and that's what we're asking."
"Let's put it all on the table. It's not only the NRA, it's the American Civil Liberties Union, it's other
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said the Senate Judiciary Committee he heads has no plans to open hearings on the 1993 siege of the Branch Davidian religious cut near Waco, Texas, an event that galvanized antagonism in some groups against federal law enforcement officers.
But Hatch told NBC he will closely monitor hearings scheduled in the House. "I think everybody has some tendency to be upset about what happened there, and it may be that we're going to have to do more about investigating it."
Sen. Bill Bradley, D-NJ, said on CBS' "Face the Nation" that he agreed there should be hearings on Waco, but added hearings should also be held on the increasing acts of violence against federal officials.
LaPierre said the NRA agrees with Dole and House Speaker Newt Griarch, R-Ga., that Republican efforts to overturn the ban on assault weapons should be set aside for the time being in light of the Oklahoma tracedy.
"It was on a fast track. It's on a slower track. It will still come up down the road," he said.
Dole said he had no intention to take up the assault weapon issue soon, and Hatch and Biden agreed that the issue should not be a part of the debate on the bill to strengthen anti-terrorism efforts now before Congress.
McVeigh theories contradict
The Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY — Was Timothy McVeigh alone in Oklahoma City? Was he there with John Doe 2? Or were there more like-minded extremists involved in the bombing of the federal building?
Competing theories on the shape and size of the bombing conspiracy seem to rise and fall daily as investigators try to place sometimes ill-fitting pieces of the puzzle into a coherent picture.
With each new revelation comes more questions and more seeming contradictions.
A senior federal official involved in the investigation told The Associated Press such frustrations are new nothing to such cases.
EXP
An example: the 1977 yellow Mercury Marquis that McVeigh bought on April 14in Junction City.
The used car has become a touchstone for various theories about McVeigh's movements, the possibility of a second getaway car or a scenario that has McVeigh setting off the bomb himself, then fleeing in the previously positioned Mercury.
THE Oklahoma City LOSIOn
McVeigh was arrested in the car he sped north from Oklahoma
"The problem for you guys (in the media) and the public is you want it all to make sense each day," he said. "Cops learn in their first few years on the job that every case they ever investigate is going to have some things that are totally unexplainable."
THE Oklahoma City EXPLOSION
City about 75 minutes after the blast. The senior federal official said a note found in the car read: "Not abandoned. Battery cable problem. Will be back to pick it up."
The note also included a date, which was not revealed.
Officials are trying to fit this with another puzzle piece. Why did McVieh have his friend Terry Nichols pick him up in Oklahoma City and drive him back to Junction City two days before the bombing?
Nichols told the FBI McVeigh called him on April 16, the two returned to Junction City early on April 17, the day McVeigh is believed to have rented the Ryder truck with a man investigators identify as John Doe 2.
The owner of the Dreamland Motel, the Junction City motel where McVeigh was registered from April 14-17, reported seeing the Mercury when McVeigh checked in. Within a few days the Mercury was gone, she said, replaced by the truck.
Does this all add up to the possibility McVeigh parked the car with its note in Oklahoma City, returned to Junction City with Nichols, then drove down to Oklahoma City alone in the rental truck, detonated the bomb and escaped in the Mercury?
The federal official said the scenario is one of several being explored.
"It's absolutely possible, physically, for one man to have detonated it," he said.
But there are problems with this theory.
Investigators say McVeigh would have taken a big risk by leaving the car on the street for three nights. The surveillance camera in an automatic teller machine across from the federal building captured images of the Ryder truck, several individuals and a possible second getaway car with Arizona license plates.
At least one witness says he saw two men driving the truck shortly before the explosion.
The federal official said such contradictory bits of information can muddy a clear picture of what happened.
He noted reports from another Junction City motel operator that he registered John Doe 2 on April 17. The witness matched his guest to a picture distributed by the FBI. But he said the man had a mustache and spoke with an accent, two elements the federal official said would rule him out.
"People out there read things and see things and they honestly believe that they witnessed something," he said.
'Hatred still flourishes,' Clinton says at Holocaust event
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — In an address Sunday to survivors of Nazi death camps, President Clinton said the Oklahoma City bombing proves that hatred still lurks and urged Americans "to stand against new forms of organized evil."
Wearing a black yarmulke, Clinton told
"Ultimately, I wanted to be here today, after all our country has been through in these last days, because you have taught me that the vigilance of memory is our greatest defense," Clinton said.
6,000 Jewish survivors in a dimly lit Paramount Theater that the world must never forget or repeat the Holocaust.
As the generation of surviving Holocaust witnesses passes away, Clinton said new generations of Americans must continue "to fight all forms of racism, to combat those who distort the past and peddle hate in the present, to stand against new forms of organized evil."
He did not specifically condemn paramilitary groups or domestic terrorists, but clearly alluded to Oklahoma City when he said. "As we have seen, hatred
still flourishes where it has a chance."
Later Sunday, Clinton was to address a dinner sponsored by the World Jewish Congress.
At the Holocaust event, Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said his country sympathized with America's loss at Oklahoma City.
Aides said he planned to unveil new measures to combat terrorism, targeting the action at Iran.
"We have experienced the terrorism of
bombs launched without remorse," he said.
After listening to mournful songs of remembrance, mostly in Yiddish, Clinton said the Holocaust redefined "the capacity of evil."
New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said the Holocaust "proves a tragic lesson as to what happens when too many people do too little when confronted by evil."
New York Gov. George Pataki said people who attempted to debunk the Holocaust "must be confronted at every turn."
SAVINGS UP TO 80% OFF
Monday & Tuesday
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
May 1st and 2nd
East of the Kansas Union
& the Burge Union
Huge selection of KU Clothing!!
Sale may be postponed or cancelled in the event of rain.
Sidewalk Sale!
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Kansas Union 864-464
Burge Union 864-560
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students
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6B
Monday, May 1. 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nominees face tough road in Washington
By Mike Feinsilber The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — It has become Washington's word association game, simple, brutal, effective, destructive;
Zoe Baird — illegal nanny.
Lani Guinier — quota queen Robert Bork — extremist.
enclusion-porsinier
Clarence Thomas - sexual harasser
Bain Günter — quota quee Robert Bork — extremist.
John Tower — drinker, womanizer.
And now, the newest recipient of a damaging label, Henry Foster — abortionist his nomination for surgeon general, incubating since early February, will be explored by a Senate committee tomorrow.
Maybe there was a time when presidential nominees for high public office were judged merely on whether they were competent to do the job.
Now nominees are made into symbols and are fought over for political advantage. Sometimes their qualifications enter the debate. Sometimes qualifications have nothing to do with it; the nominees are turned into targets of opportunity.
In the debate over Foster's nomination, his critics don't talk about whether he can fulfill the responsibilities of surgeon general but whether an obstetrician-gynecologist should be held to account for the abortions he has performed. Of course, it doesn't help that the Clinton White House mangled the nomination, finding itself caught unaware with each new set of questions about Foster's past.
"The poor guy has been wrapped around this ideological dispute; he is the abortion vote of 1945," says Tom Korologos, a lobbyist who says he has shepherded at least 100 nominees through the confirmation process on behalf of Republican administrations.
Constance Horner, personnel director in George Bush's White House, said that the liberals started it.
"When you're in the middle of a culture war, which side the soldier enlists on matters a lot," says Ms. Homer, now a guest scholar at the Brookings Institution.
And it doesn't matter that the Foster confirmation battle is over a position that has little policymaking importance; its chief responsibility seems to consist of proselytizing on health issues.
Chase Untermeyer, who was Ms. Horner's predecessor in the Bush White House personnel office, said fights about a minor nomination can affect an administration's choices for major posts. He cites Clinton's nominations of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer to Supreme Court vacancies.
"Bill Clinton has named two of the most Republican Democrats to the Supreme Court while he hungered, so far as we know, to put a Mario Cuomo or a George Mitchell on the court," Untermeyer said. "I conclude that the fact that we have justices Breyer and Ginsburg is the price the Democrats have had to pay for what they did to Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas."
The Senate had rejected only eight Cabinet nominees in its history before 1989, when it turned down President Bush's nomination of John Tower for secretary of defense
on the grounds that his personal behavior made him unfit to serve.
The prevailing attitude used to be that a president was entitled to latitude in selecting his own team. Supreme Court nominations, because they are for life, have been held to a higher standard, about a fifth of all nominees have been rejected.
"To Bork," said former Sen. John C. Danforth, R-Mo., "meant the relentless effort by interest groups to wage a political campaign against a nominee, creating a grotesque image of the person in order to build public pressure by alarmed constituents."
The process took a turm toward the brutal when the Senate rejected Ronald Reagan's Supreme Court nomination of Robert C. Bork. Bork's last name became a verb.
Fifteen days after Bork's rejection, Douglas Ginsburg, nominated for the same vacancy, withdrew following the disclosure that he smoked marujiana while a teacher at Harvard. That's about all the country got to learn about him.
Clarence Thomas survived his nomination process, but not unscatted. Thomas was accused by a former colleague, Anita Hill, of sexual harassment in sensational, nationally televised hearings.
In "Resurrection," a book he wrote about the Thomas fight, Danforth said Thomas paid a terrible personal price.
Even now, Thomas remains conspicuously withdrawn. His public appearances are few, he almost never asks questions from the bench and he has been quoted as saying that he intends to get revenge on his liberal tormentors by staying on the court for a long, long time.
Clinton's first nominee for attorney general, Zoe Baird, withdrew after the disclosure that she employed illegal aliens in her home.
His second choice, federal Judge Kimba Wood, withdrew even though opponents acknowledged that her employment of an undocumented worker was not illegal at the time it occurred. That didn't matter; Ms. Wood had "a Zoe Baird problem," opponents said, and the label was enough to cause Wood to ask to be withdrawn from consideration.
Lani Guinier's ideas were what did her in. Nominated as civil rights chief in the Justice Department, Guinier was withdrawn by Clinton before she had a chance to answer her critics. She was done in by a label — "quota queen" — applied by conservatives who said she would subvert the democratic process to win advantages for minorities.
Politizing the nomination process has had two consequences, said George C. Edwards III, director of the Center for Presidential Studies at Texas A&M University. Presidents are tempted to select "the safe, the bland, the noncontroversial," and highly qualified people shun going to work for their government.
"How many people are going to want to take a job after a lifetime of good works and professional accomplishment when the reward is to be savaged in the confirmation process?" Edwards asks.
If it's any consolation, the message to Henry Foster — as to so many other nominees who have suffered through the process — is this: Nothing personal.
If going to a foreign flick is your idea of culture...
VIRGINIA
LYRIC OPERA OF KANSAS CITY can help you.
Four bucks won't get you into the movies, but it will get you a seat at Lyric Opera's performance of Gilbert and Sullivan's THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE May 13, 15, 17, 19 & 21. Arrive an hour before curtain to participate in Lyric Opera's "Student Rush" program where a $4 ticket cost gets you a seat at PIRATES and the Opera Preview. Hey, you're getting all the culture without those annoying subtitles.
Formal dress not required
For more information, call(816)471-7344 11th & Central Kansas City, MO
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
I
235 Typing Services
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
services
235 Tax services
100s Announcements
105 Personals
EXPERIENCED ROLE-PLAYERS WANTED.
We are a small, mature group of gamers looking for one or two new players to fill our ranks beginning this summer. Graduate students and/or professors interested. If interested, please call 865-724-3900 between 5:30 and 9:00pm, and ask for John.
LeBlaGay-KO offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, or unsure. Please call KU info at 804-3560 or Head Quarters at 814-2345 for more information.
110 Bus. Personals
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Hoops, navel rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Ec. Shop 282 Mass.
It's your PARTY
Balloon Bouquets
Fresh-baked Cookies
Graduation Announcements
and decorations
749-3455
1601 W. 23rd We Deliver!
lys, lesian, bisexual, or unure? LesBiGays K! offers a confidential group Weekends laat; 17:00 p.m. Call KU! Info at 8634 506 or Head quarters at 8243 2454 for location.
120 Announcements
FREE PARTY ROOM FOR 20-240 AVAILABLE
AT JOHNY'S TAVERN. CALL 842-0377
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
Found: One Male Cat. Orange Tabby with blue collar; less than one year old, Very friendly, Call me
Lost - Gold necklace - Thursday, April 20.
Victoria Mallot Hall, sentimental value.
Reward 841,3290 or 844,3689.
LOST. Your student health insurance. FOUND:
Temporary coverage 1-4 month plans, monthly
coverage 6-12 months.
男士厕所
女士厕所
200s Employment
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
Summer & Fail call械 help + 8 brs wk; wk know windows and PageMaker, have written communica skills. KS Res. + 3.4 GPA. Start at £p, up with skills. MEM-EXSP A70 740-542
$SUMMER JOB$:SES
Earn $5-$8 an hour painting houses this summer
Work in KG, Wichita, or Lawrence. Cal.
1-93-422-3077 for an application.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
X
205 Help Wanted
Sum day care for 11 year old girls. Hours are 8:
Call 749-3099 after 8:20. References required.
For men and women, Movers and packers. Will train. $6 to $8.30 per hour depending on prior experience. Fry-Wrapper Moving & Storage 18500 (914) 782-3436. Call Don Hawton at (800) 394-0494 (x 235).
300s
Mechandise
Kansan Classified: 864-4358
Summer Jobs
SUMMERJOBS CITY OF LAWRENCE
The City is accepting... summer part- and full-time positions. The following positions are available:
**BOOKMOBILE/STORYTELLER**
CONCESSION HELPER
**MUSICIAN/MIDDLE ELEMENTARY**
YOUTH BASEBALL/SOFT-BALL UMPIE
PLAYGROUND SUPERVISOR
SUMMER LABORER/PARKS & CEMETERY
AEROBICS INSTRUCTOR
for men and women. Mounters and packers. Will train. for $5.00 to $8.50 per hour depending on prior experience. Fw Wrapper Moving & storage 18500 924-349-0001, Cald Call Bowman at dwm 394-094-000 (x 265).
Complete application at Administrative Serv,
2nd floor, City Hall, East 6th St., Lawrence KS
60444. No phone calls please. Deadline: Friday,
May 5th. EOE M/F/D
Summer positions available for household goods or call 841-2115. Apply in person at 431 N. Iowa or call 841-2115.
Now to schedule an ad:
ATTENTION ALL VETERANS
Need that extra income?
Non-smoker. must be able to pass security, must be able to work evenings and weekends. Prior experience preferred. Apply-Million Air Forbes Field. Tonnek.
AVIATION LINE SERVICE
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnasium training, lifesaving, computer computers, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $25,000-45,000. GWG 1/2476 MAlee Mnld. II. 60903 760-446-8744
Cash Caterers, Kansas and Burge Urges' Catering Department, $4.25 per hour, paid in cash day following employment. Hiring for the following shifts:
Friday, May 12, 1995 - 9:30 am-3 pm
- By phone: 864-4358
Friday, May 13, 1965; 7:30 am-4 pm
Saturday, May 13, 1965; 1:30 pm-12 midnight
Saturday, May 14, 1965; 8:30 am-3 pm
Sunday, May 14, 1965; 8:30 am-3 pm
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
In person 1195 Starfire FL
Sunday, May 14, 1995, 6:30 am - 9 p.m.
Sunday, May 14, 1995, 6:30 am - 3:30 pm
May 14, 1995, 3 p.m-9 p.m.
Must follow dress code, able to stand for long periods and lift up to 30 pounds. Apply Kansas and 'Nerson' Personnel Level. Level 5. AA/FEO
Competitive athletic type excel in our
Classified Information and order form
Avg. KU student made $7000 last summer. Must be hard working, self-motivated, and willing to work out East. Excellent resume builder and college credit avail. Call Georgia @ 412-586-9262.
Stop by the Kansan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansan offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa Account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
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.
Calculating Rates:
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the rushed days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of Inserts:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
6+ lines
105 personal
110 business personalis
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Rates
post per line per day
| $C$ cost per day per 24 h | 1X | 2X | 3X | 4X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30+X |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 2.10 | 1.60 | 1.10 | 0.90 | 0.70 | 0.75 | 0.50 | 0.45 |
| 1.95 | 1.20 | 0.80 | 0.70 | 0.65 | 0.65 | 0.45 | 0.45 |
| 1.90 | 1.10 | 0.75 | 0.65 | 0.60 | 0.60 | 0.40 | 0.40 |
| 1.80 | 0.85 | 0.65 | 0.60 | 0.50 | 0.55 | 0.35 | 0.35 |
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Classifications
305 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print
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Please print your ad one word per box
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper
Name:
Address:___
method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
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BELL
TACO BELL
$1750 weekly possible mailing our circulars.
For info call 202-898-897.
Construction company has work in yard maintenance out door work, and landscaping. Flexible hours, full-time this summer. $7.5 per hour. If vacated, $829 between the hours of 4-8 Monday thru Friday.
Now Hiring for all shifts for New Location at 1408 W.23rd Street Apply in person at the 23rd Street Taco Bell
Regular Caterers, Kansas and Burge Urions'
Catering Department, $4.25 per hour, Schedules vary, some events and weekends required,
require a minimum of 10 pounds, stand for long periods, previous food service, wait-waitless experience. Must follow Food Safety Regulations and possibly into fall. Been immediately.
ADAMS ALUMNI CENTER/LEARNED CLUB has immediate preparation for part-time banquet cook, flexible hours. Part-time banship 8.5. Please call A.S. SERIOUS applications only. No phone calls.
Lad Cateler, Kansas and Burge Unions *Catering Department*, Schedule varies, $4.50 per hour, some evenings and weekends required. Requires license, able to lift 50 pounds for long periods, previous food service, wait-waitress experience. Looking for responsible, mature person. Must follow dress code. Job would continue summer and possible into fall. Begin
Apply Kansas and Burge Uniones' Personnel
Office, Level I/II/EOE
+ + + + +
The University of Kansas Work Group is seeking one full-time research assistant to provide project assistance for a research program with multidisciplinary faculty. In 1995, renewal contingent on grant funding. Salary $12-25/Ky; plus benefits. First preference given to applications received by May 10. For applications not received by May 10, resumption, resume, and names, addresses, and phone numbers of three references to: Michele Schepel, Work Group, 408th Dole, University of Kansas, KANSAS. Secondly, the University of Kansas is an AA/EO Employer.
Responsible female companion to supervise and
involve the participant in 15 for Summer activities
8.9-30 M.-F. M.-B232.1028
SUMMER WORK
$9.75 STARTING
- National Company
* Entry Level All Areas
* AASP Scholarships
* ALL MAJORS
* Must Apply Now Start After Finals
CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION
LAWRENCE: 842-6336
TOPEKA: 1-273-7099
WICHITA: (316) 292-2077
JOHNSON COUNTY: 1-752-4196
COUNSELERS - TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMPAINE. Exciting, fun-filled summer! Openings: WISIA & WAITER SPORTS, TENNIS, WISIA & ALL WATER SPORTS, Hiking, Roping & Climbing Wall, Ice Hockey, SCUBA, Archery, Riflery, AC, Martial Arts, etc. Top Sal, Exclicent Facilities, Trl Allow, Steve Rubin, Steven Rubin, 1809-472-6104 CAMP OBOSSSEE 10 SILVERMINE DR., SALEM, NY 10590
CRAZY Marketing Co. seeking people with crazy
creativity to help wade for hake for
huge rewards, full-time, part time, work in
California.
Designer Furniture Store, looking for sales help.
Experience necessary. Overland Park location.
805-439-2455. www.designersfurniture.com
EARN $3,000-$6,000 THIS SUMMER! Hard work,
independent-students need to work in KC
this summer with college pro-painters. Call to
uply 829-804.
KANSAS AIRNATIONAL GUARD
AMRGWOODENW
FAST EABY MONEY? Student clubs and organi-
ation sponsoring marketing project on campus.
1-800-773-4252
Fire your boss: a new company expanding, look-
for opportunities in new areas and full-time positions. Call for appt. 865-2403
HELP WANTED for fee completion on June 6 or 7 at Lily Hall. Employer must submit General Accounting Office, rm. 29 Carruth O'Leary Hall. Hours: 8:11 a.m.; 14 p.m M-F. Must be employed to achieve equal opportunity/affirmative action.
Information desk clerk P/T $7 per hr. KU Natural History. Apply at museum shop in Dyce Hall. Jones New York is looking for PF and PT mature plants which are appreciated. Apply at Riverfront Outlet Mall.
The Kansas Air National Guard in Topesa will be holding pilot and navigator selection boards during the summer of 2019. Anyone who is interested in becoming a navigator for MSP/DPMA, Atm: Mtsk Mike Jaqu, Airport Field (ANG), 5020 E Street, Topesa, KS 66199-4270. Applicants must meet the following criteria:
(1) Must have a 4 year college degree, or get one no later than August 1995. (2) Must pass the Air Force license examination. (3) Not older than 54th time of the selection be able to must be able to pass a flying class I. Physical. (4) Must be physically, mentally, and morally qualified. (5) Pilot's license is preferred for pilot applicants. (6) Kansas state residence is desirable. (7) Height requirement between 64" and 70" (sitting height is preferred). (8) Current directives. (11) No history of drug usage or serious law violations. (12) Must be able to acquire a TypeScript security clearance. If you fail the inspection process, call MSG Mike Ray at (813) 461-8351.
Key
TEMPORARY
PORTRAINT
- Warehouse
Production Construction
Construction Warehouse
- Telemarketing
- Production
Work as much as you want this summer! These summer jobs are available in Topeka:
- Word Processing
Call267-9999 formore information. No fees to applicants. Weekly pay. No experience necessary for many jobs.
- Clerical
Looking for a fun summer job come be a mother's helper free room and board plus salary. Own living quarters with private entrance. For details call 842-210-3810.
Kansas City Moving Company seeks summer help. Full and Part time positions await $4,50-$8,00 DOE. Contact John or Tom at 1-800-443-6177 Landscaping: Need help summer on landscaping crews. Contact Great Expectations Landscaping (913) 897-8075 in Overland Park
Looking for talented illustrators, photographers,
copyriters and graphic designers to intern-freelance.
Send samples of work to: Red House
Desmond 520 W 31st St Blaire Lawrence 69047
Make many new friends and at the same time
he start on full and part-time summer jobs.
He starts on half- and part-time summer jobs.
Market Research telephone interviewing. Weekday evening and Saturday hours available starting mid-May. For more info, call 1-800-374-4743 after 2 p.m. and ask for Garv.
our company is looking for Exp. Painters for Social work in Jo. Co. If you responded to our earlier ad and was not were not contacted please call again, our answering service was faulty. Please call tlc.
Mothers Helper/Babyssister needed for an active family including two delightful toddler girls. Nice home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible days/evenings/wEEKends. Experience, own car, and references required. Short drive from KU. Please call 30, University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer-Flint.
Opportunity! Make a great income from your dorm or apartment. Change your lifestyle! New and Exciting program. You can do it! 1800-960-1480 Ext. 101.
OPPORTUNITY FOR INSTANT SUCCESS
armored at advancement possibilities #M-3073
armored at advancement possibilities #M-3073
849-512-711 Leave message with evening phone #.
Now accepting applications for Summer employment. Openings for all shifts, full or part time. Apply in person at sirius Stockade.
New Hiring! The Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry is seeking 2 responsible persons for part-time office assistant positions. Willing to work around class schedules. Year-round work hours required. Mail resume to HR, Paul Holl. New Hiring! Mark's Bridal and Formal is seeking a responsible person for part time work, some evening and weekends. Apply in person 615 Mass.
Oneida Factory Store now hire part time sales
people. Apply now, start after final. We work around
your schedule. Apply in person. Suite 103.
Lawrence Riverfront Outlet Center. Mon-Fri-
10-11am
Part time and Full time positions available at Chrysler Credit Corporations' Customer Service Center. Part time hours are evenings and Saturdays. For inquiries, call the telephone number included telephone contact to collect delinquent accounts and provide customer service and information. Fax resume to 913-683-8310.
Leawood, KS 66211
An Equal Opportunity Employer
NEXT YEARS CLASSES?
WELLS FARGO
GUARD SERVICES
WELLS FARGO GUARD SERVICES IS AGAIN HIRING COLLEGE
STUDENTS FOR FULL TIME POSITIONS AS SECURITY OFFICERSI
WE WILL ALSO PAY AN "END OF SUMMER" BONUS FOR YOUR DEDICATED SERVICE. WE PROVIDE A SAFE WORKING ENVIRONMENT, CLASSROOM AND ON-THE-JOB TRAINING, LICENCES AND
WORK FULL TIME FOR:
WORK FULL TIME FOR:
13 WEEKS- $300.00 BONUS
11 WEEKS- $200.00 BONUS
19 WEEKS- $100.00 BONUS
COME SEE EMPLOYMENT SERVICES AT
301 E. ARMOR BLVD, KO MCA 6011 (816) 931-0511
CALL OUR 24 HOUR JOB LINE FOR AN APPOINTMENT
1-800-688-4473
Wal-Mart
The newest Wal-Mart Distribution Center in Ottawa, KS is accepting applications for all positions, full-time, part-time and Seasonal. Come prepared to complete your application on site at our Temporary Office, located at 128 South Main, Ottawa. Our office hours are M-F 9:00 am to 5:00 pm and 8:00 to noon on Saturday.
Wal-Mart is an Equal Opportunity Employer offering a competitive wage and benefits package.
Come and join the winning team!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 1, 1995
7B
PT/PT tails help need! Immediately! Earn $109 wp.KP.技能 experience but not, notecare training at support avail: Fortune 500 Company, Management daily interview at Union May 41am-1pm.
Position open in May for acctg. or bus. student,
involving, cust. serv. Aftermoms K-M. Must have
own transportation and quality for work study.
May return to resume in EEL, P.O.
Box 104, La Vernia, KS 6809
自
provider for adults with developmental disabilities is currently accepting applications for part-time employment in their residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may require sleep overs. College course work and related experience helpful but may not be required.
AGOOD DRIVING RECORD IS AMUST.
Please apply at Cottonwood,Inc., 2801W.31st., Lawrence.
Cottonwood is an EOE
Secure your summer job now. Lake Quivera
provides 24/7 internet access, full and
part time servers. 85.00 per hour plus gratuity
insensitive, flexible hours and fun atmosphere.
913-631-4824 for an appointment.
Due to an expanding market ProSecurity is needing private security officers for full-time and part-time positions. Competitive wages based on experience. ProSecurity Kansas largest location of the workforce, benefits, tentative benefits, such as health and life insurance, vacation pay and holiday and holiday pay and high quality training. Applicants must be 21 yrs old or younger, have a home office, a home telephone and a criminal background investigation. ProSecurity, an equal opportunity employer, is seeking mature, energetic and motivated individuals with good organizational skills, personal responsibility, good decision making ability and a sincere desire to work for the best, apply today. If you are currently a security officer or are interested in our job position, please do yourself to it yourself to apply with us. For more information please call our office at 865-5959.
Seeking student home for the summer to care for
them. Hours somewhat flexible, call (913) 862-245
Spend the summer in Chicago suburbs and get paid! Family needs a college age, responsible male or female to look after two boys ages 8 and 8 Child care required. Job offers room and board + freedom for individual activities. Please call Linda at (708) 206-1195.
STUDENT CERICAL POSITION on campus. 20 hours per week in position. Application deadline May 4 Apply in person to Continuing Education office, Continuing Education building. 864-4750. EO/AA
$ SUMMER JOBS $
$FILE CLERKS
$WORD PROCESSORS
$RECEPTIONISTS
$ACCOUNTING SKILLS
$DATA ENTRY
GAIN VALUABLE WORK
EXPERIENCE!! WE NEED:
TEMPORARY PERSONNEL OUR 50TH YEAR!
VARIETY OF TEMPORARY ASSIGNMENTS. SOME MAY LAST ALL SUMMER!
TAKE YOUR TALET. ENERGY.
AND DEPENDABILITY AND PUT
THEM TO WORK FOR US ON A
STIVERS
500 Nichols Road (on the plaza)KC
(816) 716-3377
5545 North Oak Trafficway NKC (816) 452-1280
Summer Work
National Company- Entry Level positions all areas. No exp. nec.训. All majors accepted. Interview now, start now or openings. Openings 815-329-2077 and Johnson County 913-739-4198
Textbook Kru, KU Bookstore, 425/hr. M, 8:30 a.m., p. 41; alternate Saturdays 10a.m.-4p.m. Must be able to lift up to 50 pounds, stand for long periods, speak and understand English fluently previous retail experience preferred. Apply Kansas and/or Northern Illinois and Grass AAA/EE.
The city of Oskaloosa is accepting applications for swimming pool lifeguard. Apply at the city office: 605 Delaware, Oskaloosa, KS. Application number must be entered. Certification must be presented. EOE
225 Professional Services
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
DUI/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R.GREEN
ATTORNEY AT-LAW
< Driver Education > offered in Midwest Driving School, serving KI students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided.
841-7749
TRAVELLERS
Maupituport Travel Service
Think "There's no place like home."
then click your phone, times and call us!
KS Union or 031 Massachusetts
749-0700
SPAMISH TUTOR: very experienced, former T.A. native speaker in Spanish/English, proven system, results oriented, individuals/groups.
Ana, 841-0574
OUJ/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Tennessee 843-4023
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter quality type. Also transcriptions. 843-2063
RESUME-mes consultation, cover letters & more.
Easy updates. Student resume specialists.
Exper. tynist with laser printer can create top quality papers with charts, graphs and more.
Spell check included. CALL DENA: 843-2864
BEST CHECK-C consultation cover letters & more.
**Graphic Ideas, Inc.** i2c-727-Mass. 841-1071
Reasonable rates/Mention this ad for 15% off.
www.graphicsinc.com
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
2 home sub woofer, NAD THF home amplifier, MB Quart component car speakers, Power acoustic EQ/crossover, Emergency CB. Please Leave message at 832-8386.
BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES
EVERYTHING BUT ICE
926 MAS
FOR OMEGA FESTIVAL
Everything But Ice 936 Mass.
FOR SALE: $92. wide sofa w / built in bed $70, wide wooden entertainment center $50, small bookcase $10, CD Player $60, Compact turn table w / cassette player and recorder $7, Call 16-247-1247.
9010 Haskell 841-7504 or 910 N.2nd-841-8603
Nine month old full size bed and recently bought
Copenhagen desk and chair. Help Me! They won't
fit in my little car. 842-4873
E. M. 2 tickets, Sun May 28. Lawn seats. Call 321-645-0100.
FUN IN THE SUN!
Hotel package deal...double occupancy:
4 days/3
TAXI
Orlando & Bahamas PLUS 3 days/2 nights in Daytona Beach. Good thru'95. Ph: 913/648-8333 x652 from 8-5, M-F
OBO
Univega Alpina 5.3 MT Bike
Titanium Gray. Shimoo, Cromely
Cand Randy 832-9028
340 Auto Sales
*84 Volkwagen rabbit, automatic transmission,
carrier. Receive. IB00 1200 OBU.*
Please leave a note.
926 Red Kataana runs and looks great. $720 just in time for summer 768-3129.
1987 Ford LTD crown lx LF, power everything,
accented condition, great road car, $6000.
Call 212-345-8750.
1989 San Turbo black $7000. Call Brian at 825-
4963 after 5:30.
PERFECT COLLEGE CALIF.! 1984 Maida GLX
700 B.O. O'Brien Moll, call at 749-2658
Mull, call at 749-2658
Full set of bike touring panniers and rear
wheel trainer. B4-3338
Limited Edition
370 Want to Buy
Your used computer (PC or Macintosh $ ^{\textcircled{1}} $ )
for your good used computer at UMI Computers 2448 Iowa
841-4811
We are paying up to $1,000 Reward
山
Beau's Import Auto Service Quality car maintenance & repair.
545 Minnesota SAAB VOLVO
Off of 6th st. and other fine imports. next to the Wright Club
842-4320
405 For Rent
MasterCard
$410 sublease 2 bedroom for summer. Pool, V-
ware, Kitchen and balcony before graduation. Cmath
413-8720 629-5080
400s Real Estate
1 bedroom apartment, 14th and 6th Street, window, fan AC, off street parking, $89/mo. No
West Hills APARTMENTS
1 Bdm, 3 blocks from campus, rent neg. 749-3148
FORJUNEANDAUGUST
- Spacious one and two Bedroom apartments
- Great location near campus
* No Pets
NOWLEASING FORWINT AND AUGUST
Mon. Wed. Thurs. Fri.
12:30-4:30 No Appt. Needed
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
OPEN HOUSE
3 Idrm available May 1st, central air/heat/hair,
3 month supply and removal option. Call 843-0911.
and removal option. Call 843-0911.
BRAI bpt 1027 Mississippi St. Available May 13, May rent bid $560/mo. Water call Call Anne Kearney
% bdm. avail. starting summer & fall. CA.
% bdm. avail. baleney next to campus location.
call: p41-1155.
1 bedroom apt in quiet older house. Available
Aug. Blk. ceiling, faning window A/C off-street.
Free WiFi.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
$ bedroom close to campus, water paid,
30/month close to Cal Bali 82-513-4212
$ hotel close to campus, water paid.
3 Bedroom Summer Sublease 1 bedroom used as
room+Months & Utilities 74/92/87
- On the bus route
- Quiet location
- 2bedroom (1 & $ ^1/2 $baths)
- Laundry facilities
- 24 hr. Emergency maintenance
843-4754
- §475permo.
(call for appt.)
3 Bdm Apt. available for summer sub-lease. washer & dryer + 2Bmts. Great location near empset. Available May 21 thru end of July. 1344 Kempcky. Call 749-7296
3 Bdm available May 1st, spacious, 2 full bath, walk-in closets, central air/heat, dishwasher, laundry facilities, quiet setting, 3 month lease and renewal option. Call (843-9001).
DW,MW,FP. Back Patio, Cable paid 380; Clinton FIwy- Farmy- Lamar Township 641-7849.
3 bdm summer sublease across from stadium.
May free, washer/dryer, dishwasher,
microwave, backdoor, deck, big rooms 842-6314
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
Now leasing for Fall
4 BEDROOM DUPLXE IN WEST LAWRENCE
2 bath/ washer & dryer / on rent路/built route
5 bathroom room $90/no mo pets. Locally owned and professionally managed by Sterling Property Management
OnKUBus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
1&2Bedrooms
All utilities paid but electric, 3br; clob KU, $765;
1 June; 3 br$; $253+ util.; available now; 1 br$
$285+ electric; Aug. 1, room close KU, $252;
1 br$; $285+ util.; OK 82 OK $284
BCR Storage Co. INC .storage lockers available
M-84. m-298. Call for details M-74. F-84.m-
649. m-298.
Avail. Aug. 15, a b a 28 upb bdwn & campus.
Close to GSEP. No pets. #4700/m plus deposit. Alt. ut.pd. Call bwb sp.m.-sp.m for appt. Landlord 841-208 or present tenants 841-2097.
Exercise Room
available August beautiful, renovated small 2m
d apartment, in older house. Ceiling fans,
window AO, off-street parking, 14th & Connecte-
walk. To KU or downtown. $40. No pets. Beta-
Cheap Summer Sublease 1 large bedroom apt.
505 North Central Ave. in a cool townhouse.
Call Nina 218-396-4900.
Are you looking for a very nice birm. apt. available June 1. On KU bus route. Washer/Driver hookups and much more. Only $450 per mo. Call for details 842-0017
M-F 10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
Available Aug. Studio ed; renovated older house, front porch, ceiling tint window A/C/1300 RD
Available Aug., small 2 bdmpi r, in renovated older house 7th and Ohio, wood floor, ceiling fans, window A/C. Water paid, no pets,$455.841-107.
Available August renovated, small basement 1
and bathroom in old house, water paid, no
water. $84,917-1074
btwn, downtown and campus. Close to GSP-
Corbin. Nopets. $550 + deposit & utilities. call 841-
1207.
Avoid paying the summer rent. Small, 2 bedroom apt. on a 10-month lease. Avail. Aug. 1. Ceiling fan, room air conditioners, off street parking, no living room. 13th and Vermont. Very. $485贴士.
Available $/5-1/18 $7.19 in $3 berm apt $200/mo.
Available $/5-1/18 $7.19 in $3 male pool.
A/G/D/W Bertle Cell 769-9424
Check out this great location! Sublease 2 Bdrm from May 16 to July 31 on the KU bus in Grayscale Apei. (S15 #1) $400 per month plus utilities. Call 748-1888 or 841-9877.
Bradford Square
is now leasing 2 & 3 bedroom apts. for fail!
• Allowed
• On KU Bus Route
• Microwave, dishwasher
and garbage disposal
• Laundry room
Plan share call 749-1556
Hawaii Palm Island
Holiday Apartments
2稚 b2dm 1b bath next to South Park. Water paid
Cory 414th month B48-5217
Leasing for Summer & Fall
- 1 Bedroom $350-$360
* 2 Bedroom $410-$425
- 2 Bedroom $410-$425
* 2 Bedroom $595-$645
- 3 Bedroom $595-$615
- Recently constructed
Recently construc On bus route
On bus route
- 1 Bedroom $350-$360
- Nice quiet setting
- Sorry, no pets
211 Mount Hope Court #3
For more info. or Appt.
call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Finder's Keeper! Excire nice cuz, spacious 2
purses. Great cleaning. Pool bus, barque.
Great maintenance, no pets.
$345. Now signing yr leases starting June, July,
Augue. Come see! Spanish Crest Apartments
For Renr 2BH, 1Bh, Apl close to campus. Car-
lors at Renr 2BH, Fall 831-828-7504.
Available Summer and Fall. Call 831-828-7504.
For rent in Topela, Lg. solid, Home 190 Yr old home. Available July 1; i.e. 8/24 full bath, corner, chain link fence, 690 per month + deposits. please call 528-4876.
Purmulared 2 bbmr, second floor apartment in private home for 6 nets. No pet安娜. Avail
room on first floor.
First Management is now leasing 1; 2; & 3 bedroom
firsts, for August!
- Carson Place*
* Stadium View*
* Chamberlain Court*
* Oread
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OFFERINGLUXURY
2BDRM APARTMENTS
TAN AEFDARABLE PRICE
2 BDRM PARTMENTS
ATAN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
- Exercise weight room
- Fireplace
- Energy Efficient
- On site management
- Daily 3:00-5:00
808 W.24th
841-6080
KVM
--some cotlage near campus available June 1.
forest, unfortunate, from outside
pasture, for sale 843-3900 or 843-3984.
GREAT Apt. Sublease! 2-story furnished apt. So close to campus and Mass St. PRICE VERY NEGOTIABLE! $591 per month. 1311 Tennessee. 865-4380.
GTA part-time position in Eastern Civilizations for 1995-1966 acedemic yr. Deadline May 12. Apply in 2118 Wescoe. 864-3100.
HELP! Summer Sublease Avail. May 15, Aug-14 at
campaign call; report NOW
reply to campaign call
HURRY!one need to fill Large Condo. Availabn now, low rent and bills. Call Bran Travis Dr. 212-896-3047.
Large 2 bed room apt. in older house. 10-month lease. Avail. Apt. eeing ceiling, window at/C., washer/dry hookups, wood floor. $425. Water paid. No pets. 841-1074
June 1 - July 3. fully furnished 3 bldm house
at $725 per month down, $189 per month per month, 84-1594
Kaw Valley Mgmt. Inc. is now leasing Studio, 1,2
& 3 Bedroom apartments, townhouses, & homes.
We have homes for immediate or fall move in.
Come by 808 W 78 St or call us at 814-680-4680
Mid May to Aug. Sublease. Learnam Apts.
Rent each w/ own bath Wery
740-5231
740-5232
Morning Star for clean rooms and apartments in
city neighborhoods, also some houses.
*84-BA1-STAR*
Looking for a nice place to live? Guess What! You could live with 2 cool, easy to get along with guys in a spacious apartment next year. If interested all 'danny at 843-5867.
- 2 Bedroom $380
S
- 3 Bedroom Townhouse $690
Monday-Friday
1 - 4:30 p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS
Great Location. 1801 Mississippi 1 bdrm, base-
ment, studio, Central Air, no pets, $75/mo. Call
842-4242.
1 Bedroom $320
2 Bedroom $420
OPEN HOUSE
Leasing for Summer and Fall Pet Free Environment Call 749-1288
--some cotlage near campus available June 1.
forest, unfortunate, from outside
pasture, for sale 843-3900 or 843-3984.
MUST SUBST FOR JUNE & JULY - 2-bdrm.
CALL 911-850-3456;
basement $600 monthly + utilities.
Call 911-850-3456;
1 new lbm. apl. avail. for sublease submita
avail. 5/15. Washer/Dryer, quiet, private
parking, 1 block from campus, microwave, dishwasher,
AC. 8410/mo. Call 749-4307.
3 story home for 2-4 students at 17' E. 110' 1. 1 year lease.
Available June 1. Call 744-8203 for application.
One Room in Campus Place Apt. available for sub-
scription, free of charge. $215 per month + utilities
Call 811-491-3800
RENT REFERRAL
A&S LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO RENT?
RENTALSOLUTIONS 841-5454
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 Furnished house w/ w/d./3.15
from Campus Bathroom 22487 N. Niles Ave.
N/S, Niles Ave. Zax 981-901
STUDIO at Apple Lamp Apartments. Will do summer lease. Cable Call Paid 843-4300
SUB-LEASE: b.ldmr. $235 + utilities D/W_WDT
Cisco to校准 in May after May 20
D/SUBLEASE: b.ldmr. $235 + utilities D/W_WDT
Sublease BTP aPr.仗, mid May through July 1993-09/19 or 749-5787. Located at 1st and Vermont.
Sublease 2 Bdm Rpt. through July 31. Close to campus at 131 Tennessee. Call 749-5823.
bath. Apx: $#ly furnished, $#ly泡浴, $#ly bathrooms. 820/month. Call Shelley 841-772.
Sublease 3 bdmr. 2*: bth, pool, garage. 841/mo.,无奈. 865-5116.
Part25
We feature some of the largest 1 & 2 bedroom apartments in Lawrence. Nowacceptingdeposits for Fall 1995
Call or stop in!
- Ten nondrives
- 2 pools
- Volleyball court
- Washer/Dryer hookups
- Laundry facilities
- 4 Bus stops on property
Open Mon.- Sat. (8-5)
(No pets please)
2401 W.25th
842-1455
SUBLEASE STUDIO; June & July, option to
revise, $30/m. I will pay $45 for your deputy 74-
59.
SUBLEASE. May 16-July 1, new 4 bdm3 bath; MAY FREE. Clean rent. Negotiable. Call 821-1281.
Sublease: May 16-July 31, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, newer apartment. $596/month + US$17.058.
Summer rent, extra clean, walk to campus; 3 bdm3, 2 bath, all appliances, dryer/drypro system.
Sublease undurified bedroom in great apartment. Clean, energy efficient, close to campus. Available May 13. May bills paid. $217 mo+ deposit. Call 521-9446.
Sublease: 4 bedroom apartment for sublease
1 bedroom & 2 bathrooms, furnished and deck
742-769-5862
Summer Sublease - Spacious 2-bedroom, 1 bath,
close to campus, $486/month. Call 832-9366
Summer Sublease 2 beds
close to campus $486/month. Call 832-9366.
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apartment 1
from campus. Available May 15. May free. $433/mon-
tary.
BEST PRICE!
BEST LOCATION!
Now leasing for summer and fall. Call for an appt. to see your new apartment.
Berkley Berkley FLATS
BERKELEY FLATS 11th and Mississippi 843-2116
2B RM may rent free! furnished, C/A, outdoor pool.
On bar route *e* close to campus. Need to move
home. Please call 604-598-1777.
Summer Sublease from May 17 to Aug. 15, 2.5 bd.
Sublease from June 1 to July 15, 3 bd.
a month, 7.09-247 ask for Jarnel or Bob.
Summer Sublime May15 to Aug.15. Spacious 3
Berm, 28m², balcony, dining table, dis-
ping board, campus and Maus.
Bice 1 bdm, 2 floor apct close to campus, w/bal-
cage, $200/m, May padv for. Call 81-4066
Summer Sublease 1. Bedroom. Available June
Call 853-902-802
Great Location and backyard.
submiser submise with option 3 bedroom, 2 bath.
Bedroom 1 Bedroom 2 Bedroom 3 Bedroom
800/mm²/974/FPAIR 3118 485-1871
**Summer Sublease. May13-July 31 (with fall option)** SBD, free cash can be used, WD, DW
discounted.
omber sublineanne AC, WC'd, near KU $23/m. $29/m.
living areas w/ 3 people Cal Aaron 823-0683.
Summer Sublease. Campus Place Apartments 3,
4, 5, 6. Renewed, unlost. May rent.
Call: Cali M4-84118
**summer Sublease:**
May 12-August 1. $210/mo + 1/2 utilities
*rent paid. Call 843-4175.*
Option for fall available. Available June 1-
2 bedroom. $80 a month, on bus route, water
supply. Parking fee applies.
Summer sublease 1 tbam in a nice 3 lb
sublease 1 tbam in mid-May. $250 + its utilities.
Mail Michel atMichel@uva.edu
Summer Sublease: 1 Bedroom, 1 block from
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 1 bedroom, farmhouse
Summer Submarine. Spaciali bldm bprn.
Bronx campus. May 15-Aug 10
872/me call 892-3471
872/mc call 892-3471
Summer subunit for fall Largest BRapt in
microwell, microwave, microwave,
pool/ bat. Call 6319 0179
The greatest summer sublease in Lawrence 3. Bdrm, 2.bath. We are graduating and must move to KC proton. A/C, W/D, DW. Price negotiable. Call 832-2388
Two Rooms for rent in spacious 5 new bdm.
house. Dishwasher, microwave, W/D, no pets.
Kitchen. Refrigerator red ret $400.
Unique house stores 3 bed, 2 bath, CA, PP $60,
941-STAR (7827)
in just 4 easy steps:
1. Call 842-4200
---
3. Reserve an apartment
YOU can prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER or FALL in just 4 easy steps:
Visit an apartment in our
3 convenient bus stops
Laundry facilities in 20 of
21 apt. buildings
Free basic cable
Carports & Garages available
4. RELAX... In a few short months you can be:
Swimming, playing tennis,
volleyball or basketball, walking on our 40 acres or unwinding on your balcony or patio surrounded by trees and green grass...
M-F 8-5:30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
It's time to step up to
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
EXPERIENCED
PROFESSIONAL
MAINTENANCE AND
OFFICE TEAM
Very nice 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, close to
Wynn and the MGM, windows, off street,
parking lot, 301-698-7299
summer Sublime. Very nice 5 bedroom 2 bfa in
spacious house, hardwood floors, lots of windows,
deck, 2 car garage, close to campus. No Pets. 749-
2919
Sublease space 3-4 bdm house A/C, WD,
sunroom, sun room, fun summer living $250/mo. Call 749-1787
Female roommate needed until August 1. $190 +
's utilities. B32-0393.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 roommate needed for summer to share 3 bdrm
townhouse, W/D, pool. $236 + utilities. Call Noah
at 824-906.
FRIENLY Grad-level lakevolks.seKN/SPEM.pref. big bright wavetable skylight duplex nr. campus. Quick clean nairers from a room on park balcony. Tiny studio. 841-2647. KAEP Trying--beautiful for summer
Grovey roomie needed for cute 2 BR house w/big院. N/S male or female, or gender and/or grad student preferred, $250 /m+1'/uil, starting this summer or August 1. Let OK Cal KH 685-568. N/FSEmale needed for summer sublease in beauty base b/w bornroom B/W bathroom W/D/W Beautiful! Avail. May! Aug! 1. Friendly rooms! Only $20/m+ 841-1083
br Victorian townhouse, fireplace deck, close to campus; 'or' or 'y' issue; $month + mail.
N/S female need to sublease 2 bdm apt
D/ Water, trash, cable call CalLisa at
832-0944.
R/S roommate wanted for 2br. furnished house in neighboring Bodega. Great perform next neg. on pool/spa/spa/baths. R/S roommates wanted for summer sublease. $3 block from campus, W/D, $135/mo. + $1 utilities.
NJ need/T S/N female for 2 BR pt. near camp.
Storage of urine, pets, animals. Pets allowed.
Staphiae on E33-8544.
Need Sub-letter for Summer. Rent $177.50 per month. Contact Evan at 832-2289 for visit.
Non-smoking female needed to share 2 bedroom,
furnished apartment. On KU bus route. Washer/Dryer. Starts Aug. 1. $258/month + utilities.
Call 749-1588.
One female roommate needed to share
3 bedroom house for summer & or fall.
One male roommate needed to share a 3 bedroom town home. Washer / dryer included. Avail. May 15- July 31. 843-751-53
One roommate for fall will take to share 3 B/prt.
2 yrs old, to close to campus; 1 year lease.
8½/month. Call Campbell at (714) 650-2911.
ROOMMATE FINDER
A&S MANAGEMENT SERVICES
NEED A ROOMMATE?
841-5454
Professional, non-smoking female needs male or female for furnishings Alvaraar Towhone. For fireplace $366/mm utilities included. Private room, bath, & study $85/wed nights & Wed evening
Roommate M or F, to share a big ap. w/ hardwood floors beginning in Aug. N/S who don't mind noise. No high stress people. $280/mo. util. Deposit rei. 749-2791
Roommate need for summer for 5dm house.
Easilyaging roommate in campus
Roomate Call: 849-942-4621
Email: bjn@ucl.edu
Roomsmades needed to share 3 Bdrm & 8 Bathroom. Chesapeake has no other rooms except underutilized units. Utilities: 650.
RURAL FARMHOUSE-quiet female to share with non-smoking grad student and two big dogs. $230 + 1+ util. Available Ago. I Diane. 887-6240 Share 2 bdr, male, n/a, graduate student preferred, w/d, $200+utilies, near campus. 832-1250
Summer Sublease - born in 3 bdm apt. Very close to campus. $150/mo + 1 utilities. 792-7323
WANTED! Female n/ smoking roommate(s) to live in house / duplex for Summer and School year with 9th school year. We will find the place ! 843-8757
8B
Monday, May 1, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
College Life: A Few Things To Know
A mouse is falling from a stack of books.
KNOW: which off-campus bookstore will buy back your used $45 textbooks for more than 25 each.
快 慢
KNOW: which "30-minutes-or-it's-free" pizza place always takes exactly 31 minutes.
1 800-CALL-ATT!
IT ALW
i
KNOW: which evil, quarter-eating laundromat machines to avoid.
KNOW THE CODE. $ ^{sm} $ LWAYS COSTS LESS THAN 1-800-COLLECT. $ ^{sm} $
Hey, on college campuses those "in the know" are the ones who rule. And it's not just about being smart in the classroom, it's about being wise with your wallet as well. So if you want a great low price on a collect call, just dial 1 800-CALL-ATT. It always costs less than 1-800-COLLECT. Always.
There are lots of tricky things for you to learn at college, but here's something that's easy: KNOW THE CODE, and save the person on the other end some serious money. You'll be glad you did.
dial 1 8 0 0
C A L L
A T T SM
ALWAYS COSTS LESS THAN 1-800-COLLECT.*
AT&T. Your True Voice.*
AT&T
* Promotions excluded. 1-800-COLLECT" is a service mark of MCL
© 1995 A&T
CAMPUS
KU workers put rocks between an area homeless man and the hard place where he used to sleep. Page 3A
SPORTS
Kansas improves to 8-17 in the Big Eight after beating Rockhurst last night 11-3. Page 1B
PARTLY CLOUDY
High 60° Low 50°
Weather: Page 2A
Weather: Page 2A
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
图
VOL.104.NO.148
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING 864-4358
TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1995
(USPS 650-640)
Drugs in the Dorms
Residents are lighting up as authorities are cracking down
By Teresa Veazey
Illustration by Micah Laaker
Jodie heard the knock at her door in Hashinger Hall.
"Oh no! We're busted," she thought.
Turning on a fan, spraying air freshener, opening a window and covering the bottom of the door with a towel hadn't helped.
Jodie opened the door to a KU police officer who said that he could smell marijuana and that the smell appeared to be coming from her room.
"Do you care if I come in?" he asked.
In a tired voice, Jodie responded, "Yeah, that's fine."
The officer didn't find anything in Jodie's room. She and her friends had smoked the joint. One of her friends also had swallowed the "roach" – the butt of the joint.
OJ
NEWS:864-4810
D
Death toll reaches 139
The Associated Press
Developments in the Oklahoma City bombing:
THE SKETCH: The FBI released a new sketch of suspect John Doe No. 2, giving a side view and described him as very tan and muscular.
THE SCENE. Rescuers gave up the search for signs of life and plan to switch to heavy machinery to remove bodies from the rubble, Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating said. Machinery may be brought in today.
THE TOLL: The death toll reached 139, including 15 children. About 40 people still are missing.
THE INVESTIGATION: FBI agents sought two men who stayed at an Arizona motel near the one used by suspect Timothy McVeigh in recent months. They also may have spent the night of
EXP
Oklahoma CITY
LOSION
the bombing in a motel 180 miles from Oklahoma City.
Near Junction City, where the Ryder truck that carried the bomb was rented, agents searched woods and sent divers into a lake looking for evidence that materials for the bomb were mixed nearby and tools and equipment were thrown in the water. Investigators say they found a receipt for one ton of ammonium nitrate in Terry Nichols' house in Herington. The receipt allegedly bore MeVeigh's fingerprint. Nichols, a friend of MeVeigh's is being held as a material witness.
THE BUILDING: The federal buildings' fate is in doubt. Page 7A
Watkins receives low bid
By Virginia Marghelm Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The Watkins Memorial Health Center expansion project is under budget—way under budget.
The lowest bid for construction, which the University of Kansas is required by law to accept, was almost $1 million below the University's original construction estimate of $4,969,000, said Allen Wiechert, University architect. The bid, which was $2.8 million, meant that KU had the money to add seven extra projects to the expansion, such as remodeling some existing space at the center and putting a canopy over the entrance.
But when all seven alternate construction options were added, the construction cost was still about $700.00 under budget.
This made the good news even better for the University because it was able to hold back more contingency funds than originally were planned. Contingency funds are funds
"There's an advantage for all your younger brothers and sisters "
sisters."
Allen Wiechert University architect
reserved for unfoforeseen costs that arise during construction. The leftover money also made it possible to purchase a new X-ray machine for Watkins Wiechert said.
And with all that added in, the budget still is about $500,000 under budget, Wiechert said.
For future KU students, that means paying less money in student fees
than was originally anticipated. Student Senate approved a $15 dollar a semester student fee to help finance the project. The fee will start this fall and will continue as long as there are outstanding bonds - revenue bonds that will be sold to investors to help raise money for the expansion - said outgoing Senate treasurer Chad Browning.
The University originally planned to pay the bonds back in 15 years. But because the project is under budget, it can be completed in 10 years, Wiechert said. This means that the student fee will be more short-lived than was planned.
The lowest bid was made by RMT Construction Company Inc. of Olathe. The contract officially will be awarded after enough bonds are sold. The sale of bonds will begin on May 10, Wiechert said. Construction will begin after the contracts clear, which could be as soon as mid-June, he said.
Construction is scheduled to be completed in two years.
It's all down 'Hill' from here
The 1995 University of Kansas Commencement Exercises
■ When: Sunday, May 14. Process begins at 2:30 p.m.
Program begins at 3:30 p.m.
■ Where: Memorial Stadium.
■ Graduates need to meet on campus behind the Campanile at 2 p.m.
In the event of inclement weather, call the KU Information Center at 864-3506 to find out whether the ceremony will be moved to 5 p.m. at Allen Field House.
Changes in ceremony saves time and energy
Kansan staff report
Organizers of KU commencement exercises hope to get the ceremony under way a little faster this year. To accomplish this, graduates will march down Campanile Hill in two lines instead of one.
Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, chairwoman of commencement traditions committee, said the change was made to help decrease the time it took for graduates to march down Campanile Hill and into Memorial Stadium.
George McCleary, chairman of the commencement logistics committee, said that in the past one line of two students abreast would walk down the Hill. This year there will be two lines of two students abreast.
McCleary said that the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences graduates would be walking on the east sidewalk and sitting on the east side of the stadium. Graduates in the professional schools and master's and doctoral students will walk down the Hill on the west sidewalk and will be sitting on the west side of the stadium.
The commencement committees also will provide a bus service to make parking at the stadium less of a hassle.
McCleary said a bus route would run from 11:30 am to 6 pm. The route will run from the Kansas Union to the Chi Omega fountain to the Burge Union to Lewis Hall then to the stadium. The bus will stop approximately every 15 minutes at each stop.
McCluskey-Fawcett said the procession needed to be speeded up because people with young children and the elderly have trouble sitting in the sun for two and a half hours.
Commencement is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Sunday, May 14. According to a University Relations news release, about 4,600 graduates will participate.
If it rains, commencement exercises will be moved to 5 p.m. at Allen Field House.
For information on special assistance for the commencement ceremony, the Student Assistance Center at 864-4071 can provide help.
INSIDE
THE TOWER OF THE STATE MUSEUM
Surveying the scenery
From the sixth floor of Fraser Hall to the walkways overlooking Potter Lake, Mount Oread offers a host of scenic views.
Page 8A
Ooh that Burge smell, can't you smell that smell?
By Brian Vandervilet
Kansan staff writer
Last week, a broken seal on a grease trap at the Burge Union was creating smells that left employees covering their noses and wondering about the sewer-like odors.
Union goers turning up noses after grease trap's seal broke
"It reeked at times," said Chris Cooper, Hays senior, who was sitting in the third-floor lobby yesterday. "It was unpleasant in this building — people left. At times, I wished I could leave."
The strong-smelling, 20-gallon grease trap is used to collect grease from the cafeteria's many pots and pans. The trap, located in the mechanical room on the Union's bottom level, is also within feet of a building air-conditioning unit.
"The air handler was sucking the odor and circulating it throughout the building," said Wayne Pearse, Union building engineer. "You couldn't print what it smelled like. Even though it was nontoxic, it was a
"You couldn't print what it smelled like. Even though it was nontoxic,it was a really terrible smell."
Wayne Poarse Union building engineer
Maintenance workers began searching for the problem April 25, Pearse said. At first, the grease trap had not been suspected because there had never been problems with it before. The Union has had odor complaints in the past, but the problem usually was dried-out pipes that could be fixed by adding water.
really terrible smell."
Dwayne Warrington, maintenance supervisor, said the workers had searched the pipes, drainage pumps
and air handlers for the smell's origin. They even suspected that an animal had died in an air-conditioning unit or that someone had exploded a stink bomb, he said.
The smell was the worst Thursday, when the broken seal was discovered. Despite turning off the air handlers, the rancid smell of old grease spread through the Union as the trap's lid was removed so workers could clean it and replace the seal.
"It smelled like sewage," said Michele Kessler, an employee on the first level of the Union. She said that last week was not the first time the Burge had smelled poorly.
Pearse said he understood why people had complained about the odor.
J
"It's very rare to have any problems with grease traps," said Pearse. "But when you do, everybody knows about it."
Jessica Willis, Omaha Neb., junior and employee at the Union Placement Center, said the worst was when the odor was combined with a deodorant used by maintenance to pacify the smell.
"That was a very strong smell," she said. "It's not like it was overpowering, it was just annoying."
2A
Tuesday, May 2, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
金
Horoscopes
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE! Favorable changes occur in your professional as well as personal life. A period of great financial and spiritual growth lies just ahead. A demanding new job or exciting hobby be part of the picture. Go for the gold! A recurring problem will be solved before Christmas. Work and romance are linked early in 1996. Take an overdue trip or vacation next spring. CLEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: country singer Larry Gatlin, super model Naomi Campbell, pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock, actress Bianca Jagger.
By Jeane Dixon
T
♥
♩
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Good news will arrive from a friend you have been concerned about. See through a romantic partner's false promises. A child is about to enter your life. Do not worry.
You can handle it!
TAUROUS (April 20- May 20)
Plans for business travel unfold smoothly. Enthusiasm continues to build over a new employment opportunity. A positive attitude will make a partnership more harmonious.
STAIRLINE 14 june 20, 2019
Extra reserves of energy will carry you through this busy day in grand style. Guard against acting overbearing. A new political involvement could alter the course of your life.
69
CANCER (June 21- July 22): A former love could re-enter your life. A relative or friend may
decide to retocate. If invited to join this person, weigh your options carefully. A nurturing approach is vital when dealing with children.
♌
LEO (July 23,Aug. 22): Fruitful discussion or low-key negotiations could lead to the signing of an important contract. Finan
of an important contract. Financial gains are realized by means of a loan or insurance settlement. An opportunity to travel may account for your high spirits.
W
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Show appreciation for the back
**FINHO** (Aug. 23-Sep. 22)
Show appreciation for the back
you receive. Extra effort is
necessary to keep a promise
made to loved ones. Pay atti-
tion to step-by-step details.
Sharing your concerns helps
you make practical choices.
15
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Cooperation remains the keynote in joint business or financial endeavors. You may be excited about certain travel plans or anticipated changes at work.
M
about what you would like to do.
A hunch proves surprisingly accurate. Show your appreciation with a favor with a well, well-chosen idea.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Put your inspired ideas into action rather than talking wifely
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21): A new occupation is a posi-
bility. Others are focusing on
>
adopting a healthier lifestyle or making household changes. Exercise self-discipline and you will be full use of your creative gifts.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22, Jan. 19) A temporary crisis demands an original, innovative approach. But your ideas into action. Read
VS
ring poetry or philosophy will provide valuable inspiration. After today, your uncertain about a course of action will play
ON CAMPUS
Water
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Handle routine tasks with dispatch.
An important new venture
will require extra personal effort.
Rest up. Overtown can lead to
impaired efficiency. Chatting
with someone behind the scenes
helps you make a point.
X
SCES (Feb. 19-March 2u,
Make far-reaching decisions away from the spotlight, and alone.
Taking care of a dreary domestic chore will boost your stock with your mate or partner.
Avoid acting headstrong or impulsive in romance.
TODAY'S CHILDREN are reliable, thrifty and well-organized. A sensible approach to money management and strong business instincts help them reap considerable financial success. An early interest in cooking should be gently encouraged. These Taurians often excel in the culinary arts and could become world-renowned chefs. A need to express their creativity in their work is very strong. They want to convey heartfelt emotion to others.
[Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only]
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Applications for summer Kansan editorial staff are due by noon today in 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Jannie Mumn at 864-4810.
KIOSK staff members will distribute free copies of KIOSK KU's Art and Literary Magazine from 11:30 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. today at the Kansas Union and in front in Wesco Hall. For more information, call JACK Lerner at 749-5225.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch from 11:30 a.m. until 1 p.m. today at the Rock Chalk Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Mike Austin at 864-7317.
■ KU Cycling Club will sponsor a team ride at 3 p.m. today in front of Wescohe For more information, call Rick Finley at 842-1158.
Center for East Asian Studies will sponsor a China symposium 1995 at 3 p.m. today at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ashley Cheung at 864-3849.
KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Brad Bernet at 832-2157.
Oremus will sponsor a Rosary at 6 p.m. today at St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1635 Crescent Road. For more information, call Timothy Brennan at 841-4773.
Bl-ionic will sponsor a cookout at 6 p.m. today at 929 Tennessee St. For more information, call Chris at 864-3091.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Burge Union. For more information, call Gabe Ortiz at 864-6242.
**Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an eating disorders support group at 7 tonight at the second floor conference room in Watkins. For more information, call Sarah Kirk at 864-4121.**
KU Meditation Club will sponsor group meditations at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Ravi Hirekatur at 832-8789.
Christian Science Student Organization will sponsor a forum, "You Are Perfect Right Now" at 7:30 tonight at Alcove I in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Trace Schmeltz at 843-6049.
KU Fencing Club will meet at
KCBT Student Ministries will sponsor a Bible study at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Adam Decatur at 841-1683.
7:30 tonight at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call John Hendrix at 864-5861.
**Amnesty International will sponsor a letter writing session at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St. For more information, call Simone Wehbe at 842-5407.**
Lutheran Campus Ministry will sponsor Taize prayer at 8:30 tonight at Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Pastor Brian Johnson at 843-4948.
Greeks for Responsible Education Enhancing Cultural Sensitivity will meet at 9:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Caesar Millan at 832-8918.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at Alcove H in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mike Austin at 864-7317
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow at Danforth Chapel.
Kansan Correspondents will meet at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at 100 Staffer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Susan White at 864-4810.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5 p.m. tomorrow at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Isaac Bell at 843-9176.
Xingu will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jack Lerner at 749-5225.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mark at 842-4713.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jason Anishanslin at 843-7973.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Kansas Union (ask for specific room at candy counter).
- Straight Allies will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Brenda Dala at 841-8610.
Weather
TODAY'S TEMPS
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines
Kansas City
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha
St. Louis
Seattle
Topeka
Tulsa
Wichita
Atlanta
TODAY
WEDNESDAY
Partly cloudy with south winds from 10 - 20 mph.
6550
Fifty percent chance for rain.
6050
65 50
Source: The Associated Press
85 ° • 58 °
51 ° • 39 °
54 ° • 37 °
55 ° • 37 °
60 ° • 50 °
71 ° • 58 °
60 ° • 48 °
54 ° • 41 °
53 ° • 40 °
68 ° • 49 °
57 ° • 40 °
66 ° • 43 °
63 ° • 43 °
THURSDAY
6643
Dry.
6643
'Lunarred since 1993
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
*THE QUEEN OF GREAT BRITAIN* 1890
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U
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Massachusetts
832-8228
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They're Here!
1995 Jayhawker Yearbook will be available for pick-up:
Wescoe Beach April 26-28 and May1-3 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
If pre-ordered, present KUID
to purchase, bring cash/check for $30*
made payable to:
The Jayhawker
Questions: Call 864-3728
*Supplies are limited if not pre-ordered. 1994 Yearbooks also available for pick-up.
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, May 2, 1995
3A
Bed put on rocky ground
POLAND 1973
Brian Vandervliet/ KANSAN
Thomas S. David, Lawrence doctoral student, examines from a distance the large rocks that were placed in front of a heating vent near the Dole Human Development Center. Facilities operations workers placed the rocks by the vent where David often slept.
Nothing grew where homeless man slept
By Sarah Morrison Kansan staff writer
An area homeless man who often sleeps by a heating vent behind Dole Human Development Center no longer will find it a comfortable place to slumber.
"We did it for aesthetics," Green said. "Since he has slept there so much, we couldn't get anything to grow there."
Facilities operations ground maintenance crews placed large cement rocks by the vent Thursday because the man slept there, Tanya Green. ground maintenance supervisor, said.
Green said another reason the rocks were placed by the vent was that students had complained about the smell of the man.
The homeless man is Thomas S. David, a Lawrence doctoral student. David had no comment about the rocks.
On Feb. 22, the Kansan reported that David was responsible for writing chalk messages protesting divorce on campus sidewalks. Green said maintenance crews had been kept busy washing off the chalk messages each day.
"He sleeps there in the morning because he is up all night," Green said. "That is when he does his chalk writing up and down the sidewalk. We are keeping track of how much time we have spent cleaning up the messages."
She said ground crews had been frustrated by the costly and time consuming process.
Bence Williams, assistant director of personnel of facilities operations, said that the rocks had not been placed to prevent David from sleeping there.
Recently sidewalk messages have criticized incoming Chancellor Robert Hemenway, who has been divorced twice and has a third wife. Some of the messages have called the chancellor's house a brothel. Green said David was responsible for those messages.
"My understanding of it was they were extending the flower bed but not for the purpose to put that guy out of a place to sleep," Williams said.
"We are concerned over the things he has been writing about the new chancellor. We would like for him to stop writing on the sidewalk," she said. "No one likes to look at that on the sidewalk."
But Green said that facilities operations was not trying to run David off campus.
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"He has killed the grass there," she said. "We are just trying to make it look nicer."
'Cinco de Mayo'held tonight
By Eduardo A. Molina Kansan staff writer
HALO won't have a celebration on May 5 because of finals, but it will celebrate at 7 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
The Cinco de Mayo celebration means fiesta for many Mexican-American communities in the United States. The Hispanic American Leadership Association at the University of Kansas couldn't miss the opportunity to celebrate the holiday.
Matt Duran, Salina sophomore and president of HALO, said that the Cinco de Mayo reminded Mexican-Americans about their culture.
"This is a celebration when we show our nationalism and that we feel proud of being Mexicans," he said.
For tonight's celebration, Juan Velasco, as assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese, will speak about Mexican history and the meaning of Cinco de Mayo for Mexicans and Mexican-Americans.
"The Cinco de Mayo in the United States is more a party than the commemoration of a historic event."
in Latin American and Mexican- American communities in the United States in commemoration of the 1862 defeat of French troops at the battle of Puebla.
"The celebration had a historic significance, but it is not considered as important as the Mexican independence day," he said. "The Cinco de Mayo in the United States is more a party than the commemoration of a historic event."
But in addition to the talk, people attending will have a chance to taste some Mexican food.
Cinco de Mayo, or May 5,
is observed by Mexican communities
Velasco said that the Cinco de Mayo celebration had changed through the years in the United States.
Juan Velasco assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese
"The celebration is becoming an ethnic celebration of all Hispanics because it has a more universal meaning compared to the Mexican independence day," he said. "The Cinco de Mayo begun as a celebration of the Mexican culture, but it is a Hispanic party now."
Velasco said that the celebration had a special meaning for Mexicans but that it was becoming more open to other Hispanics in the United States.
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8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Mon. - Fri.
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864-5285
Burge Union, Level Two
8:30 a.m.- 7:00 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.
8:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Friday
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Look for additional buyers in the Kansas Union Gallery beginning May 5th.
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4A
Tuesday. Mav 2.1995
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE: ALCOHOL MANAGEMENT
Binge parties concern greeks steps taken to prevent abuse
The 21-shot birthday party may be on the way out.
Members of four greek houses have recently voted to sign contracts pledging not to take part in 21-shot birthday parties. This decision is the first step towards a more responsible attitude involving alcohol management by members of the greek community.
Spurred by the members of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, the members of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity and the Pi Beta Phi and Kappa Alpha Theta sororities have all agreed to swear off the so-called tradition of drinking 21 shots to celebrate one's 21st birthday. The rest of the Greek community, and the University community at large, should view this decision as an acceptance of responsibility and emulate it in their own living organizations.
The 21-shot party has been a symbol of the college lifestyle for many years. It is a dangerous and senseless practice that generally becomes a
Four houses have taken the lead by deciding to pledge to be careful in drinking alcohol at 21st birthday parties
memorable event for those watching the party, while the guest of honor gets sick and ends up forgetting the whole thing.
Every reason for drinking is obliterated by the inebriation caused by 21 shots. The amount of alcohol in 21 shots is enormous and can take most people to the verge of alcohol poisoning. A birthday is much better celebrated and remembered if some self control is applied and one drinks in accordance with his or her tolerance.
In a time when binge drinking is progressing towards epidemic proportions on college campuses and in the greek community in particular, it is a comforting and reassuring sight to see young men and women accepting responsibility and acting in a mature fashion regarding the use of alcohol.
CHRIS VINE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
THE ISSUE: HUMAN RIGHTS ORDINANCE
Commission finally helps city take a step in right direction
Justice has finally been delivered by the Lawrence City Commission.
In a 3-2 vote, commissioners voted to place the words sexual orientation into the human relations code. This makes Lawrence the first city in Kansas to pass such legislation.
The controversy and debate that surrounded this issue was unnecessary. This measure should have been passed in November when it was initially introduced, but it took the election of three new commissioners to finally do the right thing.
The measure, dubbed Simply Equal during the debate, for the group that spearheaded the effort, does only what those two words say: treat homosexuals in Lawrence equally. It is, as the name indicates, a simple concept that became distorted in arguments and ignorance. To see the ignorance finally overcome by a sensible commission restores some hope in the political system in Lawrence.
The vote in favor of adding the words 'sexual orientation' to the human rights ordinance was a positive move.
Bob Moody, who voted against the legislation, said that you cannot force tolerance. But such a measure can at least help Lawrence take a step in the right direction towards acceptance and equality.
We can only hope the rest of the state will look a Lawrence as an example and soon follow in the footsteps of this much-needed measure.
JENNY WIEDEKE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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MANNELY Chicago Tribune
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Jeff MacNetly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
'Sludge' bids adieu to KU, recalls college experiences
Hey kids, remember me?
I'm the cat who wrote those movie reviews with Matt Gowen last spring.
You know, "Matt & Sludge: At the Movies."
Everyone kept telling him how cool it was that he invented an alter ego to talk with about movies. They said how perfect the Sludge person was, since he represented the average college Joe, or is it Joe College?
Well, when Gowen was little, he had this invisible friend named Digs that he'd talk to all the time (He's kind of strange, isn't he?)
But I'm real, OK! He actually has a friend named Sludge. Even my parents call me Sludge. Where'd the nickname come from? That's another story. I really can't get into it here. But you have no idea what it's like to have countless stories written about you, only to realize those stories are actually about leftovers from water treatment plants. You've seen the headlines: "Residents prepare to deal with sludge," or "Sludge causing foul smells in reservoir." It does wonders for your ego.
Anyway, I don't consider myself the wisest man on campus, so I never had a problem representing the average guy, 'cause basically that's what I am. So maybe I can do that again here, as I say goodbye to KU.
That's right. Like 4,500 or so other students, I'll be strolling down the Hill on May 14. And since drinking's
not allowed on the Hill anymore, I'm sure everyone will be stone-cold sober (Uh, yeah). Of course, like
Let's talk show.
BRAD
STOLL
GUEST COLUMNIST
many of you walking with me, I'm done...um, in December.
Then I have some student teaching to do. And then some graduate courses. Damn! Oh well.
said life was fair.
Yeah, I suppose it's not as nifty as being done, graduating and walking down the Hill all at once, but then, no one ever
But, I gretess if I get a bunch of presents (wishful thinking) and have a party with my friends, that can't be all bad. right?
Even if I'm not completely done, I soon will be saying goodbye to the days when Coke, coffee and beer replaced the bloodstream and Cheeze-its, grilled cheese, Cheerios and spaghetti kept me alive. The diet of champions.
Gone will be the days of going to your job and to classes looking like a complete Sludge, Imean, slob. you always can tell the freshmen, too, can't ya. Dressed to the teeth. Combed, showeder, tucked.
Soon everyone learns the art of throwing on a sweatshirt, thongs and a hat, though. By the way, the most random hat wins (mine is the
Southwest Louisiana State Rajun
Cajuns).
Ah. college.
- When a friend has this friend and she'd really like to meet you and she's got a really good personality, (Besides, I'm taken.)
■ When you hear it's quarter draw night somewhere, and you grab $2 in change to buy for the night. As I finally figured out after I started working behind a bar, bartenders just love it when you have exact change.
■ When you run into someone, they say "Hi, Sludge," and you couldn't remember that person's name if someone offered you free Subway for a month. And, of course, they know you don't know because you say something like, "Oh, hi you," or "What's um. guv?"
- When it seems like you owe money to everyone you've ever met.
■ When you get so wired on coffee, while studying for a test, you start seeing little fuzzy things run across the floor.
"Winning isn't everything. It's the only thing."
Ah, college.
In closing, I'd like to remind y'all of a quote from my idol Vince Lombardi that keeps me going (it may keep you going, too):
When it seems like you don't have time to do one danit thing.
Well, that and a nice, cold beer. Bye kids.
Brad Stoll is a Lawrence senior in education.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Some students in Social Welfare are 'taxed without representation'
In the last five years, I have been assailed by every media and popular culture outlet, that I needed to "Get out and Vote."
In fact, candidates were openly pressing flesh in front of Wescoe and the Kansas Union, urging me to "just vote, baby" On top of this, my brother has put considerable pressure on me, saying that my vote was my only real voice in student government and that it needed to be used. These messages persuaded me. On April 10, I went to one of the polls to vote.
This has included the recent KU Student Senate elections.
Instead, I was informed that I could not vote. I immediately questioned the decision and was told to seek redress at the Registrar's Office. This proved fruitless because I was informed that they had no part in student elections. The Registrar's Office referred me to my school, the School of Social Welfare.
Unfortunately, the story doesn't end with a feeling of accomplishment.
I contacted Ra Willis, secretary in the school, who looked into the matter. After Willis checked with Student Senate, she informed me that because I was a newly admitted student in the school, I was not allowed to vote. Their justification was that they were unsure of my intentions of attending
school in the fall and did not want a potential nonstudent affecting the election.
This is ludicrous and a direct violation of my civil rights. First, and most importantly, the fact remains that every single vote, regardless of what school the student votes in, is liable to fall under the same restriction. After all, how can the glorious and omnipotent Senate know that a liberal arts student will be returning to school in the fall? Can they see the future? Consider the competition that I had to face in order to get into the School of Social Welfare. I guarantee that it was much tougher than getting into the College of Liberal Arts and Science.
That seems to say that my dedication to returning in the fall is greater than a student in the college. Doesn't it make sense that someone who has to make the extra effort to get into the school is more inclined to return in the fall than someone enrolled in the college? Yet, liberal arts students are given the right to vote while I'm denied. Senate has obviously violated my civil rights by unfairly discriminating against me based upon a judgment that it refuses to apply to all students. If I am not allowed to vote because the potential exists that I may not return in the fall, than everyone else who may not return in the fall should also be disallowed to vote. Obviously, if this
guideline was applied uniformly and consistently, then no one could vote.
There are no guarantees of anyone returning.
There were three Senate candidates running for the School of Social Welfare, two were chosen. There were only 55 total votes for the winners. Fifty students from the school were not allowed to vote. That means that almost 50 percent of the school are being governed without representation.
These voices in government are the ones that vote to determine Senate budget items, codes of conduct etc. I think now is an appropriate time to recount an old saying from the Revolutionary War, "Taxation without representation is tyranny."
Tora Jackson Leavenworth junior
I have no intention of sitting idly by and watching this occur. There can be no compromise. I want the right to vote. I want the right to choose my representation. This is not a privilege — this is my right. I will have it. This is not a case where there can be some middle ground. I am illegally denied my voice in government. There, will be redress or there will be action. I will not be silent.
Taking a look at where you've been helps see what's important
And so this semester disappears into the sunset astride its white horse.
Each of us look at our accomplishments and failures.
Those of us who are graduating are
I was once told that I should take time to look at my life to think about what has happened to
STAFF COLUMNIST
ISAAC BELL
Those of us w,
preparing their
goodbyes, others
look forward to
the respite,
and some, like
me, take a
breath before
continuing the
long trudge
toward a degree.
me, to examine my successes and my disappointments, the reasons why they happened, and the effects they brought. For some reason, this advice appealed to me.
Now I examine my life every semester.
Was this a good semester? No, not really. I found myself having to struggle with the details of my life and watching my scholastic career suffer as a result. This is nothing new to me, and I am almost used to it. Many of my goals just didn't come through. Some of the blame rests on the world's idle whimisms, but most of it rests on my shortcomings.
Yet I am a happy man. It is rare that I do not smile, and all in all, I am content with the semester and with my past year.
I wish I could put my finger on the reason why. I give credit to my friends to some extent. There is quite a bit that I owe to people who I promised not to name in this column. But they know their names, and they know what they're done. But a companion to the movies, a shoulder to ary on, a weekly lunch just to talk, intense discussions over the phone — it all matters; it was all appreciated.
And still that is not the entire story. I enjoyed writing this column, having the chance to babble for a few inches every week or so. I worked with interesting people in a few campus organizations. I continued to meet professors and graduate teaching assistants who challenged me to learn even when just talking on Jayahawk Boulevard.
Perhaps I finally discovered an important new step in the dance of life — the way to enjoy the world despite myself. It lets me smile at the exhortations scribbled on the sidewalks and the rain against my window. It lets me grieve at tragedies and feel cleansed afterward.
It lets me live my life with hope.
Hope that no matter what happens,
I will survive it. That's all it really is
— hone.
I doubt anything I write in this space will change lives and bring illumination. I have no need to be the voice of a generation or the preacher of a good life. I don't take myself that seriously and neither should anyone else.
But this is the one message I wish to have everyone hear just once.
It's time to climb down off the soap box for awhile. I was getting splinters.
Isaac Bell is a Lawrence junior in English.
How to submit letters and guest columns
Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the authors signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
guest columns: Should be double-
spaced typed with fewer than 700
words. The writer must be willing to
be photographed for the column to
run.
All letters and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or out-right reject all submissions. For any questions, call Heather Lawrenz, Fall 1995 editorial page editor, at 864-4810.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday. May 2.1995
5A
The image shows a silhouette of a person blowing into a glass bottle. The background is a light, neutral color with a shadow effect that creates the silhouette of the figure. There are no other discernible objects or details in the image.
Photo illustration by Valerie Crow / KANSAN
Popular drugs and their effects
Illicit drugs are all too common at the University of Kansas.
By Robert Allen Kansan staff writer
And although some initially give pleasant results, all have negative long-term effects.
A psychological addiction makes the person dependent on the feeling, but the body does not crave the drug, she said.
Cathy Thrasher, chief pharmacist at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that there were two kinds of addiction: physical and psychological.
These are some of the more common drugs used at KU and their effects on the body.
Marijuana leaves are usually smoked but can be ingested in tea or food. Effects from smoking it occur within minutes and can last for hours. Users describe a sense of calmness and well-being. Dry mouth, red eyes, clumsiness and increased appetite also result. Marijuana can make the senses more vivid, and it is psychologically addictive.
"It's very accessible, available and inexpensive on college campuses," said Julie Francis, health educator at Watkins.
■ LSD, or acid, is a hallucinogen that has no medical purpose. It usually appears in tablet, capsule or liquid form on blotter paper. LD causes users to experience hallucinations and altered perceptions of reality. LD also
can cause nausea, dizziness, loss of appetite and increased blood pressure and body temperature. LSD is psychologically addictive.
Drugs in the Dorms
The largest risk from LSD is a flashback, when the effects of LSD suddenly and unexpectedly reoccur in the body.
Cocaine and crack are psychologically and physically addictive.
"If you use the drug now, in 10 years it's possible to have a flashback." Francis said.
Cocaine and its purer form, crack, initially produce feelings of happiness and ecstasy. Hunger and fatigue fade away. But cocaine and crack also affect the central nervous system, causing the heart rate, respiration, pulse and blood pressure to rise. Blood vessels in the heart also contract, and strokes or heart attacks are likely in users.
- Heroin is a narcotic derived from morphine and appears as a white or brownish powder. Heroin can be smoked, inhaled or injected. Heroin causes feelings of euphoria, warmth, calmness, drowsiness and loss of concern. Heroin is very physically addictive and withdrawal is very painful. Shivering, cramps, diarrhea, vomiting and sleeplessness are common withdrawal symptoms. Death from accidental overdose is common.
Cocaine can be obtained from the leaves of a South American plant and was originally used as an anesthetic. Cocaine can be smoked, inhaled or injected, but smoking cocaine will cause it to react faster. Smoking it also produces higher highs and lower lows, Francis said.
"It's responsible for more deaths than any other illegal drug," Francis said.
Continued from Page 1A.
But this was no laughing matter. KU police say they take doping in the dorms seriously. They say they have shown up in the residence halls almost two dozen times this semester, on the trail of pot smoke. One of those calls landed a criminal case.
While the officer looked around the room, pictures began to flash through Jodie's head: going to jail, losing her scholarship, getting kicked out of school and having a criminal record.
"You think in the back of your mind, 'Gee, this is really funny,'" she recalls. "I can't believe this is happening to me."
Jodie was scared, and, perhaps because she was buzzing, she also found the situation slightly humorous.
The tri-county drug squad regards the residence halls as small potatoes, however. They're looking for dealers, they say, not users.
Small-time user
As it turned out in the preceding scenario, nobody was arrested, and nobody went to jail.
Michelle, a friend of Jodie's who had been smoking pot with her before the police came, said she didn't know how many times
she had used pot but said she wouldn't call herself a "druggie."
s. she wouwdn't call herself a "druggie." "It's not a really regular thing," she said. "There are a lot of people in this hall who do it a lot more than me."
Jodie and Michelle and other names used in this story are fictitious for obvious reasons. Nobody would talk about drugs without guaranteed anonymity.
Michelle said she thought having the cops show up was ironic. She could name people who smoked once or twice a day
and never got caught. But the second time she and Jodie smoked up together in the residence hall the cop came
The number of drug violations went down this past year, from 25 offenses in 1993 to 16 offenses in 1994. But Rozmiarek offers no list of reasons for the decline.
"A little bit of pot might not be a big deal," said Rose Rozmiarek of the KU police department. "But if they're caught with it, it could be."
KU police don't deny that illegal-drug activity is going on in the residence halls. And they're prepared to catch people like Jodie and Michelle.
"It was a really bizarre thing," Michelle said. "We were being really cautious."
Rozmirak said the goal of the KU police department was to get rid of illegal drugs, but how much KU police could really control drugs was hard to say.
"A lot of the drugs we end up with, we get from the street," Rozmiarek said. "Not all the drug cases come from residence halls."
Since the beginning of the semester, KU police have reported seven cases involving drugs. Six of those came from cars during traffic stops. The other was a case of possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia in Hashing Hall, after KU police received a call about the smell of marijuana.
KU police have received 21 calls since the beginning of the semester about marijuana smoke, but in each case, they found no evidence to pursue a criminal case.
Rozmiak said the fewest drug calls came from Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall, all-women residence hall. The other halls were about equal in terms of calls.
Officer James Anguiano of the KU police department said visiting a person's room after getting a call about drug activity required a certain element of surrise.
Opening up the door and seeing a KU police officer standing there makes some students nervous and reluctant to talk, Anguiano said. Generally, students cooperate after the officers explain why they are there.
If it's in plain view that gives the officer probable cause that a crime is being
But doing what police ask because he or she is scared, may not be in a dope smoker's best interest.
committed."
"Officers will try to tell you everything will
Michole Koehler associate director, Legal Services for Students
be better if you cooperate," said Michele Kessler, associate director of Legal Services for Students. "A lot of students just think, 'Oh, I caught.' I'll go ahead and tell them."
"The biggest mistake students make is to open the door wide." Kessler said. "If some
But students, such as Jodie and Michelle, who are smoking pot don't have to answer the knock at the door. They also don't have talk to the officer, Kessler said.
Kessler recommended that students talk through the door or step outside to talk to the officer. When students open the door and their drugs or drug paraphernalia are visible, the officer can choose to arrest the student or give out a ticket.
At that point, officers have to decide if they can make an arrest or give a citation.
"If it's in plain view, that gives the officer probable cause that a crime is being committed." she said.
them identify themselves."
Kessler did recommend that if students are visited by an officer and questioned, they only should answer identification questions such as name and address. The
Kessler said students should just step outside.
"Don't let the officer in your room," she said. "You don't have to answer the officer's questions."
student doesn't have to answer any questions beyond that point.
"Just tell them I don't want to talk to you," she said.
Then shut the door.
A Sideshow
In the war on drugs, the residence halls are a minor theater.
Bill Shepard, a Lawrence police lieutenant, is in charge of the Tri-County Drug Task Force which covers Douglas, Jefferson and Franklin counties. Shepard said he wouldn't classify drugs in the halls as being a big problem.
For most of the students who use illegal drugs, marijuana is the most prevalent, Shepard said. But LSD is making a comeback.
"They just go wild when they use that," he said.
Shepard has seen LSD at the University and has worked cases where the drug has been manufactured locally.
With the right materials, Shepard said a chemistry student could make LSD. But manufacturing of illegal drugs in the residence halls is rare, he said. Most of the time, the drug unit only comes in contact with recreational use and drug sales in the halls.
Most of the students at KU are good kids, Shepard said. The students who are selling the drugs and pushing the drugs are the people the task force wants to put out of business.
"They bring it in from the outside, and they won't tell us where they got it sometimes," Shepard said. "Some people will say 'here's my source, and I can help.'"
Last semester, a KU student sold marijuana out of a residence hall room to a undercover drug-unit officer who was wearing a police transmitter, a "wire." Shepard said the student also was using someone else's room.
Usually, the students who sell drugs have a connection before they come to KU, he said.
To Shepard, students who smoke marijuana aren't criminals. The students who are selling marijuana are the criminals, he said.
"What I worry about is the ones who use it and come here and influence the ones who don't," he said. "They're the ones we want."
Shepard said he hasn't seen cocaine or heroin on campus.
Dorm Dealer
"Cocaine was the only thing I did after coming here," said Joe, a resident of Hashinger Hall.
But one student tells a different story.
Joe, who had done plenty of drugs by the time he got to KU, said he had snorted cocaine more than a dozen times. He's sold the drug as well.
"Cocaine is fairly easy to get most of the time just because I stumbled upon a guy who could get it real easily," he said.
Generally speaking, Joe said coke can be hard to get in the Midwest.
"I've sold a variety of things," Joe said.
"You buy in quantity and then sell in small amounts."
Joe said he wasn't into coke dealing to make money. He said he did it just to help out his friends and make them happy.
"My biggest concern is everyone, and all of my friends get to enjoy their drugs," Joe said. "And I'll make a little change for the risk I'm taking."
While most students who sell drugs probably aren't making enough money to pay for tuition, they certainly can make some spending money.
"They can make a tidy profit and then have
"They can make a try enough drugs left over for themselves," Joe said. "I know people that certainly do that."
Pot has the biggest market and is the easiest to sell. He knows because he's sold it before.
With pot, Joe said he wouldn't mind selling to a friend of a friend of someone he didn't know. Cocaine is a different story, however. With coke, Joe always
sells to people who are his close friends
"Because that's such a scary thing and involves a little more paranoia, I wouldn't be trying to make money off that," Joe said. "I wouldn't be trying to do a lot of dealing with that."
The legal penalties for cocaine are much more severe, so people are more touchy about it he said.
"People keep flipping the coin, and one day it will come down tails."
For Joe, there is always a little voice of warning in the back of his mind when he makes a sale.
Is Joe worried about getting caught?
"My biggest fear would be of people that you can't be sure of," he said. "When you start talking to people about selling things or buying things from people, you can't be sure."
Setting the tone
"What if this person is a cop?" the voice asks.
"If it doesn't have an immediate consequence, people say, 'Well, I got away with it.'" he said. "People keep flipping the coin, and one day it will come down tails."
It will catch up with them at some point, said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
Ken Stoner KUdirector of student housing
Dope isn't unique to the halls or the University.
"Enforcement is what we have to do," said Jonathan Long, an assistant director of student housing. "Education is what we want to do."
Addressing illegal drug activity in the residence halls means approaching drugs and drug use from two different angles enforcement and education.
Students who use drugs in the residence halls are flipping a coin.
Illegal drug use violates both the law and the student housing policy, which makes it a serious offense. Long said. When drug activity is reported, it is not treated lightly.
"I don't think there's more of a problem here than anywhere else," Stoner said. "I think we try to address it as best we can."
To educate residents about the dangers of drug use, the department tries to emphasize the dangers and consequences of drug use through various programs.
"We contact University police, who confront the residents," he said. "The police then handle the situation as a police matter."
Long said outside speakers and peer educators are brought in to speak to both students and resident assistants.
Ken Stoner
"RA's are required to go over this, and they try to let residents know what expectations are related to their behavior," he said. "That sets a tone." Is drug use a problem in the residence
"Whether it's a problem depends on how you define a
problem," Long said. "We do have an increase in the number of situations our staff has to deal with which have to do with illegal drugs."
By far, marijuana is the most frequently used illegal drug in the residence halls, Long said. While it is possible for students to grow pot in their rooms, most of them buy the drug from outside sources, he said.
"Manufacturing, sale and distribution—the majority of those types of activities occur outside the hall," Long said. "There have been situations in the past where we have acted on suspicion of a resident selling illegal drugs, but I don't think it originates in the hall."
Even though Jodie almost was busted for smoking dope in the residence halls, she says she'll do it again. Michelle says she will, too.
Coming down off a high
The two girls don't know when they will get high again. They don't know when they'll quit smoking done either.
"I don't know," Jodie said. "Sometimes you're going to stick with things forever, and sometimes it's great for awhile, and sometimes you're not going to go back to it. ever."
Michelle doesn't really see a reason for her to quit smoking pot. She said that she knows professionals in the working world who still light up.
"I know some of my friends whose parents smoke pot," she said. "And it's not interfering with their lives."
Jodie said she would just stop smoking "whenever."
"I know that sounds kind of weird," she says. "Because when I was 10 years old I was always like, 'No, no, I'll never smoke pot."
6A
Tuesday, May 2, 1995
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Can't study? Try the kitchen
By Amy McVey
Special to the Korean
Satisfying cravings can help studier
Special to the Kansan
Lea Cheyney sits down at her desk, turns on her lamp, opens her biology book and begins to study. But, she won't get far. Cheyney has fries on her mind.
"When I get stressed out and don't want to deal with it. I go to McDonald's," said Cheyney, Glenwood, Iowa, sophomore. "Then I am a much happier person."
Cheyney is not alone. Many know the feeling of strong food cravings, and some go as far as binge eating. Whether it be a trip to McDonald's after a long night of studying or a bag of M&M's after a test, there are reasons behind these cravings.
Ann Chapman, a nutritionist at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that food cravings were biochemical.
Most food cravings are a result of
low levels of serotonin, a chemical in the brain that can act as a natural relaxant, Chapman said. Certain foods, when broken down, raise serotonin levels, thus creating a feeling of relaxation.
Linda Keeler, a psychiatrist for Counseling and Psychological Services at Watkins, said serotonin was related to mood, sleep, short-term and long-term memory, the immune system, and hunger.
Pulling all-nighters can lead to binge eating. Keeler said. If a person is without sleep, the body tries to compensate for the increased stress, which causes serotonin levels to drop, creating cravings.
"Some people when they are stressed tend to want to eat more," Keeler said.
Women, because of hormonal differences, may be prone to cravings more than men, Chapman said. Women's sugar levels tend to drop before menstruation, causing then to crave certain types of food before their period. Usually, something with sugar will give the quickest satisfaction. When blood-sugar levels are
high, this makes the brain register the feeling of being full.
Giving into cravings, if it is a small amount and is a part of an otherwise healthy diet, is OK sometimes, Chapman said.
"A lot of times it is better to give in to that desire and let yourself have that pleasurable food because saying no too often actually can help set up binge eating," she said.
Chapman said that the key was not to be too restrictive.
In fact, a lot of people who eat fat-free foods end up gaining weight because they forget that calories count, she said.
"Fat is essential to human nutrition, if you didn't have some fat in your diet you would die," Chapman said.
A good way to avoid overeating is to eat small amounts of food at regular intervals, to get an adequate amount of sleep and to eat slowly. Chapman said.
Chapman said the United States and other industrialized nations were obsessed with food.
Library copying costs can add up
"Food gives us immediate gratification," she said.
By Ian Ritter
Kansan staff writer
A dime may not seem like a lot of money today, but to a person making numerous photocopies at University of Kansas libraries, those dimes can add up.
Photocopies in the libraries cost 10 cents each, unless a photocopying card is purchased for $1 at the libraries. With the card, a copy costs seven cents.
But at other places in the Lawrence area and on campus, copies can cost as little as four cents or less.
to business in the area.
Food Mart does not own the copier, Benjamin said. A company called TRM distributes the copiers
At the Jayhawk Food Mart, 701 W. 9th St., copies cost five cents. Until three weeks ago, copies were 3 cents each.
"Especially during finals time, that thing runs constantly," said Jerry Benjamin, owner of the Jayhawk Food Mart. "There's people in here 1尔 2 a.m."
Since the copier uses an ink cartridge and is not printed by a luser, copies made aren't the highest quality available, Benjamin said. But he said that they were adequate for most people's needs.
"For five cents, it doesn't make too bad a copy," he said.
The Jayhawk Food Mart isn't the cheapest place in town to make copies, though.
Copies can be made in the Burge Copy Center in the Burge Union and at the Union Copy Center in the Kansas Union for 3 cents each.
But there are certain materials, such as items on reserve and reference books, that students aren't allowed to take out of libraries. Students are forced to conv them there.
"They have about three thousand of those spaced out through a lot of areas." he said.
Nancy Jaeger, assistant to the dean of libraries for budget planning, said that the higher copying prices in the library were unavoidable.
Benjamin said that TRM collected an average of $400 monthly, 5 percent of which goes to the food mart.
"The microfilm/fiche copiers are quite expensive, and there is no way they will pay for themselves," she said. "There is no way we cart cover the deficit on those units."
Jaeger said that the costs of maintaining machines that copy microfilm and microfiche were high, leading to the necessity of charging more for a copy.
"Let's put it this way," she said.
"We're not making money."
Kelly Cody, Spring, Texas, sophomore, said that she used the copying machines at the libraries every week. She said that the option of using the copy card at Watson was good in comparison to other libraries.
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Charges settled against Malcolm X's daughter
The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Prosecutors agreed yesterday to drop murder-for-hire charges against a daughter of Malcolm X in a deal that requires her to abandon her allegations of an FBI frame-up and seek drug and psychiatric treatment.
The settlement was presented yesterday morning at Qubilah Shabazz's scheduled appearance for a trial on charges of plotting to kill Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. U.S. District Judge James Rosenbaum approved the agreement without comment in a hearing that lasted only minutes.
U. S. Attorney David Lillehaug said the charges arose "out of an extraordinary set of historical and personal events which appeared to have triggered Shabazz's actions."
Shabazz, who saw her father gunned down 30 years ago, was accused of trying to have Farrakhan killed because she believed the fiery minister had a hand in her father's assassination and was a threat to her mother.
Defense attorney Percy Sutton said Shabazz's lawyers decided they could not risk the chance she might be convicted. She faced up to 90 years in prison and a $2.25 million fine.
Outside the courtroom, Shabazz said she was relieved that it's over and that she's glad it's behind her.
Lillehaug said he thought that an initial attempt at treatment rather than prison was a more just approach.
chiiatric and chemical dependency program, gets a job or attends school and remains law-abiding. Shabazz would spend the first three months in a residential treatment program in Texas. If Shabazz meets those conditions, the indictment would be dismissed.
The settlement includes an affidavit in which Shabazz accepts responsibility for participating in the plot but maintains her innocent plea.
In the affidavit, Shabazz said a statement she gave to FBI agents — described by prosecutors as a confession — was not coerced and acknowledged that the government acted in good faith in prosecuting the case.
Critics of the government's decision to indict Shabazz had suggested it was done to divide Black Americans.
The judge asked Shabazz if she understood that signing the agreement, known as a pretrial diversion, meant she gave up her right to a speedy trial.
"Yes, I understand that," Shabazz answered.
Qubilah Shabazz was 4 when she and her three sisters accompanied their pregnant mother Feb. 21, 1965, to the Audubon Ballroom in New York City, where Malcolm X was shot and killed.
Three members of the Nation of Islam were convicted in the assassination.
Malcolm X's widow, Betty Shabazz, agreed last week to end three degrees of animosity and appear with Farrakhan on Saturday at New York's Apollo Theater to raise money for her daughter's defense.
Fate of building is uncertain
The Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY — Should it be refurbished where it stands? Razed and rebuilt at the same site? Demolished and replaced with a monument?
The Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, gouged by a truck bomb, faces an uncertain future as recovery workers poke the ruins for the missing.
Once the rescue effort is complete, probably within days, structural engineers will get their first thorough check of the girders and beams to see how badly the building's skeleton was weakened. A complete analysis and cost estimate of rebuilding could take six months.
"Emotions should have a chance to cool," said Ron Loftis, a designer who worked on the nine-story, 380,000-square-foot building. "Some people believe this is a building that killed. Some people think this building saved lives. Some people think it symbolizes some nasty thing, and they never want to think about it again. I can understand every viewpoint."
Made of reinforced concrete with a glass facade, the building named for a former federal judge was built in 1977 for $44.5 million — a fraction of the likely cost of repair.
President Clinton already has committed whatever money is needed to replace the work spaces
EXP
THE Oklahoma City EXPLOSION
or the federal agencies that were in the building. But federal officials also pledge to be sensitive to local feelings as they do so.
"All levels of government as well as the people of Oklahoma will be involved in the final decision," said Marcella Banks, a representative for the General Services Administration, the federal agency in charge of buildings.
Gov. Frank Keating is among those who would like to see the site turned into a memorial park with a bronze statue of a firefighter cradling a baby. That image of the disaster, captured moments after the blast in a photograph distributed by The Associated Press, was published on front pages worldwide and came to symbolize the tragedy.
Sentiment for razing the site and putting up a memorial materialized almost immediately after the extent of the death and destruction became apparent.
Despite the gaping hole in the building, Loftis said significant portions remained intact, including the elevators and stairwalls on both sides. Loftis said there didn't appear to be any technical obstacles to rebuilding the structure.
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KANSAN
MAY 2, 1995 PAGE RA
The splendor of the KU campus, showing the Dyche Hall, Campanile, Fraser Hall and the Spencer Research Library, from behind Carruth-O'Leary Hall.
The University of Kansas offers some stunning vistas that fascinate many students.
The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text or objects. It appears to be a grayscale scene with a large open field and trees in the foreground, while a building with a tall tower is visible in the background. The sky is overcast.
Story by Jake Arnold Photos by Jarrett Lane
Potter Lake and the sprawling green on the north face of Mount Oread, as seen from the fourth floor of Snow Hall. In the distance, Memorial Stadium can be seen.
C
ommanding an awe-inspiring view of scenic eastern Kansas, Hogback Ridge towers roughly 200 feet above downtown Lawrence. From this lofty point, otherwise known as Mount Oread, University of Kansas students can enjoy a view in three directions from a variety of points.
"I just love the view because you can basically see everything," said Brian Kruse, Rose Hill junior. His favorite vantage point is from near the parking lot of Carruth-O'Leary Hall. "Sometimes I just sit on the grass and stare."
The imposing center of Lawrence began more than 300 million years ago, when limestone and shale collected at the bottom of a shallow sea covering eastern Kansas. Millemia of erosion and natural forces combined to form the future site of the University of Kansas.
From the time Kansas was organized as a territory, Lawrence was in competition for the site of a state university. Shortly after statehood in 1861, Kansas' founding fathers, lacking the financing and support for one state university, created three: a normal school in Emporia, an agricultural college in Manhattan and a university of undecided intent in Lawrence.
Once Lawrence had its university, it needed a site. Forty acres of Hogback Ridge were purchased from ex-governor Charles Robinson for half a block of city land, 10 acres on another part of Hogback and $600 cash.
The ridge's unofficial name,
Mount Oread, means any of a group
of mountain nymphs. The mount is
a layer of limestone over shale.
The limestone protects the shale,
which is more unstable and suscep-
tible to erosion. The erosion of the
sides of the hill left a ridge known
as a hogback — hence the name.
What better place to put a state university than on top of a hill, where it can be both self important and inconvenient. Despite the space and access limitations of being perched on a hill, the increased altitude does offer gorgeous vantage points.
Joe Suber, Topeka junior, enjoys the view toward Potter Lake on the walk toward Carruth-O'Leary.
"It's a peaceful, green, rolling view," he said. "It looks like a catalog cover — like college is supposed to be."
It wasn't always so nice.
When the first 55 students and three full-time faculty trudged up the barren, treeless hill on Sept. 12, 1866, the university wasn't actually on its lands. Lacking funds for a complete building, the school's founders built their first structure
on a foundation already in place about half a mile north of their 40 acres. Old North College, as the building and thus the entire university was called, was located where Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall is now.
rated from the rest of the region.
rated from the rest of the region. Old Fraser Hall was torn down in 1965, but a new Fraser was put up on the site. More than a statement of intellectual superiority, it is a nice place to watch the sunset from.
Chancellor
"It's beautiful.I just kind of sneak up there sometimes."
Tisha Brown, Prairie Village sophomore, noticed the view from
John Fraser decided that that wasn't good enough. In 1872, University Building, later called Fraser Hall, was built at the 1,030-foot summit of Mount Oread. A mammoth structure of limestone, it was intentionally built facing east, toward more civilized lands. Fraser wanted it to tower above Lawrence so that its scholars would be sepa-
Tisha Brown Prairie Village sophomore, on the view from Fraser Hall's sixth floor
a sixth floor window while bored at a psychology experiment one evening.
"It's beauti-ful," she said. "I just kind of sneak up there sometimes."
sophomore, likes the view from the fourth floor of Snow Hall looking toward Potter's Lake.
Many buildings on campus offer beautiful vistas.
"It looks like you are in some remote part of nature instead of a crowded campus," she said.
Julie Arvidson, Eudora
Chancellor John Marvin is largely to thank for the natural beauties of campus. In the late 1800s he was concerned that "the New University grounds, beautifully located and ample in extent, lie exposed as common pasture for stray cattle."
He initiated much of the landscaping of the Hill, such as planting Osage hedge rows and hundreds of trees. Marvin Grove on the east side of the Campanile is still enjoyed by students today.
But it is those high mountain vistas, whether from Mount Oread or Daisy Hill, that students really enjoy.
Elizabeth Taylor, Overland Park freshman, enjoys the night view from her room on the third floor of Ellsworth Residence Hall.
"At night, I can see the lights of Lawrence, and it is kind of like being in a big city if you imagine real hard," she said.
The University of Kansas is a wel come change for students from some of those flat Midwestern states.
Jessica Zellermayer, Skokie, Ill,
freshman, likes to look out toward
the Campanile from the third floor of
Watson library.
"Skokie is as flat as you can get," she said.
"It is a better view than Skokie."
Memorial Stadium, Dyche Hall and north Lawrence, as seen from the north stairwell of Fraser Hall's sixth floor.
KU Life
Lead Story
In March, eight Connecticut legislators and almost three dozen other guests became ill with diarrhea and stomach cramps from eating food at a reception sponsored by lobbyists for the Connecticut Food Association. Meanwhile, in Maine, a legislator introduced a bill to force lobbyists, while on duty in the State House, to wear oversized name tags of the same orange color as deer hunters' vests.
Science Fair
Twins Timothy Keys and Celeste Keys were born in New Orleans recently — Timothy on Oct. 15 and Celeste on Jan. 18. Doctors believe this gap between twins is unprecedented. A week before Celeste was born, a girl named Elisabetta was born in Rome, Italy, about two years after her mother had died. (The
non researchers explained that it was sexual activity that caused female fruit flies to die young. Sperm of super-virile fruit flies contains an additive that causes the female to become disinterested in sex for a while in order to give that sperm a head start at fertilization before the female mates again.
NEWS OF THE WEIRD
In February at a Veterans Administration facility in Jackson, Miss., Navy veteran Michael Martin received a paymaster-paid penile implant to cure his impotence. Martin had been released from prison 10 months earlier after serving four years for molesting two young girls. Said Martin, "My only wish for the future is that I be allowed my rights under the Constitution to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."
mother's preserved embryo was implanted in the womb of Elisabetta's father's sister.)
■ In a January issue of the journal Nature, Lon-
In January, the European Commission of Human Rights agreed to investigate the case of three British men who were convicted of assault while participating in various consensual sadomasochistic sex acts. Britain's highest court, the House of Lords, had upheld a trial court's ruling that consent is not a defense to acts of bodily harm.
Latest Rights
In Denver in October, U.S. District Judge Edward Nottingham ruled that imprisoned kidnapper Robert James Howard should be allowed to practice certain rituals associated with his religion of Satanism and that the prison should perhaps furnish Howard with a robe and incense. One of the rituals was a "destruction ritual," during which, according to Howard, he would visualize the death of an enemy and then convince himself, he would hope, not to carry out the killing.
In September, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that a Montreal man was entitled to a new trial on the sexual assault charge brought against him for attacking a 65-year-old woman in a wheelchair. The court said the man was entitled to show that he should be acquitted because he was so intoxicated that he did not understand what he was doing. A few weeks later, in Alberta, Canada, a man was acquired of assaulting his wife, based explicitly on the Supreme Court's ruling.
In December, New York state Rep. Michael Nozzollo told reporters that the state spends $700,000 a year on estrogen for its 87 male prison inmates who want to become female. State law establishes a right to such hormone treatments for inmates, and some legislators fear that indigent transsexuals may be committing crimes in order to receive free treatment.
PLAY BALL Owners, umpires settle with a five-year deal. Page 2B BASEBALL Attendance stays steady despite strike. Page 4B
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY. MAY 2, 1995
First things first: Jayhawks victorious. 11-3
SECTION B
By Tom Erickson
By Tom Erickson
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas' 11-3 win last night against Rockhurst College was filled with several firsts.
Making his first college start was freshman pitcher Linus Williams. Williams (1-1) also earned his first win. Freshman outfielder Eric Vann also picked up his first college hit, a triple to lead off the fourth inning.
"We've needed a couple of games like that to work on a couple of things," Bingham said. "The kids are continuing to develop and they handled this thing real well."
Most of the firsts were set up by Kansas coach Dave Bingham to give some of the younger players a chance to gain experience and build for the future.
The game, added to the schedule last week as a make-up for some of the Jayhawks' rainouts, was used specifically
for Williams to get his first start, Bingham said.
"Linus is really good," he said. "We knew all along he was a quality guy. He has a great chance to be a starter in the future."
Williams, who walked three and struck out two in five innings, said he was a bit nervous when the game began.
Freshmen Casey Barrett, Mike Terry and Ryan Van Gilder and sophomore Tim Lyons followed Williams, each pitching one inning and holding the Hawklets scoreless.
"Our bullpen was very aggressive," Bingham said. "The only guy who got into trouble was Casey, and he got through."
Kansas scored two times in the first and second innings, and again in the third to take a 5-2 lead.
Then sophomore outfielder Isaac Byrd hit a run-scoring single in the fourth inning and was followed later
with a three-run home run by senior designated hitter Brandon English. The Jayhawks finished their scoring with two more runs in the seventh.
Byrd, who went 3-for-5 with an RBI, said the victory helped build momentum for the team's series with Missouri, which begins at 7 tonight.
Kansas must win both games to guar-
antee a spot in the Big Eight tourn-
ament later this month in Oklahoma
City.
200
"This win is exactly what we needed going into the Missouri series," Byrd said. "This is a young team, and we are definitely building for the future. These are games we desperately need, but we will treat this series the same as all the rest and get a couple of wins."
The Jayhawks are currently in sixth place in the Big Eight with a 8-17 conference record. Missouri is in seventh at 5-16. The two teams split a two-game series earlier this month in Columbia, Mo.
Kansas junior Clay Baird (3-7, 6.96 ERA) will start tonight's game, with junior Jami Splitterff (4-6, 4.48 ERA) following the next day. Tomorrow's game begins at 2 p.m.
Kathleen Driscoll / KANSAN
Kansas catcher Josh Dimmick throws to first baseman Alex King, putting out Rockhurst first baseman Craig Burroughs. The Jayhaws beat the Hawklets 11-3 in yesterday's game, and now are sixth in the Big Eight Conference with a record of 8-17.
Groundskeepers rake field of benefits
Baseball crewworks up to 40 hours weekly get in-state tuition
By Matt Fey Special to the Kansan
The grounds crew for the Kansas baseball team left the garage door open before a game against Iowa on March 10 at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium. Their oversight may have helped Kansas win the game.
10.5
Early in the game, with two Iowa runners on base, the batter hit a slicing shot down the right-field line. The ball landed in fair territory, but curved into the open tool shed. Two Iowa runs scored. However, the umpires ruled the hit a ground-rule double, taking a run off the scoreboard.
Kansas escaped the inning without giving up another run and won 4-3. Normally, the five students responsible for the care of the field do not have a noticeable impact on the game. In this case, their mistake, rather than their work on the field, helped the baseball team.
This year's crew members are Scott Koenigs, Rochester, Minn., graduate student, Eric Young, Rosemount, Minn., senior, Brandon Marsh, Dickinson, N.D., senior, Erik Gagus, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore and Ryan Coleman, Omaha, Neb., freshman.
They are responsible for the upkeep of the baseball field. As compensation for this task, the team reduces the students' tuition to in-state tuition, saving the students several thousand dollars.
Wilson Kilmer, Kansas pitching coach, is in charge of the groundkeepers. He hires them, assigns their duties and oversees their work.
"Just like our team, we expect certain things out of them and get pretty unhappy when they don't perform," he said.
Using students to take care of the field began about four years ago when the NCAA cut baseball's graduate assistant program and reduced the number of collegiate baseball coaches from four to three.
In order to complete all of these duties and maintain the field's quality, the groundkeeper must work all year and up to 40 hours a week. Marsh, who worked as a groundkeeper and at another job and took 18 hours last semester, said that time management was important.
Their daily duties include chalking the lines, raking the infield dirt and watering the field. The crew also is responsible for building bullpen benches and repainting the outfield fence.
Despite the long hours and hard work, the crew said that the rewards of the job outweighed any negative aspects. Though they do receive tuition breaks, as well as free food at the stadium and free equipment, they said that the intangibles were most rewarding.
"Sometimes you feel like you're living there," he said. "You feel like pitching a tent in right field."
"We're really proud of the field," Koenigs said. "It takes a lot of work to keep it looking so good."
Photos by Sean B. Crosier / KANSAN
One example of their hard work came before the garage door incident against
ABOVE: Scott Koenigis, Rochester,
Minn., graduate student, foreground,
rakes the pitchers mound as Brandon
Marsh, Dickinson, N.D., senior drags the
infield to smooth it at a recent game at
Hofstad-Maupin Stadium.
RIGHT: Erik Graggy, Kansas City. Mo., junior uses a steel outline to make chalk lines straight at home plate in preparation for a recent game at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
lowa. The crew had to rake the entire field by hand to break up a few inches snow. Two days later, the field was completely ready for play.
Young said that he joked with Gnagy that the grounds crew deserved an award, a golden rake, for their achievement.
"We busted our butts," Young said. "We got the field so dry that we had to water it again."
"We all whine about the hours and whine about being scrubs. You know, 'We work for the baseball team. We scrub bases," he said. "But we all love the job. We know it's a great deal we get."
Coleman said that pride in their work and love for the game of baseball made the difficult job worth their effort.
Regionals, finals keep team busy
Kansas golfers stay confident despite strong Midwest field
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas has not received its official invitation to regions. Invitations will come later in the week.
After taking on the Big Eight Conference last week and placing second, the Kansas men's golf team has another foe to conquer — finals.
However, District V, the Jayhawks' district, sends its top seven teams to regionals, and Kansas currently is fourth.
But while they are trying to study and do well on semester-ending tests, the Jayhawks also must focus on the NCAA Midwest Regionals. The tournament is scheduled for May 18-20 at the Bentwater Country Club in Conroe, Texas.
"We're in pretty good shape right now," said Kansas men's golf coach Ross Randall. "I'm very confident that we're in."
Kansas will join 20 teams from districts V, VI and VII in the Midwest Regional. There are eight districts across the nation that are divided into three regionals. Out of each regional, the top 10 teams will advance to the NCAA Championships in late May.
"We know exactly what we need to do," Kansas junior
Dan Rooney said of regional play. "We don't have to play great. But we have to play consistently."
The Jayhawks will battle some of the nation's best teams in the Midwest Regional. Big Eight teams will include Oklahoma State, who is ranked No. 1 nationally, and Oklahoma
"We don't have to play great. But we have to play consistently."
Dan Rooney
Kansas iuniorgolfer
Kansas junior Alan Stearns said the competition was stiff but that the Jayhawks were a team that could and should advance through regionalists.
Arkansas, Texas, Texas Tech and Kent State are some of the other likely regional participants.
Knowing the Bentwater Country Club is one advantage Kansas will possess. During spring break, the team played two tournaments in Texas and took time to play a round at Bentwater. Stearns said the course had a couple difficult holes, but there would be many pars and birdies overall.
With finals ending five days before regional, the Jayhawks will have to work to maintain their games. Rooney said he planned to set aside three or four hours a day to practice and play golf during finals.
Being on the golf course will help break the monotony of studying, Stearns said.
"That helps you refocus when you're studying," he said. "You just have to refocus because we're all here for school."
In hopes of regaining their competitive edge, the Jayhawk starters will attempt to qualify for the PGA's U.S. Open three days before regionalists. Junior Slade Adams will try to qualify in Wichita while Rooney, Stearns, and seniors Tyler Shelton and Tom Sims will travel to Kansas City's Heritage Park.
"It's a great scheduling move for us," Rooney said. "It gets you back in a competitive mindset."
---
2B
Tuesday, May 2, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Let the games begin: tickets on sale now Hundreds line up to order tickets to Atlanta Olympics
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Thousands of people, some in Atlanta lining up before dawn, turned out yesterday to be among the first to order tickets to the 1996 Summer Olympics.
"I figure it's once-in-a-lifetime chance," said Gabe Owens, a student at Emory University who was among about 150 people standing in line at a suburban Atlanta grocery store when booklets containing ticket order forms were released at 6 a.m.
"They told me a lot of people were going to be here, and I didn't want to miss out." he said.
Lines ranging from 25 people to 400 were reported at Atlanta area Kroger and Home Depot stores, where the first brochures were distributed. A total of about 36 million brochures were to be distributed yesterday at more than 15,000 outlets across the country, including Home Depots and groceries that sell Coca-Cola.
However, for some would-be ticket buyers it may be a few days before they get a chance to order tickets. Spot checks across the country found that some stores listed as distribution points in Oregon, Indiana, Kentucky and North Carolina did not have the brochures available.
Mark Pygot, manager of a Food Lion in Raleigh, N.C., said he hoped to receive the booklets from a Coke bottle later this week. "We've been getting many calls for them. It's been generating a lot of excitement," he said.
Mark Preisinger, a representative for the Coca-Cola Co. in Atlanta, said there were a few areas that were not yet distributing the brochures but they were few and far between.
"In general, May 1 is the date the brochures are available nationwide," he said. "There will be cases, like with any promotion — and this one is on a grand scale — where the retailer and the bottler are going to decide they're not available for a week."
In Louisville, Ky., for example, Coca-Cola is running a major promotion tied to Saturday's Kentucky Derby. Stores there won't put up the Olympic displays until that program is completed. Preisinger said.
In most places, however, the rush for ticket books was the first real event of the 1996 Atlanta Games. Now the waiting begins — ticket orders won't be confirmed until September.
"I wish it was this easy to get up every day," said Michael Dannman of Atlanta, who was among the predawn crowd at a suburban Kroger.
Ordering tickets for the Atlanta Games
What time does the sports event begin?
What is the individual ticket price for the event?
What is the combined price of the tickets you want to purchase?
If you had your pick of all the sporting events what would be your preferred choice?
What is the session code of the sporting event you want to attend? The session codes will be listed in the ticket order brochure.
How many tickets do you want?
If you cannot get tickets to your preferred choice of events, what would be your first alternate choice?
If you cannot get tickets to your first alternate choice of events, what would be your second alternate choice?
Ordering tips
While filling out your Olympic ticket order form will be easier than completing your 1.040 tax return, there are still some do's and don'ts for your order to be processed by the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games.
PLAN CAREFULLY: Plan your visit before filling out your form. Make sure you aren't planning to order tickets for two seasons that will be held at the same time.
PRELIMINARIES: Request tickets to the early rounds of competition if you really want to see a particular sport. That should increase your chances of getting tickets since the demand for medal round tickets will be heavier than the demand for prelim-
ALTERNATES: Once you've selected preferred sessions make sure you fill in alternative selections in case you don't get choices. Tickets for every event will be available to the public, but the chances of getting a ticket to the first round of men's basketball will probably be higher than getting tickets to the gold medal game. Make sure none of your alternative ticket selections cost more than your preferred selections. You can list up to two alternative selections for each choice.
GETTING THERE. Leave sample transportation time between sessions.
nary rounds.
OLYMPIC EXPERIENCE: If you just want to go to the Olympics and aren't particularly concerned about what events you see, avoid the popular sports.
**SEASON TICKETS:** If you want to see every season of a particular sport, you can order a "season ticket." ACOR has not released the prices for all season tickets, but a season ticket for football will cost $346.
ONE FORM PER CUSTOMER: Use the original ticket form to order tickets and put your entire order on one form. The computer AC0A is using to process the forms and conduct the ticket lottery for oversubscribed events will only process one form per customer.
**DON'T FORGET YOUR CHECK:** Include full payment for all of your preferred choice, including the $18 processing fee and $1 per preferred ticket "fulfillment" fee.
Scott Anderson, the chief ticket official at the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games, said his reports from the field indicated the brochure distribution was going smoothly and that demand was steady throughout the day.
SOURCES: Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games, Columbus (Ga.) Ledger-Exquiver
- IT'S KIND OF LIKE TAXES: Like your taxes, remember to keep a record of your order form and before you mail it, double check to make sure you have signed it.
Though demand was strongest in Atlanta, it was not limited to the host city.
Columbus (Ga.) Ledger-Enquirer, Knight-Ridder Tribune
Bill and Kathy Gettys of Albany, N.Y., who picked up a brochure at a Home Depot store, said they would take tickets to whatever events are available.
"We're beggars, and we can't be choosy," Bill Gettyts said. "I'd like to just see part of the Olympics."
Umpires, baseball now safe at home
New five-year deal gets okay; players' contracts still KO'd
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Baseball owners who still haven't settled with their players, agreed to a five-year deal with umpires yesterday to end their 120-day lockout.
The regular umpires will return to the field tomorrow. The agreement means the end of picket lines outside stadiums and removes the prospect of a showdown on Sunday, when replacement umpires no longer would be allowed to work in Toronto.
"Their scab strategy was exposed for what it was — a fraud," said Richie Phillips, the umpires' union head. "These people were incapable of officiating at a major league level."
The regular umpires get raises this year ranging from 25 percent to 37.5 percent.
Since the contract is front-loaded and pay will remain the same during the length of the agreement, management calculated the increase at 16 percent over the contract's five years.
The deal was agreed to at 12:30 a.m. yesterday and approved 9-0 by the umpires' board at about 6:30 a.m.
Jerry Crawford, the umpires' union president, said a majority of umpires already had said it would vote to ratify the deal.
In their proposal last week, owners had offered a salary scale of $70.000 to $215.000.
"The agreement passes the rest in fairness," said Gene Budig, American League president. Budig is in his first year as AL president after serving as chancellor at the University of Kansas from 1981 to July 1994.
Replacement umpires will wind up having worked the first eight days of the season and — barring rainouts — the first 86 games. The regular umpires will be paid 100 percent of their 1995 salaries.
"Major league baseball is now
finally safe at home," said Len Coleman, NLpresident.
A planned demonstration yesterday by regular umpires in Baltimore was canceled. Players, who struck for 232 days before a federal judge ordered owners to follow the rules of their expired deal, were relieved to see the regular umpires returning.
"Everything will be back to normal." Orioles catcher Chris Holles said.
Under the deal, rookie umpires — all with at least one year of major league service from their time as vacation fill-ins — will be guaranteed $100,000, up from $75,000 under the expired four-year deal.
Thirty-year veterans, guaranteed $206,000 under the old deal, can make up to $282,500 under the new contract. The only umpire at the top level is Harry Wendelstedt of the NL.
"Having labor peace with the umpires for the next five years is a welcome and necessary development," acting commissioner Bud Selig said.
Under the agreement:
the salary scale for base pay will be $75,000 to $225,000, up from the previous range of $60,000 to $175,000.
all umpires will receive a post-season bonus of $20,000; under the old deal, young umpies get $10,000 and senior umpies get $20,000
■ bonuses for the All-Star game rise to $5,000 from $2,500; for the league championship series to $15,000 from $5,000; and for the World Series to $17,500 from $5,000. Umpires working the new round of playoffs will get $12,500, and they will be allowed to work in the World Series in the same year.
On Friday, the board said it would enforce its law against replacement workers and ruled that the regular umpires would have to be allowed back at the SkyDome starting Sunday, when the Toronto Blue Jays start the season's second series.
"It created tremendous legal problems for them," Phillips said. "There was a chance that we could extrapolate that Canadian decision into an American unfair labor practice decision."
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CRIMSON TIDE
HOLLYWOOD PICTURES PRESENTS A DON SIMPSON AND JERRY BRUCKHEIMER PRODUCTION A FILM BY TONY SCOTT DENZEL WASHINGTON GENE HACKMAN CRIMSON TIDE GEORGE ZUNDZA VIGGO MORTENSEN JAMES GANDOLFINN MATT CRAVEN HANS ZIMMER DREAM M QUEST IMAGES CHRIS LEBENZON MICHAEL WHITE DARIUSZ WOLSKI BILL UNGER LUCAS FOSTER MKE MODER MICHAEL SCHIFFER AND RICHARD P HEHRICK MICHAEL SCHIFFER DON SIMPSON AND JERRY BRUCKHEIMER TONY SCOTT
SUMMER STARTS MAY 12
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, May 2, 1995
3B
Florida's Harvey sidelined for season
Elbow surgery next career in jeopardy for Marlins closer
The Associated Press
MIAMI — Bryan Harvey's season is over, his career in jeopardy.
The Florida Marlins' $4.5 million closer will be sidelined the rest of the year with a torn ligament in his pitching elbow that requires reconstructive surgery, the team said yesterday.
The operation is similar to the procedure that saved pitcher Tommy John's career in 1974. The prognosis for recovery from such injuries is uncertain, Marlins manager Rene Lachemann said.
The 31-year-old Harvey, who pitched only 10 1-3 innings last year because of injuries, had trouble with his right elbow in three of the past four seasons. He lasted just 11 pitches in his first appearance of 1995 before leaving Saturday's game at San Francisco with pain in the elbow.
"They're all different," Lachemann said. "It depends how much damage is in there when they operate."
"You don't take him out of a game unless something is very serious," Lachemann said. "And that was the case."
Lewis Yocum of Ingelwood, Calif.
diagnosed the injury and will perform surgery tomorrow or Thursday. Players such as Jose Canseco and Frank Viola have undergone the same procedure in which a tendon is transplanted to replace the torn ligament.
Yocum also was the surgeon the last time Harvey underwent an elbow operation in August 1992. He came back to post 45 saves with a 1.70 ERA for the expansion Marlins in 1993.
"I don't know what we would have done without him that first year," Lachemann said. "We might have set a record for the most losses in baseball. He made me seem a lot smarter."
Last season Harvey spent three stints on the disabled list, two because of a sore elbow, and underwent abdominal surgery July 14. Doctors suspected that a groin injury had contributed to his elbow problems.
Harvey said he felt healthy this spring and was the subject of trade rumors involving the Cleveland Indians.
The Marlins placed Harvey on the disabled list and recalled pitcher Richie Lewis from Charlotte. Lewis spent the past two seasons with Florida.
Right-hander Robb Nen, who had 15 saves in as many chances last year, will replace Harvey as the team's closer.
Knicks use Cavs' style to take lead in series
New York turns Cleveland's slow game to own advantage The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — The New York Knicks won it Cleveland-style.
"The way that team plays, they're going to make you play this type of game," John Starks said Monday night after the Knicks edged the Cavaliers 83-81 in a brutal game that featured 74 foul shots.
The Knicks took a 2-1 lead in the best-of-5 series and can wrap it up by winning Thursday night at Gund Arena.
The Knicks felt lucky to have won because they blew the coverage on Ferry, who had hit two 3-pointers earlier in the half.
Cleveland's Danny Ferry had a chance to win it at the end, but his open 3-pointer from beyond the top of the key slid off the rim as the horn sounded.
"There was a lack of communication on our part on the last play, and it could have cost us dearly," Knicks coach Pat Riley said. "We're fortunate it didn't burn us."
The Cavs had called timeout trailing 83-81 with 7.8 seconds left after Starks made 1 of 2 foul shots. Mark Price and Ferry then set up a two-man game at the top of the key, Price taking defenders Derek Harper and Anthony Mason with him, leaving Ferry alone.
Ferry took the return pass, squared up and fired from the right
side, but it wasn't to be.
you want to switch, but Mase (Mason) didn't call it, so I didn't switch," Harper said. "I'm just glad he missed it."
New York has won its last six road games against the Cavs, including all three at new Gund Arena.
"There's no such thing as a disappointing win this time of year," Harper said. "We have more momentum now, and hopefully we'll bring the proper game in on Thursday to close the series out."
Every shot and pass was contested by the two teams ranked Nos. 1 and 2 in defense in the NBA this year, in a game that crawled at the slow pace the Cavs have used all season.
Thirteen of the Knicks' last 17 points came from the line, the only field goals during that span coming on consecutive reverse layups by Mason.
Cleveland, meanwhile, went scoreless from the field for nearly eight minutes, sinking 10 of 12 free throws during the drought.
The halftime score — Cleveland leading 38-37 — could almost have been mistaken for a first-quarter score, a sure sign the Cavs had the pace the way they like it.
Price had nine each in the first half for Cleveland.
Price's fourth point of the game, a foul shot late in the first quarter, made him the leading scorer in Cavs' playoff history with 783 points, surpassing Brad Daugherty's 782.
ALCOHOL AFFECTIONS
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Four bucks won't get you into the movies, but it will get you a seat at Lyric Opera's performance of Gilbert and Sullivan's THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE May 13, 15, 17, 19 & 21. Arrive an hour before curtain to participate in Lyric Opera's "Student Rush" program where a $4 ticket cost gets you a seat at PIRATES and the Opera Preview. Hey, you're getting all the culture without those annoying subtitles.
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4B
Tuesday, May 2,1995
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Rob Roy® 4:00, 7:00, 10:00
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"Given the situation of not having a lot of time to promote, it's much too early to make any judgment," acting commissioner Bud Selig said Sunday. "When there's warmer weather and races heat up, attendance will improve."
No one sure if fans will go the distance
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Partly because of heavy discounting by some teams, baseball attendance during the first week of the season declined by only 4 percent from last April.
Last April, the Blue Jays averaged 48,129 for 11 home games. For their first five home games this year, they averaged just 37,654.
Forrest Gump Pc¹/₁₄/₄₄ 4:15, 7:00, 9:45
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Despite some exceptionally small crowds, teams sold 1,863,463 tickets for the 66 games last week, an
"Iknew it was going to be bad, but
I didn't know it was going to be this
bad," Blue Jays president Paul Beeston
said. "It'll come back. I'm confident," he said. "I don't even worry. But it won't come easily, it won't come quickly and it won't come unless we address it properly with the fans."
Before the strike, Toronto had drawn more than 4 million fans for three consecutive seasons. Even though they fell out of the pennant race last season, the Blue Jays averaged 49,287 for 59 home games at the SkyDome.
"It's pretty obvious the game has paid a heck of a price," Colorado Rockies chairman Jerry McMorris said.
His team, which averaged 58,598 for home games last year, averaged 41,671 for its first two games in
"We're over 3 million tickets sold," McMorris said. "We've got an average 4,000 seats left per game left to sell that are not day-of-game."
Los Angeles, despite reducing ticket prices to just $3.50 — the Dodgers' top price when they moved to California in 1958 — averaged 45,950 for three home games. The New York Mets sold all tickets for $1 for a pair of weekend games against St. Louis and averaged 48,039.
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Beeston added that baseball needed to make sure last season did not repeat itself.
"Those people came to January, February, March not knowing if there was going to be a baseball season, and they made other choices," Beeston said.
Coors Field. He has the best advance sale in baseball.
Baseball executives said the strike caused them to lose a lot of group sales, business that won't be completely recovered until next season.
"I don't think we'll be able to tell until June or July what the strike did to us as far as attendance," said Philadelphia Phillies owner Bill Giles, whose team averaged 37,309 for its first two home games. "I think you're going to see some of the clubs like Kansas City and Pittsburgh in particular — who got rid of a bunch of players — hurt in attendance."
"We've got to use this as an opportunity to build between management and the players so we go forward together," he said.
Pittsburgh averaged 20,944 for two home games and Kansas City averaged 16,886 for four games. The Royals' figure doesn't include 5,000 free tickets distributed for each.
"I won't have any comments on attendance until I see what happens the first couple of weeks," union head Donald Fehr said. "It's too early to draw conclusions."
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Tuesday, May 2, 1995
5B
Court to hear liquor advertising case
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court will decide whether states may promote sobriety by banning price advertising for liquor.
A challenge to Pennsylvania's ban on price advertising, apparently the most similar to Rhode Island's, also is pending before the high court. It likely will not be acted on until the justices reach a decision in the Rhode Island case, probably sometime in 1996.
The court said yesterday that it would review a free-speech challenge to Rhode Island's price-advertising ban, enforced since 1956 as an attempt to reduce consumption of alcoholic beverages.
Two weeks ago, the nation's highest court struck down a federal law
The justices were told many states have similar laws that ban or in some way limit liquor price advertising. Listed as examples were Arkansas, Connecticut, Georgia, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and South Carolina.
841-PLAY
1029 Massachusetts
that banned brewers from putting alcohol content information on the labels of beer cans and bottles.
Rhode Island law allows advertising for alcoholic beverages but requires publishers to exclude any mention of prices, or even the word sale.
The prohibition was challenged after 44 Liquormart was informed in 1991 that it was in violation of the state law.
The justices said the 1935 federal law, aimed at preventing strength wars among beer manufacturers, violated free-sneech rights.
Rhode Island's price advertising ban is being attacked by a Johnston liquor store, 44 Liquormart Inc., and by People's Super Liquor Stores Inc., which sells liquor to Rhode Island residents from its two Massachusetts stores.
the 1st Circuit Court reversed that ruling.
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The appeals court said the liquor-regulatory authority granted to the states by the Constitution's 21st Amendment, which ended Prohibition, added to the 1982 standard a "presumption in favor of the validity of the state regulation in this area."
The appeals court relied heavily on a 1980 Supreme Court decision that set up a standard for judging the constitutionality of limits on commercial speech, which is not as protected as noncommercial forms of expression.
The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the ban last year, ruling that it was a constitutionally permissible limitation on commercial speech.
Lawyers for 44 Liquormart and Peoples argue that the 11 Circuit Court's ruling lets Rhode Island use the 21st Amendment to topple First Amendment rights, which include
The appeal also contended that the state's interest — curbing alcoholic consumption — isn't served by the ban on price advertising.
The 1980 decision said commercial speech that was not misleading and concerned a legal activity may be limited only if government has a substantial interest, the limitation directly advances that interest, and the restriction is no more extensive than necessary.
A federal trial judge ruled that the ban violated free-speech rights, but
freedom of speech.
PUY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
Peoples' stores in Fairhaven and New Bedford, Mass., sell liquor to Rhode Island residents. The stores are allowed to publish price advertising in Massachusetts, but Rhode Island publishers are barred by the state law from accepting such advertising.
Let stand rulings that required a Bloomingdale, Mich., high school to take down a portrait of Jesus Christ that had been displayed on a hallway wall for 30 years. School officials had argued that displaying the portrait should be allowed because it offered no religious message and raised no church-state problem.
Refused to reinstate a $1.2 million award won, and then lost, by two Columbia, Mo., residents who say police did not adequately protect their family from domestic violence.
In other matters Monday, the Court:
We Buy, Sell, Trade &
Consign USED
& New Sports
Equipment
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
841-PLAY
1029 Massachusetts
RECYCLE
Daily Kansan
Jaybowl
Jaybowl
Daily Specials
Tuesday
Billiards $2.40 an hour all day!!
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
Hours
Monday - Friday
8 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday
8 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
864-9500
Moving to a NewPad?
Lawrence Paper Company
Can Solve your moving hassles
Sturdy boxes for moving and storage. Reasonably priced.
Small quantities - Walk-Ins
welcome. Cash & carry
Call 843-8111 or stop by 2500 Lakeview Rd.
Ask for sales service
Minority Affairs Graduation Banquet
May 13,1995
6 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
Graduating students from undergraduate, graduate,and professional schools can pick up free tickets at the Office of Minority Affairs in Strong Hall
Happy Cinco De Mayo!
• $150 Corona Btls
• $200 Mexican Beers
• $100 Margaritas
Barefoot Iguana
9th & Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center
COSTA RICA
Cleopatra is Cleaning Her Closet Catch Her Spring Sale
A
Get Some Cool Savings Before Summer
- Selected Spring Merchandise 20%-30% Off
- All Swimwear 25% Off
CLEOPATRA'S
743 Mass.
downtown
lawrence
749-4664
CLOSET a unique boutique
hours 12-5
mon-wed 10-8
fri-sat 10-6
HOT. Burn, baby, burn - disco inferno.
MAC.
Not the burger, pal—the killer computer.
DEALS.
Cheap. Not as cheap as a taco, but hey.
}
Now $2,031.10
or $ 5 $ month
The Enforcement Power That
Brings Justice to the Court
This computer screen displays a news article about an enforcement power that brings justice to the court. The article provides details about the enforcement power and its implications on judicial proceedings.
Macintosh Performa $ 6115 w/CD
8 MB RAM/350MB bard drive, CD-ROM drive, 15" color display, keyboard, mouse and all the software you're likely to need.
Now $2881^{00}
New Goods With Money to Spend
PowerBook® 520c w/Modem
12MB RAM/320MB hard drive amd modem.
PAY NOTHING FOR 90 DAYS.
Being a student is hard. So we've made buying a Macintosh easy. So easy, in fact, that prices on Macintosh personal computers are now even lower than their already low student prices. And
with the Apple Computer Loan and 90-Day Deferred Payment Plan, you can take home a Mac without having to make a single payment for up to 90 days. Which means you can also take home the power to make any student's life easier.The power to be your best." Apple
union technology center
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
Apple
Apple
KU
KU
VISA
MasterCard
DISC VISA
VISA
Mail-Code
DINER CAFE
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burge Union * Level 3 * 913/645-6509
*Deferred Apple Computer Loan offer begins 2. 1995. No payment for principal or interest will be required for 90 days. Interest accrues during the 90-day period will be added to the repayment schedule. Monthly interest is an estimate based on a total loan amount of $2,493.1, which includes a sample purchase price of $1,604.1 and a 6% loan origination for the Performa G11S terms above. The monthly payment for the total loans described above would have been $83. The interest is variable based on the commercial paper rate plus 5.54%. For example, the amount of February 1995 and an interest rate of 18% with an annual percentage rate (APR) of 13.28%. The monthly payment based on the commercial paper rate plus 5.54%. For example, the product price, product quantity, product cost, and product tax are determined by Apples Inc., based on the business model of Apple Computer, the company that provides the loan to the business person. Free loan approved by ©1995 Apple Computer, Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the apple logo, Macintosh, Macintosh Performer, PowerBook, Laptop Retrieval Select, Color Stylus leather and "The power to be your best" are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. PowerMac and Macintosh are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. All Apple products are destined to be accessible to individuals with disabilities. To learn more, call (817) 426-7218 or visit www.apple.com.
6B
Tuesday, May 2, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Announcement
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
209 Help Wanted
228 Services
229 Supported Services
235 Typing Services
100s Announcements
EXPERIENCED ROLE-PLAYERS WANTED.
We are a small, mature group of gamers looking for one a two new players to fill our ranks beginning this summer. Graduate students and/or professors preferred. If interested, please call 850-271-3469, between 5:30 and 9:00, or ask for John.
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
105 Personals
BiLeGayOK offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, or unsexual. Please call KU info at 864-3063 or Head Quarters at 861-2345 for more information.
300S
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
110 Bus. Personals
Someone to watch over you. We look out for students better than any other credit card. Call 1-800-CTITBANK to apply. Note: we won't hit on your dates.
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
STERLING LIP JEWELRY
Hoops, navel rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing and more!
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.
It's your PARTY
Balloon Bouquets
Fresh-baked Cookies
Graduation Announcements
and decorations
749-3455
1601 W. 23rd We Deliver!
♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
120 Announcements
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, or unsure; LeBiGayiSKy offers a confidential support group Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. Call KU info at 864-3506 or headquarters at 841-2345 for location
Int'l Work Camp& info on other int'l & US volunteer/intern placementavail in ECM volunteer intern placement Resource Center ECM-Center I lock north of Kansas Anaheim 843-4983
130 Entertainment
M. *don't throw good stuff away*. Give it to
the FI. *don't throw the FI.* Call
it in 842-988-6100.
FREE PARTY ROOM FOR 20-360 AVAILABLE
AT JOHNYN TAVERN CALL 842-0377
140 Lost & Found
Found. One Male Cat. Orange Tabby with
Color. Less than one year old. Very friendly. Cail
Male Female
205 Help Wanted
$$SUMMER JOBS!$$$
Earn $8-54 hour painting houses this summer.
Call (800) 342-1977 or Topkapi, or Lawrence, Call (800) 342-1977 or Lawrence
1750 weekly possible mailing our circulars
For info call 202-298-9857
AVIATION LINE SERVICE
Non-smoker, must be able to pass security, must be able to work evenings and weekends. Prior experience preferred. Apply-Million Air Forbes Field. Topeka.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterkiesing, gymnastics, robotics, computer science, computers, camping, crafts, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1150 or more plus RB. Camp LWC/GWC 750.
Information desk clerk P/T $ 5r. KU Natural History. Apply at museum shop in Dyce Hall
GRADUATION SALE
图
May 4-13th
Reward yourself for all that hard work
Big Savings on the Best Selection in the Midwest
MASS STREET MUSIC 1347 Massachusetts (913)843-3535
Guitar
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
Classified Information and order form
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Ad phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In nearman *119 Stuart Flint
Calculating Rates:
Stop on 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.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kanan office. Dr 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 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 immeday fees. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Blind Box Numbers:
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.
Cost per line per day
Item. of insertions:
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30-X
3 lines 2.10 1.60 1.10 0.90 0.75 0.60
4 lines 1.95 1.20 1.00 0.70 0.65 0.45
5-7 lines 1.90 1.10 0.75 0.65 0.50 0.40
8-9 lines 1.90 0.95 0.65 0.60 0.55 0.35
Classifications
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
160 personal
112 business persons
120 amusement items
120 entertainment
140 last & found
185 helped way
225 professional services
225 tyres services
395 for sale
340 auto sales
380 miscellaneous
1 | | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
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 Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66845
Account number:
Case Manager, Full Time: To provide community based services to youth with severe emotional disturbance, the their families. Position requires Bachelor's degree in psychology, social work, counseling. Send resume cover to B. Ankerholz, Lawrence, MA 02539. Send resume letter to Lawrence, KS 60044. Open until filled. EEO.
Cash Caterer, Kansas and Burge Owner' Catering Department, $4.25 per hour, paid in cash day following employment. Hiring for the following shifts:
satisfy. day 14
Motors, elevators, able to stand for long periods and lift up to 30 pounds. Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel Office, Level 5. AA/EEO.
Friday, May 12, 1995 - 9:30 am-3 pm
Competitive athletic type excel in our summer gymnastics.
Signature:
ADAMS ALUMNI CENTER/LEARNED CLUB has immediate opening for part-time banquet cook, flexible hours. Part-time bannery $8.50 per hour. Contact ADAMS AT SENIOR.SERVICESapplicants only. No phone calls.
Saturday, May 13, 1985, 8:30 am-4 pm
Sunday, May 14, 1985, 8:30 am-3 pm
Sunday, May 14, 1985, 8:30 am-3 pm
Sunday, May 14, 1995, 6:30 am-3:30 p
Sunday, May 14, 1995, 3:30 pm
Are you detail oriented, well organized, and punctual? Able to lift up 60 lbs. Great potential. PC knowledge preferred. Apply in person 4824 Quail CP1 or Cpl at 841-9531 EOE
Avg. KU student made $7000 last summer. Must be hard work, self-praising, and willing to work out East. Excellent resume builder and college credit avail. Call Georgia @
ATTENTION ALL VETERANS
Serve one weekend a month & receive four days pay. We need your active duty experience and training. Call the Army National Guard a Possible at host rank up to E-5, No basic Training. Life Ins, Commissary, PX, and Retirement Benefits. All staff must complete a five-day visit and return. Call Today! 872-0759 8429 and return.
Construction company has work in yard maintenance out door work, and landscaping. Flexible equipment costs $5.75 per hour. If interested please call 842-8232 between the hours of 9-14 Monday thru Friday.
COUNSELERS, TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP-MAINE. Exciting, fun-filled summer! Openings: ALL COMPETITIVE TEAM SPORTS, TENNIS, ALL BASKETBALL. Hiking, Hikes & Climbing Wall, Ice Hockey, SCUBA, Archey, Riffley, A&C, Martial Arts, etc. Top Sal, Excl Facilities, Trt Allow, Steve Rubin, 1 800-473-654, CAMP COBOSHESS 10 SILVERMINE DR., SOALEM, NY 10590.
EARN 16,90-56,90 THIS SUMMER! Hard work,
independent students needed to work in KC
this summer with college cop-painters. Call to
annly 823-9804
CRAZY Marketing Co. seeking people with crazy personalities, who are willing to work hard for rewards, full-time, part-time 865-4054
Designer Fabrics Store, looking for sales help. Experience Necessary. Overland Park location, call (813) 414-4900
HELP WANTED for fee completion on June 6 or
July 1 for the following positions:
General Accounting Office, rm. 20C
O'Leary Hall. Hours 8 a.m-11 a.m; 4 p.m M.F. Must be
KU student to hours 8 a.m-11 a.m. Are obligated to
work 5 days a week.
FAST EAST MONEY: Student club and organi-
nation marketing on campus
1-100-735-383-汤姆
Fire your boss! A new company expanding, looking for motivated individuals to fill part and full-time positions.
Interested in Learning the Music Business: Part-Time Interns wanted at Ozark Talent Agency. We need to set up you department and promote positions. Limited positions available. Ideal candidates will be students seeking degrees in business, community service or related fields. Please refer to Steve Zalka, in the mornings at (193) 814-2800
is hiring note takers for the FALL 95 semester. Earn $10-15 per lecture taking comprehensive notes in large KU lecture classes for the entire semester. Qualified candidates will have 3.3 + GPA and related course work experience. Courses open: Biology, Astronomy, History, Geology, Geography, Sociology, Physics, Special Ed., Music History, Journalism.
Jones New York is looking for FT and PT mature
resumes. Resume appreciated. Apply at
Riverfront River Center.
KANSAS AIR NATIONAL GUARD
AIRGREEPOPENINGS
1) Must have a 4 year college degree, or get one no later than August 1995. 2) Must pass the Air Force license exam. 3) Must be able to leave the board older than 26 at the time of the selection board. 4) Must be able to pass a flying class 1A physical. 5) Must be physically, mentally, and morally qualified. 6) The pilot's license is preferred for pilot applicants. 7) Kansas state residence is desirable. 8) Height requirement between 64" and 76" (sitting height between 72" and 76") is current directives. (11) No history of drug usage or serious law violations. (12) Must be able to acquire a TypeScript security clearance. If you are not qualified to work in this process, call Msgt Mgk Ray at (866) 611-4315.
The Kansas Air National Guard in Topeka will be holding pilot and navigation selector boards during the summer of 2019. Anyone who is interested can apply online at www.kansasairnationalguard.com. 190 SMP/DPAM, Attn: Mike Mtke Roy, Forces Field (ANG), 5900 E Street, Topeka, KS 6619-357. Applicants must meet the following criteria:
Kansas City Moving Company seeks summer help. Full and Part time positions avail. $6.50-$8.00 DUE. Contact John or Tom at 1-800-431-8721 KU Grad is looking to hire a nanny for June-mid August. Call me at 201-431-8721 HS home, to call me for 2 athletic boys ages 9 and 12. Call me at e: 913-8735-789 or boy: 813-455-2397
Looking for a fun summer job come be a mother's helper free room and board plus salary. Own living quarters with private entrance. For details call 862-7270.
Looking for talented Illustrators, photographers,
designers, and artists to work with. Send samples of work to: Red House
917-526-8300.
Landscaping: Need number help on landscaping crews. Confess Great Expectation on Landscaping
Make many new friends and $& at the same time.
Complete on full and part-time summer jobs.
M4-9572
M4-9573
Mothers Help/Baby师; needed for an active family including two delightful toddler girls. Nice home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible days/evenings/wEEKends. Experience. own car. Travel from NYC to Houston. Please respond to Box #30, University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer Flint.
Market Research telephone interviewing, Week-day evening and Saturday hours available start- mid-May. For more info, call 1-800-374-4743 after 2 m. and ask for Gary.
Musical Dance Troupe for area social events.
Personable and attractive.
No exercises. 749-5490
Key
TEMPORARY
PERSONNEL
Noble Painting Co. of Johnson County is looking for Exp. Painter for Summer work in 10. He has experience as a painter and was not contacted please call again, our answering service was faulty. Please call 816-327-3900.
Work as much as you want this summer! These summer jobs are available in Topeka:
- Word Processing
Clerical
- Production
Call267-9999
- Construction
- Warehouse
Call 207-5999
for more information.
No fees to applicants.
Weekly pay.
No experience necessary
for many jobs.
SCHOOL'S OUT!
time. Apply in person at Sirtom Stockade.
New Hiring: The Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry is seeking 2 responsible persons for work around a classroom schedule. Year-round work possible. Apply in person - Room 1031 Mallot Hall.
New Hiring: Maril's Bridal and Formal is seeking a responsible person for part time work, some evening and weekend hours. Apply in客员 B13
Oneida Factory Store now hire part time sales work and the 3rd key for summer and beyond. Apply now. Please visit your schedule Apply in person. Suite 101. Phone: (765) 284-3900 Outlet Center. M-F 10:30-12:40. 728-461-202 RUE
TEMPORARY WORK'S IN!
- Telemarketing
OpportunITY FOR INSTANT SUCCESS! Check out a fantastic new company. You will be amazed at advancement possibilities. 841-5573 Opportunity! Make a great income from your dorm or apartment. Change your lifestyle! New and Exciting program. You can do it! 1800-6986
Part time and Full time positions available at Chrysler Credit Corporation's Customer Service Center. Part time hours are evenings and Saturdays. Contact the department for details. Volunteers include telephone contact to collect delinquent accounts and provide customer service and information. Fax resume to 915-663-8310.
The paying assignments are waiting for skilled students who need immediate summertime work. Learn all about the advantages of working as a
4501 College, Ste 310
Leawood KS 66211
New accepting applications for Summer employment. Openings for all shifts, full or part time.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Position open in May for accct, or bus, student.
Must be avail, for at least one yr. I need accct, eng,
math, computer, etc. Must have own transportation and quality for work study.
Pay $89 hr. Searches resume to ELEI, P.O. 10.
Requires SS 6500
PT/FT sales help needed! Immediately! Earn $50/wk. PT. Experience preferred but not necessary, training skills & support avail. Fortune looking job. Please interview at May 4th 10am-1pm.
Wal-Mart
Wal-Mart is an Equal Opportunity Employer offering a competitive wage and benefits package.
The newest Wal-Mart Distribution Center in Ottawa, KS is accepting applications for all positions, full-time, part-time and Seasonal. Come prepared to complete your application on site at our Temporary Office, located at 128 South Main, Ottawa. Our office hours are M-F9:00 am to 5:00 pm and 8:00 to noon on Saturday.
Data Entry, Word Processing, Secretarial, Mail sorting, General Labor Production, Shipping Receiving, Heartland Park.
Manpower temporary.
The newest Wal-Mart Distribution Center in
Come and join
the winning team!
TEMPORARY SERVICES
I
MANPOWER
Emporla
Lawrence
(913) 267-4060 (316)342-5751 (913)749-2800 (913)776-1094
Manhattan
Wichita (316)685-6111
(913) 762-5500
Junction City
(913) 242-1002
Regular Caterer, Kansas and Burge Union's
Catering Department, $4.25 per hour. Schedules vary, some evenings and weekends required, with varying hours and fees. Powdered pounds, stand for long periods, previous food service, wait-waitress experience. Must follow all staff procedures and possibly fall into Fall immediately.
Lead Caterer, Kansas and Burge Unions' Catering Department, Schedules vary. $45 per hour, some evenings and weekends required. Requires a valid driver's license, able to lift 50 pounds, stand for long periods, previous food service, wait-waitressing experience. Looking for responsible, mature person. Must follow dress code. Job would continue with experience and possible into fall. Begin immediately.
Apply Kansas and Burge Union's Personnel
Office, Level 5. AA/EOE
Research Aide/Assistant
The University of Kansas Work Group is seeking one full-time research assistant to provide project assistance for a research program with multiple students. The position, from 1995, renewal secured on grant funding. Salary $12-$26/yr. plus benefits. First preference given to applications received by May 10. For complete instructions see job posting. Resume, name, addresses, and phone numbers of three references to: Michele Schepel, Work Group, 4080 Dole, University of Kansas, Kansas City, Missouri. The University of Kansas is an AO / AE Manager.
Responsible female teacher to supervise and manage age groups 11,18,19 for Summer activities; 9-30 MW.
SECURITY OFFICERS
Due to an expanding market ProSecurity is needing private security officers for full-time and part-time positions. Competitive wages based on experience are required. Owned Private Security Company, offers excellent benefits, such as health and life insurance, vacation pay and holiday and holiday pay and high quality training. Applicants must be 21 yrs old and have been employed in a home telephone and pass a criminal background investigation. ProSecurity, an equal opportunity employer, is seeking mature, energetic and motivated individuals with good organization skills and a desire to work in a personal personality, good decision making ability and a sincere desire to work for the best, apply today. If you are currently a security officer or are interested in security work in the Lawrence area, you can apply by calling our office at 865-959-9999 information please call our office at 865-959-9999
Spend the summer in Chicago suburbs and go to college a medica a college bge, responst and/or female faculty or family care. Job offers room and board + freedom for individual activities. Please call
STUDENT CLEERIAL POSITION on campus 20 hrs per week, M-F早餐starting early Monday through Friday to person to Continuing Education business office, Continued Education building 364 8756, EO/AA
Summer & Fall critical help + 6 hrs wk; wk know windows and PageMaker, have written comunica skills. KS Res. + 3 GPA Start at $5, up with MEMEXPAN 249-7407.
Summer and or Fall Employment: Student Mail Assistant. Duties include: mail delivery to Cont. Edu. offices, campus errands and misc. duties. REQUIRED: Enrolled in minimum of six hours per week. Must be a team member and be able to work M-F 8:00-11:40, or MW 1:00-5:00 or a combination of both. Specific schedules will be discussed interview. Contact information: DEADLINE: may 12. EOEA/AM.
Summer Child Care Needed for 2 children ages 9 and 11 with active schedules. June 5. Aug 13 M.F. Ref's and some child care exp. required. Call please at (816) 311-8573.
Summer Employment (possible fall). Student Office Assistant. Student Hourly position $5.25 per hour. Division of Continuing Education. Must have a foreign language, light computer input, answer telephones, greet visitors and direct appropriately, miscellaneous duties. REQUIRED. Enrolled a minimum of 6 hours in the course required. Approximately 20 hours per week. Specific schedule will be discussed in interview. Contact Coleen Mann, Office of the Dean, 913-846-7800 to schedule an interview. DEADLINE. May 5.
Summer Jobs
for men and women. Movers and packers. Will train. $6.50 to $8.50 per hour depending on prior experience. Fry-Wagner Moving & Storage 13500 245-798-3280, Call Don Bohman at (800) 384-0098 (x 255).
EOE
SUMMER WORK
$9.75 STARTING
*National Company
*Entry Level All Areas
*AASP Scholarships
*ALL MAJORS
*Must Apply Now Start After Finals
CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION
LAWRENCE: 842-6336
TOPEKA: 1-273-7099
WICHITA: (316) 292-2077
JOHNSON COUNTY: 1-752-4196
SUMMER JOBS
CITY OF LAWRENCE
The City is accepting applications for summer, part and full-time positions. The following position
BOOKMOBILE/STORYYELLEI
CONCESSION HELPER
CONCESSION HELPER
NATURE DAY CAMP COUNSELOR
COUNSELLOR
WOFTWARE SUPPORT
YOUTH BASEBALL/SOFTBALL UMPIRE
SUMMER LABORER/PARKS & CEMETERY
AEROBIC INSTRUCTOR
AEROBICS INSTRUCTOR
TENNIS INSTRUCTOR
Complete application at Administrative Serv.,
2nd floor, City Hall, 6th east St., Lawrence K.
66044. Phone calls please. Deadline: Friday,
May 5th. EOE M/P/D
For men and women. Movers and packers. Will train. $5.50 to $10 per hour depending on prior experience. Fry Warner Moving & storage 18500 712-346-9323 18500 Calm Call BDouton at 800 (man) 944-9980 (x 255).
Summer positions available for household goods
call 542-380-1978. Apply in person at 431 N. town
calle 542.
Summer Work
National Company- Entry Level positions all areas. No exp. nec.训. Train all majors accepted. Interview now, start or new at fairs. Openings 842-792-2097 and Johnson County 913-752-4198.
Textbook Clerk, KU Bookstore, $4.25/hr, M-F 8:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m., alternate Saturday 10a. m-4p. Must be able to lift up to 50 pounds, stand for long periods, speak and understand English fluently, previous retail experience preferred. Contact J.P. Morgan International Personnel Office. Level 5, 13th and Oread AA/EEO
Summer day care for 11 year old girl. Hours are 8-
5:30 M-P. Must own car. References required.
Call 748-0911 after 5:30.
TOLL FREE 24 HOURS
TACO BELL.L.
Now Hiring for all shifts
for New Location
at 1408 W.23rd Street
Apply in person
at the 23rd Street
Taco Bell
225 Professional Services
The city of Oakland is accepting applications for swimming pool lifeguard. Apply at the city office. **065 Delaware** RS. Application Certification. . . . .
We are taking applications for part-time help.
Hours per week: In apply in person at Ses 2022
No phone calls.
DUI/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
GOVERNMENT CENTER
LA SCALE DE JUSTICE
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
LAW
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Tennessee 843-4023
< Driver Education > served in midTwin Driving School, served KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
TRAVELLERS
Maupintour Travel Service
Then click your heels three times and call us!
Think to yourself "THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME."
KS Union or 831 Massachusetts 749-0700
GAIN VALUABLE WORK EXPERIENCE!! WE NEED:
$ SUMMER JOBS $
TAKE YOUR TALENT, ENERGY,
AND DEPENDABILITY AND PUT
THEM TO WORK FOR US ON A
$FILE CLERKS
$WORD PROCESSORS
$RECEPTIONISTS
$ACCOUNTING SKILLS
$DATA ENTRY
VARIETY OF TEMPORARIL
ASSIGNMENTS. SOME MAY LAST
ALL SUMMER!
9401 Indian Creek Parkway OP
(913) 491-4145
600 Nichols Road (on the plaza)KC
(816) 756-3377
5545 North Oak Trafficway NKC
(816) 452-1280
STIVERS
TEMPORARY PERSONNEL
OUR 50TH YEAR!
235 Typing Services
Exper. typist with laser printer can create top quality papers with charts, graphs and more.
Spell check included. CALL DENA: 843-2844.
RESUMES consultation cover letters & more.
**Graphic Ideas, Inc. 927*; **Muss. 841-1071**
**Rationless/Rates/menton at 15% off**
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES
EVERYTHING BUT ICE
936 MASS.
FOR SALE Alpine AMP 3547 $150.
Alpine AMP 3503 $50.
Call Chris at 749-4199.
TENTS FOR OMEGA FESTIVAL
E
Everything But Ice 936 Mass.
VISA
MAC2 f 2 x 60 HAM 140 Mb, Quantum hard-
drive 13 monitor $1090, negg 749-5401 till
Nine month old full size bed and recently bought Cupcakehead desk and chair. Help Me They won't work with this one.
225 Professional Services
Quality car maintenance & repair
545 Minnesota Off of 6th st
Beau's Import Auto Service
car repair & maintenance
SAAB VOLVO
next to The Yacht Club
MasterCard
and other fine imports.
842-4320
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday. Mav 2.1995
7B
R.E.M. 2 tickets, Sun May 28. Lawn seats. Call
BEER & BOOZE
Stafford's Liquor
(formerly Graham's)
1906 Mass.
843-8186
The
Mom & Pop's Store
340 Auto Sales
926 Red Kelan runs and looks great. $2700 just in time for summer 706-3129
64 Volkwagen rabbit, automatic transmission
64 Good condition, Relinable $1,800 OBJ 64
Good condition, Relinable $1,800 OBJ 64
1985 Chrysler LeBaron AC AM/FM. Runs great, extensive interiors, recent new works, new tires, cruise control. Must sell urgently. $1300, very negotibal. Call 841-8239
PERFECT COLLEGE CAR1 1984 Mazda GLX 7000 B O P Must sell. Car at 49-208.
370 Want to Buy
1847 Ford LTD crown lit vLX, power everything,
8847-3627 or 7490-7607, great road car, $500; Call
312-822-7400 or 7490-7607
Full set of bicycle trackers panniers and rear wheel trainer. 942-3336
Your used computer (PC or Macintosh®)
A
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
410 sublease 3 bedrooms for summer. Pool, V-
park. Entrance before毕业 preparation. Bldg
4137-89 or 823-200
RENT REFERRAL
RENTALSOLUTIONS 841-5454
A&S LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO RENT?
1 Bdmr. 3 bblocks from campus, reni mg. 749-3148
1 brdupm duplex for summer sublease w/ fall option.
All new, all includes: ceiling fan, AC, carpet.
May Paid. Call 832-9482
1 bedroom apt. in quiet older house. Available Aug. big deck, ceiling fan, window A/C, off-street parking, 14th and Connecticut. $39. No pets.
1 Bpt. 107, Mississippi St. May available May 13, May rent paid, $350/mo. Water paid. Call Anne 749-6797 or 749-4979.
1 bedroom apartment, 14th & Connecticut, ceiling fan window AC, off street parking, $39/mo. No pets.
- Microwave, Dishwasher, Garbage Disposal
- CatsAllowed
BRAHFORD SQUARE is now leasing 2 & 3 bedroom ants; for fall
- Laundry Facilities
Plan Ahead--Call Now!
MWF 9-12 noon
TTR 1-5pm
501 Colorado #B1
749-1556
3 bdm. avail. startling summer & fall CA, gua.
call 8410, balcony nets to campus location.
call 8411
3 Bdm available May 1st, central air/heat,
3 month and removal option. Call 845-7260.
www.bdm.com
2 bedroom close to campus, water paid,
25%/month. Available no Call # 842-5031, ask for
phone.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE
apartment
- Close to campus
- On Bus Route
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Are you looking for a very nice 2 bbm, apt. available June 1. On KU bus route. Washer/Dryer hookups and much more. Only $450 per mo. Call for details 829-0917.
APARTMENT sublease: 2 bdrmrs fully furnished + W/D. may rent FREE, on KU bus route 2 blocks from campus. Beautiful view. $400/mo. or negotiable. Call 682-5602
Avail. Aug 15, a b 24 br btwn down & campus.
Close to GSP. No pets. Nktt/400 plus.贮备. All p.
cell. Call bdwp $m.p.-ap.m for Landlord
841-1207 or present tenants #841-2097.
2 bedroom Summer Sublane 1 bedroom used as study room, AC available mid May $25 per month
2 story home for 2-4 students at Unit 1, 11th year. 1-hour call. June 1. Call 400-6128 for appointment to see
3 Bdm Apt. available for summer sub-lease.
washer &derby + 2+8ths. Great location near
campus. Available May 21 thru end of July. 1344
Kentucky. Call 749-286
Dbrm available May 1st, spacious, 2 full bath,
walk-in closets, central air/hat, dishwasher,
laundry facilities, quiet setting, 3 month lease and
renewal option. Call 843-4011.
3 BEDROOM TOWNHOME FOR JUNE DW, MW, FP. Back Carp. cable paid. 380 Clinic.
REDROOM DUXLEY NWEST LAWRENCE
2 bath/ washer & dryer on route/ vaulted ceilings/dishwasher/garage/avail. Aug 1 - $500/mo no pets. Locally owned and professionally managed by Sterling Property Management.
All utilities paid but electric, 3br close KU, $760; June 1: 3 brd. $85 + util, available now: 1 bdr. $85; Aug 1 room: close KU, $24*Jun
The sun is shining through the trees.
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
(Behind Sonic)
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 11-6
- Luxurious 2,3,& 4 Bedroom Town Homes
* Garages; w/d Hook Ups
* Microwave Ovens
* Some with Fireplaces
* On KU Bus Route
* Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
841-8400 or
841-1287
Available Aug., small, $1 berm apt, in renovated older house. 7th and Ohio, wood floor, ceiling fans, window A/C. Water paid, no pets. $455. 841-1074
Available Avg. Studio app in renovated older
block Vermont pets. $891.1971U7
block Vermont pets. $891.1971U7
Available August beautiful, renovated small 2bdm, apartment in older house. Ceiling fans, window AC, off-street parking 4th & Connective OK, off-street downtown. $40.00. No pets. 817-104-6784
Available August renovated, small basement 1
building, 841-707-4100, old house, water not,
pipes 841-707-4100
Aspen West
Now Leasing for Fall!
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
- Water Paid
- LaundryonSite
- No Pets
- Reasonable Rates
2900 West 15th Lawrence, KS 66049 865-2500
Available June 1st, spacious 2 bdmr, apartmen
bwn. downtown and campus. Close to GSP-
Corbin. No pets. $550 + deposit & utilities. call$41-
1207.
Available 5/8-5/15. 8 tmr in 3 bmr帐 p. $000; mo
pool; AC D; W.C臂 C4.79-0024 mules.pales.
AC D; W.C臂 C4.79-0024 mules.pales.
Avoid paying the summer rent. Small, 2bedroom apt. on a 10-month lease. Avail. Aug. 1. Ceiling fan, room, air conditioner, off street parking, no living room. 13th and Vermont. For $425.81
---
YOU can prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER or FALL
2. Visit an apartment in our peaceful countrylike atmosphere
4. RELAX... In a few short months you can be:
Swimming, playing tennis,
volleyball or basketball, walking on our 40 acres or unwinding on your balcony or patio surrounded by trees and green grass...
Carports & Garages available
3. Reserve an apartment
1. Call 842-4200
EXPERIENCED
PROFESSIONAL
MAINTENANCE AND
OFFICE TEAM
Laundry facilities in 20 of 21 apt. buildings
3 convenient bus stops
I/O Storage Co. Inc., storage lockers for
or return I/O *Call* for detail M-F im-*
ntr.
Free basic cable Free water in apts.
Free basic cable
M-F 8-5:30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
Heap Summer Sublease. 1 large bedroom apt
in a charming, quiet town in a cool town
square. Cincinnati Browns 298-765-
Cincinnati Riverside 298-765-
Check out this great location! Sublease 2 Bdrm from May 16 to July 31 on the KU Bus route in Grayscale Apts. (515) #1140 per month plus utilities. Call 749-1288 or 841-9877.
Bradford Square
is now leasing 2 i&3 bed apartments, for fall
* Crate Male Rooms
* On KU Bus Route
* Microwave, dishwasher
and garbage disposal
* Laundry facilities
Plan your room 149-1586
Now leasing for Fall
OLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
842-5111
1&2Bedrooms
On KU Bus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3Hot Tubs
Exercise Room
Cozy 2 Bdmr i l床 next to South Park. Water
valid. $410 month Call 843-9217
Coby 2 bbm 1 bath next to Park. Water paid, $414 month叫843-5217
Excellent location, 1341 Ohio & 1194 Tenn. 2.3dorm
in 4 plax, c.a. no, pets, Mbps 8.4+1424
www.mit.edu
- Carson Place
1425 Kentuckv
Chamberlain Court
Finders Keepers! Extra nice quiet, spacious 2 bdmts.艺宅 have all kitchen appliances. Low utilities, pool, bus route. Excellent maintenance, no pets.$345. Now signing yr. les leases summer June, July, August. Come see! Spanish Crest Apartments 81-698
Five Bed House with Hardwood Floors, near cam-
ing lot, 10 June to May 31, N/S Call Shelah
1-800-657-5077
West Hills APARTMENTS
NOW LEASING FOR JUNE AND AUGUST
- Spacious one and two Bedroom apartments
* Furnished and unfurnished
* Great location near campus
* No Pets
OPEN HOUSE
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs. Fri.
12:30-4:30 No Appt. Needed
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
GTA part-time position in Eastern Civilizations
May 12 in Airline Decline. May 12
in Airline Bills. 604-3100
Large 2 bedroom lab, in older house, 10-month
lease. Avail. Awg. eating c tanks, window/A/C,
cwasher/dry hookups, wood floor. $425. Watera
noet. noets.841-1074
Kaw Valley Mgmt. Inc. is now leasing Studio, 1.2 &
3 Bedroom apartment, townees, and homes
have homes for immmediate or Fall moves.
Comfortable 8D or Stl call at 841-8060 for
more info!
Looking for a nice place to toye? What You can live with 2 cool, easy to get along with guys in a spacious apartment next year. If interested call Danny at 843-5867.
Furnished 2-bed, second floor apartment in private bime for 20 girls. No pet/mouse. Avail $3,850 per month.
1 June 1 - July 31 Fully furnished 3 bdm house
downcity. 810 perm per month, 841-1094
perm. 810 perm per month, 841-1094
HELP! Summer Sublease Avail. May 15 - Aug 14
Campbell's Ranch, 2790 East 63rd St.
camp, is neo call, noz 6232 6297 NW.
Available Summer and Faint, can 125-175.
For in rent to Hotel Lg, Solid grown, Honey 100 Yr old.
Home Available, July I, B 2, bril baths, corner,
room. Deposit, 600 per month + deposits, please
call 329-487-686
Great Location. 1801 Mississippi 1 bdm, basem.
student central, Air no. pets, 825/mo. Call
GET A JUMP ON NEXT YEAR
First management is now leasing 1.2, & 3 bed
management apt.
Mid Year Tuition
Med May Bag to Auq. Suburbia. Lawnarm Apts.
Vice Mid Bay to Auq. Suburbia. Lawnarm Apts.
Vice Mid Bay to Auq. Suburbia. Lawnarm Apts.
Morning Star for clean rooms and apartments in well kept homes, also some houses.
1425 Kentucky
Call now and beat the rush - 749-1436!
For Rent 3BR, 2B1. bath, Apt close to campus. Car
air conditioned. Air conditioning. No Pets
allowed.
MUST SUBLET FOR JUNE & JULY-2 bdrm.
town home w/ basement $600 month + utilities.
Call 841-2851.
Modern living in charming older home 2 bdrm.
Westchester, NY. Located on the
downtown. Available June, Jul
499-9853
2512 West 6th St. 749-1288
GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom $38
One room in Campus Place Apt. available for sub-
summe season and fail. $250 + utilities.
Management
OPEN HOUSE
Quit, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500.
Rooms For Rent - Pleasured house w/ w/d / b 128
Grade Student furnished. Zak 843-9021
Grade Student furnished. Zak 843-9021
- 3 Bedroom Townhouse $690
Leasing for Summer and Fall Pet Free Environment Call 749-1288
1-4:30 p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
SUBLEASE 2 bdrm apt, close to campus.
$480/mo. avail. mid May. W/D hookup, water/cable
call. Paid: 641-629.
STUDIO 10 at Apple Lane Apartments. Will do summer lease. Cable Call Paid 843-4300
Stone Cottage near campus available June 1?
2 bedroom, unfurnished w/UWD & CA
1 Bedroom $320
2 Bedroom $420
2 bedroom, unurnished w/DW & CA.
$205/month. No builts. 841-3800 or 542-3884.
- furnished carpeted suites with private bathroom
OFFERING LUXURY
Spring semester is on its
→maid service
→ Planned social activities
- Exercise weight room
- ATAN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
--b lcmr, 2 floor loc, to campus, w/balon:
$200.00 mv. May den for. Call 241-4656
- Energy Efficient
KVM
Sublease 1 BR apt. Avail. mid May through July
31. $200/mo 749-0919 or 749-5797 Located at 13th and Vermont.
- Daily 3:00-5:00
- Fireplace
→ IBM and Macintosh computer lab
Naismith Hall offers:
- Laundry room
808 W.24th
841-6080
1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559
- Onsite management
Professionallymanaged by
Tired of Cooking Cleaning and Studying? Let us take care of the first two and we'll even help you with the third!
--b lcmr, 2 floor loc, to campus, w/balon:
$200.00 mv. May den for. Call 241-4656
→Pool
NAISMITH HALL
1 new bldm, apt. avail, for summer sublease avail, 5/11, Washer/Dryer, quiet, private parking, a block from campus, microwave, dishwasher, AC. 841/90 (mo. Call 798-4307).
Sublease 1 BR apt, available end May-Jul 31. AC,
blocks from campus.
$295 max. Call 784-7827
Sublease 8 Bdmr Apt. through July 31. Close to campus at 1321 Tennessee. Call 749-6825.
Sublease 2nd semester (Jan.-Aug.) 1963, 3 Bed-
room apartment. $250/month. 4-year lease.
$229/month. Call Shelley 841-717-
Sulisele 3 bdmr *2* : bib, pool, garage $920/mo.
865. n05-5114
**bublease apaculous 3.4 bdm house.-A/C, W/D**
**loase** wedge **feeder** a recessed pad for fun sum-
**base** base of tubular feeder
PALM TREE ISLAND
Holiday Apartments
Leasing for Summer & Fall
- 2 Bedroom $410-$425
- 4 Bedroom $715-$725
- 3 Bedroom $595-$615
- Recently constructed
- 211 Mount Hope Court #3
For more info. or Appt.
call 843-0011 or 842-3843
- On bus route
- Dishwasher
Sublease: 4 bedroom apartment for sublease.
Includes: 6 bathrooms, furnished and deck
furniture.
SUBLEASE STUDIO: June & July option to
save $330/mo. I will pay $240 your debt 789-
540.
Sublease unfurnished bedroom in great apartment. Clean, energy efficient, close to campus. Available May 13. May bills paid. $217/mo + deposit. Call 822-9246.
Sublease. May 16-July 31, 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
near apartment. $95/month + usl. 837-0583.
Summer rent, extra clean, walk to campus, 3
bdmr, 2 bath, all appliances, wash/dryer
provided, parking, call 749-9667.
Room rate $219/month, bathroom, bath,
close to museum. $496/month, Calif. 837-966
We feature some of
Park25
We feature some of the largest 1 &2 bedroom apartments in Lawrence. Now accepting deposits for Fall 1995
- 2 pools
Callorstopin!
- Volleyball court
- Washer/Dryer hookups
- Law enforcement
- Laundry facilities
- 4 Bus stops on property
Open Mon.- Sat. (8-5)
(Nopets please)
2401 W. 25th
842-1455
2 BR May rent free! Furnished, C/A, outdoor
move! Need to move fast! Mail Cert.yr # 892348.
Summer Subase 2 bedroom apartment 1 block from Campus. Available May 15. Free magic 843-760-9222.
SUMMER SUITEBASE 3 bedroom, 2 bath, $1890
3 bedroom, 2 bath, $4490
4 bedroom, 3 bath, $6790
permanent
Summer Sublease May 15 to Aug 15. Spaced 3 squares
across campus to campus and Mass. Call 843-343-2678
or visit www.mass.edu/bus.
Summer sublease one bbmr at. Close campus.
112 Indianapolis of closet space. Avail. June 30
3333 Lakeland 3333.
Four Bedroom/Three Bath
Featuring for Fall of'95
- Full-Size Washer/Dryer
- Microwave
- Trash Compactor
- Gas Fireplace
- Ceiling Fans in Every Rm.
- Cable in Every Rm.
- Walk-In Closets
- 1500 Sq Ft.
- Cable Paid
- Gas Heat
- Carport Per Townhome
4501 Wimbeldon Dr.
Call 841-7849
Office Hours (9-5), M-F
Summer submarine 3br, 2 full baths. Furnished
with an A/C and has AUS A/C/D.
$199.00 call. Call 445-286-1878.
Summer Sublease. 1 Bedroom. Available June
Great Location and Seackey.
Call 943-800-8900
Summer Sublease. Campus Place Apartments. 2 Bedroom. $212 per m. furnished/loft. May rent paid. Call Jen 691-4181.
Summer Sublease:
Fully-fill available. Available June 1
Summer sublease starting May 14th. Unfinned one bdm at West Hills Apts. (never section) Great location, ten campus at 100 Emery Park, 831-769-2252, May rent free. No pets. 841-380-304 and 842-384-388.
**Summer Offerline:**
May 12-August 1. $210/mo + ^1_2 utilities.
May rent paid. Call 843-4175.
Option for fall available. Available June 1-2
bedroom: 8 a.m. month, on bus route, hot
bedroom: 6 a.m. month
SUMMER SUBLEASE: June 1-July 31 one bed
room, $799.00 / 180/m² + *utilities*
Call server: 855-383-8886
Summer sublease with option 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
6000 sq ft. $8900 / month 9000 / month
NOSGOTTAIB1 1181 | 845-1371
A&S LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO RENT? RENTAL SOLUTIONS 841-547-6000
Summer sublease. 1 bdm in a nice 3dm
2/1/2 ba, townhouse. avid. mid-$236+1/3
$248
Summer Sublease 1 Bedroom, 1 block from
Ward, W/D/8410/month. Call 791-1436.
SUMMER BUSELEASE 3 bedroom furnished.
付 half 1/2 of May rent. 电话 843-4178.
Sunflower House student co-op, 140 Tenn. Rms.
Available for summer. Taking applications for
fall $160-215. Util. included. WID. cable and more.
to campaise & Downtown. Call or stop by 819-274-3200.
furnished, close to campus. May 15-Aug 10
$737/mo call 832-8617
Sundance
7th & Florida
841-5255
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS
DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
SECURE AN APARTMENT
FOR FALL '95
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm
Sat. 10am-4pm
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455Equal Housing Opportunity
The greatest summer sublease in Lawrence' 3Brdm. 2.bath. We are graduating and must move to KC pronto. A/C, W/D. DW. Price negotiable.电话 832-2388
Very nice 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, close to
theater, shopping center, off street, office
parking, no pets. 749-381
Two Rooms for rent in spacious 5 new bdm.
house. Dishwasher, microwave, W/D, no pets.
$200 month + utilities. No lease req d'. 843-0280
Summer Sublease. Very nice 3 bedroom 2 bath
spacious house, hardwood floors, lots of windows,
deck, 2 car garage, close to campus. No Pets. 749-291
430 Roommate Wanted
Sublease space 3-4 bdm house A./C W/D,
living room 2-3 bdm house A./C W/D,
living room 2-3 bdm house A./C W/D.
living room 2-3 bdm house A./C W/D.
living room 2-3 bdm house A./C W/D.
1 roommate needed for summer to share 3 bdm
toward W/D, pool $26 + utilities; Call Nosh
Female room needed until August 1. $190 +
1/3 utilities. 832-0393.
Male/Female roommates need to share nice house for summer and/or fall. Off Naitsmith, Washr/Dryer, and 1/4 unit, call 832-9690
FRIENDLY Grad-level lakesek seN/ SFem pref. big bright vaulted skifflet klux nr. campus. baskets, flowers, a/c/w $138, 1/4 until 24:46 KEEP Trying--beautiful for summer.
2 b/r Victorian townhouse, fireplace, deck, close
room. 2 b/r Victorian townhouse, 2 month's rent +
mountain. 865-985-351 or tax.
Groovy roomie needed for cute 2 BR house w/b gigapad. N/S male or female, or趣/or grad student preferred. $255/mo + 1/2 unit/, starting this summer or August 1. I ok ONK Cat 885-6598. N/S Female needed inLEAN sublease in beautiful 4 bdm townhouse in Leanamur. Downstairs on a double bathroom. W/D, D/W. Beautiful! Await. May 1-Aug. 1 Friendly roomie Only 820/1bm. $800/1mb.
N/S female need to sublease 2 bdm apr
D/ Water, trach, cable paid Call Lisa
832-054-0648
Need 1 M/S female for B BAP kit. Near campus.
Need 2 TSH/TSH/LP for pets, permits called.
Staphase at H3-8264-MIL.
Need Sub-letter for Summer. Rent $177.50 per
week. Contact Evan at 823-229 for help.
Month. Contact EVAN at 822-5299 or visit.
Non-smoking female needed to share two bedrooms furnished apartment. On KU bus has route. Wash bathroom Aug. 1, $888/month + utilities. Call 749-1588.
ROOMMATE FINDER
A&S RENTAL SOLUTIONS
NEEDA
ROOMMATE?
0115 7154
One female roommate needed to share 3 bedroom
house for summer & or (wr) D, W/D, A/C Close
The male roommate needed to share 3 bedroom
house for summer & or (wr) D, W/D, A/C Close
mature roommate needs to share a 3 bedroom
room and/or dryer/air include. Avail. May
15- July 13.
professional, non-smoking female needs male or female for furnished Alamar Townhouse. Garage, w/d. fireplace, $350/mm utilities bath, & study. Bath + 841-2572 Wed& evenings.
Roommate M or F, to share a large apt. w/ hardwood floors begin in Aug. N/S a W who doesn't mind noise. No high stress people. $200/mo. util. incip. Deposit req. 749-2791
roommate need for summer. 3 blocks from campus has a/a/c/d,e/f, furnishings. POSSITION? No.
roommate wanted for summer for $3bm house.
Easygoing roommate not interested in campus
or dorms. No pets or kids.
RURAL FARMHOUSE-quiet female to share with non-smoking grad student and two big dogs. $230 + 1; util. Available Agl. D. Ianee. 887-6240
Share 2 bdr., male, n/a, graduate student preferred. w/d. $200 + utilities, near campus. 832-1964
Summer Sublease one + bdm in bdm apt. Very close to campus $150+m/ + utilities 749-7323
8B
Tuesday, May 2, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Foster to define himself for Senate
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Buffeted for months by abortion foes and other critics, President Clinton's surgeon general nominee declared himself primed to "define who Henry Foster is" at a Senate hearing today. Administration officials conceded confirmation still looked difficult.
Brushing off questions about Foster's abortion record, Clinton called him a "pro-life, pro-choice doctor" yesterday. And the president added, "If we can't confirm Henry Foster to be the surgeon general of the United States, what kind of person can we confirm?"
But Senate Majority Leader Bob
Lote, who has said he might not call up the nomination for a vote even if it got out of committee, said the White House had caused whatever problems there were.
"This is not about abortion," Dole said. "This is about credibility. This is about telling the truth. This is about the White House leveling with the American people and not letting it drip, drip, drip out as the American people find out."
Foster smiled and joked at yesterday's Capitol Hill news conference, surrounded by teen-agers who are enrolled in his "I Have a Future" program in Tennessee and who rode a bus to Washington to show their support. He said he was ready
for the tough grilling he was likely to get today before the Senate Labor and Human Resources Committee.
"Am I intimidated? No. And I'm not being dishonest, and I'm not being cocky," the 61-year-old obstetrician-gynecologist said. He said he looked forward to the hearing "because that is the place where I get the chance to define who Henry Foster is."
Ever since President Clinton put his name forward in February, Foster has been under attack from conservatives — primarily because he performed abortions and gave several different answers about how many.
Another juror leaves the O.J. Simpson trial
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — O.J. Simpson's judge failed yesterday to stop the continuing departure of jurors from the trial, releasing a 25-year-old Black flight attendant who once tearfully told him, "I can't take it anymore."
Judge Lance Ito tried to persuade Tracy Hampton to stay, reportedly dismissing three deputies who guard the jury in part because of her complaints. But Hampton appeared to grow unhappier by the day, sitting statue-still in the jury box, he eyes downcast.
She was replaced by a 28-year-old Hispanic woman who said on her jury questionnaire that Simpson was the only person with a visible motive for killing Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman.
Hampton was the seventh juror dismissed, leaving just five alternates, with months of the trial left. The change shifted the ethnic configuration of the jury to seven Blacks, three whites and two lisi-
O.J.SIMPSON
THE
TRIAL
panics.
After the new juror was selected by lot and took her seat, testimony resumed with police chemist Gregory Matheson offering explanations of why only small amounts of blood spilled at Nicole Brown Simpson's condominium were tested by the police lab.
In conjunction with the testimony, prosecutor Hank Goldberg showed on a 7-foot courtroom screen one of the bloodiest photos seen during the trial. The defense said that the photo was overly gruesome, but It allowed it. The photo showed Nicole Brown Simpson's body huddled at the foot of
the steps leading into her condominium. There was a dark pool of blood around her head and bright red streams of blood flowing down the walkway.
Matheson said that it was clear that the blood was coming from Nicole Brown Simpson's body and that vast amounts of testing were not needed.
Ito, meanwhile, continued his attempt to move the trial along. He refused a prosecution request for a hearing about blood outside the jury's presence, and he reacted angrily when a cellular phone rang out.
It asked the phone's owner to hand it over. When nobody reacted, the angry Ito banned all pagers and phones from the courtroom and ordered that everyone be searched as they enter. During a break, Sports Illustrated reporter Shelly Smith said that she discovered it was her phone that went off and said she would confess to the judge.
"I feel like a criminal," she said.
MAKE TRACKS TO
1995 KANSAS BASEBALL
Hawks Open 2-Game Series vs. Tigers Tuesday Night!
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The image provided is too blurry and pixelated to accurately recognize any text or identify the contents. It appears to be a grayscale photograph of an interior space, possibly a room with wooden furniture and large windows. The focus is on the seating area where people are gathered. There are tables, chairs, and decorative plants visible in the room. However, due to the low resolution, no clear text can be read from this image.
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CAMPUS
The School of Business is searching for a new dean. Page 6A
SPORTS
Kansas beat Missouri last night 13-9. The victory improved its chance at a seed in the Big Eight tournament. Page 1B
STORMY High 57° Low 45° Weather: Page 2A
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.104,NO.149
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1995
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Commission approves ordinance
Discrimination based on sexual orientation illegal
By Sarah Morrison
Kansan staff writer
It's official. It's illegal to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation in Lawrence.
Last night, the Lawrence City Commission adopted, on the second and final reading, an amendment to add the words "sexual orientation" to the city's human relations ordinance, thereby providing anti-discrimination protection to people on the basis of their sexual orientation.
The move was expected after the commission voted 3-2 on the first reading April 25 to make the change. Still, four opponents of the provision spoke to the commission in hopes of changing their minds.
Sharla True, Lawrence resident, told the commission that she challenged commissioners Allen Levine, Jo Andersen and Vice Mayor John Nalbandian, all of whom voted for the change on April 25, to vote against the amendment on second reading. The issue should be put on the ballot and voted on, she said.
However, the commissioners voted the same way they had on the first reading, Nalbandian, Levine and Andersen voted for it; Mayor Bob Moody and Commissioner Bonnie Auguste voted against it.
Ben Zimmerman, co-chairman of Simply Equal, the coalition that campaigned for the new provision, said he was happy the amendment passed.
we are very happy,
Equal's work is not done. We are going to continue educating people. There is a lot of misinformation out there."
Zimmerman said. "But Simply
The Rev. Leo Barbee, who has been vocal in his opposition to the amendment, said he would continue in his efforts to get it repealed.
"Simply Equal's work is not done."
"There are several options we are looking at," he said.
"We are going to contact the attorney general, for one thing, and see if it conflicts with the state's sodomy laws."
Ben Zimmerman co-chairman of Simply Equal
Opponents of the ordinance change have said they would collect signatures for a petition to get the item placed on the ballot and put to a referendum. About 2,800 signatures would need to be collected to get the item on the ballot, said Patty Jaimes, Douglas County clerk.
The amendment makes it illegal to discriminate against people on the basis of their sexual orientation in areas of employment, housing, and public accommodations.
Prior to the vote and public comment on the issue, Moody read a memo from the city staff clarifying some of the effects the new provision would have.
Religious organizations would be exempt from the provision because of the ordinance's definition of employers and public accommodations.
The exemption had been included in the ordinance prior to the addition of the words "sexual orientation."
Moody also said the new provision would not force people to reveal their sexual orientation. Some landlords and employers had questioned the commission about possibly being required to ask about sexual orientation on a job or rental application.
INSIDE Graduating family
INSIDE
Graduating family
The Schrandts family will have three members walk down the Hill on Graduation Day.
Page 8A
JOHN MURRAY
The Man who will be Chancellor
His legacy in Kentucky behind, Robert Hemenway starts his new reign in Kansas
Story by Stephen Martino
Photos by Brian Vandervliet
A
Robert Hemenway will become the 16th chancellor at the University of Kaneas on June 1. "I consider this to be the best job in the country," he said.
Arna, with the evening's treats in tow, and Hemenway pile into the chancellor's personal vehicle — a 1984 Mercury Lynx — and make the 15-minute drive to a church for the meeting, with one pit stop.
They turn in at Wendy's. Arna has a kid's meal, the chancellor, a single hamburger with everything and a Diet Coke. The chancellor loves Diet Coke.
At the church, Hemenway has the kids placed in the corner of the room.
"Tonight, we are going to learn how to tell stories," Hemenway stays. "The story I'm going to tell you is about a man named Odysseus and the Trojan War."
For the next hour, Hemenway does his best to keep up with the 7 year olds, telling them stories and
"Oh, Dad." Arna interrupts. "Don't start again about those gods."
HEMENWAY: New chancellor visits the University. Page 3A
having them tell stories to him. It's all in a day's work, he says. And he likes to do it.
"I think if you don't do events such as these you are going to forget where you came from," he says.
Hemenway has not forgotten where he has been, and he knows where he is headed: into the 16th chancellorship of the University of Kansas.
It's the type of job that Hemenway, 58, has long coveted, to be the chief executive officer of a major research university.
"I consider this to be the best job in the country," Hemenway said at his Jan. 7 introduction to the University by the Kansas Board of Regents.
Time will tell. Hemenway says he wants to be KU's chancellor for 10 to 12 years.
And if the University of Kansas feels the same way at Hemenway's departure as the University of Kentucky does now, all indications point toward a successful term as chancellor.
At Kentucky, everybody seems to like Hemenway. Fellow administrators regard him as a tireless worker. Faculty members cite his active concern for their situation, and students think of his open-door policy as an invitation to discuss problems. Even the editor of the student newspaper, the type of person regarded on college campuses as a cynic or a pessimist, likes him.
"I love the man to death," says Kentucky student body president Benny Ray Bailey. "It's just so comfortable to talk to him as a student. He's like going to talk to your grandfather."
Accessible Attitude
Sandwiched between meetings with deans, alumni and interviews for open positions on the Lexington
See HEMENWAY, Page 5A
KU might seek attorney general's assistance
By Robert Allen
Kansan staff writer
Tonkovich suit names University lawyers
The state attorney general may represent the University of Kansas in court if former law professor Emil Tonkovich's lawsuit is heard.
Normally, KU is represented by the University General Counsel, but Victoria Thomas, general counsel, and Rose Marino, associate general counsel, are named as defendants in Tonkovich's lawsuit.
In cases where defendants are state employees, the employees may request that the attorney general represent them, according to the Kansas Tort Claims Act.
"It is a statute that states in part that a state employee who is sued for an act or omission that is within the scope of employment can be represented by the attorney general's office, if a request is made for such," Marino said.
To make this request, the state employee must write a letter to the attorney general's office after the lawsuit has been served, she said. The law states that the request must be made within 15 days after formal serving of the lawsuit to the defendant.
But making such a request is not necessary.
Instead, defendants may seek a lawyer in the private sector, said Stephen McAllister, associate professor of law.
"Either they can go to the attorney general's office or they could go to outside counsel," he said.
"If a defendant didn't want to, they wouldn't have to ask." Marino said.
But representation by a private attorney could be costly to the University or to the other defendants. Representation by the attorney general's office would be free.
"That may be a strong economic incentive," said William Westerbeke, professor of law.
Westerbeke said that it would be
highly unusual for the University's attorneys to represent the University in a lawsuit in which they were named.
Because there are 30 people specifically named in the lawsuit, the defendants also may be represented by several attorneys. McAllister said.
"There is a possibility that some of these people may want their own attorneys," he said. "Joint representation is difficult. Some may want to retain their own counsel."
It is not known who will represent the University or when the case will go to court.
"It's too early in the case," Westerbeke said. "It's hard to make a prediction. All you have is a complaint filed."
2A
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
🌟
Horoscopes
By Jeane Dixon
HAPPY BIRTHDAY! IN THE NEXT YEAR OF YOUR LIFE! The work pace quickens. Count on the summer months being especially busy. As business accelerates, so will your socializing. Overseas travel holds strong appeal in early fall. Review the benefits accruing from your job; it may be possible to obtain additional perks. A chance meeting early in 1996 could lead to a happy romantic connection. Follow your heart.
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DATE: Godfather of Soul James Brown, basketball player JEff Hornacek, magician Doug Hennessy, actress Betty Cedron.
T
II
♂
**ARIES** (March 21-April 19): A sudden change in plans or a missed connection could cause dismay. Keep your temper in check; issuing an ultimatum could backfire. Financial transactions require careful attention to detail.
AURUS (April 20-May 20)
Your personal life isn't any of my business, but if it was — I wouldn't sell. Visit a Sagittarius this summer and you'll never forget it. Life seems full of promise.
69
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Do not let a conservative streak lean away from looking at an ugly
'for a fun experience' from looking at innovative ideas. A new approach could improve the quality of your work, Your life love is on the upswain. Look ahead with pleasure.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): You are now entering a period of
Q
increased activity and energy. A career change is likely to be discussed in the days ahead. Creative self-expression revitalizes your sense of purpose. Promote intellectual pastimes. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A new enterprise has been launched.
W
today. Be prepared to travel.
Joining a special group could bring you financial or psychological benefits. Do not underestimate the value of teamwork. A pilot project will succeed.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Your social contacts could help.
land a loan or business contract. Show your appreciation in a tangible way. Be cautious when making long-term agreements. Romance on the rebound could be short-lived.
15
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Certain expectations may be unrealistic. Avoid making promises you cannot keep. Do not sacrifice security just to be "nice." Conservative investments help people stay well-balanced. Entertaining at home tonight will save you money.
m
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Adopting a more flexible approach will help you make switer progress at work. Listen to what co-workers have to say.
Humor and understanding will go a long way towards patching up a soupleb.
>
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Spend time alone with a loved one who has felt neglected lately.
Comparison shopping helps you save money when purchasing a major appliance. Dress simply but elegantly if going out tonight.
Steer clear of zossios.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Reward someone's efforts to please you. If in love, make your honorable intentions known. Discussions about religion or politics are best avoided this evening. Emphasize shared interests and values.
VS
ON CAMPUS
水
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Go ahead with a business project and other gainful pursuits that will boost your income. Those who pass out the benefits are open-handed. Emphasize serenity on the home front. A mellow approach works wonders
X
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Quickly scale the ladder of success when the going is smooth, but pause when it is not. Check occasionally to see what the competition is doing.
TODAY'S CHILDREN will amaze you with their determination and perseverance. Beneath their gentle, somewhat docile appearances a will of iron! It is almost impossible to sidetrack these Tauraeans from their goals. An aptitude for math and science makes them excellent candidates for a career in medicine or aeronautics. Reliable and detail-oriented, these Tauraeans make exemplary employees. Horoscopes are provided for entertainment purposes only.
The University Dally Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60645, 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. 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, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KC. 66045.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor an informational series on International Workcamps and U.S. Volunteer/Intern placement from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today through Friday at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove H in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mike Austin at 864-7317.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a University Forum, "World War II in the Lives of America's Children," at noon today at 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chanel.
KU Cycling Club will sponsor a team ride at 2 p.m. today at Wescoe Beach. For more information, call Rick Finley at 842-158.
Kansan Correspondents will meet at 4:30 p.m. today at 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Susan White at 864-4810.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5 p.m. today at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Isaac Bell at 843-9176.
Xingu will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jack Lerner at 749-5225.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at p.m. today at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mark at 842-4713.
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.
Straight Allies will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Brenda Daly at 841-8610.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Kansas Union (ask for specific room at candy counter).
LesBiGay Services of Kansas will sponsor a support group for people who are gay, lesbian, bisexual or unsure at 7 tonight. For location or more information, call 864-3506.
KU Sail Club will meet at 7 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tom Connard at 832-9655.
University Chess Society will meet at 7 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight at the southwest lobby in the Burge Union.
KU Dance Club will have its graduation dance at 7:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Sonia Ratzlaff at 864-1562.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Darin Nugent at 749-5666.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Chris Wiswell at 864-6203.
KU Democrats will sponsor a "Stop the Madness" party at 9 tonight at 2337 Murphy Drive. For more information, call Ted Miller at 842-4596.
Canterbury House will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon tomorrow at Danforth Chapel.
KU Karate Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Brad Bernet at 823-1257.
CORRECTIONS
A front-page story in yesterday's Kansan about commencement procedures contained incorrect information. If the weather is bad, an announcement will be made at noon through the KU Information Center. The ceremony may be moved indoors to Allen Field House and will be at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. May 14.
A front-page article yesterday on the Watkins Memorial Health Center expansion contained incorrect information. The original construction estimate was $3,790,000, not $4,969,000.
Weather
HIGH LOW
Atlanta 75 ° • 55 °
Chicago 59 ° • 45 °
Des Moines 54 ° • 45 °
Kansas City 58 ° • 45 °
Lawrence 57 ° • 45 °
Los Angeles 69 ° • 55 °
New York 62 ° • 51 °
Omaha 53 ° • 42 °
St. Louis 61 ° • 51 °
Seattle 61 ° • 45 °
Topeka 58 ° • 47 °
Tulsa 72 ° • 53 °
Wichita 67 ° • 48 °
TODAY
A 40-percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Southeast winds at 10-20 mph.
57 45
THURSDAY
Cloudy. Northeast winds at 10-15 mph.
62 47
FRIDAY
Partly Cloudy. Southwest winds at 10-20 mph.
71 53
TODAY
A 40-percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Southeast winds at 10-20 mph.
5745
THURSDAY
Cloudy. North-east winds at 10-15 mph.
6247
FRIDAY
Partly Cloudy. Southwest winds at 10-20 mph.
7153
5745
THURSDAY
Cloudy. North-east winds at 10-15 mph.
6247
7153
FRIDAY
Partly Cloudy.
Southwest winds
at 10-20 mph.
7153
Source: Michael Bobey, KU Weather Service
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's backpack and its contents were stolen Sunday from the hood of a car in the 900 block of Mississippi Street, Lawrence police reported. The items were valued at $160.65.
A KU student's car was burglarized Sunday in the 1500 block of Lynch Court, Lawrence police reported. The driver's side window was broken and the detachable car stereo faceplate was stolen, according to the report. The items were valued at $550.
A KU student's car was burglared in the 4700 block of West 26th Street, Lawrence police reported Sunday. The passenger side window was broken and a bookbag, two cameras and other items were stolen. The items were valued at $714.
was broken Monday in the 2500 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $75.
A KU student's mountain bicycle was stolen Sunday from the 1300 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police reported. The bike was valued at $350.
A KU student's car antenna
A KU employee's cassette tapes were stolen from a car in the 1900 block of West Third Terrace, Lawrence police reported Sunday. The tapes were valued at $85.
A KU student's car was burglared in the 1300 block of West Campus Road, Lawrence police reported Sunday. The passenger side window was broken and a portable compact disc player was stolen, according to the report. The items were valued at $350.
Congratulations Graduates! Best Wishes
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If you qualify, we'll reduce your debt—up to $55,000. Payment is either ½ of the debt or $1.500 for each year of service, whichever is greater.
You'll also have training in a choice of skills and enough self-assurance to last you the rest of your life.
Get all the details from your Army Recruiter.
ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
PEACE
This is the universal sign for peace.
P
This is the universal sign for peace-of-mind.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
2.
Wednesday, May 3,,1995
3A
Hemenway explores campus
New leader chats with staff gets acquainted with University
By Virginia Marghelm
Kansan staff writer
Incoming chancellor Robert Hemenway is having a great time not being chancellor.
Hemenway, who moved to Lawrence last month, does not officially become chancellor until June 1. For now, he's just getting to know the campus.
And it's great, he says. He bounds out of bed each
HEMENWAY:
KU's 16th chancellor is profiled. Page 1A
morning, eager to get so "Every day is very exciting," he said.
people is the best part. And universities are great places to meet them.
His work includes studying organizational charts and budgets and meeting people. But for Homegrown
"Universities are people places," he said.
To meet people, Hemenway has been visiting offices across campus. He has visited places such as the Student Assistance Center, Marvin Hall, Carruth-O'Leary Hall and Wescoe Terrace. Hemenway said that talking to people had helped him get an idea of what people saw as problems and strengths of the University.
Hemenway said he was in an enviable position of
being able to ask anyone questions.
"I love to ask questions," he said.
"Universities are people places."
When he asks questions, people assume he knows little about the University, and they explain
Robert Hemenway incoming KUchancellor
things from a basic level. Everyone he has met has been friendly and helpful, he said.
Shirley Cormack, secretary to the Student Assistance Center, said she was glad Hemenway had stopped in to ask questions. He talked to everyone about how the office worked and chatted with a student who was visiting the office.
"He was very interested in talking to people," she said. "I was very impressed with him."
When he isn't on campus in his red beret talking to people, he may be in his makehift office in Strong Hall or reading about University programs while at the chancellor's guest residence.
Hemenway said that visiting at KU before becoming chancellor had given him the chance to become acquainted with the University and make his transition easier.
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SUNDAY, MAY 14 Kansas Union Ballroom 7:45 a.m. Breakfast 8:30 a.m. Program
The Chancellor's Student Awards and the class gift and banner will be presented during the program.
Great Gifts
for the Grad!
• Watches
• Starling Silver
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• Brace & Laurel
Razor Sunglasses
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For tickets, return the card from your Commencement packet or contact the Alumni Association, 864-4760. Limit 4 tickets per student.
Stay Wired and well-fed at Commencement Breakfast For graduates and their families
E3 alumni
Sponsored by the KU Alumni Association, the Student Alumni Association and the 1995 Board of Class Officers.
Students are encouraged to wear their caps and gowns.
KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
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4A
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE: GUN CONTROL
Gun laws protect, not limit
0 K, let's go through the pro-gun lobbyist checklist.
President Clinton and Attorney General Janet Reno are fascists and possibly the devil incarnate. The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms is actually a front for Communists preparing to take over the country. And the media, including the Kansan, cannot be trusted. Why? Most of them are run by the government. Hmmm.
In fact, in letters the Kansan has received, certain readers have tried and convicted this editorial board of extreme liberalism, unspeakable naivete, and even fascism.
Why? Because we believe in gun control.
No. Anything but that The Second Amendment to the Constitution is in peril, the gun zealots lament. This does not include only members of the paranoid military militias that have received so much ink in the wake of the Oklahoma City disaster. No, those attempting to lobby for concealed weapons bills and a repeal of the assault weapons ban are many, and they are active.
Oh, and the NRA and other pro-gun lobbyists also happen to have a certain congressman, namely
Gun control proponents are not jeopardizing Second Amendment rights but are securing right of safety for all.
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, in their pocket.
Dole has called for repeal of the assault weapons ban and limiting the power of the ATF, the agency responsible for enforcing federal gun laws.
And in states such as Missouri and Kansas, concealed weapons bills have been or are being considered. The Kansas Senate voted down this state's proposal last month. The Missouri Legislature, however, is on the verge of approving a change to the concealed weapons law. This is in direct opposition to the two-thirds of Missourians who oppose this change. But the pro-gun lobbyists are many, and they are active.
We can only hope that voices of reason stand ready to speak out against such measures, in Missouri and across the country. Gun control laws do not constitute an attempt by the government to strip us of our freedoms. They are designed to protect the rational people of this nation from the sort of terrorist violence that occurred April 19.
MATT GOWEN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
THE ISSUE: THE END
Editorial board says goodbye
The editorial board members have made it through the editorial war zone with their sanity intact.
This semester the board had no shortage of topics.
Chris Vine, Spencer Duncan, and Tim Muir put a lot of work into the Senate election endorsement interviews. They spent about 26 hours interviewing nearly 100 Senate candidates.
In addition, Muir and John Bennett assisted with city commission. endorsement interviews. But they are just part of the 13-member board that met twice a week to debate campus and city issues. Henri Blanc, John Bennett, John Collar, Lance Hamby, Bill Kenealy, Craig Lang, Stanton Shelby, Amy Trainer and Jenny Wiedeke also should be congratulated for their hard work and dedication.
The 13-member board should be commended for their diligence and thoughtful debates on campus, city topics
There were times when the discussions got heated and times when the board seemed too tired to develop a single editorial topic. There also were times when many students did not agree with what we wrote. But our job is to generate debate; we have done that.
It is our hope that when every board member picked up the Kansan from the racks in the morning, they were able to look at the work they had done and feel proud of the results. We hope that each of the members learned something from their experience, and we also hope each reader gained something from what was written.
HEATHER LAWRENZ FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
STEPHEN MARTINO
Editor
DENISE NEIL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH
Technology coordinator
News...Carlos Tejada
Planning...Mark Martin
Editorial...Matt Gowen
Associate Editorial...Heather Lawrentz
Campus...David Wilson
Colleen McCain
Sports...Gerry Fey
Associate Sports...Anishie Miller
Jammo Lane
Associate Photo...Paul Kotz
Features...Nathan Olson
Design...Brian James
Freelance...Susan White
JENNIFER PERRIER
Business manager
MARK MASTRO
Retail sales manager
JAY STEENER
Sales and marketing adviser
Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Beth Poth
Regional mgr ... Chris Brannan
National mgr ... Shelly Falvits
Coop mgr ... Kelly Connelys
Special Sections mgr ... Brigg Bloomquist
Production mgrs ... JJ Cook
Kim Hyman
Marketing director ... .Mind Blum
Promotions director .. Justin Froselone
Creative director .. Dan Gier
Classified mgr .. Lissa Kulesth
GOD'S OWN
MILITIA
A PARANOITARY
ORGANIZATION
GET YOURSELVES
ANOTHER 🌙🌙
CLEANING LADY.
CIVIL
LIBERY
The Answer to the Ultimate Question? You'll never guess
I hate to tell you this, but this is going to be a farwell column.
I know, that makes six in this week alone. Quit waxing sentimental, already.
So different, in fact, that it may change your life.
Relax, this is different.
When I say that, though, what I mean is you may be involved with this column, eyes transfixed and glazed, you might forget where you are. And as you walk in front of Wescoe or Watson on your way to the last classes of the year with the last Kansan issue of this semester in your face, you might slam into someone who you end up asking out on a date.
Yeah, you know the person you want to ask, too. You've walked by him/her all semester. Every other day at 9:25 a.m., you've thrown a couple of curious glances or smiles that person's way and never said a word.
Once a month, oh, you almost got up the nerve. You had the perfect thing to say, but you let that person just walk away.
Now's your chance.
Today, I have for you the ultimate pick-up line. The greatest ice breaker in the history of human existence. This is a pretty good piece of information, regardless of what you use it for.
Tell us, tell us! What is it?
Nothing less than the meaning of life. That's right, the Answer to the Ultimate Question. It's Forty-two.
You see, Ford Prefect, Arthur Dent, Trillian and Zaphod Beelebrox are on this quest. The quest takes place in Douglas Adams' loony
and inspiring novel "The Restaurant at the End of the Universe," the
Yup. Forty-two.
MATT
GOWEN
sequel to "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy," which tells you how to hitchhike across the space-time continuum (and not to forget your towel).
I must leave you now. As I go, and you look up from your paper, let these words ring in your head:
So anyway, Deep Thought, which is this oninipotent type computer, built for the sole purpose of determining the
answer to the Ultimate question. Deep Thought then tells them that the answer is 42.
OK. problem.
Do something stupid. It may be the smartest thing you ever do.
And if that means "Singing in the Rain" when it isn't raining, or walking on your hands instead of your perfectly good feet, so be it. You know the meaning of life, use it. Everyone's logical; anyone can act like everyone else. What fun is that? Say something to him/her. Give that person a flower, just for walking by you every day. Dance and spin in public. Drive with your head out the window. Do something you've always wanted to do but couldn't. Why? Just because.
If that's the answer, what's the question? Well, Deep Thought doesn't seem to know. So it designed and built the Earth to calculate the Question to the Ultimate Answer. And organic life is part of the computer matrix
Hang on. it gets complicated.
Much later, when Ford and Arthur are marooned on Earth, 2 million years in the past, Arthur tries to teach some apelike creatures how to play Scrabble. He chiles out a bunch of letters on small stones and draws a grid in the dirt. The attempt is futile; one of them spells "crcjgrdjwiddc." After he has given up, one of the creatures, grunting, spells out "forty-two." The Answer!!
They figure these same letters, if thrown into a sack and pulled out at random, will give them the question. The unconscious pulled forward. They pull out the letters "W-h-a-d
o-y-o-g-e-t-f-y-o-u-m-l-t-i-p-l-y-s-i-
x-b-y-n-i-n-e-
There goes the rug from under you. Ford and Arthur burst into fits of laughter. Just then, two female Golgafinchins (don't ask) walk curiously up to them.
"Hello," Ford says to them. "My friend and I were just contemplating the meaning of life. Frivolous exercise."
Get it.
I have a better piece of advice for you — lighten up. Enjoy your relatively short time here (geologically speaking). Do something stupid once in a while.
I could tell you about how many of us are here at KU to find answers. Philosophy, think it up. Math, count it up. Journalism, write it up. History, look it up, etc. I also could remind you that life is a journey, not a destination, all that stuff. But you already know that, don't you?
Yes, it could happen to anyone
Matt Gowen is a Lawrence senior in Journalism.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
After reading "It Could Happen To Anyone" Thursday in the Kansan, I was once again affected by the life and death of Claire Henderson.
Having grown up with Claire, her brother, Mark, and sister, Maria, in Lawrence, I, too, never expected or anticipated being directly affected by AIDS. Like so many young people in Lawrence, I grew up without fear of strangers, walking the streets at night, unafraid to meet anyone or anything. Now, all of my foolish inhibitions are gone, and I am faced with the reality that growing up in Lawrence does not place us in a plastic bubble protected from the rest of the world.
Like so many people who knew Claire, I have asked myself, "Why? How could this happen to someone so good, so full of life with so much to offer?" And like most of these people, I have found no truly comforting answer. I just have to believe that this happened to Claire for a reason. Perhaps he had to die so that we could all take a better look at our own lives. I know I have. I keep saying a little poem over and over to myself: "It could happen to me; it did happen to you; and it happened right here at KU."
Carter Moeser Lawrence junior
Thank you, Virginia Margheim, for the accurate, compassionate and moving story in the Kansan about Claire Henderson's life and death. Claire was an innocent person who loved life, people, dance and her family. If Margheim's story makes one person become more responsible in his or her personal relationships, it will help those of us who loved and miss Claire.
■ Kaye Moeser
Lawrence resident
■ Carter Moeser
Lawrence junior
MIXED MEDIA
By Jack Ohman
©1995 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
...WHO WOULDVE THOUGHT
THAT TOM MANNKS WOULD
COME OUT TO GET THIS
SHLAGE COUNTY ROTARY
CLUB AWARD?
Kansan editor bids farewell to paper. KU
It's difficult for me to remember Fall 1990, when I was a freshman sitting in class and thinking that I might like to write for the newspaper. I came to KU seeking a political science degree with hopes of going to law school.
I'm still getting that political science
KANSAN EDITOR
degree, but I no longer aspire to be an attorney. I have found journalism to be a more noble calling.
I have worked in some capacity at The University Daily Kansan for
EDITOR
STEPHEN
MARTINO
And the faculty and students at the School of Journalism and this newspaper are the reasons why.
three years. It has been the source of my greatest collegiate joy and heartbreaks. But at every step of the way, it has been a learning experience — an experience that has taught me about journalism, office politics and human relationships.
I have grown every day that I have worked at the Kansan, and I know that when I enter the "real world" I will be better prepared because of my experience here.
This past year at the Kansan I have served as editor. It is a job that I have thoroughly enjoyed, but I am ready and happy to pass the baton on to others. It is time for me to leave.
Oh, we make our share of mistakes. But at the heart of it, the Kansan is a laboratory newspaper for students to improve their skills. Sometimes we put commas in the wrong places, and occasionally we misspell names. We do not endeavor to do these things, but they happen.
There is no doubt that there are those of you who have disagreed with things that the Kansan has done this year or generally hold the paper in low regard. And while I respect anyone's right to take issue with specific decisions made by the Kansan, I fail to understand how people feel the Kansan lets the University of Kansas down.
But what we also do five days a week during the school year is produce a newspaper for the students, faculty and staff of this community we call KU. I would certainly argue that no other campus organization does more for the University than the Kansan.
The Kansan is one of the best collegiate newspapers in the nation. It is one of the best newspapers in the state of Kansas. You need only look at the collection of papers in the journalism school's reading room to convince yourself of this.
We inform, we educate, and at times we entertain. And every time this staff gets together, we have only one goal — to produce the best newspaper we can. Sometimes we fail. But at many times, especially during this semester, I would contend we have succeeded with brilliant results.
And I am proud of what this staff has done consistently, day in and day out, for you. I believe that you and the University are better for our efforts.
Catherine Ellsworth is the Kansan's technology coordinator. She makes sure the computers, and so much more, are running. With the Kansan's change in printers and the move to color, it would not have hit the streets on some days without her. She has earned my respect, friendship and gratitude for everything she has done. Thank you.
Even professionals in the business say getting a paper out every day is a miracle. I would agree, and without the efforts of two important people, this paper would stop in its tracks.
Tom Eblen is the Kansan's news adviser and general manager. He makes sure the books are balanced, the Kansan's mission is maintained, and students are guaranteed the experience they deserve. I would not be in journalism today if it weren't for him. He is the one who told me to take a chance and see whether I liked it. I did, and I do. So many days I have walked into his office to discuss problems or just talk about life. And when I leave KU, I will miss that more than anything else. His counsel has been appreciated. He has earned my respect, and he will have my friendship always. I hope he won't mind an occasional phone call from wherever, just to talk about life.
Years from now, no matter where I am, I will proudly tell people that I am a graduate of the University of Kansas, and that yes, I worked for The University Daily Kansan and was so much better for having done so.
I will miss this school and this newspaper. Goodbye.
Stephen Martino is an Olathe senior in Journalism and political science.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
5A
Hemenway leaves Kentucky reign for home on the range
N. M. BARRISON
Continued from Page 1A
Robert Hemenway will soon move into the chancellor's office in 230 Strong Hall. Hemenway, who grew up in Hastings, Neb., said he was glad to return to the Midwest
PURDUE
campus, three students come into Robert Hemenway's office. It is not usual to see students waiting to see the chancellor. Across the campus of the University of Kentucky, most students who know the chancellor know that they can come in and speak with him about anything.
Robert Hemenway speaks to members of AMANZAA, a group for minority journalists, at a recent meeting.
These three students have an agenda. Two are running for student body president and vice president, respectively, and the other is their campaign manager. They have come to Hemenway to run some ideas past him for the campaign. They speak about campus lighting around the library and the recruitment and retention of minority students and faculty members.
The chancellor's schedule is tight. The students get 30 minutes. The meeting starts at 11 a.m.
They are not the same.
They check the clock in Hemenway's office. They check their watches.
Hemenway claims to keep his clock 10 minutes fast so people, thinking time has passed more quickly than it has, get to their point sooner. This day, it seems Hemenway has reset the clock even faster; it's 17 minutes fast.
One of the students, Joe Bennett, the candidate for vice president, excuses himself early — very early
-- for a class that doesn't begin for another 25 minutes.
During the ensuing conversation, Ted Lahren, the candidates' campaign manager, tries to nail Hemenway down on specific issues.
"Do you agree that grebes are looked down upon by students, faculty and administrators?" Lahren asks. He admits the candidates' base of support lives in residence halls
"No," Hemenway says. "I wouldn't agree with that at all. I think the Greek experience is an extremely positive one for the University of Kentucky."
It's this kind of accessibility that attracted Sherman Reeves, KU's former student body president, to Hemenway.
Reeves, a member of the chancellor search committee, sat through interviews with all 16 semi-finalists and was impressed by Hemenway's upfront attitude and ability to articulate issues. But most importantly, Reeves said, he was looking for a chancellor whose type of leadership was inclusive of students.
"My most important goal was to find a chancellor who has that type of management style," he said. "The chief executive sets the tone for the rest of the campus, and if he creates a caring attitude, you hope it flows down to the rest of the offices on campus."
One of the first groups at KU Hemenway met with after being named chancellor was President's Roundtable, an organization that includes leaders from most campus organizations. As the leaders introduced themselves and their organizations, Hemenway shot questions at them. He made it clear he was there to learn as much about them as they were to learn about him.
To the president of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, Hemenway asked if he preferred to be called Hispanic or Latino. To the president of the Native American Student Organization, he asked how many tribes were represented in the
It is all consistent with Hemenway's approach to higher education.
"You don't need a chancellor unless there are students," he said. "You don't need a lot of things unless there are students here."
Kentucky Home
And Reeves wasn't the only one impressed with Hemenway's claims of accessibility.
"The campus is so diverse anyway, it's nice that he wants to jump right in there," said Anita Hientz, president of the Stouffer Neighborhood Association.
Growing up in Hastings, Neb., Hemenway wanted to own a small-town pharmacy, complete with a soda fountain. However, once he got into college, he found that chemistry was a class that he didn't do well in or enjoy.
He experienced his change of heart at Hastings College in Hastings, Neb., and after a semester abroad in Mexico City, he completed his bachelor's degree at the University of Nebraska-Omaha.
By his own account, had Robert Hemenway been a better chemistry student he probably wouldn't be the University of Kansas' incoming chancellor.
Hemenway decided to immediately pursue a graduate degree in English. After seriously considering attending the University of Kansas, he enrolled at Kent State University — all expenses paid courtesy a National Defense Education Fund Fellowship. He graduated with a doctorate in 1966 at age 24.
That same year, he was off to the University of Kentucky — an institution he could not seem to get away from — for his first job as an assistant professor of English. Even though he had a Ph.D., he didn't know everything — especially about teaching. And it took two ladies more than twice his age to teach him.
"You don't need a chancellor unless there are students."
English, on the other hand, was his salvation. He made excellent grades with ease, and he soon changed his career ambition from
Kentucky had a program that allowed senior citizens to take classes free of charge, and after one of his first classes, two sisters approached him with some free advice.
small-town pharmacist to being the United States' next great novelist.
"My sister and I believe you would do better if you spoke to the class," one of ladies said," Hemenway recounted.
It seems the young assistant professor had been too intent with the chalk and blackboard.
"I learned my first lesson of teaching," he said. "You don't talk to the blackboard; you talk to the class."
Robert Hemenway KU's incomina chancellor
And ever since, no matter what his other positions or responsibilities
at a university have been. Hemenway has been a teacher. And he will teach at KU. In the fall, he will teach a 7:30 a.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday American literature II class. Students enrolled can expect a
rewarding
instructional experience but a lot of quizzes, said David Durant, associate professor of English at Kentucky and chairman of its English department.
"He is a tough grader," Durant said. "But I have never known one student who didn't think he or she got the grade he or she deserved from him."
Durant said Hemenway's student evaluations were always excellent and conveyed the importance Hemenway put on literature.
Hemenway left Kentucky in 1968 for the University of Wyoming but returned in 1973, already working on his "great American novel."
Zora Neale Hurston was a early 20th century anthropologist, folklorist and novelist, and Hemenway's 1977 book about her, "Zora Neale Hurston: A Literary Biography," is credited by many for starting arebirth of attention to African-American female novelists. The
New York Times named it one of its "Best Books of 1978."
The book and the experience of researching it helped refine Hemenway's strong views about the importance of minorities' contributions in higher education.
In 1986, he left Kentucky again for the University of Oklahoma to become its dean of the college of liberal arts and sciences. But once again, he left for Kentucky to become chancellor of the Lexington campus — the equivalent of executive vice chancellor and vice chancellor for academic affairs at Kansas.
But he does not think he will be returning to Kentucky again.
"This is definitely a promotion." Hemenway said. "It was exactly what my family and I were looking for, a major university in a small Midwestern town. It will be nice to get closer to home."
Personal Schedule
Had Robert Hemenway's good friend Tom Blues known he was going to be an administrator, he probably would not have liked the man very well, he says.
But Blues, associate professor of English at the University of Kentucky, and Hemenway became close friends. Both arrived at Kentucky within a couple of years of one another in the '60s and shared an office for some time.
Blues knows the kind of teacher Hemenway is, but he also knows what kind of person he is, too.
"He's got an openness, affability and good humor that attracts people to him," Blues said. "There is a real naturalness to him. There is no artificiality to his personality."
While some colleagues and almost all students have only seen Hemenway in an official role, Blues knows the avid basketball fan inside the incoming KU chancellor.
The father of eight kids by three marriages, Hemenway admits that he could have spent more time with his children when they were younger. But he tries to make sure, he said, that they don't get lost in the shuffle of administrative meetings and budget negotiations.
"He kept more than a passing interest in basketball but more as an observer than a player," Blues said. "You only have to look at him to tell that. He likes to play basketball like he did football.
"I would defy you to show me a father who is over 50 who can't look back and see a moment when he could not have spent more time with his kids," Hemenway said. "I think all my children know that if they are in a tight spot that I'm there for them. Wherever they are in that spot, I can be there."
"But one thing that has always struck me about Bob is how available he makes himself to others," Blues said. "I know the schedule of an administrator is choked full of meeting and obligations, but I have never known him not to meet with someone if it could work out."
A special group that Hemenway always tries to work into his schedule is his family.
Those spots can be pretty spread
out. Hemenway's oldest daughter, Gina, 27, lives on farm near Dodge, Neb.; son Jeremy, 26, lives in Jackson Hole, Wyo.; daughter Robin, 25, is a graduate student at KU; daughter Karintha, 21, is a student at the University of Oklahoma; 19-yearold twin sons Matt and Langston are divided between the universities of Oklahoma and Kentucky; and sons Zach, 11, and Arna, 7, will be part of the new contingent moving into the chancellor's house.
Hemenway's partner in helping to manage a large family and putting work issues into perspective is his wife. Leah. 41.
"She is a compass for me that can keep me focused on what the true directions are," he said.
Strengthening RU
Four female professors gather for an early morning meeting of the deans of Lexington campus of the University of Kentucky. Their purpose in meeting: to discuss what it is truly like to be a female faculty member at Kentucky.
as the deans sip their coffee,
Linda Curren, assistant professor of
history, talks about her trials as a
female faculty member.
"It seems like a good ol' boys club,
and I don't belong here, and if I get tenure,
that is as good as it gets," she says.
Most deans show little expression; it appears as if they have heard it all before.
But then Curren throws out a curveball that hits the deans like hot coffee dropped in their laps.
"During my last set of teaching evaluations.
and their response was, 'My professor's body.' And I asked, 'What was the worst thing about this course?' and their response was, 'Not enough nudity."
To the side of the room Robert Hemenway writes in his journal, rarely putting his pen down. It is these types of problems and stereotypes that he wants to work against in a university community.
Since he was hired as chancellor of the Lexington campus, Hemenway hired 48 tenure-track African-American faculty members and 101 female tenure-track faculty members.
But it has not been easy. Not everyone, especially in the conservative '90s, believes in the rightness of his action. He does.
"How can you think you are not cheating students by not giving them opportunities to learn from people who might be different than them?" he asked.
His actions have been met with general approval in Lexington.
"He is the kind of chancellor that makes an effort to be inclusive," said Mary Davis, assistant professor of law at Kentucky. "What he does is not just to meet some end, but the means are important to him, too."
Another idea that came to Kentucky with Heimaway was a yearly
"He is the kind of chancellor that makes an effort to be inclusive."
Mary Davis Assistant professor of law at the University of Kentucky
do you know what some students wrote? — and I doubt many male professors saw these on their comments," she says. "I asked, 'What was the best thing about this class?'
bus tour of the state with new faculty and administrators. The purpose: to expose the citizens of Kentucky to who was working at the university and what they were doing. Davis was a new faculty member who took part in the tour.
"It made us feel that we were committed to the state," she said. "When you are the main university of the state, it is important to know what your duties are to the state."
The bus tour served another important purpose in Kentucky, said Penny Miller, assistant professor of political science at Kentucky. It was good public relations.
"He has very good political skills, and this is one way of demonstrating to the public and the legislators the importance of UK." she said.
Miller said that Kentucky was not unlike many other states that found it easy to cut from higher education when its budget fell short. However, she said, Hemenway had become the master of at least maintaining what the university had.
"He knows how to sell the university, and he knows how to fight for what UK has," she said.
Those same talents will be necessary in Kansas, said Burdett Loomis, professor of political science at Kansas.
Loomis said that it was clear after this legislative session that Kansas was a state that was willing to cut from higher education when other needs were pressing. He said that the Legislature looked to universities as places where they could recover lost state money through increased tuition and deferring projects.
"Any chancellor has got to convince the Legislature to stop using the university like a bank," he said.
Hemenway's outgoing attitude and willingness to tell people why KU is important to the state will be a contrast to former chancellor Gene Budig, Loomis said.
"Budig was as hands-on as his personality allowed him to be," Loomis said. "He cared a great deal about KU, but Gene Budig was not Mr. Schmoze."
But whether it's dealing with the Legislature, attracting minority faculty members or reaching out to the student body, Hemenway knows how he wants people to regard him when leaves KU.
"I hope when I leave KU people will say, 'He came to an excellent university, and it was even better after he left,'" Hemenway said. "I think that's all any chancellor can expect after spending 10 to 12 years there."
6A
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Business dean list narrows
Committee hopes to release decision early next month
Kansan staff report
Robert Hemenway won't be the only new administrator at the University of Kansas in June.
The search committee for a new dean of the School of Business has narrowed its field to four people. The committee is conducting interviews this week and hopes to announce the new dean's name by early June.
The names of the finalists won't be announced until after the dean
is chosen, said David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
"I expect a report from the search committee back to me later this week or early next week," Shulenburger said.
He said that the office of academic affairs had hoped to make the announcement by commencement on May 14 but that the office probably couldn't because there would not be enough time to review the nominees' interviews and resumes.
Candidates for the position were chosen from inside and outside the University, he said. The University placed ads in the Chronicle of Higher Education and The Wall Street Journal to help find
possible deans.
The search committee was put together about two weeks after Joseph Bauman announced he was resigning as dean of the school last February. Bauman resigned so he could concentrate on teaching.
The search committee, much like the committee that brought Robert Hemenway to KU from the University of Kentucky, reviewed candidates' resumes before deciding on the final four candidates.
The committee consists of nine members. They are faculty members, classified and unclassified employees and business-school administrators. A graduate and an undergraduate student also sit on the committee, Shulenburger said.
Residence hall rooms available for parents
Kansan staff report
5.
The residence halls will close May 12 — two days before commencement on May 14. But housing residents who are graduating can reserve a room in Templin Hall at no charge. Interested students can sign up at the Templin Hall information desk before May
Rooms also are available in Lewis Hall for parents and relatives of those graduating. Mel Sandfort, complex director, said that interested students should contact the Department of Student Housing in Corbin Hall before May 4. The cost is $15 per person for a double room or $20 for a single room.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
7A
Man in custody made small bombs
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Gary Alan Land changed after his father died when he was 15 or 16 years old, three childhood acquaintances said yesterday.
Michael Johnson, Ralph Hertzfeldt and Scott Peterson attended elementary through high school with Land in Topeka.
They described him in separate interviews as an ordinary youth who, as Johnson said, "kind of came apart at the seams" after his father died about two decades ago.
Johnson and Hertzfeldt said they believed Land turned to drugs, and Hertzfeldt said he seemed spacy when they met again by chance when both were in their 20s.
Land was charged with criminal damage to property and battery in two separate incidents in Topeka in the mid-1980s. None of the Topeka charges were drug-related, but the state alleged in the battery incident that he was intoxicated.
THE Oklahoma City EXPLOSION
E X P
All three one-time friends said Land was into making small bombs from firecrackers when he was young, but they said they had no knowledge that he had ever made any large bombs.
They haven't had contact with Land for years.
Johnson and Hertzfeldt still live in Topeka; Peterson lives in Oklahoma City.
Land, 35, was being held late yesterday in Springfield, Mo., as a material witness in the Oklahoma City bombing. He and another man were taken into custody by FBI agents and other law enforcement officers at a motel early yesterday.
After Land's father died, Johnson said, "He just kind of changed. His father meant quite a bit to him. He just kind of came apart at the seams."
concerned about what he had been hearing about Land's physical condition that he went to where Land was living.
Johnson said he once became so
"He was pretty bad off the last time I saw him." Johnson said.
the saw in him, Johnson said.
Johnson described the bomb-
making of the group as amateurish
and harmless.
"Every Fourth of July we'd get together...just kind of make tape bombs, we called them, out of masking tape, using the leftover firecrackers."
Hertzfeldt said he had encountered Land at a south Topeka shopping center several years ago.
"He had changed quite a bit," Hertzfeldt said. "He was close-mouthed, a little spacy. He got into something, I figured it was probably drugs. He said he was working in a warehouse in Kansas City."
Hertzfeldt said as a youth Land was "kind of rowdy and outgoing, but he wasn't real bad."
He said he remembered making firecracker bombs, describing it as "just kids' stuff; just playing with fireworks."
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THE FAMILY THAT STUDIES TOGETHER...
Three members of the Shrandt family will make graduation a family affair on May 14.
MARK C. BROWN
Bill Schrandt, center, with his children Jody and Stephanie. The three family members, who are graduating from the University of Kansas, will be walking down the Hill May 14.
By Polina Sukonik Special to the Kansan
Jeffrey M. Schiffman / SPECIAL TO THE KANSAN
On a typical Monday evening, the Schrandt family gathers for the weekly ritual: cheese pizza and "Melrose Place." The show is a rumor, but it's no problem. They entertain each other by discussing sports
movies, classes and their coming graduation. Graduation?
For the Schrandts, graduation truly will be a family affair. On May 14, Bill, 50, an industrial engineering student; Jody, 23, an MBA candidate and Stephanie, 25, a law-school candidate, might be the first family to graduate from the University of Kansas at the same time.
They will, along with thousands of their peers,
take that memorable stroll down Mount Oread.
But these soon-to-be graduates are not the only family members that share educational goals at KU. Betty, 50, a former KU graduate, is working toward her master's in educational counseling, and another daughter and son-in-law also are studying for their master's at the KU Regents Center.
Education has played an important and vital role in the Schrand household. "I have always just assumed that my sisters and I would go on to college," Jody said. "In my family, it was never even a question."
And no, they don't receive a family discount for KU tuition.
"I'm very proud of my children," said Bill, clad in a "Gamma Phi Dad" sweatshirt. "They worked hard to put themselves through school."
But there is a defector in the family.
Daughter Suzanne is a freshman at Kansas State University.
"She just had to do that animal science thing, I guess," said Jody, a loyal KU fan.
A family that studies together plays together. At the last KU-KState basketball game, the Schrands were at a K-State bar cheering both the Jayhawks and the Wildcats. Betty and Bill, a former K-State graduate, stayed neutral. The two wore painted tattoos on each cheek, one Jayhawk and one Wildcat. "Traitors," Stephanie
getting here.
The Schrandt enjoy the Lawrence bar scene when they can root for the Jay-hawks.
"We go to Henry T's and the Yacht Club often during games," Jody said. "Mom gets really into it."
But KU life is not just fun and games. There are some academics involved also.
"I cannot believe that people I graduated with actually got along without computers," Bill said. "Back in the '60s we had to use slide rules instead of spreadsheet programs. I just don't know how
Jody and Stephanie help their parents learn how to do their research on computer databases such as LEXUS and NEXUS. In their undergraduate years, Bill and Betty did not have the convenience of having computers.
"The best part of my college experience is the association with the youth," he said. "I'll miss
May 14 is going to be hectic. We have to go to Stephanie's law school hooding, then Dad's special engineering ceremony, then
people survived college without computer programs. I don't know how they could have done
Bill loves KU and the positive experiences he is
my party."
Jody Schrandt One of three graduating Schrandst
that a lot when I graduate. I appreciate the warm reception that I got from young peers. They accept me for who I am, and when we work on our projects we share resources." Bill and his classmates trade Bill's real world experience f
Bill and his classmates trade Bill's real world experience for their computer knowledge.
"It's a great trade," Bill said. Because of their graduate status, Jody and Stephanie get much better parking lots than their lowly undergraduate dad.
"I can't believe that I, their father, have a worse parking space than my children," he said.
Stephanie and Jody love having their parents on campus.
colonel uniform and now, instead of green canouflage clothes, he wears cool sweatshirts, Levi jeans and hikking boots. What a change."
"It's really weird because Dad, a former Army colonel, now dresses cool," Stephanie said. "I am used to seeing Dad in his army
But having a brother on campus is the most
convenient for Stephanie, who has been at KU long enough to accumulate a large number of residences in Lawrence.
Jody has helped her move 13 times.
And with the more time one spends on campus, the more one's vocabulary tends to change
"Iheard Dad say, "That guy's a dork," Jody said.
"He never used to say that."
Now, the graduation announcements have been sent. Caps and gowns have been purchased. And the Schrandtis eagerly are anticipating their big day. Relatives are flying in from as far as Michigan to witness the big day.
Between classes, Jody runs into his father in the cafeteria. "Dad is surrounded by people my age," Jody said. "They call him Bill, and he introduces them to me as his friends."
"May 14 is going to be hectic." Jody said. "We have to go to Steph's law school hooding, then Dad's special engineering ceremony, then my party."
The MBAs $\Pi$ are not having a special ceremony this year.
After graduation, each will go their separate ways. Stephanie accepted a job offer at a law firm in California; Jody, an offer in St. Louis; and BIII will remain in Lansing, where he and Betty reside. He hopes to be a city or county engineer.
But distance will not keep the Schrandts from losing touch.
"We expect the phone bills and those frequent riders to rack up," Jody said.
Poetic tour takes unusual view
By Lulsa Flores
Kansan staff writer
Mount Oread will become an Acropolis tomorrow when a professor leads a group of students around campus.
The name of the event is "Perspectives on the Monuments of Mount Oread." It is a Stop-Day walking tour to the University of Kansas led by Theodore Johnson Jr., professor of French.
The tour will start at 9 a.m. at 14th Street and Jayhawk Boulevard. The event, which is open to all students, is free and will last until 5 p.m.
Their purpose? Philosophy and other matters — just as Socrates in his peripatetic dialogues.
"If one transposes Mount Oread into the abstract idea of an Acropolis, one becomes aware of certain sweetness and grace, and to that end I organize every spring on Stop Day a marathon walking tour of the campus," Johnson said.
He said one purpose of the tour was to bring people to transpose the sights into metaphors and to read ideas into seemingly disparate elements. He said he would not talk about buildings as buildings, but buildings as metaphors and ideas.
"Over a year ago two banners were placed over two windows of the facade of Dyche Hall," he said. "The banners hide figures of the moon and the sun and blocks a great deal of the perception of the facade as a whole."
Another reason for the tour was to shed light on some of the problems with the campus today.
"The glass windows, with the images of the moon and sun, which have the concept of time, are blocked off," he said. "I think that they wanted to make it colorful for children, but it is awful and intellectually wrong. It is not right, and is so frightening that if they do this to this building they can do it to others."
Johnson's thesis related the writings of French author Marcel Proust to painting. He also wrote a minor thesis in art history on allegory and symbols on the work of the Dutch painter Vermeer.
Johnson has been complaining about this problem for a year, but the banners have remained. "The poetry of the facade is not understood," he said.
"Ialways worked on art history," Johnson said. In his classes, Johnson discusses composition in sculpture, painting and music.
"We look at how things are put and their inter-relations," he said.
Johnson uses the campus buildings to illustrate aspects of the subjects he teaches.
"I bring people to look deeply and discover the integrity of the minds who conceived and executed those works," he said.
Junko Sawamura, Wichita senior and one of Johnson's students, said that Johnson pulls out insights from everybody.
"He gets us to travel through time from Egypt to the present time and also the future," Sawamura said. "We get to see things from Rome, Greece, France and even from the moon just being on campus. He makes the statues talk and move."
The concept of the seven liberal arts goes back to the Middle Ages. The liberal arts were divided into the trivium and the quadrivium. The trivium was composed of grammar, rhetoric and dialectics. The quadrivium was composed of geometry, arithmetic, music and astronomy.
"This 12th-century structure is useful for the students to deal with iconography and the interrelation with the seven liberal arts," Johnson said.
Johnson also uses the buildings in terms of architecture. His students study Dyce Hall, which is based on the Roman-style St. Tropine cathedral in Arles, France.
Johnson said that the campus buildings gave a sense of time to people, but people sometimes went by without noticing the buildings.
For example, the stones that compose the Natural History Museum are more than several hundred million years old, and fossils can be seen in the stones, giving a perspective of a sense of time to the viewer, he said.
Johnson said that another important building on campus was Twente Hall, with the sculpture of St. George and the Dragon. He said that the building symbolized the role of the faculty and students at the University.
"George, which in Greek conveys the idea of Geo or Earth, and the statue of the pioneer digging into the ground, in front of Blake Hall, set into relief the intellectual character of our campus and our role, as faculty and students, to cultivate our ideas," he said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MAY 3,1995 PAGE 8A
KU Life
SCIENCE FAIR
The New York Times reported in January that some dermatologists, who are dissatisfied with injecting collagen to ease forehead wrinkles, have turned to a solution of the toxin that causes the botulism food poisoning. The treatment, which has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration, paralyzes the muscles that pull down the eyebrows, easing the wrinkles. And in tests at a Palm Springs, Calif., cancer center, doctors reported in December that a derivative of mistletoe has been their most effective treatment in cases of advanced lung cancer.
A report in a January issue of The New England
Medicine revealed that the cause of a woman's chronic heel pain was an accumulation of dog
A study in the November issue of the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology evaluated females in four body positions to find out which was the most effective in keeping them from wetting their pants. Findings: It is much better to cross your legs, and more effective to stand upright while doing it than to be bent at the waist.
A medical journal reported in September that a 28-year-old man had been saved from certain death in his fall from a seven-story building recently in Toronto — because he landed on a signpost and was impaled. The steel post pierced his back and protruded about six inches out of his chest near the armpit. The man received "minimal injuries," according to doctors, and suffered no permanent impairments.
NEWS OF THE WEIRD
LEAST COMPETENT CRIMINALS
embedded in the skin over the Achilles tendon, produced by years of her rubbing her Scottish terrier with her bare heel.
hairs
In March, a man with a gun burst into a Columbia, Tenn., building that formerly housed the First Citizens Bank and rushed up to what were formerly the tellers' counters. However, the bank had relocated six months earlier, and the building now houses an insurance company, two of whose employees were on duty. Asked the man, "Is this not a bank anymore?" He managed to escape after robbing the two women.
In New Jersey, James J. Downes, 29, was arrested for attempted robbery of the Sussex County State Bank in Vernon Township after he drew attention to himself by banging on the bank's doors while wearing a mask, a few minutes after the bank had closed for the day on April 1.
FOOTBALL Michigan football coach gets into restaurant brawl. Page 3B BASEBALL Japanese pitcher makes debut. Page
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY. MAY 3. 1995
Punk writer says 'bye
If you liked it, thanks;
if you didn't, tough ass
To whom it may concern:
SPORTS EDITOR
GERRY
FLY
There will be no more PowerBar columns. I will no longer confess that I like Jerod Haase. My stint as sports columnist and sports editor is done. But I will take a great amount of knowledge with me from my two years on the sports desk — things I didn't
SECTION B
know and things I didn't want to know.
I realized that Roy Williams is a great basketball coach, but he is not God.
He is subject to the same pressures as any other major college coach and sometimes does things that the media and those outside of athletics don't like.
HARRY DENNIS
As a sportswriter, images of athletes and coaches sometimes are shattered. Athletics is not always like the Mean Joe Greene Coke commercial where the football player gives up his jersey for a fan. Hell, sometimes athletes won't even give up five minutes for a reporter, even one from a tame college paper that never had the balls to be nasty.
People don't have to look in awe at Woodberry and other basketball players. They could hate or scorn them. And players always should remember that the admiration and fame that they receive is not a right, it is a privilege. That means returning the admiration back to the public—the ones that blindly cheer and give energy to a team down 10 points, whether the 'Hawks have lost one or 21 in a row.
Kansas junior pitcher Clay Baird delivers a pitch against Missouri. Baird started the game but didn't last through the second inning. Kansas senior Dan Rude picked up the victory.
I realized that the real heroes and superstars are not the high-profile student-athletes. Rather, it is the student-athletes with partial scholarships who demand and deserve our respect.
I don't think he is obligated to do it because of his scholarship. However, he does owe it to his admirers to at least sign an autograph or two and maybe give a reporter three minutes of his time.
They have no fame, few see them perform and still fewer know their names. And yet, these athletes always are willing to sign a program or answer a few quick questions.
These athletes put as much time and hard work into their sports as any football or basketball player, but they receive none of the benefits.
I realized that athletes are not always what they seem on the court or field.
I realized the large amount of money this University makes from athletics and how crudely unfair it is to the student-athlete who sees none of the navback.
Sure, many say that the full scholarship is payment enough, and maybe it should be in an idealistic world. But aside from financial compensation, something is wrong about the current exploitation of student-athletes as money-making bystanders. The business-like attitude in revenue-producing sports makes me sick and angry.
Athletes, remember where your admiration and school pride come from, because there will come a time when it is not there for you.
Stayin' alive: Kansas holds that Tiger
Sure, former Jayhawk guard Steve Woodberry was a great — no, an unbelievable — player on the court last year. He generally was unapproachable to fans or the media. He was shy, but that was no excuse. He didn't want to deal with the media and chose not to. This is not sour grapes for being unable to interview him.
And finally, I learned that for highprofile Division I sports, college newspapers take a backseat.
2
Even the Kansan, an award-winning paper, must bow down to the bigwigs that come into Allen Field
Kansas IP H R ER BB SC
Baird 1.2 4 6 6 5 1
Rude 5.0 1 1 1 7 7
Keens 2.1 4 1 2 1 3
Milesour IP H R ER BB SC
Guliani 3.0 9 9 7 2 1
Lindstrom 1.2 3 3 .0 1 2
Hunt 2.2 4 1 1 1 2
See BYE-BYE, Page 2B.
Lindstrom 2, Nivens, DeMarco 2, Meadow
E DP Missouri 1, LDB Kansas 8, Missouri
15-28 Chamberlain, Byrd, DeMarco,
26, Chamberlain, 2, Kiner 28, Terrell,
DeMarco
Kansas outfielder Isaac Byrd slides safely into third base as Kansas coach Dave Bingham looks on. Kansas beat Missouri 13-9.
Sean R. Crosier / KANSAN
TIGERS (17-31) ab r h rbl
2b Niyens 5 0 0 0
of Fullerton 3 3 0 0
1b White 5 2 2 1
c Buchman 4 0 1 2
dh Chamberlain 5 2 2 0
if Terrell 4 1 2 2
rt Fry 4 1 2 1
rf Soymour 1 0 1 0
3b Jongensen 3 0 0 1
sa Tyson 2 0 0 0
ph/ss Towne 2 1 1 0
Totals 36 9 9 7
MAWKS (19-31) ab r h rb l
sa DeMerco 4 3 2 0
2b Kilner 5 2 2 2
cf Byrd 5 2 1 2
dh English 5 1 1 0
rf Igou 5 2 1 1
3b Wilhelm 5 1 2 1
1b Headley 5 1 2 1
if Tuney 5 0 1 2
c Wiltim 3 1 1 0
ph Dimmck 1 0 0 0
c Meadows 0 0 0 0
Totals 41 13 16 9
Kansas 13, Missouri 9
With no time to talk postseason in reach
By Tom Erickson
Kansan sportswriter
One down. one to go.
Kansas still controls its own postseason destiny following a 13-9 victory against Missouri last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
The Jayhawks, 19-31 overall and 1-9 in the Big Eight Conference, can clinch sixth place and a trip to the conference tournament in Oklahoma City with a victory in the second game at 3 this afternoon.
If the Tigers (17-31, 5-17) manage a victory, then Kansas will need help from Iowa State to make the tournament.
Missouri will conclude its Big Eight schedule with five games against the Cyclones, and with a victory today would need to win four of those games to finish sixth.
But the Tigers weren't about to hand the first game away.
Missouri scored four times in the first inning off Kansas junior starter Clair Baye. The Jayhawks stormed right back with four runs of their own to tie the game.
Missouri then added two more runs in the second inning to take a 6-4 lead. Kansas coach Dave Bingham then brought in senior pitcher Dan Rude (4-2) to relieve Baird, who walked five batters in 1 2/3 innings.
"I felt like we needed to have one to stay alive," he said. "We got the game we needed tonight, and hopefully we can get the second one tomorrow.
Rude responded well, allowing one run
Rude then got into trouble in the seventh inning and was replaced with freshman Robert Keens, who struck out three and earned his fourth save.
on one hit in five innings. The righthander struck out seven, though he also walked seven.
Bingham said getting the first win in the series was important.
The game was put out of reach when the Jayhawks scored four in the fourth inning and two more in the fifth to take a 12-6 lead
"Coming out of the bullpen, you have to inherit the situation that the last guy set up," Rude said. "Having the game tied back up at four means a lot, though, because you get to start the ballgame over. To have them come out and do that was a real pick-me-up."
While Rude shut the Tigers down, Kansas added two runs in the third inning, tying the game again at six.
Igou gets 200th hit gaining confidence
By Jenn Carson Kansan sportswriter
Josh Igou and the Kansas baseball team still have some fight left.
Last night the Jayhawks defeated the Missouri Tigers 13-9, and a victory today would clinch a Big Eight Conference tournament spot.
"We're a lot more relaxed, and it shows," Igou said. "If I can just uphold my part, then everybody else will try to do their part."
Igou definitely did his part against the Tigers.
He was 4-for-5, and his second hit marked the 200th of his career. The senior right fielder became the sixth Jajawk to surpass that milestone. Igou's teammate, senior Brent Wilhelm, recorded his 200th hit earlier this season.
"That's a pretty good thing to say I've done in my four years here." Igou said.
During his career, Igou said three hits particularly stuck out in his mind: his first hit, and two in the Jayhawks' regional victory against Ohio State last season in which he hit a home run from each side of the plate.
But Igou has slumped at the plate this year. His average has hovered around .200 throughout most of the season.
Relaxing as of late has built Igou's confidence at the
olate. His average has improved to .280.
"He has been really hot lately," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "It's been a tough year for Josh. But he looks confident at the plate."
Igou's batting improvement has led Bingham to move him up in the batting order. He batted fifth last night, following Isaac Byrd and Brandon English.
"I like batting behind those guys," Igou said. "And plus, with Brent Wilhelm behind me, they're throwing me better pitches."
u
Robert Moczydlowsky / KANSAN
Kansas men's tennis coach Michael Center instructs senior Manny Ortiz and Junior Victor Fimbres between games at the Big Eight tournament.
Tennis readies for postseason
Men regionals-bound; women hope for best
By Robert Moczydlowsky Kansan sportswriter
The class is National Title 101, and the No. 20 Jayhawks have been busy studying. They'll get their chance to show what they've learned Saturday, when they will be the host team for the Region V NCAA Qualifying tournament at the Allen Field House courts.
It's final exam time for the Kansas men's tennis team.
The winner of each Regional tournament is awarded an invitation to the NCAA Team Championships held May 13-21, in Athens, Ga.
The six-team Region V field features Kansas, No. 21 Arizona State, Colorado, Oklahoma, Tulsa and Indiana State. Arizona State, a team that boasts national No. 1 Sargis Sargisian, has been awarded the tournament's No.1 seed.
"Right now we don't really have a specific game plan," Kansas sophomore Tim Radogna said. "We just plan to play with a lot of confidence and fight as hard as we can."
Kansas' road to the regional final starts at 2 p.m. Saturday when it will
16
A potential battle with No. 1 Sargesian and the top-seeded Sun Devils has the Jayhawks excited.
face the winner of Friday's Tulsa vs. Indiana State match. Arizona State will play the Oklahoma vs. Colorado winner Saturday morning. The final will be at 1 p.m. Sunday.
"The committee decided that they would be No. 16 and we were No. 17," Radogna said, referring to the national seedings. "That makes us want to play well and face the higher-seeded team. Arizona State was the school I considered before Kansas, so personally, I have something to prove to their coach."
If the lineup remains unchanged, freshman Enrique Abaroa will battle Sargisian at the No. 1 singles spot.
The Jayhawks finished the season with a conference title and an overall record of 18-11. But tough road losses to top 25 competition will likely cost the team an NCAA bid.
"Right now I'm very envious of the
For the No. 27-ranked women's team, the post-season has brought sighs of disappointment and questions of what could've been. The women's tournament does not have regional qualifying, thus regular season records become yardsticks of tournament worth.
Merzbacher won't stay down for long. He will lose just one senior from this year's squad, No. 11 Nora Koves, and he has signed Kris Cell, a No. 59-ranked junior player from Morrisstown, N.J.
men's regionalization." Kansas women's coach Chuck Merbacher said. "Regionalization rewards the teams that are playing well at the end of the season. If we had a regional system, I'd say we would be right in it. But you have to qualify by the standards and rules that we have now."
"We have the depth, and we have the talent," Mierzbacher said. "What we need to do is make some adjustments in our games and in our attitudes that will allow us to continue to be an elite tennis program."
In the postseason Big Eight Conference awards, several Jayhawks were honored. Men's coach Michael Center again was named Coach of the Year, and Enrique Abaroa won the league's Newcomer of the Year award. Reid Slattery and Victor Fimbres were named to the All-Conference team.
For the women's team, Koves was named Player of the Year and All Conference. Sophomore Jenny Atkerson joined Koves on the All-Conference team.
2B
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
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$249 LUNCH SPECIAL Lunch only from 11:30-3:00
PUPS
1016 Mass · 865-4055
If going to a foreign flick is your idea of culture...
TWO FACE TREE
LYRIC OPERA OF KANSAS CITY can help you.
Four bucks won't get you into the movies, but it will get you a seat at Lyric Opera's performance of Gilbert and Sullivan's THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE May 13, 15, 17, 19 & 21. Arrive an hour before curtain to participate in Lyric Opera's "Student Rush" program where a $4 ticket cost gets you a seat at PIRATES and the Opera Preview. Hey, you're getting all the culture without those annoying subtitles.
Formal dress not required
For more information, call (816) 471-7344 11th & Central Kansas City, MO
Sure, the department wants the Kansan to cover the smaller, lower-profile sports such as softball and track. But when the students want to know about their Jayhawk basketball or football, the Kansan gets brushed aside for better coverage from The Kansas City Star.
BYE-BYE:Punk writer bids adieu
House, even though we are the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. After all, this athletic program is for all students, isn't it?
Continued from Page 1B.
Thanks for all the praise I've received from my friends and the Lawrence bar faithful. I said your names would be in the paper: Allen, Todd, Argie, Dave, Brian, Fran and the rest — you know who you are. To the entire Kansan staff, thanks for saying the columns were great even when they sucked.
My naive sports thinking is gone, but it looks like that may be for the better. College should prepare us for the real world, and it has done that for me.
And to those who didn't like my columns, kiss off. No, really, you are even more important. Thanks for reminding me that I was just another punk sportswriter who writes only because he can't play the game. You showed me that my opinion isn't the only one, and certainly not the right one.
Goodbye — for now.
SPORTS WATCH
All times Central
WGN — Major League Baseball, Houston at Chicago Cubs
ESPN — Cycling, Tour DuPont, day No. 7, at various sites (same-day tape) 5:30 p.m.
ESPN2 - Cycling, Tour DuPont, day No. 7, at various sites (same-day tape)
6:30 p.m.
**TNT** — NBA Basketball Playoffs, doubleheader,
first round game No. 3's, Orlando at Boston and
Utah at Houston
ESPN — Major League Baseball, Atlanta at Florida or Boston at N.Y. Yankees
ESPN2 — NHL Hockey, Florida at Pittsburgh
9:30 p.m.
ESPN Major League Baseball Los Angeles at San Francisco or Oakland at California
San Francisco or Oakland at California
ESPN2—NHL Hockey, Vancouver at San Jose
LIMITED SEVERITY
The Summer Option.
Not in summer school but still in Lawrence? If you were a student this spring -you can still be seen at Watkins. It's the Summer Option. Pay the health fee or pay by the visit and keep some continuity in your busy life.
Summer Session Hours
8:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m., M-F
8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m., SaSu
Break Period Hours
8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m., every day
HEALTH Since 1906 Watkins CENTER For KU
864-9500
GIANT WAREHOUSE SALE Jayhawk Spirit
Look good for the summer: Stock up!
Screenprinted over runs and test prints (KU,KSU,and other schools) Blank and Blemished Garments $1.00,$2.00,$3.00,& $4.00 box items
SCREEN STARS
Hanes
BEEFY-
Fitted Pro Hats Pro & Regular Jackets 100% Cotton T-Shirts 50/50 Cotton T-Shirts
Cotton Shorts
Nylon Shorts
100% Cotton Sweatshirts
50/50 Cotton Sweatshirts
LRM 1 Mile South
31st Street 31st Street
Quality Electric Spirit Industries
Houston Drive
Harris Complex
Parking located in rear of warehouse
RUSSELL ATHLETIC
Indoor Sale, Rain or Shine!!
FRUIT OF THE LOOM
SOFFE
1021 E.31 st Street (E.of Quality Elect.) Lawrence, KS 66046
Fri., Sat., 8am-5pm, Sun., 9am-5pm, May 5,6,7
$\pi$
StorGard
RYDER
We're ready to help you move in
StorGard
811 East 23rd. Street
Your one stop location for storage (boxes, tape, rope, locks, etc.) needs and truck rental
CALL TODAY WHILE THEY LAST
StorGard 749-1144
Ryder 749-3915
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
3B
Michigan suspends coach
Moeller arrested in weekend fight
The Associated Press
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — James Duderstadt stood in the glare of television lights, trying to explain yet another brush with the law concerning his athletic department.
The University of Michigan president announced Monday that football coach Gary Moeller was being suspended with pay while the school investigated his weekend fight in a restaurant and scuffle with police.
Southfield police said Moeller on Friday night was asked to leave the Excalibur restaurant by the manager, then refused to leave when an officer asked and finally became verbally abusive to police before he struck one of them.
"He was singing, he was attempting to dance with a few patrons, he was monopolizing the time-of the waitresses and overall being loud and obnoxious," detective Reginald Phillips told WBK-TV in Southfield.
Moeller, 54, was released on bond after he was arrested on misdeaner charges of disorderly conduct and assault and battery.
The charges carry a $500 maximum fine and 90 days in jail penalty.
For Duderstadt, suspending Moler was not a job the head of a large, proud research institution cherished. Yet trouble somehow keeps finding Michigan athletics. In the past two years:
Two players from the "Fab Five" basketball team and two others from the Wolverines football team were accused of stealing beer.
Three football players admitted
The hockey coach was arrested for urinating in public.
A football player was suspended for throwing a student through a plate-glass window.
guilt in stealing a credit card and buying merchandise with it.
A football player was arrested for mistakenly shooting at police officers.
"The University of Michigan is a large place," Duderstadt said. "On occasion, such unfortunate incidents occur. In the end, those of us in leadership positions have to accept responsibility for that."
Duderstadt said assistant Lloyd Carr was the interim coach. He said it was too soon to say whether Moeller might be fired.
"Such incidents are always quite unfortunate. And when such misfortunes occur, we obviously are sorry and if necessary make the appropriate apologies and take the necessary action."
Moeller, who faces arraignment Monday, has declined comment, citing an attorney's advice.
Moeller has guided the Wolverines to Big Ten championships in 1991 and 1992 and shared a conference title in 1990. Moeller is 44-13-3 since taking over from Bo Schembechler at the start of the 1990 season.
JUST DO IT!!
Instructing Staff at New Horizor
You always wanted to try martial arts, but never quite got around to it until now. You knew that the martial arts had a lot of benefits such as improved concentration & flexibility, a place to meet new friends, and just have FUN!
And you always wanted that confident feeling that comes from knowing that you could defend yourself or your family. Now is the time to start.
Call us today to set up an appointment for your first lesson.
One Week Intro $19.95 Call now! 749-4400
New Horizons
Black Belt Academy of Tae Kwon Do
Holiday Plaza Shopping Center 25th & Iowa, Lawrence (Across the street from Food 4 Leas)
Burge Union, Level Two
8:30 a.m.- 7:00 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.
8:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Friday
10:00 a.m.- 4:00 p.m. Sat.
864-5697
Kansas Union, Level Two
8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Mon. - Fri.
10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sat.
Noon - 3:00 p.m. Sunday
864-5285
Look for additional buyers in the Kansas Union Gallery beginning May 5th.
Sale starts promptly at 9 AM at KU Credit Union; Bring the family and enjoy free popcorn and drinks while you choose your new summer fun vehicle!
Eligible units include new & used boats, personal watercraft, RVs, travel & camper trailers
Payroll deduction makes it easy to repay!
Boat, Car, RV, Camper Personal Watercraft & Motorcycle Sale! Saturday, May 6 9AM-9PM
100% financing for new units; 100% of NADA retail on used units!
KU Credit Union Announces Its
Rates as low as 6.75%* and terms up to 144 months mean lower payments for you!
Cash For Books!
GRAND OPENING!
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students
Because we sell more used books, we need more used books. Sell your books to us and get consistently higher prices.
Free End of Semester Shopping Coupon!
ReMax RV
Finance your new summer recreational vehicle with KU Credit Union's new Boat & RV Loan Program!
Kaw Valley Industrial Motorcycles ATVs jet skis
Laird Noller Ford Lincoln Mercury Mazda Mitsubishi
KU CREDIT UNION An Affiliate of 66 Federal Credit Union
KU
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
KU
CREDIT UNION
An Affidavit of 66 Federal Credit Union
00 W. 6th * Lawrence KS * 6C
Arnie's Boat Sales & Service
3400 W. 6th * Lawrence KS * 66049
10
P
Shown: 100%
cotton/Lycra®
index bra #1582
brief
100% cotton Jockey hi-cuts, bikinis, briefs thongs, tank tops & bras are all on sale.
100% cotton bilinis and hicuts.
3 pair in table, Reg. $15, SALE 11.25
---
25% off all Jockey $ ^{\circ}$ for her
100% cotton French-cut pants in prints and solids. Reg.-$6, $ALE 4.$SO
100% cotton briefs. Sizes 5-6.7 Reg.
$5.50, SALE 4.12, Queen sizes. $4.50
.
WeaverS
9th & Massachusetts
.
SHOP THURSDAY 9:30-8:30 p.m
4B
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Red Lyon Tavern
Congrats to KU Graduates!
Songk
Thanks and Good Luck from
Stafford's Liquor
(formerly Graham's)
1906 Mass.
843-8186
The Mom & Pop's liquor store of Lawrence
In memory of Mom
KU Habitat for Humanity's 5K HOME RUN
8:30 AM Saturday, May 6th
(7:30 AM Registration)
Haskell CC Course
$7 Run $12 Run & T-Shirt
$7 Run $12 Run & T-Shirt
Mass.
19th St.
23rd St.
Mass. 19th St.
23rd St.
ARRIBA! ARRIBA! IT'S FIESTA TIME! JOIN US AT...
Scott's
Brass Apple
GRILL & BAR
FOR A FUNTASTIC...
CINCO DE MAYO WEEKEND!
Thurs. - Sat ., May 4,5,6
Experience Authentic Mexican Food Specials
enchiladas & more!
Thurs.: Tacos, tamales, shrimp fajitas,
Fri.: Tacos, tamales, beef or chicken fajitas,
enchiladas & more!
enchiladas & more!
Sat.:Tostados, tamales, beef or chicken fajitas,
enchiladas & more!
Drinks:
Mexican Beers $1.50
Margaritas $2.00
Cuervo Shots $1.00
MUSIC
3300 W.15th St.
841-0033
Relief Fund THE Oklahoma City EXPLOSION
The University Daily Kansan would like to extend our gratitude to the The University of Kansas students and faculty for donating over $500 to the Oklahoma Disaster Relief Fund.
Your generosity and concern for the residents in Oklahoma City is greatly appreciated.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ray-Ban
IS UNLICENSED BY
BAUCH & LOMB
The world first unlabeled
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 843-0611
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUCH & LOMB
The world's finest sunglasses*
928 Mass. 843-0611
They're Here!
1995 Jayhawker Yearbook will be available for pick-up:
Wescoe Beach
Wescoe Beach April 26-28 and May 1-3 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
If pre-ordered, present KUID
To purchase, bring cash/check for $30* made payable to:
The Jayhawker
*Supplies are limited if not pre-ordered. 1994 Yearbooks also available for pick-up.
Questions: Call 864-3728
Coach hopes Big 12 merger will benefit Texas sports
OMAHA, Neb. — Former Oklahoma basketball coach Billy Tubs, who now heads the Texas Christian program, is having a good time with what he sees in the early development of the Big 12 Conference.
The Associated Press
The Big 12 is the approaching union of Big Eight Conference schools and four former Southwest Conference members — Texas, Texas Tech, Baylor and Texas A&M. The conference is to begin play in football and basketball during the 1996-97 school year.
"I think the whole thing is kind of interesting," said Tubbs, who was the featured speaker Monday at Creighton University's annual athletic fund raise. "The Texas schools think they're going to totally dominate the league.
"I always wanted the Big Eight Conference (headquarters) to move out of Kansas City. The Texas schools just know that the Big Eight basketball tournament will be in Dallas. So will the football game. I don't think so, but I'm just going to sit back and laugh and watch them. Gosh, Nebraska will even have to play some out-of-town games now, won't they?"
Actually, Tubbs said, the Big 12 will be good for basketball in Texas. "With all the schools in Texas
either going to the Big 12 or the Western Athletic Conference, we're going to be able to keep a lot of the good players in the state who had been leaving," he said. "It's really different, but I think we have a chance to really do well. It's a great area to recruit to."
Tubbs said that TCU had signed two of the top four players in Texas this year.
"I think the new league helped us this year," said Tubbs, whose school will join the WAC in 1996-97. "We'll be recruiting against the Big 12 schools some, but I don't see us having a real problem there. For one thing, we won't be playing many of their teams."
Tubbs' first TCU team was 16-11 and finished tied for third in the Southwest Conference.
The Horned Frogs were 7-20 in 1993-94, leading to Moe Iba's departure as coach after seven seasons at TCU.
Tubbs' 14-year stay at Oklahoma produced 333 victories and four Big Eight Conference championships. But the Sooners finished fifth in the league in Tubbs' final two seasons and didn't make the NCAA tournament.
After his last Oklahoma team finished 15-13, Tubbs accepted TCU's offer to replace Jba, a former Nebraska coach.
NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass.841-0100
WIN A SPORTS CAR!!
COME TO CHECKER'S AND ENTER
"THE DREAM CAR SWEEPSTAKES"
12
ALL GRADE
"AA" EGGS
DOZEN PACK
1/2¢
Over Invoice Cost
@@@@@@@@@@
FUNNY POPULAR
FIRESKIES
DOG FOOD 18 LB. & LARGER
1 C
PER
POUND
1
COST
DAILY SPECIAL
Begin Thurs. May 6, Wed & Fri., May 7, Sun.
BANANAS $19¢
LB.
Over Invoice Cost
TAYSTEER OLD
FASHIONED
BREAD
1 LB. LOAF
53¢
EA.
DIAPERS
HUGGIES
BUMPS
JUNKS
SAMPERS
10:30 a.m.
Over Invoice
BLAUPUNKT
MT. DEW, DR. PEPPER HAWAIAN PUNCH OR PEPSI COLA
BBC
7
7¢ EA.
9
COST
97¢ EA.
PEPSI, MT DEW, DR. PEPPER $ 198
15 PAK W/MAL-N REBATE
1¢ PER DIAPER
NABISCO
HONEY MAID
GRAHAMS
---
Over Invoice Cost
1¢ PER QT.
ALL 12QT. TUB ICE CREAM
99 EA.
Serine
NATIONAL BRAND POP
12 & 24 PACK
12 OZ. CANS
SNACKWELL
CEREALE BARS, 14 OZ NR $ 1.68
EA
NATIONAL BRAND BEER
34 PACK 12 OZ. CANS
1¢
PAPPAK
Deep Dish
PAPPALO'S
DEEP DISH
PIZZA
COBE
International
FASHION
500
6
THE HUGS LITE
THE HUGS LITE
THE HUGS LITE
50¢
Over Invoice
Cost
Budweiser
Budweiser
BELFONTE NON-FAT YOGURT
8 OZ. CUP
ASST. FLAVORS
45¢
EA.
FRITO LAY
TOSTITOS
13.5 OZ. TO 15.5 OZ. BAG
188
FA.
11
BUD LIGHT.
BUD DRY OR
BUDWEISER
BEER
1199
24 PACK
12OZ CAN
LIMIT 1
WASHINGTON EXTRA FANCY RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS APPLES
ADDITIONAL Purchases
BUDWEISER BEER
14 PM 120% CANS
$1250
WL ACCEPT
LOOD STEAMS &
MANUFACTURERS
COLPONS
FRITO LAY
TOSTITOS
13.5 OZ TO 15.5 OZ BAG
188
EA.
1
38
1 LB. PKG.
138
IOWA GOLD
SLICED
BACON
88¢
OPEN
24
HOURS
EVERY DAY
FRESH PORK
SPARE
RIBS
(1)
BONELESS CHUCK STEAK
BONELESS CHUCK STEAK
ECONOMY PACK
128
LB.
FULL SLAB 118 LB.
T-BONE STEAK
FROM THE BAKERY
FRESH BAKED
WHITE BREAD
ECONOMY PAK
2 LAVES IN A BAG
2 16 OZ FO R $1
388
FRESH CRISP
GREEN
CABBAGE
18¢
LB.
10 LB. BAG
U.S. NO. 1
RUSSET
POTATOES
88¢
RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT LARGE 27 CT. SIZE 30¢ FA
BLUE BELL YOGURT OR ICE CREAM
1/2 GAL CTN.
248 EA.
RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT
LARGE 27 CT. SIZE
30¢ EA.
JUMBO SUNKIST
CHOICE
NAVEL
ORANGES
1
56 SIZE
28
Bread
BONELESS RUMP ROAST
BLUE BELL YOGURT OR ICE CREAM
1/2 GAL. CNT.
248 EA.
ECONOMY PAK
128
LB.
20¢ EA
FRESH CRISP
BROCCOLI
9-11 ASST. PORK CHOPS
350
68¢
FRESH SLICED
1/4 PORK
LOIN
28
128 LB.
FRYER BREAST
W/RIB BONE
ECONOMY PACK
98¢
CHRYSLER
ECONOMY PACK
188
LB.
FROM THE DELI Sliced OR SHAVED 95% FAT FREE HAM 188 LB. ECONOMY PACK
SKINLESS BONELESS
FRYER
BREASTS
ECONOMY PACK
188
LB.
FRYER BREAST
W/RIB BONE
98¢
BABY SWISS CHEESE $288
4 LB. WHEEL APPROX.
LB.
MOOSE BROTHERS
SUPREME
PIZZA
2 FOR $9
LARGE 12" SIZE
Miral Nagwale
1234567890
we receive the right to limit quantities
while supplies last
mixed vegetables
BIRDS-EYE CORN,
PEAS AND
MIXED VEGETABLES
16 OZ. BAG
78¢
FA
LARGE 12" SIZE
78¢ FA
CAKE
FROM THE BAKERY ASSORTED VARIETIES CAKES 16-24 OZ 248 FA.
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES
248 FA.
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
FROM THE BAKERY ASSORTED VARIETIES CAKES 16-24 OZ 248 EA.
8 EA.
FRESH KANSAS
RAISED BUFFALO
DAILY
VIDEO SPECIAL
3 MOVIES/GAMES
NEW RELEASES
NOT INCLUDED
PRICES EFFECTIVE
MAY 9
BUS BK TRA WKS STH FTH AFT
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
Pitcher makes major debut
Former Japanese player throws five scoreless innings
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — Though he has used Roger Clemens as a model, Hideo Nomo seemed more like a right-handed Randy Johnson in his major league debut yesterday.
Nomo, the first Japanese native to play in the majors in three decades, was overpowering when he got his pitches over the plate. But, like Johnson, he often had trouble with his control.
"I'm glad to see it," said Maki Sato, a Japanese native who now lives in Menlo Park, Calif. "Baseball was taught by the American people, and finally we came back to say thank
you."
Nomo, 26, allowed just one hit and struck out seven in five scoreless innings for the Los Angeles Dodgers in their game against the San Francisco Giants. A fan in right field held up a big red "K" sign after each Nomo strikeout.
But Nom, who retired after five seasons with the Kintetsu Buffaloes of Japan's Pacific League so he could play in the United States, also walked four — including three straight in the first inning. He was way outside and high on many pitches.
It took Nomo 32 pitches and 20 minutes to get out of the first. After getting Darren Lewis on a called third strike and forcing Robby Thompson to pop out weakly to first, he walked Barry Bonds, Matt Williams and Glennallen Hill. He then struck out Royce Clayton on an inside fast ball, much to the delight
of a fan waving a Japanese flag behind first base.
Nomo has a pitching motion reminiscent of Luis Tiant. He slowly stretches his arms high above his head. Then he turns his back to the plate, pivots and whips his right arm toward the plate.
His windup is more conventional when runners are on base and he's pitching from the stretch.
Nomo allowed his only hit in the third on a double off the left-field wall by Thompson that could have been caught by Billy Ashley.
Nomo also made his first pro appearances at the plate, since the designated hitter is used in Japan's Pacific League.
The former outfielder went 0-for-2. He struck out in the third and hit a sharp grounder up the middle in the fifth, but was thrown out by Giants shortstop Clayton.
The Barefoot
Juana
9th & Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center
Don't get stuck in the stacks... come check out our Beer Library!
928 Mass.
Downtown
Jaybowl
MATTHEW UPSON
Jaubowl
MARKETS UNION
Daily Specials
Wednesday
Free Shoe
Rental!!!
REVO Sunglasses
EVERYTHING BUT ICE Beds Desks Bookcases
Layaway Now For Summer
642 LIBERTY HALL 749-
Mass. 1912
Theatre is accessible to all persons
The Etc. Shop
9th & Mass.
BEFORE RAIN
Mon-Fri 5:00; 7:15, 9:30
No Showing Sat.
Sun 2:45, 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
SHALLOWGRAVE
Daily 5:30, 7:30
Sat/Sun 3:30, 5:30, 7:30
PULP.FICTION
9:30 Daily
---
DICKINSON THEATRES
Dickinson 6
841-8600
2333 South Louis St W
Tommy Boy PG-13
4:05, 7:20, 9:00
Circle of Friends PG-13
4:20, 7:00
Don Juan DeMarco PG-13
9:50
Top Dog PG-13
4:10, 7:30, 9:40
Kiss of Death R
4:15, 7:15, 9:50
Village of the Darned R
4:20, 7:10, 9:30
Rob Roy R
4:00, 7:00, 10:00
5250 Adults Before Hearing + Dolby
S 350 Adult Before Heating Baby
0 P.M. P.M. Impaired Sterile
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 9 PM ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
M V
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 843-5197
Bad Boys %/mo 5:00.7:15.9:30
Destiny Turns on the Radio $^{18}$ #9:00 7:30 9:45
Jefferson in paris $^{18}$ #9:20 5:00 6:00
The Curse $^{18}$ #9:30 4:45 7:45
Jury Duty $^{18}$ #9:30 9:38
A Godly movie $^{18}$ 5:00 7:15
Outbreak $^{18}$ 9:30
Wo you Were Sleeping $^{18}$ #4:50 7:45 9:40
CINEMA TWIN 110 YEARS
311 IDIOWA 841-5191 $1.25
Forest Gump 9613/₁₄ 4:15; 7:00; 9:45
Legends of the Fall 23x³³ 4:30; 7:10; 9:45
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Come Party on the Patio!
Wednesdays are back at Dos Hombres!!!
25¢ Draws
and
$1.00 Margaritas
DOS
HOMBRES
RESTAURANTE
815 New Hampshire
841-7287
$1.00
DOS HOMBRES
RESTAURANTE
NOT SLIPPERY WHEN WET. NIKE
Air Deschütz $ ^{\mathrm{II}} \mathrm {I}. $
francis sporting goods, inc.
843-4191 721 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 60044
DISCOVER WHAT THE "NORTH COUNTRY" HAS KNOWN FOR YEARS.
THE Rankin FAMILY
Canada's multi-platinum recording artists
A heart-stopping
blend of country,
folk and Celtic
influences...
Specially Priced
Appearing at
Liberty Hall
5/12
STREETSIDE RECORDS®
sdn
Shipping
Parcel Pick up from Your Dorm Apartment
UNIVERSITY SHIPPING & STORAGE
Call Now
We Gladly Accept:
800-722-5456
MC-VISA
Why Brides Choose Barrier's Bridal Registry
• Brides can rely on the expert advise and guidance of Barrier's qualified and friendly staff
• Brides have available the most complete selections of china, pottery, crystal, casual gifts and accessories
- Personal bridal services - always
- Individual bridal shower assistance
- Exquisite, free gift wrap and delivery
• Barrier's does not require "guarantees" or "exclusive" registration, assuring the bride's friends the courtesy of shopping choice
Why Brides' Guests Choose Barrier's Bridal Registry
· Shopping is as easy as picking up the phone - with major credit cards accepted
· Reliable staff assures personal selection, beautiful gift wrap and prompt delivery
Given the choice, brides and their guests prefer to shop at Barrier's because "It always means more from"
Barrier's
Oliver & Douglas
6B
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VUARNET
FRANCE
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts
JAEP
This past year our organization provided informational lectures from:
If you have a major in the field of science and desire a job after graduation, this is the organization for you!
Jay Zandell of Hydrologic Corp.
Jules Colten of PCI Industries
Michelle Toelkes of Hallmark Cards
Look for JAEP next year for more opportunities!
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
102 Personal
110 Business
111 Announcements
120 Entertainment
130 Lost and Found
200s Employment
Help Wanted
Professional Services
Typing Services
Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
户
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
300s
Merchandise
For Sale
Auto Sales
Miscellaneous
Want to Buy
100s Announcements
105 Personals
LeBiGiAyOK offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, or unsure. Please call KU info at 864-3506 or Head Quarters at 861-2435 for more information.
HEADQUARTERS
We Can Help
HEADQUARTERS
110 Bus. Personals
Counseling and information
841-2345
1419 Massachusetts St., Lawrence
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Hoops, nail rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Etc. Shoe $293 Mass.
120 Announcements
FREE KITTEN! Cute, healthy, frisky many colors, and litter trained. Come by C32 1900 W. 11st St. (Gaslig Village) any evening this week from 8 a.m. to 9 a.p. and pick out your cat.
Gay, lesbian, or unsure, or unsure? LeBlaGayOK offers a confidential support group Wednesdaysat 7:00 p.m. K叫InfU at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for location.
int I T Work Cams & info on other int I & US volunteer intern/placements avail in ECM volunteer interment placement Resource Center-ECM Center. l lock north of Kansas Union 843-4893.
Moving ? Don't throw good stuff away. Give it to a team. The R T I L R, mail sale Call: 842-989-6200
130 Entertainment
FREE PARTY ROOM for 29-300 AVAILABLE
AT JOHNYS TAVERN. CALL 824-6377
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
Are you detail oriented, well organized, and punctual? Able to lift up 60 lbs. Great potential. PC knowledge preferred. Apply in person 4824 Quail Crest P1 or call 841-6531 EOE
Non-smoker, must be able to pass security, must be able to work evenings and weekends. Prior experience preferred. Apply-Million Air Forbes Field, Topeka.
Case Manager, Full Time: To provide community based services to youth with severe emotional disturbance, an their families. Position requires Bachelor's degree in psychology, social work, counseling. Send resume/cover to A. Ankherko, 304 E. 2nd St., Lawrence, LA 60444. 0604 filled. EEO.
Case Manager, Full Time. To provide community based services to youth with severe emotional disturbance, and their families. Position requires Bachelor's degree in psychology, social work, or related field. Ankerhole, Bert Nash CMHC, 336 Missouri, Lawrence, KS 65028. Open until filled. EEO
Cash Caterers, Kansas and Burge Unions' Cater-
ment Department, $4 25 per hour, paid in cedar day
following employment Hiring for the following
shifts.
Friday, May 12, 1995 - 9:30 am-3pm
Saturday, May 13, 1995 - 9:30 am-3pm
Saturday, May 13, 1995, 7:00 a.m-4 p.m
Saturday, May 13, 1995, 1:30 p.m-12 midnight
Sunday, May 14, 1995, 8:00 a.m-11 p.m
Sunday, May 14, 1995, 6:00 am-3:30 pm
Sunday, May 14, 1995, 9:30 am-3:00 pm
Must follow dress code, able to stand for long periods and lift up to 30 pounds. Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel Office, Level 5. AA/EEO
Construction company has work in yard maintenance out door work, and landscaping. Flexible hours, full-time this summer. $7.50 per hour. If unable to attend, 9:00 between the hours 4-9 8:00 thursday
Interested in Learning the Music Business: Part-Time Intern wants to attend Ozark Talent Agency We have two locations. You can how to set up tours, and promote concerts. Limited positions available. Ideal candidates would be students seeking degree and graphic design. Call Steve Ozark, in the mornings at (913) 841-2800. Call Steve Ozark, in the mornings at (913) 841-2800.
Child care needed for 8 year old girl in my home for month of June, 8am. 5pm. Excellent work conditions, must have transportation, non-smoker. After 6pm call 841-2671.
OUNSELERS*TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP
MAINE-Exciting, fun-filled summer! Openings:
LIM COMPETITIVE TEAM SPORTS, TENNIS,
BASKETBALL, LACROSSE, BIKING, ROPES & Climbing Wall, Ice Hockey,
CUBA, Archery, Riffley, A/C, Martial Arts,
Tot. Top, Salzl Acquisitives, Ttl Allow,
Rockies, Steve Rubin, 1-800-472-6140
ZAMB OBGOSSHEE 10 SILVERMINE DR.
SALEM, NY 16908
Avg. KU student made $7000 last summer. Must be hardworking, self-motivated, and willing to work out East. Excellent resume builder and college credit avail. Call Georgia @
Competitive athletic type excel in our
IHELP WANTED for fee completion on June 6 or
January 3. Send resume to General Accounting Office, rm 20, Carruth
O'Leary Hall. Hours: 8:1am; 1:4pm M-F. Must be a KU student. We apply an equal opportunity.
To apply, we can contact:
EARN $2,000-$4,000 THIS SUMMER! Hard working,
independent students needed to work in KC
this summer with college co-painters. Call to
apply 823-9804
Information desk clerk P/T $ 5r. KU Natural
History. Apply at museum Dyche in Dyche Hall.
is hiring note takers for the FALL 9 semester.
Earn $10-$15 per lecture taking comprehensive notes in large KU lecture classes for the entire semester. Qualified candidates will have 3.3 + GPA and related course work experience. Cources open and related biology, chemistry, Chemistry, History, Geology, Geography, Sociology, Physics, Special Ed., Music History, Journalism.
GRADUATION SALE
James New York is looking for FT and PT mature
with a Bachelor's in Resumes applies At
Riverfront Waterworks
FOR ONE UNIVERSITY
Established in 1857, Northwestern Mutual Life
was recently named in "Job's '94".
• Salesperson Dream Company
• Best in Recruitment, Training, Reputation
• Promotion from within
FORTUNE500COMPANY
Northwestern-Mutual Life/Baird Securities is seeking candidates from the Kansas City area with college degree desiring income exceeding industry standards. Excellent growth potential, professional offices & extensive training. No ex. necessary.
Fax or send resume to: The Ertz General Agency,
6100 Broadway, Suite 711, Kansas City, MO.
4111. Fax (816) 731-7655.
For additional information call Judi Kali 531-6500.
PT/FT sales help needed! Immediately! Earn $50/wk. PT. Experience preferred but not needed. You can also support avail. For久待 909 Company. Call (800) 414-10mil. Today! Interview at Union May 4 10am-1pm.
Regular Caterers, Kansas and Burge Unions' Catering Department, $4.25 per hour, Schedules vary; some evenings and weekends required, needed. Must be able to stand up for pounds, stand for long periods, previous food service, water-waitress experience. Must follow company policies and possibly into fall. Begin immediately.
Guitar
Big Savings on the Best Selection in the Midwest Reward yourself for all that hard work
Leader Cater, Kansas and Burge Urions' Catering Department, schedules vary. $45 per hour, some evenings and weekends required. Requires license. Must be a licensed service license, able to lift 50 pounds, stand for long periods, previous food service, waiter-waitress experience. Looking for responsible, mature person who follow dress code. Job would continue with the role and possible into fall. Begin immediately.
May 4-13th
MASS
STREET
MUSIC
1347 Massachusetts
(913) 815-3535
The Kansas Air National Guard in Topeka will be holding pilot and navigation selector boards during the summer of 2019. Anyone who is interested in a job with the KSA must attend 195 MSF/DPMA, Attn: MSI Mike Ray, Forbes Field (ANG), 1950 E Street, Topeka, KS 6619-3750. Applicants must meet the following criteria:
图
KANSAS AIR NATIONAL GUARD
AIRCREW OPENINGS
Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel
Office Level 5 AA/EEO
(1) Must have a 4 year college degree, or get one no later than August 1995. (2) Must pass the Air Quality Exam. (3) Must be older than 82 at the time of the selection board. (4) Must be able to pass a flying class I physical. (5) Must be psychical, mentally, and morally qualified. (6) The pilot license is preferred for pilot applicants. (7) Kansas state residence is desirable. (8) Height requirement between 64" and 70" (sitting height not greater than 74") are current directives (11). No history of drug usage or serious law violations. (12) Must be able to acquire a Typercept security clearance. If you do not meet the above requirements, call Mlg Mike Ray at (816) 811-4351.
Looking for a fun summer job come be a mother's helper free room and board plus salary. Own living quarters with private entrance. For details call 842-2180.
KU Grad is looking to hire a nanny for June mid-
August. Hours 9am-6pm M-F in Prairie Village,
KS home, to care for a 2nd grade boys ages 9 and 11.
Custody needed. Landscaping. Need summer help on landscaping
Landscape. Contact Great Expectations Landscaping
(913) 877-8076 on Overland Park.
Bell
Looking for talented illustrators, photographers,
copyriters and graphic designers to intern-freelance. Send samples of work to: Red House Design 520 W III St Blea Wright KS 6047
Make many new friends and $$ at the same time
Head start on full and part-time summer jobs
Now Hiring for all shifts for New Location at 1408 W.23rd Street Apply in person at the 23rd Street Taco Bell
TACO BELL
Program Assistant, Office of Academic Affairs,
University of Kansas. Half-time 20 hours per wk.
Half-time coursework on data management. Must have a
degree in word processing and database experience,
demonstrated writing, organization, or computer
knowledge. Master's degree in Richardson,
Academic Affairs, University of Kansas, 132
bldg 504, KC 69545 for a complete
program and application procedure. 864-
4645. EOA/AA Employer
Market Research telephone interviewing. Week-day evening and Saturday hours available starting mid-May. For more info, call 1-800-374-4743 after 2 m. and ask for Garki.
Mothers Help/Babies sited for an active family including two delightful toddler girls. Nice home on West side of Lawrence. Flexible days/evenings/weekends. Experience, own care, and references required. Short drive from KU. University of Kansas 119 Staffer-Flint.
Musical Dance Troupe for area social events and entertainments. Awesome and attractive noexcites. 784-360.
**STUDENT HOURLY SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR**
44.75/hour, 10:15 hours/week. Deadline:
May 12, 1996. Operate telephone operator's contact information; sort phone number for student/ directory entry projects. Qualify for: 1) Valid KU enrollment; 2) Ability to understand and carry out verbal and written instructions; 3) Ability to spell and alphabetize names and file phone numbers and fully understand the English language; 5) Available to work weekends and evenings; 6) Available to work during semester break and summer recues and be "on call" as needed; 7) Working with students at Engl. Ering Road; 8) Wpmt. Obtain and complete an application form from the Networking and Telecommunications Services reception desk. Address: Networking and Telecommunications Services, University of New York at St. Louis Engl. Ering Road, Lawrence, KS 65045. Phone: 913-834-8000; Email: dean.Reinhair.EOA/VA.
$5.00/hour, 40 hrs/wk. Deadline: May 12, 1985.
Duties: Assist in removing abandoned cables, wire mode, and/or moving telephone equipment on campus; assist in installing cable conduit, insulation tape, or other equipment. Required Qualifications: Valid KU enrollment, graduate or undergraduate students with major in Engineering, RTVF, or Architecture; complete all technical communications skills; ability to complete assigned work accurately and on time, with minimum supervision; valid driver's license, ability to drive a vehicle for up to 5:00 p.m., M-F. Address: Networking and Telecommunications Services, University of Kansas, Ellsworth Annex, 1736 Eagle Road, Lawrence, KS 66038, Phone: 918-894-9300.
SUMMER WORK
Noble Painting Co. of Johnson County is looking for Exp. Painters for work in summer. Co. If you responded to our earlier ad and you were not accepted please again, or go
Part time and Full time positions available at Chrysler Credit Corporation's Customer Service department. Requires flexibility, Responsibilities include telephone contact to collect delinquent accounts and provide customer service and information. Fax resume to 103-683-8310.
940-517-1. Leave message with evening phone #.
Now accepting applications for Summer employment.
Openings for all shifts, full or part time.
Apply in person at Sirtlin Stockade.
$9.75 STARTING
STUDENT HOURLY TECHNICIAN
Now Hiriting! The Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry is seeking 2 responsible persons for part-time office assistant positions. Willing to work around class schedules. Year-round work with our team in the pharmacy. OpportunITY FOR INFANT SUCCESS Check out a fantastic new company. You will be amazed at advance possibilities. 841-5573. Opportunity! Make a great income from your dorm or apartment. Change your lifestyle! 1800-9600. Exciting program. You can do it! 1800-9600
Position given in May for accu. or bus. student
Must be on rent for a least one yr. Ivolves accu.
invoking, cust. serv. Aftermorns M.F. Must have
own transportation and qualify for work study.
Pays $8/hr. Send letter & resume to EEI, P.O.
Box 104, Lawrence KS 60049.
*National Company
*Entry Level All Areas
*AASP Scholarships
*ALL MAJORS
*Must Apply Now Start After Finals
450 College, Ste 310
Leawood, KS 68211
An Equal Opportunity Employer
CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION
LAWRENCE: 842-6336
TOPEKA: 1-273-7099
WICHTA: (316) 292-2077
JOHNSON COUNTY: 1-752-4196
Summer & Fall callier help 6 + hrs wk; wk know windows and PageMaker, have written commen nica skills KS Res. + 3.4 GPA Start at $ up, with skills MEM-EXAMP 749-5402
Summer and or Fall Employment: Student Mail Assistant. Duties include: mail delivery to Cont. Office; offices, campus errands and mic duties. REQUIRED: Enrolled in minimum of six hours. Must have job duties that include and be able to work M-F 8:00-11:00, or mWF 1:00-5:00, or a combination of both. Specific schedule will be discussed at interview. Contact an interview DEADLINE: may 12 NOVEMBER
STUDENT CLERICAL POSITION on campus. 20
summer. Initiates start-up business
sample. Applies to person to Continuing Education business office,
Continuing Education building. 864-790-EOA/
OEAA.
4.
The University of Kansas Work Group is seeking one full-time research assistant to provide project assistance for a research program with multimedia resources. The group will work 1996, renewal contingent on grant funding. Salary $12-$24/kyr. plus benefits. First preference give to applications received by beggars. For complete instructions see www.unk.edu/workgroup. For completion, resume, and names, addresses, and phone numbers of three references to: Michele Schapelle, Work Group, 4060 Dole, University of Kansas. For the University of Kansas is an A/A/EO Employer.
Research Aide/ Assistant
Responsible female company to supervise and transport *ship* age 11, 14, 15 to **SUMMER activ-**
Due to an expanding market ProSecurity is needing private security officers for full-time and part-time positions. Competitive wages based on job requirements, plus a commitment to private Owned Security Company, offers excellent benefits, such as health and life insurance, vacation pay and holiday and holiday pay and high quality training. Applicants must be 21 years of age, have a current job position, a home telephone and pass a criminal background investigation. ProSecurity, an equal opportunity employer, is seeking mature, energetic and motivated individuals with good organization skills and a strong personal, good decision making ability and a sincerity desire to work for the best, apply today. If you are currently a security officer or are interested in security work in the Lawrence area, you can contact us at 859-5099. For information please call our office at 859-5099.
SECURITY OFFICERS
Spend the summer in Chicago suburbs and pay family needs a college age, responsible job. Take care of your child. Care required. Jobberson work and board + freedom for individual activities. Please call
Summer Jobs
For men and women. Movers and packers. Will train. 6.50 to 18.00 per hour depending on prior experience. Storage at Alesage 15800 or Dr. Leraux 7341. Cald Call Dawn banton at (800) 394-0948 (x 253).
E0E
SUMMER JOBS
CITY OF LAWRENCE
The City is accepting applications for summer, part- and entire time positions. The following positions are available:
BOOKMOBILE/STORYTELLER
YOUTH BASELEY/DAVID COUNSELOR
NATURE DAY CAMP COUNSELOR
YOUTH BASELEY/SOFTBALL UMPIRE
PLAYGROUND SUPERVISOR
SUMMER BASELEY/STUDENTS REFERENCE
AEROBICS INSTRUCTOR
TENnis INSTRUCTOR
Completed application at Administrative Serv. 2nd floor, City Hall, E at East 6th Street, Lawrence Ks 60444. No phone calls please. Deadline: Friday, May 5th EOE M/F/D
For men and women. Movers and packers. Will train. $6.50 to $10 per hour depending on prior experience. Fry Wrapper Mgr & storage 15800 (724) 394-0098, Call Don Banton at 800) 394-0098 (x 255).
Summer positions available for household goods or call 841-3115. Apply in person at 411 N.路 or call 841-3115.
Summer Work
National Company- Entry Level positions all areas. No exp. nee. Train. All majors accepted. Interview now, start or after finishes. Openings 814-722-5077, 812-320-2977 and Johnson County 913-752-4196.
OUTSTANDING OPPORTUNITY
(Including salary and commission)
- GREAT Benefits
- EXCITING & FUN work place
- SOLID Income Potential
Just Bring Us DRIVE +
ENERGY+
PERSONALITY
If you are willing to come to work - to work!
And we'll help you grow into a COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL!
Apply in Person to Lawrence's oldest new car dealer
Ask for Larry Walburn or Bill Wheeler
Jim CLARK MOTORS,Inc
-EOE-
29th & Iowa
Wal-Mart
Wal-Mart is an Equal Opportunity Employer offering a competitive wage and benefits package.
The newest Wal-Mart Distribution Center in Ottawa, KS is accepting applications for all positions, full-time, part-time and Seasonal. Come prepared to complete your application on site at our Temporary Office, located at 128 South Main, Ottawa. Our office hours are M-F 9:00 am to 5:00 pm and 8:00 to noon on Saturday.
Come and join the winning team!
SCHOOL'S OUT! TEMPORARY WORK'S IN!
The paying assignments are waiting for skilled students who need immediate summertime work. Learn all about the advantages of working as a Manpower temporary.
Data Entry, Word Processing, Secretarial, Mail sorting, General Labor Production, Shipping / Receiving, Heartland Park.
MANPOWER
Emporla
Topeka
(913)267-4060
Wichita
(316)685-611
Emporia (316)342-5751
I
TEMPORARY SERVICES
(913) 762-5500
Lawrence Manhattan
(913)749-2800 (913)776-1094
(316) 685-6111
Junction City
Ottawa
(913) 242-1002
Summer Child Care Needed for 2 children ages 9 and 11 with active schedule. June 15-Aug 1M-F Ref's and some child care exp. required. Please call Jill at (816) 351-8573.
Summer day care for 11 year old girl. Hours are 8:30 - 10:30. Must own car. References required.
Phone: (612) 546-7944
Summer Employment (possible Fall). Student Office Assistant. Student hourly position $2.5 per hour. Division of Continuing Education. Job # 1009. Contact computer input, answer telephones, greet visitors and direct appropriately, miscellaneous duties REQUIRED: Enrolled a minimum of 6 hours in the course required. Required. Approximately 20 hours per week. Specified schedule will be discussed in interview. Contact Cloeen Mann, Office of the Dean, 913-849-7800. Specified interview DEADLINE: May 3, 1995. EEO/AA
- Construction
- Warehouse
- Clerical
- Production
- Construction
- Warehouse
- Word Processing
Work as much as you want this summer! These summer jobs are available in Topeka:
- Telemarketing
Call 287-9999 for more information. No fees to applicants. Weeklypay. No experience necessary for many jobs.
Call267-9999
Textbook Kluwer, KU Bookstore, #24.hr $M. 8:30 a.m., 4:4p., alternate Satdays 10a.m.
- 4:4p. Must be able to lift up to 10 pounds, stand for long periods, speak and understand English fluently, provide retail experience preferential office level, 5.13th and Orest. AA/EEO
Office Level, 5.13th and Orest. AA/EEO
The city of Oksakaou is accepting applications for swimming pool lifejacket. Apply at the city office 061 Delaware, Oksakaou, NS Application department. No certifications must be presented. EOE
We are taking applications for part-time help
with the AstraZeneca please at SAC 2285
No phone calls please at 1-800-967-9343
225 Professional Services
DUI/TRAFFIC TICKETS
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CITYHOUSES ATTORNEY
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
call for a free consultation (361) 361-0964
RESUMES
Consultation
Linda Morton, C.P.R.W
TRANSCRIPTIONS
842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite201
*Member of
PAW
Professional Association of
Round Writers
*Professional Writing*
*Cover Letters*
*Consultation*
Linda Marten C P R W
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333
PROMPT ABORTION AND
CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
IN LAWRENCE
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
official office
DONALD G. STROLE
Gain G, Strole
Sally G, Kelsey
16 East 13th
842-1133
< Driver Education > offered to Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided.
TRAVEL CENTER
AIRLINE HOTLINE 841-7117
- Domestic &
- International Travel
- Bus Charters
- Royals Games
- Social Events
- JobInterviews
- Study Abroad
- Student Discounts
- LOWEST FARES
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 W.23d. M-F 9-5:30 Sat, 9:30-2
Located By Perkins
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
7B
RAVELLERS
Then click your heels three times and call us!
KS Union or 831 Massachusetts
749-0700
Think to yourself
"THERE'S NO PLACE
LIKE HOME."
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
X
BEDS DESKS BOOKCASES
EVERYTHING BUT ICE
936 MASS.
FOR SALE Alpine AMP 3547 $150
Alpine AMP 3503 $50.
Mac 2 x 16 RAM, RAM 106 MB, Quantum hard drive, *3* monitor, *1080*, neg. 745-7401 mantel
R.E.M. 2 tickets, Sun May 28. Lawn seats. Call
832-259-8.
Sailboard, 10 foot Tyrons, 330 complete with
5 meter sails.
Excellent condition. Calls 837-1827.
340 Auto Sales
`^84 Volkswagen rabbit. automatic transmission,
surcoat. Good condition. Reliable. $1200 OBO. 841-
5848. Please leave message.`
926 Red Kataana and looks great. $720 just in time for summer 766-3129.
1985 Chrysler LeBaron AC AM/FM. Runs great,
excellent interiors, recent new works, new tires,
cruise control. Must sell urgent. $1300, very
negotiable. Call 841-8239
1845 Ford LTD crown vix LX, power everything,
846-307 and 747-607, great car road, $590;
846-307 or 747-607
PERFECT COLLEGE CALL! 1884 Mazda GLZ
936 700 0 B0 O * 700 0 B0 O Must sell, Coll. call in A49-100
360 Miscellaneous
R.E.M. Ticketss ! Lawn seats. May 27th & 28th.
Call (913) 872-9491.
REM at Sandstone Amphitheatre, May 28. Section 2, call EE, Mike L1-800-484-982
370 Want to Buy
Full set of bicycle touring panniers and rear wheel trainer. 842-3336
Your used computer (PC or Macintosh $ ^{\circ}$)
Wanted:
We are paying up to $1,000 Reward
for your good used computer at UMI Computers 2449 Iowa 841-4611
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
410 sublease 2 bedroom for summer. Pool, V-
814-579 or bachelor before graduation. Call
814-379 or 812-205
1bdm duplex for summer sublease w/ fall
dinam room, ceiling fan, AC, carpet
May Paid 632-942-8524
I bedroom apartment, 17th and Connectical, ceiling
building, 83rd off street parking, $330/mo.
841-9704.
BEDROOM-1 BLOCK FROM CAMPUS. RENT.
NEG. SUMMER-41:4195
| BR apt 1027 Mississippi St. Available May 13,
water or air 948 mm. Water call, Call Anne
650-890-6820 or 948-890-6820.
1023 Oread rii 81 August 1969 to July 19, 1966 $155 per mo. gas and water paid. Garbage Dibase and microwave in kitchen. Laundry facility in basement. call 749-1438 or 749-1556.
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
842-5119
Now leasing for Fall
Exercise Room
1&2Bedrooms
OnKUBus Route
M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
3HotTubs
Naismith Place
3Edrm available May 1st, cental school, dishwasher, laundry room, quat sequest, 3 month lease.
New让程 for summer and fail
* 2BR from $407
* Jacuzzi in each apt.
* Kitchen/Business
* Private balconies/Patios
* Pd cable TV/Pets
* Basketball court/Park
* On-site management
* 25% Off on Courses 16/15
Submit an app with Moy 1 May to Rise Rate increase
Call for Appointments
* 5:15pm - Fifti-10 2-Sat
® bisectionum $商业银行 $bisectionum
*b bedroom close to campus* water paid;
*b available now Call 921 5432 for Taitm Matt.*
Palm Tree
2 store home for 2-4 students at 11:19 E. 11th, 1 year lease. Available Now! Call 749-6123 for door information
Holiday Apartments
Leasing for Summer & Fall
- 2 Bedroom $410-$425
* 2 Bedroom $525-$345
- 1 Bedroom $350-$360
* 2 Bedrooms $400-$480
- 3 Bedroom $95-$615
4 Bedroom $715-$725
- Recently constructed
- Dishwasher
- Nice quiet setting
211 Mount Hope Court #3
For more Info. or Appt.
3 Bdrm Apt. available for summer sub-lease,
washer & erythro + 2 Btwrs. Great location near
campus. Available May 21 thru end of July. 1344
Kentuckv. Call 749-7296
call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Bdrm available May 1st, spacious, 2 full bath,
walk-in closets, central air/heat, dishwasher,
laundry facilities, quiet setting, 3 month lease and
renewal option. Call 843-8011.
3 BEDROOM TOWNHOME FOR JUNE DW, MW, FP. Back Patio, Cabile nado 3801 Chin-
ton PKwv - Lorimar Townhomes 811-749-84
4 bedroom b,2 nearby new, good location.
Lease avail. June 1. No pets. $80/ month. 749-
4680.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
NOWLEASING FORJUNEANDAUGUST
- Spacious one and two Bedroom apartments
* Furnished and unfurnished
* Great location near campus
* No Pets
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed, Thurs. Fri.
12:30-4:30 No Appt. Needed
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
APARTMENT sublease. 2dbrms fully furnished + W/D. May rent FREES, on KU bus route 2 blocks from campus. Beautiful view. $40/mo. or negotiable. Call 842-5662.
Are you looking for a very nice 2 burr, apt. available June.1 on KU bus route. Washer/Dryer hookups and much more. Only $450 per mo. Call for details 892-6917.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
- On the bus route
- 2bedroom (1& $ ^{1/2} $ baths)
- Laundry facilities
- 24 hr. Emergency maintenance
* $475 per mo.
843-4754
SUNSHINE CENTER
Avail. Aug. 15 a b, 28 ap blown down & campus.
Close to CBZs no pets; 480/m plus deposit. Allion
Landlord 182 or 187 present to 16:30, 2017
Available Aug. 1.8 & 2.8 bdmr apt in nice old雀
room.
Available Aug. 18 - 3:50pm *ap* in nice older room.
Available Oct. 27 - 4:30pm *ap* in newly starting on
$310 at $193 bucks 841-1074
Available/5/3-1/8/1 1m in bdprt a$200/mo/
Available/5/3-1/8/1 1m in bdprt a$200/mo.
Materials. Poleo A/C/D/W. Cable J98-094.
Available August beautiful, renovated small 2 bd. apartment in older house. Ceiling fans, window夹,C off-street parking 14th & Connecticut, Walk to KU or downtown. $410. No pets. 811-355-6730
660 Gateway Ct.
(Behind Sonic)
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.-Fri. 11-6
Available Aug. Studio apt. in renovated older house, front porch, ceiling fan windows / A/C 1300 Btu / HVAC 850 BTU
Available August renovated, small basement 1
bark, apartment in old house, water paid, no
rent.
841-8400 or
841-1287
Available June 1st, spacious 2 bbm apartment
bdn. downtown and campus. Close to GSP-
Corbin. Notepads $550 + deposit & utilities. call 811-
1207.
- Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts
GET A JUMP ON NEXT YEAR!
Chamberlain Court
Good
w/d, microwave, garb. disp.
dishwasher. A apts.
within 2 blks of campus.
First Management is now leasing 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom apts.
Call now & beat the rush!
Avoid paying the summer rent. Small, 2-bedroom apt. on a 18-month lease. Avail. Aug. 1. Ceiling fan, room air conditioners, off street parking, no rooming. 13th and Vermont. No pensions. $425 - 845.
BCR Storage Co. INC, lockers lockers available for BCR Storage Co. INC. Call for details of M-F ma-r-n-i-a-t-
CHEAP! ! CLEAN! ! 2 Bdrms in huge beautiful home with Vaulted ceiling, garage, kitchen, bathroom. 883-290-8289.
CHEAP SUBLEASE Payment Apr. 2 MR Pay rent Paid Purchasing available Option for payment Purchase available
Cheap Summer Sublease 1. Large bedroom apl.
2. Small bedroom in a cool town house.
Call Rina Kira 643-208-5555
Check out this great location! Sublease 2 Bdrm from May 16 to July 31 on the KU Bus route in Graystone Apts. (515) a1 t1a) per month plus utilities. Call 749 1288 or 841-987-978
VILLAGE SQUARE
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
- Spacious 2 bedroom
- Closetocampus
- Spacious2bedroom
- Laundry facility
9th & Avalon 842-3040
- Laundry facility
- Swimming pool
- On Bus Route
Finder Keepers! Extra nice quiet, spacious 2
room suite. Great kitchen, balcony, patio,
bath room. Excellent management.
$345. Now signin yr leases starting June, July.
Come see! Spann's Crest Apartments
- Swimmingpoo
- On Bus Route
For Rent 2B1, I bath, Apt close to campus. Carry
All Applicable Summer and Fall. Call B291 1210
For rent in Topeka, Lg. solid, Henry 100 Yr old
home. AvailableJuly i. l. 2 full, baths, four;
chain link fence, 690 per month + deposits, please
call 328-4876.
Aspen West
Now Leasing for Fall!
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
- LaundryonSite
- No Pets
- Water Paid
- Reasonable Rates
2900 West 15th Lawrence,KS66049 865-2500
Kaw Valley Mgmt. Inc is now leasing Studio, 1,2 &
3 & bedroom apartments, townhomes, & homes.
We have homes for immediate or Fall move ins.
We will be W 24th St or call us at 841-6000
for more info.
Great Location 160 Mississippi i dbrm, basew
Central Airlane, no pets, no259; call Me
Furnished 21bm, second floor apartment in privative home for rent in the Bronx. Avail on or before July 31, 2024 or after fax no. 856-770-3478.
HELP! SUMMER Sublease Avail. May 15-14 May MPREE 2'b terminated, close to campground
Lev' Grad Students.
Lg. furnish. $2,495 to quiet home
K to W U. $3,811 to 843-8131.
*3 bedroom (room for 4)
*one block from campus (13th & Ohio)
*washer/dryer, off street parking
*$740/mo. May free
*749/8599
June 1 - July 31. Pally furnished 3 bdmr house.
W/D, A/C. backyard & porch. Quiet area near downtown. $190 per rm per month. 841-1594
Looking for a nice place to live? Give Geen What you could live with 2 cool, easy to get along with guys in a spacious apartment next year. If interested call Dannav at 843-5867
SUBLEASE
- 3 Bedroom Townhouse $690
Mid May to Aug. Sublease. Learnamur Apts.
B large 2 rooms each rent each w/bath. Very
comfortable.
wan
Leasing for Summer and Fall Pet Free Environment Call 749-1288
MUST SULLET FOR JUNE & JULY - 3-bmr
home name / basement 50 months + utilities
or roommate 50 months + utilities
Morning Star for clean rooms and apartments in well-kept homes, also some houses.
Modern living in charming old home 2 Idrum,
W/D, A/C; Walking distance to campus and
park.
GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS
1. new 1dbm .apt. avail, for summer sublease
avail. 5/.15. Washer/Dryer, quiet, private storage.
1. block from campus, microwave, dishwasher,
AC $410/mo. Call 749-4307.
Management
2512 West 6th St. 749-128
Part25
- 1 Bedroom $320
• 2 Bedroom $420
Jone room in Campus Place Apl. available for sub- sesure summer and fall. $215 per mo. + utilities.
OPEN HOUSE
- 2 Bedroom $380
- 3 Bedroom $600
- 1 Bedroom $320
- 2 Bedroom $380
Call or stop in!
Monday-Friday
1 - 4:30 p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
- Ten month leases
We feature some of the largest 1 & 2 bedroom apartments in Lawrence. Now accepting deposits for Fall 1995
Large 2 bed room in, older house, 10-month lease. Avail. Apg. ceiling lighting, window/AC, cwasher/dry hookups, wood floor, $425. Water paid. No pets. B41-1074
--furnished carpeted suites with private bathroom
Open Mon.- Sat. (8-5)
(No pets please)
2401 W. 25th
842-1455
- Volleyball court
- Voneybarcourt
- Washer/Dryer hookups
- Washer/Dryer hookups
- Laundry facilities
- 4 Busstops on property
Sublease lease 3-4 bdm house A/C/W. D for fun
dum living $250/mo. Call 947-268-1061
It's like a dream come true,
UBILEASE STUDIO: June & Jul option to
buy $330/mo I will pay $200 for your deposit 749
Sublease unfurnished bedroom in great apartment. Clean, energy efficient, close to campus. Available May 13. May bills paid. $217/mo + deposit. Call 852-9246.
Sublease: 4 bedroom apartment for sublease
include: w/d, 2 bathrooms, furnished and deck
Summer Sublease - Spacious 2-bedroom, 1 bath.
close to campus $486/month Call 823-9366
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apartment 1 block
campus. Available May 15. Free way. 843-5235
Quail Creek Townhouses
because we've got the perfect 3 bdm townhome for you.
Over 1,600 sq. ft.
Swimming Pool available
Separate Family Room
Washer/Dryer Hookups
2.5 Bath
Cable Paid
3 Bedrooms
10 Month Lease Available
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
(append to jhy-Vee & Gold Co.)
Managed and Maintained by Professionals
2 BR May rent free! Furnished. C/A, outdoor.
Need to move fast! Mat/Caf/Jeff at 848-3634.
SUMMER BRELEASE 1 bedroom, 2 bath, $1990
per month. Monthly rent: $419.877
per month. May payment: $419.877
Summer Sublease
Summer Sublame May13 to Aug. 15, Spacious 9
Bdrm, 2 Bath, Furnished, A 3, C Big dining
room, Kitchen, Gym, Bathroom, Parking.
68403
Nice 1 birm, 2 floor. pc close to campus, w/hal-
cation. $200/mo. May pad for. Call 718-4565
Summer obearise lecture May 14th (infarm-
tory) Great location, near campus at 100 Emery Rd. $490/mo. Cable paid. +1 May rent free. No pets. 811-3800 and 542-3804.
Summer sublease with option 3 bedroom, 2 bath.
$600/month. May 84-127. MAY 890/
NEGOTIABLE!! 843-1887.
BRADFORD SQUARE is now leasing 2 & 3
Laundry Facilities
Plan Ahead--Call Now!
MWF 1-5pm
TTR 9-12 noon
501 Colorado #B1
749-1556
Summer sublease 3 br, 2 full baths. Furnished.
Only 3 blocs from cassino *Hast* A/C/D/W
*Wood*. Bathroom, toilet, en-suite.
Summer Sublease 1 Bedroom. Available June
463-7850. First. Great Location and backyard
443-8090.
Rooms For Rent - Furnished House w/ w/d / 2 Baths
Cable / N/S
Grad student please. Zak 84% 9011
Quiet, comfortable, furnished rooms and apartments. Two short blocks from campus. Some utilities paid. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-5500.
Serious female needs roommates. New 4.bim, 3ba. house, Furnished. W/D, security system. 2 car garage. L/R, F/R. Util paid. 1 year lease. $175/mm. $75/cm. Call 013-812-1518
Stone Cottage near campus available June 1
Stone Cottage near campus / TW/A & CA $80/month.
No pet. No kids. No children.
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Featuring for Fall of'95
- Microwave
- Trash Compactor
- Ceiling Fans in Every Rm.
- Cable in Every Rm.
- Gas Fireplace
- Walk-In Closets
- Gas Heat
- *1500 Sq Ft.*
- Carport Per Townhome
- Cable Paid
Apt. stap. 1, close to campus, lots of character.
hardwood floor 1229 Tennessee, 1019/mo Call
phone 555-447-3822
**Sublease** 1 BR *apt*. Avail. mid May through
31st $200/month or 919/749 or 579/Fourth Located in
13th St, New York, NY 10003
Sublease 1BR pmt available end May 31st AJC 1
SUBLEASE 2BR pmt available from campus
$65/mo. New Call 784-927-8211
Sublease 2 Bdm Apt. through July 31. Close to campus at 121 Tennessee. Call 749-8252.
Sublease 3 bdmr. $2; bib, pool, garage. $720/mo.
865-511-651
Sublease for summer only *2 bdt apt. in renovation*
weather, WD book-ups, 875, notps, 841-1074.
Sublease June, July Traillage trailge paid. 824-5314
new carpet, $330 water and cable paid. 824-5314
Tired of Cooking, Cleaning and Studying?
Let us take care of the first two and we'll even help you with the third!
Naismith Hall offers:
→ maid service
→continuousmeal service from 7 a.m. to
7 p.m. with unlimited seconds
→ Pool
→ IBM and Macintosh computer lab
Come by anytime for a tour or call for more info. today!
→ Planned social activities
Summer Submarine. Campus Place Apartments 2
Bedroom. $12 per room, furnished/loft. May rent
Sublease nice 1, 2 and 5 bedroom apartments
broadway room to allow 19. Numate 740-781
9365 1234 5678
Spring'semester is on its
1800 Naismith Drive
843-8559
NAISMITH
SUMMER SUBLASE. June 1- July 31 one bedroom in 3 bedroom condo, W/D, 180/mo. + 1/3 utilities. Call steve at 865-398
Summer Sublease
Option for fall available. Available June 1-
2 bedroom. $40 a month, pool, on bus route, water
& trash paid. Call 855-983-983
Summer subclasses: 1 bdmr in a nice bdmr
2 ba townhouse in a nice townhouse + `util`
3 bbmr in a nice bbmr + `util`
Suburban summer. May rent $75/month, 1 walk to campus, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Call 823-645-0020.
A&S LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO RENT?
RENTAL SOLUTIONS 841-5454
SUMMER SUBLEASE 3 bedroom furnished
Will pay $15.00 by May rent. Call 848-417-8.
Summer Sublease: 1 Bedroom, 1 block from
WU, W/D, $410/month. Call 749-1436.
---
Summer Sublime. Very nice 5 bedroom 2 bath
spacious house, hardwood floors, lots of windows,
deck, 2 car garage, close to campus. No Pets. 749-
2919
YOU can prepare NOW for your new home for SUMMER or FALL in just 4 easy steps:
SUMMER SUSAGELE: own room, across from campus. Dishwasher, microwave, POAC, trash, water PAID, large FURNISHED apartments. Cost: $50/day. 50/mo. For June/Layla Callen Jennifer at 789-9244
in just 4 easy steps:
1. Call 842-4200
3. Reserve an apartment
4. RELAX... In a few short months you can be:
Swimming, playing tennis,
voleball or basketball, walking on our 40 acres or unwinding on your balcony or patio surrounded by trees and green grass...
Laundry facilities in 20 or 21 apt. buildings
Carports & Garages available
Free basic cable Free water in apts.
M-F 8-5:30
Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4
Its time to step up to MEADOWBROOK
842-8200
EXPERIENCED
PROFESSIONAL
MAINTENANCE AND
OFFICE TEAM
The greatest summer sublease in Lawerence 3. Bdmr. 2.bath. We are graduating and must move to KC pronto. A/C, W/D. DW Price negotiable. Call 832-2388
Sunflower House student co-op, 1406 Tenn. Rms.
Available for summer. Taking applications for fall 2016-215. Util. Used. W/D, cable, and
phone. Available at Downtown. Call or by-dp:
841-0484.
Very nice 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, close to
parking lots, lds of office, off street
parking lots.
Sublease spacious 3-4 bdm house. A/C, W/D, to close KU +1' furn. if needed, porch for fun summer living. $256/mo. Call 749-3703.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 roommate needed for summer to share 3 bdm
townhouse, D.W. pool $26 + utilities; Call Noah
Female roommate needed until August 1. $190 +
3 utilities. 822-0393.
Male/Female roommates need to share nice
breakfasts. (Phone: 812-9960,
Washr/Dryer, and /+ until: call 832-9960
FRIENDLY Grad-level lakes seek N/Prem.efem.
Big bright walters skylight duplex nr. campus.
(arburs trees, flowers), a/c/w.d. $138., util. $14
2746.KEEP Trying—beautiful for summer.
Hit! I'm looking for a N/W roommate this summer.
Our room has a balcony. Put great location
to watch tennis or golf on the patio.
Grad student for fall needed to share nice 2 b/ft.
Victorian townhouse, fireplace, deck, close to
campus; 2 or 1 yr lease. $288 month + util. Call
Marcus 865-3531 or fax.
Groovy roomee roomed for cute 2 BR house w/big yard. N/V male or female and/or grad student preferred, $225/mo + 1; unit starting this summer or August 1. ok call OK. Cat Chicago 865-5986.
NFS Female needed for summer submarine in beautyable 4b dormroom in Leanamar. Downstairs large bdm room w/ your own bathroom, W/D, D/W $200. Room A: Friendly rooms. Only $200; mbi-841-1063
ROOMMATE FINDER
A&S
RENTALSOLUTIONS
NEED A ROOMMATE?
841-5454
N/S female need to sublease 2 bdmpl. abm/
/D Water, trach, cable call CalLisa at
832546
Need one male non-smoker for fall. 3 BAp 149.
$156.25/m, + no. ultr. to campus. Cal478-8997.
Need Sub-lab for Summer. Rent $177.50 per month. Contact Faust at 872.499.xx
One male roommate needed to share a 3 bedroom
roommate or driver included. Avail May
15-July 31.
Roommate needed for summer. 3 blocks from campus has a/c/d. w/ furnished. NO DEPOSIT!
$199.00/mo + 1 utilites. Call Amy 843-3133
wanted for summer for 5 bdrm house
Ea9300 +$900/㎡ +1 unit, campus
+$900/㎡ +1 unit, Call 641-842-1141
RURAL FARMHOUSE-quiet female to share with no smoking hard at two big dogs.
Share 2. bdr. male, n/ s, graduate student pre-
ferred, w/d. $800/month, near campus, $831-1259
Summer Sublease one bdr in a bdmr ap. very
close campus. $190/month + / -, 792-7241
8B
Wednesday, May 3, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Finals FRENZY
HatsOff!
--asics
~ Balloon Bouquets
~ Finals Snack-Baskets
~ Fresh-Baked Cookies
~ Graduation Announcements
~Party Decorations
It's your PARTY BALLOONS N MORE
1601 W. $ 2 3^{r d} $
749e3455
JUST GRADUATED
I G T E
THIS SEMester I WILL BE PROFESSIONAL
JUST GRADUATED
We Deliver!
Happy Cinco De Mayo! Only 2 days left
- $1⁵⁰ Corona Btls
- $2^{00} Mexican Beers
- $1^{n0} Margaritas
The Barefoot Iguana
The Barefoot Iguana
9th & Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Center
The girl next door...
The girl next door...
just grew up.
Juicers
Showgirls
Open Sun-Thurs 18 & Over
7:00pm-1:00am
Fri & Sat until 2:00am
913 N. Second
Brooke
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
When its time for a break from finals come check out our daily food and drink specials
23rd & Louisiana·Malls Shopping Center 843-4044
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1995
All Bestsellers $ 10^{8 8} $
The End.
Get a preferred membership cardand get 20% offEVERYDAY!
All listening Stations on Sale for 1299 or LESS!
Locally owned & operated 128 Listening Stations
A
10th & Mass.
843-3630
NOW THERE'S NO REASON TO SHOP ANYWHERE ELSE
CROSSING SUMMER SPECIAL
X-ING
"OPEN"
Noon 'til Midnight
EVERYDAY
All Summer Long!
CLUB SURRENDER
806 W 24TH ST. (BEHIND MCDONALDS ON 23RD)
WEDNESDAY
MAY 3 LADIES 21-OVER FREE MIXIN THE HITS FROM 70'S-80'S MAY 10TH MALE DANCERS 9-11:30 MEN ENTER AFTER 11:30
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
$1.50 ANYTHING 75c DRAWS
*FIGHT NITE WOLF VS. DOG RED WOLF & RED DOG BOTTLES $1.50 MYSTERY SHOTS 75¢
CONVERSE
*18 TO ENTER·21 TO DRINK
32OZ.BIG BEERS $2.50 GIN & JUICE $2.50 21& UP ONLY
SATURDAY
NIKE
Bring your friends for great bargains!
Reebok
END OF SCHOOL BLOWOUT SALE
Buy one pair at regular price get the 2nd pair for $39.99. (selected styles only)
Cross Training Hiking Running Aerobic Basketball Sandals
Saucony.
The Athlete's Foot.
914 Mass.
root
841-6966
Don's Steak House Your Hometown Steak House Serving Hand Cut Steak
GOOD LUCK GRADUATES
843-1110
2176 E. 23rd. Street
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
Dinner: 5pm Mon-Sat 4pm Sundays
from
STRESSED? Relax at Molly's
LATE NIGHT SPECIALS FROM 9PM TO MIDNIGHT-SUN-WED
SUNDAY-WING DINGS $.15 &$1.25 Domestic Drafts
MONDAY-1/2 PRICE MILANO STICKS & $1 Domestic Drafts
& $1.25 Domestic Drafts
TUESDAY-1/2 PRICE CHEESE McGEES & $2.25 Margaritas
WEDNESDAY-1/2 PRICE POTATO DUGOUTS
MOSSY CREEK BANK
molly mcgees
grill & bar
2429 IOWA