ADVERTISING: 864-4358 NEWS: 864-4810 KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANS SECTION TOPEKA, KS 66612 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WEATHER PARTLY CLOUDY High 82° Low 67° VOL.104,NO.150 Weather: Page 2A SPORTS KANSAS BASKETBALL KU players chosen for U.S. basketball team Angela Aycock and Charisse Sampson will play abroad after trying out with Olympians. Page4B CAMPUS Hagen to lead KU Med Center A search committee selected the Navy's surgeon general after a nationwide search. Page 3A Heart program faces problems NEWS BRIEFS The University of Kansas Medical Center's heart-transplant program is being examined by the Kansas Legislature for allegedly turning down donor hearts for a 10-month period. Members of the Kansas Joint Committee on Post Audit began KU Medical Center rized the audit after The Kansas City Star reported that the Med Center's program had not performed transplants for 10 months. On April 10, Med Center officials temporarily closed the program. According to the articles, the program continued to place patients on the transplant waiting list without informing them that hearts were being refused. In a May 10 press release, A. L. Chapman, acting executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said he anticipated that the heart-transplant program would reopen before the end of the year. However, Randy Tongier, audit manager for the Post Audit Committee, said that the committee wouldn't have the reports ready until late September. Serbs set 108 hostages free MALI ZVORNIK, Yugoslavia — Bosnia's Serbs sent 108 U.N. peacekeepers across a bridge to Serbia and freedom early this morning, and there were indications that more of the 148 remaining hostages could be released soon. Two buses carrying the 108 peacekeepers crossed the Drina River into this border town shortly after 1 a.m. today. The freed hostages came from Britain, France, Ukraine and Spain, said Jovica Stanisic, the Serbian president's security chief. The releases came after days of U.N. pressure, international negotiations and intervention by Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, whose office issued a statement minutes after today's release. Compiled from The Associated Press and Kamam staff reports. Movin' on up to the 'Hill' top Kathleen Driscoll / KANSAN Zach and Leah Hemenway unpack books in the chancellor's house study. Chancellor Robert Hemenway's family continued their task of moving in west By Kimberly Crabtree Kansan staff writer W When not preparing statements about budget cuts or the new executive vice chancellor of the University of Kansas Medical Center, Chancellor Robert Hemenway will be unpacking. (USPS 650-640) "As you can see, I've done quite a bit of unpacking of books," Hemenway said, acknowledging the full bookcases lining his office walls. However, since Hemenway became KU's 16th chancellor on Thursday, he's had plenty more than just unpacking to keep him busy. Recent allegations against the Med Center's heart transplant program, in addition to a university hiring freeze and budget cuts, have kept the new chancellor on his knees. The Med Center's heart transplant program remains in suspension after articles printed in the Kansas City Star alleged that the Med Center failed to perform any heart transplants in a 10-month period, despite continuing to accept patients on a waiting list. "The program will remain suspended until we are absolutely certain that the quality of the care of the heart transplant program is equal to the excellent quality of care in the other programs." Hemenway said. "But we need to remember that the business of the Med Center is being carried out in great success every day," he added. "There are hundreds of patients successfully treated there every day." On the main campus, Hemenway has had to deal with budget cuts and a resulting hiring freeze. The budget alts resulted in the freeze because 85 percent of the budget is related to personnel. Hemenway estimated. "The budget cut will force us to look very carefully at the administration structure and ask ourselves if there are ways we can operate in a more streamlined fashion," he said. The freeze, which affects all unclassified and classified employees, was enacted on Thursday. In relation to the budget problems, Hemenway has spent his first official days on the job preparing public statements on the cuts. "The statement tries to explain the context in which the budget cuts will be occurring and propose those principles we need to think about as we set budget priorities." Hemenwav said. Meeting citizens, legislators and members of the media is as much a part of who Hemenway is as it is a part of his job, said Tom Hutton, director of University Relations. And this week, the facts and figures Hemenway is interested in are those relating to potential students and alumni in Kansas towns he will be visiting. Hemenway is traveling to Western Kansas this week to meet citizens, alumni and possible future KU students. lors have been," Hutton said. "Hemenway also differs from previous chancellors in that he is very driven by facts and figures." "He is a more public person than past chancel- Liberal, Dodge City and Garden City all are planned stops on Hemenway's itinerary, Hutton said. "My intention of going to Western Kansas, or anywhere in Kansas for that matter, is to convince students that KU is a good place to go to school," Hemenway said. "It is also to convince the people of Kansas that KU really pays dividends on their investment." Last fall's enrollment decline prompted administrators to recruit potential students and curb the problem. Hemenway has conducted meetings with the admissions staff to this end and remains optimis- See HEMENWAY, Page 2A. Jayhawks'first family nests on Oread Chancellor's Angle Dasbach themselves at home as they adjust to a new Angle Dasbach Kansan staff writer to a new university and campus environment Echoes of children's voices fill the rooms of the chancellor's house once again. "Arna, Arma, where are you?" Leah Hemenway calls to her 7-year-old son. "It's time to go to your class!" The only response she receives is the sound of her own voice bouncing off the walls and the numerous boxes which line them. Zach Hemenway, 11, doesn't bother to look up in the sports page he is reading when he announces that his brother has already left. "Zach, where's your brother?" she asks. sports page and help me find your brother!" Leah pleads. The Hemenways arrived at the chancellor's house Thursday afternoon and began to unpack on Friday. Fortunately, the first floor, which consists of a central hall and five rooms, was already furnished by the University of Kansas. "Please stop reading the This scenario seems common of the typical household. The only difference is the house in which this typical family lives. Although the Hemenways had only one moving van, they had more than 300 boxes of books "We still have a lot of unpacking to do," Leah said, her eyes getting bigger as she thinks of what's left to do. "We mostly have books and other junk in the basement." Zach's 18-foot soccer goal. Zach said that he loved the house and yard and that he planned to use the yard as a soccer field. But most of all, he loved his bedroom. and Zach's 18-foot soccer goal. He said that when the door bell rings, he and his family become confused as to which way to go because there are four entrances to their home. "It's a lot bigger than my old room. I've never lived in a big house like this," Zach said proudly. "Why would we not like it?" "We kind of turn around a few times before we figure out which door to answer," Zach said. Leah said that she had been trying to unpack the 60 boxes that filled the second-floor study. They were filled with books, of course, most of which belonged to her husband. "Bob has so many books, and it's difficult to organize all of them," she said, laughing. "I'm trying to put my collection in a different spot so that I can find them." She said that the chancellor hadn't helped with the unpacking at home. Instead, he had been working on the 200 boxes that were sent to his office in Strong Hall. Her husband was able to fill his office with all but four boxes of books, she said. They were sent to their home, and she said she wasn't happy to See MOVE, Page 2A Freezes prepare faculty for cuts Schools face first phase of difficult budget reductions Meng Yew Tee and Kim Crabtree Kansan staff writers Although the budget cut will only affect fiscal year 1996, which begins July 1, the administration has been planning ahead for the cuts. A hiring freeze has been implemented at the University of Kansas to prepare for the $3 million budget cut from the Kansas Legislature. Following the decision to defer the faculty's salary hike, the hiring-freeze policy is a step to help the University function within the means of its budget. The policy began June 1 and will stay in affect throughout fiscal year 1996. Chancellor Robert Hemenway faces the difficult task of balancing the budget. "The hiring freeze will not be forever, but it's something we need to do in order to help identify places where a cut may have to occur," Hemenway said. "The freeze is simply an action you have to take when faced with a budget cut of this size." The hiring-freeze policy applies to all levels of the University, with the exception of student hourly appointments. Also, graduate assistant positions will not be subject to position-by-position review, but the departments involved with hiring will not be allowed to spend more in fiscal year 1996 than they did the year before. Del Shankel, professor of microbiology, is concerned about the issue. Positions for which an offer had been made still will be filled. "This will be a difficult time for all of us," said Shankel, former KU chancellor. "Permanently reducing the budget will test our values and our creativity and will require the sacrifices from every segment of the university — faculty, staff, students, and administration." Some schools still are not sure to what extent the freeze will affect them, while others are facing problems already. However, the good news is that the college, the largest school in the University, will not have to cancel any classes because of the hiring freeze. Frost-Mason said the process of planning and scheduling classes for this fall had been difficult, but the administration was trying to work within the constraints of the tighter budget. "It certainly has slowed things down a bit, but we're trying our best to work things out," said Sally Frost-Mason, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. "The new chancellor is trying his best to make sure that the students are well-served, and the faculty and the administration are trying their best to work with him," Frost-Mason said. Alpha Phi Alpha house's fate suspended City commission sets public hearing about demolition On Tuesday night, the Lawrence City Commission scheduled an Aug. 1 public hearing to decide the fate of a former fraternity house at 1014 Mississippi St. By Trine Nygaard Kansan staff writer It became an item on the commission's agenda after neighbors complained that vagrants lived in the house and started fires to keep warm at night, said Jo Andersen. The house, owned by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity and also the first black fraternity house west of the Mississippi River, has been unoccupied for about 10 years. "A plan to rehabilitate the house has not been kept up by the fraternity, and the house is falling apart like any house would," said Andersen. "Quite frankly, I think it all comes down to money." Donald Lee, coordinator of the rehabilitation efforts, agreed that lack of funds was the main problem. But also, most members have a hard time squeezing rehabilitation efforts into their schedules. who was the Lawrence mayor when demolition of the house was first recommended. . Raising the money can not be done overnight. Lee said. "You don't just pick up the phone and say, 'We need money. Send us some,'" he said. He wanted to make it clear that the house closed because members choose other living arrangements but that the fraternity was still active. Jim Kitchen, dean of student life, who spoke at the city commission meeting on behalf of Alpha Phi Alpha, said that the fraternity expected to be able to raise the money needed to pay back taxes and finance a private demolition company. The fraternity can save money by hiring a private demolition crew rather than having the city demolish the house. No specific fund-raising plans have been made but alumni and business people belonging to Alpha Phi Alpha have shown interest. No fraternity members attended the meeting or were available for further comment. "Saving the house is not so important anymore, but they want to keep the property in the name of the fraternity." Kitchen said. AMAN Edmee Rodriguez / KANSAN 1 The fate of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity house, located at 1014 Mississippi St., was determined last night at the Lawrence City Commission meeting. 2A Wednesday, June 7, 1995 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Letter angers faculty involved in lawsuit Defendants in case of former law professor advised to seek counsel Dan Gelston Kansan staff writer the five-member faculty committee that was responsible for a KU law professor's dismissal and two dozen other people named in a federal lawsuit have been informed via a form letter that they will have to go to the state attorney general if they want free legal representation. The long, controversial saga of former law professor Emil Tonkovich took another twist when he filed suit against the committee members and two dozen other people. Tonkovich is seeking reinstatement of his faculty position as well as $17.5 million in damages. "They all have a right to legal representation. All they have to do is request it from the attorney general." "All of the defendants received a letter explaining how, under state law, they need to proceed," Marino said. "They all have a right to representation. All they have to do is request it from the attorney general." Rutherford Turnbull, who was head of the committee, said that when he was appointed by the University Senate Executive Committee there was no communication regarding legal representation. However, Turnbull said he was aware that this The KU faculty members named in the lawsuit learned in early May that they would have to contact Kansas Attorney General Carla Stovall for legal representation. tact with defendants to answer questions or to offer support. Rose Marino associate general counsel for KU situation could The individuals were notified in a form letter sent by Victoria Thomas, a KU attorney. Rose Marino, associate general counsel for KU, said that the defendants received the same letter. The KU attorneys had no con- occur. John Davidson, chairman of SenEx, said that Thomas had done the right thing. "They did what they had to do, which was to advise the faculty on the proper procedure," he said. Davidson said that Thomas had to inform the faculty that they should contact the attorney general's office within 15 days of getting the letter. Tonkovich was fired in 1993 after the committee found him to have sexually harassed a female student. One of his law students said that Tonkovich made her perform oral sex on him after a 1988 party. Tonkovich has denied the act. After his dismissal, Tonkovich went to the Kansas Board of Regents, but his appeal was rejected in 1994. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044 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 Staufer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. HEMENWAY: Chancellor ready to represent Kansas Continued from Page 1. tic about this fall's enrollment. For Hemenway, representing KU to students, their families, alumni and the public is the heart of his job. He describes a university as a collection of people dedicated to the noble goals of education, learning and formalized curiosity. "The job of chancellor, then, is to be a spokesperson for those pursuing these goals." Hemenway said. But before he officially assumed his job as chancellor less than one week ago, Hemenway spent a month in Lawrence to ease the transition. "It's to his credit he was here observing. Del found it helpful," said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, of Del Shankel, former chancellor. "And Bob defined himself as a person without a portfolio," Meyen continued, meaning Hemenway was attentive to University business but could not make official decisions. In that month, Hemenway visited all three of KU's campuses and met people throughout the state of Kansas. He also learned much about "the KU way." "It is a humbling experience to realize you are coming in as chancellor of an institution where there are such strong traditions and such a rich history," Hemenway said. And with summer school now underway, Hemenway has his work for the rest of the summer cut out for him. He plans to appoint a task force to study the administrative, business and academic processes of KU, looking for more efficient — and possibly cheaper — ways to operate the University. "We want to see if there aren't ways we can serve students better," he said. "Our job is to be as helpful as we possibly can to students who want to come to this institution and learn, and go out, and do well in the world because they're well educated." MOVE: Hemenways settle in on University homefront Continued from Page 1. see them. "I told his staff that I wouldn't accept any more boxes," she said with an expression of dread that she directed at the boxes. "Someone should invent unpackers so that we don't have to do this." Unfortunately, there won't be any time for siestas after the house is in order. The children need to be registered for school, Leah said, and she and Chancellor Hemenway need to get their new drivers licenses in addition to registering their bicycles. Other than filling her schedule with the unpleasanties of moving, she has spent her time helping her children find their way around campus. "Are you sure you know how to get your class?" she asks. "Yeah, mom. I know my way around." Amarelpies. "So tell me what you should do if you get lost," she inquires as she ties his sojourns. "I should go to one of those yellow phones and call someone," he says confidently. "Well, you should find a police officer or a maintenance person and ask for directions," Leah says. "Okav?" Amid the chaos in the house and walking around all of the boxes, Leah leads Arna to his bicycle while she grabs hers and rides with him toward campus. Weather Atlanta Chicago Des Moines Kansas City Lawrence Los Angeles New York Omaha St Louis Seattle Topeka Tulsa Wichita TODAY Breezy and partly sunny. H I G N L O W 90 • 70 91 • 64 92 • 63 87 • 66 82 • 67 74 • 57 83 • 71 77 • 62 91 • 73 68 • 50 85 • 68 91 • 70 86 • 67 8267 THURSDAY Rain possible. 8565 THURSDAY FRIDAY Rain possible. A chance for showers. 8565 8569 85 65 FRIDAY A chance for showers. 8569 Source: The Associated Press 8569 CAMPUS INFORMATION Today: First day for 90 per cent adjustment or refund for drop ping eight-week Monday: Last day of the $10 late enrollment fee Last day for 90 percent adjust ment/refund for dropping an eight week course (unless you paid the $250 deposit) Tuesday: First day to elect Credit/No Credit grade option First day for the $25 late enroll nent fee First day for 50 percent adjust ment/refund for dropping an eight-week course June 19: ■ Last day to elect Credit/No Credit ■ Last day of Late Enrollment Last day to add/change sections without written permission Last day for the $25 late enrollment fee - Last day for 50 percent adjust ment/refund for dropping an eight-week course - Last day to cancel eight-week course Hours for Watson Library and Hours for Watson Library and Anschutz Science Library: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday-Thursday; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday; noon to 5 p.m. Saturday; 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday Enrollment center hours: 8 a.m. to noon, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday- Friday Hours for the Kansas Union and Burge Union Bookstores: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. The Kansas Union will be open on the following Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.: June 17, June 24, July 8, July 15, and July 22 Sunflower Bike Shop We're taking the gloves off for this year's Trekfest! Save tons on bikes and accessories during Trekfest, June 8-12! 904 Massachusetts 9150 843-8000 Sunflower Bike Shop We're taking the gloves off for this year's Trekfest! Save tons on bikes and accessories during Trekfest, June 8-12! 804 Massachusetts (913) 843-5000 Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE Wed 7 Little Sister Acoustic Juice Thurs 8 Phantom Rockers Adam's Farm Carolines Fri 9 The Urge Power & Fear Sat 10 Wakeland Outhouse Colony Mon 12 James Mc Murty Arthur Dodge Open Mic Coming Events 6/14 Junior Brown 6/17 Filter 6/22 Foster Children 6/23 Billy Goat Sunflower Bike Shop We're taking the gloves off for this year's Trekfest! 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DANA from STANDA MARKE/DJ Currently appearing at Paddy O'Quinn's DON'T FORGET: HaWAIIan tropic Pagaent every Wednesday through June 21st. ICEHOUSE FOOD AND DRINK SPECIALS: Sunday 2-4-1 Bursters $1.75 Colors Light Founders Monday 1/2 Piece Appetizer After 8pm 10 oz. frozen Drink for $2.00 $3.25 Tuesday $.20 Wings $1.50 Domestic Bottles $1.50 Wells Wednesday $.50 Lumps $1.50 Big Beers - 2 oz. Thursday 8 oz. Snack & Fries with salad Ale 98 $1.00 Everything 70's '60's D.J. $3.00 over after 8pm Friday 2 Frozen 7 oz. on special for $2.75/ea AKarae/DJ Saturday 2 Frozen 7 oz. on occasion special for $2.75/ea Appetizer served until 12pm Live music on the patio Come early for food specials- Stay late for drink specials! There’s always something cool goin’ on. ICEHOUSE ULTIMATE FROZEN COCKTAIL BAR 1801 MASSACHUSETTS 841-1337 3.2023年1月14日 星期一 星期四 星期五 星期六 星期日 星期一 星期二 星期三 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 7, 1995 3A Rivers rise, but flood fears don't Clinton Lake and Kansas River should hold deluge of rain By Meng Yew Tee Kansan staff writer The water levels of the Kansas and Wakarusa rivers are not expected to rise above the flood stage, at least not in the next couple of days. However, water from the Nebraska region is expected to flow down through the Kansas River Basin by the end of the week. If that water is met by more rain, it may cause some problems. "We have been lucky lately because most of the bad storms have been hitting the northern regions of the Basin, especially Nebraska," said Philip Rislove, hydrometeorological technician at the Topeka-based National Weather Service. Minor flooding could occur in the Lawrence area, Rislove said, but there's no cause for alarm yet. Still Rislove warned the public to be careful and take the normal precautions because the rainy weather was not showing any signs of letting up. Although no torrential rain is expected in the next week or so, a steady flow of precipitation in the first half of the month is expected to exceed average rainfall levels. Average rainfall in Kansas for June is 4.06 inches. At this point, the river's water level stands at "There is still quite a bit of storage available if rain continues to fall." David Rhoades this point, iver's water trend at U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 15. 55 feet. It is expected to rise to about 16 feet by the end of the week, which is within just 2 feet of the 18-foot flood stage. The situation with the Wakarusa River, a Kansas-River tributary which flows into Clinton Lake, is less gloomy. There is still water storage capacity left in the Clinton Lake reservoir, said David Rhoades, park manager at Clinton Lake. Clinton Lake's flood pool is about 55 percent full, but a recent lack of rain has relieved the pressure a little. If the flood pool reaches its highest level, which means the lake cannot hold any more water, the water has to be released into the Wakarusa River even if the water level of the river is high. But for now, there is no cause for concern. ... After the wettest May in Kansas history, the Kansas River level stands at 15.55 feet. The river is expected to rise to 16 feet by the end of the week, just within the 18-foot flood stage. Brian Flink / KANSAN New top doc to lead KU's Med Center Surgeon general of Navy drops anchor and has big plans for new crew By Jenni Carlson Kansan Campus Editor Donald Hagen is setting sail on a new adventure. Donald Hagen is setting sail on a new adventure. A University of Kansas Medical Center search committee yesterday named the physician and current surgeon general for the U.S. Navy as its new executive vice chancellor. "This was a national search with some of the best in the nation interviewing for this position," said Chancellor Robert Hemenway during Hagen's introduction. "Don Hagen will make an outstanding executive vice chancellor for the Med Center." D. Kaye Clawson, the former executive vice chancellor, retired in February. Hagen, 57, became the navy's 31st surgeon general in 1991 KU Medical Center after serving as the commander of the Bethesda Naval Hospital in Bethesda, Md. Even though Hagen joked that he would not be yelling orders, he said he would bring a Navy-related philosophy to the Med Center. Hagen will implement a total quality management philosophy when he takes over on Sept. 1. All Med Center employees will identify strengths and weaknesses to build on or improve, have an equal opportunity for advancement and work together. "If one of you isn't working properly, then the team is failing." Hagen said, addressing several hundred Med Center employees and students who gathered for the announcement. "Medicine is a very careful balance between research, clinical care and education." Hagen's commitment to the entire Med Center community excited many Med Center employees, including Chukuka Enwemeka, professor and chairman of the department of physical therapy. "He's going to pull everybody together," Enwekea said. "He brings a wealth of experience to the job.I feel very comfortable." Even though Hagen is bound to his duties as the Navy's surgeon general until Sept. 1, he said that he would be in close contact with KU administrators. "I will not be doing anything else but getting ready to come here," said the Williston, N.D., native. Virtual Access supplies area with fun Reality games let people enjoy cyber adventures without leaving their homes Dan Gelston Kansan staff writer There's a place in Lawrence where you can fly planes, shoot at strange creatures, and travel through space — and you don't have to leave the comfort of your own chair to do it. Virtual Access, in the Holiday Plaza, West 25th and Iowa streets, is the first interactive store in Kansas. It specializes in catering to personal virtual entertainment. "What goes on here is sort of like a sub-reality," said Josh Roza, the store's owner. Virtual reality is when users wear a headset to give the impression that they are actually going through the pictures they see in their eyepieces. People can move their heads up and down or turn all around to get a different angle on what they might see — just like in real life. Roza decided to open the store based on the increase in popularity of virtual reality. Virtual reality is a relatively new concept that has only been made available to the public in the past year. "People are really intrigued by this because they like the idea of being able to just go to another world," Roza said. Roza sells one headset, a disk drive, and four different games for $1,000. Customers can even try out the system in the store to see what they like. The system is adaptable to any unit — including computers, Sega and Super Nintendo — that can supply audio-visual resources. Once the unit is assembled, it can be used just about anywhere. Roza said that this was especially appealing to people. Roza said people in Lawrence should love the product he supplies. "It would be like drinking two or three beers," he said. "You don't even have to sit down to do this," Roza said. "You can lay on your bed and play games or even do DOS." Roza did warn against overuse. He said that the headset should not be worn for more than 15 minutes at a time because it would cause disorientation. "It's a lot of fun and alternative," he said. "It's not what you expect." Kathleen Driscoll / KANSAN Josh Roza, owner of Virtual Access, demonstrates one of his virtual reality games. Virtual Access is located on 25th and Iowa streets. $1088 KIEF'S AUDIO/VIDEO Trisha Yearwood ... Sleeper ... Truck Stop Love ... Dionne Farris ... Bob Dylan ... John Prine ... Soul Asylum KMFDM ... Goo Goo Dolls ... Season to Risk ... Blessid Union of Souls ... Everclear Beastie Boys ... Juliana Hatfield ... Better Than Ezra Buy, Sell & Trade Used CDs. Buy 5 Get 25% off mfg. list price. Thousands of Closeout CDs up to 75% off mfg. list price Special Clearance CDs as low as 99¢ 24th & Iowa • P.O. Box 2 • Lawrence, KS 66044 Audio/Video 913-842-1811 Car Stereo 913-842-1438 CDs & Tapes 913-842-1544 $988 4A Wednesday. June 7. 1995 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT THE ISSUE: RU-486, THE ABORTION PILL Abortion pill lessens trauma The prayers of these women could be answered if the Federal Drug Administration approves the drug mifepristone, known as the abortion pill. Mifepristone, or RU-486, its brand name, works by causing the fetal tissue to release itself from the uterus, much like a miscarriage. With mifepristone, a woman simply makes three visits to a clinic. On her first visit, she ingests three 200 milligram pills of mifepristone. Two days later she returns and takes a 400 milligram dosage of a cramping drug. A powerful vacuum rumbles. A scared 19-year-old woman lies on a cold, hard table. She is awaiting a surgical abortion. She realizes that within moments the fetus inside her will be sucked from her body by a vacuum, assisted by a sharp tool. Millions of women have undergone this type of surgical abortion since 1973 when Roe vs. Wade legalized abortion in the United States. But for years, women with unwanted pregnancies have prayed for a miscarriage so they wouldn't be subjected to this gruesome, unnatural form of abortion. Government approval of RU-486 can provide women with abortions that are less invasive than surgical methods. It is at this visit that the fetal tissue is aborted. The woman must remain at the clinic for about four hours while she naturally releases the tissue. She returns 12 days later to clarify that the abortion was successful. Mifepristone has been used in Europe for years by more than 150,000 women. It has been tested by 2,100 women in the United States at Planned Parenthood and other such clinics. Opponents of mifepristone claim that approval will prompt more abortions and that there is no distinction between a surgical and medical abortion. Women in the United States have had the right to legal abortions for more than 20 years. The next women's right should be the choice between a surgical or medical procedure. The drug, however, allows the body to do the work, and it requires no anesthesia. No tools or vacuums are used, and the fetal tissue is not ripped from the woman's body. Media not cause of breakdown JUILLE HAES FIST FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.AT THE ISSUE: MEDIA VIOLENCE AND FAMILY VALUES It must be getting close to election time. Sen. Bob Dole has been planning ahead by dishing out criticism of Hollywood films and rap artists. Urging Hollywood to clean up its act, Dole said last week that "our popular culture threatens to undermine our character as a nation." Although conservatives praised his comments, Dole seemed to forget one wrench in his election-soundbite machine. Our nation's problems were here before these movies and songs, and merely changing Hollywood's artistic expression isn't going to solve them. These films and songs that the speaker of the House called "nightmares of deprivacy" merely mirror society. They enlighten society about what is wrong. They are not the problems, just the messenger of those problems. In addition, the break Sen. Bob Dole's attacks on movies and rap groups are good soundbites but not answers for crumbling relationships in the family. down of family values has not been caused by "casual sex and even more casual violence" in movies and songs. A more natural explanation is economics, not entertainment. Economic pressures lead to a variety of family problems when one or both parents must work long hours or when financial burdens translate into parental incompatibility or worse, violence. Controlling what you and your children watch and hear is much easier than controlling an industry. Dole should stop using movies and music as an easy campaign target. Unfortunately, it is easier to attack this industry than to solve the problems it shows. JAMIE MUNN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF GERRY FEY Editor ASHLEY MILLER Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser CATHERINE WALWorth Technology coordinator Editor J. J. COOK COOK Business manager MATT SHAW Retail sales manager MATT SHAW Sales and marketing adviser Editorial ... JamieMunn Campus ... Jenni Carlson ... Virginia Marghelm Photo ... Jay Thornton Copy Chief ... Melinda Diaz Design ... David Johnson Business Staff Campus mgr...Courtney Becks Regional mgr...Jody Groton National mgr...J.J. Cook Special Sections mgr...Stephanie Utley Production mgr...Anne Loeper Marketing director...Matt Shaw Creative director...Anne Laurenzo Classified mgr...Heather Valler Philip Morris had to recall 8 billion cigarettes for defective filters. If these filters give me cancer I'll sue. are you kidding me? Topley Rob Tapley / KANSAN Camel brand lover blows smoke in face of other cigarette maker's recall flimflam Recalling cigarettes is a joke. I'm a smoker, and I still don't know the reasoning behind the recall of brands such as Marlboro, Benson & Hedges and Virginia Slims from store's bins. I don't know if KU cigarette smokers realize this, but Philip Morris USA still is recalling many brands of cigarettes it makes because of contaminated filters. According to the company, few people have turned in their cigarettes, and it's obvious why. Now, I'm not saying recalling cigarettes is a bad idea. I've seen Philip Morris' full-page advertisement, and I know what it's like to smoke. The symptoms of bad filters that Philip Morris admit to are ridiculous. The advertisement released in newspapers across the country on May 26 said that smoking a cigarette with a contaminated filter would give off a bad odor. I can't describe the smell of a normal cigarette, but it's not the most pleasant odor in the world. In fact, smoking and smokers themselves stink. I would think any change in the smell would be an improvement. STAFF COLUMNIST GERRY FEY It can't get any worse. The advertisement also said that the contaminated cigarettes' taste might have a metallic or other off-taste. What is an off-taste exactly? I won't sugar-coat smoking. The taste is awful, and it is not the reason I Newspaper reports and the company's advertisement said that continuous smoking of contaminated cigarettes might cause wheezing or discomfort. smoke. The filter on a normal cigarette is like breathing in dirt, and the affertaste is similar to the sensation of chewing on used barbecue coals. So, once again, any difference in the taste has to be considered better than how it tastes now. I could have told you that smoking cigarettes --- contaminate or not --will cause wheezing. No kidding. That is what all kinds of political-action groups have been trying to tell Philip Morris and other tobacco companies for years. Of course, officially, cigarettes aren't a huge health culprit. Whatever. If that was true, stores wouldn't be yanking almost every single brand Philip Morris produces. That is quite an expense for the company to be eating if there was a possibility that the contaminated cigarettes weren't distributed to stores. The other thing I find funny about the cautionary advertisement is the wording Philip Morris uses to lessen its actions. According to the company, it is possible that no defective cigarettes have ever reached retailer's shelves. And in the ad Philip Morris uses the word "defective" much more than "contaminated," which would be more truthful. The word "defective" sounds like the filters were just wrapped in paper wrong or something, instead of actually having a contaminant in them. The wording in the ad isn't really I smoke Camels, and I wouldn't turn in my cigarettes either if this fine Turkish blend of tobacco was being recalled in the same circumstances. false, and by context it sounds much better for the company. Why should I? The reasons given by the company for recall are so ridiculous that it's not even worth mytime. Doesn't taste right? Gives off an odor? Does my a break. It's about time the multinillion-dollar cigarette businesses were honest with the public. Not just in this situation, but in all circumstances. Tell us that cigarettes cause lung cancer, emphysma and might aggravate asthma instead of dancing around the issue. It's clear that smokers, like me, really don't care about health issues, and this situation is an example. People probably wouldn't ever turn in cigarettes unless they were laced with cyanide or something. Gerry Fey Is an Omaha, Neb. senior in Journalism. Clinton's plan would increase FBI's power at expense of American public's rights I'm not a cautious person by nature, and, according to my mother, I never was. My first day skiing I risked life, limb and a cheap pair of rental skis on an ill-advised trip down an expert slope. In a weak moment of youth, I called a man named Howling Wolf a liar. And in my most daring outing to date, I walked the streets of our nation's capital alone after midnight. President Clinton wants to give the FBI more power. He said the change is necessary to insure national security and public safety. He wants agents to have the power to search our credit card records, and to make our phone records and motel logs more accessible. He wants the FBI to be able to infiltrate People have called me foohardy and stupid, but now they will call me paranoid and right-wing because I urge caution in the wake of the Oklahoma City bombing. Is it the fear of a copycat or the huge amounts of fertilizer so readily available in the Heartland that drives my prudence? STAFF COLUMNIST No. I'm afraid of the FBI TODD HIATT and investigate groups even if no criminal evidence exists. And he wants to give the FBI a Counterterrorism Center, making these assaults on our freedoms that much easier. Have we forgot so soon the FBI abuses under the 1960s You may think that time has passed. It hasn't. According to *The Guardian*, the FBI made Southern Illinois University release photos of campus activists. It tapped one student's and '70s Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO)? Have we forgotten how it tried to destroy groups such as the American Indian Movement, the Black Panthers and the Student Left, or how it attacked Martin Luther King Jr. in the name of public safety and national security? phone, made crank calls to her late at night and listed her on the Mirage Network, which requires city, county and state police to notify the FBI whenever a person's drivers license comes up in a criminal investigation or a routine traffic violation. She had done nothing illegal. Under President Reagan, many of the FBI's illegal activities during COINTELPRO were made legal. In Lawrence, agents have targeted the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee. They have tapped the group's phones, broken into a house rented for its volunteers, and tampered with its safety deposit box. For the most part, this was all illegal activity, but it didn't matter to the FBL. Agents now have the ability to infiltrate political organizations, conduct electronic and mail surveillance without a warrant, and search an individual without consent. They have used this power to create dividesiveness between African-American, environmental, anti-war, women's and political movements. They also have targeted and harassed ACT UP, a homosexual Personally, I can walk through a farm supply store completely unaffected by the rows of fertilizer. I can park next to a Ryder truck without bolting from my car with my head covered. I can even converse with a middle-aged man in fatigues without letting him know what a putz I think he is. But I also have moved my old squirrel gun to the front of the closet and have tried to encourage the territorial instincts of my Doberman, because I never know when I'll say too much or become too politically active to remain hidden from the FBI. rights organization, to the extent it qualifies as psychological warfare. And now we want to give them more power to abuse? When will agents decide to break into my house, tap my phone or go through my credit card records? I don't know, but I think the fact that they can and do is enough. After all, it's just one more little Amendment standing in their way. Personal behaviors linked to latest damaged goods Todd Hlatt is a Lydon senior in social welfare. Now even tainted consumer goods come in threes. First in the frenzy was Philip Morris cigarettes. Then there was the pink tulip on the can of Renuzit's Fresh Cut Flowers air freshener that looked like a penis. New Giant Green is recalling spinach it says may contain fly larvae. ACUTE OBSERVATIONS People now have reasons not to smoke,not to smell fresh and not to eat their vegetables. Pecking birds poke hole in space shuttle planets. Woodpeckers win the technology thwarter award for damaging NASA's space shuttle Discovery, sheduled for launching this week. training this week. Trying to impress females during the mating season, the male woodpeckers made holes in the shuttle's fuel tank, some as big as four inches wide. Some holes penetrated to the fuel tank's metal wall. Taking a strategic defense initiative, NASA used plastic owl decoys to drive the birds away. Simpson's friend rushes from court hearing page Lawyers failed to file the papers necessary to bring O. J. Simpson's friend and Kansas City Chiefs running back, Marcus Allen, to a Kansas City, Mo., court hearing last Friday. Allen's lawyers said he was on vacation but did not know if he had left in a white Ford Bronco. Pet monkey goes ape, slashes, eats, then dies Lawyers had already started on a Twinkie defense. After being captured by an animal control officer, the monkey apparently died of a heart attack. When a Pennsylvania family took in a stray monkey last week, they were unprepared for the Bobbitt-tuese event that occurred. The monkey had played happily until frightened by two men Thursday morning. The screaming monkey picked up a knife, for two hours, terrorized the family. The monkey slashed open and ate from bags of marshmallows and brown sugar. All the while, it tried to operate a cigarette lighter. 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 letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For any questions, call Jamie Munn, editorial page editor, at 864-4810. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 7, 1995 5A Carlin takes charge of U.S. archives Critics can't stop confirmation of former governor By Mark Luce Kansan staff writer Despite criticism from professional historians, former Kansas Gov. John Carlin is the new U.S. National Archivist. He was confirmed by a U.S. Senate voice vote on May 25 and moved into his new Washington office yesterday. Carlin is responsible for the maintenance and preservation of national records and documents such as the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. The position had been vacant since Don Wilson resigned in 1993 amid controversy over the handling of former President George Bush's electronic records. DONALD M. DUNLEY John Carlin Carlin's nomination sparked protest from professional historians and archivists who saw him as an unqualified candidate with political ties to U.S. Sen. Bob Dole, who sponsored the nomination, and President Clinton. Among several groups that voiced concerns about Carlin were the American Historical Association and the Society of American Archivists. A 1984 law stipulates that the archivist must be selected "solely on the basis of the professional qualification required to perform the duties and responsibilities of the office." Carlin, who served as governor from 1979 to 1987, holds a degree in dairy science from Kansas State University, and worked as a farmer and in agriculture-related businesses before becoming governor. Carlin also was the president and chief executive officer of Midwest Superconductivity in Lawrence. Carlin said he was able to overcome the criticism from historians and archivists because of his management experience. "Although some may have preferred a more traditional archivist, the challenge facing us now isn't an archival one, but to provide leadership," he said. "It's an administrative job as much as anything." Carlin said that the agency was beset with budgetary and space problems, and that he hoped to cultivate relationships with the private sector to aid in funding. Ted Wilson, professor of history and a user of the National Archives, said the position of National Archivist required three sets of skills: understanding and protecting the heritage and integrity of the documents, excellent management skills, and the ability to represent the agency to both political and professional groups. "The archives have been cursed by sloppy and inefficient management, and Carlin should perform well as a manager," Wilson said. "However, whether he will be too political or can represent the professional constituency are questions which have to be raised." Sheryl Williams, University archivist and curator of the Kansas Collection at Spencer Research Library, said that the controversy needed to cease. "I think he will move forward," she said. "Hopefully he will do this with the support of the organizations. I've seen from the national groups the willingness to work together." Landmark University 944 Mass.832-8228 Red Lyon Tavern LIBERTY HALL SHUBERT HALL "The Basketball Diaries" R 4:45 7:15 9:45 Enda Thomas teamed "My Family" R Daily 4:30 7:00 9:30 "The Secret of Roan Inish" PG Starts Friday! 5:30 7:30 9:30 Sunflower Bike Shop All Trek bikes on sale during Trekfest, June 8-12! Great bargains on mountain bikes, starting at only $199! 004 Massachusetts 6713) 843-5000 THE HARBOUR LIGHTS 1031 MASSACHUSETTS STREET, LAWRENCE, KS 841-1060 $1.00 Draws and $1.25 Premium Draws Tuesday $2.50 Premium Jam Jars Wednesday $1.75 Wells LIVE JAZZ Thursday 1.50 Jam Jars 7.5 Draws Saturday $3.00 Big Import Bottles Sunday $5.50 Pitchers of premium Beer LIVE MUSIC Wednesdays & Sundays Tuesday $1.50 Miller Highlife Bottles 2. (1) NOW OFFERING 9 BEERS ON TAP Keep it clean. We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment Roller Skate PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 (LIIMTED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY (1015) MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191 PUBLIC HILLCREST 925 IOWA Crimson Tide $ ^{8} $ 2:00,5:00,8:00 French Kiss $ ^{P1-13} $ 2:00,4:45,7:40,9:45 While You Were Sleeping $ ^{15,5,8,30,9,45} $ Forget Paris $ ^{15,5,8,30,9} $ Casper $ ^{21,5,4,45,7,45,9} $ Fiuke PG 2:45,5:00,7:15,9:30 CINEMA TWIN 3710 IOWA 841-5191 $1.25 ALSO REDEEM FOR A FREE DAILY PLANNER VALUED UP TO $3.95!! (WHILE SUPPLIES LAST) CINEMA TWIN JULIOVA 841 5191 $1.25 Man of the House* 2:45,5:00,7:00,9:30 Outlooks* 2:30,5:00,7:20,9:30 SAVE 10% ON ALL BOOKS SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Jayhawk Bookstore USED BOOK HEADQUARTERS! "AT THE TOP OF THE HILL" MUST HAVE COUPON, NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER, EXPIRES JUNE 8,1995 JBS USED BOOKS SAVE YOU MONEY!! TAKE AN EXTRA 10% OFF IBS Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. MUST HAVE COUPON, NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER, EXPIRES JUNE 8, 1995 IBS Wake up to Cedarwood Apartments Happy New Rasing Winter & Spring Newly Redecorated Units Air Conditioning & Pool Close to Mall 1 Block from KU Bus route Studios 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom) Call Pat today at 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave. Tae Kwon Do TAEKWONDO INC. Our Instructing Staff One Week Intro Benefits you can enjoy: $19.95 (includes uniform) ★Relieve Stress ★Lose Weight ★Develop Concentration Skills ★Develop Flexibility ★Gain Confidence ★Gain Leadership Skills ★Develop Self-Discipline ★Develop Balance & Coordination ★Learn Self Defense ★Make New Friends Join Now! 749-4400 New Horizons Black Belt Academy of Tae Kwon Do Holiday Flaza Shopping Center 25th & Leja Summer Special European Tan Herb/Health Products 2 FREE TANS 2FREE TANS with purchase Tanning Packages or Unlimited Tanning 7@$20 1 mo. $44 or 10@$25 2 mo. $88 and 15@$35 get 3rd mo. FREE EUROPEAN TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON Southern HILLS Center 841-6232 (behind Perkins) Royal Peking Restaurant 店 飯 都 京 - Famous Peking Cuisine - Lunch Specials from $3.25 - Dinners from $5.45 - Special Sunday Selected Dinners $4.75 Recommended by the KC Star and Wichita Eagle-Beacon "Serving area famous Chinese Cuisine since 1974" Dining Hours: Dining Hours: 11:30-3:00 and 4:30-10:00 Tuesday-Saturday 12:00-9:30 Sunday Closed Mondays delivery Tue-Sun.5 p.m.to 9:30 p.m.Limited are Delivery Tue.-Sun. 5 p.m.to 9:30 p.m.Limited area. (913) 841-4599 711 W.23rd St. Malls Shopping Center Next to Westlake Hardware 6A Wednesdav. June 7, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --- "Historical since 1998 Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass.832-8228 DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" - Complete Auto Repair - Machine Shop Service - Parts Department 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street Get one of these. Get one of these. GIANT BOULDER $265.95 Go out and enjoy these. Rick's Bike Shop 916 Massachusetts 841-6642 OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 5:00 Rick's Bike Shop TASTE THE DIFFERENCE LAWRENCE Pizza Co. ESTABLISHED 1995 Pizza Co. ESTABLISHED 1995 601 Kasold 749-2277 11-11 Fri.-Sat. 11-10 Sun.-Thurs. Grand Opening Offer 2 Cokes & 2 Pizzas for only $10 COMPAQ PRESARIO 486SX/25 microprocessor 486SX/25 microproce 3.5" HD Floppy Drive 4mb RAM 200mb Hard Drive COMPAQ PRESARIO FAX Modem/Answering Machine combo DOS, Windows 3.1 and much more $869.00 But Still for Only a Short Time! Jayhawk Bookstore the bookstore at the top of Naismith Hill 1420 Crescent RoadLawrence, KS 66044 843-3826 BAYSIDE 100 Largest Beauty Supply Selection in the Midwest! Professional advice from professionals. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK. VISIT OUR SALON FOR A NEW LOOK BEAUTY WAREHOUSE &HAIRZONE of Lawrence KMS ABBA MAGE S Brovatto S SCRUPLES NEXUS PAUL MITCHELL TIGI JOICO SORBIE... Juclerie II BODY DRENCH AVEDA Daily Kansan TIGI PETER RUBY $200 OFF ($15 purchase minimum, excludes sale items) BEAUTY WAREHOUSE Hours: M-F 9-8 Sat. 9-6 Sun Noon-6 530 West 23rd exp. 7/7/95 841-5885 UDK LAWRENCE TAE·KWON·DO SCHOOL HAP-KI-DO • SUN-DO • KUM-DO (Technique for Body Restraint) (Meditation) (Rod Art) (No text available) Chief Instructor: Master Ki-June Park, Ph.D. In our dysfunctional environment, are you concerned about the safety and sound character of yourself and your loved ones? Then, our school's program may be helpful. In martial arts, an untrained mind is dangerous. Therefore, we put our utmost efforts into helping students become well-disciplined human beings who cherish value and pursue goals. RECYCLE Chief Instructor: Master Ki-June Park, Ph.I A Martial Arts student since 1955 Learn Martial Arts from an original Master Most comprehensive Martial Arts programs you will ever know. The best Instructor for the lowest possible price. Classes: Mon. thru Sun. (Martial Art Meditation) & Tots class. Vintage clothes for guys and gals -1900-1970- •new cottons and rayons •accessories and costumes Barb's Vintage Rose 841 2451 Mon-Sat 11:5 927 Mass./841-2451/Mon-Sat 11-5 Baldwin & Oskaloosa 10th & Mass. • Lawrence 843-2121 Hsu, Taipei, Taiwan, graduate student, came to the United States and KU one week ago without a clue what Lawrence was like. But after seven days of living here, he is satisfied. Foreign students find a fit at KU With a pen behind his ear and his hands full of papers written in a foreign language, Chaoche Hsu stands in a crowd of new international students at the Applied English Center. By Luby Montano-Laurel Kansan staff writer "In Taiwan, someone told me that KU was the prettiest university in the Midwest, and now that I am here, I agree." Hsu said. Doris Gasper, office manager for the center, said, "The AEC has an enrollment of 150 students during the summer session, and 70 of them are new students coming to Kansas for their first time." Siska Wijata, Jakarta, Indonesia, freshman, hopes to major in journalism at KU. "My brothers are KU students, and they would always go back home and talk about it; now this is more like a family tradition." Wijata said. Gasper said that the best way of attracting foreign students was by word-of-mouth. "It's so wonderful to see that people in different countries far from here know about us. That's why we work hard," she said. "What we do here not only affects the students that are presently in KU but also those who will be KU students in the near future." "I visited many states before coming to KU, but I found Lawrence so peaceful that it was hard not to stay." Alabullah said. The KU environment also has a big influence on perspective international students. Nawaf Alabullah, Kuwait City, Kuwait, sophomore, is attracted to KU because of the safe environment. Rain is a pain with a campus to maintain By Kimberly Crabtree Kansan staff writer Raindrops just keep falling on the heads of facilities operations workers. The heavy rain that recently has plagued much of the Midwest also has created problems around campus, and facilities operations workers must clean up the mess. "We have a lot of water infiltration in Murphy Hall especially," said Robert Porter, associate director of physical plant maintenance. "With as much rain as we've gotten, the ground gets so saturated the water just flows upward." Inside Murphy, the water is continuing to damage several storage areas. Instead, maintenance workers have had to first pour Portland Cement, a harder cement, to solidify the base before they can use standard cement. "It damaged several irreplaceable, antique costumes, and we're not rid of it yet," said Jim Peterson, technical director of University Theatre, which is located in Murphy. Christy said. "We can't get our equipment in to do the sidewalk repairs because of the mud, and we can't pour cement because the basin is too soggy." Crews attempting to reconstruct sidewalks on campus also have had to deal with the water. Despite the heavy water, facilities operations workers are continuing outdoor work such as putting wood chips around plants and adding new lights around campus. Inside campus buildings, many classrooms await a fresh coat of paint. Summertime certainly doesn't mean a vacation for facilities operations. Dean Christy, facilities maintenance supervisor, said the water had been a big problem. "We work year round," Porter said. Get one of these. GIANT IGUANA $425.95 Go out and enjoy these. Rick's Bike Shop 916 Massachusetts 841-6642 OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 5:00 Want to sell something fast? Use the Kansan Classifieds! Keep it clean. RECYCLING DOUGLAS COUNTY Rape Victim/ Survivor Service Affordable, Fine Dining for Family and Friends - Advocacy * Support * Awareness * Prevention 1419 Mass. STUDENT 843 8985 SENATE 24 HOURS CALL 841 2345 24 HOURS CALL 841-2345 RVSS A.S.A.P The Castle Tea Room 1300 Massachusetts by Reservation Only, Call 843-1151 IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... for a confidential, dating friend call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. FREE FREGNANCY TESTING Girthday HOURS: mon 1:3, 6:4 tue 8:30 wed. 1:3 thurs. 6:4 sun. 12:15 843-4821 | 1246 Kentucky 25¢ Draws and $1.00 Margaritas DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 $1.00 Come Party on the Patio! Wednesdays are back at Dos Hombres!!! DOS DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE Look your best for the Summer Total Fitness Athletic Center Get 20% off Summer & Fall package LASTS TILL JUNE 15 ATHLETIC Expanded Selecterized Machine Area Free Weight Area Saunas Jacuzzi Aerobics Classes Nordic Tracks Tread Mills Child Care Fittness Testing 2108 West 27th Suite 832-0818 --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 7, 1995 7A "Unmarried since 1993 Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 *Unarmed since 1993 University since 1991 Classified Directory 100s Announcement Armorments 108 Personal 110 Business 112 Personnel 130 Entertainment 138 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employ ment 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional 235 Typing Services Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not endorse the university's violation of University of Kansas law or law. 1 100s Announcements Our readers are here help information that aid jobs and housing research in the nsw that affect our lives. HOUR READERS are here help information that aid jobs and housing research in the nsw that affect our lives. All real estate advertising in the newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, family status or national origin, or an intention, for any such preference, limitation or discrimination. 110 Bus. Personals 400s Real Estate 408 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted 300s Merchandise 308 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy Avoid long waits in an emergency room. Try LAWRENCE PROMPT CARE. Full-service hospitalized care and experience, and be certified emergency medical physician for General care, fracture care, and laceration care. Open am: 11am, Mon-Fri and 12-1pm on Saturdays. Get to the Medical Arts Centre, Kasold & Clinton Park. 120 Announcements -Kansan Classified: 864-4358- COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong **briarve Video Sunset:** Oversearance 110 atbads on sale start at $9.86 and up 910. N 241. 849-830 and 890 Haskell. 841-7504 **NEDA ERIER/RIDER? Use the Self Serve Car** WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong. 140 Lost & Found LOST. Your student health insurance Temporary coverage 16 month plans monthly. 男厕所 女厕所 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted ARNP, full-time; provide medical services to Center's clients, particularly children/adolescents/families; knowledge of psychopharmacological interactions. Requires Master's degree in clinical speciality of psychiatric nursing. Elegible and fluent. Send resume/cover to B. Ankerhoff, Bert Nash CMIC, 365 Missouri, Lawrence, KS 60044 EEO. Open until filled. CAMPUS REP WANTED (800) 357-2634 LIN. 10040 BASIC COURSE FOR COMPUTER ENGINEERING COURSE DESCRIPTION: COMPUTER ENGINEering is a rapidly growing industry that requires highly skilled technicians to perform complex engineering tasks. This course provides students with the necessary skills and knowledge to excel in this field. Course Objectives: - To develop a strong understanding of computer engineering principles. - To learn about software development techniques. - To understand the design process for building computer systems. - To be able to apply these concepts to real-world problems. Course Prerequisites: - Completion of an equivalent course or higher level education. Course Content: - Introduction to computer engineering. - Basic programming languages (C, Java, Python). - Software architecture and design. - User interface design. - Database systems and database management. - Computer networking. - Operating systems and operating system administration. - Project management. Course Requirements: - A minimum of 12 hours of instruction. - Written assignments (e.g., reports, research papers). - Audience outreach (e.g., workshops, conferences). - Participation in a final project. Course Evaluation: - Regular progress monitoring. - Feedback from instructors. - Performance assessment through tests or exams. Contact Information: - Office: 203-879-1234 - Email: info@course.com - Website: www.course.com Please note that this course is designed for students who are new to computer engineering and may not have prior experience. If you are looking for a more advanced course, please contact your instructor. The nation's leader in college marketing is Dr. Robert Dukes, student for the position of campus rep. No sales involved. Place advertising on all school bulletin boards and American Express, and Microsoft. Great part-time job earnings. Choose Job 4-8 hours per week required. Call Campus Rep. Program American Passage Media Corp. 215 W. Harrison, Seattle, WA 98119 (80D) 487-2343 Ext. 4444 Cash Caterers, Kansas and Burge Urns' Catering Department, 42 $5 per hour in cash day following employment. Hiring for Saturday, June 10, 1995 - 3:30 p.m: Must follow dress code, able to stand for long periods and lift up to 50 pounds. Available for Ups' Personnel Office Level, 5 AA/EE Kansas Union Food Services' Catering Department hiring regular caterers for all shams. 8 a.m., 2 p.m. or 3 p.m.-midnight. $4.25 per day. Prefer previous food service experience. Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Union Attention Veterans All Branches Use your military training and experience in the Kansas Army National Guard. Receive much more than a monthly paycheck. Benefits include: -Educational Benefits in addition to current VA Benefits -Credit of prior service time towards pay & retirement -Commissary / PX privileges -$200,000 Life Insurance -Last pay grade held up to E-6 Try one year! Work only one week-end a month! Cell toll-free 842-0759 842-9293 Call today! 842-0759 842-9293 Like kids ages 3-7? Want to make a difference in a child's life? Then Head Start child care can use as a volunteer in the classroom. 2 hours a day, 1 day a week. Call for information Monday- Friday. Living, responsible person to provide full-time care for our 2 girls ages 1 and 9 in our Northwest Lawrence home beginning July 3. Call collect at 1913.341-1404. Needed: People aged 18-20 to educate a program to reduce alcohol sales to minors. Work from 2pm on Tuesday, Oct. 18th to 8pm. For info call 864-3633 (day) or 887-6495 (eve). & weekends. Babbysister wanted days and evenings. Must be English-speaking, N/S, and must have own transportation. Call Becky B41-989 evenings. $35./hr. Summer Research Asst. Approx. 10br/ks, 60. kr/week. Familiarity w/ journals and good writing skills needed. Call Kristine at n. 972-949-4601 s skills needed. Call Kristin at 913-627-4906. Systems & Networks of Lawrence, KS, has an opening for a part-time student intern to help with project management and training materials. A successful candidate must be fluent in English, have excellent editing and writing skills, and be able to write clear and concise technical documentation experience with Windows, the Macintosh, or X-windows and the use of a mouse experience using desktop (publishing systems (PageMaker) or programming programs) Aldus Persuation or Power-Point is a plus. Experience with UNIX is a finite plus. This position will full time for the summer or fall semester, providing resume with qualifications and a writing sample (preferably technical writing) to Systems & Networks, 110 Wakarauskau Dr., Suite A, Lawrence KS, 50830-1043, or email to pterry @ lcs.ca.com EOE TELEMARKETING/PHONE SALES SALARY + COMMISSION. Experience a plus but not required. Small, fun office. Lenexa location. Call Stony 800-9462-763 WHY THE LONG FACE? New company in Lawrence, KS. area offers you a reason to smile again. Serious inquiries only. 832-0327 225 Professional Services J Rick Frydman, Attorney 701南京 843-4023 OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call TRAFFIC-DUI'S Scales DONALD G. STROLE WE WILL VIGOROUSLY DEFEND YOUR RIGHTS FREE CONSULTATION X 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale Desks, Bookcases, Chest of Drawers, Beds Snowballs but Ice. 684 Mass. 864 Mass. PALM TREE 400s Real Estate APPLECROFT APTS Now showing & 2Brs for Aug. 1 leave, AC heat, AC water & trash PD, DW, discell and microwave. Call anytime, 843-820 Sorry, no pet. Excellent Location, 1104 Tenn. near/kU, NKR bip in AR pt-14, CA, no ptets, $395.842-4242 405 For Rent one bbm, one bath on bus route. Available April 1. Approx. 800 sq. ft. Unfinished $380 month price. Holiday Apartments VILLEGE SQUARE A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere VILLAGE SQUARE apartments - Closetocampus Great Location, 1801 Miss. I BRI Baseament basement CA, no petains, $275 842-4242 Kaw Valley Management, Inc. is now leasing Studio 1, 2, & 3 bedroom apartments, tow homes, and homes. We have homes for immediate or Fall 2018 or Winters 2018. W 2th. or call us at 608-4080 for more info. Leasing for Summer & Fall 2 Bedroom $410-$425 3 Bedroom $595-$615 - 3 Bedroom $595-$615 9th & Avalon 842-3040 - Spacious2bedroom - 4 Bedroom $715-$725 - Recently constructed Swimmingpool On Bus Route - Laundryfacility Modern 3 BR, b2 bath Condo. Fully furnished. Walking distance to Camp. Call 913-493-8000. First Management is now leasing 2 - 2 Bedroom $410-$425 On bus route Dishwasher Real Nice 1 BR Apartment. Close to KU & Downtown. Hardwood floors, lots of windows. No Pets. 748-2919 bedroom apts. for fall! • Microwave • Dishwasher • Garbage Disposal • Washer/Dryer Hookup • Gas, Heat/CA M-F 1-5pm 1740 Ohio 749-1436 - Dishwasher - Nice quiet setting - Dishwasher 211 Mount Hope Court #3 For more info, or Appl. call 843-0011 or 842-3841 Mon-Fri 10-5 Mon-Fri 12-5 p.m. West Hill APARTMENTS 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 Summer Sublime. Spacious 5HR House. Close to KU. No pets. 749-291-99 Now Leasing for August Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts. GREAT LOCATION near campus OPEN HOUSE Mon.-Fri. 12:30-5:00 No appointment needed EDDINGHAM PLACE OFFERING LUXURY 2BDRM APARTMENTS Summer subside: real nice, spacious 2 BR house, close to KU. Nopes 749-2919 ATANAFFORDABLEPRICE 24th and Eddingham Dr. - Exercise weight room - Energy Efficient - Swimmingpool - Laundry room - Onsite management NowLeasingForFall 841-5255 SUNDANCE APARTMENTS 7th&Florida 808W.24th 841-6080 Pool and Clubhouse Professionally managed by Furnished Apartments Summer Sublease: 1 BR apartment. Close to KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, off street parking. No Pets. 749-2819 KVM FourBedroom-AskAbout OurThree Person Special Spacious 3 BDRM Apts. Cats Welcome Bradford Square Apartments Modern Interiors with: - microwave •dishwasher •patio/deck •separate dining room •lots of closet space •convenient laundry facility on site management - on-site management - on KU bus route 501 Colorado #B1 Mon.- Fri. 1-5 p.m. Sat. 11 a.m.- 3 p.m. Stop by or call 749-1556 430 Roommate Wanted 1 room 2 Roomates, $125 to $220 mo, W/D, Close to bus i route 1. bedroom house 2 bedroom house *at REDLY Grad-level folks seek N/M or M* *Big bright skylight skuilt dupli n. campus* *park, trees, flowers, a/c v/d $38*. @84,276 KEEP trying—beautiful, for summer. Sunflower Bike Shop If you don't need it,don't toss it Recycle Use your head and plan to attend this year's Trekfest! Huge savings on helmets, bikes & much more, June 8-12! 804 Massachusetts (613) 843-8000 Sunflower Bike Shop Pump up the savings at this year's Trekfest! All Trek bikes and accessories on sale! 804 Massachusetts (913) 843-5000 615 Massachusetts 842-6560 Open11 AM Gurmonk RAH & PRIDE *Full Service Restaurant & Bar* *No Cover* Drink Specials Monday-23oz Frozen Drinks Tuesday-Imports $1.75 Wednesday-23oz Domestic big girls $1.50 Thursday-23oz Boulevard $1.75 Friday-23oz Margaritas $2.50 Saturday-Domestic bottles $1.25 Sunday-2 for 1 Well drinks $2.50 We sell the sports equipment you want to buy! Carry out orders Available 842-6560 Y 8 We BUY, SELL. The best new & used equipment around We BUY, SELL, TRADE, & CONSIGN quality used works equiomer sports equipment. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Mass. phone 841-PLAY LOOKING FOR A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE? Come by and see what Naismith Hall has to offer... Lawrence's premier private student housing option-the exceptional, affordable choice for KU students Maidservice Fully furnished and carpeted suites, each with their own bath Swimmingpool Convenient location next to campus and on KU bus route - Featuring our "Dine Anytime" program that serves teriffic meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner Planned social activities Don't forget to ask about our "Fast Back"Bonus! Tours available daily including weekends-just drop by! *IBM and Macintosh computer lab* 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 NAISMITH Hall Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information packet! 1-800-888-GOKU CLUB 806 W24 th St. (Behind McDonalds on 23rd) WEDNESDAY 1st&3rd Wed. MALEDANCERS 9:00-11:30 pm Men admitted after 11:30 Alternative Weds. LADIES21 & OVER FREE MIXIN' the HITS from the 70's, 80's & 90's & two 4 one shots THURSDAYS TRIP2 THIS Techno – Tribal – House $1.50 Wells $2.25 Sour & Juices FRIDAY R & B-HIP HOP-ACID JAZZ Bottles $1.75 S SATURDAYS R & B - HIP HOP - ACID JAZZ 32 oz. Big Beers $2.50 Open 9 - 3 DJ at 10 pm Wed. - Fri. 18 to enter/21 to drink Sat. 21 & over only For Private engagements call 865-5222 8A Wednesday, June 7, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vibes MUSIC Summer Meltdown Savings Selected New Releases On Sale! The place to go for COOL NEAT CHEAP stuff - within easy walking distance from campus stop in... THE STUFF: • Top 10 titles • really cheap — every day • Great import selection - CDs from all over Europe & Asia • Serious rap and alternative collection • Used CDs — we trade & sell! • Magazines • Great selection of Posters • Sheet music • Guitar strings • T-shirts ...and more... Sale prices good for two weeks from publication date. Blue Dolphin 2 Live Crew Soul asylum let your dim light shine hotelshpup UNION HOBER UP BITTERSWEETHEART PROMISSE BROXEN KONJ VILAX Atlantic email twowrites Soul Asylum Sugar Ray 1199 CD 7.99 CASS Bar/None Esquivel PINK FLOYD p.u.l.s.e Double Live Album - Includes A Complete Performance at Dark Side Of The Moon Columbia 25 99 CD 13TH CLASS Pink Floyd First Floor Unit 12 911 Massachusetts Street 832-0055 E-mail: vibrations@delphi.com Attending We offer many great locations and floor plans... custom studios, 1,2,3 and 4 bedroom apartments & Townhomes COMFORTABLE & AFFORDABLE Living Sundance 7th & Florida·841-5255 COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS --- CONTRIBUTED PHOTO Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas·749-2415 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Mary Elizabeth Debicki says she loves the new KU tropical studies program in Golfitio, Costa Rica. Hanover Place 14th & Mass.841-1212 Noah Musser/KANSAN This program came about after years of planning without money, and I finally signed the agreement two weeks ago," said Debicki, director of KU study abroad. Golfto was a place full of plantations owned by the United Fruit Company in the '30s, she said. However, in 1984, they donated their facilities to KU and the University of Costa Rica for different studies. The program will operate in the UCR' s branch in Golfito Bay in Golfo Dulce, a part of the Pacific Ocean. "It's a beautiful resort," she said. Debicki said that Golfifo's tropical environment made the program suitable for not only students of Latin American culture, but also for those who studied biology, ecology, anthropology and social welfare. Students study nature Spanish in Costa Rica Golfit is a port town with an urban population of 14,000 and two small Indian tribes, she said. The Golfit campus is in front of the rain forest facing the bay. Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445 Luby Montano-Laurel Kansan staff writer Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226 KU starts tropical studies program She said that during the semester - custom furnishings - designed for privacy - energy efficient - many built-ins - affordable rates - private parking - locally owned - laundry facilities* Nicaragua Area of detail Costa Rica Panama Golfo Dulce Stop by and view these great apartments! *microwaves* *available some locations* - close to campus •locally managed •close to shopping •central a/c •on site managers* •pool* •microwaves* The deadline for scholarship applications is July 1. Other applicants must apply by July 15. Fine Line Tattoo Inc. - Reasonably priced - Hospital sterilized "The Goliffo program is for those students who are not happy studying mother nature with just a book," Quiros said. "This program is for those students who are willing to try something new, exciting, and most of all unforgettable." "We have four $800 scholarships available for this program and no applicants vet." Debicki said. Even though only 10 spaces are left, there is still time for those interested in the Golfto program. Students are required to live with a Golfitena family to improve their communication skills. However, after a semester they can move into their own apartments. *Fraternity & Sorority Letters *Baby Jayhawk Tattoo *Bring your own design or choose from our extensive selection To join the program, students must have at least a 2.7 grade point average and four semesters of Spanish. The campus of the University of Kansas-University of Costa Rica facility in Goffiti houses the new KU Tropical studies program. "Golfio is one of the best places in Central America to study nature because of the rain forest, the ocean and the variety of flora and fauna." 29th Mass. St Topeka 233-8288 The classes offered by Quiros and other professors will not only allow the KU students to study nature, but they also will help them to become fluent in Spanish. All classes will be conducted in Spanish. "This place has many advantages for different studies," Quiros said. Mon-Sat 12-8pm Tues. till 6pm Professional Management and Maintenance Company MASTERCRAFT The Golifto program will offer classes that will transfer to KU. "This program is perfect for the KU undergraduate student who is interested in Latin-American nature, but never had an opportunity to practice their field," Quiros said. The director in Costa Rica is Oscar Quiros, a native of Golffo and a former KU graduate student. "I think that this is an incredible experience for any student interested in nature because this is an undeveloped but very receptive area," Debicki said. "There is magnificence in mother nature, especially in this place." students would enjoy Golfito's environment by taking field trips to the rain forest and ocean. 合 EVERYTHING BUT ICE Beds Desks Bookcases 936 Mass. EVERYTHING BUT ICE EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY DICKINSON THEATRE 831-8600 Dickinson 6 831-8600 Tales from the Hood ® 9:30, 11:15 The Little Princess ® 1:25, 4:40, 7:20 Johnny Mmmonic ® 1:10, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50 Mad Love II-13 1:25, 4:45, 7:10, 9:50 Die Hard III ® 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:40 Braveheart ® 1:00, 4:30, 8:00 Bridge of Madison Co ® 1:15, 4:00, 7:00, 9:50 $3.50 Adult Before Heating Baby 2:00 P.M. Insured Stereo FREE PIZZA Any Monday buy any pizza & get the second one of equal value FREE! From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area) MONDAY MANIA!! 14th & OHIO 843-3232 (UNDER THE WHEEL) PYRAMID PIZZA "We Pile It On!" 843-3232 EVERY DAY SPECIALS SINGLE 110" PIZZA DOUBLE 2 TOPPINGS 210" PIZZAS $5.75 2 TOPPINGS $10.50 TRIPLE 310" PIZZAS 1 TOPPING NOT VALID ON MONDAY NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER $13.75 LIMITED DELIVERY AREA NO COUPON NECESSARY lifestyles A simple story about a complex problem: Written by Matt Hood The writer shares his personal experience with chronic fatigue syndrome as he tries to shed light on a misunderstood disorder. **T** the fatigue crept up like a mugger. But instead of snatching him CHRONIC FATIGUE insense of snatching my bag or emptying my pockets, this criminal added to my load. Each day my book bag felt as if there was an extra textbook inside. My coat pocketlets felt as if I was carrying around extra change. Eventually, I couldn't lift my bag. Ultimately, I couldn't get out of bed to put on my coat. It was my senior year in high school, a time when teen-agers ought to be invulnerable and on top of the world. I was at the top of my class, carrying an honors load and playing varsity golf after school. The doctors called it chronic fatigue syndrome, CFS. I started missing school; the class load became too heavy. I got to where I couldn't even stand up on the golf course. Then came the fatigue. After months of rest, I came to college feeling better. But 2 1/2 years after the initial diagnosis, I felt that mysterious weight return to my bag. I've had to quit my job and drop classes. My doctors renewed their hypotheses, and the testing started again. My assailant is back --- Approximately 3 million to 18 million adults in the United States complain of fatigue each year. Doctors disagree about how many of these people are affected by chronic fatigue syndrome, but esti- million. Most of these chronic fatigue sufferers are in their 20s or early 30s. What exactly is chronic fatigue syndrome? Doctors and researchers don't have an exact answer. But if each day is a struggle and you're beginning to think that it's all in your head, it's an answer worth investigating. Your illness, like mine, may be chemical, and the torment you feel may be avoidable. The National Institutes of Health, a federal agency of biomedical research, answers the question this way: "The hallmark of the illness is fatigue — a fatigue that comes on suddenly and is relentless and relapsing. well. including severe depression. On stress tests that doctors administered, I was pushing the end of the scale. I was taking junior and senior classes during my freshman year. I felt driven to make straight A's. A dearly loved aunt had died suddenly. I felt the incredible high of falling in love for the first time and then felt the crash when it fell apart. And I endured the day-in-day-out stress of working as a reporter on the student newspaper. Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, has seen hundreds of cases of chronic fatigue during his career as a physician. He said chronic fatigue syndrome, a disorder that worsens when mixed with stress and inconsistent sleep habits, can be a nemesis for college-age students. Twenty-five KU students are being treated at Watkins for chronic fatigue syndrome. I spent the summer after high school in bed. When I came to college, I thought I had left CFS in my childhood room. But after three semesters of balancing school and sleep, stress and new relationships, my illness began to return. It stole the living from my college life. The list may not look so sinister. Other students work just as hard and do fine. But to the syndrome that had been lurking in remission, I looked like an easy victim. It attacked. Chronic fatigue causing debilitating tiredness. Unlike the mind fog of a serious hangover, to which CFS has been compared, the profound weakness accompanying CFS does not go away with a few good nights of sleep but instead slyly steals a person's vigor over months and years." "The hallmark of the illness is fatigue-a fatigue that comes on suddenly and is relentless and relapsing... syndrome is a relatively new name for a condition that has been around for ages. Around 1870, doctors began diagnosing soldiers exhausted in battle as having "soldiers heart" or the "effort syndrome." During World War I, 60,000 British troops were diagnosed with the disorder and approximately 44,000 were dismissed from dismissed from duty. Modern study of the syndrome has been prompted by epidemic outbreaks of the syndrome. One of the largest was at Incline Village. Nev., a playground for the well-to-do by Lake Tahoe. Doctors can't explain the high outbreak rates in the yuppie population, especially women, who are twice as likely to be diagnosed with CFS. But they speculate that this segment of the population is more likely to go to the doctor for testing and thus discover the syndrome. The high rate of illness among young, successful people has prompted other names for the disorder: "the yuppie plague" or "affluenza." After spending weeks in bed, I have returned to class. When I explained to one of my professors that I had chronic fatigue syndrome, she said with a hearty laugh, "Oh no! You have the yuppie fly." She meant it to be funny. CFS is brighting out. There's no dress code in a sick bay. Chronic fatigue is not some piece of the yuppie wardrobe one can put on and take off. It's not some suede-patched dinner jacket or some paisley tie with matching pocket hankie. Polo ponies are not a part of the CFS collection. There were days when I was so exhausted I couldn't even get dressed. There were days when tying a tie felt like tightening a hangman's noose around my throat. I spent weeks in bed too weak to move. I wore blue-striped pajama bottoms and an undershirt that started to unravel at the neck. They were wrinkled and stained. They smelled of sweat and stale sleep. No buzzing off to the club in a BMW for this yuppie. There were days when making it down my apartment hallway to the bathroom was a small victory. She meant it to be funny. CFS is anything but. --said. Unlike testing for pneumonia or some other quantifiable illness, there is nothing tangible about CFS. Even the clinical name, "syndrome," connotes a certain amount of confusion. Joseph Brewer, physician and specialist in infectious diseases at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., said that the medical community had not yet found a cause for the disorder, and there were no definite tests to prove a patient had it. Thus, he said that chronic fatigue was classified as a syndrome, not a dis- "With a disease, we know what it is," Brewer said. "A syndrome, on the other hand, is a clinical constellation of signs and symptoms. There is no specific and definite way of diagnosing it." Yockey agreed that there was a great deal of uncertainty about chronic fatigue syndrome "It's a diagnosis of exclusion." Yockey didn't tell the audience. "When testing for CFS, I can't see anything, and I can't hear anything," Yockey said. Chronic fatigue can look like a dozen different disorders, some of them strictly physical and several that pain as Reeve's vertebrae fusion goes well Surgeons used 11 titanium wires to tie together CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Surgeons piece together two shattered vertebrae at the base of Christopher Reeve's skull Monday to immobilize the paralyzed actor's broken neck and keep his riding injury from causing further harm. "Everything went well," said Reeve's surgeon, Dr. John Jane. "We did the fusion we anticipated." Surgery won't restore actor's ability to move The Associated Press The six-hour operation on the "Superman" star wasn't expected to restore his ability to move and breathe on his own. receive, 42, was paralyzed from the neck down on May 27 when he was thrown from his horse during a jumping event. He landed on his head, breaking the top two bones in his spine. Reeve was an avid rider who had trained for eight years. Reeve's upper two vertebrae. They also connected the first vertebra to the base of the skull with a ring. Bone shavings from Reeve's hip were grafted between the first and second vertebrae. Doctors hope the surgery will immobilize the damaged vertebrae and allow them a chance to heal. It also was expected to prevent further damage to the spinal cord, two surgeons familiar with such operations said. PETER CRAIG "It was a little more complicated just to get everything absolutely, exactly right." Jane said at a news conference. "The vertebrae were so fragmented." Christopher Reeve "It will allow him to begin his mobilization, to sit up and, hopefully, to begin his early rehabilitation. That will depend on his overall medical recovery," said Dr. Rick Delamarter, an orthopedic surgeon at the University of California at Los Angeles Comprehensive Spine Center. "There's very little else medically that can be done." Propping Reeve upright should improve his breathing and help prevent any recurrence of pneumonia, a common complication in such cases. Jane said. Reeve's fractures should heal in six to eight weeks. However, it could be weeks or months before the full extent of spinal cord damage is known. The actor has some feeling in his neck and chest, indicating his spinal cord was not severed, Jane said. He said it was impossible to say how much mobility Reeve can hope to achieve. Delamarter and Dr. Jack Wilberger, a neurosurgeon at the Allegheny-Singer Research Institute in Pittsburgh, said Reeve could be turned in bed or positioned upright in a chair in a few days. That should help prevent bed sores, blood clots in the less and potentially fatal ailments. reieve's inability to breathe without a ventilator will inhibit his recovery and rehabilitation and increase the risk of complications, Delamarter and Wilberger said. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SECTION B JUNE 7,1995 JUNE 7,1995 KU Life BOX OFFICE HITS LOS ANGELES — The ghostly "Casper" took in LOS ANGELES — TI an estimated $14.1 million in its second week of release to remain No. 1 at the box office. The figures are based on estimates of ticket sales Friday through Sunday. Final figures were due out Monday. The Clint Eastwood- Meryl Streep romance "The Bridges of Madison County" was second with $10.8 million, studio and industry sources said Sunday. Film Notes The weekend's top 10 films were: 1. "Casper." $14.1 million. 2. "The Bridges of Madison County," $10 million. 3. "Die Hard," $9.2 million. 4. Braveheart, $7.5 million. 5. "Crimson Tide." $6.5 million 6. "Forret Paris." $3.7 million. 7. "Johnny Mnemonic." $3.3 million. 8. "While You Were Sleeping, $3.3 million." 10. "Tales from the Hood," $1.9 million. 1995 TONY AWARDS NEW YORK — As expected, Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Sunset Boulevard" was named best musical Sunday night at the 1995 Tony Awards. Then the best play award went to "Love! Valour! Compassion!" by Terrence McNally. McNally said the play was dedicated to Nathan Lane, who starred in "Love! Valour Compassion!" Lane, who was one of the co-hosts of the television program, didn't receive a Tony nomination for his critically acclaimed performance. "Sunset Boulevard" took home the most Tony's, seven, followed by the Harold Prince revival of "Show Boat" with five. "The Heiress," a revival of the play based on Henry James' novel "Washington Square," picked up four prizes including the best actress award for Cherry Jones. Other big acting wins were scored by Matthew Broderick in "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" and Ralph Fiennes for his portrayal of the melancholy Dane in a revival of "Hamlet." Compiled from The Associated Press. Wednesday, June 7, 1995 LIFESTYLES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CHRONIC HEALTH ENTHUSIA Edmee Rodriguez / KANSAN Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, designed this stool as a metaphor for the healing process. Each leg contains an aspect of healing (physical, spiritual and mental) and supports the word "health." Continued from Page 1B are completely psychological. Yockey said that the problems that plague diagnosis of diseases in general further confounded identification of CFS. "The biggest problem in medicine is the debate between cause and effect." Yockey said. "Which is the cart and which is the horse?" Yockey said that one of the most frequent complaints that accompanied fatigue was depression. But is the depression caused by the fatigue or vice versa? He said that of all the people who feel fatigued but who have completely normal physical lab tests, thus tagging them as potential CFS sufferers, 75 percent actually are clinically depressed instead of chronically fatigued. Such uncertainty about the disorder has led some doctors to dismiss chronic fatigue as imaginary. An August 1993 report in Redbook magazine found that 30 percent of doctors viewed chronic fatigue syndrome as little more than a yuppie manifestation of simple depression. I've met some of those doubting doctors. Some of them treated me. Some of them mistreated me. My fatigue carried with it crashing depression. For a while even I was convinced that it was all in my head. But after months of trying to talk it out with various therapists and psychologists, I was only getting worse. One doctor thought it would be good to start me on a series of drugs that would alter my brain chemistry. When I continued to get worse, she decided to call my parents and suggested that I would be better off if I were checked into a hospital. I promptly left her office and never returned. I finally have found an empathetic doctor, but never did I feel so out of control, so sick and as ashamed as I did when I was being "cares" for by doctors who didn't care to find the truth. immune system attacking itself. Others think that the disorder is caused by environment, genetics or even allergies. --immune system attacking itself. Others think that the disorder is caused by environment, genetics or even allergies. Yockey is a firm believer that the disorder exists. "I think it's very real, a definite impairment," Yockey said. As far as explaining a cause, Yockey agrees with a growing number of physicians who believe the illness has many causes. "I don't think for a minute that there's only one cause for CFS," Yockey said. He added that there are too many symptoms and too many differences among the patients who have CFS to believe that there is only one cause. Dr. Edwin Jacobson presented a similar theory in March during a seminar for medical professionals. He tends to agree that CFS is multicausal. Jacobson said 150,000 to 720,000 people suffered from severe fatigue each year, but these cases weren't serious enough to classify as CFS. Causes for standard fatigue can include irregularities in biochemistry or metabolism, overexposure to chemicals and toxins, deficiency in neurotransmitters, a dysfunction of any major organ system, stress, and drug allergies or addictions, Jacobson said. As for chronic fatigue, Jacobson theorized that any or all of these factors could conspire and cause the extended, multi-symptomatic fatigue of CFS. Other doctors believe CFS has its genesis in some kind of viral infection. Brewer said that the initial belief that CFS was a virus caused it to be categorized as a part of his infectious diseases department at St. Luke's. "One of the leading theories is that it is infectious and that it is viral," Brewer said. Historically the virus that has received the most scrutiny is the Epstein-Barr virus, which causes mononucleosis. But recent research has proven that Epstein-Barr is not a singular cause of CFS. Some doctors believe that chronic fatigue is actually the body's own Brewer said his experience at St. Luke's made him leery of allergy explanations for CFS. "People get really carried away with that one," he said. "People can say they're allergic to the vinyl wall paper, and the theories can just go on and on." He does support, however, the possibility that CFS is caused by some failure of the immune system. The only certainty shared by all is uncertainty. "There is no known cause for chronic fatigue," Yockey said. "In the final analysis, we may never know the exact cause." --- Vockey has a visual aid that he uses with all his patients who have chronic fatigue. It's a three-legged stool that he made in his garage. He says it illustrates healing, especially for a disorder like chronic fatigue syndrome. There are few certainties with CFS, but this list of questions and answers compiled from books, magazines and interviews with medical professionals may help. Questions? . ● Each of the legs has a different label: physical, emotional and spiritual. If I have chronic fatigue, how long does it last? Can I get well? His white lab coat billowed a bit as he tried to balance his chair on two legs. He demonstrated that it takes all three legs to sit in good The syndrome has an erratic pattern of attack and retreat. The average duration of the illness is 2.9 years with lower and upper limits recorded at six months to 1.3 years. Physicians note that the sharpest decline in health comes in the first few years of the disease. Is CFS contagious? A certain answer can't be had until a positive cause has been found, but there is no evidence that the syndrome is contagious. The syndrome usually strikes people in their 20s or early 30s. Based on statistics from case studies, women are twice to three times as likely as men to develop CFS. Demographic studies have also shown that Caucasians are more likely to be diagnosed as having CFS than people of other races. Joseph Brewer, physician and infectious disease specialist at St. Luke's, warns that these statistics may be warped. health. Who is affected? "I a relatively amdent person who makes $10,000 a year in a stressful, high-tech job gets sick... that person is not going to just sit idly by." Brewer said. "That's the sort of person who will go to the doctor, slam his fist on the desk and say, 'I want an answer!'" A second school of thought, the one that believes the original cause of CFS is viral or allergenic, believes a complete cure could come from a change in diet. Yockey believes in a variety of treatment methods that include more rest, exercise and the use of antidepressant drugs. But he also believes that the doctor must give the patient a large dose of empathy. "It's difficult and fatiguing to try and do," he said. Of those doctors who have a regimen of treatment, the great majority believed the only treatment was treatment of individual symptoms. This could mean pain-killers for flulike aches and pains, sedatives to help regain a normal sleep pattern and antidepressants to help with the psychological stress. Then with a bit of a lunge he went up on one leg, for a split second. "THAT is unlucky." He also said national surveys of varied demographics aren't yet available. With his chair safely back on the ground, he said the best cure for chronic fatigue syndrome would come when each patient found a way to put all three legs on the ground. Susan Levine, a physician who estimates that as many as 30 percent of doctors don't even believe in the disorder, also estimated that of those doctors who did believe the syndrome was real, only 10 percent would treat it with anything more than bed rest. I was amused by Yockey's gyrations, but in his metaphor and his demonstration I saw an image of myself wobbling unsteadily through my illness. I saw a picture of myself trying once again to have my legs planted firmly on the ground. As many theories as there are about CFS, there is no cure for the syndrome. But for each theory of causality there are different theories for treatment. The patient needs an understanding empathic physician, he said. Yockey said he understood how frightening a disorder like CFS could be. The patient needs to hear the doctor say, "I believe you, and I understand what you're going through," he said. "We haven't dug into it deep enough," Brewer said. An empathetic approach can keep patients from what Yockey calls "doctor shopping," or getting sicker as they search for a doctor who believes them when they say they're in pain. Yockey also said the mental desire of the patient to be well again could be more powerful than any Defining the disorder For decades chronic fatigue syndrome was mysterious and misunderstood. In 1988, the Centers for Disease Control, the federal public health agency in Atlanta, published an official definition of CFS. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, two major criteria must be fulfilled before an official diagnosis of chronic fatigue can be made; 1. The onset of "persistent or relapsing, debilitating fatigue." The fatigue is severe enough to reduce a person's daily activity to less than 50 percent for at least six months. 2. Other medical conditions that could produce similar symptoms must be excluded through examination and testing. Specific conditions that the CDC says must be eliminated first include: CBC says must be enlarged • autoimmune diseases - autoimmune diseases - localized infections - AIDS, or HIV-related infections - a parasite disease like Lyme disease or tuberculosis or HIV related infections - sis or schizophrenia - chronic psychiatric diseases such as depression, neuro- neuropsychia - drug abuse - multiple sclerosis - diabetes - any other known chronic pulmonary, cardiac, or blood-related disease. The CDC also requires that a patient report six or more of the following symptoms. These, too, must have persisted for more than six months: 1. Mild fever or chills 2. Sore throat 3. Painful lymph nodes 6. Generalized fatigue lasting 24 hours after light exercise 4. Unexplained muscle weakness 7. Headaches that differ in type or severity to those prior to illness 8. Severe joint pain without swelling 9. At least one neuropsychological complaint such as excessive irritability, confusion, inability to concentrate or depression 10. Sleeve disturbances The following symptoms must be documented by a physician on at least two occasions, at least a month apart; 1. Low-grade fever (between 99.5 and 101.48 degrees Fahrenheit) 2. Inflammation of mucous membranes, throat or upper respiratory 3. Palpable or tender lymph nodes amount of medication. --- "We can't choose the things life deals us, but we can choose how we deal with them," Yockey said. I write the final draft of this article surrounded by thatched piles of papers and photocopies. I've been too tired to organize them or clean them up. Diluted sunlight cascades through my blinds and cuts bars of light on the floor. I've been lucky the last few weeks. I've been able to see a little more sunshine. But there are still times when fatigue and depression drift like clouds in front of that light. I've been able to research and write this article. I feel tired now. My bed sits in the corner, unmade and inviting, I hope those of you who feel that some debilitating fatigue have had the strength to finish this article. I hope it has provided some answers or at least sparked some new questions. I know what you're going through. This article is as much help as I know how to offer you. I hope you can find an emphetic doctor, one who can help you through this hard time. I hope you make it out of the shadow and see a little more sunshine. As for me, I'm tired. I'm closing the blinds and heading for bed. I need a nap. 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HUNTINGTON BOYS CLUB TEL 0123456789 Fat Free Hawaiian Shaved Ice III Open 7 days a week from 11am to 11pm Jay Hawker 1.80 Small 1.05 Large 1.55 Taster .80 medium 1.30 Juice Bars .90 Located at 939 Iowa in the Hill Crest Shopping Car Located at 939 Iowa in the Hill Crest Shopping Center UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 7, 1995 3B Coaches' earnings limited no more U. S. district judge decides against $16,000 salary cap By Mark Luce Kansan sportswriter Pam DeCosta's job as the restricted-earnings coach for the Kansas women's basketball team is a labor of love. For the last two years she routinely has put in 10 to 12-hour days lining up team travel, arranging pregame meals, overseeing evening study halls and performing the on-court duties of an assistant coach—all for $16,000 a year. But for DeCosta, and coaches like her throughout the country, all the hard work is about to pay off. Reacting to potential anistrue laws, the NCAA Administrative Committee on May 25 rescinded its rules limiting restricted-earnings coaches' compensation. On May 23. U.S. District Judge Kathryn Vrati rulen in favor of five men's coaches who had challenged the 1992 NCAA rule. The restricted-earning positions were created by the NCAA as a cost-saving measure. Every sport but football had to designate one coach as a restricted-earnings coach with pay limited to $16,000 annually. In addition, the NCAA prohibited off-campus recruiting by restricted-earnings coaches. The new policy allows schools to pay restricted-earning coaches whatever the school desires. DeCosta, who is growing up to fill Renee Brown's assistant position in October, said that the pay increase would impensely, but that the NCAA's continued ban on off-campus recruiting was poorly conceived. Brown is on a one year leave of absence to take an assistant coach position for the women's national team. "Recruiting is the biggest part of the program." DeCosta said. "Even if they would let the restricted earnings coaches recruit only in-state, it would give them the needed experience." Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said that she wasn't sure yet what effect lifting the earnings restriction would have. DeCosta, who eventually wants to become a head coach, is grateful for her experience despite her salary. "I'd like to see the position changed to another full-time assistant coach," Washington said. "The restricted-earnings coach is an entry-level position. It is critical to get them recruiting experience." "I couldn't work for a better coach, she lets me do everything," she said of Washington. "If you want to be in this business, you have to work your way up the ladder. It's a long-term goal that's worth the sacrifice." Baseball ends with losses Kansan staff report The Kansas baseball team had a winning streak before the Big Eight Conference tournament. Unfortunately, the Jayhawks rode a losing streak out of the tournament that ended their season. Kansas, 24-33, was not invited to NCAA post-season play. Before losing, the Jayhawks defeated the Oklahoma Sooners. 2-1. Kansas junior pitcher Pitcher Splittorr surrendered only one run in his 11 innings of work while junior catcher Ted Meadows had RBI in the sixth and 12th innings. Kansas couldn't keep pace with its next two opponents, though. Starting sophomore pitcher Robert Garola did not make it through the first inning of the Jayhawks' game against Nebraska as Kansas lost 15-5 to the Huskers. The Jayhawks ended their season with a 14-11 loss to Kansas State. Kansas golf team makes NCAA finals Kansan staff report Earlier this month, Kansas junior Slade Adams' 5-foot putt on the final hole of regional competition secured the Jayhawks a spot in the NCAA Championships. Kansas finished ninth in Montgomery, Texas, as the top 10 teams qualified for the championships in Columbus, Ohio. After rounds of 293 and 304, the Jayhawks shot a finalround 288. Adams shot a 71 and tied for 20th. But Kansas junior Dan Rooney's final round bettered Adams by one stroke. "Rooney just went crazy for a while," Kansas men's golf coach Ross Randall said of a round that included five birdies and one eagle. Kansas' good luck with close finishes ended in the 30-team NCA tournament. After two rounds of competition, only the top 15 teams advanced to the final round. The Jayhawks finished in a tie for 16th with a 592. EGGS Sprite COKE, SPRITE OR DIET COKE 24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS 488 EA. Doritos FRITO-LAY DORITOS ALL GRADE "AA" EGGS 1/2 PER EGG OVER CHECKER'S INVOICE COST EVERYDAY! DAY Begin Thurs. June 21 BAN Sprite Coke COKE, SPRITE OR DIET COKE 24 PK, 12 OZ. CANS 488 EA. Doritos FRITO-LAY DORITOS 14-15 OZ. BAG 188 EA. LAXS POTATO CHIPS, 4 OZ. BAG 88¢ AU RED BARON PIZZA 12" SIZE 2 FOR $5 FAIRMONT-ZARDA ORANGE JUICE 1/2 GAL. 89¢ EA. NEW SAUCED NEW SAUCED NABISCO SNACKWELLS 5 TO 7.5 OZ. 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OF 2 HENS NABISCO SNACKWELLS 5 TO 7.5 OZ. PKG. 168 EA. FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED WHITE BREAD 2-1 LB. LOWES IN A BAG 1 LB. OVER $1 RED RIPE WHOLE WATERMELON 20-22 LB. AVE. 288 EA. HEADLESS SHELL-ON SHRIMP 50-60 CT. PER LB. 398 LB. MOOSE BROTHERS SUPREMI PIZZA TAYSTEE OLD FASHIONED WHITE BREAD 20 OZ. LOAP 78¢ MILD MEDIUM YELLOW ONIONS 19¢ LB. BRIDS EYE CORN, PEAS OR MIXED VEGETABLES FROZEN 16 OZ. BAG 69¢ EA. BREYERS ICE CREAM ALL FLAVORS, 1/2 GAL. 238 EA. FROM THE BAKED SUSPIRY PIZZA $2 FOR $5 WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS WIK AVORCHERS & MAYN ON JURGER'S CUPONS Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE VIDEO SPECIAL 3 MOVIES/GAMES 3 DAYS $3.00 NEW RELEASES NOT INCLUDED OPEN 24 HOURS EVERY DAY We accept the following: VIDEO SPECIAL 3 MOVIES/GAMES 3 DAYS $3.00 NEW RELEASES NOT INCLUDED MOTORCYCLE BONELESS BEEF RUMP ROAST ECONOMY PAK 118 LB. 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Lines not included and large subject to change unless specified. Call today for other worldwide destinations. Council Travel 1•800•2COUNCIL (1•800•926•8694) all today for a FREE Student Travel magazine! Have You No Class? Council Travel Monday - $3 pitcher, $1 import draws Tuesday - $3 domestic pitchers, $5 import pitchers Wednesday - 50$ draws, $1.75 big beers Call today for a FREE Student Travels magazine! and hurgers on the patio only $1.50 Thursday - $1.25 patio pitcher, $1.50 domestic bottles Friday - $1.75 import bottles Saturday - $1.75 well drinks Get one of these. GIANT YUKON $386.95 Go out and enjoy these. Rick's Bike Shop 916 Massachusetts 841-6642 OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 5:00 BICYCLE Rick's Bike Shop EARN CASH All Your Money Gone? $15 TODAY $30 THIS WEEK By Donating Your Blood Plasma Walk-Ins Welcome NABI The Quality Source Lawrence Donor Center 816W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 Summer Hours Mon.,Wed.,Fri.9-5:30 Tues.,Thurs.9-6:30 Sat.closed ce $ $ SPORTS WEDNESDAY JUNE 7.1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansas camp keeps hoop dreams alive PAGE 4B Michael Schulze / KANSAN TOMMY GRANT 700 girls in town for Washington's summer session High school girls compete in a scrimmage at Allen Field House during Martian Washington's basketball camp. The camp began Sunday and will end on Friday. By Dan Gelston Kansan sportswriter Hundreds of girls have descended upon Lawrence this week with high hopes of becoming basketball stars. The girls are taking part in the University of Kansas Marian Washington's 21st Annual Jayhawk Basketball Camp. Washington, the Kansas women's basketball coach, places an emphasis on teaching the fundamentals of the game to girls ranging from elementary school age to seniors in high school. The campers are split into two groups, with girls 13 and older assigned to the "Big 10" and the rest to the "Big 8." The sections are then broken up into teams that are instructed by some of the finest high school coaches in the area along with former Jayhawks and other players from across the country, Washington said. One of the players coaching at the camp is Sharon Green, formerly of Howard University. "We stick to the philosophy Coach Washington wants," Green said. "I teach them the fundamentals: how to run plays and proper offense and defense." The players learn the game's fundamentals in the morning, going through various stations on the floor of Allen Field House. They spend the afternoon listening to lectures and at night get to show off what they've learned by playing in games. Derby High School coach Doug Kinley is another instructor at the camp. He coached Wichita Southeast High School to state championships in 1986 and 1987. "We try to stress the teaching in the morning so they can use some of what they learned at night," Kinley said. "We want them to see what they can get out of this program in just a day and how they'll be a better player in just a week." "When these girls leave they will have gained valuable knowledge and be better basketball players," he said. "There is none better around." The camp was started by Washington not only in an effort to help out aspiring players, but to pump revenue into the women's basketball program. Washington said that during the first two years, all the money she made from the camp was put directly into women's athletics. The camp has grown tremendously since its inception. Washington said the camp has gone from barely 60 participants in its first year to more than 700 during the three five-day sessions this year. Although the numbers have changed, Washington's philosophy hasn't. "I want to make sure that the philosophy I built this camp on is upheld," she said. "I want the campers to know that we care about them and want to help them and accommodate them in any way." Washington said she was determined to keep her staff as strong as possible. "We strive for individual attention, and we want every coach to know every kid," she added. Lawrence High School coach Gary Hammer, who led his team to the state championship in 1992, is in his third year with the camp. They both help with instruction, and Woodard is a featured speaker. Woodard does not appear at any other camps and does not accept a fee for her appearance. It is the appearances by former Kansas standouts Woodard and Angela Aycock that highlight the camp. "The kids really learn the right way to play," Hammer said. "The girls keep coming back, and that's a tribute to the camp." "It is so great for these kids to see such exceptional role models as these two, who are not only great ball players but exceptional people as well." Washington said. Two of those girls are Candice McFieod and Shelly Anderson, who are attending their fourth and sixth consecutive camps, respectively. Both players said they kept coming back not only because of the knowledge they had gained but because of the friends they had made. "They teach you something new every year," Anderson said. "We get to participate with players who teach us, and it's a lot of fun." "We learn new things, meet new people and have lots of fun," McFleod said. "Plus we get to meet famous people like Coach Washington and Lynette Woodard, which is something I don't usually get to do." Tennis players take the court at NCAA meet Abaroa won his first two rounds and became the first All-American member of the men's team since 1977. The players who advanced to the third round earned All-American titles. Senior Nora Koves competed in the NCAA Women's Tennis Championships in Malibu, Calif., and freshman Enrique Abaroa and the doubles team of juniors Mike Isroff and Reid Slattery traveled to the men's NCAA tournament in Athens, Ga. Kansan staff report The Jayhawks who qualified for the tournaments did so on the strength of their regular-season results and ranking. All-American Cox is fourth at NCAA Abaroa lost in the third round to Chris Pressley of Duke. Kansan staff report On Saturday, Kansas senior Michael Cox ended his jayhawk track career with a fourth-place finish in the 1,500-meter run at the NCAA Track and Field Championships in Knoxville, Tem. Cox's best of 3:40.6 garnered him All-American honors in outdoor track for the first time in his career. Cox, the Big Eight champion in the 1,500-meter run, is now a fourtime All-American. He finished 21st at nationals in cross country last fall and also earned the honor twice during the indoor track season, qualifying in the mile run in both 1983 and 1984. "That was probably one of the highest and deepest quality races in the 1,500 we've had for years," Kansas men's track coach Gary Schwartz said. "To end up fourth was a real accomplishment." Basketball players enjoy new success By Trine Nygaard Kansan sportswriter While most students enjoyed their summer break, Kansas basketball players Angela Aycock and Charisse Sampson were sweating, diving for loose basketballs and being named to America's top amateur teams. Invited by the Olympic Committee, the players competed with other top athletes for selection to the Jones Cup Team, the World University Team or the Olympic Team. Sampson is going to Taiwan to play in the Jones Cup while Aycock was chosen to play at the World University Games in Japan later this summer. Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said that she was proud of her players and attributed their success to their own efforts. Aycock said that she was not surprised that she made the team. "I hoped the committee had seen how hard I had been working," she said. Of her tryout experience, Aycock said she thought it would be intimidating to play against other All-Americans. "But being around them gave me a lot of energy. I wanted to play well and plav hard." she said. Sampson said it was an honor to play with future Olympians. But compared to previous years, she did not have as much fun. Some of the other players had become selfish, she said. "I had to work hard on being loud and showing that I was free when they did not throw the ball to me," Sampson said. Both have great expectations for their teams and their own goals for what they hope to take home. Aycock's future includes a professional basketball career in Europe, while Sampson said that participating now would help her prepare for next season. Looking For a Great Place to Live? Come by and see what Naismith Hall has to offer. Lawrence's premier private student housing option—the exceptional, affordable choice for KU students Quiet study areas Air conditioned Fully furnished and carpeted suites, each with their own bath conditioned Featuring our"Dine Anytime" program that serves terrific meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner. Coed Fitness Center Convenient location next to campus and on the KU bus route Maid service Cable TV in floor lounges and on large screen TV Computer room with Macintosh and IBM computers KANSAS 树树树 Tours available daily including weekends—just drop by!! Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information packet. (1) NAISMITH Hall KAHSAS If you've already signed a lease but are interested-call us and we'll see what we can do. Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 1-800-GOKU ADVERTISING: 864-4358 NEWS: 864-4810 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SECTION A WEATHER PARTLY CLOUDY High 85° Low 67° WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 1995 VOL.104,N0.151 Weather: Page 2A. (USPS 650-640) CAMPUS I am a very nice man. I like to relax and have fun. I love going to the movies. I love going to the beach. I love going to the park. I love going to the restaurant. I love going to the coffee shop. I love going to the gym. I love going to the beach. I love going to the park. I love going to the restaurant. I love going to the coffee shop. I love going to the gym. KU mathematics promotes exodus Math students prefer the attention of a junior college to being taught by their peers. Page 3A KU LIFE Hot summer wax 0 wax New modern rock reviews of the up-and-coming and the established. Page 8B KU Med Center under scrutiny KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway and A.L. Chapman, acting University of Kansas Medical Center executive vice chancellor, announced Friday that they have formed a committee to KU Medical Center investigate allegations about the Med Center's heart transplant program. The 14-member committee, which includes people from inside and outside the Med Center, will complete its work in 60 days and then recommend any needed changes. The first scheduled meeting is June 23. NEWS BRIEFS The heart transplant program was suspended after Kansas City Star articles alleged that the Med Center failed to perform any heart transplants in a 10-month period, despite continuing to accept patients on a waiting list. Kansas coach sues Dick Vitale Compiled from Kansan staff reports and The Associated Press. Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington is preparing to hold court. But this time, the action will not take place at Allen Field House, but in a U.S. District Court in Washington, DC. Washington filed a $10 million defamation suit in October 1994 against Dick Vitale, basketball announcer and writer, as well as a publisher, editor, and writer of the preseason basketball magazine, Dick Vitale's Basketball. A paragraph previewing the Jayhawks in the magazine's 1993-94 edition is the basis of the suit. Joe Smith, director of the Women's Basketball News Service, wrote, "The Jayhawks are loaded with talent with swingman Angela Aycock and guard Charisse Sampson heading the list No court date has been set. Washington said yesterday that she could not comment on the case. "But coach Marian Washington usually finds a way to screw things up. This season will be no different." Student awareness lowers crime risk Crime on Campus Arrests on campus 1992 1993 1994 Drug violations 10 28 17 Weapons violations 0 0 1 Alcohol violations 12 17 3 Operating under the influence 233 136 37 Reported campus crime 1992 1993 1994 Murder 0 0 0 Statutory rape 0 0 0 Sodomy 0 0 2 Sexual battery 4 3 2 Rape 1 0 4 Robbery 3 4 2 Aggravated assault 4 7 5 Burglar 115 209 287 Motor vehicle theft 11 5 7 Theft 477 614 632 By Angle Dasbach Kansan staff writer Noah Musser / KANSAN Students' chances of being violent crime victims has decreased over the past two years at the University of Kansas. Sgt. Rose Rozmirek of the KU Police Department told Awareness, an annual publication for KU faculty, staff members and students, that in 1994, a KU student had a one-in-226 chance of being a crime victim. That's down from a one-in-212 chance in 1993, she said. The reason for the decline was difficult to determine, said Cindy Alliss, KU police officer. She said it was possible that students were becoming more aware of the potential crime situations. "We would like to think that students are listening to our programs that concern crime prevention," Alliss said. Although the chance of a student becoming a crime victim has dropped, crimes against property, such as burglary and theft, are rising. Alliss said that theft usually involved someone leaving their backpack unattended while in the library or other buildings. Campus burglaries occur most when faculty or staff members leave their rooms and offices unlocked, she said. "Students may leave their belongings on a table in the library," she said. "All it takes for your property to be stolen is for you to get up and walk away for a few seconds." There were 1,065 crime victims last year, she said, and 554 of those victims were students. Visitors, faculty, staff and the state of Kansas account for the rest. Even though most of the statistics are accurate, the number of rapes doesn't reflect reality, said Barbara Ballard, director of Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. "Rape is one of the most under-reported crimes in the nation," Ballard said. "The accurate statistic is much higher than anyone could ever quote," she said. There were many reasons rape went unreported, Ballard said, but the prime reason was that rape was a crime of embarrassment and shame. Another statistic that has decreased is the amount of arrests for operating under the influence. Alliss said that last year there was a police department reorganization in addition to budget cuts, which changed the time left for officers to check for drunk drivers. "Some officers have to investigate their own work," she said. "That doesn't leave much time for us to do self-initiative work which includes OUIs." BELOW: A construction worker's lunch sits on piping material. Currently, construction is progressing and on schedule. ABOVE: Construction workers continue work on the second underground level of Budig Hall. Three underground levels will be left empty until funds are raised for their completion. Brian Flink / KANBAR Hoch for tomorrow By Trine Nygaard Kansan staff writer Budig Hall rising from Hoch hole in time for 1996 summer opening What was once the back of one of the oldest campus buildings, formerly known as Hoch Auditorium, is now a big hole in the ground. The construction on what will become Budig Hall is progressing and on schedule, said David Schaecher. KUarchitect. The building was so severely damaged that the sides and the facade facing Jayhawk Boulevard are the only parts of the original Brian Flink / KANSAN Hoch Auditorium, which burned after it was struck by lightning on June 15, 1991, was renamed Budig Hall last spring in honor of former Chancellor Gene Budig. structure that can be preserved. Mark Green, senior project manager for diCarlo Construction, said 90 percent of the interior demolition had been completed. And if the weather stays dry, workers could remove the roof and begin construction of a new one. In order to coordinate the installation of technical equipment - such as cameras, projectors and podiums - with the opening of the new hall, KU is soliciting bids for audiovisual equipment this summer. Schaecher said workers would complete the second underground level next month. Three underground floors will fill the hole behind Hoch. Schaecher estimated that the equipment needed for the building will cost about $900,000. when finished, Budig Hall will be home to 2,000-seat Hoch Auditorium and two smaller auditoriums with 500 seats each. The three underground levels will accommodate a library and technology storage space. They will be completed when KU is able to raise the funds. The rest of the Budig Hall reconstruction is scheduled for completion in late summer 1996. Schaecher said. No time limit has been set for this part of the project. Scientists and their rocks to roll into town By Mark Luce Kansan staff writer Fossils and professors add prestige to KU Two tractor-trailers rolling into Lawrence in the next few weeks will contain about 200,000 fossils, which will give the University of Kansas the second-largest collection of paleobotanic fossils in the country. The fossils, many from Antarctica, are the collection of Thomas Taylor, a widely published paleobotanist and only the second member of the National Academy of Sciences that KU has employed. Taylor, along with Edith Taylor, his wife, recently received joint appointments in the department of The National Academy of Sciences, with its 12,13 members, elects 60 U.S. scientists and 15 foreign associates each year. The academy was founded in 1863 by President Abraham Lincoln to create a pool of scientific leaders who could provide consultation for the government. Members of the academy are widely recognized as some of the finest scientists in the world. botany and at KU's Natural History Museum. Taylor, who was elected to the academy in 1994, said that care for his fossil collection was a major factor in making the move from Ohio State University, where he had taught since 1974. He complemented the history museum's collection. "The people there have a commitment to paleobotany, and I knew Taylor's scientific interests lead him around the globe. In late June, he will travel to Germany to study 400-million-year-old moths as an Alexander von Humboldt fellow. In November he'll return to Antarctica, minus 30-degree temperatures, high winds and 24-hour sunshine. "Not many people know that Antarctica is 5 percent exposed rock," he said, "But it is treacherous work." Edith Taylor, has been working as an adjunct professor of plant biology and geological sciences at Ohio State and as a research scientist at the Byrd Polar Research Center. She said she and her husband were excited about the move to Lawrence. "We really liked the strong museum, and Kansas is well known for its strength in systematic biology," she said. "After the interviews, we realized how nice the people are." Christopher Hauffer, chairman of the botany department, said that Thomas Taylor contacted him in February to inquire about any positions. The next day Hauffer started putting together an offer. "He was interested in coming here," Hauler said. "They were willing to negotiate a multiple-year package we could offer. If he were simply fishing along, I am sure he could have gotten more money." See SCIENTIST, Page 2A The hiring of the Taylors, Haufler said, will help the University tremendously. Chancellor puts his principles on paper Hemenway answers budget blitz with 15-point program By Kimberly Crabtree Kansan staff writer Hemenway's letter includes a list of 15 principles he said his administration would use as a guide when making final budget reductions. In one of his first official acts since taking office, Chancellor Robert Hemenway issued a statement to the University community last week concerning budget cuts. According to the 15 principles included with the chancellor's statement, academic programs, student education and research missions will be sheltered from cuts. Administrators will be forced to reduce the University of Kansas' operating budget by $3 million after the state legislature cut the amount of money available to KU. On June 1, before the statement was issued, faculty salary deferrals and a hiring freeze were enacted. The salary deferrals mean that raises for the 1995-96 school year will not be available until Dec. 18. "The deferrals hurt faculty because we've been asked to donate a chunk of money, and nobody likes being in that position," said Steven Maynard-ny, professor of public administration. "But the ability not to be able to get books from the library is a much worse option." The hiring freeze means any job that is unfilled or becomes vacant will remain so until further notice. However, the cuts will force the administration to scrutinize even those areas for efficiency. Research programs will be forced to seek external funding, and faculty and staff will be forced to take on greater responsibilities, perhaps teaching more classes and doing more administrative work with fewer staff. Students, too, are concerned about how their education will be affected as a result of the cuts. The statement included class-size requirements, setting undergraduate classes to a minimum of 12 students. Graduate classes must enroll at least six students. The policy took effect at the start of the summer session. "Coming from out-of-state, I chose KU because of its high quality of educational programs," said Cassandra Curry, Zionsville, Ind., sophomore. "After all the cuts — cutting here and skimming there — who's to say if I would make the same choice." Hemenway and his administration are seeking suggestions from the University community as to where the budget reductions can be made effectively. Changing KU's open admissions policy is one suggestion. "I had never heard of open admissions before coming to KU," Curry said. "Limiting the number of students would lower class numbers, decrease the needed numbers of GTAs and allow more attention to be given to students who worked to be here." 2A Wednesday. June 14. 1995 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Free concerts spice up lunch hour downtown By Leslie Taylor Special to the Kansan The sounds of blues and jazz are reverberating through downtown this summer as the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Brown Bag Concert series enters its third decade. The shows can be seen every Thursday at noon in front of Mercantile Bank on the corner of Ninth and Massachusetts streets. The Parks and Recreation Department has sponsored the Brown Bag series for more than 20 years, and the concerts have elicited quite a following. Julia Galas, Lawrence resident, said she never misses a show. "These shows are a great idea," Galas said. "My friends and I have been coming out to hear these concerts every Thursday for the past 31/2 years — since I moved here. We truly enjoy them." The series features a different jazz or blues band each week. Duane Peterson, Special Events Supervisor, explained that usually the same bands come back each year. "We do have a waiting list of about 10 other bands who would like to play," he said. Bands scheduled to play during the summer are as follows: River City Six, Thursday; Chuck Berg, June 22; Full Circle, June 29; The Jim Stringer Band, July 6; Lonnie Ray Blues Band, July 13; Tommy Johnson Experiment, July 20; Radio Trio, July 27; Billy Hunsinger and the Lonesome Hobos, August 3; and Debbie and the Mystics, August 10. In the event of rain, the concerts will be moved to Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St. The University Daily Kansan (JSPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. NEW PROFESSORS SCIENTIST: Taylors to call KU new home Continued from Page 1A. "His research experience will help in providing a necessary link between botany and the Natural History Museum," he said. "We instantly became one of the top places to pursue the study of paleobotany." Charles Michener, professor emeritus in etymology, the only other National Academy of Sciences scholar the University and state has ever had, said hiring the Taylors was very important for KU. "It puts us on the map as far as paleobotany is concerned," Michener said. "Many people measure the excellence of a scientific institution on the number of NAS people they have. If you compare ours with neighboring states, there is a striking contrast." He said Missouri has 19 academy members, and Colorado has 25, 12 of whom are at the University of Colorado. arts and sciences, said the hiring of the Taylors was finalized before the hiring freeze, which took effect on June 1. "For KU, this is a very big thing," she said. "We are actually on the low side, and to get scholars like the Taylors is quite a coup for "Many people measure the excellence of a scientific institution on the number ofNAS people they have." Charles Michener professor emeritus in etumology Michener taught at KU from 1948 to 1950 and was elected to the academy in 1965 for his work on the systematics of bees and the evolution of their social behavior. Philip Humphrey, director of the Natural History Museum, said the Taylors' appointments would benefit the museum. us." "He will be the curator of botany for the museum." Humphrey said. "They will have responsibilities for working with graduate and undergraduate students, overseeing the management of exhibits and helping provide museum services to the public." One of those projects involves creating a virtual database that would provide cataloging information for the museum on the Internet, Edith Taylor said. Sally Frost-Mason, associate dean of liberal She said the museum's reputation made their decision easier. "It is good to be part of a museum that will archive our material and preserve our research for future generations." Former KU theatre employee dies at 79 Kansan staff report A 79-year-old former KU worker died of natural causes at Sterling Heights Nursing Center on Saturday. work. Maxine Mercer Norfleet, born Dec. 27, 1915 was the Murphy Hall box office manager for 15 years. Ronald Willis, former director of University Theatre who worked closely with Norfleet, said she was friendly and devoted to her She graduated from Lawrence High School and the University of Kansas. She was a member of Plymouth Congregational Church, Business and Professional Women, American Business Women's Association and the Beta Sigma Phi business sorority. She is survived by her sister, Wanda Carleton, Lawrence. A memorial service will be at 2 p.m. on Friday at the Althaus Chapel of Plymouth Congregational Church. Weather TODAYS TEMPS Atlanta 82 ° • 62 ° Chicago 83 ° • 56 ° Des Moines 84 ° • 62 ° Kansas City 85 ° • 67 ° Lawrence 85 ° • 67 ° Los Angeles 78 ° • 61 ° New York 80 ° • 59 ° Omaha 89 ° • 66 ° St. Louis 84 ° • 68 ° Seattle 65 ° • 53 ° Topeka 86 ° • 67 ° Tulsa 86 ° • 70 ° Wichita 88 ° • 67 ° TODAY Dry and warmer. 85 67 THURSDAY Continued dry and warm. 93 65 FRIDAY Dry and ... you guessed it, warm. 93 67 TODAY Dry and warmer. 8567 THURSDAY Continued dry and warm. 9365 FRIDAY Dry and ... you guessed it, warm. 9367 8567 9365 Source: The Associated Press 9367 FRIDAY Dry and ... you guessed it, warm. 9367 CAMPUS INFORMATION Monday, June 19: Student Fulbright and Graduate Direct Exchange Scholarship information meeting, 4 p.m., Governor's Room, Kansas Union. For more information, contact Hodgie Bricke, 864-4141. Last day to elect Credit/No Credit Last day of Late Enrollment Last day for the $25 late enrollment fee Last day to add/change sections without written permission Last day for 50 percent adjustment/refund for dropping an eight-week course Last day to cancel eight-week course Hours for Watson Library and Anschutz Science Library: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday-Thursday; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday; noon to 5 p. m. Saturday; 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday p.m. Saturday; 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday Enrollment center hours: 8 a.m. to noon, 1 to 5 p.m. Monday- Friday Hours for the Kansas Union and Burge Union Bookstores: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. The Kansas Union will be open on the following Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.: June 17, June 24, July 8, July 15 and July 22. Important phone numbers: tance: From campus phones, dial 0. Off campus, dial 864-2700 KU Police Department (nonemergency): 4-5572 KU parking: 864-PARK Safe Ride: 864-SAFE Watkins Health Center. 864-9500 Appointment desk: 864-9507 KU Weather line: 864-3300 WIDESPREAD PANIC Wed. 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The Power to be your Best at KU. union technology center Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Barge Union * Level3 * 913/864-5690 KU --- CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 14, 1995 3A Jayhawks flock to juco for math class Students voice dissatisfaction with KU course By Sarah Wlese Special to the Kansan When Suzanne Stebor, Quincy, Ill., sophomore, started her collegiate career at the University of Kansas, she never guessed that she'd have a fellow undergraduate teaching her Math 002 class. She said math had never been her strong suit, but she figured that with a decent teacher, she'd be OK. She wasn't one of the lucky ones. She said her teacher didn't seem to Malloy, who struggled to maintain a C, said that he did not get what he needed out of the class. KU know how to teach and seemed unfamiliar with the material, often making mistakes in the example problems. Even with frequent trips to the math lab, her grade inevitably suffered. He said that he went to class for the sole purpose of turning in homework because, at that point, he was teaching himself. JCCC bachelor's degree; master's preferred; yes it least 2 years 10 As far as the math department is concerned, students teaching themselves is not too much to ask, said Andrew Hughes, Lawrence senior and Math 002 group leader. completion of MATH 122 or 116; no degree necessary no 0-3 years yes "These so-called teachers are sophomores and juniors." Stebor said. "Math 002 and 101 are math classes students should be familiar with from high school," said Hughes. "When it comes down to the nity grity, they should be able to teach themselves." 37 37 30 to 1 maximum individual instructors lead course instructor There are standards for the 39 undergraduate group leaders. They must have completed Math 116 or Math 122, which are Calculus II courses. Leaders also must have a "I'm paying out-of-state tuition, and I get this?" took tests at their own pace; a tutoring room was their only source of guidance. Despite the improvements, students like Cyndi Ormsby, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, still have their share of problems. Allowing undergraduate group leaders to teach Math 002, Intermediate Mathematics, and Math 101, Algebra, has annoyed and even outraged KU students. And it's not just the bad math students who are complaining strong command of English. However, requirements don't include a degree, teaching ability or experience. They are paid $4.50 an hour to teach and help in the tutoring room. 16 to 1 maximum department department "When it comes down to the nitty gritty, they should be able to teach themselves." INSTRUCTORS: Required education math! Math major required? Years of experience Use of undergraduates **COURSE SPECIFICATIONS:** Sections offered last semester: - -MATH 002 (KU), MATH 116 (JCCC) 18 - -MATH 101 (KU), MATH 171 (JCCC) 45 John Malloy, St. Louis freshman, said that in high school he took precalculus and calculus and earned strong B's in both classes. Although he was qualified for a more advanced course, Malloy said he enrolled in Math 101 last semester to help ensure a good first-year grade point average. Andrew Hughes Laurence senior, KU math group leader courses to accommodate students at all experience levels, said Marilyn Carlson, director of the Kansas Algebra Program, which consists of Math 002 and 101. Ormsby took three years of high school math but had no idea how big the jump between high school and college math would be. Although she attended Math 002 regularly, did all the homework, utilized the tutoring room and went to study sessions before the tests, she still ended up with a low C. The program is supposed to provide a carefully structured class with a teacher. The program's class sizes are limited to 16 so that students can ask the group leader questions in an informal setting. yes no This strategy isn't perfect, but it is an improvement. Before the implementation of the program, remedial math was a self-paced study. Students would enroll in Math 002 and 101 and not attend an actual class. Instead, they did homework and "He expects us to know so much," she said of her group leader. "He's a nice guy, but he's not a teacher." Student-teacher ratio Who creates tests, quizzes? Who creates final exams? yes yes There is an inexpensive alternative to KU's program, and it's about 45 minutes away: Johnson County Community College. The differences between the KU program and JCCC's math program are hard to miss. At JCCC, all the math teachers have at least a bachelor's degree in mathematics and two years of teaching experience, said Joe DiCostanzo, director of mathematics at JCCC. RESOURCES: Math lab/tutoring Open Saturday JCCC's comparable courses are Math 116 Intermediate Algebra and Math 171 College Algebra. The courses cover basically the same material. And credit for both JCCC classes is easily transferred to KU. Carlson said that having students take lower-level math classes at a community college was not seen as a threat. It was a triumph. KU math professors then could spend more time teaching upper-level courses. JCCC employs many highly educated, experienced teachers and charge $112 for a three-hour math course. KU charges $273 for essentially the same course. The disparity stems from the differing missions of the two institutions. As a community college, JCCC provides more personal attention than KU, DiCostanzo said. "We're clearly focused on freshman/sophomore level courses," he said. As a community college in one of the nation's most affluent counties, JCCC operates with local tax dollars and doesn't compete with other institutions for state funding. KU, on the other hand, is a research university. That means that many professors are hired to do research. Many KU professors teach just one or two classes. Much of the teaching responsibility falls to graduate teaching assistants and some undergraduate group leaders, DiCostanzo said. And KU doesn't get its money from Douglas County. The Kansas Legislature determines KU's budget each year. Even with the statistics in JCCC's favor, the real litmus test is students' reactions to JCCC courses. Amy Miller, a KU junior who spent last semester at JCCC, said the learning environment is different from KU's. "The teachers at JCCC are more willing to help you and work with you," Miller said. Noah Musser/KANSAN With that kind of attention, many university students end up at JCCC to fulfill their math requirements, DiCostanzo said. then gave me the assignments." "One day I missed two of my morning classes because I was sick. That afternoon, both teachers called me and asked if I was OK and "in our summer program, the overwhelming majority of College Algebra students are from KU, Kansas State and UMKC," DiCostanzo said. "Most of them are juniors and seniors who put off taking it or dropped it at their university." DiCostanzo added that the department also had a significant number of KU students during the fall and spring semesters. Back at KU, though Malloy never considered himself math-anxious, he said the community college route would have been a better choice. "I came up here completely uninformed about how the math program was set up," Malloy said. "I just assumed they had professors teaching the classes. I never imagined I'd be paying for an undergrad as a teacher." Community college offers alternative By Kimberly Crabtree Kansan Staff Writer Nightmare? Perhaps. Summertime means vacation, sun, and algebra. But not for University of Kansas students who are studying away their summertime freedom by taking math classes at Johnson County Community College. It is no secret the KU math department is not exactly user-friendly in the eyes of students. As a result, many students find taking the math equivalents at this nearby community college the easiest option for satisfying math requirements. "The people at Johnson County who are teaching know how to teach and most have been doing so for awhile, instead of a 20-year-old who may know the subject really well, but either does not know how to teach or is just not interested," said Rachel Brown, Lawrence junior, who is enrolled in College Algebra at Johnson County Community College. Before heading for a community college, most students attempt a math class at KU. For some, the long study hours mixed with frustration is just not worth it. Pam Dishman, Homewood, IL., junior is one such student. "I went to the tutor room a couple of times for help, but that did little good because they are understaffed," she said. "Finally, I just took an equivalent to Math 105 and transferred it." Jennifer Duffield, Olathe junior, agreed. "When I was enrolled in it, the class was self-paced and the tutors were so busy that it was difficult to get much help," said Duffield, who is also currently taking College Algebra at Johnson County Community College. "Johnson County offers smaller classes and more help." francis sporting goods, inc. 843-4191 731 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 66044 A LIGHTWEIGHT SHOE FOR AN UNLIGHTWEIGHT WORKOUT. NIKE 1920 Air Sculpt II. 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Now, the budget must be permanently reduced. Hemenway outlines 15 principles for Lawrence-campus budget cuts in his letter, and they are good starting points. However, in his first written address to the University. Hemenway said he wanted the campus to be stronger after the cuts. This is a good goal, but the campus wouldn't be better after budget cuts. Improvements are too optimistic, especially after the drastic hiring freeze recently put in effect. The 12th principle makes sense. It calls for a new Students should remain the top priority in the University's fiscal future. BUDGET: Hemenway addresses issue of cuts Page 1A. task force to search for more efficient ways to run the University. Budget cuts are similar to the doctor's scalpel. Few want to go under the knife, but sometimes a patient has no choice. It could happen when student importance conflicts with fewer teachers. This would mean larger classes, and therefore, less individual, intellectual interaction. Examining the administration's efficiency also is positive, and keeping the students as a top priority is important. But let's hope that Hemenway holds fast to the students, especially if two of his 15 principles should clash. If Hemenway is careful and keeps the principles he has set, KU's budget wounds may heal with as little pain as possible. GERRY FEY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD THE ISSUE: FLAG BURNING Freedom of speech a burning issue The Supreme Court has ruled that burning the flag is protected by the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of speech and expression. And it should stay protected. Hatch says the U.S. flag is a symbol of our society's ideas and of the history that has supported the growth and power of those ideas. This is true and is precisely why flag burning should be protected. But Sen. Orrin Hatch, RUtah and Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, is trying to change that by bringing the flag amendment to the Senate. This addition to our Constitution would make flag desecration a federal offense. Speech is nothing more than the use of symbols to convey meaning. The flag does this inherently, as Hatch has said, and so does its burning. The framers of our Constitution did not intend for the First Amendment to protect mainstream speech. It was meant to insure that those on the Desecrating the U.S. flag should not be limited by another Constitutional amendment. Protection of expression is needed. fringe of society could express their thoughts without fear of government retribution. Libel, obscenity and words meant to incite violence are not protected. However, desecrating the flag does not fit into those criteria. It may offend, but it also makes a point. Certainly the flag stands for freedom and democracy, but to some it also represents an oppressive society that has subjugated women and minorities and has persecuted those who refused to conform to an accepted ideal. Flag burning illustrates these beliefs in a vivid way. But some Republicans don't understand what the flag truly represents. If they actually believed in the freedom behind the flag, they would stop trying to limit the First Amendment by prohibiting flag burning. KANSAN STAFF GERRY FEY Editor ASHLEY MILLER Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Technology coordinator Editors J. J.COOK Editorial...Jamie Munn Campus...Jenni Carlson ...Virginia Margheim Photo...Jay Thornton Design...David Johnson Graphics...Noah Musser Copy Chief...Melinda Dia JAT COOK Business manager MATT SHAW Retail sales manager JAY STEINER Sales and marketing adviser PAT BOYLE Accountant Business Staff Campus mgr ...Courtney Bea Regional mgr ...Jody Groton National mgr ...J.J. Cook Special Sections mgr ..Stephanie Utley Production mgr ..Anne Loeper Creative director ..Anne Laurenze Classified mgr ..Heather Valler Matt Hood / KANSAN Classified mgr ...Heather Valler SESAME STREET MEETS WILD KINGDOM GOP CUTS TO PUBLIC TELEVISION HOOD UDK 195 Can you tell children how to get to Sesame Street? Not without funds Cutting federal funding to the Public Telecommunications Facilities Program, forcing public television to support itself through commercialism and criticizing "elitist" programs are confusing prospects to me. It all comes down to this -- attacking pubic television is like attacking my childhood, and eliminating funds means denying future children the joys I remember to this day. The year I was born, 1970, is much more important for another birth. It was the year that Sesame Street began, bringing numbers, the alphabet and social skills to all American children. Few Generation Xers can forget cozy up to the television with an after-school snack. There, Kernit the Frog sparked my interest in journalism with his news flashes about Little Red Riding Hood and the Boy Who Cried Wolf. JAMIE MUNN Counting to 12 was easy when you could sing along to the clip of a pinball machine bumping numbers along its psychedelic path. Sesame Street even taught young children that women could fix their STAFF COLUMNIST own cars. I just wish that when my auto breaks down now, I could get out, open the hood and adjust the letter "r" until the car purred back to life. Guy Smiley, the game show host, is still a better alternative for children than the flood of trashy talk and game shows offered now. I hope grouchy politicians who want to balance the federal budget, such as Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, will be foiled too when they try and cut these educational programs. nantly Republican Congress should support a children's society filled with guns but not educational television. Speaking of TV garbage, you always could count on Oscar the Grouch and his trashy style to try and ruin things for everyone. Fortunately, he always was foiled by kind-hearted men, women, children and other puppets. It seems ironic that a predomi- And public television is not limited to children's programming like Mister Rogers, The Electric Company and Viva Alegre. Mom and Dad were right next to me watching public television too. We would gather around the preremote-control set lured by the trumpet theme of National Geographic. As the shrinking golden square hypnotized us, we then watched Jacques Coutesteau take us on a journey into the ocean's depths. Learning about the wonders of watery sea creatures and treasures was captivating to all ages. It is my fear that my children, when I eventually plan to have them, will miss these stables of educational entertainment. How will I explain to them that Sesame Street was once sponsored by the letter "E" and the number "10," not Mighty Biker Death Machines. They might miss Sesame Street's multicultural influence of learning basic words in Spanish and world music. They might miss the sand bin of imagination in Fred Rogers' back yard. They may never develop a respect for underwater and safari nature. Many in my generation would not be able to support the kind of programming we have enjoyed if Congress cuts public television funding. It's difficult to think about supporting public television at a time when most of us have student loans, car payments and Ramen noodles in the cupboard. For those of us who can afford to pledge money for programming, go for it. But if like me you have a limited budget, let your congressional representatives know that public television is a valuable part of American history and culture. Calmly and politely call Sen. Bob Dole at 1-202-224-6521 and Sen. Nancy Kassebau at 1-202-224-4774 or fax them your opinions at 1-202-224-8952 and 1-202-224-3514 respectively. My hope is that public television funding doesn't disappear à la peanut butter sandwiches. Jamie Munn is an Enlid, Okla., graduate student in journalism. Ambler learns by easing down road of life By nature, I am a pedestrian almost any circumstance, almost any distance. In ferocious rainstorms, during pleasant spring days, despite boiling sun or gently falling雪, I put on my worn out sneakers and walk. I've been walking since I was very young, yet most of my life has been spent finding ways around it. Tricycles then bicycles, buses then cars were all ways to save me from having to put one foot in front of the other. Cars always have had a somewhat adversarial relationship with me. And after my second bike was stolen, I resorted to the last available vehicle: my feet. This campus encourages walking, though. The bus system is omnipresent, but standing in the cold, waiting to be packed like a sardine, soon loses its appeal. I still drive when necessary — for ISAAC BELL STAFF COLUMNIST groceries or the occasional trip home for free laundry and food — but I've learned something from strolling through life. The world is too big to worry about individuals. This is a society that works in terms of billions, with numbers overriding names and evidence outweighing dreams A constant flood of advertisements, information, money and opinions overwhelm each and every one of us, especially a certain person with old shoes walking down the sidewalk. And yet there is an intimacy when walking — a harmony of ground to foot to leg to body that creates a song of being. Questions and worries are always distant. All that has substance is the stride and the surface. Daydreams are background; details the surroundings. In a car you might never notice the kitten playing under a porch or the flowers blooming. I create time for myself when I walk. If I'm late there is no way of going 55 mph down Massachusetts Street, I learn patience and relaxation. I think in terms of footsteps when considering travel time: five minutes to class, 10 minutes to go downtown, a half hour to my friends' homes. And I take this time to consider where I am and what I'm doing, what I'll say and what I'll do. Cars move past me. It's odd how some people can't deal with the sight of someone just ambling. I've But I'm in no hurry. I'm enjoying myself, and these people always disappear quickly while I keep walking. been honked at, yelled at and bumped by a car. Sometimes I wish I wasn't one of the only ones out there. There are others, such as the infamous "Chalk Prophet," whom I sometimes pass — me on my journey, he on his. Or the exercisers, who are there simply to feel better about their bodies and themselves. Perhaps this is nothing more than rambling to you, 500 words about something pointless. Then again, I am there to exercise my being, and who is to say which is more of a waste of time? B beored if you wish. I'm still walking along. isaac Bell is a Lawrence student in Engl. lish. 98 subtle ways to end your dead relationship (Number one.) Emmie Hsu/KANSAN 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 letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the absolute right to edit, cut to length or outright reject all submissions. For any questions, call Jamie Munn, editorial page editor, at 864-4810. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 14, 1995 5A Acting dean 'good for business' By Luby Montano-Laurel Kansan staff writer Thomas Sarowski, a KU distinguished lecturer, has been named acting dean of the School of Business. Sarowski, who joined the School of Business faculty in 1991, teaches graduate-level management information systems classes. Bruce Bublitz, director of accounting and information systems, said that Sarowski was well respected among students and colleagues. "He likes to make things better," Bublitz said. "He has been a leader in the KU business school, and he is a person who enjoys making changes." Charles Krider, associate dean of business, said that Sarowski was an excellent appointment not only because he had experience in management, but also because he had good knowledge of the school. Mark Daubert, former graduate student, said that he enjoyed Sarowski's Systems Analysis and Design class last semester. "He will do an excellent job, and I am looking forward to working with him," Krider said. "Our faculty should have a good year." "He is a very good business lecturer," Daubert said. "He is very concerned about the well-being of the students, and that is something that you can't easily find among professors nowadays. Professor Sarowski is one who will go an extra mile for his students." Before he came to the University of Kansas, Sarowski worked with Arthur Andersen & Co., an accounting firm, and with Andersen Consulting, a computer consulting firm. Sarowski received a bachelor's degree in civil engineering from the Detroit Institute of Technology in 1963 and a master's degree in industrial administration from Purdue University in 1964. McDonald's may fry downtown image By Jenny Wiedeke Kansan staff writer The golden arches have been lit, and McDonald's is open for business in downtown Lawrence. The store, at 911 Massachusetts St., opened for business April 27 and is owned locally by Marilyn and Tom Dobski, who own a total of nine McDonald's. Downtown Lawrence Inc. is an organization that oversees downtown shops. The downtown McDonald's is the fifth in the Lawrence area; their other stores are in surrounding communities. "It adds an additional dimension to downtown that will hopefully draw more people to the area," said Lisa Blair, administrator for Downtown Lawrence Inc. Some employees of downtown shops weren't as enthusiastic. "I was surprised that it opened." said Debbie Scheetz, manager of the Mass Street Dell, 941 Massachusetts St. "Downtown Lawrence Inc. has worked so hard to keep downtown the way it is." Downtown mostly is comprised of locally owned shops and restaurants. Smaller restaurants, like the Mass Street Deli, have been forced to compete with the better-known McDonald's. "We have had fewer junior high and high school kids since McDonald's opened," said Ginny Gent, manager of the downtown Pizza Hut. 934 Massachusetts St. Pizza Hut, the other corporate restaurant downtown, also has noticed a slight drop in business. Scheetz said she hadn't noticed too much of a drop in the deli's business. "We have a completely different menu than McDonald's," Scheetz said. "It's apples and oranges." But Scheetz realizes that despite different menus, McDonald's does add more competition to the downtown area. "People will eat somewhere," Scheetz said. "McDonald's just throws one more choice in the pot." Blair, of Downtown Lawrence Inc., sees the new choice as a positive addition for downtown patrons and employees. "There are a lot of people who have short lunch breaks who don't have time to go to a restaurant," Blair said. "McDonald's is perfect for those people who don't have much time." The long-term economic effects of the McDonald's are yet to be seen, but Scheetz remains realistic about the situation. "There are so many new restaurants in Lawrence," Scheetz said. "Some will eventually have to get weeded out. It's a cycle that only the best survive." DANA'S Baking Thurs. June 15, 2024 BANA LITE TIME FROZEN YOGURT ALL FLAVORS 198 EA. QUALITY CHEWD JR. FROZEN POPS SOLD IN BOX OF 24 5¢ EA. FRITO LAY, LAY'S OR RUFFLES POTATO CHIPS 14 OZ. BAG 188 EA. REGULAR NET WATER BAKED TOSTITOS, 5.8 OZ. DG TAYSTEE D'ITALIANO BREAD REC. OR LIGHT 88¢ EA. MADISON'S HARVEST CRISPS, TRISCUT OR MR. PHIPPS 5.8 OZ. TO 2.50 OZ. 168 EA. DIET PEPSI DR. PEPPER, DIET DR. PEPPER OR PEPSI 18 PE. PARTY PACK 198 WITH WAID. IN RESULT WHILE SUPPLIES LAST WE ACCEPT COOPERSHIP, WICKY CUSTOMS & MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS OPEN 24 HOURS EVERY DAY LITE TIME FROZEN YOGURT ALL FLAVORIS 198 EA. WIN A TRIP TO SEE PEARL JAM IN CONCERT IN MILWAUKEE, WI. ON JUNE 24TH REGISTER JUNE 17TH FROM 1-3 PM AT CHECKERS DAILY SPECIAL BANANAS 19¢ LB. LITE TIME FROZEN YOGURT ALL FLAVORS 198 EA. BUDWEISER BUD LIGHT OR BUDWEISER BEER 1199 24 PACK, 12 OZ. CARD LIMIT 1 ADDITIONAL BUILDINGS BUDWEISER BEER 11 OZ. CARD 70% LEAN FRESH GROUND BEEF ECONOMY PACK 5 LB. PRG. OR LARGER 69¢ LB. FRESH CRISP HEAD LETTUCE LARGE SIZE 58¢ LB. BONE-IN BEEF RIB ROAST OR STEAK ECONOMY PACK LARGE END 258 LB. QUALITY CHEKD JR. FROZEN POPS SOLD IN BOX OF 24 5¢ EA. FRITO LAY, LAV'S OR RUFFLES POTATO CHIPS 14 OZ. BAG 188 EA. FRESH SWETE CORN FULL EARS 198 DOZEN WHOLE CRYOVAC BEEF BRISKET 6-8 LB. AVG. 89¢ LB. FRESH SWEET CALIFORNIA NECTARINES 78¢ LB. FRESH LEAN COUNTRY TOOL OUT FROM THE PONK BUTT OR FULL SLAB SPARE RIBS ECONOMY PACK 128 LB. TAYSTEE D'ITALIANO BREAD REG. OR LIMIT 88¢ EA. BONELESS BEEF SIRLOIN TIP STEAK OR ROAST ECONOMY PAK 128 LB. BONELESS BEEF CHICK STEAK ECONOMY PAK 128 LB. FARMLAND WHOLE BONELESS HAM 595 EA. SWEET RED ONIONS 33¢ LB. MILD MEDIUM YELLOW ONIONS 19¢ SPLIT FRYER BREASTS ECONOMY PAK 98¢ LB. NARISCO CHRISEPS, TRISCUT OR MR. PHIPPS 5.8 OZ. TO 9.5 OZ. 168 EA. FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED CROISSANTS 4 CT. PKG 98¢ EA. BONELESS BEEF TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ECONOMY PAK 198 LB. T-BONE STEAK ECONOMY PKG $398 EA. FROM THE DELI SUCKER OR SHaved CONNEED BEEF, PASTRAMA OR ROAST BEEF 269 LB. BABY SWISS APPROX. $288 CHEESE MOOSE BROTHER'S PEPPERONI PIZZA LARGE 19 SIZE 398 EA. DIET PEPSI, DR. PEPPER, DIET DR. PEPPER OR PEPSI 28 P.C. PARTY PAK 198 WITH PAINT, WHILE SUPPLIES LAST RED RIPE WATERMELON 20 LB. AVG. 268 EA. FAIRMONT-GULLETTE LITE ICE CREAM 1/2 QAL. SO, CTR. ALL FLAVORS 98¢ EA. FROM THE DELI COLESHAW, MACARONI SALAD OR POTATO SALAD ECONOMY PACK 68¢ LB. FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED CHERRY PIE 178 EA. WELCOME FOOD STAMP WI. VOUCHERS & MANUAL LUNCH QUOTES OPEN 24 HOURS EVERY DAY Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE VIDEO SPECIAL 3 MOVIES/GAMES 3 DAYS $3.00 NEW RELEASES NOT INCLUDED PRICE EFFECTIVE JUNE '95 Budweiser Budweiser BUD LIGHT OR BUDWEISER BEER 1199 24 PACK 12 OZ CASE LIMIT 1 FRESH SWEET CORN FULL EARS 198 DOZEN YAC FRESH CRISP HEAD LETTUCE LARGE SIZE 58¢ FAIRMONT-GILLETTE LITE ICE CREAM 1/2 GAL. 90, CTR. ALL FLAVORS 98¢ EA. FRESH LEAN COUNTRY STYLE CUT FROM THE PORK BUTT OR FULL SLAB SPARE RIBS ECONOMY PACK 128 LB. RED RIPE WATERMELON 20 LB. AVG. 2 68 EA. Oilseed Oilseed SWEET RED ONIONS 33¢ LB. MILD MEDIUM YELLOW ONIONS 19¢ BONELESS BEEF TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ECONOMY PAK 198 LB. T-BONE $9.98 MARKETS ECONOMY PACK LARGE END 258 LB. BOWELLESS BEET BIRD EYE ROAST OR STEAK ECONOMY PRICE $ 3.88 LB. FROM THE DELI SICKED OR SHAVED CORNED BEEF, PASTRIAM OR ROAST BEEF 269 LB. ECOCOND PACK BABY SWISW CHEESE $2.88 4 LB. WHEEL SPLIT FRYER BREASTS ECONOMY PAK 98¢ LB. BONeless SMOOTH FRYER BREASTS ECONOMY PAK $2 19 LB. FROM THE DELI COLESLAW MACARONI SALAD OR POTATO SALAD ECONOMY PACK 68¢ LB. Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE MOOSE BROTHERS PEPPERONI PIZZA LARGE 16 SHEET 398 EA. FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED CHERRY PIE "F" 20 oz. 178 EA. "Universidad once 1993 8 EA. A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Massachusetts 832-8228 Red Lyon Tavern VIDEO SPECIAL 3 MOVIES/GAMES 3 DAYS $3.00 NEW RELEASES NOT INCLUDED PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE '85 GAMES THOUGH FRID SAT SUN FRI SAT FRI SUN 80 74 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 CHRISTIE'S TOY BOX WHERE THE FUN BEGINS! "Lieutenant Commander, 1983 - Sexy Lingerie Coed Naked - Unusual Greeting Cards AMRICA'S CHRISTIANITY MUSEUM 1909-2004 - Gag Gifts - Sensuous Oils & Lotions - Hilarious Party Games Don't forget to ask about the Free Condom Give-Away. - Current Monthly Magazines - Coed Naked & Big Johnson T-shirts & Hats Big Johnson Rent 1 movie at regular price & get a 2nd movie for 1¢ EVERYDAY! 1206 W.23rd.Lawrence.Ks 842-4266 Come Party on the Patio! 254 Draws $1.00 Margaritas Wednesdays at Dos! DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE 111 New Hampshire - 631-7258 Attending K.U. COMFORTABLE & AFFORDABLE Living COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS We offer many great locations and floor plans... custom studios, 1,2,3 and 4 bedroom apartments & Townhomes --- Campus Place 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 Hanover Place 14th & Mass.841-1212 Regents Court 19th & Mass. • 749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida·841-5255 - custom furnishings ·designed for privacy ·energy efficient ·many built-ins ·affordable rates ·private parking ·locally owned ·laundry facilities* Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas·749-2415 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226 *close to campus *locally managed *close to shopping *central a/c *on site managers* *pool* *microwaves* *available some locations* Stop by and view these great apartments! 自 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY MASTERCRAFT Professional Management and Maintenance Company --- 6A Wednesday, June 14, 1995 Keep it clean. Keep it clean. IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... for a confidential, caring friend call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING Girthright mon 1.3 - 6.8 tues 6-8 wed 10-10 thurs 6-8 friday 1-9 843-4821 • 1246 Kentucky DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Imports & Domestics* *Machine Shop Service* *Parts Departments* 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street Keep it clean. IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... for a confidential, caring friend call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING HOURS: mon. 1-3 6-8 tues. 6-8 wed. 1-3 thurs. 6-8 fr. 1-3 Birthright 843-4821 • 1240 Kentucky DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Imports & Domestics* *Machine Shop Service* *Parts Departments* 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street We sell the sports equipment you want to buy! The best new & used equipment around We BUY, SELL, TRADE, & CONSIGN quality used sports equipment. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Mass. phone 841-PLAY Get this. GIANT ACAPULCO $291.95 Enjoy this. Rick's Bike Shop 916 Massachusetts 841-6642 MON-THUR 10AM TO 8PM Largest Beauty Supply Selection in the Midwest! Professional advice from professionals. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK. VISIT OUR SALON FOR A NEW LOOK BEAUTY WAREHOUSE® & HAIRZONE® of Lawrence KMS MAGE Broad SEBASTIAN OPI SCRUPLES LANZA REDKEN NEXUS PAUL MITCHELL TIGI JOICO SORBIE. Judler R. BODY DRENCH AVEDA® $200 OFF ($15 purchase minimum, excludes sale items) BEAUTY WAREHOUSE Hours: M-F 9-8 Sat. 9-6 Sun Noon-6 530 West 23rd exp. 7/7/95 841-5885 UDK 垒球 篮球 棒球 健身房 We BUY, SELL, TRADE, & CONSIGN quality used sports equipment. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Mass. phone 841-PLAY Keep it clean. IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW... for a confidential, caring friend call us. We are here to listen and talk with you. FRESH PREGNANCY TESTING Birthright 843-4821 • 1240 Kentucky DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" *Imports & Domestics* *Machine Shop Service* *Parts Departments* 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street We sell the sports equipment you want to buy! The best new & used equipment around We BUY, SELL, TRADE, & CONSIGN quality used sports equipment. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Mass. phone 841-PLAY Get this. GIANT ACAPULCO $291.95 Enjoy this. Rick's Bike Shop 916 Massachusetts 841-6642 MON-THUR 10AM TO 8PM Largest Beauty Supply Selection in the Midwest! Professional advice from professionals. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK. VISIT OUR SALON FOR A NEW LOOK BEAUTY WAREHOUSE & HAIRZONE of Lawrence KMS MAGE Braak SEBASTIAM OPI SCRUPLES RANZA REDKEN NEXUS PAUL MITCHELL TIGI JOICO SORBIE BODY DRENCH AVEDA $200 OFF ($15 purchase minimum, excludes sale items) BEAUTY WAREHOUSE Hours: M-F 9-11 Sat. 9-4 Sun Noon-6 530 West 23rd exp. 7/7/95 841-5885 UDK KANSAS CITY'S River Valley Festival A Celebration of Blues, Brew and Barbecue SUPERIOR CHEVROLET KY 102 FRIDAY JUNE 16 FREDDY JONES BAND JIMMY THACKERY ... DRIVERS FAT POSSUM MISSISSIPPI JUKE JOINT CARAVAN DRUD THOMPSON, JUJUOR MIGRUO, R.P. BUROSIDE KFKF 94FM SATURDAY JUNE 17 CONFEDERATE RAILROAD WEST WIND CHUBBY CARRIER BAYOU SWAMP BAND BON TON SOUL ACCORDIAN BAND GREAT MUSIC•40 MICROBREWED BEERS•KC'S BEST FOOD FRIDAY, JUNE 16 + SATURDAY, JUNE 17 4PM TO MIDNITE Micro Beer Samples from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Each night! NEW TIMES BOATMEN'S* TICKETS AT MICKE MASTER Including 14 Yrs. Blockbuster Music, Streamable & Purchase Records, Record Town and all Ticketing Ticket Centers. CHARGE-BYPHONE: (819) 821-3330 Get this. GIANT ACAPULCO $291.95 Enjoy this. Rick's Bike Shop 916 Massachusetts 841-6642 MON-THUR 10AM TO 8PM Largest Beauty Supply Selection in the Midwest! Professional advice from professionals. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK. VISIT OUR SALON FOR A NEW LOOK BEAUTY WAREHOUSE® & HAIRZONE® of Lawrence KMS ABBA S MAGE Brookhill SEBASTIAN OPI SCRUPLES Lariza REDKEN NGX US PAUL MITCHELL TIGI JOICO SORBIE. Judie C. BODY DRENCH AVEDA® $2'00 OFF ($15 purchase minimum, excludes sale items) BEAUTY WAREHOUSE Hours: M-F 9-8 Sat. 9-6Sun Noon-6 530 West 23rd exp. 7/7/95 841-5885 UDK Hot time keeps Watkins hoppin' Doctor shares safety tips for heat and sun By Robin Sorensen Special to the Kansasan Summer means new illnesses and injuries not seen by employees at Watkins Memorial Health Center during the regular school year. "We see a lot of people with heat-related injuries like heat exhaustion and sunburn," said Janine Gracy, coordinator of health promotion and education. Warmer temperatures and high humidity can lead to excessive sweating and dehydration, she said. Extreme dehydration causes heat exhaustion or heat stroke, a condition marked by disorientation and even loss of consciousness, said Randall Rock, physician at Watkins. Gracy said a heat stroke could be life threatening or could cause brain damage. The person's body temperature gets extremely high, and he or she can't sweat to get cool. "A person can go from being uncomfortable because of the heat to being nonfunctioning, and it is important to take the necessary steps to make them comfortable again," Rock said. A person suffering from heat exhaustion or heat stroke should be cooled down and given small amounts of water frequently. If the person is unconscious or unable to keep fluids down, it is important to seek medical attention, Rock said. To avoid heat exhaustion and heat stroke, students should drink plenty of water or juices and avoid extreme physical activity during the hottest hours of the day, Gracy said. She said that drinking alcohol or caffeinated beverages could increase the risk of dehydration. Sunburn is another problem that frequently plagues students in the summer. Rock said a sunburn was actually a first-degree burn. To soothe a sunburn, Rock recommended using over-the-counter skin moisturizers, taking Advil or Tylenol and avoiding hot showers. While sunburns are uncomfortable for a few days, they present a greater risk for the long term, Rock said. As few as three significant sunburns throughout a lifetime can lead to cancer. "It is important to always wear sunscreen when you're going to be outside," Gracy said. REV UP YOUR Grocery Carts! Shop at Alvin’s IGA and receive an entry for your weekly Tuesday drawing. Come in on Tuesdays to check your number. If it matches, YOU’RE A WINNER! If no one claims the prize by closing time on Tuesday, we add $100 to the pot for next week. Alvin’s IGA No purchase necessary. One FREE entry per person per week and then receive another entry each time you make a purchase. D KANSAS CITY'S River Valley Festival A Celebration of Blues, Brew and Barbeque SUPERIOR CHEVROLET KANSAS CITY'S River Valley Festival A Celebration of Blues, Brew and Barbecue SUPERIOR CHEVROLET KY 102 FRIDAY JUNE 16 FREDDY JONES BAND JIMMY THACKERY ... DRIVERS FAT POSSUM MISSISSIPPI JUKE JOINT CARAVAN CAUD THOMPSON, JUNOR KIMGROUCH, R.L. BURNSIDE KFKF 94FM COMMERCIAL PARTIES GREAT MUSIC • 40 MICROBREWED BEERS • KC'S BEST FOOD FRIDAY, JUNE 16 + SATURDAY, JUNE 17 4PM TO MIDNITE Micro Beer Samples from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. each night! SATURDAY JUNE 17 CONFEDERATE RAILROAD WEST WIND CHUBBY CARRIER & LILY BAYOU SWAMP BAND BON TON SOUL ACCORDIAN BAND NEW TIMES BOATMEN'S' TICKETS AT: TICKETMASTER Including N.Y. Vee, Blockmaster Music, Breaks & Permit Records, Record Team and at Tickettner Ticket Centers. CHARGE BY PHONE: (819) 921-3330 Tickets subject to convenience charge. CASH ONLY at Trade Center. REV UP YOUR Grocery Carts! YOU CAN WIN $600 OR MORE IN GROCERIES! Shop at Alvin's IGA and receive an entry for your weekly Tuesday drawing. Come in on Tuesdays to check your number. If it matches, YOU'RE A WINNER! If no one claims the prize by closing time on Tuesday, we add $100 to the pot for next week. Alvin's IGA No purchase necessary. One FREE entry per person per week and then receive another entry each time you make a purchase. KY 102 A KINGSTON CITY BY FRIE BOCK & ROLL FRIDAY JUNE 16 FREDDY JONES BAND JIMMY THACKERY DRIVERS FAT POSSUM MISSISSIPPI JUKE JOINT CARAVAN CAUD THOMPSON, JUNIER HIMBROUGH, R.C. BUROSIDE KFKF 94FM (Country Availability) SATURDAY JUNE 17 CONFEDERATE RAILROAD WEST WIND CHUBBY CARRIER AT THE BAYOU SWAMP BAND BON TON SOUL ACCORDIAN BAND GREAT MUSIC•4D MICROBREWED BEERS•KC'S BEST FOOD FRIDAY, JUNE 16 + SATURDAY, JUNE 17 4PM TO MIDNITE Micro Beer Samples from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. each night! NEW TIMES BOATMEN'S* TICKETS AT: TICKETMASTER Including 10 Yrs. Blackwater Music, Greystoke & Perpignare Records, Record Town and all Tickmaster Ticket Centers. CHARGE-BY-PHONE: (819) 931-3330 Tickets subject to convenience charge. CASH ONLY at Ticket Center. REV UP YOUR Grocery Carts! YOU CAN WIN $600 OR MORE IN GROCERIES! Shop at Alvin's IGA and receive an entry for your weekly Tuesday drawing. Come in on Tuesdays to check your number. If it matches, YOU'RE A WINNER! If no one claims the prize by closing time on Tuesday, we add $100 to the pot for next week. Alvin's IGA No purchase necessary. One FREE entry per person per week and then receive another entry each time you make a purchase. 1 Alvin's IGA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 14, 1995 7A Some jobs at KU are done in the sun By Sean Demory Special to the Kansan Job opportunities exist on campus, however, for those students who want to stay at the University of Kansas. Many students use the summer to step away from academia and into the job market. Job listings at the center,110 Burge Union,range from library work to groundskeeping. Kip Grosshans, director of personnel for the department of student housing, said that several custodial and maintenance jobs were unfilled. Because of a reduced demand for employees during the summer session, far fewer students are working for housing's major employers — James Henry, associate director of the University Placement Center, said that fewer departmental jobs are available during the summer due to downsizing. The Department of Facilities Operations, which maintains the property at KU, has a constant demand for student workers. Bence Williams, assistant director of administration and personnel, said the demand for students was as great during the summer as it was during the rest of the year, although more students were needed for grounds maintenance. food service and desk labor. Renee Semarge, Manhattan senior and a former tutor for Supportive Educational Services, said that her summer tutoring job was one of the best she had had. "The people were really nice; the work was important; and I felt that I was making a difference," Semarge said. Interested students can call Facilities Operations at 864-5596 or the Department of Student Housing at 864-4560 for more details about job openings. New shelter to offer animal amenities By John Collar Special to the Kansan A feline celebrity will be in Lawrence today to scrape up a few paws of dirt at the groundbreaking of the Lawrence Humane Society's new $600,000 animal shelter. Finicky television star Morris the Cat will meet the public after the 11:15 a.m. ceremony, which will take place next to the current shelter at 1805 E. 19th St. The Chicago resident is owned by Heinz Pet Products, which is donating $4,000 to the shelter's construction; 9-Lives Cat Food, a division of Heinz, is donating $1,000. The 4-year-old, 11-pound tabby has been appearing in 9-Lives Cat Food commercials for less than a year. He is the third cat to star in the ads, which began in 1968. The shelter will feature a pawprint design on the outside of the building, statues of animals above the entrance and a canine comfort station consisting of three decorative fire hydrants in front of the building. The current building is 40 years old and is having serious structural problems, said Melissa Loewenstein, secretary of the Humane Society's board of directors. "We are hoping that once the new facility is open, adoptions will increase to 85 to 90 percent," Johnson said. The adoption rate is about 65 percent. Ron Johnson, treasurer of the board of directors, said the building would provide more accessible and more attractive facilities for the public to visit the animals and would help the Humane Society increased animal adoptions. The city will provide 20 percent of the funds to build the shelter; the county will add another 5 percent. The remaining money will come from private sources. CLUB SURRENDER WEDNESDAY 1st & 3rd Wed. 806 W 24 th St. (Behind McDonalds on 23rd) MALE DANCERS 9:00-11:30pm Men admitted after 11:30 Alternative Weds. LADIES21 & OVERFREE MIXIN' the HITS from the 70's,80's&90's TWO4 ONE SHOTS Look your best for the Summer If you don't need it,don't toss it Recycle Total Fitness Athletic Center Get 20% off Summer & Fall package LASTS TILL JUNE 15 Free Weight Area Nordic Tracks Saunas TFC ATHLETIC Fittness Testing - Expanded Selecterized Machine Area Aerobics Classes Tread Mills Jacuzzi Personal Training Child Care THURSDAYS TRIP 2 THIS Techno – Tribal – House $1.50 Wells $2.25 Sour & Juices FRIDAY R&B-HIP HOP-ACID JAZZ Domestic Bottles $1.75 2108 West 27th Suite 832-0818 SATURDAYS R&B-HIP HOP-ACID JAZZ 32 oz.Big Beers $2.50 Open9-2DJat10pmWed.-Fri. 18 to enter/21 to drink Sat. 21 & over only For Private engagements call 865-5222 Looking For a Great Place to Live? Come by and see what Naismith Hall has to offer. Quiet study areas Air conditioned Fully furnished and carpeted suites, each with their own bath Featuring our"Dine Anytime" program that serves terrific meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner. Coed Fitness Center Convenient location next to campus and on the KU bus route Maid service Cable TV in floor lounges and on large screen TV Computer room with Macintosh and IBM computers KANSAS --- Tours available daily including weekends—just drop by!! Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information packet. NAISMITH Hall KANSAS If you've already signed a lease but are interested-call us and we'll see what we can do. Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 1-800-GOKU 8A Wednesday, June 14, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ALL EVENTS THURS. JUNE 15 Concert NEW RIDDIM BAND 7 p.m. Campanile Hill THURS. JUNE 22 Movie - Sneak Preview APOLLO 13 8 p.m. Lied Center of Kansas FRI. JUNE 23 Movie OUTBREAK 9 p.m. Campanile Hill SUMMER ON THE HILL 195 NATIONAL LAMPOON'S FRI. JULY 7 Movie VACATION 9 p.m. Campanile Hill THURS. JULY 13 Movie PULP FICTION 9 p.m. Campanile Hill L STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Vouchers available June 21 at the SUA Box Office for APOLLO 13 For more info call. 864-3477 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Please no glass on the hill Concessions will be available at all events PACT The US and North Korea are close to agreement on getting rid of communist nation's nuclear program. Page 5B SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 1995 SECTION B '93 teammates on their way to 'the bigs' The 1993 Kansas baseball team, the most successful in school history, may soon be known for more than their team record 45 wins and first ever trip to the College World Series. By Dan Gelston Kansan staff writer "All I really want to do is pitch," he said. "It hasn't been too much of an adjustment, although the mental part of the game has to be a lot stronger." Three members, key to Kansas' resurgence in the early '09s, have seen their dream of playing professional baseball materialize by playing minor league baseball. Chris Corn, Darryl Monroe and David Meyer, all members of the 1993 team, have traded in their comfortable lives at KU for grueling road trips and a season more than twice as long as the college one. After some early season work as the club's set-up man, Corn has taken over the closer role, earning six wins and seven saves. Greensboro manager Tey Hillman likes what he's seen of Corn thus far. Batters Pitchers Corn was the pitching ace of the '93 staff, winning nine games and pitching the opener of the College World Series. He followed that season with another nine-win performance his senior year and was drafted in the 21st round by the New York Yankees. Although Corn proved he could be a staff's ace, the Yankees had other plans for him. "I'm having a great time down here," Corn said. "My teammates, the coaches, my manager — they're all doing a great job, and I'm loving it." Hillman said the key to Corn's success is that he's a four-pitch pitcher with good control. Corn can throw a curveball, changeup and slider, but it is his faster-than-90-mph fastball that has gotten his opponents' attention. "The biggest and best thing is his mental psyche," Hillman said. "He's always prepared; he always knows exactly what he wants to do when he gets into the ball game." This year the Yankees assigned him to their Class A club, the Greensboro Bats of the South Atlantic League, and converted him into a reliever. For Corn, there hasn't been much of an adjustment. These professional baseball players are proud to have been Jayhawks... Corn has struck out 59 batters in just 44 innings and is keeping runners off base by holding opposing batters to a .171 batting average. These are two important stats for a late-inning specialist. One man Corn kept off base the three times he faced him this year was his former Kansas teammate Darryl Monroe. Monroe is beginning his climb up through the majors with the Fayetteville Generals, the Detroit Tigers' Class A farm team. | PLAYER | TEAM | AVG | AB | R | H | HR | RBI | SB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Jeff Berlinger | Arkansas Cardinals | .335 | 206 | 53 | 69 | 4 | 21 | 13 | | Darryl Monroe | Fayetteville Tigers | .298 | 191 | 32 | 57 | 1 | 12 | 11 | | PLAYER | TEAM | W-L | ERA | SV | IP | H | BB | SO | | Chris Corn | Greensboro Yankees | 6-4 | 1.64 | 7 | 44 | 26 | 14 | 59 | | David Meyer | Tampa Yankees | 2-4 | 6.49 | 0 | $52^{½}$ | 79 | 28 | 26 | | Steve Renko | Midland Angels | 0-1 | 7.71 | 1 | $9^{½}$ | 13 | 7 | 8 | | Curt Schmidt | Ottawa Expos | 3-0 | 2.55 | 4 | $17^{½}$ | 11 | 4 | 12 | | Curtis Shaw | Edmonton Athletics | 2-2 | 3.24 | 0 | $33^{½}$ | 23 | 33 | 21 | | Scott Taylor | Oklahoma City Rangers | 2-5 | 4.15 | 0 | $56^{½}$ | 62 | 19 | 31 | | James Walker | Fredrick Orioles | 0-1 | 16.20 | 0 | $1^{¾}$ | 2 | 2 | 3 | After a rough start to his pro career in the rookie league, Monroe has blossomed this year, showing the Tigers the talent he displayed at Kansas. As a Jayhawk, he hit 348 with 172 RB during his four-year "Knowing that I'm getting an opportunity at getting a chance Monroe has also experienced a change of positions, going from center field to left field and also has been batting at the beginning of the Generals' order. worker, and he's a student of the game. He's really been an asset to us." Part of Monroe's success is due to what he learned at Kansas. "I'm living out a dream,and I'm having a great time doing it." "Knowing myself as a player and always triving to improve the proba- "He's got a real great attitude," Lowry said. "He's a good, hard to play in the big leagues keeps me going," Monroe said. "I'm living out a dream, and I'm having a great time doing it." Darryl Monroe Fayetteville Generals left.fielder It's easy to enjoy yourself when you're having success like Monroe's, who is hitting at a .288 clip in 55 games. Monroe also has enjoyed success stealing bases — he has 11— including a perfect 6-for-6 performance in April which earned him a gold watch from the team. On June 19, he will play in the South Atlantic League all-star game. Former Tiger and current Fayetteville manager Dwight Lowry said that Monroe's work ethic would help him progress. bly the two biggest things I learned at Kansas, and I use that here," Monroe said. "There are no guarantees in this game," hesaid. "You can never predict what's going to happen. If I play well enough then eventually they have to move you up." As for a major league career, Lowry offered no promises but said that Monroe would go as far as his bat would take him. It's quite possible that in a few years the Yankee pitching staff will be comprised of two former KU players. Southpaw David Meyer, who won seven games during his 1994 senior campaign, may join Corn. Meyer is playing for the Tampa Bay Yankees, another Class A farm team, in the Florida State League. Meyer, who shuffled between the starting rotation and the bulpen during his four years at KU, has found a home in Tampa as a starting pitcher. Tampa manager Jake Gibbs said "He gets up in the strike zone too much, and he has to be more consistent as far as getting ahead in the count," Gibbs said. "He can be a successful starting pitcher." For their efforts, the players get $1,000-$1,100 a month and a $50-per-day food allowance on the road. The teams play 142 games in only 150 days, taking a toll on even the best-conditioned ball players. "It can get boring and tiring after a while," Corn said of life on the road. "You got bored sitting in the hotel room. There's no place to go." Although the daily struggle of balancing baseball with academics isn't there, both Corn and Monroe are trying to finish up the three remaining credits they need to graduate. They are taking correspondence courses, which they hope to complete by September. Kansas also has seen some other recent graduates of the baseball program enjoy some success in the pros. Jeff Berblinger has batted over 300 most of the season for the Arkansas Travelers of the St. Louis Cardinals organization. Steve Renko, Curtis Shaw, Scott Taylor and Jimmy Walker all are in the minor leagues and the Montreal Expos' Curt Schmidt even has been in the majors for a brief time. The careers of Corn and Monroe seem brightest, but sometimes it takes more than talent to make it to the maiors. "If you can't see yourself there, you'll never make it," Corn said. "You've got to believe in yourself." Jayhawks chosen in baseball draft By Gerry Fey Kansan Editor Two more Kansas baseball players were picked in the latest amateur draft two weeks ago, increasing the total number of former Jayhawks in the major leagues to 11. Junior pitcher Jamie Splitoff was selected by the Minnesota Twins in the 13th round, while the Chicago White Sox took senior third baseman Brent Wilhelm in the 28th. Both have signed contracts with their respective clubs, Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. Although Splitterfif will forego his senior year of eligibility, Bingham said both players were on track to graduate. Although the two went relatively high in the draft considering no limit exists on the number of rounds, Bingham said that he thought Splittorf would have been picked higher. "With Split, I thought he might go higher, but everybody in the draft thinks that going in," he said. Wilhelm and Splittorff were unavailable for comment as they have left for their respective clubs. Bingham said that both players had the work ethic necessary to make it all the way to the major leagues and out of the minors. Wilhelm also has something valuable to a minor league player — maturity. "With Bren, he's really improved in his four years at Kansas," he said. "Brent going through college baseball makes him able to survive the ups and downs. Baseball is a game of failing and adjusting. You need mental toughness as well as ability." KU Bingham said that recruiting players out of high school was made easier by having players from Kansas get draft Jamie Splittorff KU Rrant Wilhelm "That's one thing they want to know when we talk to them," Bingham said of the recruits. "They want to know that other kids made it from here. I know all the guys that come in have goals to go to the pros and we want them. But we also want guys who value their education and both Split and Brent do." "I'm just really pleased to have those two guys go through our system." 80 Michael Schulze / KANSAN Former Kansas basketball player Rex Walters answers questions Monday at Roy Williams' basketball camp. The boy's basketball camp will run from Monday to Friday at Allen Field House. Dave is not alone. Thousands and thousands of kids across the country hear that same pop each summer. What's wrong with America's game? JENNI CARLSON Like most 10-year-old boys, my little brother Dave loves sports. But lately, I've noticed something. After Dave's Little League baseball games, it's not long before he ties on his Nike high-tops just like the ones Charles Barkley wears. He puts on a pair of baggy navy shorts just like the ones Michigan's basketball team teams. Finally, he dons a t-shirt just like the ones the Kansas When summer rolls around, Dave pulls out his baseball glove and heads down the street to play catch. The sound of a grass-stained baseball popping into the well-worn mitts can be heard clearly from my parents' front porch. CAMPUS EDITOR men's basketball team wore after winning the Big Eight Championship last season. On Saturday, June 3,14 games were played in the Major Leagues. Weekends are generally a good time for attendance. Families and working folks can get out to the games. However, in five of those 14 games the stadiums were less than half full, and only one game's attendance was within 1,000 of a sell-out — in Cheve- And the black socks — Dave denies it, but I think we wear them because of Jacque Vaughn's black ankle braces. Dave is not alone. Kids are trading in their bats and gloves for basket-balls, soccer shoes, hockey sticks and footballs. The overwhelming love people had for baseball, America's favorite pastime, is fading. When the season opened and stadiums were practically deserted, most people, including myself, thought it would get better over time. This has been most evident from the meager attendance that Major League Baseball teams are drawing. But baseball's declining popularity solely cannot be blamed on the strike. Remember that the National Hockey League suffered through an owner-imposed lockout this season. Unlike baseball, hockey maintains its following. We were wrong. So what's happening with baseball? Some of what's happening is sim- land, where the Indians faced the Toronto Blue Jaws. And attendance doesn't seem to depend on a team's success either. I saw the New York Mets play the division-leading San Francisco Giants on Thursday. The 60,000 seats in Candlestick Park dwarfed a crowd numbering just under 11,000. If those things don't happen, come some summer day in the future when my brother goes looking to play catch, Dave will be alone. This drop in attendance and interest could easily be blamed on the baseball strike. A love of money snuffed out a season that promised to be record-breaking and one of baseball's best. For example, six players, including Frank Thomas and Ken Griffey Jr., were on course to hit 50 home runs. This mark only had been reached 18 times in all of baseball's history. I can't offer any quick fixes for baseball. But it helped itself out last week with some rule changes suggested by former-Major League umpire Steve Palermo. Baseball's owners cut the time allowed between innings by 40 seconds and will not allow batters to set out of the batter's box once the pitcher steps on the rubber — a healthy first step to bringing fans back to the game. Making the game affordable and the players accessible is also a must. Fans need to feel a tie that draws them back to the game. ply the game itself. There isn't the continuous action that basketball and hockey boast. Spectators love the action. Basketball's slam dunk or hockey's breakaway goal sure beats watching a pitcher stroll back to the mound, shake off two or three signs from his catcher, check a runner at first base and then throw a pitch. North vs. South, Big 12 agrees to playoff The Associated Press AUSTIN — Big 12 chief executive officers yesterday approved a football playoff game between the North and South division champions that will bring at least $550,000 to each school in the new league. School presidents and chancellors also agreed to a revenue-sharing formula that allows football powers to keep their gate receipts and rewards schools for first-year NCAA basketball tournament appearances. "We have more work to do, clearly. but I think what you're seeing is steady, systematic and substantial progress," said Iowa State President Martin Jischke, head of the league's CEOs. The playoff, which had been opposed by the coaches, was proposed by the league's athletic directors and faculty representatives. The school presidents, who have final approval on all major issues, approved the idea 11-1. Nebraska Chancellor Graham Spanier, who was not available for comment, voted against it. Jischke said he believed Spaniier's concerns mirrored those of the league's coaches, who fear losing a playoff game could knock their team out of a major bowl or a national championship game. The cities interested in hosting the playoff are Dallas, Kansas City, San Antonio, St. Louis, Houston, Denver The coaches also contend that more money could be raised getting a second team into the major bowls each year, but Jischek expects the revenue from a playoff game to be higher than estimated. and Irving, Texas. The presidents also continued discussions on possible sites for the conference headquarters. The Big Eight offices are located in Kansas City, Mo., while the Southwest Conference is based in Dallas. The cities being considered are St. Louis, Kansas City, Oklahoma City, Dallas, San Antonio, Colorado Springs, Colorado, Denver and Lubbock, Texas. The presidents plan to make a decision by Dec. 1. 2B Wednesday, June 14, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunglasses™ Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunglasses!™ The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downtown Parking in the rear M M M M M The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downtown Parking in the rear Affordable, Fine Dining for Family and Friends The Castle Tea Room 1300 Massachusetts by Reservation Only, Call 843-1151 Get this. GIANT BOULDER $265.95 Enjoy this. Rick's Bike Shop 916 Massachusetts 841-6642 MON-THUR 10AM TO 8PM SPORTS IN BRIEF Haase only Big Eight pick on USA collegiate team Kansan staff report Kansas junior guard Jerod Hanse will join forces with 11 other collegiate standouts on the 1995 USA Men's World University Games Team. The USA Basketball Men's College Committee selected the team Monday after three days of tryouts in Colorado Springs, Colo, "There was some great competition at the trials, and for me to make the team is exciting," said Haase, who is the only Big Eight Conference representative. "It is a huge honor to be part of the World University Games Team and play for my country." Haase, who led Kansas in scoring last season, completed his first season as a Jayhawk this spring. The Big Eight named Haase the conference's newcomer of the year. The South Lake Tahoe, Calif., native won't be the only player on the team to have conference honors. Five other members of the world team were deemed top players in their conference. "This is a group of good athletes whose abilities compliment each other very well," said USA coach Lon Kruger. Members of the World University Games Team are: Chucky Atkins, South Florida; Ray Allen, Connecticut; Austin Crosher, Providence College; Tim Duncan, Wake Forest; Brian Evans, Indiana; Haase; Ottelia Harrington, Georgetown University; Allen Iverson, Georgetown; Kerry Kittles, Villanova; Charles O'Bannon, UCLA; Jerome Williams, Georgetown and Lorenzon Wright, Mamphis University The squad will have a week to train before the World University Games begin on Aug. 24. The games will assemble the world's top student athletes and recent college graduates in Fukuoka, Japan. 'Hawks represented in festival Kansan staff report Several Kansas basketball players will represent the Jayhawks in the 1995 U.S. Olympic Festival. USA Basketball and the U.S. Olympic Committee selected Kansas junior guard Tamecka Dixon, sophomore guard Billy Thomas and incoming freshman forward Paul Pierce to compete in the festival, held July 26-29. Four regional teams compete against each other in the Olympic Festival. Players on these teams are 20 years old or younger with no more than one year of high school eligibility remaining. Dixon is a member of the East Team, which includes high school first team All-American Chamaine Holdsclaw. In the men's competition, Thomas will play on the North Team with three other Big Eight Conference representatives: Colorado's Chamcey Billups, Missouri's Kendrick Moore and Kansas State's Mark Young. Pierce will compete on the West Team with Toby Bailey and J.R. Henderson, members of the national champion UCLA Bruins. Ex-'Hawk tees up at U.S. Open Former Kansas golfer Matt Gogel is learning to play for money. By Mark Luce Kansan staff writer Three years ago, Gogel qualified for the U.S. Open Championship at Pebble Beach Golf Links in Pebble Beach, Calif. He was an amateur and K an s a s junior. PETER HENRY Kansas junior. Gogel tees off tomorrow in the U.S. Open at Shin- necock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., as a professional golfer with an eye on making the cut Matt Gogel Gogel qualified for his second Open by winning the sectional qualifying tournament at the Milburn Country Club in Kansas City, Mo. Gogel is already in New York for practice rounds and could not be reached for comment. July, Gogel has traveled around the world to make his living playing golf. He played on the Asian Tour this spring and had a fourthplace finish in the China Open in April. Gogel will attempt to earn his tour card, which would allow him to play for a year on the PGA Tour, later this summer. Kansas men's golf coach Ross Randall said that his former player was progressing steadily in his professional endeavors. Since he turned professional last "Matt is coming along well." Randall said. "It may not be as quick as he would like, but he has had to get used to traveling and adjusting to different grass every week. Hopefully, he will continue on a nice steady progression." Randall said that because Gogel already had played in one U.S. Open, he would be more relaxed this week. "He's going as a professional," Randall said. "I don't think he will be as awed as he may have been as an amateur. He has gotten used to playing for money, which is very different than playing in college." Dan Rooney, Kansas senior golfer and Gogel's friend, said that Gogel was looking to improve on his last showing at the Open. "From talking to him, he has a very different mindset," Rooney said. "It will be a real stepping stone if he can play well and make the cut." Despite Gogel's talent, Rooney said that professional golf was highly unpredictable. "He certainly has the tools to make the tour, but pro golf is a funny thing," Rooney said. "The odds are in his favor, but you can never be sure in golf." Slade Adams, Kansas senior and last spring's Big Eight Conference co-champion, said that Gogel's collegiate experience should help him earn his tour card. "It's a good type of warm-up because it gives you a feel of how you measure up against everyone else," Adams said. "A combination of skill, luck, determination and patience is needed to make the tour." Gogel tees off in tomorrow's first round at 3:15 p.m. Television coverage for the first two rounds will be provided by ESPN. PGA's Shark hungry for major win The Associated Press SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — Once again, Greg "The Shark" Norman comes into a major championship playing very well. Once again, he'll be the favorite to win. The question is: Will Norman disappoint once again? Norman said yesterday that he was playing better going into this week's U.S. Open Championship than at any time in his career. And Norman at his best is positively awesome. Norman returned to competition after six weeks of rest, recovery and some fishing with a 19- under-par victory at the Memorial Tournament two weeks ago and then had a fourth-place finish Sunday at the Kemper Open. "On a scale of 1 to 10, I'd give it a 7 1/2." Norman said of his game's current state. Even before his layoff, Norman was playing well. He was second at the Doral Ryder Open in March and third at the Masters Tournament a month later, closing with three 68s. He has served notice on the Open's defending champion, Ernie Els, and the rest of the field that he'll be in the hunt when play begins tomorrow at Shinneck Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y. But even Norman knows he's served notice before only not to follow through. "I have been at the top of my game, too, going into other tournaments, and it doesn't come off the way you like it to come off," Norman said before practicing yesterday. Last year, for instance, Norman went into the Masters as a near prohibitive favorite after a record-shattering 24-under-par 268 and a four-stroke victory in The Players Championship. But he tied for 18th at Augusta, stumbling home with a 75 and a 77. CASABLANCA DANCE CLUB PALM TREE presents... THIS SUMMER every Friday nite - MERENGUE, SALSA, REGGAE AND TECHNO ❑❑❑ * NO COVER BEFORE 10PM ❑ * CASH PRIZES FOR DANCE CONTESTS $$$ * GREAT TROPICAL DRINK SPECIALS ❑❑❑ * DANCE LESSONS FROM 9-10PM. "___"___ THE BEST ALTERNATIVE FOR A FUN FRIDAY NITE! PALM TREE EARN CASH All Your Money Gone? $15 TODAY $30 THIS WEEK By Donating Your Blood Plasma Duffy's NABI The Quality Source Walk-Ins Welcome In the Ranada Ion 6th & Iowa 842-7030 Lawrence Donor Center 816 W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 Summer Hours Mon.,Wed.,Fri. 9-5:30 Tues.,Thurs. 9-6:30 Sat.closed $ Kansas Sports Club KU merchandise We've got what you're looking for. 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" EVERY 843-3232 EVERYDAYSPECIALS SINGLE 110” PIZZA 2 TOPPINGS $5.75 DOUBLE 210" PIZZAS 2 TOPPINGS $10.50 NOT VALID ON MONDAY NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER TRIPLE 310" PIZZAS 1 TOPPING $13.75 25€ CHECK CHARGE LIMITED DELIVERY AREA NO COUPON NECESSARY SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 14, 1995 3B Being normal suits Houston's Rudy to a 'T' The Associated Press HOUSTON — When Rudy Tomjanovich was an NBA player, he didn't seem to be coaching material. "He was not a leader on the court. He was just a hard, tough player who played to win and did his job," Houston assistant coach Carroll Dawson said. "That's been the biggest surprise. He becomes a coach and all of a sudden I see leadership qualities I never knew he had." Now Tomjanovich is on the verge of leading his Houston Rockets to a second consecutive NBA championship. Across the country, he's known simply as Rudy T. No last name is needed for this unassuming, regular guy. If ever a team reflected the personality of its coach, the Rockets do. "Hard-working, never-give-up, humble." Dawson said of that mentality. "If you watch this team, the egos are not involved, just like Rudy's isn't." "I think one reason Rudy won't coach very much longer is because his ego's not big enough. He doesn't really need this. He wants to be a normal guy. All of this celebrity status really bothers him." up. But with his team one away from victory from an NBA Finals sweep of Orlando, he's becoming harder to ignore. When the great NBA coaches are mentioned, Tomianovich's name seldom comes One more win and he'll have two titles in a little more than three seasons as head coach. "They're going to have to look at Rudy and give him some respect because he's a great coach," Houston guard Mario Elie said. "I get mad when I hear about George Karl and Pat Riley, Where's Rudy T in all of that?" Attention is something Tomjanovich can do without. "I don't like this at all," he said, surrounded by a mot of reporters. "I wish we could play basketball in a deserted gym and come out and say, 'Hey, we won that one,' and it's over." The players all say the same things about him, that he's more like another player than some stern dictator of a coach. He asks for suggestions and listens to their opinions. Houston center Charles Jones has played for all kind of coaches in 12 NBA seasons, and he's never been around one like Tomjanovich. "He's a guy with an open mind," Jones said. "Everybody gets along with him and understands him. It's so open that it's hard to describe." After an All-American career at Michigan, Tomjanovic played 11 NBA seasons, all with the Rockets. When he retired, Rockets coach Del Harris asked him to stay as a scout. "Del and I talked him into helping me, because I was the only assistant we had." Dawson said. Dawson marvels at Tomjanovich's ability to deal with the different personalities on the team. "He does it with a soft but firm hand on this team. They don't always like the answers he gives them, but they respect him," Dawson said. Devils ward off evil spirits, reach their first NHL finals The Associated Press EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The New Jersey Devils exorcised the ghosts of a Game 6 failure one year ago and advanced to their first Stanley Cup final Tuesday night with a 4-2 victory over the Philadelphia Flyers. The Devils will go on to meet the Detroit Red Wings on Saturday in a best-of-7 series for the NHL title. Last year they led the New York Rangers 3-2 in games, but Stephane Matteau scored in double overtime in Game 7, sending the Rangers to what eventually would be their first Stanley Cup in 54 years. This time the Devils didn't let it slip away — becoming the first team in this series to win a home game. Whether New Jersey will remain home to the Devils remains to be seen. The team is exploring a move to Nashville, Teen. Philadelphia took an early 1-0 lead on Jim Montgomery's first career playoff goal. However, that would be as close as the Flyers would come. The Devils' neutral-ice trap limited Philadelphia to just 16 shots against Martin Brodeur, and New Jersey got the goals it needed from Stephane Richer, Brian Rolston, Randy McKay and Claude Lemieux. The vaulted "Legion of Doom" line of Eric Lindros, Mikael Renberg and John LeClair finished with just five goals in the series after scoring 81 of the team's 150 in the regular season. "They've got a good future ahead of them," Stevens said. "Time was running on us, so it's great to get to the finals." Montgomery gave the Flyers the lead for only the second time in the series at 4:05 of the first period. But the Devils took advantage of a questionable tripping penalty minutes later as Neal Broton sent a cross-ice pass to an open Richer for his first goal in 11 playoff games and the 50th of his career. Holston put New Jersey ahead for good with 1:45 left in the first period, slipping a rebound just over the goal line. Bobby Holik carried the puck up the left wing and McKay re-directed his cross-ice pass to break the game open. Lemieux, whose 50-foot goal in the final minute won Game 5 for New Jersey, started the Meadowlands' chants of "We Want the Cup" by scoring on a breakaway with 9:49 to go. It was his 11th of the playoffs. US decathlete has incentive to win fourth national title The Associated Press SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Dan O'Brien no longer thinks about who he will be competing against in the decathlon. He doesn't have to. "I've always felt that since 1991 I was in a league of my own," said O'Brien, who is the overwhelming favorite to win his fourth national title and third in a row at the USA-Mobil Championships, which begin today at Hughes Stadium. His only loss in the nine decathlons he has finished in that time was at the 1992 Olympic trials at New Orleans, where he ignominiously failed to clear a height in the pault. Otherwise, O'Brien has been sensational, scoring at least 8,700 points in every victory except one and setting the world record of 8,891 points at Talence, France, in September 1992 — shortly after watching, instead of competing in the Barcelona Games. No other decathlete in the world has been nearly as good nor as consistent. "I don't worry about the competition." O'Brien said. "Sometimes, it's more stressful doing that." Only two dreadful performances in the 1,500 meters, the final event of the demanding two-day, 10-event competition, prevented O'Brien from smashing his world record last year. First, he ran 5 minutes, 16.42 seconds in the national championships at Knoxville, Tenn., finishing with 8,707 points. Then he went 5:10.94 in the Goodwill Games at St. Petersburg, Russia, for a total of 8,715. "in both competitions, I had such a big lead I felt all alone out there," he said. "In that situation, you feel a little sorry for yourself and just want to get through it. "Goodwill didn't look good and wasn't a great effort. I've learned a lot thinking about it. I regret not running a good 1,500 because of the exposure (a world record) would have gotten. That was a mistake. "This year, I've come to grips with the 1,500. If I'm going to be a gold medalist at the Olympics and the World Championships, I have to run well in it. I won't run 4:10 or 4:20, but I think I can run 4:30 or 4:40." O'Brien's best, 1,500 is 4:33.19 in 1989 at San Francisco. This week, he will have added incentive to do well and possibly break the world record and the 9,000-point barrier. Some 25 family members and friends will be on hand to watch him perform. --- Snip This VIDEO BIZ 9th & Iowa • 749-3507 2 Video Tapes and VCR One Night Rental $5.99 2 Movies for the Price of 1 Limit 2 movies per coupon per day Not good with any other promotional offer. Exp. 6/30/95. Limit one coupon per family per day. GUMBY'S Pizza® 841-5000 1445 W. 23rd Carryout Special X Large One Item Pizza $3.99 + tax X-Large One Item Pizza $4.99 + tax COUPON Classical Music and Jazz Get a FREE CD * with purchase of any 3 CDs Classical & Jazz Only! *Free CD must be of a value equal to or less than least expensive CD purchased Not Valid With Other Offers KIEF'S CDS/TAPES All New! Offer ends 05/28/15 Excludes orange tag items 24th & Iowa St, P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, K8.0044 CDS & TAPES - MUSICVIDEO - CARPENTER 91 013-842-1544 013-842-1611 013-842-1438 RUNZA RESTAURANT FREE Original Runza with purchase of any size fry and medium drink *Not valid with any other offer. Limit one coupon per person or car per visit. 2700 Iowa • Lawrence, KS • good thru Aug. 31, 1995 10% Discount not valid with other offers exp. July 31st 1401 W.23rd St. 832-COPY One coupon per person COPY CO Experience the Difference I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! 50¢ 50¢ I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! Bring this coupon in for 50¢ off a Medium or Large Yogurt Cup Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-0440 50¢ 50¢ Pro Sound Audioand Security $10 off any install or alarm No Hassles! Custom Boxes • Alarms • Neon Polk • Clarion • Kicker • Lanzar Phoenix Gold • JVC 2329 Iowa Suite "M" Lawrence Not Valid With Any Other Offer • Exp 1/96 Buy one menu item, get one 1/2 price! call for our daily drinks specials. expires 7/31/95 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANT PIZZA By The SLICE DRIVE THRU 2 Pizza Slices only 16 oz Coke 2.95 Bob's PIZZA Shoppe 1618 w. 23 St. Next to Taco John's 842-0600 Santa Fe Optical Eye Glasses & Contacts 843-6828 737 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS *Over 1,500 frames *Number of lenses *Southwest style frames *Replacement contact lenses 20% off prescription glasses Expires 6/30/95 COUPON COUPON Miracle Video COUPON 1910 Haskell.841-7504 910 N.2nd St.841-8903 NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. 2 MOVIES FOR THE PRICE OF 1 Over 900 titles in stock White space Say it. 119 Stauffer-Flint 864-4358 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VCR + 2 TAPES FOR $4.99 LIMIT ONE PER PERSON EXPIRES 7/31/95 $1 off Coupon 24 Pack or two 12 packs of Coke or Pepsi 9TH AND IOWA Expiration Date: 6/20/95 Alvins IGA Valentino's Restaurant Valentino's Ristorante FREE Large Drink with purchase of All You Can Eat Adult Buffet 544 W. 23rd St. 749-4244 Pizza, Lasagne, Spaghetti, Bread Sticks, and Salad Bar buffet hours: 11am-2pm Lunch 5-9pm Dinner not good with other offers expires June 28th BIKE AMERICA 23rd & Louisiana (Behind Schlotzsky's) • 842-7822 Bike Tune-up $19.95 REG. $29.95 expires 8/2/95 $50 OFF any bike purchase over $300 Not valid with sale bikes or other offers expires 8/2/95 4B Wednesday, June 14, 1995 Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 Vintage clothes for guys and gals -1900-1970- •new cottons and rayons •accessories and costumes Barb's Vintage Rose 927 Mass./841-2451/Mon-Sat 11-5 Fine Line Tattoo Inc. •Fraternity & Sorority Letters •Baby Jayhawk Tattoo •Bring your own design or choose from our extensive selection •Reasonably priced •Hospital sterilized Mon-Sat 29th Mass. St 12-8pm Topea Tues. till 6pm 233-8288 VIENNA THE CHAPMAN Used & Curious Goods 731 New Hampshire 841-0550 Noon 6:00 Tues. - Sat. Buy • Sell • Trade Ninja* 500 EVERYTHING BUT ICE Beds Desks Bookcases 936 Mass. Make Vrroom for Fun. > Digital Electronic Ignition > 37mm Tescellic Fork Tubes with Improved Damping Characteristics > Rear Disc Brake with Single-Piton Caliper > High-Tensile Steel Frame > 43mm Semi-Flat Slide Carbs Test ride one today at your awaful dealer Kawasaki picks up the pace with the ultimate sport bike — the Ninja* 500; KVI Kaw Valley Industrial SUNFLOWER 843-5000 804 Massachusetts Give Your Feet A Break! Teva Contours on Sale Reg. $5928 Now Only TEVA THE SPORT SANDAL $3928 WE CAN HELP HEADQUARTERS THE SPORT SANDAL 105 E 32d SL, Lawrence (913841-1971) © 1996 Kaiser Music Corp. USA, www.kaiser.com and amateur subscription Test ride one today at your Kawasaki dealer. Kawasaki Counseling and information 841-2345 1419 Massachusetts St. Lawrence 5pm-9pm EVERYDAY! (New Tables) •801 New Hampshire• 1419 Massachusetts St., Lawrence 8thStreet TAPROOM FREE POOL B Build a Beautiful Body SAVE $144 Body V. I.P. Membership Only $20 per month for students and faculty Absolutely NO joining fee --- BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility Buy 10 tans Get 5 tans FREE for $30 expires 6/21/95 749-2424 925 Iowa Offer expires June 21, 1995 francis sporting goods, inc. 843-4191 731 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 68044 STICKUM FOR YOUR NIKE FEET. Air Fly Turf Training Locallyowned...since 1947 Make your summer plans begin at Edmondson Berger Retail Liquor Make your summer plans begin at Edmondson Berger Retail Liquor Add to your summer fun with a great selection of import and domestic wines and beers- Kefall 600 Lawrence Ave. Stop by today! RECYCLE RECYCLE Daily Kansan 842-8700 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Designated hitter Hamelin sent to Triple-A Omaha team The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bob "The Hammer" Hamlin, the hefty home run hitter who became a fan favorite and the 1994 American League rookie of the year, is taking a .175 average and a worrisome slump back to the minor leagues. Hoping for only a quick stay, the Kansas City Royals announced Sunday they had sent Hamelin to Triple-A Omaha. "The idea is to let him go to Omaha, get his swing back, get his confidence back and then get back here as soon as he possibly can," Royals general manager Herk Robinson said following Kansas City's 3-2 victory against Toronto. Hamelin was hitting. 175 with two home runs and nine RBI. Royals manager Bob Boone had begun cutting his playing time, and Hamelin did not play on Sunday. "It's not a big surprise," Hamelin said. "It's not the end of the world. Obviously, it's frustrating. I want to hit, but there's not an easy answer. It's not an easy game." Hamelin hit 24 home runs and batted .282 in the strike-shortened 1994 season and easily won rookie honors. He hit several homers during a 14-game winning streak that vaulted the Royals back into playoff contention before the strike halted play on Aug. 12. Shortly after the All-Star Break, fans began showing up with big toy hammers, and "The Hammer" was a smash hit with Kansas City fans. When the Royals moved their outfield fences in 10 feet during the winter, even bigger things were forecast for Hamelin. But when the strike ended in April and Hamelin reported to spring training overweight, the first baseman-designated hitter never seemed comfortable. Hamelin will be replaced by first baseman-designated hitter Jeff Grotewold. Grotewold was hitting. 297 in 55 games at Omaha with 11 doubles, 12 home runs and 32 RBI. Hamelin is still very much a part of the Royals, Robinson said. As soon as he's ready, he will be welcomed back. "It could be a combination of a lot of things," he said. "I'm sure there are a lot of theories. But I really don't know." Robinson said he's not certain why Hamelin has been ineffective. "I want him in the middle of my lineup," Boone added. "But I don't want him like he is now in the middle of my lineup." Mantle facing lifelong battle after transplant Surgeon says baseball Hall of Famer showing more signs of improvement The Associated Press "It's just sinking in that he's been through a liver transplant," his son David Mantle said Monday. DALLAS — Mickey Mantle, who didn't even know he had liver cancer until a week ago, will undergo the ordeals of a transplant patient for the rest of his life. He said Mantle's jaundice was fading daily, and there had been no signs of rejection. Goran Klintalmal, medical director of the Baylor Transplantation Institute, said vigorous physical therapy over the next few months would accompany a continued risk of organ rejection and a lifetime of prescription drugs. Mantle's new liver is doing exceptionally well after going through a minor amount of shock related to removal from the donor, shipment and grafting into Mantle's body, Klintmaltm said. Kidney damage is among the dangers Mantle faces. Klintmaim said the Hall of Fame slugger was entering a seven-week period during which doctors would monitor him closely for signs of rejection. Beginning later this week, biopsies of tissue drawn from his new liver will be taken regularly. David Mantle said the knee injuries his father sustained during his baseball career probably would alter his physical therapy. "He won't be running," David Mantle said. "He'll probably ride the bike a lot." Further complicating Mantle's situation is the cancer that blocked his bile duct. Doctors believe they fully removed the tumor, but Mantle must undergo chemotherapy to fight any cancer cells that could be left behind. "Management of immunosuppression is not only a science, it's an art," Klintalmal said. "When you're doing chemotherapy, it becomes much more difficult." David Mantle, who is alternating with his younger brother, Danny, in spending the night in their father's hospital room, said the family noticed signs of illness a year ago. Recently, Mantle's health deteriorated. "We didn't know that the liver could affect things like the memory," David Mantle said. "There were times he'd say something, then repeat it." Klintmalm said that while the odds of rejection were minute after two months, the chance would always exist. Mantle, 63, will take drugs related to his transplant for the remainder of his life. Liver transplant patients run a 60-to-65-percent risk of some degree of rejection, Klintalmal said, but all but a small fraction of those cases can be treated without retransplantation. The Associated Press Titans blast four homers claim unexpected title in College World Series OMAHA, Neb. — Posting the best record in college baseball and capturing the national championship weren't supposed to happen this year at Cal State-Fullerton. At least that's how Fullerton baseball coach Angie Garrido saw it. The Titans returned only three players and three pitchers from last year's team and Garrido, a 27-year coaching veteran, figured a title was a two-year project at best. He was pleasantly surprised to be wrong. Fullerton capped a 57-9 season Saturday with an 11-5 victory against Southern California to capture the College World Series championship. The win was the 18th consecutive for the Titans and their .864 winning percentage was the highest by a championship team since Texas'.903 mark in 1975. Garrido said he never had a team that worked harder, played together better, achieved as much or was morefun to coach. "I'm glad that we won because ... sports is not always a kind animal," said Garrido, who won his third CWS title. "When it gets down to one game, it doesn't always allow the team that's been the most consistent or worked the hardest to win. Some twist of fate is always around the corner. I'm glad that didn't happen to this group." Fullerton sophomore outfielder Mark Kotsay was one of the reasons that twist of fate didn't happen. He hit a three-run home run off the first pitch he saw Saturday and added a two-run homer in the second inning — on the second pitch. Kotsay ended 2-for-4 with five RBI. He said he was in the zone. "It happens in the game or prior to the game," Kotsay said. "Everything seems slow. The ball's coming in, and you can see the rotation of the seams." The 19-year-old hit. 563 during four games in the CWS with two doubles, three homers and 10 RBI. He was chosen the tournament's most valuable player. The Titans became the first top-seeded team to win the title since the NCAA began seeding teams in 1988. Southern Cal, which ended its season 49-21, lost for only the second time in 13 championship-game appearances. Fullerton and UCSC tied a series record and set a championship game record by combining for seven home runs Saturday. In addition to Kotsay's homers, Fullerton's Tony Martinez had a three-run blast in the seventh inning, and Tony Miranda followed that with his 12th home run of the season. Fullerton also set a series record with its .372 batting average. The old mark was .349 set by Oklahoma State in 1990. "They're a marvelous team that just seemed to get better as the tournament progressed," USC baseball coach Mike Gillespie said. "They played flawless baseball." USC was shut out after the third inning as Titan starter Ted Silva (18-1) settled down. The junior right-hander allowed six hits and two earned runs while striking out five. Kotsay struck out two more in pitching the final 1/23 innings. "We can't try to match anything this team has done." Kotsay said of next year's team. "It's pretty much an unbelievable season." River City Lobster Bar 1021Mass. 842-0568 River City Lobster Bar 1021 Mass. 842-0568 Have a jammin'good summer! River City Update: Hot Live Jazz Line Up: Summer Drink Specials: Come in and ask about our World Booze Cruise. W: The Cats R: So What F: Tim Cross Trio S: 4Man Jam M: $1.50 Dom. Bottles/$1.75 Imports T: $.75 Bud Light Draws/$1.00 Premiums W: $2.00 wells R: $2.50 tidal waves/$1.00 Buds/$1.25 Boulevards F: $1.50 Oyster Shooters S: $1.50 Bud Pitchers with a $3.00 cover TOMBULDER Have a jammin'good summer! --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesdav. June 14. 1995 5B US and North Korea approach accord on nuclear program The Associated Press KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Negotiators for the United States and North Korea have received approval for a deal to dismantle the communist nation's nuclear program, the U.S. embassy said yesterday. The approval came from their respective governments overnight, U.S. Embassy representative Tom Carmichael said. No details of the agreement were released, but a diplomat close to the talks — requesting anonymity — said the American side did not compromise on any key issues. South Korea, the chief financier of the nuclear accord, said it was satisfied. It had expressed concerns about a tentative agreement announced Saturday, but President Clinton sent President Kim Youngsam a letter of assurance. "We have finished our work here in Kuala Lumpur," chief U.S. negotiator Thomas Hubbard said Monday night. North Korea, after declaring its delegates would be on the first flight home, reversed its position and said they would remain for a final session. "We decided to stay to see the matter to an end," said North Korean embassy representative Chol Sung Ho. He said the negotiations have ended and that the purpose of the meeting was to sign the agreement. U.S. officials would not confirm the signing. Hubbard had said Monday night that their governments needed to approve the agreement. South Korea and Japan will play leading roles in providing North Korea with two new reactors to replace the facilities that produce weapons-grade plutonium. The deal should help ease tensions on the Korean Peninsula, which have been rising over North Korea's threat to restart its nuclear facilities — suspected of weapons development. The facilities have been frozen under the Oct. 21 agreement. During the talks, which began May 20, North Korea threatened twice to reprocess 8,000 spent nuclear fuel rods, which experts said would yield enough plutonium to build three or four bombs. North Korea is believed to already possess enough plutonium for at least one bomb. Two top U.S. State Department officials are visiting South Korea and Japan to brief their governments on the talks. U. S. negotiator Robert Gulliucci said in Seoul on Saturday night that "the devil's in the details," reflecting the difficulty in eliminating ambiguities North Korea might use to reopen negotiations later and seek fresh concessions. The main dispute at the talks has been about who will provide the reactors. The United States said they must come from South Korea, the only country willing to pay most of the $4 billion cost. North Korea balked, citing safety concerns, but was believed to be acting out of national pride. State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns refused to say whether the words "South Korea" appeared in the text negotiated by the two sides. "I believe that the South Korean government is fully supportive of what has taken place," Burns said in Washington. Seoul said Tuesday it had approved the agreement. "South Korea has decided to accept the deal, which virtually guarantees South Korea's central role," chief presidential spokesman Yoon Yeo-jun said Tuesday. The Korea Peninsula Energy Development Organization, a multinational consortium set up to provide the replacement reactors, has been given full authority to choose the design and contractor. Troops to leave West Bank soon Minister Yitzhak Rabin was cautious, saying he hoped the July 1 target would be met. "Starting tomorrow morning, we will take over the areas the army will vacate," said Yehiel Leiter, a settler leader. "We have arms to protect ourselves, and we will defend our lives, our families, our homes and our right to live in Judea and Samaria." the biblical names for the West Bank. Jewish settlers in the West Bank responded to the Israeli-Palestinian withdraw proposal by threatening to set up new settlements and move armed settler groups into positions left by the army. The Israeli-Palestinian peace process has passed the point of no return, he said. "If it will take two months more or six months more or one year more to solve it ... don't judge us by days or weeks." Also Monday, senior PLO officials said they would revive the Palestinian city council in east Jerusalem to JERUSALEM — Israel and the PLO reported progress Monday in talks on a West-Bank troop pullback, and an Israeli official said an accord likely would be reached by the July 1 target date. Speaking in Paris, Israeli Prime The official said the two sides had agreed to a troop withdrawal from all West Bank towns except Hebron in the next few months. Palestinian elections then would be held by year's end, he said. Yasser Arafat's spokesman, Marwan Kanafani, said some progress had been achieved, but he called the Israeli assessment too optimistic. He said there was no agreement yet on the dimensions of withdrawal. underscore their claim to the disputed city. The Associated Press PLO forms government for Jerusalem; Israel refuses to give up city Israel has said it would never relinquish control of Jerusalem, including the eastern sector it captured from Jordan in 1967. Palestinians claim east Jerusalem as the capital of a future state. RESTRICTED Both sides have been trying to increase their hold on the city in advance of talks on the final status of Jerusalem, which are supposed to begin by next year. Arafat met last week with former members of the council that administered east Jerusalem until 1967. He told them he planned to revive the council. "Jerusalem has only one municipality and this reality will never change," said Jerusalem Mayor Ehud Olmert in a statement. Does Your Car Have You In A Jam? A-1 Automotive Faisal Hussein, Arafat's minister in charge of Jerusalem affairs, said the Palestinian Cabinet approved the council's revival during the weekend. Want to sell something fast? Use the Kansan Classifieds! 21 Years Experience SQUIRREL - Transmission Specialists - High Quality work - Excellent Prices - All Car Repairs (Foreign & Domestic) Columbia bomb suspects arrested 1501 W.6th The bombing came one day after police arrested Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela, who with his brother, Miguel, leads the Cali cartel from the southwestern city. It supplies 80 percent of the world's cocaine and helped destroy the rival Medellin cartel. Wake up to Cedarwood Apartments 842-0865 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom) Call Pat today at 843-1116 2411 Cedarway Ave. minister. More than 200 people, many of them street vendors, were wounded in the blast. It ended this city's brief peace after a decade of drug terror. Dozens of people remained hospitalized. Rodriguez Orejuela faces up to 24 years in prison if convicted on drug trafficking charges. He has said he would admit to crimes to cut prison time. was carrying five cans of gunpowder. "We haven't ruled out any group," said Ramiro Bejarano, head of the secret police. He provided no details on the suspects' arrests. Now leasing Winter & Spring Newly Redecorated Units Air Conditioning & Pool Close to Mall 1 Block from KU Bus route Studios U. S. officials worry that Rodriguez Orejuela could exploit Colombia's troubled justice system, which has a record of corruption. Under Colombian law, traffickers can get years off for good conduct and cooperation. 2411 Cedarwood Ave. Officers in Bogotá did not dismiss a possible cartel role in the Medellin bombing, but also speculated leftist guerrilla involvement. Another suspect, a 17-year-old Medellin resident, was arrested minutes before the explosion. He MEDELLIN, Colombia — Police officers went after Colombia's biggest problems Monday, first battling violence by arresting suspects in a lethal public bombing. Secondly, they fought drugs by hunting for the second of two brothers believed to run the notorious Cali cocaine cartel. The Associated Press Several people were arrested as suspects in the bombing of a street festival that killed 29 people Saturday in Medellin, Columbia. Anonymous telephone callers claiming to be drug traffickers said they carried out the attack Saturday night in reprisal for the arrest of a drug kingpin, said Fernando Botero, defense Raise your scores LSAT GMAT MCAT GRE Satisfaction Guaranteed Small Classes $ \diamond $ Dynamic Instructors Practice Testing $ \diamond $ Free Extra-Help THE PRINCETON REVIEW (800) 2-REVIEW info.chicago@review.com It is not affiliated with Princeton University or ETS. "NO COUPON SPECIALS"EVERYDAY PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PARTY "10" X-OUT 2-PIZZA 3-PIZZA 10-PIZZA PIZZA 2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 2-COKES 4-COKES 1-COKE $9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50 DELIVERY HOURS Sun-Thurs Fri-Sat 11am-2am 11am-3am Use your Kansas Card and get one pizza with one topping for $2.60 each + tax. KANSIN 601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS KIVIN 928 Mass. Downtown The Etc. Shop Have a great summer Dickinson 9.21 June 9-15 The Secret of Roan Inish (PG) 5:30 7:30 9:30 Daily Sat/Sun 3:30 My Family(R) 4:30 7:15 9:40 Daily 53 50 Adult Before Meeting + Dolly 6:00 P.M. Impaired Sleep DICKINSON HOTEL Dickinson 6 2339 South Iowa St Tales from the Hood $^{\textcircled{R}}$ 9:30, The Little Princess $^{\textcircled{R}}$ 1:25, 4:40, 7:20 Johnny Memonic $^{\textcircled{R}}$ 1:10, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50 Mad Love II $^{\textcircled{R}}$ 1:20, 4:45, 7:20, 9:45 Die Hard III $^{\textcircled{R}}$ 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:40 Braveheart $^{\textcircled{R}}$ 1:00, 4:00, 8:00 Bridges of Madison Co $^{\textcircled{R}}$ 1:15, 4:00, 7:00, 9:50 LIBERTY HALL Crown Cinema VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 Halloween Congo PG-13 2:30,4:50,7:15,9:15 842-6560 615 Mass. Quinton's BAR & DELI DRINK SPECIALS Monday-23oz Frozen Drinks Tuesday-Imports $1.75 Wednesday-23 oz Domestic Big Girls $1.50 Thursday-23 oz Boulevard &$1.75 Friday-23oz Margaritas $2.50 Saturday-Domestic Bottles $1.25 Sunday-2 for 1 Well Drinks $2.50 BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00 (limited to SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 at 7:00 pm in Alderson Auditorium SUN HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 Our First Fall Meeting on September 13,1995 Quinton's CAR & DELL HILLCREST P25 IOWA 831/5(91) Crimson Tite® 2:1,45; 7:15; 9:45 While You Were Sleeping® 2:30; 4.45; 7:15; 9:45 Finke® 2:1,45 French Kiss® 12:30; 5.00; 7:15; 9:30 Forget Paris® 12:30; 5.00; 7:15; 9:30 Casper® 2:30; 5.00; 7:15; 9:30 --- --- We hope to see you back for SUN CINEMA TWIN ALL SEATS 1111/IOWA 641-5191 $1.25 The Pre-occupational Therapy Club cordially extends this invatiation: Pulp Fiction® 2:15, 5:15, 8:15 Heavyweights PG 2:30, 5:00, 7:15, 9:15 SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY - NoCover• Have You No Class? London $349 Paris $379 Frankfurt $379 Madrid $369 Tokyo $478 Rome $459 Italy is home from Kansas City,昂威纳在首 top partners. Each franchise apply, not included in the package. Call for other world destinations. Council Travel (1*800+926+8694) 1·800·2COUNCIL Call today for a FREE Student Travels magazine Wish you could afford a tongue piercing? Your wish is granted! Tongue piercing w/14g. barbell only $60 (Reg. $75) Supply limited. EXTREMUS Body Arts 4037 Broadway Kansas City, MO (816) 756-1142 Piercing by Mick Noland Get this. GIANT ATTRACTION $206.95 Enjoy this Rick's Bike Shop 916 Massachusetts 841-6642 MON-THUR 10AM TO 8PM 6B Wednesday, June 14, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 fifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food RV55 ASAP DOUGLAS COUNTY Rape Victim/ Survivor Service RV55 ASP • Advocacy • Support • Awareness • Prevention 1419 Mass. STUDENT 843 8985 SENATE 24 HOURS CALL 841-2345 VV INLINE SKATING We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts SUNFLOWER 843-5000 804 Massachusetts Fathers' Day Sale 10% off All Woolrich Shorts Woolrich June 10 - June 17 The Etc. Shop TM Ray-Ban THIS IS A LICENSED BY BRAKEHOME FOR THE WESTERN AFRICA Sunglasses forDRIVING 928 Mass. 843-0611 SUNGLASSES PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts Love Garden $900 CD $700 LP New Fugazi!! On Sale Now! Lowest prices on Manic Panic Hair Color!! Lowest prices on Manic Panic Hair Color!! Lots of new posters & t-shirts!! 9361/2 Mass. St.(upstairs) Lawrence,KS 66044 843-1551 Ca$hpaid for CDs,tapes, & LPs 7 days a week. LOUISE'S BAR DOWNTOWN Wednesday & Thursday $1.50 Schooners! Wearing nothing but a smile... but a smile... New Girls Brooke Wednesdays are STUDENT NIGHTS $2 admission with student ID Juicers Showgirls Open Sun-Thurs 7:30pm-1:00am Fri & Sat until 2:00am 913 N. Second Last Day for Full Bus Pass Refunds June16th 4th Floor Kansas Union KU on Wheels Office K STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Keep It Clean THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Try some white space in your next ad. And don't forget to place it where students look first. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Nothing works better. NOTHING SEEMS TO WORK. Enjoy the summer Charlie, and get ahead... EARN COLLEGE CREDIT Nothing works better. Choose a course from over 120 Independent Study courses. Stop by Independent Study's Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A, just north of the Kansas Union.Pick up a catalog or call 864-4440 for Information How about... BIOL 104c. Principles of Biology HIST 341c. Hitler and Nazi Germany BIOL 331c./PSYC502c. Human Sexuality HPER 330c./HDFL 220c. Principles of Nutrition ENGL 101c. Composition MATH 101c. Algebra ENGL 325c. Recent Popular Literature MATH 115c. Calculus ENGL 362c. Technical Writing WC 204c. Western Civilization I ENGL 466c. Literature for Children WC 205c. Western Civilization II EPR 300c. Principles of Human Learning Enroll any weekday of the year 8am to 4pm. 100s Announcements Kansas Learning Network Independent Study Continuing Education 1 105 Personal 110 Business Personal 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found Classified Directory --- I 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 205 Professional Services 235 Typing Services 100s Announcements 105 Personals Bureau, Leslie Gay, Unsurfeit • Call Headquarter 921-541 or GAY 938-1066. Ask for Leslie B. Gay, UNSURFEIT. 110 Bus. Personals Camera Lost at Well's Lookout. June 7, 35mm Automatic Miniature. REWARD. Respond to University Daily Kranan. Box 35, 119 Stauffer-Flint, Lawrence KS 66045 Avoid long waits in an emergency room. Try LAWRENCE: PROMPT CURE. Full-service urgent care center staff have experienced and trained you to provide the best for General medical, fracture care, and laceration repair. Open 8am, 11pm, Mon-Fri and 12:15pm on weekdays. Visit www.medart.org Art Centre, Kasdall & Clinton Phkty. MAZZIOS PIZZA $2.99 BUFFET DAY OR NIGHT 11-1,30, 6-8 everyday All the pizza, pasta and breadsticks you can eat! 2630 Iowa 843-1474 200s Employment 140 Lost & Found MAZZIOSPIZZA Miracle Video Summer Clearance. All adult tapes on sale starting at $9.99 and up. 910 N. 2nd, 413 880 and 910Haskell, 841-794. A志愿位于Music Ministries,regular part time position in music beginning the month of August. Enroll at Trinity Lutheran Church, 1249 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS 72501. Call 613-943-4150 for com NEED A BUDGET RIDER Use the Self Serv Cane Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union 205 Help Wanted LOST Your student health insurance: • Temporary coverage, 1 month plus monthly coverage. 男 女 COMMUTERS. Sell Service Car Pool Exchange Marine Lobby, Kansas Union LOST. Your student health insurance. 120 Announcements 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted - Kansan Classified: 864-4358 Campus Rep Program American Passage, Inc. Depo 215 W. Seattle Ave, WA 98119 (800) 487-2434 Ext. 4444 CAMPUS REP WANTED The nation's leader in college marketing is seeking an energetic, entrepreneurial job. No sales involved. Place advertising on bulletin boards for companies such as IBM. Send an email to Great part-time job earnings. Choose your own hours: 4-8 hours per week Needed. People aged 18 to 20 ate a program to reduce alcohol sales to workers. Work from 2pm-4pm on Tuesday, Oct. 18th to receive $25. For info at 184 633 1041, or day or night 837 464, eyes & ears. Attention Veterans All Branches Use your military training and experience in the Kansas Army National Guard. Receive much more than a monthly paycheck. Benefits include: -Educational Benefits in addition to current VA Benefits -Credit of prior service time towards pay & retirement -Commissary/PX privileges -$200,000 Life Insurance -Last pay grade held up to E-6 Try one year! Work only one week- end a month! Call today! 842-0759 842-9293 Loving, responsible person to provide full-time care for our 2 girls ages 1 and 3 in our Northwest Lawrence home beginning July 3 Call collect at 903-341-1414 Lice ages 13- 7. Want to make difference in a child's life? 3 - 7. Want to start Head start care can use a volunteer in the classroom. 2 hours a day for information. Monday-Friday. 6 a.m-6 p.m. National Company Entry Level AASP Scholarships ALL MAJORS Work Part Time Around Classes CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION 842-6336 Kansas Union Food Services' Catering Department hiring regular caterers for all meals. 8 a.m., 9 a.m, or 9 p.m.-midnight. $4.25 per day. Prefer previous food service experience. Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel Office. Level 5. Kansas Union SUMMERWORK $9.75 STARTING - National Company Systems & Networks of Lawrence, KS, has an opening for a part-time student intern to help with editing commercial software documentation and management. You will be fluent in English, have excellent editing and writing skills, and be able to write clear and concise sentences. The applicant should also have experience using Microsoft Word windows and the use of a mouse. Experience using desktop publishing systems (PageMaker, XPress, Framemaker, or Interlead) and presentational points is a plus. Experience with UNIX is a definite plus. This position is full-time for the summer and part-time for the fall. Send a cover letter, resume, and any other materials to preferentially technical writing to *Systems & Networks*. 1310 Wakarusa Dr., Suite A. Lawrence. KS 60494. You can send a fax to KS 60494, or email to office4ksi @ kcs.com EOE. Professional Writing Correspondence Consultation Linda Morton, Certified Professional Resume Writer RESUMES TRANSCRIPTION 842-4619 1012 Mass, Suite 201 A Member of PAW Professional Association of Resume Writers Retired professor needs local college student male to stay overnight one or two nights a week Can sleep on job and earn $30 a night. R.S.Raymond, 841-8354 Seeking active person for summer to work with 13 year old boy. Must be patient, soft-spoken and active Preference majoring in psychology in development, but not necessary. Call (423) 321 STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING MAINTENANCE $5.00. hr./month. wk/daily to apply. June 20, 1995. Duties: pickup and deliver equipment on campus sites; receive and write reports from students; perform repairs and upgrades on micro-computers and their associated peripherals. Qualifications: enrolled in 6 hours for fall semester; 6 months previous experience; valid driver's license. Req. BS or equiv. in Computer Science or out application at Networking and Telecommunications Services. University of Kansas, Elsorth Annex 1780 Engel Rd. Lawrence, KS 48301-1844 830-3800. Contact: Deanna Rhoenhold EA 104 STUDENT HOURLY SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR 84.75 hrs./week 10/week/December 19, 2015. Operate telephone operator's console and provide faculty/student/directory information, scheduling, data sourcing, alphabetizing, and data entry projects. Required Qualifications: * 1. Valid KU enrollment; * 2. Ability to understand and carry out verbiage and alphabetic names and file phone numbers correctly; * 4. Ability to fluently speak and only understand the English language; * 5. Available to work during semester break and summer recurs, and on 'cae' as needed; * 7. Data entry computer experience; * 8. able to type 40 ppm. Obtain and complete an application form from the Networking department; * 9. Ability to work desk. Address: Networking and Telecommunications Services. University of Kansas, Ellsworth Amos, 1738 Engel Road, Lawrence, KS 65045. Contact: Deanna Reinhold EO AA student Telephone Interviewer - must communicate with people using the internet, working with people $4.25 - $9.00, Flexible 20 - 30 hrs/ckw. Full description available at kern Geotechnical Center, 863 661 4308. An equal opportunity employer. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 71B NEEDED EXTRA MONEY? **Help wanted for fall completion held on August 17 and 18. Fill out application in General Accounting, Room A-201. Register with us at moneyman@uc.edu. 1 a.m. - 4 p.m. Deadline to apply is June 28. 1995. Must be current KC student to employ. We are an equal opportunity affirmative action employer. Talk to people all over the country about their shopping habits. No sales involved, so don't distract them. Therapist (case manager to work in therapeutic classroom with adolescents, 3+ years experience with adolescent with SED required. Schoolchildren with SED required. Work in work, or psychiatric nursing required. Send resume. cover to Ankhraleh. Bert Nish CMHC. Massachusetts, KSA. 65424. Open until filled. EEO United Child Development Center has opening for 1 full-time and 3 part time lead teacher. Applicants must have degree in education or related field with early childhood emphasis including 2 years of child care and transcript. Send by July 3 to Mary A. Kornby at 446 Vermont, Lawrence, KS 60044. EOE WHY THE LONG FACE? New company in Laurens, KS. area offers you a reason to smile again. Serious inquires only. 832-8227 225 Professional Services PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES Dale L. Clinton, M.D. Lawrence 841-5716 BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 JUSTICE OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 701 Nucass 843-4023 TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID'& alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole 16 East 13th 842-1133 Highly successful company seeks personnel in position 2074-2086. Flexible requirem t. Cell 681-865-7888 235 Typing Services For ALL your typing/editing /creative needs. All work is GA MANEED! Fast, friendly, reliable, accurate Call Jacka at 865-2835 Ask the teacher --- 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale Queen size mattress set. Never used. Still in Queen size. Wet slip pad. Will sell 19" bass headboard 17" - 75-98mm Full-size mattress set. New never used. Still in plastic warranty. $165. Brass headboard $490 $75. Desks, Bookcases, Chest of Drawers, Beds Everything But Ice. 936 Mails 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 1980 RX7, $1000. Runs great. Call 841-5633 Renta WASHER & DRYER For Only $45 a Month 1000W *No Deposit *Free Maintenance *GE quality, Heavy Duty. Large Capacity Delta Corporation 842-8428 3301 Clinton Parkway Ct. Suite #5 Jaworski, K 60047 370 Want to Buy Wanted for 6-8 weeks this summer furnished house or possibly apartment. Alaskan Principal and teacher needs to be in Lawrence. Price not a certain amount. Send resume to Mike Williams. 907-329-2271. Call immediately; Mike Williams. 907-329-2271. 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent 2 bedroom apartment in 4 plces, 15th and 17th tennessee. 6 bathrooms. 9 pet water paid and an air conditioner. 4 large kitchen. 3 large dining rooms. S wan GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS Management 2512 West 6th St. 749-1288 1 Bedroom $320 2 Bedroom $380 3 Bedroom $600 EAGLE APARTMENTS • 1 Bedroom $320 • 2 Bedroom $240 OPEN HOUSE COPENHUSE Monday-Friday 1-4:30 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Call 749-1288 Pets Welcome* South Points 2166 W.26th 843-6446 - Swimming Pool - On KU Bus Route - Sand volleyball court - Water &trash paid - 1,2,3&4bedroom - Ask about our brand 2 and 3 HR houses & duplexes available Nov 01 July 1 & Aug. 1, No Pte B44/160) *RestrictionsApply West Hills APARTMENTS 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 Now Leasing for August Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts. GREAT LOCATION near campus OPENHOUSE Mon.-Fri. 12:30-5:00 No appointment needed SUNDANCE APARTMENTS 7th & Florida Now Leasing For Fall Furnished Apartments Four Bedroom--Ask About Our Three Person Special PoolandClubhouse 841-5255 EDDINGHAM PLACE - Exercise weight room 225 Professional Services ATAN AFFORDABLE PRICE - Energy Efficient - Professionallymanagedby - Swimming pool - 4th and Eddingham D OFFERING LUXURY 2 BDRM APARTMENTS - Daily 3:00-5:00 Holiday Apartments Beau's Import Auto Service Quality car maintenance & repair. 24th and Eddingham Dr. - Fireplace PALM TREE ISLAND 545 Minnesota SAAB VOLVO KVM - 4 Bedroom $715-$725 - 3 Bedroom $595-$615 MasterCard 842-4320 Leasing for Summer & Fall - Recently constructed - Onsite management - On bus route - Dishwasher - Nice quiet setting - 2 Bedroom $410-$425 • 3 Bedroom $595-$615 COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith 842-5111 211 Mount Hope Court #3 For more Info. or Appt. call 843-0011 or 842-3841 Mon-Fri 12-5 p.m. VILLAGE SQUARE apartments A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere Now leasing for Fall 1&2Bedrooms OnKUBusRoute Indoor/Outdoor Pool 3 Bedroom duplex, 1/2 bath, garage. No pets. Excellent location $650/month. Available 9/1/56 B42 6599 3Hot Tubs - On KUBus Route with Exercise Room - Volleyball Court - 2 Pools - On KUB Bus Route with 4 access property. M-F10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 4stopsonProperty - Some Washer/Dryer Hookups - We are now accepting deposits on apartments for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. - 2 Laundry Rooms We presently have available a select few 1 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. Part25 Call or stop by today 2401 W. 25th, 9A3 842-1455 Hookups - Laundry facility - Close to campus (sorry no pets) 9th & Avalon 842-3040 - Spacious 2bedroom - Spacious 2bedroom * Laundry facility - Swimmingpool Great Location, 1801 Miss., 1801 Studio basement CA, no pets, ABS 875-942-4242 Bradford Square Apartments Spacious 3 BDRM Apts. Cats Welcome Modern interiors with: • microwave • dishwasher • patio/deck • separate dining room • lots of closet space • convenient laundry facility • on-site management 524 Frontier 842-4444 In Trailbridge Bus Bus ALPLEGRIT AFTS. Now showing & 21hrs Aug. 1, lapse. AC, heat & trash pD, DW, disposal & microwave. Call anytime. 843-8220. Sorry. phone: Boardwalk VISA Excellent Location. 1104 Tenn. Hotel in KU, 2R bpt in apt. CA, no pets. $835-842-4224 501 Colorado #B1 Mon.-Fri. 1-5 p.m. Sat. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Stop by or call 749-1556 Avail immediately. 1 BR basement apartment, avail immediately. 1 BR basement apartment, all utilities call 748-999. Leave message. Hilton Plus & bedroom 4th & Michigan Available August 1, $1,200 1&2 Bedroom Apts. Now leasing for Summer & Fall Move-ins. Historic 6 BBR, 3 baths. Lots of features, near riverfront. $1,320 Quail Creek Apartments & Townhouses 841-STAR (7827) 2111 Kasold Drive 843-4300 Call for Appt. "In a busy, impersonal world. we provide good old-fashioned personalized service." Managed & maintained by Professionals Morning Star for rooms, apartments in well-kept older homes. Somerset NY (857) 269-1400 MORNING STAR FOR ROOMS, APARTMENTS IN WELL-KEPT OLD HOME. SOMERSUET N.Y. (857) 269-1400 HARVESTON HOUSES Brand New! Bethe First! SOUTHPOINTE ParkVillas - Three bedrooms, two full baths Now leasing for spring or fall! - Washer/dryer included - Professionally designed interiors - OnKUbusroute-GreatLocation! 843-6446 2310 West 26th St *Immerzeje •Dishwasher •Garbage Disposal •Washer/Dryer Hookup •Gas, Heat/CA M-F 1-5pm 1740 Ohio 749-1436 MASTERCRAFT Summer Sublime. Spacious 5 BR House. Close to KU. No Pets. 749-209. Studio,1,2,3,&4bedroom apartments and townhomes bedroomapts. for fall! Real Nice 1 BR Apartment. Close to UK & Downers Hardwood floors, lots of fabs. No Pets. First Management is now leasing 2 Hanover Place 14th& Mass. 841-1212 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2415 One bedroom, one bath; on bus route. Available April 1. Approx. 800 sq. ft. Unfurnished $380 a month. Call 965-6884. Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-4226 Modern BRID, 28th Condo. Fully furnished, W.D. DW, MW and More. Walking distance to campus. Call 919-493-2004. Summer Sublease 1 BR apartment. Close to KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, off street parking. No Pets. 749-2919 Summer Sublease. real nice spacious 2 BR COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTAL DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND SECURE AN APARTMENT FOR FALL'95 Mon-Fri 9am-5pm Sat. 10am-4pm Professional Management and Maintenance Company - 842-4455 Equal Housing Opportunity Summer Sublease real nice, spacious 2 BR house, close to KU. Nopts 748 2919 MASTERCRAFT 430 Roommate Wanted NAISMITH Hall offer... N: NF female communal command for furnished 3 BR HI- 庭, with en-suite bath, 80 ft², in a NK basement, $869.5, 2 suites, 814.4 ft² LOOKING FOR A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE? Come by and see what Naismith Hall has to offer. Lawrence's premier private student housing option-the exceptional,affordable choice for KUstudents Swimmingpool Tours available daily including weekends-just drop by! Maidservice - Fully furnished and carpeted suites, each with their own bath - Convenient location next to campus and on KU bus route - Featuring our "Dine Anytime" program that serves teriffic meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner Don't forget to ask about our "Fast Back" Bonus! *IBM and Macintosh computer lab* Planned social activities 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 1-800-888-GOKU Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information packet! - By phone: 864-4358 How to schedule an ad: THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - Bs Mail: 119 Staffler Flint, lawrence. KS. 66045 Classified Information and order form Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. Stip 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 in payment to the Kansan offices. Or you may choose to have it delivered to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled with 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 cancelling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advert s account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by cash or with check are not available. The advertise may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00. Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Num. of insertions. 3 lines 4 lines 5-7 lines 8+ lines 1X 23X 47X 81X 2.10 1.60 1.10 0.90 1.95 1.20 0.80 0.70 1.90 1.10 0.75 0.65 1.80 1.05 0.65 0.60 15-29 N 30 N 0.75 0.50 0.65 0.45 0.60 0.40 0.55 0.35 - Dispose of Batteries and other Electrical Products Drainage Systems Waste Materials Classifications ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAST POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: Please print your ad one word per box: 1 2 3 4 5 Date ad begins: Total ad cost: Total days in paper Classification: Address: Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard Visa (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad. Account number: Print exact name appearing on credit card: Signature:___ Expiration Date: MasterCard The University Data Daly Kaanan. 11$^9$ Stuart Bear Fint Hall, Lawrence K. $600454$ $^{1}$ 8B Wednesday. June 14, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Students who linger keep bars in business By Angle Dasbach Kansan staff writer The Lawrence bar scene during the summer remains hot despite the exodus of KU students. Nick Carroll, owner of the Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St., said more people frequented his bar in the summer than in the fall or spring. "There are a lot more people walking around downtown," Carroll said. "I think students want to drink a lot of beer when it's hot outside." Carroll said his profits were up during the summer months. He attributed the gain to a change in students' moods. "In the winter, people stay at home and watch movies," he said. "But now students are in the mood to go out." Pat Rhodes. Jazzhus of Lawrence, 926 I/2 Massachusetts st., but that Old Chicago, 2329 S. Iowa St., was their favorite because it was big. manager of The Yacht Club, 530 Wisconsin St., said the summer crowds were better than the student rush during the school year because he made more money. "I think students want to drink a lot of beer when it's hot outside." Nick Carroll "We've been very busy every night since school started," he said. "I like the crowd because most students are old enough to enter the bar, and we don't have to deal with freshman and sophomore fake IDs." "You have a lot of room to move around, and you can play pool without being bumped." Russo said. However, some students don't mind less-crowded bars and enjoy the laid-back atmosphere. Lori Rusu, Wellington senior, said she liked going to a bar without having to stand in lines or deal with underage drinkers. "The summer is different because there are fewer people and fewer teenagers being obnoxious," Russo said. "I don't have to deal with the fake-ID crowd." Russo said that she and her friends Russo the Tachy Club and The Nick Carroll owner of the Replay Lounge Some bar owners are not as excited about the summer turnout. Rick McNeyel, owner of The Jazzhaus, said that the number of people who visit the Jazzhaus varied, but that it was definitely not the same as fall or spring. "Sometimes I'm really surprised because we may be packed with people," McNeely said. "But then there are times we have a lull. It's not a constant rush of people like the school year." Revenues decrease, he said, but the bar usually has good summers regardless of the crowd. "We still have really good bands that can pack the house and that's the most important part of this bar," McNeely said. Terrez Dawson, Wichita junior, said he didn't like going to a bar that didn't have a big crowd. He said that there were more people last summer and that he was disappointed by the bar scene this year. "There aren't as many dance clubs and cover charges are more expensive," Dawson said. "The bars seem to be dead this summer." Rather than suffer such a death, several Lawrence bars choose to hibernate during the summer, closing their doors until the students return. The bars taking a summer break are as follows: Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th St.; Bull Winkles Bar, 1344 Tennessee; and The Stumble Inn, 704 New Hampshire. MUSIC AND CONCERT REVIEWS The NEEDLE on the RECORD By Robert Moczydlowsky Kansan staff writer With several big-name shows coming up in the Lawrence/Kansas City area and a glut of new albums in local record stores, early June makes for a great time to listen to modern rock. But just like at the movies — where every release is billed as "The All-time Summer Blockbuster" — wading through the flood of new stuff can be tough. I grabbed some well-established artists, a couple of rowdy newcomers and a handful of local stuff. I put the needle on the record, and this is what I think. One song, "Wynona's Big Brown Beaver," sounds like "The Devil Went Down to Georgia" by the Charlie Daniels Band. It's a good disc, but it's nothing new. If you disagree, let me know. behind most of the champagne toasting, and their debut single "Stars" is spinning in heavy rotation nationwide. Vitreous Humor - the Vitreous Humor Self-titled e.p. (Crank!) Give it up for Vitreous Humor. A little over a year ago these guys moved out of Wichita and into the KU residence halls. They go to class, and from what I gather, they get better grades than the rest of us. And, oh yeah—they also have an independent record deal and very fine eight song e.p. Hum - You'd Prefer an Astronaut (RCA). Hum is from Champaign, Ill., a little college town with a ton of great local schools, a music-friendly bar scene and some new-found national attention. Hum is the band But unlike most recent acts, Hum isn't a band with just one single. They've created a spacey sound that blends their low-key vocals with some NAMM 14.05.2018 17:30:00 From start to finish this album is nothing but quality. My only beef? At nine songs and 45 minutes, it's just too short. Primus Tales - from the Punchbowl (Interscope/Atlantic) Here we go again. Les Claypool and his frantic band of THC-suckin' Merry Men have cranked out another studio album unlike any other on the planet. But that's the thing about Primpus — sure they're different from everybody else, but all of their albums sound the same. astro guitar work that Smashing Pumpkins would kill for. It's not a disc that will change the world, but any one of the songs might keep you from changing the station. Keep it up boys, I'm sure you're makin' your moms proud. Catherine Wheel - Happy Days (Mercury/Fontana). I know you are sick of hearing about the "Second British Invasion." You've heard Bush and Elastica, you've endured the Stone Roses and you're sick to freakin' death of those loud mouths from Oasis. But give this band a chance. APTERINE WHEEL KU they've got a solid single in "Waydown," and the last track, "Kill My Soul," is fast becoming one of my recent favorites. The disc is a little long, but there are definitely six or seven tunes worth hearing. And they don't even sound like they're from England. Soul Asylum - Let Your Dim Light Shine (Virgin). This disc has been out for barely a week, and already I'm horribly sick of the first single, "Misery." It just doesn't have the usual Soul Asylum integrity, and frankly, nor does any other song on the disc. I liked their previous albums and loved "Can't Even Tell," a song that appeared on the Clerks motion picture soundtrack. "Can't Even Tell" is Dave Pimer at his standoffish best, and the rough guitar had me looking forward to a new album. What I expected to hear on Let Your Dim Light Shine was more of Pirer's growlin' and bitchin' while the band's trademark blend of acoustic and electric guitars joined in. What I got was a bunch of radio-friendly crap. Shallow - 3-D Stereo Trouble (Zero Hour). Kansas City-based Shallow hooked up with New York SHALLOW 3-D stories trouble band," and you've got yourself a great little summertime treat. Check out Shallow at the Hurricane in Kansas City on June 23. label Zero Hour to put out a groovy little disc. Local wonderboy Ed Rose recorded the album in Lawrence at Red House Studios, and his talents really make the disc shine. Combine that with some catchy songs that don't sound like they were written by "just some local ku life STUDENTS LOOK FOR NOTHING IN THE PAPER. Remember that white space can be an irresistible attraction to a pair of inquisitive eyes. Use it to your advantage when you place your next ad where students look first. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Nothing works better. Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE June 14 Junior Brown Big Sandy Fly-Rite Boys 18 & Over/ Adv. Tix June 15 Las Toallitas Carson Shoefly June 16 Truck Stop Love Salty Iquanas Junk June 17 Filter Grither June 20 Menthol Sons of Elvis Stuck Mole Now On Sale: 6/22 Poster Children 7/5X Top (fwar's new project) 7/4The Jay Hawks 7/14Tripping Daisy Specials every day of the week RUDY'S PIZZERIA HUGE Selection of beer and wine Taste the Rudy's Difference 704 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS 749-0055 Pizza by the slice Gourmet Pizzas JOHNNY'S TAVERN the DRINK SPECIALS 401 N. 2nd • Lawrence, KS • 842-0377 Monday - $3 pitcher, $1 import draws Tuesday - $3 domestic pitcher, $5 import pitcher Wednesday - 50¢ draws, $1.75 big beers Thursday - $1.25 patio pitcher, $1.50 domestic bottles and burger on the patio only $1.50 Friday - $1.75 import bottles Saturday - $1.75 well drinks Attending K.U. COMFORTABLE & AFFORDABLE Living COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS We offer many great locations and floor plans... custom studios,1,2,3 and 4 bedroom apartments & Townhomes Campus Place 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Hanover Place 14th & Mass. • 841-1212 Regents Court 19th & Mass. • 749-0445 - custom furnishings ·designed for privacy ·energy efficient ·many built-ins ·affordable rates ·private parking ·locally owned ·laundry facilities* Sundance 7th & Florida·841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas·749-2415 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226 - close to campus •locally managed •close to shopping •central a/c •on site managers* •pool* •microwaves* *available some locations 会 Stop by and view these great apartments! EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY MASTERCRAFT Professional Management and Maintenance Company ADVERTISING:864-4358 NEWS:864-4810 KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. SECTION VOL.104, NO.151 WEDNESDAY. JUNE 21. 1995 WEATHER MUGGY High 90° Low 65° (USPS 650-640) KU LIFE Card-carrying spouses Some foreign students are using marriage to become U.S. citizens. Page1B KU LIFE The Sesame Street edge A new study by KU professors says children who watch Sesame Street perform better in school. Page 3A Former director of international students dies Graveside services for Clark Coan will be at 2 p.m. today at the Riverside Cemetery in Waterville. Coan, director emeritus of KU's international student services died Sunday. Compiled from The Associated Press and Kansan staff reports. NEWS BRIEFS Coan was born Oct. 1, 1924, in Barnes. He earned his bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in education from KU. In 1967, Coan came to work for the University as assistant dean of men and foreign student adviser. He held this position until 1966. From 1966 to 1974, he was dean of foreign student services, and from 1974 to 1990 he was director of foreign student services and associate dean of student life. He also served on the KU Athletic Board for more than 10 years. He is survived by his wife, Rebecca; sons Clark Jr., Marc and Edward, all of Lawrence; and a sister, Maxine Helene Summers. Lawrence. The family suggests memorials to the Clark Coan International Student Leadership Award Fund in care of the KU Endowment Association or to the First United Methodist Church in Lawrence in care of Warren-McElwain Mortuary, 120 W 13th St. Senate: Pedal to the metal "If we raise the speed limit and take the limits off, from a national perspective, people will die," said Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio. WASHINGTON — It's time to get rid of the 55 mph federal speed limit for cars, the Senate decided yesterday, moving to cancel a rule praised by safety groups but opposed by many motorists. The limit would remain for big trucks and buses. This issue and others came to the floor during debate over the National Highway System bill, which would provide $13 billion spanning two years to improve 159,886 miles of roads across the country. The House has yet to consider the measure. Defenders of the federal speed limit said there was no question that it had saved lives since it took effect in 1974. Loans directed straight to students Students can cash in federal loans at KU, avoid banks, red tape By Kimberly Crabtree Kansan staff writer Students who receive government loans to finance their education soon may find the process a little easier, thanks to the William D. Ford Federal Direct Student Loan Program. Under the program, more commonly known as direct lending, the federal government will make loans directly to students through their schools. Students will no longer have to go through a lending institution to receive their loan money. The University of Kansas has been selected to participate in the program beginning with the 1996-97 school year. Direct lending was started during the 1994-95 school year. By 1996, 1,854 colleges and universities will be a part of the program. Direct lending will affect Federal Subsidized Stafford Loans, Federal Unsubsidized Stafford Loans and Federal Plus Loans. "From a student's perspective, direct lending is similar to the current program," said Diane Del Buono, director of student financial aid. "The difference is that you're borrowing from the Department of Education. It will allow us to provide a lot more consistent service to students, rather than trying to deal with lending institutions all over the country." Tracey Cluthe, Houston senior, agreed. Cluthe receives loans from local and out-of-state banks. Students who already receive loans through lending institutions automatically will be switched over to the new program. "It will allow us to work more efficiently," Del Boone said. "Right now, if a student shows up at fee payment completion and for some reason doesn't have their loan money, we have to refer them to their lending institution, which causes time delays for the student in getting tuition and books paid for." "This new program definitely sounds like a step in the right direction," said Matt Direst, Topeka junior. Direst receives a student loan through Capital Federal Savings. "The program would conserve time, energy and money by totally eliminating a step that is currently involved in the program. Eliminating the step of correspondence with the lending institutions would also get rid of some red tape." Direct lending will allow the office of student financial aid to streamline loan functions and assist students in a more timely manner when problems arise. The University deals with 8,000 to 9,000 student loan recipients, with loan totals amounting to about $37 million. "It's a pain to go through all the steps you have to take now," Culthe said. "I just see the process being a lot quicker and more accessible if it's on campus." The Rape of a Homeland Nafa Mehmedovic sorts through a pile of pictures on the coffee table her forehead furrowed, blinking back the tears filling her brown eyes. Covering her mouth with her quavering hands, she points to a picture of Mostar, her hometown in Bosnia-Herzegovina. It shows a graceful 500-year-old arched bridge made of white bricks spanning a river with clear blue water, with houses and gardens full of flowers in the background. Then she points to a more recent photo. The bridge is reduced to rubble; the stream filled with debris; and the picture might as well be black and white, for Mostar is now gray and pock-marked by bullet holes from the war. In broken English, she says, "My town, before beautiful, now destroyed." Trying to maintain the Bosnian-Muslim custom of feeding visitors, she offers a typical Bosnian dish, chevapchichi — little beef kebabs — as she sits at her kitchen table and talks about how she and her family fleed their homeland to find safety and peace 5,000 miles away in Lawrence. She came to Lawrence with her husband Hardijia, 50; sons Vanja, 21, and Haris, 26; daughter-in-law Alisa, 22; and grandson Adnan, 2. Other family members remain in Mostar. Her husband, a tall gray-haired man, listens in gloomy silence as Mehmedovic tells how they came to the United States because there was no food, no work and no safety in her own country. "When soldiers start knocking on your doors and getting into your house without your consent, you live in constant fear," she said through a translator. Her son Vanja said the way in Bosnia-Herzegovina was not easy to understand. "No one should be blamed for this war," he said as he clapped his hands once in anger. "The politics and politicians are guilty for the suffering of our country. This is no one's fault, not the Muslims, not the Croatians, not even all of the Serbs are guilty." Before the war the family lived a normal middle-class life in Mostar and were not politically involved. Nafa Mehmedovic said. She said Serbian soldiers had no respect for private property; they often opened her door and walked into her house without asking permission. Her son sold soldiers did not care whether they hurt women or children. He said that at times when the soldiers came, his mother hid her baby grandson and her daughter-in-law to protect them from harm. "It was not safe for anyone, not even babies," he said. "In the ethnic cleansing the Serbian extremists killed many people, including babies." Mehmedovic said that even in her Lawrence home she was afraid of answering the door because she still was traumatized by her past. She said she was a murdered by her past. Tears run down her pale face as she shows a picture of the grave of her niece and nephew. They were killed after a grenade exploded near them, shortly before her family came to Lawrence. Her husband, still silent, shakes his head. Mehmedovic said that early in 1994, Croatian troops surrounded Mostar, a city of about 110,000, and gathered together all Muslims and Serbs. She said the soldiers told her they were trying to protect them from getting hurt. Soon, most of the city residents were sent to camps, including her family, she said. How- before see Bosnia, Page 2A Photos from Nafa's photo album. after Bosnia tries to end Serb siege with attacks, peace plan The Associated Press SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — A few rare hours of respite from war yielded to familiar gunfire and explosions last night even as the Bosnian government and rebel Serbs hunted they might talk peace again — with some conditions. Sirens sounded a general alert as the fighting began south of Sarajevo. Two civilians were killed and seven, including a child, were wounded, the government said. ment forces renewed artillery attacks south west of Sarajevo and launched infantry attacks in several locations. Three Serb civilians were slightly wounded in the shelling of the western Serb-held suburb of Rilovac, Serb television reported. Bosnian Serb media reported that govern- A three-day blitz by Bosnian government forces last week heralded the start of a summer-long offensive to try to crack the three-year Serb siege of Sarajevo. The Muslim-led army hopes to capture strategic heights around the city, severing Serb supply routes. The city has not had electricity, water or regular food aid for the last month. Both the Muslim-bosnian government and the rebel Serbs have indicated they might be willing to return to peace talks if the conditions are right. "I think we both understand that peace in Bosnia is dependent on a negotiated settlement," said Muhamed Sacirbey, Bosnian Foreign Minister. He added that the government's only condition was the lifting of the siege of Sarajevo. The international peace plan — proposed by Russia, Britain, France, Germany and the United States — would divide Bosnia, giving 49 percent to Serbs and 51 percent to a Muslim-Croat federation. The Bosnian government has accepted the plan, but Serbs, who now hold 70 percent of the country, have not. However, there have been some signals that Serb leaders could accept the plan with some changes. Momcilo Kraijasnik, a Serb leader, was quoted as saying that Serbs are urging a permanent cease-fire, negotiations and territorial divisions. University philosophy professor dies of cancer at age 51 By Mark Luce Kansan Staff Writer Peers, students mourn loss of associate dean Megan Hope, a spring 1995 graduate in English and anthropology, said she greatly admired J. Michael Young. Mr. Young, professor of philosophy, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, and director of the College Honors Program, died Saturday after a long battle with cancer. During her undergraduate career, Hope and Mr. Young worked together in the University Scholars Hope met Mr. Young as a freshman in his honors tutorial and said she was awed by his intelligence and generosity. JOHN B. HENRY Program and co-taught an honors tutorial on multiculturalism. J. Michael Young "What I really learned from Mike was that life in college and after college is not about impressing other people," Hope said. "It's about loving life, loving learning, and maintaining integrity no matter what you go through. He was really an inspiration." Sandra Wick, assistant director of the College Honors Program, said that even though Mr. Young was ill, he managed to finish a book, present conference papers and teach. "There was never a better fit between a man and a job," Wick said. "He gave direction and focus and set a wonderful example for students of a professional life in the academy." Mr. Young was born January 5, 1944, in Waterloo, Iowa. He studied philosophy at Grinnell College and joined KU's philosophy department in 1969 after receiving his doctorate from Yale University. An internationally recognized Kant scholar, Mr. Young was the editor and translator of "Immanuel Kant: Lectures on Logic," a book published in 1992. John Bricke, professor of philosophy and a close friend of Young's, said that Mr. Young's dedication to He also wrote many articles on Kant and other topics for philosophical journals. undergraduates was unique. --- Mr. Young's guidance was not just limited to his students. Sally Frost-Mason said that her decision to take an opening as associate dean of liberal arts and sciences was made easier because she knew she would be working with Mr. Young. "What marked Mike as a colleague was his incredibly deep concern for undergraduate education," Bricke said. "It is easy enough for highly specialized professors to drift toward graduate students, but that was never the direction he took." "His focus created a network of students who name him as the major intellectual influence in their lives, and this is said by an astonishing number of students," Bricke said. Bricke said that this commitment to undergraduates led not only to more philosophy majors, but also to a group of students who looked up to Mr. Young. "He brought a special perspective that always took into consideration the needs of the students," she said. "I know as a teacher, a friend and a mentor he will be incredibly missed." Young is survived by his wife, Carolyn; his children T. Jason Young, New York City, C. Bryan Young, Lawrence and A. Michelle Young, Las Vegas, Nev.; his parents, of Laguna Hills, Calif.; and two grandchildren. A memorial service will be held this fall at the University. Memorial contributions should be made to the J. Michael Young Memorial Scholarship Fund at the Metropolitan Federal Bank, 901 Vermont St., Lawrence, K. 60044. 0 2A Wednesday, June 21, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BOSNIA: Lawrence serves as refugees' promised land Continued from Page 1A. ever, with the help of some Croatian friends, her son Haris went to Croatia. The entire family soon followed Vanja Mehmedovic said that once in Croatia, the family decided it was safer to move to the United States. The United States is a promised land, and we came here to work and be part of the Lawrence community," he said. The family was sponsored by the New York-based Catholic Relief Services and arrived in Lawrence about one year ago. Bosnia Sarajevo Montenegro Area of detail Noah Musser/KANSAN Sister Frances Russell of Catholic Social Services of Lawrence, 320 Maine St., created a group to resettle Bosnian families in the area and was assigned with helping the Mehmedovic family settle here. Sister Russell said the group helped the family with housing, food and other necessities. One week after their arrival, they all started jobs: Nafa and Alisa at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 W. Turnpike Access Road; Vanja and Hamdija at Packer Plastics Inc., 2330 Packer Road; and Haris as a construction worker in St. Louis. "I think they adjusted well. They are peaceful, non-violent, and hard working people," Sister Russell said. "Our town is about the size of Mostar, and when they saw Clinton Lake they got really excited because in their hometown they have a beautiful river." Geoff Husic, a KU librarian in Watson Library's Slavic department, directs the group Sister Russell founded. He said that the Mehmedovics were homesick for a while but that they now felt like part of the community. "I helped them because I was sick of watching what was going on in their country and not being able to do anything," Husic said. "Anyone who has been in Bosnia knows that before 1991, the Muslims and Serbs and other groups in the country lived together without a problem." Even though the Mehmedovics cannot go home now, they have not forgotten their homeland. Someday, they say, they will go home. For now, Hamdja whispers, "Just remember — my friends, my family and my country are always in my mind and heart." The University Daily Kansas (USPS 655-040) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairfall Flint, Lawrence, KA. 60455, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holiday and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Subscription is paid to Lawrence, KA. 60454. 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 Stairman-Flint Hall, Lawrence, K6045 Crimson Girls lead cheers, lack recognition KANSAS KANSAS By Robert Sinclair Kansan staff writer Kansan staff writer Crimson Girls celebrate success at a recent national cheerleading camp. In addition to awards for Best Fight Song, Best Home Routine, and a gold medal for All Around, the team also qualified for nationals next April in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. In the nearly empty Dayton Arena, Julie Hammond catches her breath and gathers her pompons. One spent the last two hours yelling and jumping around in front of 13,045 people and a national TV audience. Her face shines from the effort, and small sweat beads hang from her short, brown hair. She's hot, sweaty and tired. All that she wants now is to relax, shower and savor Kansas' tournament victory against Western Kentucky. She never even gets the chance. Things aren't always pretty in the life of a Crimson Girl. Contrary to popular belief, there's more to being a Crimson Girl than just pompons and short skirts. Each member is a full-time student and is expected to keep up her classwork. Although each Crimson Girl receives $100 and free text books each semester, none are allowed access to athletic advisors or tutors. They also must schedule their classes around practice times. That can be difficult, since they are denied the early enrollment times of student athletes. Despite the hard work that goes into every one of their performances, the Athletic Department still doesn't classify them as a team. They are a "support group" or an "auxiliary group." This lack of official recognition may help to explain their post-game problems at the NCAA basketball tournament in Dayton, Ohio. "The they told us they'd have showers for us at the basketball arena, but they didn't," said Hammond, the team's captain. "The Athletic Department paid for the players to have their rooms until 4 p.m., but we had to check out at 1 p.m. After the game there was no place for us to shower." The Spirit Squad, which includes the Crimson Girls, cheerleaders, mascots and band members, has been fighting for respect from administrations and fans for years. Some progress has been made: a budget increase and more scholarship money. However, this latest mix-up illustrates how much further they have to go. Betsy Stephenson, associate athletics director, said that she had not heard anything about the Dayton mix-up and didn't think there was any controversy. She also pointed out that the arenas weren't responsible for providing showers for the Spirit Squad. If being hot and sweaty wasn't bad enough, the Crimson Girls had to file onto a bus with the other Spirit Squad members and begin an overnight, cross-country journey back to school. Meanwhile, the basketball team was flown back to Kansas. According to Stephenson, the decision to drive the Spirit Squad instead of flying was due to an Athletic Department policy that ground transportation should be used for any trip less than 600 miles. Richard Konzem, assistant athletics director, said the basketball team usually flew to NCAA tournament games. The NCAA requires that teams be there at least one day in advance to practice and meet with the media. Konzem said that if the Spirit Squad flew to Dayton with the team, 43 students would have missed class unnecessarily. The Crinson Girls' trip to Dayton was not the first time they had to fend for themselves. members. Eventually, Spirit Squad emergency funds were used to send six members, in addition to the seven the department would pay for. Five people paid their own way. When the Athletic Department was trying to decide who to send to the 1992 Aloa Bowl, it was one day you are going, the next day you're not for Spirit Squad The price for these annoyances is practice two hours a day, five days a week. On football game days, the squad arrives at Memorial Stadium for practice at 8:30 a.m. and then spends the rest of the day cheering for the Jayhawks. Sundays, the Crimson Girls teach high school clinics to raise money for the annual national cheerleading competition in Dallas. "The hardest time of the year is when basketball overlaps with football. We have to do both of those games, plus we still have to practice five days a week for our national competition in January," said Staci Sill, Jefferson City, Mo., junior, and a third year squad member. The hard work has paid dividends. At this year's competition, which is sponsored by the National Cheerleading Association, the Crimson Girls finished third, after winning the competition last year and placing second in 1993. Although it may sound as if the Crimson Girls face the rigors of any athletic team, they certainly aren't treated the same way, said Elaine Brady, Spirit Squad coordinator since 1983 and founder of the Crimson Girls. That won't happen any time soon. "We're not in competition while we're out there on, in the eyes of the Athletic Department, we are only a support group," she said. "I'd love to see us compete under the NCAA rather than have to do it through cheerleading organizations." "The NCAA is a national collegiate governing body for sports," said Stephenson, a former Kansas volleyball player who graduated in 1983. "Although the students who participate in Spirit Squad activities are great athletes and put in a lot of time, that governing body is not involved in supporting support groups." Nevertheless, Brady said things were improving. The department increased the squad's budget from $25,000 to $45,000 in just two years. But it is still pretty much on its own as far as competing in nationals is concerned. "It's not by any means where we want it to be, and we're always striving to make it better." Brady said. Hammond offered one explanation for the squad's plight. "There are going to be some people in charge who don't have a clue about why we're out there doing what we do," Hammond said. "I guess if you don't have a daughter, and you've never known how much work goes into being on a cheerleading squad, you might not understand." Some people are very appreciative of the Crimson Girls' efforts, she said. "Roy Williams is so supportive of us. He thanks us all the time," she said. "When we went to the Indiana game he said, 'I'm so sorry you had to cheer at this game.'" Student-athletes echo Williams. "They're not just there to be there," Kansas senior guard Calvin Rayford said. "I think it helps a lot to have them there. They've got a job to do just like we do." However, the squad hopes one day to be able to hit the showers like any other athletic team. "I think other athletes in the Athletic Department think of us pretty highly, and we all have a lot of respect for each other," Sill said. "It's too bad we're not seen as a team by the Athletic Department." Wearing nothing but a smile... New Girls New Girls Brooke Wednesdays are STUDENT NIGHTS $2 admission with student ID Juicers Showgirls Open Sun-Thurs 7:30pm-1:00am Fri & Sat until 2:00am 913 N. Second Barracuda Haro Raliegh BIKE AMERICA Super Summer Sale 23rd & Louisiana (Behind Schlotzsky's) • 842-7822 DIAMOND BACK GT Bicycles GTRTS-3 Full Suspension $93995 E Bike Tune-Up $1995 REG $29.95 Expires 8/2/95 $50 OFF any bike purchase over $300 Not valid with sale bikes or other offers Expires 8/2/95 The Power Is here! Apple PowerBook 150 PowerBook 150 The PowerBook150 Bundle Includes: - PowerBook 1504/120 - Claris Works 2.1 - StyleWriter 1200 - Claris Organizer TOTAL ONLY: $125100 Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU. Microsoft. The Power to be your best at KU. union technology center KU Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Burge Union • Lewal 3 • 913/864-5690 KU KU VISA MasterCard CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 21, 1995 3A Edmee Rodriguez / KANSAN Aletha Huston and John Wright, professors of human development and psychology and communication studies, have found that children who watch "Sesame Street" are more ready for school than those who watch non-educational programs. 'Sesame Street' may be path to potential By Meng Yew Tee Kansan staff writer Children who spend their sunny days sweeping the clouds away on "Sesame Street" may have an academic edge A study recently released by two KU professors found that preschoolers from lower-income families who watched educational programming, such as "Sesame Street," were more ready for school than children who didn't school than children who didn't watch educational shows. These "Sesame-Street" watching children also performed better on reading, math and vocabulary tests. In the long run, non-educational children's programs like "Bugs Bunny" or Disney cartoons, such as "Aladdin" and "The Little Mermaid," can negatively affect children's developing academic skills, school readiness and adjustment capabilities, the study revealed. The 4-year study was completed by John C. Wright and Aletha C. Huston, both professors of human development and co-directors of the University's center for research on influences of television on children. The study was financed by a $1.4-million unrestricted grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. "For the first time, we are able to say, based on a scientifically sophisticated study, that the same kids viewing different parts of the medium of television have benefits for some kinds of viewing and deficits for others." Wright said. For example, the study found that children who watch 25 minutes of educational programs a day scored five points higher on a standardized achievement test. However, if the same children watched commercial or non-educational programs for 25 minutes a day, they lost about five points on the same tests. The study also found that those children who watched educational programs spent more time reading About the study... More than 250 preschoolers and their families were followed closely during a three-year period. They were assessed four times in their homes and four times at the research office. Unannounced telephone interviews also were made. or being read to. They also spent less time on such activities as watching adult-television programs or playing video games. "We were able to do something that has never been done before," Wright said. "We were able to study over time the effects of prior viewing on subsequent test scores." The opposite was found for preschoolers who had watched non-educational and made-foradult television programs. - On average, children watched up to 8 hours of non-educational cartoons and 16 hours of adult-or general-audience programs a week. Those hours declined when they started kindergarten. The length and depth of this study is unprecedented, Wright said. It should quickly become a factor in arguments about the effects of television, particularly on children. METHOD Subjects were selected from low-income families, Statistical controls were applied to parental education, family income, preschool attendance, the child's first language, home environment and the child's initial level of language skill at the beginning of the study. "We can use television to help children develop, or we can use it to sell them things," Huston said. "Unfortunately, most of the television in this country has been used primarily for sales and making profit off children. - Children from ages 2 to 4 watched less than 2 hours of educational programs a week. By age 6 to 7, the hours declined to about 1 a week. "Sesame Street" made up almost 80 percent of that viewing. "But our study shows that if you do have the programming that is well designed, children can learn and benefit from it." The bottom line to parents is this: Careful selection of the programs children watch is essential. As the husband-wife team of Wright and Huston said, television is like a library: it depends on what you pick up to read. One of the study's most important conclusions is that television - 6 year olds and 7 year olds who viewed children's educational programs were more likely to show better reading skills and school-adjustment capabilities. OTHER KEY FINDINGS Study of children's shows may help save public TV By Meng Yew Tee Kenneth staff writer Kansan staff writer A newly released study by two KU professors on the effects of educational television viewing on children could mean another important battle won for public broadcasting stations. John C. Wright, professor of human development and one of the study's researchers, said that the results favored PBS since most quality educational children's programs were aired on public broadcasting. PBS is trying to prevent funding cuts by the federal government. For this reason, Wright said the study's publicity was important. The results have been featured on NBC's "Today Show," ABC's "World News Tonight" and in the New York Times. It also caught the attention of the White House. Wright and Aletha C. Huston, professor of human development and the study's other researcher, met Vice President Al Gore, the first lady and Washington policy-makers last year while working on the project. "The publicity is going to help us make sure that the people of the United States, acting through the government, continue to fund public broadcasting," Wright said. "It is pretty clear that the Congress will be very ill advised to stop funding it." Huston added, "It seems quite clear to me if we don't keep some public funding going for children's television, we are not going to have quality television for children." Warm months are busy ones for financial aid Office receives more than 700 calls in a day By Tara Trenary Kenyon staff writer Kansan staff writer At 8 a.m., two students wait outside the Office of Student Financial Aid at 50 Strong Hall. Inside, the switchboard already is lit with phone calls. While many students and faculty take a break during the spring and summer, the busy season blooms at the financial aid office. "We stay consistently busy from mid-March to the end of Seentem. ber," said Diane Del Buono, director of financial aid. The purpose of the financial aid office is to make a college education an accessible option for everyone by providing funds to those who qualify, Del Buono said. The warm "We stay consistently busy from mid-March to the end of September." Diane Del Buono Director of financial aid When students leave Lawrence for the summer, the number of walk-ins at the office decrease. That's when phones carry the load. The warm months are busy ones at the office for many reasons. It accepts fee payments from students during the last few weeks of the spring semester and bills are mailed in July. The office increased its number of phone lines and the phone capacity. Also, the staff uses headsets to answer calls, which helps cut the waiting time for the caller; Del Buono said. The Student Senate provides funds for the financial aid office to hire student advisers. The advisers are trained to work with students and their problems. "Where our volume really changes is on the phones," said Del Buono, "because now many of the families must communicate by phone." During the summer, many of these student advisers increase their work hours from part-time to fulltime. Since it moved from a much smaller space in Strong Hall last year, the office has been better equipped to handle the heavy workloads. The financial aid office receives 700-900 phone calls a day. phone calls, they had plenty of extra work. Student adviser Martina Dodson said that the front desk was not as busy during the summer, but that between the paperwork and the Temporary staff is hired to perform basic office work, said Del Buono. Training sessions and staff meetings are conducted to help the staff better deal with anxious or angry customers and to discuss concerns of staff members. Even with the Even with the extra effort made to improve financial aid office efficiency, students and their families still may feel the effects of the work overload. "I think, because it is busy, that very few people get through on the phone without some kind of wait," Del Buono said. She said that as summer progresses, callers get frustrated and many times get angry. However, the office may never be able to adequately staff so that no one has a delay, Del Buono said. Student adviser Jessica Robinson said callers should be patient. "We try to answer calls as quickly as possible." Robinson said. The Associated Press DEA agents say drug busts on the rise INDEPENDENCE, Mo. — Methamphetamine apparently is replacing cocaine as the drug of choice for some middle-class users, and Independence has become a production center for the easy-to-make drug. "A DEA agent told me we've busted more meth labs in the last six months than the state of Missouri and Kansas combined," said city police Lt. Jerry Heard. "The city of Independence is the hub for meth, so we've got a big mess." In 13 raids since February, detectives have found meth — also known as crank — at each lab or clandestine drug house. "We're involved in more labs this year than last year. And a number of those have been in Independence," said Gary Worden, agent in charge of the DEA district office in Kansas City. "It's the middle-class people's drug, occasionally upper class," Heard said. "This is more the street-level people. Outlaw biker gangs are still involved, but it's branched out. It pretty much runs the whole gamut." 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Sounds Great Car Stereo 913-842-1438 Audio/ Video Floor Demo Sale NOW! 4A Wednesdav. June 21. 1995 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT THE ISSUE: KANSAS COACH SUES Vitale should rule this court Theoretically, Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington's lawsuit against basketball announcer Dick Vitale is a well-aimed shot at sports media. Legally, the lawsuit for defamation may be an air ball. In a paragraph previewing the Jayhawks in Dick Vitale's Basketball, writer and co-defendant Joe Smith said the 1994-95 team was "loaded with talent with swingman Angela Aycock and guard Charisse Sampson heading the list. But coach Marian Washington usually finds a way to screw things up. This season will be no different." Washington answered the slight by filing a $10 million defamation suit against Vitale in October 1994. And although no court date is set, these players will face off in a U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. Washington's anger is understandable, but winning this game may be difficult. To receive damages, she must prove that she is not entirely a public figure. Just by being Kansas' women's basketball coach, Washington has put herself into the public eye, accessible to both praise and criticism. The growing popularity of women's college basketball has widened this spotlight. Washington's lawsuit against the announcer lacks legal strength, but her target is a well-chosen one. WASHINGTON: Lawyers say suit is questionable. Page 8B. Ultimately, Washington's reason for the suit is more important. She is defending her role in a sport that still doesn't get the respect it deserves. She is challenging the dismissal of her coaching ability. But suing an opinionated broadcaster like Vitale in this case is nonsense. JAMIE MUNN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD. Even if Washington is able to do this, Smith and Vitale probably would be protected by explaining that the words were fair comment and criticism, recognized as opinion or editorializing. She also must prove that Smith used actual malice, either knowing the information was false or using reckless disregard for whether the information was false. THE ISSUE: AMERICAN HEROISM Downed pilot is authentic hero He finally made contact, and within five hours, the helicopters found him. Bad weather kept U.N. planes from the heavily-armed Serbian area where O'Grady was shot down, leaving him to fend for himself. It is honorable to die for one's country. But being a hero meant more last week when Air Force Capt. Scott O'Grady was rescued from death. Heroism meant trusting in himself, his comrades and perhaps a higher being to bring him through a crisis alive. O'Grady survived six days in the hills of Bosnia as the target of a Serbian manhunt. Covered in mud, eating bugs and drinking rainwater, he sent numerous unanswered signals with his survival radio. "God, he protected me," O'Grady said. This was one of the ideals that inspired him to fight for his life, and this should be recognized and respected. He also praised the American fighter pilot Scott O'Grady trusted in himself, others and a higher being to survive in Serb-held territory. Marines who made the early-morning rescue mission. O'Grady said that these people were the real heroes who risked their lives to save his. This selfless attitude toward O'Grady's ordeal and his faith in other's help are examples of American heroism more than any celebrity in music, the movies or sports. It is unfortunate that it may have taken an American soldier in jeopardy, in a war-ravaged country and at the mercy of others before we re-evaluate our ideas of heroism. O'Grady worked toward a heroic life rather than die an honorable death. He put his trust in himself, his fellow Americans and faith. He came out a real national hero. ULLIE HAEST FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF GERRY FEY Editor ASHLEY MILLER Managing editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Technology coordinator GERRY FEY Editor Editorial ... Jamie Munn Campus ... Jenni Carlson ... Virginia Marghelm Photo ... Jay Thornton Design ... David Johnson Graphics ... Noah Musser Copy Chief ... Melinda Dia J.J. COOK Business manager MATT SHAW Retail sales manager JAY STEINER Sales and marketing adviser PAT BOYLE Accountant Campus mgr ...Courtney Becks Regional mgr ...Jody Groton National mgr ...J.J. Cook Special Sections mgr ..Stephanie Utley Production mgr ..Anne Loeper Marketing director ...Matt Shaw Creative director ...Anne Laurenze Classified mgr ..OHeather Valler Matt Hood / KANSAN WEAPON THAT GOT SCOTT O'GRADY SHOT DOWN OVER BOSNIA: INDECISIVE FOREIGN POLICY HODGES VOL. 85 Bad habits are lousy excuse to chop useful affirmative-action programs It always had been my opinion that racism, interpersonal as well as institutional, had limited minorities' economic and political progress. Imagine my chagrin upon finding out I was wrong. Speaker Newt Gingrich has figured out the real reason behind the disproportionate number of African Americans living in poverty. In an ingenious bit of insight, he said it was because of their bad habits. I should have realized the answer was that simple. If only our country's various minority populations would work on improving themselves, their opportunities would be limitless. I don't know what I was thinking when I looked at the nine Georgia school districts under federal investigation and saw racism. It was only bad habits that placed most Black kids in tracks for low achievers. It certainly wasn't their test scores since they surpassed many white students whose scores placed them in high-achiever tracks. And it couldn't have been racism since, in last week's opinion on affirmative-action programs, Justice Antonin STAFF COLUMNIST TODD HIATT lation being Black. It is bad habits. So Blacks are twice as likely as whites to be unemployed? Bad habits. Blacks with a college degree are three times as likely to be unemployed? Bad habits. Twenty-five percent of Black men between the ages of 20 and 29 are incarcerated? Bad habits. Are you buying any of this? I'm not It would be wise if we could reduce the problem of racial inequality to the simple statement: "It's your fault. Fix it." But we can't do that. We can't escape the fact that in the past 20 years our society has spent more time trying to rectify the past and insure political and economic equality than it has spent trying to develop social equality and justice. According to a 1991 report of the 21st Century Commission on African-American males,50 percent of African-American children grow up below the poverty line. Their quality of education is dismal due to a reliance on property taxes for funding and racist policies within the educational system. What do they care if someone has guaranteed them a place in a university? Chances are very good they won't see anything but manual labor and more poverty anyway. And what if these children do manage to survive the nihilism of their youth and make more than $8,000 a year? Will they find a society of love and acceptance, one that can't see the color of their skin? No. In fact, if tomorrow we were to abolish all forms of affirmative action, we would find that we had done nothing more than create a false sense of progress. We do see more minorities in government and in higher education, but how many of them would be there without the past benefits of affirmative-action programs? Of course, affirmative action should only be a temporary solution But I see hope. Every time I see my niece bring home a friend with a different skin color than hers I think maybe one day we will see Justice Sciala's vision come true — one race in America. — one that rectifies past inequities — while we concentrate on fixing the root of the problem. But as long as we ignore the underlying causes of racial inequality, we make affirmative action a permanent necessity. Then I hear someone like Gingrich talk and wonder how many old men and old ideas must die before that vision becomes a reality. We already have wasted too much time and lost too many lives to political rhetoric and temporary solutions. It is time to try something new. Todd Hlatit is a Lyndon senior in social welfare. Math enrollment can calculate one's future The student needed just one more class to graduate: Math 106. For three semesters, he tried to get into the class. He walked into the enrollment center, crossing his fingers. He faced the enrollment center workers who seemed to possess all the power in the world. "Can I have your enrollment card please?" an assistant asked. "Yeah," he said, trying to sound casual yet confident. It was up to these workers to set thousands of KU students free for graduation. They had complete control — like holding a TV remote or a car steering wheel. "It looks like you've got all your classes this summer except for one: Math 106," said the enrollment worker. "It is closed." The student's face turned bright red then蓝 as he fell to the floor. STAFF COLUMNIST SHELLY FALEVITS "I need it to graduate," he said sobbing. "I must have it to graduate. I just want to graduate." Many KU students go through this stressful scenario every semester. It is always a struggle to get the courses they need. Many general classes that are closed every semester make it difficult for students who try to plan for their graduation. When students cannot get the courses they need, they end up spending more time and money at KU. This affects their future schedule; prolongs their original graduation date; and in the end, puts major financial pressures on their families who pay for the extra time. This also is stressful for students who support themselves. These students have the least money and no time to play Russian roulette with KU course work. I too have had this problem. When I enrolled this past spring for my final summer and fall schedules, I found that the only class that was closed was one of my summer requirements, Math 106. When I explained to the computer operator that I must have Math 106 to graduate in December, she said there would be no problem. She told me to go to my instructor the first day of the class and explain my situation. She said, with my December graduation plan, I would have no problem getting a closed-class opener. Not that easy. Thirty students were in my same situation: trying to get into this closed class. The instructor did not grant me a closed-class opener card at first. I actually was sent to Johnson County Community College to enroll in an equivalent math course in case I could not get into the one at KU. Being a KU student and paying out-of-state tuition, JCCC should not be a part of my options list. I pay to go to school here, not to travel an hour and a half every day to a school in another city. After many hours of questions, calls and emotional outbursts to the deans of the math department, I finally got into Math 106. It is difficult to see where students fit into the scheme of class scheduling. It would be helpful to get a better idea of how many students need each class before enrollment instead of afterwards when students have few options. This issue has been a great concern of mine since I started at the University. With some careful planning, the enrollment process will change from hopeless to hopeful. Shelly Falvits is a Chicago senior in Journalism. *What are you staring at?* Emmie Hsu/ KANSAN 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 letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the absolute right edit, cut to length or outright reject all submissions. For any questions, call Jamie Munn, editorial page editor, at 864-4810. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 21, 1995 5A Summer campers are new kids in the hall By Leslie Taylor Special to the Kansan A new batch of students is moving into the KU residence halls this summer, and many of them are more concerned with Clearasil than with add/drop. More than 8,000 junior high and high school students will live in the halls while participating in a variety of camps and workshops held at KU this summer. Workshops for these students range from diving, golf and basketball to flag teams and cheerleading. Academic camps such as the pharmaceutical or debate workshops also will take place. Student Housing provides room and board for the campers, and each workshop brings its own counselors to assist the campers and enforce each workshops' regulations. "In general, these kids are kept very busy throughout the week and really don't have much opportunity to get into any trouble," said Randy Timm, assistant director of Student Housing. "The camps keep them busy and make sure they're having a good time." What I'm doing this summer... This week the following workshops are scheduled: - Kansas Governor's Academy ...80 students - Golf Camp ...60 students - First Baptist Youth Conference ...40 students - Debate Camp ...80 students - Pole Vault Camp ...90 students - Kansas/Duke Talent Identification Program ...90-100 students - Upward Bound ...58 students - Pathways ...55 students - National Fire Academy Delivery ..30 students - Junior high Midwestern Music Camp 220 students - Kansas Inservice Training Systems ..50 students Workshops scheduled for next week include: - Kansas Journalism Institute ..180 students - Golf Camp ...60 students - Senior high Midwestern Music Camp ...310 students - Writers Workshop ...12 students KANSAN Source: Department of Student Housing City Commission bumps back N. Second Street repairs By John Collar Special to the Kansan The North-Lawrence street in front of Johnny's Tavern will continue to be plagued by poor drainage, narrow lanes and decaying pavement for at least another year. Citing cost overruns and the safety hazards of a torn-up roadway, Lawrence City Commissioners voted 3-2 last week to put the North Second Street improvement project on hold. North Second is a major thoroughfare for students traveling to Interstate 70 or to the Tanger Factory Outlet Center. The commission's decision has frustrated several North-Lawrence business owners. "The that road is a deathtrap," said Bill Webster, owner of Webster's — The Home Specialist, 801 N. Second St. "I really hope something is done before someone gets hurt." A year ago, the Lawrence City Commission placed the North Second Street renovation project at the top of its agenda for this summer. The city earmarked $1.6 million for widening lanes, adding sidewalks and replacing antiquated storm sewers and water lines. City engineers estimated that the project would cost about $2.19 million. W. A. Dunbar & Son Trucking and Excavating Inc. submitted the only bid: $2.46 million. Dunbar's project was expected to take about a year to complete. Hoping to save both money and time, the commission decided to wait and solicit more bids. Commissioner Allen Levine, who voted for the delay, said that if the project had been started this summer, there was no guarantee that it would be completed in a timely manner. Levine said a year-long project, as proposed by Dunbar's company, would have hurt not only those on North Second Street, but also the rest of Lawrence. "If we had been guaranteed that the storm sewers would have been functional by winter, I would have gone for it," he said. Does Your Car Have You In A Jam? A-1 Automotive Want to sell something fast? Use the Kansan Classifieds! 21 Years Experience A family in front of a car crash. - Transmission Specialists - High Quality work - Excellent Prices - All Car Repairs 842-0865 (Foreign & Domestic) 1501 W.6th We sell the sports equipment you want to buy! 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FRIDAY, JUNE 23 CAMPANILE HILL FOR MORE INFO CALL 864-3477 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WAREHOUSE® & HAIRZONE® SALON Pebble & Penguin $^5$ Pulp Fiction $^8$ Circle of Friends $^{1-3}$ 2:45, 5:00 7:30 2:30, 5:00, 7:15, 9:30 2:30, 5:00, 7:15, 9:30 CINEMA TWIN ALL STARS 3110/OWA 841-5191 $1.25 SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY OPEN TO THE PUBLIC KMS MAGE ABRA PAUL MITCHELL S CEDASTIAM GAIN DE TERRIE Nucleic A. Beauty SEBASTIAN of Lawrence 520 West 23rd 841-5885 NEXUS DAN THE LERRE SAVE NOW Nudeic A. REDKEN BROCATO OPI SORBIE. GRAHAM WERR Lanza Specials Good through July 15 JOICO AVEDA. CALIFORNIA TAN BODY DRENCH BROCATO OPI SORBIE. GRAHAM WEBR BODY DRENCH TIGI SORBIE GRAHAM WEBB SORBIE ALL PRODUCTS BUY ONE GET ONE 1/2 PRICE SORBIE ABBA INFINITI MOTORS ALL PRODUCTS BUY ONE GET ONE 1/2 PRICE KMS HALLARD SILKER CONDITIONER 1/2 L $9.95 PAUL MITCHELL SCULPTING FOAM 16 oz. OPI Nail Polish BUY ONE GET ONE OPI NAIL LAQUER 1/2 PRICE ORALI NAIL LAQUER BELLA HYDRATING BALM $995 BODY DRENCH AND CALIFORNIA TAN 20% OFF NEXUS HUMECTRESS --- NEXUS HUMECTRESS 1L Refill Bag $19.95 NEXUS Humectress NEXUS PAUL MITCHELL FREEZE & SHINE 32 oz. $12'95 PAUL MITCHELL PROTECTIVE SOLUTION ENERGY HomeTrac 3/4 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z THERAPPE 1/2 L with FREE 60g Hair Spray JOICO Kerapro or Triage Shampoo 1/2L $695 $695 NEWS US THERAPY HEALTH CARE NUTRITION PHOTOGRAPHY ART MEDIA RESOURCES COUPON Beauty Warehouse 10% OFF Any Products EXCLUDES SALE ITEMS! Offer Expires 7/15/95 841-5885 • 520 W. 23rd UDK We Now Feature AVEDA AVEDA AVEDA AVEDA AVEDA --- 6A --- Wednesday, June 21,1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Keep It Clean THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPECIAL ADVANCE SCREENING TOM HANKS KEVIN BACON BILLI PAXTON GARY SINISE ED HARRIS "Houston, we have a problem." RON HOWARD APOLLO 13 IMAGINE ENTERTAINMENT BRIAN GRAZER "APOLLO 11" KATHLEEN QUINLAN JAMES HORNER "RITA RYACK" ALDRIC LAVAULT PORTER MICHAEL BOSTICK MIKE HILL DAN HANLEY MICHAEL CORENBRUTH DEAN CURRY FORD HALLOWELL JIM LOVEL JEFFREY KLUGER WILLIAM BROOLES JR. AL RINERT BRIAN GRAZER RON HOWARD A UNIVERSAL PICTURE FREE SCREENING Thurs, June 22 8:00 p.m. Lied Center DK Diet Coke cK Diet Coke KU students will study abroad free Diet Coke PLUS A SPECIAL PRESENTATION OF DUCKMAN Vouchers available at SUA Box Office Limit 2 per person STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES Entertainment Papa Jeans THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LONDON Ray Ban USA NETWORK School shares top place with Yale for scholarships By Luby Montano-Laurel Kansan staff writer Eight KU students have won National Security Education Program awards to study abroad during the 1995-96 school year. According to the KU Study Abroad Office, the students were among 300 winners of the national scholarship, worth as much as $8,000 a semester. More than 1,000 students entered the competition. The National Security Education Program, which started last year, offers undergraduate students the opportunity to study abroad in areas that are not in Western Europe, Canada, Australia or New Zealand, said Elizabeth Debicki, director of KU Study Abroad. The NSEP sent applications to 159 colleges nationwide, including the University. The Study Abroad Office organized and helped the KU applicants in the long application process, Debicki said. However, Leslie Anderson, head of the undergraduate division of the National Security Education Program in Washington, said that this year KU shared the top place with Yale University. Both universities have eight winners. entered the competition this year but that the three-level screening process was very competitive. She also said that 16 KU students Anderson said that the program covered the expenses of all 300 winners from 159 different colleges in 41 states. The program is designed to assist American students who need foreign language skills and international competence for their future jobs. She said that the program provided scholarships to internationalize students' education in areas less commonly chosen for study abroad. Students can go abroad to any country they choose as long as the country meets the necessary requirements. Anderson said. "We support the students decisions," she said. "We are here to help them." To qualify for the awards, students must be U.S. citizens, be full-time students in a college or university, and apply for a study abroad program that helps meet their degree requirements. "KU winners are excited to be able to go abroad and not have to worry so much about money." Debicki said. "This is the only national scholarship specifically for study abroad." The program's funds come from the Department of Defense, Debicki said. Angela Warren, Ottawa sophomore, said that she was shocked when she heard that she was a winner. Warren studies Russian. She left for Moscow on Wednesday and will be there for the summer. Nancy Rideout, Liberty, Mo., senior and Chinese major, said that the NSEP scholarship would allow her to go to China with her children for the 1996-97 academic year. "I've been planning to go to China since I was a freshman, and I am glad that this opportunity is given to undergraduates as well," Rideout said. "I think that going abroad is important because students can always learn more." Next year's award applications are available at the KU Study Abroad Office, 203 Lippincott Hall. KU undergraduate NSEP scholarships list of scholarship recipients with future school, field of study and money amount: Jennifer Cavanaugh Jennifer Cavanaugh Universidad de Costa Rica, Costa Rica; Spanish Literature; $7,000 Jeffrey Lonard Linda Ly Kiev University, Ukraine; Ukrainian; $8,000 The People's Republic of China, Nanjing; Biology and Chinese; $5,000 Nancy Ridgeout John Roberts The People's Republic of China, Nanjing; Chinese; $5,000 JOHN ROBERTS Frederic Chopin Music Academy, Polarid; Music/Piano; $11,000 Jamieh Shawman Jennifer Snowmink School for International Training, Bolivia; Sustainable Development; $6,000 Jason Unrein Universidad de Costa Rica, Costa Rica; Business and Spanish; $5,000 Angela Warren Angela Warren St. Petersburg University, Russia Russian; $5,000 WIDESPREAD PANIC Wed. July 12 LIBERTY HALL 644 Massachusetts • Lawrence, KS • 913-749-1972 The Etc. 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And our soft water saves you another 14 to 25 cents per load on detergent! Use our Duds 'n Suds punch card and save as much as 24 cents per load! We absolutely guarantee that you wash will dry with 75 cents per load! Your total savings is 59 cents per load, meaning each load is only 41 cents!!! --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 21, 1995 7A Affirmative action should be aimed at poor, says Gingrich The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Women and minorities who rely on affirmative action should take advantage of opportunities which overlook race and gender, Speaker Newt Gingrich said Thursday. In a talk with 10 black journalists that covered race, school busing and civil rights strategy, Gingrich said he'd like affirmative action to focus specifically on the poor — provided they are willing to work hard — without putting more expectations on the institutions asked to educate or hire them. The Georgia Republican suggested an experiment which would provide incentives such as computers or scholarship money to disadvantaged high school students in three cities if they finish school with B-averages or better. "I am prepared to say to the poor, You have to learn new habits. The habits to being poor don't work." Gingrich said. "I'm not suggesting there's an easy answer to this. The question becomes, 'What's the best way to create opportunity?' ... What best dissels prejudice??" Advocates for affirmative action, however, said they were not willing to heap more expectations on the victims of discrimination while expecting less of those who perpetuate the bias. "Our contract with America is the United States Constitution." said Wade Henderson, lobbyist for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "We expect the nation to live up to its commitment to all its citizens." Last week, the Supreme Court placed tough new limits on affirmative action programs which were designed to help minorities. Those who oppose such programs in hiring, contracting and education said the court ruling proved that these programs were discriminatory. GingrichRepublicanswere interested in makingaffirmative action work for the poor, but not in helping people solely because of their race or gender. "In this country in 1995, if you work twice as hard, you're going to succeed," Gingrich said. "There are enormous avenues for opportunity in this society. "I'm not sure, in the long run, you want a system that says, 'Tell me what your racial makeup is, and I'll tell you whether or not you get the next slot.'" The flaw with affirmative action, Gingrich said, was that it was built on lawsuits, and it was a structure encouraged by civil rights activists who had used the law to break down segregation during the 1960s. "When you create that kind of backward-looking, grievance-looking system, you teach people exactly the wrong habits," he said. "They end up spending their lives waiting for the lawsuit, instead of spending their lives seeking opportunity." Wilson throws hat in GOP race The Associated Press SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Seeking to calm jittery supporters, Gov. Pete Wilson said Thursday there should "be no doubt" he is running for president. He said he would underscore it, as other candidates have, on CNN's "Larry King Live." In a conference call to several hundred backers, Wilson announced formation of a "Pete Wilson for President Committee." And he said he would appear tomorrow on King's CNN show to talk about his Republican candidacy nomination. He is the ninth Republican in the race. "Let there be no doubt in anyone's mind that I am running for president," he said. "There have been a lot of rumors to the contrary put out by people engaged in wishful thinking." The hurriedly arranged conference call appeared to be a response to increasing speculation that Wilson's presidential hopes could be dashed by his slow recovery from throat surgery, his low standing in polls and his slower-than-expected fund raising. Wilson plans campaign trips to Florida on Saturday, Iowa on Sunday and Denver next week. TERRA NOVA BOOKSTORE and CAFE 920 MARSHALBURNETT LAWRENCE LES 60044 913-832-8300 Monday - Thursday 10-9 Friday & Saturday 10-10\ Sunday 12-6 NEW BOOKS NEW MAGAZINES NEW HOURS Our Cafe Now Open Serving coffee,teas & juices pastries & desserts th 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 FREE FREE PHOTOFINISHING Develop 9 rolls of film at the regular low discount price and the 10th roll of C-41, 12 or 24 exposure standard size,single prints is on us! If 36 exposure only $3.00. Keep and reuse thru 12/31/95 "At the top of Naismith Hill R Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road843-3826 WHERE'S IT FROM? CANNONDALE M200 8426.95 YBETCHA! 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MOOSE BROTHERS PIZZA 6 F SMALL 2 FOR 6 NABISCO SNACKWELLS 5 OZ. / 7.25 OZ. SIZE 168 ASSORTED VARIETIES SWEET ROLLS ECONOMY PAK 298 FAIR ACRES ICE CREAM 5 OR. PAIL, ALL FLAVORS 269 BANQUET FROZEN DINNERS 6-11 OZ. ARSIT. VARIETIES 88¢ FA. FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED FRENCH BREAD 216 F $1 2 LOAVES IN A BAG WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS WE VOW CHERS & MAN BUYERS' COUPONS OPEN 24 HOURS EVERY DAY Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE VIDEO SPECIAL 3 MOVIES/GAMES 3 DAYS $3.00 NEW RELEASES NOT INCLUDED PRICE EFFECTIVE JUNE '98 FAIRMONT-ZARDA FRUIT DRINK 1 QAL JUG 69¢ FA BLUE BELL ICE CREAM PINT CTR. 89¢ FA FRITO-LAY LAY'S OR RUFFLES POTATO CHIPS 14 OZ BAG 188 FA LONDON INTERNATIONAL MUSEUM FAIRMONT-ZARDA FRUIT DRINK 1 GAL. JUG 69¢ EA BLUE BELL ICE CREAM PINT CTR. 89¢ EA FRITO-LAY LAY'S OR RUFFLES POTATO CHIPS 14 OZ. RAG 1 88 EA REGULAR TOSITOS, NOT BAKED 14 OZ. TAYSTEE OLD FASHIONED BREAD 20 OZ. LOAF 78¢ NABISCO SNACKWELLS 5 OZ.-7.75 OZ. SIZE 1 68 MILWAUKEE'S BEST OR BEST LIGHT BEER 685 24 PACK 12 FL OZ CANS LIMIT ADDITIONAL PURCHASES MILWAUKEE'S BEST $735 BEER CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA GREEN LEAF, RED LEAF, BOSTON OR ROMAINE LETTUCE 48¢ BONELESS ROUND STEAK ECONOMY PACK 128 LB. MILWAUKEE'S BEST OR BEST LIGHT BEER 685 24 PACK 1,102 CANES LIMIT ADDITIONAL PURCHASES MILWAUKEE'S BEST $7.35 BEER FRESH SWEET SOUTHERN PEACHES 48¢ LB. FRESH SWEET APRICOTS 98¢ FRESH CRISP CARROTS 2 LB. BAG 58¢ ASSORTED VARIETIES SWEET BOLLS ECONOMY PK 298 BONELESS BEEF RUMP ROAST ECONOMY PAK 128 LB FRESH SWEET SOUTHERN PEACHES 48¢ LB. FRESH SWEET APRICOTS 98¢ BONELESS PORK LOIN ROAST OR CHOPS ECONOMY PAK 268 LB. RED OR WHITE SEEDLESS GRAPES 88¢ LB. FAIR ACRES ICE CREAM 5 QT. PAUL, ALL FLAVORS 269 FRESH CRISP CARROTS F LB. BAG 58¢ BONELESS BEEF TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ECONOMY PAK 2 19 LB. 20% OFF ALLIN STOCK SUITS FOR '95 SEASON Araisins • Citrus Too Hot Brazil 820-822 Mass. 841-0100 ASSORTED VARIETIES SWEET ROLLS ECONOMY PK 298 At Super Scan, your privacy is assured! For only $6.00 per image, you will get a FREE disk, FREE S/H, and a scanned image of your picture. Use it for Windows wallpaper, or touch it up in Paintbrush! No special programs are needed! Three or more images are only $5.00 each! Delivery within ten days! All originals will be returned. Send images with check/cash to P.OBox 3567. Lawrence, KS 66046 100 FRESH SLICED PORK STEAK ECONOMY PACK 88¢ LB. FROM THE DELI SLUCED OR SHAVED DELI HAM 169 LB. ECOUNMY PACK IMPORTED FROM DENMARK HAWITT CHEESE $ 3.88 LB. FRESH CRISP BROCCOLI LARGE BUNCH 68¢ BANQUET FROZEN DINNERS 6-11 OZ. ASSE VABEITES 88¢ FA. Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE FRYER THIGHS OR DRUMSTICKS ECONOMY PACK 58¢ MOOSE BROTHERS PIZZA 8" SMALL 2 FOR $6 VIDEO SPECIAL 3 MOVIES/GAMES 3 DAYS $3.00 NEW RELEASES NOT INCLUDED PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE '95 SUN TUE WED THU FRI SAT 18:00 10:00 7:00 10:00 5:00 2:00 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 FROM THE BAKERY RESIDENCE IN FRENCH BREAD 2 LOWES IN A BAG 16 F DOC R Cadillac Cadillac RANCH Country Western Bar Mosey on down to the 2515 West 6th 842-9845 SUMMER SPECIALS THURSDAYS- ONE DOLLAR ANYTHINGS!!! FRIDAY IS- LADIES NIGHT! LADIES GET IN FREE! Plus, two dollar anythings. Don't forget "The Ranch" this summer. With the patio, good country music and cheap drinks you can't go wrong. Come on down and see us y'all. Cadillac RANCH Country Western Bar Cadillac RANCH Country Western Bar usic, 8A Wednesdav. June 21. 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 Raise your scores LSAT GMAT MCAT GRE Satisfaction Guaranteed Small Classes ♦ Dynamic Instructors Practice Testing ♦ Free Extra-Help THE PRINCETON REVIEW (800) 2-REVIEW info.chicago@review.com T.P.R. is not affiliated with Princeton University or E.T.S. ↩ Raise your scores LSAT GMAT MCAT GRE Satisfaction Guaranteed Small Classes ♦ Dynamic Instructors Practice Testing ♦ Free Extra-Help THE PRINCETON REVIEW (800) 2-REVIEW info.chicago@review.com T.P.R. is not affiliated with Princeton University or E.T.S. the DRINK SPECIALS 401 N. 2nd • Lawrence, KS • 842-0377 Monday - $3 pitchers, $1 import draws Tuesday - $3 domestic pitcher, $5 import pitcher Wednesday - 50¢ draws, $1.75 big beers Thursday - $1.25 patio pitcher, $1.50 domestic bottles and burgers on the patio only $1.50 Friday - $1.75 import bottles Saturday - $1.75 well drinks JOHNNY'S TAVERN JOHNNY'S TAVERN the DRINK SPECIALS 401 N. 2nd • Lawrence, KS • 842-0377 Monday - $3 pitchers, $1 import draws Tuesday - $3 domestic pitchers, $5 import pitchers Wednesday - 50¢ draws, $1.75 big beers Thursday - $1.25 patio pitchers, $1.50 domestic bottles and burgers on the patio only $1.50 Friday - $1.75 import bottles Saturday - $1.75 well drinks Riverfront Plaza hasn't done harm Downtown survives another raid By Dan Gelston Kansan staff writer Walking through downtown Lawrence can seem like taking a trip back in time. 70 Riverfront Mall 10 Lawrence Buildings more than 150 years old and structures that survived Quantrill's Raid are a constant reminder that this is a town with a fascinating history. That feeling of history was one of the reasons for opposition to the Lawrence Riverfront Plaza Factory Outlets, 6th and New Hampshire streets, which opened in 1990. It the first mall in a town known more for its quint shops. People feared that it would be a corporate monster that would suck the charm and economic life out of downtown. Five years later, the 50-store mall is a monster of a different sort, providing the town with healthy competition and a needed attraction for outsiders, who bring in dollars to help the economy. The mall, which was built for $17.5 million by the Chelsea Group of Roseland, N.J. Noah Musser/KANSAN opened with cautious optimism on April 6,1990. David Longhurst has been the mall's manager since its opening and has seen an improved attitude from Lawrence consumers. "I think when we opened, people weren't really sure what we were all about," Longhurst said. "Even though we were advertised as an outlet mall, some people might have thought we were a traditional mall and that may have led to some misconceptions about what we were about. But I don't think that people were ever against the idea of a mall." Longhurst said that if people were wary of the mall, it was because they didn't know if they would lose the downtown stores. He said the reason the mail had been such a success was that the mail didn't compete directly with local retailers and that most of the customers came from outside Lawrence. Delana Lee of Alley Cat Records, 717 Massachusetts St., has not noticed a drop-off in customers because of the mall. "Most of the people who come here are students," Lee said. "I think they really don't have the time or want to go to a mall. They don't have what they're looking for." Paul Duncan, manager of the mall's Music 4 Less, echoed Lee's sentiments. "We cater a little more to older customers who want music from the '50s or '60s. They might not be able to find at the stores downtown," Duncan said. Those who come for the mall do not necessarily stay there. "People come for the mall, but they soon realize that there is much more," Lawrence City Manager Mike Wildgen said. "So often I see people downtown with shopping bags from the mall, but they're eating in the local restaurants or shopping in the other stores. "It certainly has had a positive effect." Perhaps the most positive aspect of the mall has been the way it has helped the town financially. Millions of dollars generated annually by the sales tax are pumped back into Lawrence. Riverfront Mall succeeded largely because of location. The Riverfront Plaza was not the first mall proposed for Lawrence. In 1888 JVJ Inc. of Cleveland wanted to build a mall at 33rd and Iowa streets, but was denied because of city zoning laws. "This mall wasn't right in the middle of downtown, and it helped clean up a part of town that needed it," Wildgen said. "Plus it complied with zoning laws." For Lawrence consumers like Kara Richardson, where they shop has a lot to do with what they want. "I go downtown for unique gifts and stuff you can't find in a mall," Richardson said. "I go to the mall if I want to buy something specific." Although the mall can't expand structurally, it still has room to improve. "We're always looking to get better," Longhurst said. "We're just one of many attractions here in Lawrence, but we want to be one of the best." Safety worries prompt closing of parking lot By Ryan Vise Kansan staff writer garages and repairs to the Towers. The upper level of the westernmost garage at Jayhawker Towers was closed on June 7 because of safety concerns, parking officials said. The KU parking department has received a final report from a consulting firm, which determined the garage was beyond repair. Barton-Aschman Inc. proposed demolition of the garage. Alan Black, president of University Council, said that the garage was an immediate concern. "I think that parking will be very controversial next year." Black said. Last semester, University Council voted down a proposal for new garages and repairs to the Towers. Barton-Aschman originally was hired in 1986 to help the University meet its projected parking needs through the mid 1990s. The parking garage north of Allen Field House was constructed in 1989, but new parking problems have developed, and Barton-Aschman was hired again in 1993 for further study. The firm has suggested a new garage north of the Kansas Union and a replacement garage at the Towers. Donald L. Kearns, director of the parking department, confirmed the site north of the Union. "We will not pursue any further locations." Kearns said. Michael Schulze / KANSAN He said the safety concerns were a maintenance issue, not parking. The upper level of the parking garage west of Jayhawker Towers has been closed due to safety concerns. Tentative plans for the garage include building a replacement garage near the Towers. REV UP YOUR Grocery Carts! REV UP YOUR Grocery Carts! YOU CAN WIN $100 OR MORE IN GROCERIES! Shop at Alvin’s IGA and receive an entry for your weekly Tuesday drawing. Come in on Tuesdays to check your number. If it matches, YOU’RE A WINNER! If no one claims the prize by closing time on Tuesday, we add $100 to the pot for next week. Alvin's IGA No purchase necessary. One FREE entry per person per week and then receive another entry each time you make a purchase. THE SHOPPER Alvin's IGA IGA Attending K.U. 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Story by Angie Dasbach I It wasn't exactly the kind of marriage my parents would approve of. But this man was offering some interesting perks. I could date anyone I wanted. He would cook and clean. And at the end of two years, he would give me an all-expense-paid quickie divorce. I was about to say yes. But this proposal was coming from a friend and KU teaching assistant from Italy who was in need of a green card. "I don't believe I could do this," I told him. "I'm a terrible liar and I'm afraid of getting caught." Even then I knew the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service would frown on the fraudulent arrangement he was proposing. "Oh come on! It would be fun and you could see anyone that your heart desires," he said, and then added slyly, "but I'm sure that I could keep you happy enough that you wouldn't need any-one else." I didn't think good sex in return for an illegal marriage was incentive enough to risk my future. "Sorry, I just can't do it." I told him. "It was worth a hair," he said with a touch of disappointment. "I was just kidding anyway." Or was he? Marrying a U.S. citizen isn't a joke for some foreigners in the Midwest hoping for a shot at the American dream. Mike Heston, deputy district director of the INS for Kansas and Missouri, said, the number of illegal murders in the Mid believe how many people try to convince us that their marriage is viable." "It happens more times than you could guess," he said. Just how many times is that? For starters, Heston said that out of nearly 2,800 applications for green cards, 194 were denied last year because of fraud. Students are high on the list of people attempting to defraud the INS. The potential for fraud is higher, Heston said, because foreign students' visas expire after graduation, and a pattern of impromptu marriages forms immediately before or after graduation. Pinpointing an exact number of students involved in fraudulent marriages is difficult, Heston said, because the INS doesn't break down marriage statistics into specific groups. Despite the fact that the INS may be looming like Big Brother, the temptation to bypass the system and marry for a quickie green card is real for many students. --together. That wasn't an easy task All sources in this story who have dealt with or will deal with the INS insisted on being identified by pseudonyms before they would talk. Jason, a KU sophomore, said that he would have been temped to marry Maude, whom he met last summer. Although he hasn't married her yet, he did help her cross the Although Canadians don't need a visa to enter the United States, Maude said she had to lie to U.S. customs officials because they wouldn't let her enter the United States for an indefinite stay. She said she told officials that she was going to do some cross-border shopping with a friend, when in fact she intended to move to Kansas to live with Jason and his family. Maude said she stuffed her belongings into her friend's car and then met Jason after they entered the United States. She's been in Lawrence seven months. Jason said that they had been trying to find out how to get a visa for Maude and that they had no luck. "She has to wait two years to get a visa and then an employer must show that there's not an American who can do the job better than she can," he said. "It's just ridiculous." Once they realized that it was close to impossible for Maude to get a work visa, Jason's mother suggested that they get married. "We've looked at every possible way to beat the system," Jason said. "It would be much easier if we got married." Maude and Jason said they had thought about getting married to ease the immigration process, but they weren't sure they would want to take that kind of risk. See MARRIAGE, Page 35. MUSIC AND CONCERT REVIEWS FILTER, NINE INCH NAILS on the RECORD By Robert Mocydlowsky Kansan staff writer Rarely does a band dominate radio and television waves before playing in front of a live audience. Most bands spend years working their way through the smoke-filled club circuit just to earn a decent following, not to mention a record deal. Else it's dreadful if it is that way. The band got their start when ex-Nine Inch Nails guitarist Richard Patrick quit NIN and teamed up with their programmer, Brian Llesegang. They moved into the studio and wrote some songs, doing the brunt of their recording on Filter didn't do it that way. They cut a five-song demo in 1993 and pitched it to various record companies. Macintosh computers. Soon they were signed Patrick and Liesegang have recruited four musicians to play with them on tour, adding guitars and a bass to Patrick's vocals and Liesegang's drums. My number one concern before the show was whether Filter could re-create their deep-layered studio sound on stage. Inside their liner notes they openly admit their heavy reliance on electronic post-production modifications, and that usually means eight-track-tape-assisted-live shows. On Saturday night, Filter played their first-ever live show to a sold-out Bottleneck crowd. That's not to say that I was hoping to hear perfect CD versions of every song; I merely wanted to find out if these guys could really play. FILTER When the lights came up, I noticed a burly dude with a shaved head in the front row. His arms were outstretched and he was rubbing his fingers together as if holding a wad of money. He was implying that Filter have already sold out. to Reprise Records, and Short Bus — their excellent debut disc — was released. Now their single "Hey man, nice shot" is all over radio and television. Most of my fears were allayed early on. I don't "Must be playing two sets," I thought. "They're probably just taking a break." know how long Filter practiced before Saturday's show, but they sounded crisp and polished. They played every song with furious intensity, highlighted by particularly stellar versions "Dos" and "Hey man, nice shot." Nope. No encore, no second set. Filter had left the building. And then they quit. Take a look at what's been given to them. They've got continuous airplay, an expensive-looking video and a relentlessly promoted record. An appearance on syndicated radio's "Modern Rock Live" no doubt boosted record sales, and now they are on a sold-out U.S. tour. I tend to agree. Two weeks ago I attempted to arrange an interview with the band, but their company told me that they "would not have time" to meet with me in person. So, I offered to do the interview over the phone. Remember, counting Saturday night, they've played to a live audience a grand total of one time. No dice on that either. Hell, I've had to pull teeth just to get a biography and a CD. I guess they think they're big time rock stars. And maybe they will be. But if the band and the record company keep up the overhype, Filter are in serious jeopardy of selling themselves right out of a fan base. It's the sweaty people in the pit who buy the tickets and pay the band. Without fans, a music career usually doesn't last very long. I just don't think Filter have realized that yet. Aside from the buzz that Filter generated, Saturday night also marked a great opening-act gig for the Lawrence band Grither. The trio have managed to grab a little radio time here and there with their tune "Dig it up," and they rocked away Saturday night, earning a decent crowd reaction at the end of their set. If they keep it up, they could be makin' some waves in the pot-so-distant future. --- And back to Nine Inch Nails, Interscope Records has released Further Down the Spiral, an 11-song EP that features re-mixes and alternative versions of tracks from their platinum-selling The Downward Spiral. In addition to remixes, this disc also contains musical cameos from such industry luminaries as License to Ill producer Rick Rubin, ex-Jane's Addiction and ex-Chil Peppers guitarist Dave Navarro, and Aphex Twin. My fave is Rubin's disc-opening version of "Piggly", but the runaway hit is the live version of "Hurt" — which you've no doubt seen or heard countless times already. The other re-mixes are decent, but they aren't any better than Reznor's original tracks. My copy of the disc says "Special Low Price CD," and for the mild to frantic NIN fan, it's probably a worthwhile purchase. Next week: The Poster Children chat it up at the Bottleneck; Shallow CD Release Party at the Hurricane in Kansas City; and Vitreous Humor live from Mass. St. Staytuned. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SECTION B JUNE 21,1995 KU Life Billboard magazine's top 10 video rentals 1. "The Shawshank Redemption," (Columbia TriStar) 2. "Forrest Gump," (Paramount) 3. "The Professional," (Columbia TriStar) 4. "Legends of the Fall," (Columbia TriStar) 5. "Quiz Show," (Hollywood) 6. "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein," (Columbia TriStar) 7. "Richie Rich," (Warner) 8. "Speechless," (MGM-UA) 9. "The Jungle Book," (Disney) 10. "Bullets Over Broadway," (Miramax) The weekend's top 10 Box office hits Top 10 movies at U.S. and Canadian theaters Friday through Sunday, followed by studio, gross, number of theater locations, receipts per location, total gross and number of weeks in release: 1. "Batman Forever," Warner Bros., $52.8 million, 2,842 locations, $18,573 per location, $62.8 million, one week. 2. "Congo," Paramount, $10.7 million, 2,676 locations, $4,000 per location, $44.5 million, two weeks. 3. "Casper," Universal, $6.63 million, 2,755 locations, $2,407 per location, $66.3 million, four weeks. 4. "The Bridges of Madison County." Warner Bros., $6.57 million, 1,986 locations, $3,310 per location, $36.1 million, three weeks. 5. "Die Hard With a Vengeance," Fox, $4.2 million, 2,200 locations, $1,017 per location, $79.1 million, five weeks. 6. "Braveheart," Paramount, $4.1 million, 2,037 locations, $2,022 per location, $41 million, four weeks. 7. "Crimson Tide," Disney, $3.5 million, 1,804 locations, $1,963 per location, $76.2 million, six weeks. 8. "Pocahontas," Disney, $2.7 million, six locations, $448,286 per location, $2.7 million, one week. 9. "Forget Paris," Columbia, $1.68 million, 1,380 locations, $1,220 per location. $27 million, five weeks. 10. "While You Were Sleeping," Disney, $1.67 million, 1,242 locations, $1,346 per location, $88.3 million, nine weeks. Compiled by The Associated Press 2B Wednesday, June 21, 1995 Affordable, Fine Dining for Family and Friends The Castle Tea Room 1300 Massachusetts by Reservation Only, Call 843-1151 We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts Have You No Class? London $349 Paris $379 Frankfurt $379 Madrid $369 Tokyo $478 Rome $459 areas are each way from Kansas City based on round the maximum Jackson city. Please not be limited and free subject to change and/or availability. Call locally for other venues distributions. Council Travel 1·800·2COUNCIL (1)·800·986·8624 Call today for a FREE Student Travel magazine! PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts Fine Line Tattoo Inc. •Fraternity & Sorority Letters •Baby Jayhawk Tattoo •Bring your own design or choose from our extensive selection •Reasonably priced •Hospital sterilized Mon-Sat 29th Mass. St 12-8pm Topeka Tues. till 6pm 233-8288 Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE June 22 Poster Children Dis Frog Pond CLUB Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE June 22 Poster Children Dis Frog Pond June 23 Billy Goat Grumpy June 24 Common Ground June 27 Cher UK Chune June 28 Gospel Porch Singers Skirt Big Mouth On Sale Now 7/6 X Cops 7/11 The Jay Hawks 7/14 Tripping Daisy June 27 Cher UK Chune WEDNESDAY MALE DANCERS 9:00-11:30pm Opens 8:30 Swim Suit Contest 12:30 Alternative Weds. LADIES enter FREE Top 40 Hits TWO 4 ONE SHOTS 18 & UP 906 W 24 th St. (Behind McDonalds on 23rd) THURSDAYS TRIP 2 THIS Techno-Tribal-House $1.00 Wells $2.25 Sour & Juices 18& UP FRIDAY R&B-HIP HOP-ACID JAZZ Domestic Bottles $1.75 18 & UP SATURDAYS DATE for $8 NITE minor in with 21 & up date R&B-HIP HOP-ACID JAZZ 32 oz. Big Beers $2.50 For info call 865 5222 For Info call 865-5222 open 9pm-2am WED.-FRI. DJ at 10pm 18 to enter- 21 to drink reg. cover: 18 & up $7.00 21 & up $3.00 (A) (B) (C) (D) The American Chestnut and Chinquapin Oak may be hard to tell apart due to their similar leaves (B), but the fruit (C) and flower (A) of these close relatives differ greatly. True nature revealed The bur (b) encases the fruit of the American Chestnut, and looks nothing like Chinquapin Oak's acorn. Nature lover discovers rare tree in local park Noah Musser/KANSAN By Billie David Special to the Kansan Nedra Rogers thought she had found Chinquapin oak leaves to add to her collection as she drove past South Park on a collecting expedition last fall. "I was really looking for oak trees, because that's my specialty," Rogers said. Rogers realized her mistake, however, when she found that the seed pods had sharp spines. Crystal Miles, who works in Lawrence's parks and forestry department, confirmed that there was an American chestnut growing in South Park, but she declined to comment on its rarity. What the leaf collector from Marysville really found was an American chestnut, a tree made almost extinct by a fungus. Craig Freeman, assistant director of the R.L. McGregor Herbarium, part of the University of Kansas Natural History Museum, said that, although one can find small shoots of the American chestnut, large trees would be extremely rare. Freeman said that the American chestnut was once a very dominant tree in the eastern part of the United States. "They are not native to Kansas," he said. Freeman said that in the early 1930s, every standing American chestnut tree was killed off by a European fungus called the chestnut blight. Freeman said young shoots still grow but most are killed by the blight before they can mature or grow seeds. Rogers identified the tree by the number of seeds in the pods. The more common European chestnut trees have two seeds in the pod, but the American chestnut trees contain three, she said. "Shoots from the tree are not uncommon, but fruit-bearing trees are extremely rare," she said. "Everything I have read says they are nearly extinct." Rogers said she became interested in leaf collecting about one year ago when her daughter was working on leaf collecting as a school project. She finds oak leaves especially interesting and has found 20 different kinds in Kansas. 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Sale prices good for two weeks from publication date MUSIC BY HENRY HANNAH 12 THE OFFSPRING STAL PHARVETT BRANDY METHOD MAN THE FLAMING LIPS MAZZY STAR PRESENTED BY BATMAN FOREVER A NEW MUSIC FROM THE BOX THE CITY OF GREETINGS Batman Forever Soundtrack RADIOHEAD The Bends Capitol JEFF BUCKLEY GRACE including: MOJO PN GRACE ETERNAL LIFE HALLELUJAH Columbia Radiohead Rembrandts the rembrandts M.P. 1199 CD 799 CASS Interscope Primus Tales from the Punchbowl First Floor Unit 12 911 Massachusetts Street 832-0055 E-mail: vibrations@delphi.com UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N Wednesday, June 21, 1995 3B Tom Hanks, Bill Paxton and Kevin Bacon star as the crew of the lunar mission in "Apollo 13." **CONTRIBUTED** **RNZD** Hanks stays down to earth even with 'Apollo 13' role By Dolores Barclay The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — A spring breeze drifts through an open window, carrying the fresh scent of lavender buds from the jacaranda trees. Somewhere in the distance, a tiny bird calls to its mate. Otherwise, it's a fairly quiet day at Clavius Base, Tom Hanks' global headquarters. "I think you're out of your mind!" Hanks roars at the suggestion that he — two-time Oscar winner, Hollywood's nice guy — is the man of the year. Until ...A burst of laughter. "Val Kilmer — he's the man of the year. I think he's great," Hanks says about the "Batman Forever" star. Few actors can rein in their eggs long enough to lavish such praise on their peers. But Hanks is that rarity: a well-grounded star. The American public first met Hanks in 1980 with the television sitcom "Bosom Buddies." Since Lied Center screening There will be an advance screening of "Apollo 13," starring Toman Hanks, Bill Paxton, Kevin Bacon and Ed Harris, at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Lied Center. Vouchers are available at the Student Union Activities box office. Limit two per person. then, he's evolved from a cocky comedy bunny to a compelling movie artist: the little boy-big man of "Big," the ravaged lawyer of "Philadelphia," the heroic naif of "Forrest Gump," and now astronaut Jim Lovell in "Apollo 13." "He's as well-known as any global leader and, minimally, as smart," says Brian Grazer, producer of "Apollo 13." Hanks is relaxing in a comfortable chair in his office on the lot of Twentieth Century Fox. He has named his company Clavius Base, a place mentioned in the movie "2001: A Space Odyssey." It's an important film for Hanks, who since childhood adored astronomy and space travel. "He's become not only film history, but real history," Grazer says. "And he hasn't changed. He's still a guy who, if he wants to get some sandwiches at the beach, he gets them himself." He's talking about "Apollo 13" and how much he loves movie-making. "It was amazing," he says of experiencing zero gravity. "We were all looking at each other thinking, 'Can you believe we get to do this?' It was hard work but filmmaking at our guerrilla best. We weren't questioning ourselves about the job. It was the greatest job in the world." Although surfing occupies yet another place of honor, Hanks swears he has no all-encompassing passions. "Ever since I became an actor, I've lived the same way," Hanks says. "I have the kids who have to be looked after all the time, and when I'm not working, I'm on the lookout for inspiration and distraction." Free! Sun. 6/25 4PM Vitreous Humor 936 $ 1 / 2 $ Mass. (Upstairs) 843-1551 "In the heart of downtown" LOVE SHINE AND CREATE GARDEN francis sporting goods, inc. 843-4191 731 Massachusets Lawrence, Kansas 66044 THIS IS ONE NIKE LIGHT SHOE (THE OTHER ONE'S LIGHT,TOO). Air Edge II. Cross-Training Locally owned...since 1947 COMPAQ PRESARIO THE BEST ALTERNATIVE FOR A FUN FRIDAY NITE! 928 Mass. 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Stop by Independent Study's Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A, just north of the Kansas Union.Pick up a catalog or call 864-4440 for Information How about... BIOL 104c. Principles of Biology HIST 341c. Hitler and Nazi Germany BIOL 331c./PSYC502c. Human Sexuality HPER 330c./HDFL 220c. Principles of Nutrition ENGL 101c. Composition MATH 101c. Algebra ENGL 325c. Recent Popular Literature MATH 115c. Calculus ENGL 362c. Technical Writing WC 204c. Western Civilization I ENGL 466c. Literature for Children WC 205c. Western Civilization II EPR 300c. Principles of Human Learning Enroll any weekday of the year 8am to 4pm. Kansas Learning Network Independent Study Continuing Education --- 41B Wednesday, April 19, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN RECYCLE your Daily Kansan Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 francis sporting goods, inc. 843-4191 731 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 66044 SO COMFORTABLE, YOU WON'T NIKE KNOW WHICH FOOT IS HITTING THE GROUND. francis sporting goods, inc. 843-4191 731 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 66044 SO COMFORTABLE, YOU WON'T NIKE KNOW WHICH FOOT IS HITTING THE GROUND. francis sporting goods, inc. 843-4191 731 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 66044 SO COMFORTABLE YOU WON'T NIKE KNOW WHICH FOOT IS HITTING THE GROUND. NIKE Air Max Trixx. Running Locally owned...since 1947 CLEARANCE It•s CLEARANCE Time SUITS SPORTCOATS POLO SHIRTS POLO SHORTS COLE HAAN SHOES SAVE - SAVE - SAVE 20% to 50% OFF EASTON'S E LIMITED EASTON'S E LIMITED BOOK REVIEW EASTON'S E LIMITED 839 MASS. LAWRENCE, KS. 843-5755 Writer deletes early promise in "Microserfs" By Mark Luce Kansan staff writer On its slippery surface, "Microserfs," Douglas Couland's fourth novel, appears to be the doppleginger of his first book "Generation X." Rather than shiftless twenty somethings working McJobs and ironically critiquing the plastic culture of Palm Springs, Couland gives readers a handful of determined and driven twenty something hipster geeks who populate the computer industry's high-tech world. Even though the venues and characters have changed, Coupland's themes and the conclusions he draws have staved the same. In place of the definitions that littered the margins of "Generation X," Coupland's first-person narrator, Dan Underwood, gives the reader his subconscious musings every 15 to 20 pages. They are sets of randomly placed terms, products that range from Buck Rogers to Intel processors to Prozac. "Microserfs" revolves around a handful of characters who disillusioned with the corporate sterility of Microsoft, break out on their own and develop "Oop!" It is a computer game akin to cyberspace LEGos with applications ranging from physiology to architecture. Idiosyncrasy and eccentricity are the staples of these self-proclaimed geeks as they move through the Silicon Valley's capitalist world with hypersensitivity, hyperirony and hypersmarts. Coupland's trademark happiness is in full force. Characters deliver soliloquies on everything from the decadent values of Trix! cereal — However savvy the players, they cannot save Couland's uneven narrative. Like all of his other novels, he simply tries to do too much. "Well-meaning rabbit, Trix," kept in continual state of malnutrition/subservience by dominant children of the parasitic bourgeoisise." — to the post-feminist implications of the Barbie aisle at Toys-R-Us. He wants to address questions of DOUGLAS COUPLAND microserfs exists. technology and the body, and through the well-developed character of Karla, he does broach important issues. He offers three post-modern love stories; tackles a family dealing with a long-dead sibling and a mother's stroke; delineates the machinations of the post-industrial world; and debates whether history still into a world haunted by the ghost of giant conglomerates, banal cultural artifacts and the Gap. When runnaming on such issues, Couland is at his best. His form is playful, sardonic and hilariously insightful. Coupland, though, wants it both ways. He plays the disillusionment and irony cards and pulls the reader He wrote: But when he delves into the relationships and questions of identity, Coupland severely undercuts his cultural critique with redemptive romanticism. "And then I thought about us ... these children who fell down life's cartoon holes ... dreamless children, alive but not living — we emerged on the other side of the cartoon holes fully awake and discovered we were whole." A sentence, though, can't make these people nor the milieu which they inhabit whole. In an increasingly fragmented, temporarily and spatially compressed world, the notion of identity completion is fleeting at best. The novel has moments of brilliance and poignancy, but like Couland's other works, it ultimately falls short of the promise it offers early. *Bausch & Lomb Bausch & Lomb Killer Loop Diamondhard Glass Polished - SerengetiDriver's - Vuarnet - Randolph Engineering Military Issue Aviators - Revo The Etc. 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Shop 928 Mass. 843-0611 P Ray-Ban BLACK BELT BY BAUERLE V LOMBIS THE WORLD'S MOST FASHIONABLE Retail Computer Analysts Sales If you don't need it,don't toss it Recycle Come Party on the Patrol 25c Draws $1.00 Margaritas Wednesdays at Dosl Live Jazz on the patio this THURSDAY DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE New Hampshire UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 21, 1995 5B MARRIAGE U. S. citizenship motivates couples to exchange vows Continued from Page 1B. There are numerous qualifications, forms and filing fees. Then there are interviews that determine whether an immigrant is worthy of being a U.S. citizen. Health, criminal records, financial status and intent are examined closely. Additionally, limits are placed on the number of immigrants allowed to enter the United States. Only 675,000 visas, which allow an alien to stay legally in the United States, are granted for any fiscal year. But immigrants who marry U.S. citizens don't fall under this quota. After a couple is married, Heston said, the INS determines whether the marriage is viable. He said a viable marriage had three elements: The marriage license must be legal. The marriage can't have been entered into for any type of gain. The marriage must be consummated. In other words, the couple must have sex. Heston said, though, that investigators do not ask questions regarding the couple's sex life. The INS does not give a green card to an immigrant immediately after marriage. Heston said both immigrant and citizen must successfully convince the INS that they intend to remain married. "If someone tells us that it was a marriage made in heaven, and they got married just because they love each other, that's not a sufficient reason for us to approve of the union," he said. "You could say that all day long, but you've got to be able to back it up." Heston said the couple must back up its reasons for marriage by answering intense personal questions. Investigators split the couple up and ask questions such as, "What's the color of your drapes in your bedroom?" or "What color is the negligee that your wife wears to bed?" and "What does your husband's family like to do for the holidays?" He said the answers must be the same from both people. Once Once the INS is satisfied that the marriage is not fraudulent, the immigrant receives a plastic card traditionally she met Harry, one of her students. After he finished his courses, he visited his family in Honduras. Harry then came back to the learning center to work, and he and Miriam started dating. One month later they were married. "I probably would have waited, but there was no time to spare," she said. Fraudulent Facts: "His student visa was going to expire and he wanted to stay in the U.S," Miriam explained. "He asked me to marry him, and well, I said ves. Miriam said that they had kept the marriage a secret for a while, be- known as a "green card." Actually, the cards are now blue or white and are proof of lawful residence in the U.S. *By law, a marriage is fraudulent if it was entered into for the sole purpose of receiving a green card.* Students are not the only ones marrying for green cards. Some teachers lend a helping hand. Out of almost 2,800 greed card applications,194 were denied last year because of fraud. √ Defrauding the INS is a federal offense. The citizen helping the immigrant can end up with a felony on their permanent record, and the alien can be sent home. $ \checkmark $ Students are more likely to attempt to defraud the INS because foreign students' visas expire after graduation. Miriam was a teacher at learning center in Fort Worth, Texas, when cause she had felt that some people would raise unneeded questions about their arrangement. Harry received his green card two months later, Miriam said, and the process was a bit unnerving. "Dealing with the INS was a real pain," Miriam said. "We had to have everything exactly as they wanted it. They asked detailed questions to determine whether we were legitimately married. "I was extremely nervous about it," he said. Miriam may have thought dealing with the INS was painful in 1985, when she married Harry, but the process became even more complicated with the passage of the Immigration Marriage Fraud Amendment of 1986. The amendment was passed to deter a foreigner from marrying a U.S. citizen in order to ease the immigration process. Instead of receiving a green card and becoming a permanent resident after marriage, immigrants are subjected to a two-year review on their residence. This means that a foreign spouse can legally work and live in the United States, but the immigrant and his or her spouse must apply to the INS within 90 days after their two-year anniversary to remove the conditional status. After applying, an interview is set up to determine whether permanent residence will be granted. Heston said the amendment had made a big difference in the amount of fraudulent marriages. "Before the amendment, an immigrant thought that if he got by one interview, he was home-free," he said. "The fraud rate was unbelievably high." Heston said the rate of fraudulent marriages prior to the amendment was 16 percent for Kansas and Missouri. That rate has been cut to 7 percent, he said. Although Miriam married Harry to help him remain in the country, she insisted they didn't scam the system because they cared for each other and staved married for eight years. Miriam said that although she loved Harry, there were times that she questioned his intentions for marrying her. They divorced in 1993 at Harry's request. "I know we cared for each other," Miriam reflected. "But I still wonder if he married me for the sole purpose of getting a green card." --courses at Washburn University. After paying out-of-state tuition he had financial difficulties and was quickly running out of money. Howard Eisberg, a Kansas City attorney who specializes in immigration law, said there were many definitions of love, and that relationships could be based on a number of things. The nature of a relationship isn't always clear. "Let's just say that two people care for each other and have a sexual aspect to their relationship. They may live together for a while and then break up after three or four months," he said. "So the immigrant gets a green card out of it. Who's to say that's committing fraud?" Eisberg said that by law a marriage was fraudulent if it was entered into for the sole purpose of receiving a green card. "Before I take a case, I ask them to tell me the truth," he said. "I can't say that I've never been fooled, but I usually have a pretty good sense of who's telling me the truth." He said he had had some immigrants come through his office who obviously were not obeying the law. The difficult cases for the INS, Eisberg said, didn't involve the obvious phony marriages where money changed hands and the couple didn't live together. The troublesome part is when two people look like they don't belong together but actually have a legitimate relationship, he said. "The INS uses stereotypes for people and that can be dangerous," he said. "The couple might, at first, look funny together, but they may have a genuine relationship. The INS shouldn't jump to conclusions, because it makes life more difficult for those people in good-faith relationships." "The INS is suspicious of every marriage," Eisberg said. "Their perception is that there are more people who do this than there really are." Immigrants are often intimidated by the rigorous process of proving that they are in a legitimate relationship, he said. The INS isn't suspicious of every relationship, Heston said, but investigators routinely look for signs of a fraudulent marriage. The stereotypes the INS applies to applicants are actually profiles of certain types of individuals who commonly attempt to commit fraud, he said. "There is a set of criteria that is used to develop a fraud profile for different countries," he said. "This is very similar to the FBI's system of profiling serious criminals." Heston said the most commonly used profiles were of men from Nigeria and the Middle East. He would not disclose the profiles, he said, because the INS doesn't want potential law-breakers to know what investigators are looking for. But investigators do not wait for a couple to admit that they are breaking the law. Instead, the law goes looking for them. "We'll show up at their doorstep and look at the way they live," Heston said. "We'll subpoena their relatives, neighbors, friends and employers. It doesn't take long for the truth to come out once we visit these people." --courses at Washburn University. After paying out-of-state tuition he had financial difficulties and was quickly running out of money. Maybe the truth in some cases is that these marriages are unions of convenience and love. Jack left France in 1992 and headed for Topeka to begin his Take the case of Jack and Jesse. Jack could only work part-time on campus because of restrictions placed on his student visa. He said he could not find a job that supported him, so he gave up. "I had to withdraw from school, because I couldn't pay the bills by working part-time," Jack said. "I tried to find ways to get in-state tuition, but I couldn't manage that either." He was in the country illegally, because his visa expired when he left school. Jack found a job as a roofer, which started a succession of problems that would plague his stay in the United States. Eventually he met Jesse, a U.S. citizen. After dating for a few months, Jack moved in with her. His employer was willing to break the law until Jack fell off a roof and broke his elbow. Then his boss called the INS, because he didn't know how to handle workers' compensation for an illegal alien. "He got freaked out because he was afraid he'd get into trouble once I received medical help." Jack said "He told me that he called the INS and that I had to call them to explain my situation." any solution to the problem The only choice left for him, Jack said, was to get married so that he could stay in the country. Jesse was frightened at the prospect of marriage. She said Jack had asked her to marry him before, but she had sternly rejected his proposals. But she changed her mind. They were married six days after the accident. "I wasn't willing to face the idea that he would be sent back to France and would never be able to become a citizen." Jesse said. "We didn't have any choice." Now they must face the INS, and they aren't looking forward to the interview. "It's just so scary," she said. Jack and Jesse have reason to be scared. There are severe penalties for agreeing to a fraudulent marriage. "The INS makes us very nervous." Jesse said. "We're worried about the details that they can ask us about, like Jack working illegally and the other stuff that they can get on us. --- Defrauding the INS is a federal offense. Heston said students don't think of the consequences of entering a fraudulent marriage, because they think they're helping someone out. "Most of the time students don't have any concept of what they're doing," he said. "What they should realize is that a felony conviction follows you forever, and that's pretty heavy stuff when your trying to find a job." The United States Immigration and Naturalization Services uses three guidelines to determine whether a marriage is viable. The guidelines are: Jack became frightened. The worst that can happen to an alien is that she or he is sent home. The marriage license must be legal. The marriage must be consummated. Jesse said that she wanted to help Jack but that there didn't seem to be He spent his days waiting for the INS to knock on his door and haul him back to France. ✓ The marriage can't have been entered into for anytype of gain. When Jack called the INS and explained that he was trying to save money so that he could go back to school, the INS was not very sympathetic. In addition, INS investigators ask couples intense questions, such as, "What color is the negligee that your wife wear to bed?" The answer must be the same for both persons. Heston said. "Don't be fooled by your good intentions," Hesston warned. "It's just not worth it." He said he would rather see felons that committed serious crimes put behind bars than a harmless citizen who thought that they were helping someone. But that doesn't mean that marriage isn't in their future. "Marrying Maude so that she can get a green card wouldn't be a bad reason to get married," Jason said. "But I can see her staying here for a long time, and I would hate to force the issue." Maude said she wanted to attend KU and had been waiting for an answer to her application. She'd like to get a student visa and study physical therapy. If Jason asks her to marry him, Maude said she would say yes, but not just because she wants a green card. She said there wasn't a doubt in her mind that they cared deeply for each other. 6 17 18 19 20 The No Cheat Treat. I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! FREE Sports Bottle with purchase. See store for details. Nonfat frozen yogurt with NutraSweet®. Only 20 calories per fluid ounce and NO FAT! Redeemable at participating full-size I Can't Believe Yogurt® store Offer a while last 6 17 18 19 20 The No Cheat Treat. Nonfat frozen yogurt with NutraSweet®. Only 20 calories per fluid ounce and NO FAT! FREE Sports Bottle with purchase. See store for details. Redeemable at participating full-sized I Can't Believe It's Yogurt® stores. 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Quinton's BAR & DELI DRINK SPECIALS Monday-23oz Frozen Drinks $2.00 Tuesday-Imports $1.75 Wednesday-23 oz Domestic Big Girls $1.50 Thursday-23 oz Boulevard &$1.75 Friday-23oz Margaritas $2.50 Saturday-Domestic Bottles $1.25 Sunday-2 for 1 Well Drinks $2.50 No Cover 6B Wednesday, June 21, 1995 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Ex-basketball captain dies By Dan Gelston Kansan staff writer The captain of Kansas' 1971 Final Four basketball team died June 12 of a heart attack in Kansas City, Kan. Pierre Russell was 45. Mr. Russell, a 6-foot-4 forward, also was a member of Kansas high school championship teams his sophomore and senior years at Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kan. wins. The three-year letter winner averaged 10.1 points a game during his career and recorded 607 rebounds in 83 games. His 607 rebounds ties him with Richard Scott for 11th place on the school's all-time rebounding list. After his collegiate career, Russell played for the Kentucky Colonels of American Basketball Association. He averaged 3.9 points and grabbed 222 rebounds in a 110-game, two-year career. Russell was fondly remembered by his former Kansas roommate Roger Brown. "I always thought of him like a brother," Brown said. "I never played with anyone who loved to play the game as much as Roger. I think the best thing I can say about him was that if you met him, you liked him." Mr. Russell also served three years in the U.S. Army and most recently worked for transportation firms. He is survived by his mother, Inez Russell, of Kansas City, Kan.; a son, Pierre Russell Jr., and a daughter, Heather, both of Louisville, Ky.; two sisters, Loretta Russell of Kansas City, Kan., and Jacqueline Jolliffe of Mission; and a brother, Charles Russell Jr., of Newport News, Va. In his U.S. Open Championship professional debut, former Kansas golfer Matt Gogel defeated such notables as Tom Kite, Ben Crenshaw and Kansas City resident Tom Watson. Former Kansas golfer wins $5,842 at US Open SPORTS IN BRIEF Kansan staff report However, his four-round total of a 12-over-par 292 was only good enough to tie for 51st place. Gogel earned $5,842 for his 72 holes of golf at the Shinnecock Hills Golf Course in Southampton, N.Y. Gogel played in the 1992 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach Golf Links in Pebble Beach, Calif. As an amateur and Kansas junior, Gogel did not make the cut after two days of competition. After bogeying the first two holes, Gogel went on to finish with a 6-over 76, his worst round of the tournament. His scores for the four days at the par-70 course were: 73, 70, 73 and 76. 'Hawks excel at track meet Kansan staff report The Kansas Jayhawks were well represented at last weekend's USA Mobil Outdoor Track & Field Championships in Sacramento, Calif. All-American Michael Cox finished sixth in the 1500-meter event. Former Jayhawk Scott Huffman won the pole vault event and earned the right to compete for the U.S. national team at the coming World Games. Devils defeat Red Wings 4-2, nearing first-ever NHL cup "It was incredible. He (Huffman) missed two attempts at 18-feet-10. On his final attempt he raised the bar to 19 feet," said assistant track coach Steve Guymon. "After he made it, the crowd went nuts." The Associated Press DETROIT — The New Jersey Devils can win the Stanley Cup without ever returning to Detroit. Jim Dowd, who didn't even play in the finals opener, scored with 1:24 to play last night and the Devils defeated the Red Wings 2-4 to go up 2-0 in the NHL championship series. New Jersey, which has a league-playoff record 10 road victories, can wrap up the Cup by winning at home on Thursday and Saturday nights. The Red Wings, trying to win the title for the first time in 40 years, will attempt to become only the third team in finals history to prevail after dropping the first two games at home. The Red Wings, who started the series with an 8-0 home record and a 12-2 playoff mark, led 2-1 nidway through the third period but gave up goals to Scott Niedermayer, Dowd and Stephane Richer in the final 10:13. On the winning goal, Detroit defenseman Paul Coffey blocked a Play of the Game Third period — 1:24 Devils defenseman Tommy Albelin passes to right wing Shawn Chambers. Chambers' slap shot was blocked, but Jim Dowd backhanded the rebound into the net. shot by Bill Guerin and lay injured on the ice even as the Devils passed the puck around Detroit's zone. Tommy Albelin got the puck to the right point for Shawn Chambers, whose slap shot was blocked by goalie M vernon in front of the net. Dowd then backhanded the puck into the vacated net. Richer added an empty-net goal with 20.9 seconds to play as New Jersey pulled within two victories of its first title in franchise history. Niedemayer's trying goal, at 9:47 of the third period, came on a rare end-to-end rush for a New Jersey defenseman as he beat both Coffey and Vernon on the play. Defense- minded Devils coach Jacques Lemaire doesn't like his defensmen to carry the puck deep into the opponents' end. New Jersey didn't have a shot for almost 10 minutes to start the game and finished with only three in a scoreless first period. At 6:56 of the second period, Devils goalie Martin Brodeur was assessed a delay-of-game penalty for knocking the puck into the crowd. Twenty-one seconds later, Brodeur stopped shots by Sergie Fedorov and Dino Ciccarelli but couldn't get in position to prevent Kozlov from flipping the puck into the net. It was the first time in seven games — since the finale of their second-round series against San Jose — that Detroit scored before its opponent. MacLean tied it at 9:40, capping the 3-on-1 break by beating Vernon between his leg pads. With 6:11 left in the period, Kozlov took a vicious shoulder in the head from Devils captain Scott Stevens and didn't return until the third period. Tragedy strikes Chargers again as linebacker dies The Associated Press MIAMI — David Griggs, a starting linebacker last season for the American Football Conference champion San Diego Chargers, died when his Lexus slid off an expressway and slammed into a large sign pole. Griggs, 28, apparently lost control of the car late Monday on a ramp linking Florida's Turnpike with three other roads west of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Griggs was taken to Broward General Hospital and pronounced dead on arrival. "It just hasn't sunk in yet," Chargers general manager Bobby Beathard said yesterday. "I don't know if it will until we're all together and he's not there. We thought we were a better team because of David." Griggs was the only person in the car, which was traveling substantially faster than the 30 mph speed limit, the highway patrol said. There was no evidence of drug or alcohol use. The tragedy was the third to hit the Chargers this year. Quarterback coach Dwain Painter's ex-wife killed herself hours after San Diego won the AFC championship game in January. Less than three weeks later, Painter's daughter was swept to her death by a wave as she scattered her mother's ashes along a rocky ocean coast. Griggs received his AFC Championship ring last week during a ceremony in San Diego. He signed with the Chargers as an unrestricted free agent in March 1994 after spending five seasons with the Dolphins. "I'm sorry to learn about David's death," Miami coach Don Shuula said. "My condolences go out to his family. He worked hard when he was here to improve from a player on the developmental squad to become a starter, and he contributed to our success during his tenure in Miami." In the Chargers' Super Bowl loss to San Francisco last January, Griggs made three solo tackles and assisted on two others. Griggs is survived by his widow, Amy, and 1-year-old daughter, Jasmine. Bulls' Jordan plays opposite Bugs in new feature flick The Associated Press NEWYORK — Ehhh... what's up, Michael? For Michael Jordan, a starring role in a feature film is what's un. Jordan, the marketing marvel and Chicago Bull, will team with Bugs Bunny and other Looney Tunes characters in a new Warner Bros. movie called "Space Jam." "My kids wanted me to do it," he said. "It'll give me the opportunity to play myself. If I can't play myself, I can't play no one else." Jordan, who appeared with the Looney Tunes in fast food and athletic shoe commercials, doesn't worry about being upstaged by a smart-mouthed rabbit. "I don't mind playing second fiddle to him at all," Jordan said, "or fourth or fifth fiddle." Jordan's first film role will be a challenge because of the live action-animated format, producer Ivan Reitman said. "Michael has picked a relatively difficult film," he said. "One of the hardest things to do is act with cartoon characters that aren't there. It will take an enormous amount of patience." To make things easier, actors will be stand-ins during filming. Jordan's part in the production will begin next month and is expected to conclude before the start of the Bulls' training camp in October. By testing the waters as a movie actor, Jordan follows in the footsteps of Orlando Magic star Shaquille O'Neal. Jordan, however, isn't entirely convinced a movie career is for him. David Falk, Jordan's agent and the movie's co-executive producer, said his client had been offered a number of film opportunities in the last four or five years but was waiting for the right deal to come along. "Landmark since 1998 "I look at it as a learning experience," Jordan said "After this first experience, I'll know where I can go from here." 944 Mass.832-8228 Red Lyon Tavern Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunglasses™ The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downtown Parking in the rear TM PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS 842-1212 PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunglasses™ DELIVERY HOURS Sun-Thurs 11am-2am Fri-Sat 11am-3am "NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS TWO-FERS PRIMETIME PARTY "10" 2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 2-COKES 4-COKES 1-TOPPING 1-PIZZA 1-TOPPING 1-COKE $9.00 $11.50 $30.00 $3.50 DELIVERY HOURS Sun-Thurs 11am-2am Fri-Sat 11am-3am 842-1212 KANSAS 1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS KANYAY Classified Directory M M 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business Personal 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted 205 Professional Services 235 Typing Services Classified Policy All real estate advertising in the newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an inter-familial any such preference, limitation or discrimination.' The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not violate the law of University of Kansas regulation or law. Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on behalf of us. 100s Announcements I 110 Bus. Personals Avoid long waits in an emergency room. Try LAWRENCE PROMPT CARE. Full-service emergency room. Certified board certified emergency medicine physicians. For general care, fracture care, and laceration care. Open 9 a.m-11 p.m. Mon-Fri and 12 p.m-11 p.m. Wed. Boarded Medical Arts Center, Kasdow & Clkpwty Bienqual, Lesbian, Gay, Unsure? Call Headquarter Fees Counseling or Support Group you Fees Counseling or Support Group you 105 Personals Add professional polish to class projects, maps, and posters. (up to 25 inches wide) Plastic Lamination 300s Merchandise 120 Announcements Miracle Video Summer Clearance. All adult tapes on sale starting at $89.08 and up. 910 N.2nd St, Suite C3. (516) 248-7454. Howell Creative Studios 1203 Iowa 842-9289 corner of Orchard Lane and Iowa 1 bik South of Capitol Fed. MAZZIOSPIZZA 304 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy 11-1:30, 6-8 everyday All the pizza, pasta and breadsticks you can eat! DAY OR NIGHT UTORS. List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center --- LOST. Your student health insurance FOUND! Temporary coverage 1-6 month plans available at www.loost.com. WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 205 Help Wanted Child care needed for two boys: 8 - in my home — Friday — Friary, 10:30 noon, July 12 — Home — 200s Employment 140 Lost & Found 男 女 STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT T. Deadline: 6/30; Salary $4.35/h. Duries including typing, filing, photocopying, distributing mail, and performing all assigned clerical duties with System documentation for this position. Required: Enrolling in 6 hours at the University of Kansas this fall. To apply, complete a job application O/AA EMPLOYER STUDENT HOURLY TECHNICIAN 85.00/hr, 40 hrs/wk. deadline to apply: June 23, 1995. Assist: in removing abandoned cable, wire mode, and/or moving telephone equipment on campus; Assist in installing cable, conduit, wire mold, and in testing in installation of installed equipment Require Bachelor's degree or graduate undergraduate students with a major in Engineering, RTFV, or Architecture are eligible; Good oral, written, and interpersonal communications skills; ability to complete assigned tasks; supervise; valid driver's license; ability to carry 70 lbs.; must be able to work 8:00 m.-5:00 p.m., M-F. Fill out application at Networking and Telecommunications Services, University of Kansas, Ellsworth Annetx, 1736 Eglin Road, Katy, TX 77493-3480-8000; Deanna Reinhard, EO/AA If you like kids and need job hours, consider applying to work in the nursery at Grace Presbyterian Church. Sun.mornings 9:30-pm. References req. Exp help. Call Kathy at 843-2005. Kansan Classified: 864-4358 SUMMER WORK $9.75 STARTING - National Company - Entry Level - AASP Scholarships - ALL MAJORS - Work Part Time Around Classes CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION 842-6336 400s Real Estate 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted Student Telephone Interviewer - must communicate well, be familiar with IBM computer and enjoy working with people. $4.25 - 90/hr. Flexible 20 - 30 hrs/wk. Full description available at KU Gerontology Center (913) 864-4130. An Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action employer. United Child Development Center has opening for 1 full-time and 1 part time lead teacher. Applicants must have degree in education or related field. Req. Master's degree or work related references and transcript. Send by July 3 to Mary Ann Dean at 946 Vermont, Lawrence, KS 60044. EOE Useyour military training and experience in the Kansas Army National Guard. Receive much more than a monthly paycheck. Attention Veterans All Branches Benefits include: Benefits include: -Educational Benefits in addition to current VA Benefits -Credit of prior service time towards pay & retirement -Commissary/PX privileges -$200,000 Life Insurance -Last pay grade held up to E-6 Try one year! Work only one week- end a month! Call today! 842-0759 842-9293 I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! is now hiring part time, 32rd E Louisiana. Computer Technician Wanted contact Uni Computers 841-4611 Kansas Union Food Services "Catering Depart- ment" 29 p.m. or 3 pm.-midnight #4.28 per day. Prefer previous food service experience. Apply Kansas and Burge Union's Personnel Office, Level 5. Like kids ages 3-7? Want to make difference in a child's life? Then Head Start child care can use you as a volunteer in the classroom. 2 hours a day. For information Monday-Friday 8 a.m., 6 p.m. Management Trainee Start now! Expanding c positions. No experience. call 892-977 Nanny Needed: PT for skids (3, 6 & 9). Must be reliable. Non-smoker who drives live in town. Please call (801) 257-7422. TRANSCRIPTIONS 842-4619 1012 Mass. Suite 201 *Professional Writing *Cover Letters *Consultation Linda Morton, Certified Professional Resumé Writer RESUMES PA RW Professional Association of Resume Writers 225 Professional Services Seeking active person for summer to work with 11-year old boy. Must be patient, soft-spoken and active. Prefer some majoring in psychology development, but not necessary. Call 432-3251 NEED EXTRA MONEY??^79 Help wanted for fall fee completion held on August 17 and 18. Fill application in General account at 8:04 a.m. to room #361, Room 225, 8:04 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. 4:00 p.m. to apply is June 28, 1995. We must be current KU student to apply. We are an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-779 OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense J For free consultation call JJJ Rick Frydman, Attorney 701 NAMES 843-4023 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS-VISITORS DV-1 WRECARD card, by U.S. Immigration Legal Services. Tel. (813) 822-6921; (813) 919-4425 Sunday, a.m. to 10 a.m., CA 91386 Monday, Sunday, a.m. to 10 a.m., PROMPTABORTIONAND CONTRACEPTIVESERVICES Dale L. Clinton, M.D. Lawrence 841-5716 WE CAN HELP HEADQUARTERS Counseling and information Telephone/In Person 24 Hours Confidential 841-2345 1419 Massachusetts St. Lawrence TRAFFIC.DUIS TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133 BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law General Practice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 Thesis & Hardbinding and Gold Stamping 3 Day Turnaround Lawrence Printing Service, Inc. 512 E. 9th Street 843-4600 Highly successful company seeks personnel to train for marketing position. Flexible require 235 Typing Services For ALL your typing/editing/createive needs, rely on me to do it RIGHT! All work is GUARANTEED! Fast, friendly, reliable, accurate. Call Jacki at 865-2855 Makin' the Grade X UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesdav. June 21. 1995 7B 305 For Sale Desks, Bookcases, Chest of Drawers, Beds. Everything But Ice. 926 Mass. Full-size mattress set. Not never used. Still in plastic, warranty, $185. Brasshead床垫 80-79 Queen size mattress set. Never used. Still in condition. White mattress. Will sell 194. Brass headboard 59.78-989. 340 Auto Sales For Sale: 1976 Daison 280 Z $1,500 BOO. Call Steve 835-398 or 844-306-306. 370 Want to Buy Wanted for 6-8 weeks this summer; furnished house or possibly apartment. Alaskan Principal and Teacher needs to be in Lawrence, Price not a child, Bachelor's degree, Call immediately Mike Williams. 907-329-2274. A 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere VILLAGE SQUARE apartments VILLAGE SQUARE - Closetocampus - Spacious2bedroom - Laundryfacility - Swimmingpoo * On Bus Route 9th & Avalon 842-3040 Quail Creek Apartments & Townhouses 2111 Kasold Drive 843-4300 Call for Appt. "In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good old-fashioned personalized service." Managed & maintained by Professionals - Studios 1,2,and 3 bedroom apartments now available. 2 BR apartment in 4-plex, 15th and Tennessee. New carpeted. No pets, water paid. Available NOW $400 plus deposit. lease.842-3946 MEADOWBROOK APARTMENTS 15TH & CRESTLINE LEASE beginning for summer and fall Variety of apartments that sell out fast! DON'T WAIT ANY LONGER! OPEN: MON-FRI 8-5:30 p.m. SAT-10-4 p.m. Sun-1-4 p.m. Taking deposits for rain From $345 to $900; Studios, 1, 2 & 3 BR apts. Water Trash prd. in studios, water, trash, gas heat pd. In apts. 2, 3 & 4BR townhomes. "Small" pets OK with dep. Pools, tennis, basketball, on bus route. Reserve your home for Fall today! Trailridge Apartments 2500 W 6th 913-843-7333 Fax 843-0197 3 Bedroom duplex, 1+ bath. garage. No pets. Excellent location. $650/month. Available 9/1/95. Call 842-6599 Holiday Apartments PALM ISLAND Leasing for Summer & Fall - 3 Bedroom $595-$615 - 4 Bedroom $715-$725 - Recently constructed - Dishwasher - On bus route - Nice quiet setting 211 Mount Hope Court #3 for more info. or Appt. call 843-0011 or 842-39* EDDINGHAM PLACE 24th and Eddingham Dr. OFFERING LUXURY 2 BDRM APARTMENTS AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE - Swimming pool - Exercise weight room - Energy Efficient - LaundryRoom - Fireplace - Onsite management - Daily 3:00-5:00 Professionally managed by KVM --bedroom apts. for fall! Townhomes Four Bedroom/Three Bath Featuring for Fall of '95 - Full-Size Washer/Dryer - Trash Compactor NowLeasingForFall - Microwave - Ceiling Fans in Every Rm. 225 Professional Services Beau's Import Auto Service Quality car maintenance & repair - Gas Fireplace Off or on st. next to The Yacht Club. and other fine imports. SUNDANCE APARTMENTS 7th & Florida APLCREPCH APTS. Now showing & 2 BRS for Aug. aile, AC. heat, water & trash dp, DW, disp& microware Call anytime, 843-820. Sorry, no pets. - Cable in Every Rm. Furnished Apartments - Carport Per Townhome First Management 4501 Wimbeldon Dr. Call 841-7849 - 1500 Sq Ft. 841-5255 Pool and Clubhouse Four Bedroom--Ask About Our Three Person Special Office Hours (9-5), M-F - Cable Paid - VOLVO - Walk-In Closets 842-4320 MoneyCard is now leasing 2 - Gas Heat - 2 Pools - Volleyball Court - 2 Laundry Rooms - Gas, Heat/CA M-F 1-5pm 1740Ohio 749-1436 4stops on Property We are now accepting deposits on apartments for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. - •On KU Bus Route with - We presently have available a select few 1 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. - Some Washer/Dryer Hookups Call or stop by today 2401 W. 25th,9A3 842-1455 Hookups (sorry no pets) - Sand volleyball court - Swimming Pool Park25 2166 W.26th 843-6446 apts. available Pets Welcome* - 1,2,3&4bedroom - Ask about our brand new 3 bedroom villas South Point AVAILABLE 2166 W. 26th - Water & trash paid *Restrictions Apply - On KU Bus Route 749-1556 apts.available Ask about our brand Now leasing for spring or fall! Bradford Square Apartments 501 Colorado #B1 Mon.-Fri. 1-5 p.m. Sat. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Stop by or call OUTHPOINTE ParkVillas Spacious 3BDRMApts. Cats Welcome *patio/deck Brand New Be the First Modern Interiors with: ·microwave separate dining room - dishwasher - on-site management - on KU bus route e Three hotrone tun full hothe - convenient laundry facility - lots of closet space - convenient laundry - Washer/dryerincluded Now leasing for Fall - On KU bus route-Great Location! 1&2Bedrooms OnKUBusRoute COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith 842-5111 843-6446 VISA Indoor/OutdoorPool M-F10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 Exercise Room 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 West Hills APARTMENTS Now Leasing for August Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts. GREATLOCATION near campus OPENHOUSE Mon.-Fri. 12:30-5:00 No appointment needed Avail. immediately. 1 BR basement apartment, close to KU and downtown $250/mo all utilities pd Call 748-9095 Leave message --wan S Management 2512 West 6th St. 749-1288 2310 West 26th St GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS GRAYS ONE APARTMENTS • 1 Bedroom $320 • 2 Bedroom $380 • 3 Bedroom $600 - 1 Bedroom $320 • 2 Bedroom $420 EAGLE APARTMENTS OPEN HOUSE Monday-Friday 1 - 4:30 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Call 749-1288 MASTERCRAFT Excellent Location, 1104 Tenn. near/own KU, 2 RU apt 8I inter ac, CA no pets, $895.842-424 Great Location, 1801 Miss. IBR Studio basement ac, CA no pets, $895.842-424 Modern 3 BR. 2 bath Condo Fully furnished, WD, DIM, MORE. Walking distance to beach and park. One bdm, one bdh, so on bus route. Available a one bdm, one bdh, so on bus route. Unfurnished $180 a month. Chell-98-0044 Offers Completely Furnished Studio, 1,2,3, & 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes Regents Court 19th& Mass. 749-0445 Boardwalk 524 Frontier 842-4444 On Trailside Bus Rout Kaw Valley Management, Inc. is now leasing studio, 1, 2, & 3 bedroom apartments, town homes, and homes. We have homes for immediate or Fall move in. Comes @ W 8th, W 24th, or call us at (800) 697-8344. Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2415 1&2 Bedroom Apts. Now leasing for Summer & Fall Move-ins. Campus Place 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS Orchard Corner 15th & Kasold 749-4226 Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm Sat. 10am-4pm ROOMMATE FINDER Real Nice I BRI Apartment. Close to KU & Dow- Hardwood floors, lots of windows. No Pets. No Parking. 842-4455 Equal Housing Opportunity offer... Summer Sablesie: real nice, spacious 2 BR house, close to KU. No pets. 748-2919 430 Roommate Wanted NAISMITH Hall RENTALSOLUTIONS A&S 1/R/S Roommate & share BREC condo, 2 full bath, 3 full bathroom, 2 BR condo, $280/mo & /ml Call Todd or Chad at 605-996-288 LOOKING FOR A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE? Come by and see what Naismith Hall has to NEED A ROOMMATE? 841-5454 N/N Female roommate required for furnished 3 BR apt for 1996-1998 academic year. W/O (3), on KU宝马 B520, in a heated kitchen, near the library. Don't forget to ask about our "Fast Back" Bonus! - Lawrence's premier private student housing option-the exceptional, affordable choice for KU students Swimmingpool *Maidservice* - Fully furnished and carpeted suites, each with their own bath Convenient location next to campus and on KU bus route Featuring our "Dine Anytime" program that serves teriffic meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner Planned social activities 843-8559 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 - IBM and Macintosh computer lab Tours available daily including weekends-just drop by! Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information 1-800-888-GOKU packet! THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - By phone: 864-4358 Classified Information and order form Ada phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. **University:** 3190 Stuaffler Floor - By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045 Stop by the Kansan offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. You may print your classified order on the form be hand 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 with 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 unused days. Rounds on an cancelled ads that were one-road by check or with cash are not available. Blind Box Numbers: The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kaiser 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. Rates Cost per line per day | Num. of insertions: | 1X | 2-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30+X | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 3 lines | 2.10 | 1.60 | 1.10 | 0.90 | 0.75 | 0.50 | | 4 lines | 1.95 | 1.20 | 0.80 | 0.70 | 0.65 | 0.45 | | 5-7 lines | 1.90 | 1.10 | 0.75 | 0.65 | 0.60 | 0.40 | | 8+ lines | 1.80 | 0.95 | 0.65 | 0.60 | 0.55 | 0.35 | Classifications 105 personal 110 business personals 120 announcements 120 entertainment 125 personal and fund 205 help wanted 225 professional services 235 typing services 305 for sale 340 auto sales 360 miscellaneous 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 roommate wanted ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: Please print your ad one word per box 1 2 3 4 5 Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper___ Total ad cost:___ Classification:___ Name: ___ Phone: ___ Address:_ VISA Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad. Account number: Print exact name appearing on credit card: Expiration Date: MasterCard Signature: The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045 STUDENTS LOOK FOR NOTHING IN THE PAPER. Remember that white space can be an irresistible attraction to a pair of inquisitive eyes. Use it to your advantage when you place your next ad where students look first. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Nothing works better. Does Your Car Have You In A Jam? A-1 Automotive 21 Years Experience - Transmission Specialists RULES OF SERVICE - High Quality worl - Excellent Prices - All Car Repairs (Foreign & Domestic) 842-0865 1501 W.6th We sell the sports equipment you want to buy! Roller skates Hockey ball Golf bag Weight bench The best new & used equipment around we BUY, SELL, TRADE, & CONSIGN quality used sports equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Mass. phone 841-PLAY SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1995 SECTION B Washington's suit may be off mark magazine. The case was filed in October 1994 and only recently became public knowledge. By Gwen Olson Kansan staff writer Just because many people are taking their problems to court doesn't mean their cases are valid. Kansas women's basketball coach, Marian Washington, will soon find out the validity of her case. Washington is suing Dick Vitale, basketball announcer and writer, and several members of the staff of Dick Vitale's Basketball for defamation of character. In addition to Vitale, the lawsuit targets the publisher, an editor and a writer of the The reason for the $10-million suit was a paragraph about Washington in the 1993-94 edition written by Joe Smith, director of the women's basketball news service. The paragraph praised certain Jayhawks, however it continued, "But Coach Marian Washington usually finds a way to screw things up. This season will be no different." Stephen McAllister, professor of law, said that Washington might not have a case. "For defaulment of character suits, the difficult part is that it could be an opinion," McAllister said. "It will be difficult for her to prove if the writer did it out of malice toward her." This case could involve interpreting the Constitution, McAllister said. According to the First Amendment, the press is allowed to express opinions about public figures. But the big question will be whether the writer was expressing this as an opinion or stating it as a fact. If the comment about Washington was an opinion, the writer had the right to publish it. Washington's case is seen as a threat by many journalists, because if she wins, freedom of the press could be restricted. "I have a license to express any opinion that I want to," said Bob Hentzen, sports columnist for the Topeka Capital-Journal. "If facts are involved, they could sue, but when commenting on any sport, it is usually opinion." VITALE: Washington's lawsuit may not stand in court. Page 4A, Basketball tradition lures new coach Assistant prepared to uphold Jayhawk pride By Trine Nygaard Kansan staff writer Neil Dougherty just got off the phone. "It has been busy around here," he says as he walks down the long, carpeted hallway of the Kansas basketball offices. He sits down in his office and seems to relax for a bit before Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams stops by to confirm their appointment for later that day. Dougherty is Williams' newest addition to the Jayhawk coaching team. On May 15 he replaced assistant coach Steve Robinson, who left Kansas to take the University of Tulsa head coach position. Williams said that replacing Robinson was not easy. However, Dougherty was the one person he had targeted as Robinson's successor. "Neil was my first choice, my only choice for this job," Williams said. "He is a proven coach and recruiter. And more importantly he is an outstanding person who will do a great job in our program." Dougherty said that Williams' compliment had a lot to do with why Dougherty came to Kansas. "Having someone like Coach Williams with his status in this business say that made me feel real good," Dougherty said. "And it also made me feel welcome." Williams and the work he had done played a large role in Dougherty's decision to come to Kansas. He said he hoped to keep the program at its current level. "Here at the University of Kansas the standards are a little bit higher than most places because of the people who have been here and the tradition that goes along with Kansas basketball," Dougherty said. Summer basketball camp was one of Dougherty's first assignments. And last week Dougherty's oldest son, Neil, continued his tradition and went to camp with his dad. His son liked camp so much that he didn't want to go back to South Carolina where his mother, Patti; his older sister, Megan; and his younger brother, Ryan, remain, Dougherty said. "I miss them, but moving is a part of this business and we have already done it a couple of times," he said. "This time it is a little easier because I have so much family in this area." Dougherty grew up in Leavenworth, and although his parents still are there, he and his family have decided to live in Lawrence. SANDERS New assistant men's basketball coach Neil Dougherty replaces Steve Robinson, who joined the basketball program at the University of Tulsa. Kathleen Driscoll / KANSAN Looking For a Great Place to Live? Come by and see what Naismith Hall has to offer. Lawrence's premier private student housing option—the exceptional, affordable choice for KU students Quiet study areas Fully furnished and carpeted suites, each with their own bath Air conditioned Air conditioned Featuring our"Dine Anytime" program that serves terrific meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner. Coed Fitness Center Convenient location next to campus and on the KU bus route Maid service Cable TV in floor lounges and on large screen TV Computer room with Macintosh and IBM computers KANSAS Tours available daily including weekends—just drop by!! Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information packet. JOHN J. LEE NAISMITH Hall KAHSAF If you've already signed a lease but are interested-call us and we'll see what we can do. Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 1-800-GOKU ADVERTISING: 864-4358 NEWS: 864-4810 KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612 THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SECTION A VOL.104, NO.152 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1995 Weather: Page 2A SPORTS A (USPS 650-640) Ostertag in the first round; Big Eight draft line-up and more potential picks. Page 8 & 10B Draft hopefuls to discover fate CAMPUS Riding shotgun with the fuzz Kansan reporter Angie Dasbach rides along with the Lawrence and KU police. Page 6A NEWS BRIEFS Lalia Browlee / CONTRIBUTED PHOTO John Hill, D.C., of Hill Chiropractic Clinic inserts an acupuncture needle into reporter Phillip Brownlee. Needles were placed just below both knees and ankle bones. Former White House press secretary busted Police department spokesman Sydney Bennett says Myers was arrested about 12:45 a.m. Tuesday, after an officer spotted her car double-parked facing the wrong way on a street in the city's bustling, late-night Adams-Morgan neighborhood. WASHINGTON — Former White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers was arrested on a Washington street yesterday and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol. Laila Brownlee / CONTRIBUTED PHOTO She was released on the promise to appear at a court hearing. In custody, Myers also was charged with driving under the influence after she was found to have a blood alcohol content level above the legal limit. If found guilty of the misdemeanor offense, she could be fined $2,000 or sentenced to one year in jail. The officer asked Myers to move on, at which point she continued the wrong way. The officer stopped her again; she again double-parked facing the wrong way, and was arrested for driving on the wrong side of the street. Jesse James to be exhumed ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — Bank robber Jesse James was posing as a cattle buyer when a member of his gang fired a bullet through his head to collect reward money. But was it really James that Bob Ford killed on April 3, 1882? And did Ford shoot alone, or did his brother Charles fire his gun at the same time? Stars also has investigated the deaths of accused ax-murderer Lizzie Borden and Carl Weiss, the alleged assassin of Huey Long, the populist governor and U.S. senator. A team of scientists wants to conduct a new autopsy on James' body to try to resolve controversies that linger 113 years after his death. "DNA tests could solve once and for all the question of whether Jesse James was killed in St. Joseph," said James E. Starrs, professor of law and forensic sciences at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. Compiled from The Associated Press. ACUPUNCTURE Thousands turn to this art to treat health problems Cecely Chou, a tutor in Chinese at the University of Kansas, battled asthma for years. Even though she took her medicine faithfully, her condition never improved. Helen Hill of Kansas City, Mo., smoked for 50 years before deciding to quit. But when she tried to stop, she felt so horrible that she started up again. Alice LaFrenz of Lawrence just wanted to keep her weight off. These three women and thousands of other people have turned to the ancient art of acupuncture to treat their health problems, despite the doubts of the medical community. The results of these acupuncture treatments are sometimes dramatic: Chou's asthma cleared up; Hill stopped smoking for good; and LaFrenzi lost 10-15 pounds. Acupuncture originated in China between 2,500 and 4,000 years ago but did not gain popularity in the United States until the last 20 years. According to U.S. Food and Drug Administration estimates, 9 million to 12 million acupuncture treatments are now performed in the United States each year. In Lawrence, four chiropractors advertise and perform acupuncture; John Hill of Hill Chiropractic, 944 Kentucky St.; Vince Schole of Massachusetts Chiropractic, 932 Massachusetts St.; Mikell Adams of Adams Chiropractic, 2032 W. 27th St.; and Chris Wertin of Advanced Chiropractic Services, 3300 W, 15th St. The University is a major source of patients for these practices. Hill Chiropractic estimates that nearly one-third of its acupuncture patients are KU students. The local practitioners follow the traditional Chinese teachings that the body contains opposite forces known as yin and yang. According to the teachings, people are healthy when yin and yang are balanced and become ill when they fall out of balance. Acupuncture theory holds that harmony can be restored by altering qi (pronounced "chee"), an energy source that flows through the body's 14 meridians and channels energy to all organs and systems. Along these meridians are approximately 400 acupoints that can alter the flow of qi. 4 In most U.S. clinics, acupoints are stimulated through the insertion of hair-thin needles. In Lawrence, Hill, Scholle and Adams use this technique, while Wertin uses electronic stimulation and pressure. "It's not like a shot or an injection," she said. "Sometimes you feel the needles going in, but that's it. Once they are in you don't feel anything." Unlike their Chinese counterparts who determine a patient's yin and yang balance by using their fingertips, the Lawrence practitioners rely primarily on an electronic meter to measure the body's electrical currents. These readings are then plotted; and a diagnosis and treatment plan are determined. Patient Helen Hill said acupuncture did not hurt but sometimes caused a momentary sting. Charts indicate which acupoints affect which organs or ailments. For example, the human ear is said to contain dozens of points linked to such organs as the heart, stomach and gall bladder. To help Alice LaFrenz lose weight, Hill placed a quarter-inch surgical staple on her ear. Hill instructed her to pull her ear lobe whenever she felt hungry. "When I was extra hungry I would reach in and move the staple back and forth to send the message quicker," LaFrenz said, "It worked, and I lost my weight." work,' said Paul Mathews, associate professor of respiratory care and physical therapy at KU's School of Allied Health in Kansas City, Kan. Although most acupuncture treatments are for pain management, claims that it works on a myriad of conditions ranging from the common cold to bed wetting have made traditional physicians and consumers skeptical. Even using acupuncture to help stop smoking raises eyebrows. And indeed, acupuncture isn't always successful. Molly Merringer of Kansas City, Mo., for example, had two months of acupuncture, receiving two to three treatments a week, yet was "I can't figure out how it would Reporter casts away fear; takes poke at acupuncture By Phillip Brownlee Special to the Kansan Some people say flu shots don't hurt, yet I describe them in one word. YEEOUCH! In interviewing acupuncture patients, I was told repeatedly that the needles "don't really hurt." But what does "really" mean? OK, so maybe I'm a wimp and am not a good candidate for body piercing, but as a reporter, I do feel obligated to try and understand my topic. I was escorted into a medical examination room like any other, save the posters on the wall diagraming "The Meridians of Ch'i Energy" and the stainless-steel needles glistening in a tray on the counter. After asking me some health questions, Hill prescribed a basic treatment to improve my leg circulation. He then had me remove my shoes and socks and roll up my pant legs. I felt a slight sting when the needles broke the skin, but the feeling in both knees passed almost immediately. And as for my feet, I didn't feel a thing. As I hopped onto the exam table, Hill said that in his 15 years of practice, only four patients had felt queasy; all were male. 1 After dabbing my skin with alcohol, Hill skillfully inserted a 2 1/2-inch needle about 1/8-1/4 inches into the skin below the outside of my kneecaps and another by my ankle bones. These are four key acupuncture points on the human body. Hill said. I didn't know if I should be comforted or scared by that. Hill said different acupuntures brought different discomfort levels. He tells his patients what to expect. For example, the bottom of the foot is one of the worst spots. Hill said. Needles are sometimes twisted or tapped in order to trigger a particular response, but mine were left dangling peacefully from my legs for about five minutes. Lalia Brownlee / CONTRIBUTED PHOTO Hill explains to Brownlee the benefits of acupuncture. Removing the needles was simple and painless, though removal did produce one blood drop, which Hill said was common. Leaving the clinic, I felt somewhat disappointed since I was ready for Hill to use my forehead as a pin cushion. But I had to admit, my steps did feel bouncer. I just hope my next assignment isn't about circumcision. Iron lures Levine from KU City commissioner to deal in metal art By John Collar Special to the Kansan Allen Levine, who was elected to the commission in April, is resigning as membership coordinator of the Spencer Museum of Art effective July 17. One of KU's two connections to the Lawrence City Commission is leaving the University to test his mettle in an ornamental iron company. Levine and John Nalbandian, asso- cause professor of public administration, serve on the commission. Levine will stay in Lawrence and retain his position as a commissioner. C. A. C. Levine will be a partner in The Blue Iron Allen Levine Co., which will reproduce and sell pieces of metal art. He will run sales and marketing. "We have the rights to just literally thousands of designs of mainly metal structures — anything from statuettes to art deco mirrors, park benches and just amazing iron tables," Levine said. Some of the designs are original and date from the 1870s. "I feel really good pushing a pretty high quality Kansas product," he said. Levine has been interested in design since taking art history courses at KU and working at the museum. The job also is a unique opportunity, he said. Doug Tilghman, assistant director of the art museum, said he was sorry to see Levine leave. "Allen is committed to seeing the arts flourish in Lawrence," Tilghman said. The museum is in the process of hiring a replacement for Levine. Levine said his duties on the commission had nothing to do with his leaving KU, even though the first four weeks as a commissioner were pretty hectic. "After the first month or so, I was able to focus on what I wanted to do." he said. Levine said he started to hit his stride when he introduced a resolution condemning plans of the Victory Sand and Gravel Co. to dredge the Kansas River. The resolution passed unanimously. He said he also was pleased to see an emerging dialogue between the city and neighborhood groups. He said that the increasing emphasis on city-neighborhood relations had accompanied a changing definition of what a neighborhood actually is. "Neighborhoods are much more than just houses and occupants," he said. "There are stake holders in each neighborhood, including schools and businesses and the people who work there." Levine, who has a bachelor's degree in English from KU, said he had enjoyed his time spent at the University. "It's been the best years of my life," he said. Parking department gives fewer tickets during summer By Leslie Taylor Special to the Kansan Toppea graduate student Steve Reynolds sighed as he emptied his pockets searching for spare change to feed the parking meter. Reduced staff less attentive of University's restricted lots "Twenty-five cents per hour? This is ridiculous," he muttered to himself while he stood in lot 91 between the Kansas Union and Campanile Hill. Unlike the drivers of 12 other cars in his row, Reynolds stuffed the meter with his change. He said he wanted to avoid a ticket. But the other dozen cars with expired meters were not getting ticketed either. Summertime seems to be an easier time for parking on the KU campus, students say. Parking patrols are fewer and far between. Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking, said the department issued fewer tickets in the summer because there were fewer students and less ground to cover. So far this summer, the department has averaged 175 tickets a day. In April the average was 414 tickets a day. "Although we write fewer total tickets during the summer, we write more tickets in the blue and red areas because campus is open, and the students have access to these areas as early as two o'clock." Hultine said, "Even if campus is open, the signs in each lot still take precedence." Because the department has less ground to cover, it also has a smaller summer staff. During the school year the department keeps three full-time and 30 part-time employees. In the summertime, however, it has only 10 part-time employees. Hutline said that lot 91 was ticked the most, and Reynolds and his Mike Eenbach, Overland Park senior, said that this did not surprise him. Although many of these cars lacked hang tags, half of them were parked beside unpaid meters. While the parking department staff was patrolling the numerous blue and red areas on campus, yellow zones appeared to get less attention on June 21. On that date, 36 cars parked illegally in lot 91 behind the Kansas Union. cofflaw companions could expect to eventually get ticketed. However, in the 1 1/2 hours that the lots were under observation, no tickets were issued. "I never pay the meters. In fact, I'm parked at an unpaid meter right now," Enenbach said. "The key to parking close to campus is knowing where the meters are. An unpaid meter ticket is only $1, whereas a ticket for parking without a permit in a restricted area is $10." He went on to explain that if a student couldn't find an open meter, using an old hang tag worked well for yellow lots. "A lot of my friends bought tags for last year and never bought another. They never check the stickers, only the tags" he said. "I should know, I haven't gotten a single ticket yet this summer." 2A Wednesday, June 28, 1995 UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N --- The doctor is in the money at KU Med KU has top paid state employees By Kimberly Crabtree Kansan staff writer Doctors usually are well paid, and faculty at the University of Kansas Medical Center are no exception. In fact, they are some of the highest paid employees in the state. Daniel Hollander, executive dean of medicine, is the highest paid state employee, commanding a salary of $253,575. Of the 10 highest paid state employees, nine work at the Med Center, and all 10 are KU administrators or faculty. Chancellor Robert Mewenay, whose annual salary is $160,000, is the eighth highest paid state employee. S. Edwards Dismuke, professor and chairman of the department of preventative medicine, is the third highest paid state employee with $174,642. "According to the Association of American Medical Colleges, among department chairs, the average salary is $205,000, so I guess I'm underpaid according to that," said Dismuke. "But department chairs do fairly well, and I'm not complaining." Among Dismuke's duties are teaching at least two classes per year, advising medical students and sitting on masters thesis committees. The Med Center does not have peer schools with which to compare salaries, as the Lawrence campus does, said Lindy Eakin, associate vice chancellor of administration and finance for the Lawrence campus. As a result, salaries of Med Center faculty can only be compared with those listed by the Association of American Medical Colleges. The Med Center and Kansas State University's School of Veterinary Medicine are the only two schools in the state without peer institutions. Because the Lawrence campus has a separate budget from that of the Med Center, faculty at the Med Center are exempt from the salary deferrals been experienced at the Lawrence campus. "The Lawrence campus and the Med Center are two separate state agencies in terms of budgets," said Eakin. "Our problems are the result of a legislative cut." At the top of the heap executive vice chancellor, KU Med $205,000 1. Daniel Hollander, executive dean of medicine, University of Kansas Medical Center $253,575 3. S. Edwards Diemuke, professor and chair of preventative medicine, KU Med. $174,242 University of Kansas Medical Center 2. Donald Herman (Texas) position 1, Sent 1 medicine, KU Med $174,642 1-month Rent-Markdown 4. Joseph C. Meek Jr., professor and dean of medicine, KU Med. $172,069 medicine, KU Med $172,069 Education and Learning $172,069 5. Glemm Potter, vice chancellor of hospital administration (JW Med) administration, KU Med $170,242 G. Herbert Swick, assistant dean of medicine, KU Med $165,000 University of Kansas Medical Center-Wichita $163,665 B. Robert Hemenway, chancellor, University of Kansas $160,000 sciences, KU Med $159,884 10. C. Raymond Lahe, chair of psychiatry, KU Med $156,760 8. Robert Hemenway, chancellor, University of Kansas 9. Ronald L Martin, chair of psychiatry and behavioral $159,684 $156,760 Other top-paid state employees: Steven R. Potsic, State health officer and director of the division of health, the Department of Health and Environment. $118,908 Richard W. Holmes, Chief Justice, Kansas Supreme Court $90,311 Bill Graves, Governor $76,476 Carla Stovall, Attorney General $69,347 Ron Thornburgh, Secretary of State $60,297 Sally Thompson, State Treasurer $60,297 Kathleen Sebellius, Insurance Commissioner $60,297 Weather TODAYS TEMPS Atlanta 89 ° • 70 ° Chicago 81 ° • 65 ° Des Moines 82 ° • 64 ° Kansas City 88 ° • 66 ° Lawrence 85 ° • 61 ° Los Angeles 75 ° • 63 ° Lubbock 96 ° • 67 ° New York 72 ° • 66 ° Omaha 86 ° • 63 ° St. Louis 87 ° • 70 ° Seattle 86 ° • 58 ° Topeka 88 ° • 65 ° Tulsa 95 ° • 70 ° TODAY Warmer and mostly sunny. 85 62 THURSDAY Not as warm with a chance for thunderstorms. 82 61 FRIDAY Not quite as warm with a slight chance for thunderstorms. 80 60 8562 8562 Source: The Associated Press 8261 80 60 ACUPUNCTURE: Scientific doubt doesn't deter local practitioners Continued from Page 1A. never able to kick her smoking habit. Still, Merringen, who is the assistant prosecutor for Jackson County, believes that acupuncture is effective for other addictions. In fact, she directs the county's drug rehabilitation program that requires first-time offenders to receive acupuncture treatments as part of an addiction recovery program. Another concern of the medical establishment is the lack of training requirements for those who perform acupuncture. and Wertin, 12. The State of Kansas has "no specific training requirements" to practice acupuncture, said Kevin LaChance, disciplinary counsel for the Kansas Board of Healing Arts in Topeka. The only stipulation is that an acupuncturist must be a licensed physician or be under the direction or supervision of a physician. All of the Lawrence practitioners have some level of formal acupuncture training. Hill has practiced for 15 years; Scholle, 6; Adams, 5; Doctors also question the validity of acupuncture since few reliable scientific studies have been completed. But acupuncturists, including the Lawrence practitioners, counter that several of the studies that have been completed support their claims, including current research at the Paseo Clinic in Kansas City, Mo. Still, for most acupuncturists and their patients, the bottom line is whether acupuncture works. "Just because we don't understand it doesn't mean that it doesn't work." Adams said. "Patients who get results don't care how it works." Chou, Hill, and LaFrenz are examples. They believe in acupuncture, because it worked. "It doesn't matter to me if we can't explain it," Hill said. "After I experienced it, I believed it," Chou said. "I believe acupuncture is a gift from God." CAMPUS INFORMATION ■ Tuesday: Independence day. No classes. **Hours for Watson Library and Anschutz Science Library:** 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday-Thursday; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday; noon to 5 p.m. Saturday; 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday - Enrollment center hours: 8 a.m. to noon, 1 to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday ■ Hours for the Kansas Union and Burge Union Bookstores: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. The Kansas Union Bookstore will be open on the following Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.: July 8, July 15 and July 22. Campus is closed from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday-Friday. Parking is restricted in blue, red and yellow lots. Dormitory parking lots are not restricted. Important phone numbers: ■ University directory assistance: From campus phones, dial 0. Off campus, dial 864-2700 KU parking: 864-PARK KU Police Department (nonemergency) 864-5572 Watkins Health Center: 864 9500 Appointment desk: 864-9507 KU Weather line: 864-3300 The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 StaufferFlint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60645. Keep it clean. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN STUDENTS LOOK FOR NOTHING IN THE PAPER. Specials every day of the week RUDY'S PIZZERIA HUGE Selection of beer and wine Specials every day of the week HUGE Selection of beer and wine RUDY'S PIZZERIA Taste the Rudy's Difference 704 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS 749-0055 Pizza by the slice Gourmet Pizzas Remember that white space can be an irresistible attraction to a pair of inquisitive eyes. Use it to your advantage when you place your next ad where students look first. Nothing works better. Gourmet Pizzas - Serengeti Driver's - Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban® Killer Loop™ Diamond hard Glass Polarized xrays ™ ORBS ™ Sports Series ™ ACTIV ™ Predators ™ Classic Metals ™ The Etc. Shop Ray-Ban BOULEVARD & CO., LTD. Factory Direct Authorized Dealer 1st MERCHANDISE by RAYBAN & CO. 928 Massachusetts • Lawrence • 843-0611 "Liverpool since 1983 Red Lyon Tavern W. .. A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 "Ulmirid since 1993" The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown Business in the City Parking in the rear WHAT EVERY NEW JAYHAWK NEEDS! COED NAKED SPORTSWEAR KANSAS SPORTS CLUB SIMPLY THE AREA'S BEST PRO & COLLEGE FAN SHOP Greatest Hat Selection in the Area! Over 600 styles in stock including 200 fitted KU, College,and all Pro teams! - Awesome KU selection! Jackets, hooded crews, jerseys, tees, sweat-shirts, and accessories. NIKE JOCK'S ON NITCH Reebok DEFINITELY THE AREA'S BEST ATHLETIC SPECIALTY STORE! - - Over 250 athletic footwear styles in stock! Including: Nike, Reebok, K-Swiss, Asics, Converse, Hi-tech, Teva, Ryka and more! Workout and Casual apparel! Champion, Nike, Hind, Life Forms, Umbro, Adidas, Reebok, Co-ed Naked, Wigwam, Club, Rawlings, Columbia and many more! - Authentic Pro merchandise! NFL, MLB, NHL and the NBA. · Authentic Pro merchandise! STARTER. Champion RUSSELL ATHLETIC 837 MASS·842-2992 STORE HOURS 9:30 - 7:00 Mon-Wed 9:30 - 8:30 Thurs 9:30 - 6:00 Fri-Sat 12:00-5:00 Sun MasterCard ALERTNOV TODAY VISA WCCN524 OAKCOVER Champion Teva THE SPORT SANDAL Columbia University of Compan 840 MASS·842-2442 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 28, 1995 M. B. GOLLAND New director of the Natural History Museum, Leonard Krishtalka. Museum leader will take science public Former KU student discovers a new home in director's office As a beginning doctoral student at the University of Kansas, Leonard Krishtalka had a difficult time finding an apartment, so he stayed in the basement of Dyche Hall, home of KU's Natural History Museum, for two months. By Mark Luce Kansan staff writer Now, 23 years later, Kristtalka is back at Dyche not as a guest, but as the new director of the Natural History Museum. Kristalka, who took over for retiring director Philip Humphrey on June 19, said that the museum's reputation had helped him decide to leave his curator position at The Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh. Krishtalka said that he hoped to work with both the private sector and the public community, not only to increase the museum's accessibility to people in Lawrence but also to develop ways to bring the museum to people around Kansas and the globe. "This is the finest university natural history museum in the country," Kristhalka said. "As someone who worked on a national scale, I noticed that the top positions around the country that deal with biodiversity enterprises were inordinately full of KU graduates." the other museums on campus and the creation of a virtual museum, which would be a comprehensive Internet site, are some ideas that Kristalka said he hoped the museum could pursue. A traveling museum, coordinated events with "At no time in human history are natural history museums more important to society than today," Krishtalka said. "The natural history museum can, because of its mission, serve society by providing the kinds of knowledge that will engender wise decisions on environmental use of natural resources. "In turn, this will engender cost-effective solutions." Brad Kemp, marketing director of the Natural History Museum, said that Kristalka's ability to merge the various interests of science and the public would help the museum. "This will give us opportunities we wouldn't have had otherwise." "Many directors are more interested in science, but he is an exception," Kemp said. "Krishtalka sees it as a continuum. Leadership has been passed from one generation to another. Kristalta's ability to communicate effectively with a variety of people will be a major factor in opening the museum to the public, said Ruth Genrich, director of public education for the Natural History Museum. "Kristalka can talk science to people who aren't scientists without being descending." Gennrich said. "He is an excellent communicator who was selected because of his dedication to making the information in the museum accessible to the public." Kristalka is committed to the public side of the museum, but as a professor of systematics and ecology, he also is dedicated to the scientific responsibilities of his position. Edith Taylor, incoming professor of botany, said that Kristalka's pervasive publishing and knowledge of all fields was impressive and that his hiring sent a positive message to scientists. "I think it shows the University's commitment to the Natural History Museum," Taylor said. "By hiring Kristhalka, he said what the University thinks of the museum and the future of it. As a scientist, this is very important to me." Christopher Hauffer, chairman of the botany department, said that Kristaltka would bring fresh ideas into KU's scientific environment. "He brings new possibilities for coordinating science and the museum," Haufler said. "He wants to bring the museum into the information age, get catalogs on-line and make us that much more visible in the national and international community." Kristalka earned his bachelor's and master's of science in zoology, anthropology and paleontology in 1969 and 1971 respectively at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada. He earned his doctorate in 1975 from Texas Tech. SUA calendar provides hot dates for students Kristalka talked he enjoyed living in Lawrence and looked forward to the challenges of directing the Natural History Museum into the 21st century. "The regional community is willing to invest in its betterment though education." Kristalka said. "And we have a terrific advisory board that is committed to this principle. There cannot be anything more grand than discovering the knowledge of life on earth and disseminating this information to the public." By Gwen Olson Kansan staff writer It is summer at the University of Kansas, and Student Union Activities has many events lined up to occupy students during those hot summer nights. The best part is, the events are all free. The first of the events was the New Riddim Band concert on June 15. The concert, on Campanile Hill, drew a crowd of about 350 people. "We had a few less people than we expected," said Jason Fizell, SUA promotions coordinator. "But it was our first event, and we hadn't gotten all of the publicity out yet." "We had 1,200 free vouchers to see the movie, and we ran out in about three hours," Fizell said. "Less people showed up, but the turnout was still about 1,000 people." A special sneak preview of the new Tom Hanks film, "Apollo 13," was shown June 22 at the Lied Center and was a big success, Fizell said. The movie was released in theaters June 23, so KU students got a special first look at the film. The movie was enjoyed by many students, said Jessica McNickle, Ashland junior. "It was a great opportunity to see it before it came out in the theaters," she said. Other students agreed. "It was an amazing movie," said Aroop Pal, Lawrence sophomore. "Everyone really enjoyed it, and I was amazed that SUA got it, because it was so new." SUA had planned a showing of "Outbreak" on the Hill for the following night. But, because of rain, the movie was rescheduled for 8 p.m. tomorrow in Woodruff Auditorium. "We anticipate the attendance to get better as the summer progresses," said Fizell. "We have had a lot of calls on our movie line from people looking for something to HawkWeek SUA's Hawk Week will take place Aug, 15-20. Here's the what, when and where: Playfair 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 15 Allen Field House Beach-n-Boulevard 7 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 16 Wesco Beach ice cream social sponsored by the University of Kansas Alumni Association 5:30 to 6:15 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 17 Adams Alumni Center Traditions Night 7 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 17 Memorial Stadium Downtown Lawrence Day 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 19 Convocation 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 20 Lied Center SUA Movie on the Hill 9 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 20 Campanile Hill. Source: Student Union Activities do." "We tried to program for the students, but other people are always welcome," Fizell said. "We conclude the events on July 13 because finals will be coming up after that, and we have to get ready for the fall." In July, SUA will be showing two movies: "National Lampoon's Vacation" at 9 p.m. July 7 on Campanile Hill and "Pulp Fiction" at 9 p.m. July 13 on the Hill. SUA will gear up its fall program with Hawk Week, a week of orientation events for students, August 15-20. Proposal weakens Kansas'sexed mandate By Traci Carl The Associated Press TOPEKA — Starting Saturday, any school district in Kansas can refuse to teach human sexuality and AIDS education, and there's nothing the state Board of Education can do about it. The 1987 mandate that requires schools to teach students human sexuality is, and has always been, in place, said Dale Dennis, deputy education commissioner. But a legislative proposal to revamp the board's controversial accreditation program will take away its ability to tie the requirement to funding. This tie has provided the board with leverage to make schools teach sex education "On July 1, the mandate is unenforceable," said Rod Bieker, attorney for the state Department of Education. Mark Tallman, lobbyist for the Kansas Association of School Boards, said enforcement isn't an issue. He believes schools still will follow the mandate, which simply requires them to report to the board that they have developed a curriculum for human sexuality and AIDS education. Besides, he said, accreditation and funding are based on many issues — not just sex education. "I don't see how the old system had any real teeth in it," Tallman said. In theory, the board has been able to enforce the controversial sex education mandate in two ways: as part of the criteria for accreditation and by denying funding. But it voted earlier this month to remove it as a bers that they could still pull funding at schools that didn't offer human sexuality and AIDS education. After that, seven members of the board voted in favor of removing the requirement that all students demonstrate physical and emotional well-being — which included "I don't see how the old system had any real teeth in it." criterion for the accreditation process. Responding to concerns that the mandate couldn't be enforced, Lee Droegemueller, commissioner of education for the board, told mem- MarkTallman Kansas Association of School Boards lobbyist When included the study of human sexuality and AIDS — from the accreditation process. The legislative proposal that becomes law on Saturday repeals a provision requiring schools to make annual reports to the state board describing their progress and how they have met board criteria to receive state aid. Wichita board member Michael Graggert questioned whether the board could have legally pulled funding from a school that didn't offer sex education. A supporter of the sex education mandate, he favored leaving it in the accreditation criteria. "It provided cover to local school boards to offer this type of education," he said, adding that a small, vocal group of parents was pressuring local boards to drop or limit sex education curriculum. "I don't know whether they have the guts to stand up to it or not," Graggert said. Gerald Henderson, executive director of United School Administrators of Kansas, said there should be sanctions in place to enforce the mandate, but he believed most schools would recognize the importance of teaching human sexuality. Many parents have attacked the mandate, arguing that sex education should be taught in the home. Others argue that it should focus on teaching abstinence. Parents can pull their children out of human sexuality and AIDS education classes without consequences. Schools are required to make the curriculum available to parents. Phelps, some of his flock face court date next month The Associated Press TOPEKA — Unless a federal judge dismisses charges brought against them by Shawnee County prosecutor Joan Hamilton, six members of Westboro Baptist Church will go on trial next month in Lyon County District Court in Emporia. The defendants, including anti-gay activist Fred W. Phelps Sr., the church pastor, are charged with a variety of counts including assault and battery in a series of incidents related to church members' picketing churches, businesses and law enforcement officials in Topeka 1994 and 1995. Special Shawnee County District Court Judge Michael Barbara had moved their trials from Topeka to Emporia on grounds their activities in Topeka had so prejudiced residents that they could not get impartial trials here. Attorneys for the six defendants had contended they also could not get fair trials in Lyon County and argued that the trials should be moved to some other location in southeast Kansas. However, on Monday prosecutors and the Phelps' attorneys agreed to keep the trials in Emporia. The Phelps defendants also have a case pending in federal district court in which they ask for dismissal of all charges, on grounds they are unconstitutional, because Hamilton is biased against Westboro Baptist Church members and has engaged in selective prosecution. Judge Timothy Leonard of Oklahoma City has scheduled a hearing here Thursday to listen to arguments in that case. If he doesn't dismiss the charges, Barbara plans to begin hearing the cases against the six defendants on July 17 in Emporia. He announced a schedule that calls for hearing two of the cases each week over a three-week period, with two days of testimony estimated for each case. Defendants and the charges against them are as follows: Fred W. Phelps Sr., battery, assault and two counts of disorderly conduct. Jonathan B. Phelps, disorderly conduct, battery and unlawful restraint. Charles F. Hockenbarger, battery. Charles W. Hockenbarger, battery and unlawful restraint. Karl Hockenbarger, assault, unlawful restraint and two counts of battery. Phelps Sr. has called the charges "total fabrications." NEF'S AUDIO/VIDEO 913-842-1811 Floor Demo Sale NOW! KIEF'S AUDIO/VIDEO 913-842-1811 CDs/Tapes new & used 913-842-1544 MICHAEL JACKSON “HISTORY” MFG. LIST $32¥8 KIEF’s $24¥7 New Pink Floyd – “Pulse,” also $32¥8 $24¥7 New Phish – “A Live One” … $14¥7 Look for lots of Kief's $9¥8 and $10¥8 CD Specials – including ... Neil Young w/ Pearl Jam ... "BATMAN FOREVER" ... Beastie Boys ... Juliana Hatfield ... and yes, LOTS MORE! 25% off mfg. list with purchase of 5 CDs We buy sell & trade used CDs Up to 75% off mfg. list clearance CDs Closeout CDs as low as .49¢ 24th & Iowa • P.O. Box 2 • Lawrence, KS 66044 STEREO SYSTEM JACKSON HIS TORY Sound Great CD Stereo 913-842-1433 A BETTER WAY TO EVERYDAY 4A Wednesday, June 28.1995 OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIEWPOINT THE ISSUE: THE RELIGIOUS RIGHT Foster's fate a bad sign for GOP Last week, Henry Foster's surgeon general nomination was essentially derailed by the Christian Coalition and the National Right to Life Committee, groups that wrote letters to U.S. senators asking them to prevent a vote on the nomination. Thus President Clinton's nomination of Foster, an obstetrician-gynecologist was killed when an attempt to end a Republican nomination blockade fell three votes short. This type of influence should be recognized as an effective and dangerous weapon against women and their rights. That same weapon is sure to affect the next general election. Voters should see that these groups continually will try to turn their views into law. Letting these coalitions affect the nomination of a candidate who had performed legal abortions showed Congress believed there was not even room for discussion on this important subject. By bowing to the wants of religious coalitions on Clinton's nominee. Republicans run the risk of alienating voters. The Republican party has leaned further toward the agenda of social conservatives since gaining control of Congress in November. Many in the party have shifted their views increasingly to the right on issues from medical assistance to public broadcasting. If the Christian Coalition and the National Right to Life Committee can easily influence legislation, what will their next mission be, mandatory school prayer? In this case, Republicans blocked a candidate who was more concerned with preventing and dealing with teen-age pregnancy than preforming abortions. The GOP should be wary of linking itself to these groups. By giving in to the religious right, Republican candidates may have turned many mainstream AMIE MUNN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD THE ISSUE: FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS Parade flaunts free speech issue in a victory for the First Amendment, the Supreme Court ruled last week that because the organizers of Boston's St. Patrick's Day Parade were a group of private citizens, they had the right to include or exclude any group that wished to participate in the parade. The reasoning behind the decision was that the parade made a statement and therefore was protected as free speech. As such, the organizers had the right to decide what message they wanted to convey. Unfortunately, a message of acceptance, inclusion and caring wasn't one they felt important enough to include. Instead, they chose to ban a group that wanted to proclaim its pride in being homosexual and Irish. But this issue hasn't been that simple. Discrimination against gays has been widespread, and group solidarity has been necessary to provide greater understanding and equality within our society. Some wonder what the uproar might have been if Organizers of Boston's St.Patrick Day's events have right to exclude gays, but actions show lack of today's tolerance. the parade's organizers had chosen to ban an African-American group. It might have been a much louder statement, but having Black skin hasn't been seen as immoral—lately. Society has come a long way in race relations since the days when African Americans weren't allowed to drink from the same water fountains as Caucasians, but its views on homosexuality remain stuck in the generation of Edsels and nuclear families. The evidence accumulates that sexual preference is more biological than psychological. So even though the organizers of Boston's St. Patrick's Day Parade had the legal right to decide who would and would not participate in the event, making that decision based on an individual's sexual preference was wrong and misguided. TODD HIATT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD KANSAN STAFF GERRY FEY Editor SHELEY MILLER fanaging editor TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser CATHERINE WORTH Technology coordinator Effort Editorial ... Jamie Munn Campus ... Jenni Carlson ... Virginia Marghelm Photo ... Jay Thornton Design ... David Johnson Graphics ... Noah Musser Copy Chief ... Melinda Diaz J.J. COOK Business manager MATT SHAW Retail sales manager JAY STEINER Sales and marketing adviser PAT BOYLE Accountant Business Staff Campus mgr ...Courtney Becks Regional mgr ...Jody Groton National mgr ...J.J. Cook Special Sections mgr ..Stephanie Utley Production mgr ..Anne Looper Marketing director ..Matt Shaw Creative director ..Anna Leuenzo Classified mgr ..Heather Valier Rob Tablev / KANSAN distorting the truth OK. You caught me. Honestly, I've really done 12 abortions. I've REALLY done 39 abortions. Please let me be surgeon general. I've only done six abortions. So what if I lied? I've REALLY done 39 abortions. A word to the wise: use of language may mask warped, ulterior messages Words fly around. Politicians and public-television advocates use them. Preachers and scientists, students and professors, each of us uses words all the time. Some people seem to worship the almighty word. How does the Bible phrase go? "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God." And as an English major, I study the meaning, purpose and use of words. It depresses me how many people take simple sounds and symbols and turn them into weapons of war or replacements for intelligent thought. I am one of those rare individuals who believes that language and knowledge are not synonymous. Many times, our words for something disguise the true meaning we wish to convey. As infants, we learn to say the words "Mommy" and "Daddy," as if these words can sum up everything STAFF COLUMNIST ISAAC BELL these people truly represent as if these words can accurately represent the people who gave us our life. Later in life, we learn to hide behind words. If we dislike or are frightened by someone, we call that person a liberal or a conservative. We call disastrous events dilemmas, while great moments are iows. The words we use are sometimes slippery things with no substance or power other than that which we give to them. Take any book and you can find phrases that could support or damn any idea you might have. Chances are the word you picked had a minimum of two listed meanings. Speaking of books, look at any comprehensive dictionary and pick a word, any word. And if you could find two listed meanings, you could interpret a dozen other meanings yourself. Twist the language a little and you can make a noun into a verb, a verb into an adjective and make an adjective extinct. Take a thought and give it voice, and suddenly, that thought is distorted. The language, the words, often cannot carry the understanding we need. Yet, sometimes we still wish to acknowledge only the literal sounds and spellings of words. The attention to the poetry of syllables, the need for catch-phrases and sensitive terms — all fail to pit thought against thought and bring forth truth. Do not accept without question the words with which you are assaulted. In a world where "I like you" can mean anything from a gentle admonition to the beginning of a romance, nothing can be taken at face value. When someone like Rush Limbaugh starts spewing words that demean and diminish, look at the words warty. The same holds true when President Clinton gives a five-minute address concerning the nation's budget. The words may be there just to convey information. But it is far more likely that they're being used to distract while the truth slips out the back. Most people prove their power with words at least once in life, from innocently telling white lies to spindoctoring like a pro. So remember those moments, and then do not assume that your words cannot affect you or your life — especially the words you have just read. Isaac Bell is a Lawrence senior in English. Random acts of kindness lead plea for peace Practice random acts of kindness. See what you can do for someone else today. By helping someone else, you help yourself. You may not get something in return, but in the end you will feel like a better person. Most of us have heard or seen these slogans at some point whether it was on "Oprah" or on a bumper sticker. They are slogans which have the potential to change lives for the better. But our society has been so wrapped up in individual gain that it has started moving backward socially. Instead of evolving toward a utopian society, U.S. citizens have regressed into a pit containing selfish people possessing few morals. Many families no longer can sit down at the dinner table to have a meal and talk about each member's lives. Each person simply eats when Much of the problem is rooted in economic pressures and time limitations. JULIE HAEST STAFF COLUMNIST it is convenient for him or her. nvenient for him or her. Families also have been unable to instill morals and values in their youth, because the parents are too concerned about their own problems. Some parents care more about financial stability and their jobs than raising children. Discipline in the home is infrequent because parents are too tired to remain firm in their decisions and eventually give in to the wishes of the child. Many times, by necessity, children must be dropped off at day-care centers where they may get little attention. Even in these scenarios, children have been influenced by family values. But in the absence of home instruction, some children turn to outside means of identity and instruction on values. And, unfortunately, some turn to gangs that commit crimes to become members. Crime, even murder, has become a household word to these youth. But this cycle of ineffectiveness can be broken. Every one of us has a common bond. We all are human. We all need love and support to be happy. Give of yourself to others, and you will be rewarded. Open the door for a stranger. Smile at someone you pass on campus or on the street. Donate a book to your favorite organization. Thank an instructor for all his or her help. Treat a friend to lunch. Or just send someone a card to let them know that you care. With this new attitude, our society can only improve. If each of us practices one random act of kindness every day, the difference in society would be immeasurable. Like the old saying, "what goes around, comes around," we should start a new world-wide campaign to practice random acts of kindness. At some time in our lives, we could be the recipient of a random act of kindness. In fact if we all spent one-third of our day helping someone — time that we normally would spend either watching television or gossiping on the telephone — we could brighten someone's day. Smiles are contagious; start a new trend. Practice random acts of kindness and make the world a better place. And if we as U.S. citizens could just make an effort to change our attitudes and to help others, the effects could translate into global benefits. $\textcircled{1}$ $\textcircled{2}$ $\textcircled{3}$ $\textcircled{4}$ $\textcircled{5}$ $\textcircled{6}$ Julie Haest is a Richardson, Texas, freshman. $\textcircled{1}$ $\textcircled{2}$ $\textcircled{3}$ $\textcircled{4}$ $\textcircled{5}$ $\textcircled{6}$ $\textcircled{7}$ $\textcircled{8}$ $\textcircled{9}$ $\textcircled{10}$ $\textcircled{11}$ $\textcircled{12}$ $\textcircled{8}$ $\textcircled{9}$ $\textcircled{10}$ $\textcircled{11}$ $\textcircled{12}$ 12 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 letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newroom, 111 StaufferFlint Hall. The Kansan reserves the absolute right edit, cut to length or outright reject all submissions. For any questions, call Jamie Munn, editorial page editor, at 864-4810. CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 5A CAPS helps turn hell to heaven Get Psyched... With a new and more efficient system, people who call in to see one of the seven full-time professionals at CAPS can expect an appointment within seven to 10 days. "In the past, we've had as many as 120 people waiting, which meant a two- or three-month wait," said Frank DeSalvo, director of CAPS. "This past semester, the largest number of people we had people waiting was 20." Telephone Number: 864- CAPS Location: Second floor of Watkins Memorial Health Center Fee: No charge the first three sessions for full-time students. Every subsequent session is $7. Other on-campus counseling centers: KU Psychological Clinic Location: 315 Fraser Hall Telephone Number: 864-4121 Fee: $6 per session for full-time students. Transfer student is one of many to find comfort By Meng Yew Tee Kansan staff writer The day that Dena Piscisite arrived in Lawrence was the day living hell began. At least it was hell for her. Piscitie, Grand Junction, Colo., senior, transferred to the University of Kansas in January hoping to turn over a new leaf from a relationship that had gone awry and also to expand her academic horizon. But everything was going wrong. Unfortunately, major setbacks began to take place, too. The day she moved into the residence halls, her luggage, purse and credit cards were stolen. At the same time, severe homesickness began creeping in. She had just learned that her tuition fees were going to cost almost $3,000 more than expected. Her housing contract was not confirmed as expected. Being new in town, she had no place to live and no friends to turn to. Piscioite, slipping into depression, knew that she was breaking down and needed to find help soon. Calls to her mother and to her friends were not helping anymore. After a quick search, she picked up the phone and dialed 862-2277. It was the number for Counseling and Psychological Services, more commonly known as CAPS. "It felt like everything was coming on you on all at once." Pisciote said, with a slight quivering smile. "I was ready to jump of the cliff." It was January 14 when she sat down in front of a therapist at Watkins Memorial Health Center and let her feelings and tears flow. Ironically, it was that day that enables her to smile today. "I didn't like doing it at first, but things got really bad," Piscitie said. "I swallowed my pride and went to see somebody at CAPS. Now, I am a much happier and healthier person." Last year, CAPS provided clinical and counseling services to more than 1,000 students — many who were going through difficult times like Piscito, CAPS, an individual and group therapy sessions later, knows that direction. "CAPS does not, solve problems for you. They taught me how to deal with different problems," she said. "They taught me how to fish, instead of just giving me the fish." However, the process never was easy. Three to four months ago, Piscottie still was struggling. Her eaturing and sleeping habits went topsy-turpys. She lost 18 pounds in less "It felt like everything was coming down on you all at once." Dena Pisciotte Grand.Junction, Colo.,senior agency within the division of student affairs and accredited by the International Association of Counseling Services, is designed to meet the growth and developmental needs of KU students. than two months, and often she found herself staring at the ceiling at three in the morning. She also had picked up smoking again. Pisciotte, six months and several Things were going really slow then, she said, but at least she thought it was getting somewhere. She was right. Piscisio has Pisciotte has gained back about half of the weigh she lost. Smoking and sleeplessness does not dominate her life anymore. Now, every so often, a warm and infectious smile breaks through her pale but healthy looking face. She said that now she was more prepared to take on challenges, but she understood that there were always going to be some bad days. "It has not been easy, but what they did for me at CAPS has really helped me to get my life together," she said. KU helps Kyrgyzstan hit the press University faculty teaches in former Soviet republic By Tara Trenary Kansan staff writer Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the newly freed and independent republics have been trying to put the pieces back together. The University of Kansas and the School of Journalism are trying to help through an effort financed by the United States Information Agency and the Eurasia Foundation, a non-profit organization to help development in Europe and Asia. A group from KU went to Kyrgyzstan, a country bordering the former Soviet Union and Asia, to teach students and journalists about American journalism. It consisted of Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism; Tom Volek, assistant professor of journalism; Chuck Marsh, assistant professor of journalism; Robert Basow, associate professor of journalism; Terry Weidner, associate director of International Studies; and KU graduate students Svetlana Novikova and Rodica Cinciei. "The whole project went far more successfully than we ever hoped," Volek said. After two days on a plane and one day visiting KU alumni in Istanbul, Turkey, the group arrived in Bishkek, the capital of Kyrgyzstan. The participants spent their first weekend in Kyrgyzstan hiking in the tains south of Bishkek. "That was a real adventure because it is a really rugged country," Marsh said. Back in Bishikek, the group stayed in apartments provided by Kyrgyzstan residents. The first Monday they were there, the hot taught mass media issues, entrepreneur management, regulation and law, and writing for broadcasting, public relations and advertising. They spoke about the potential of starting newspapers instead of working for big newspapers. Marsh said that Kyrgyzstan had good journalism and working news- "The whole project went far more successfully than we ever hoped." After washing up, the professors began teaching workshops at Kyrgyzstan Technical University. They "It was like camping in the city," Marsh said. water in Bishkek was cut off. The participants spent their mornings boiling hot water on the stoves and rotated taking baths, Volek said. Tom Volek assistant professor of journalism papers, but it did not have an economic system to support journalism. "We tried to keep the sessions as interactive as possible and to encourage lots of questions," Voleksaid. The workshops averaged about 50 people per session including a mix of Kuwaiters. professors, media professionals and students. The professors' English lectures were interpreted into Russian by a hired interpreter from Kyrgyzstan. The two graduate students from KU interpreted for the group when they were traveling around the country. "It was a great teaching experience," Marsh said. Kautsch spent his days meeting with government officials and evaluating their willingness to receive help. In the evenings, the participants either stayed home, cooking their own meals with food from the bazaar in Bishkek, or visited local homes. One evening they visited the home of the director of Kyrgyzstan Technical University. Another evening they visited the home of Svetlana Novikova, a KU graduate student who served as an interpreter on the trip. "The country's motto is 'eat, eat, eat; drink, drink, drink.'" Volek said. Kautsch said the U.S. investment in that part of the world was not only important but necessary. He said the former Soviet system purged Kyrgyzstan of its ability to develop, and he felt good because it seemed the group could make a difference. They hope to return next May to begin implementing an advertising and public relations curriculum and also to install a small media center. This trip would depend on another grant that has not yet been confirmed. After the first week of workshops, Volek, Marsh and Basow remained to visit, consult, and develop internship programs. Want to sell something fast? Use the Kansan Classifieds! 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So, if your Mac is demanding some assistance, allow the Union Technology Center to be of service... gratuity is not necessary. Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU. union technology center KU Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment Barge Union * Level 3 * 913/864-5690 6A Wednesday, June 28, 1995 CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Campus police find less summertime crime Reporter sees few violations in ride-along By Angie Dasbach Kansan staff writer It's Friday at 9 p.m. and all is quiet on the dark, KU campus until the KU police department is notified of three perpetrators invading a house on West Campus Road. I am riding shotgun with Officer Handel Welsh, who puts the car in gear and heads for the house. We pull up in the driveway and spot the perpetrators immediately. Eventually, we corner the criminals, and I anticipate the reading of Miranda Rights. But my excitement soon turns to amusement because the three perpetrators found terrorizing the neighborhood are ducks. "This is pretty exciting stuff." Welsh said, jokingly. "The campus is usually pretty calm during the summer." Despite the fact that campus settles down in the summer, I was hoping for a car chase or a big arrest during the short stint as a KU police ride-along. Unfortunately, Welsh told me that summer violations weren't as exhilarating as a high-speed car chase. The usual problems that the KU police encounter, Welsh said, were from KU summer camps. He said that the young visitors sometimes dialed 911 or played with the emergency phones as a prank. "The activity on campus may be slower during the summer, but the camps with the junior high kids keeps us busy." Welsh said. The most disturbing incidents involve drunk drivers, he said. After we chased the ducks down to Potter Lake, we drove around campus until an unsuspecting civilian was caught speeding: 41 mph in a 30 mph zone. We were heading west on 15th Street, but Welsh whipped the car around to the east, and we were approaching the speeding car at 50 mph. As the offender pulled the car to the curb and stopped, visions of a rear-end collision danced through my head. We didn't slowed down. Just as I checked to see if my seat belt was intact, we stopped five feet from the car. Thank God for anti- After my short-drive with Welsh, there was a shift change and I was placed with Officer Robert Linzer. lock brakes. We parked at the west end of 19th Street, and began the shift. I watched Linzer shoot radar and then decided it was time for me to do some traffic regulating. He handed me the radar gun. It felt handles the good to be the one aiming the gun and not the one getting a speeding ticket speeding ticket. Linzer said that he didn't pull a car over for speeding unless the driver was going 10 mph over the limit. That made my job difficult because every car that passed by the radar was only five to eight mph over the limit. lights; had given two sobriety tests; and had caught two people driving with suspended licenses. "It's been a normal Friday night as far as the summer goes," Linzer said. "I like to get OUT, but this may not be the night for that." Since my luck wasn't that great with the KU police, I decided to spend Saturday night with the Lawrence Police Department. "I like to get OUI's, but this may not be the night for it." Officer Robert Linzer KUpolice I didn't catch anyone trying out for the Daytona 500 on 19th Street, but by 2:30 a.m., Linzer had pulled three people over for speeding; had stopped two cars for broken tail The night began by helping Officer Glen Hazelwood direct traffic on North Third Street. The street was flooded from the underpass to Tanger Outlet Mall, and it was our job to prevent people from barreling through the lake that covered the road. Our civic duty was completed at 10:45 p.m., and Hazelwood drove to his favorite doughnut hole, Village Inn, 821 Iowa St. As we shared a club sandwich, Hazelwood said that the Lawrence police remained busy during the summer even though there were less students. "We look forward to the quiet that comes after graduation," he said. "But for past few years it has been just as busy during the summer as it is during the fall or spring." There is an obvious increase in outdoor activity, Hazelwood said, usually involving noise complaints, bar brawls and car burglars. When we finished our lunch break, police dispatch alerted us to a possible intruder in the basement of a northwest Lawrence home. We headed west on Sixth Street driving 65 mph. We arrived first on the dark street. Hazelwood shut off the headlights and instructed me to stay in the car. Two other police officers soon followed. As I sat alone in the car, I waited for a dark figure to come flying out at me from the back of the house and take me hostage. But the only person who came out of the house was Hazelwood, and he said that the house was safe. I was disappointed, but secure. Around midnight, we went to the police station to pick up Hazelwood's partner, Officer Jim Phillips. Phillips and Officer Jim Phillips. Phillips said that after midnight we would get busy. He wasn't living. First, we helped track down a person who put a fist through the front window of Rick's Bike Shop, 916 Massachusetts St. After that, we investigated a bar brawl at the Jet Lag Lounge, 610 Florida St. Then we drove through northwest Lawrence looking for a full-size car whose driver was allegedly shooting a rifle randomly. We never found the gun-slinging driver, but we continued to tour looking for troublemakers. Phillips said that the Lawrence police tried to prevent crime from happening but the department lacked personnel. He said that proactive policing helped resolve problems before they occurred. "We are more reactive these days because there's not enough of us," Phillips said. "We go from call to call, and we don't have as much time to patrol the streets." I couldn't imagine what it would be like to stay awake all night fighting crime, but when my shift ended at 5 a.m., I knew that I would stick with reporting. I was exhausted from clutching the police car dashboard. --- Scissors Snip This - GYROS • MOONBURGERS BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE EXPIRES 8/1/95 803 Massachusetts 832-0444 Full Moon Cafe HIGH TIMES HILO MUSIC Pro Sound Audio and Security. ProSound $10 off any install or alarm No Hassles! Custom Boxes • Alarms • Neon Polk • Clarion • Kicker • Lanzar Phoenix Gold • JVC 2329 Iowa Suite "M" Lawrence Not Valid With Any Other Offer • Exp 1/96 H PIZZA DRIVE 2 Pizza Slices only 16 oz Coke 2.95 PIZZA One coupon per person PIZZA By The SLICE DRIVE THRU 2 Pizza Slices only 16 oz Coke 2.95 Bell's PIZZA Shoppe 1618 w. 23 St. Next to Taco John's 842-0600 1401 W. 23rd St. 832-COPY By SLICE The THRU 10% Discount not valid with other offers exp. July 31st COPY CO Experience the Difference Bob's PIZZA Shoppe 1618.w.23 St. Next to Taco John's 842-0600 C White space Say it. 119 Stauffer-Flint 864-4358 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN White space Say it. 25% off Kief's everyday low price on any* pre-recorded cassette * no special orders KIEF'S CDS/TAPES 25% off Kief's everyday low price on any* pre-recorded cassette * no special orders Not Valid With Other Offers KIEF'S CDS/TAPES Act Now! Offer ends 17/09 Includes orange lag items 24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, KS. 80044 CDS & TAPES AUTHORIZED CXSTUDIO 913-842-1544 913-842-1811 913-842-1498 Act Now! Offer ends 7/29/95 Excludes orange tag items I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! 50¢ Bring this coupon in for 50¢ off a Medium or Large Yogurt Cup 50¢ Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-0440 50¢ The Palace "Kuala Lumpur Jamaica" Low Calorie from refreshing flowers! 100 125 150 175 200 225 250 300 350 400 450 500 550 600 650 700 750 800 850 900 950 1000 Buy One Get One same size or smaller FREE Open noon-10:30 daily RUNZA RESTAURANT 1/4 lb. Hamburger only 99¢ 99¢ Ranch, double, deluxe, cheese & mushrooms extra. *Not valid with any other offer. Limit one coupon per person or car per visit. 2700 Iowa • Lawrence, KS • good thru August 31, 1995 $1 off Coupon 24 Pack or two 12 packs of Coke or Pepsi 9TH AND IOWA Expiration Date: 7/11/95 Alvis's IGA DOS HOMBRES BARADEANO Buy one menu item, get one 1/2 price! call for our daily drink specials. Sun.-Thurs. only expires 7/31/95 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 COUPON COUPON Miracle Video 1910 Haskell 841-7504 910 N.2nd St. 841-8903 COUPON --- 2 MOVIES FOR THE PRICE OF 1 NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. Over 900 titles in stock LARSON BROOK VCR + 2 TAPES FOR $4.99 (with gift card) LASER ENGCO LIMIT ONE PER PERSON. EXPIRES 7/31/95 Valentino's Restaurante 544 W. 23rd St. 749-4244 buffet hours: 11am -2pm Lunch 5-9pm Dinner Valentino's Pizzeria FREE Large Drink with purchase of All You Can Eat Adult Buffet Pizza, Lasagne, Spaghetti, Bread Sticks, and Salad Bar not good with other offers expires July 12 Recycle Reuse Reduce THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --- Bucks Cream Pasta Dinner only $249 pasta, homemade marinara sauce, garlic toast With coupon only. Not valid with other offers. 1 offer/coupon/customer. Coupon expires 7/12/95 12th & Oread (above Yello Sub) VIDEO BIZ 9th & Iowa • 749-3507 2 Video Tapes and VCR One Night Rental $5.99 2 Movies for the Price of 1 Limit 2 movies per coupon per day Not good with any other promotional offer. Exp. 7/31/95 Limit one coupon per family per day. Pasta Dinner only $249 pasta, homemade marinara sauce, garlic toast With coupon only. Not valid w/other offers 1 offer/coupon/customer. Coupon expires 7/12/205 VIDEO BIZ 9th & Iowa • 749-3507 Yello Sub 1814 W. 23rd 12th and Indiana Yello Sub for Lunch? Monday-Friday Lunch Special! Any 6" sub only ¥2.49 with purchase of drink (Up to 96% value) With this coupon, I am to 2 pm only. Not valid with other offers. 1814 W. 23rd 19th and Indiana 1814couponperson.Com Coupon code 7/12/95 BIKE AMERICA 23rd & Louisiana (Behind Schlotzsky's) • 842-7822 Bike Tune-up $19.95 REG. $29.95 expires 8/2/95 $50 OFF any bike purchase over $300 Not valid with sale bikes or other offers expires 8/2/95 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 28, 1995 Jay Thornton / KANSAN Splashing toward ecstasy Robert Shutt, Topeka junior, and Amy KooB, Watertown, S.D. junior, have a water fight in the Chi Omega fountain. They were taking a break from their bike riding when they decided to cool off. Watkins says get shots before running for border By Billie David By Billie David Special to the Kansan Students who plan to travel abroad but don't get the required shots may end up stranded at the border. Candye Waitley, a registered nurse in the education department at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that although some countries, such as Britain and France, did not require immunizations of visitors from the United States, other countries did. Finding out what shots are required from a travel agent or the organization that is sponsoring the trip is important. Watkins can also supply vaccination information. "We receive weekly updated requirements," Waitley said. Other shots that may be required include typhoid, cholera and yellow fever. Immunization records are stamped in an immunization booklet. Some students have been disappointed when they went to Watkins for shots the day before they were scheduled to leave. Waitley said. The students did not realize some immunizations, such as cholera, require multiple shots spread over several weeks. Travelers also are often required to be immunized two weeks prior to departure so that the immunizations have time to take effect. "Students should check ahead, long before they leave," Waitley said, adding that some students have been stranded inside the United States during winter break because of poor planning. Students entering the United States from other countries, on the other hand, are not required to be immunized, said Daphne Johnston, associate director of International Student Services. However, they need to show proof of immunization against measles, mumps and rubella when they arrive at KU. ered if students plan to be sexually active abroad. The cost is approximately $140 for a series of three shots. In addition to the required immunizations, hepatitis B shots should be consid- Hepatitis B is a viral infection involving inflammation of the liver. It is transmitted through exposure to an infected person's blood, semen, vaginal secretions or saliva. Ten percent of those infected run a high risk of developing cirrhosis of the liver and liver cancer. Like HIV, the hepatitis B virus can be sexually transmitted and has no cure. However, hepatitis B is 100 times more infectious than HIV. There is a vaccine for Hepatitis B, though. Almost 300,000 Americans are infected with hepatitis B each year. It is more prevalent in Southeast Asia, South Pacific islands, sub-Sahara Africa, Alaska, the Amazon, Bahia, Haiti and the Dominican Republic. "It is important for students to know their immunization status," Waitley said. "These diseases are preventable." KU employee finds stitch niche on 'Kansas City' set By Amy Southerland Special to the Kansan Gerli Lamer confesses that when she goes to see the new Robert Altman film "Kansas City," she'll have a hard time paying attention to the story. "If there's a pucker, it will be as big as my head," Lamer says. And she's not talking about on-screen kisses. Lamer was the draper for "Kansas City" which means she sewed all the house's curtains used in the film, now being shot on location in Kansas City, Mo. But usually other crew members hung the curtains, so Lamer is eager to see whether her curtains appear on the big screen bulge-free. Lamer, office manager in the KU communication studies department, landed the job as draper because of a friend. Her friend, who is a computer consultant, answered a call and found himself behind the scenes at one of the film's Kansas City locations. Lamer's friend knew she had sewn the curtains and pillows for "Skylark," a made-fortelevision movie filmed in Emporia. While taking care of the computer problem, her friend mentioned Lamer to Altman's son, who is part of the production crew. Susan Emshwiller, the film's set decorator, contacted Lamer and hired her. "Getting his movie makes me believe in fate," Lamer said. Before filming began, Emshwiller gave Lamer the dimensions of the windows in all four houses being used in the film so that she could determine how much curtain fabric would be needed. The first house required 13 sets of curtains. Lamer lost count after that as she sewed dozens of curtains for the remaining four houses. One house doubles in the film and required two curtain sets. She estimated materials for the curtains cost about $20,000. Lamer's sewing schedule was demanding and unpredictable. She had to sew the curtains for a quick turnaround — sometimes in one night. On those nights, she transformed her apartment into a one-woman curtain factory, setting up a sewing machine and ironing board in opposite corners so she could work as efficiently as possible. She did all this while continuing to work her full-time job. The most elaborate task she faced was making bedroom drapes for the character played by Miranda Richardson. The house is owned by a wealthy family, and a great deal of action takes place in this bedroom. It called for some serious curtains, Lamer said. How serious? The bedroom had two side-by-side windows that required 52 yards of lush green fabric and 30 yards of trim. For these particularly difficult drapes, Lamer set up her sewing machine on the set for three days. She shuddered as she described stapling the fabric to makeshift boxes attached to the wall above the window. "This is so wrong!" she told Emshwiller. She was reassured that the curtains just had to look right. According to Emshwiller, Lamer did a great job with the green drapes. "Everybody that walked in was totally impressed," Emshwiler said. "I totally had faith in her. I'd draw little pictures and she'd know what I was talking about." The sketches for the green drapes, one on a piece of notebook paper and the other on a Post-It note, are so rough one has to look twice to realize what they are. No directions, no dimensions — just rough pencil drawings that provide a general sense of the style Emshwiller was looking for. Lamer always has worked for the state or federal government but has decided she needed some business experience before realizing her dream of becoming an entrepreneur. In July, she is moving to New England to take a management position with Osco Drug. Lamer said she planned on letting the local film commissions near her new home know about her "Kansas City" experience. In addition to earning the satisfaction of a job well done, Lamer was paid well for her work. While she wouldn't disclose exact amounts, she said the payment as a draper would fund her move to New England. "Kansas City" should hit the big screen sometime next year. But she will have more than the completed film to remind her of her work as draper. "The first couple of times I see it, I'll just be looking at the curtains," Lamer said. Carefully packed away in one of her moving boxes are all the fabric remnants from the film. Lamer is an experienced quilter, and she is going to make a Victorian crazy quilt that incorporates a piece of each fabric. "That will make that quilt really special," Lamer says. Wanna'win 50 Bucks? then come to DUDS'n SUDS Good clean kin! Drawing held EVERY WEEK for $50.00 CASH! BUD LIGHT Hours Sun-Fri 7am-last load10pm Sat: 7am-last load8pm 918 Mississippi What other Laundry in the Universe can offer you: BEER! (50 cent draws on Mondays!) Pool Tables! Huge Big Screen TV! Snack Bar(with yogurt,food and BEER!) Video Games! Super-Attractive members of the opposite sex (that really know how to appreciate a good tasting beer)! Come in before noon Mon-Thurs and get FREE DRYING!!! Use a $5 dollar bill and save 10 cents per load! And our soft water saves you another 14 to 25 cents per load on detergent! Use our Duds 'n Suds punch card and save as much as 24 cents per load! We absolutely guarantee that you wash will dry with 75 cents per load! Your total savings is 59 cents per load, meaning each load is only 41 cents!!!! --- 8A Wednesday, June 28, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SERTA SAVINGS BLAST ST Once-A-Year, Back-To-School Specials . . . while they last! Serta We make the World's best mattress 0% Interest--No Payments for 90 days with qualified purchase The Covers Don't Match but who cares when you can SAVE $140 to $200 per set* FULL ea. pc. $119 when sold in sets Compare at $189 Open Mon-Fri 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m.-5:30 SUNDAYS Noon-5 p.m. QUEEN 2pc.set $249 sold in sets only Compare at $499 KING 3 pc. set $399 sold in sets only Compare at $599 *Off the price that these premium quality Serta mattresses would sell for if the covers matched. Quantities limited to stock on hand. Furnishing Kansas homes since 1936 Furnishing Kansas 2050 McClure, Topeka 1 block west of 29th & Fairtown 273.6207 ED MARLING'S 74 2108 SW 27th, Lawrence Park Plaza Retail Center 843 4400 Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunglasses™ The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downtown Parking in the rear Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's finest sunglasses™ Fine Line Tattoo Inc. *Fraternity & Sorority Letters *Body Piercing *Bring your own design or choose from our extensive selection *Reasonably priced *Hospital sterilization Mon-Sat 29th & Mass. St 12-8pm Topea Tues. till 6pm 233-8288 SUNFLOWER 843-5000 804 Massachusetts Go Ahead... Drink The Water SUNFLOWER 843-5000 804 Massachusetts Go Ahead... Drink The Water PUR Explorer Water Purifier: Non-clogging Self-cleaning Effective against: giardia, other protozoa bacteria, and viruses $13925 Yeltsin may bypass Parliament struggle The Associated Press MOSCOW — President Boris Yeltsin summoned Russian lawmakers to the Kremlin on Monday, hoping to avert a showdown this week in his power struggle with Parliament. "The president is not interested in confrontation," Yeltsin's spokesman, Sergei Medvedev, told Russian television. "The president stands for dialogue." Last week, Parliament touched off Russia's worst political crisis in nearly two years by giving Yeltsin's government a no-confidence vote for its handling of a recent hostage crisis in southern Russia. The government struck back by daring lawmakers to declare no confidence again, which would allow Yeltsin to dissolve Parliament and call new elections. The vote is scheduled for Saturday. On Friday, lawmakers balked and killed a Communist Party proposal to begin impeachment proceedings against the president. Instead, they passed a series of near-unanimous votes urging Yeltsin to fire his so-called power ministers — the men in charge of the army and security forces. Yeltsin suggested he might consider personnel changes at tomorrow's presidential Security Council meeting. 18th-century engraving 1693 Gaidar was among the first of several lawmakers to be invited to the Kremlin for consultations, Yeltsin's press service said. "The president will take a number of steps and propose specific measures to liquidate the crisis between the Parliament and the government," his press service said. It said Yeltsin planned to use all existing political mechanisms. Yesterday, for example, Yeltsin met with Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin and Ivan Rybkin, the speaker of Parliament's lower house, the State Duma. In a speech Thursday, Yeltsin acknowledged mistakes in both the handling of the hostage crisis and the war in Chechnya that set the stage for it. Chechen gunmen demanding an end to the conflict took approximately 2,000 people hostage in the southern city of Budyonnovsk for nearly a week. More than 120 people died in their surprise attack and subsequent assaults by Russian forces. ALL 12QT. TUB ICE CREAM 1 PER QT. OVER CHECKER'S INVOICE COST EVERYDAY! Gaidar once was among Yeltsin's strongest supporters but broke with the president because of his decision to send troops to Chechnya in December. The president met Monday with his former prime minister, Yegor Gaidar, who now heads the largest reformist bloc in Parliament. DAILY SPECIAL Bananas, June 29, 2016 & FROZEN, June 30, 2016 BANANAS 19¢ LB. DAILY SPECIAL Begin Tuesday, June 29, 7pm & End Friday, June 30, 7am BANANAS 19¢ LBS. BUY 6 12 PACKS GET $500 OFF ANY 7-UP PRODUCT WITH THIS COUPON 7-UP, RC, DIET RITE, HIRES, SQUIRT OR SUNKIST ONLY ONE CORPORATION PURCHASE. CONSUMER PAYS SALES TAX. AND USE AS DESIGNER, FURNITURE, PRODUCTION, AND OTHER USE CONSTITUTES FRANK. CASH VALUE $1,000 CENTS. ZIPP FF BONE-IN BEEF RIB ROAST (LARGE END) OR STEAK ECONOMY PAK 288 LB. OREO OREO NAISCO OREO COOKIES 20 OZ. 258 EA. NAISCO HONEY MAD GRAHAMS, 118. 208 BONELESS BEEF CHUCK STEAK ECONOMY PAK 98¢ LB BUSCH New York, New Jersey Northport, NJ WHITE SEEDLESS GRAPES 58¢ LB REG. OR LIGHT BUSCH BEER 978 54 PACK 1ROZ CANS 9 Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 JOHNSONVILLE $ 188 BRATWURST AL VINTAGE LB. 80% LEAN FRESH GROUND CHUCK ECONOMY PAK 89¢ LB. JOHNSONVILLE BEAT HEADLESS SHELL-ON SHRIMP 51-60 CT. PER LB. BOLD IN A 4 LB. BOX- FROZEN 398 LB. FAIRMONT-ZARDA ORANGE JUICE 1 GAL JUIC 188 EA. Lay's FRITO LAV. LAV'S OR RUFFLES 14 OZ BAG 188 EA. TOSTITOS HEAT IN ROT MIX 1 38 BUTTER CREAM BLUE BELL ICE CREAM 1/2 GAL CTLN ALL FLAVORS 2 38 EA. BONELESS BEEF SIRLOIN TIP ROAST OR STEAK 268 EA. RED RIPE FRESH ARKANSAS TOMATOES 78¢ LB. WASHINGTON BING CHERRIES 128 LB. FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED APPLE PIE 24 OZ FOR $3 FRESH CRISP SALAD MIX 1 LB. PRO. 88¢ EA FRESH COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS ECONOMY PAK CUT FROM THE PORK BUTT 118 LB. SUPER SWEET CARZABIA YELLOW ONIONS 24¢ LB. BUDGET GOURMET SPECIAL SELECTIONS FROZEN 10 OZ. ASST. VARIETES 86¢ EA. FROM THE DELI Sliced OR SHAVED TURKEY BREAST 188 LB. ECONOMY TOOL IMPORTED FROM FRANCE BRIE DEMIAN CHEESE $ 75.80 FRYER LEG QUARTERS 10 LB. BAG 38¢ LB. FISH MOOSE BROTHERS PEPPERONI PIZZA LARGE 12" SIZE 398 FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED CROISSANTS 6 CT. PKG 98¢ OPEN 24 HOURS JULY 4 Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE VIDEO SPECIAL 3 MOVIES/GAMES 3 DAYS $3.00 NEW RELEASES NOT INCLUDED PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE-JULY '95 BROWN TUE TH FR SAT SUN TUE TH FR SAT 28 29 30 1 2 3 4 SUMMER ON THE HILL 195 DUSTIN HOFFMAN RENE RUSSO MORGAN FREEMAN OUTBREAK FREE SCREENING 8:00 P.M. THURSDAY, JUNE 29 WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM, KANSAS UNION FOR MORE INFO CALL 864-3477 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS JUMMER ON THE HILL 85 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS* --- NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 28, 1995 9A Philippine rebels make early exit; peace talks stall The Associated Press BRUSSELS, Belgium — It took eight years to get the Philippine government and communist rebels back to the negotiating table but only minutes for the peace talks to break down on Monday. The rebel National Democratic Front refused to proceed beyond the opening ceremony as long as a jailed communist leader was unable to join their negotiating team in Brussels. "We shall be able to go into further sessions as soon as he arrives," Luis Jalandoni, chairman of the rebel delegation, said of the jailed leader, Sotero Llamas. He said releasing Sotero Llamas would be a test case of the government's good faith in the talks. Philippine President Fidel Ramos said that releasing Liamas, a commander of the Communist Party's armed wing who was arrested May 17, was beyond his authority. "It's not for the executive branch to dictate to the courts in our democratic system," Ramos said. The standoff overshadowed the resumption of talks to end a 26-year Marxist insurgency in the Philippines. The communists have been fighting to establish their own state and have organized their own government. On Monday, the government offered a unilateral suspension of offensive military operations for the duration of the formal talks' opening round, said chief government negotiator Howard Q. Dee. He called on the rebels to agree to a cease fire. Jalunduni said the would study the proessus. Llamas was arrested after a clash in the southern Bicol region, and the rebels claim the arrest broke a safety and immunity guarantee signed by both sides. Jalandoni said Silvestre Bello III, a government negotiator, was exerting great effort to obtain Llamas' release but could run into opposition from the military. Negotiators were hoping the issue could be resolved soon, allowing the talks to resume later this week. Ramos is keen on attracting more foreign investment to the Philippines by stabilizing the country's turbulent political climate. The first talks to settle the insurgency, held in 1986 and 1987, ended with a rebel walkout after police shot 13 protesters in Manila. The victims had been demanding land reform. After Monday's opening ceremony, the two sides were to split into four committees on specific topics. One was to tackle human rights issues, including political prisoners and the practice of charging them with common crimes to keep them behind bars. A committee on socio-economic matters was to discuss land reform, foreign debt and industrialization. A third group was to deal with political issues, including the possibility of a constitutional change to give the rebels more say in running the country. And a fourth group was to discuss an end to fighting and the disposition of armed forces. U.N. blamed for Bosnian woes The Associated Press Srebrenica receives heaviest pounding this year by Serbs SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnia's prime minister marked the United Nations' 50th anniversary Monday by branding it an accomplice in genocide for failing to protect his people during 38 months of war. The criticism came after rebel Serb gunners killed a civilian Monday in Sarajevo and pounded the U.N.-patrolled enclave of Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia with their heaviest attack this year. "The international community, whether it likes it or not, and the United Nations organization is an accomplice in the genocide against Bosnia and its people," Prime Minister Haris Slaidzic said. Silajdzic said the United Nations had not been able to protect civilians in six "safe areas" it had established around Bosnia in May 1993. Nor has it continued to enforce a weapons exclusion zone that largely kept Serb guns from pounding Sarajevo from February 1994 until this spring, he said. The U.N. force, he implied, had done little for Bosnia since war began in April 1992. An estimated 200,000 people are dead or missing. At least one person was killed and nine were wounded in renewed Serb shelling of Sarajevo on Monday. Eleven civilians, including four children, were killed and 17 were wounded by shelling and snipers on Sunday. The heaviest shelling this year was recorded Monday morning in Srebrenica. The Serbs also shelled Gorazde, another eastern enclave, U.N. officials said. There were no confirmed casualty reports from the shelling. Serb shelling of Sarajevo and five other U.N.-protected areas in Bosnia has increased since NATO air strikes began last month and the June 15 launch of a governmental offensive to break the Serb siege of the city. Treatment of U.N. peacekeepers by both sides has worsened. On Monday, U.N. officials reported that French peacekeepers patrolling the only open road into Sarajevo were harassed by government troops who robbed one unit. Bosnian Serbs have shot at other U.N. units using the road. U. N. representative Lt. Col. Gerdard Dubois said a unit of French peacekeepers on the road near Mount Igman, southwest of Sarajevo, was ambushed and robbed of assault rifles, flak jackets, helmets, radios and ammunition belts by Bosnian soldiers late Sunday. Diplomats and politicians are trying to determine whether the 23,000-man peacekeeping force should continue its mission — even as they bolster it with additional troods. A new rapid-reaction force of as many as 12,000 soldiers is arriving in Bosnia. Germany decided Monday to reinforce it with planes and 1,500 troops. When Serb violations of the weapons-exclusion zone led to retaliatory NATO air strikes last month, the Serbs seized hundreds of peacekeepers. They released them only after apparently winning promises that there would be no more air strikes. Virtually the only U.N. measure in effect in Bosnia is an international arms embargo on all of former Yugoslavia, Slaidicz said angrily. Although Bosnia's Muslim-led government army clearly has obtained some weapons despite the embargo, it has always been outgunned by Serbs who inherited heavy weapons from the old Yugoslav army before it left Bosnia in April 1992. Neo-Nazi messages blitz cyberspace "Our hands are tied," Silajdzic said. Germany's extreme right avoid arrest with e-mail The Associated Press BERLIN — Germany's neo-Nazis are retreating; their political parties are banned; their homes are searched almost weekly; their physical moves are constantly monitored. Yet scores — perhaps hundreds — have found shelter in electronic fortresses that authorities say they can barely penetrate. The fortresses are modem-equipped computers, including a dozen linked to a bulletin-board network with inner chambers open only to select comrades after elaborate identity checks. A protective wall of U.S.-authored encryption software is used to keep prying eyes from sensitive e-mail. "I don't wish to betray how things work here," says a bulletin board operator code named Undertaker. Undertaker, who would not give his real name during an on-line interview last week, shares a belief common in his circles: Germany's extreme right is unjustly persecuted by an autocratic state bent on curbing civil liberties. Germany's estimated 50,000 extreme rightists are going on line by the hundreds, although authorities offer no hard numbers. Via the global Internet, they have direct access to material illegal in their country — from anti-Semitic material to treatises claiming the Holocaust was a hoax. Some of the material has reached Germany via postings in forums of Ohio-based CompuServe, raising questions about how one nation's laws can be enforced in borderless cyberspace. German authorities are only just beginning to study the issues. Meanwhile, the country's neo-Nazis have turned to producing their propaganda abroad and transferring it electronically. Mailed leaflets are going out of style. One of Germany's top investigators of the extreme right, who spoke on condition he not be further identified, said: "When someone disappears into one of these bulletin boards where the information is encoded, the authorities might as well call it quits. There's nothing we can do. And that is surely the danger. They are out of reach. Despite a decrease in neo-Nazi street violence, 1994 saw the first firebombing of a German synagogue since Nazi times, and many experts fear a terrorist backlash from the technologically elite neo-Nazis forced underground. "Those who can use this kind of sophisticated technology are the real war-makers, the real violence-producers," said Berlin professor Hajo Funke. Two bulletin boards — based in Frankfurt and Kassel — were shut down in October and all the equipment was seized. But no charges have been filed against their operators. The Nuremberg prosecutor dropped his case against the network's main board last year after deciding that bomb recipes discovered inside were likely planted by leftist saboteurs. Lefists accuse authorities of lenient treatment of neo-Nazis. They note that it is technically possible through eavesdropping to read encrypted email once it has been decoded at its destination. If authorities are doing that, they aren't admitting it. Looking For a Great Place to Live? Come by and see what Naismith Hall has to offer. Lawrence's premier private student housing option—the exceptional, affordable choice for KU students Quiet study areas Fully furnished and carpeted suites, each with their own bath Air conditioned Air conditioned Featuring our"Dine Anytime" program that serves terrific meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner. Coed Fitness Center Convenient location next to campus and on the KU bus route Maid service Cable TV in floor lounges and on large screen TV Computer room with Macintosh and IBM computers KANSAS Tours available daily including weekends—just drop by!! Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information packet. --- NAISMITH Hall KANSAS If you've already signed a lease but are interested—call us and we'll see what we can do Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 1-800-GOKU 10 A Wednesday, June 28, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Summer Coolers JOHNNY'S TAVERN the DRINK SPECIALS 401 N. 2nd • Lawrence, KS • 842-0377 Monday - $3 pitchers, $1 import draws Tuesday - $3 domestic pitchers, $5 import pitchers Wednesday - 50$ draws, $1.75 big beers Thursday - $1.25 patio pitchers, $1.50 domestic bottles and burgers on the patio only $1.50 Friday - $1.75 import bottles Saturday - $1.75 well drinks DUDS'nSUDS Good clean sun! Bar or Laundromat? AFTER FOUR HOURS OF CHRISTMAS TALKS 50 CENT DRAWS EVERY MONDAY!!! HOT & TIRED? COOL OFF AT MOLLY'S Mon $1.00 Drafts Summer Drink Specials Tues. $2.25 Margaritas on rocks Wed. $1.75 Domestic bottles Fri. $2.25 Mr. Beers Fri. $2.25 Mr. Beers $2.95 Long Island & Long Beach tea molly mcgees grill & bar Sun. $1.25 Drafts Sat. $2.25 Selected Imports 842-6560 615 Mass. Quintan's BAR & DELI DRINK SPECIALS Monday-23oz Frozen Drinks $2.00 Tuesday-Imports $1.75 Wednesday- 23 oz Domestic Big Girls $1.50 Thursday-23 oz Boulevard & $1.75 Saturday-Domestic Bottles $1.25 Friday- 23oz Margaritas $2.50 Sunday-2 for 1 Well Drinks $2.50 - No Cover• The Sandbar Summer Drink Specials It's Always Happen'n' at the Sandbar Mon. $1.50 Domestic Bottles! Tues. tues. $1.00 Anything! Wed. $1.50 Honey Brown Bottle! (Tonight Only) Thurs. & Sunday $1.75 Anything - No Cover! Fri. $2.75 1/4 Shrimp! (While they last) The Sandbar SAND VOLLEYBALL-CHEAP DRINKS SAND VOLLEYB ALL-CHEAP DRINKS Open at 3 p.m. 17 E. 8th St. IT IS YOUR RIGHT!!! 18th AMENDMENT (Formerly "The Hawk") SUMMER SPECIALS WEDNESDAY $1.25 Well drinks and domestic bottles THURSDAY $1.50 Well drinks FRIDAY $1.00 ANYTHING! SATURDAY $1.00 Well drinks and domestic bottles 1340 Ohio Sun.-Sat. 843-9273 Open at 5pm 0 Come check out our specials and the nightly sand volleyball games. Spice it up every night! DAILY DRINK SPECIALS DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANT **Sunday** $4.25 pitchers of domestic beer $1.00 well drinks $1.00 well drinks Sunday $4.25 pitchers of domestic beer Mon. $6.95 pitchers of margaritas $4.25 pitchers of domestic beer Wed. 25¢ draws $1.00 margaritas Tues. $2.25 margaritas (strawberry 25¢ extra) Thurs. $2.50 gold margaritas $1.25 swillers of beer This Friday $1.75 Coronas and Negra Modelos $8.95 pitchers of margaritas SAND VOLLEYBALL-CHEAP DRINKS SAND VOLLEYB ALL-CHEAP DRINKS Fri. $2.25 swillers of beer 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 Sat. 2 for 1 well drinks $2.00 long island ice teas THE REPLAY LOUNGE AVENUE LAWRENCE, KS. 10TH & MASS. 749-7676 tues 7pm-9pm Steak night! 10oz Sirloin with live Bluegrass! thurs Slicky s Jambalaya 9-11pm Sat Shishkabob 4-10pm Shishkabob 4-10pm --- LOUISE'S BAR Wednesday Wednesday & Thursday $1.50 Schooners! 31st Street VAPROOM FREE POOL FREE POO 5pm - 9pm 50¢ tables after 9pm EVERYDAY! (New Tables) •801 New Hampshire* lifestyles 100 Kathleen Driscoll / KANSAN At Top: Shelly Huebner, Lawrence freshman, laughs at her picture on her new KUID. Huebner was on campus all day and was happy the last thing she had to do was pick up her new I.D. At Right: All the new students gather in the Kansas Union Ballroom for a luncheon. Who's that on campus? SUNDAY, JULY 20, 1985 Shelly Huebner, Lawrence freshman, takes a piece of candy from Pooneh Rajaei, iron sophomore, after asking her a question. Orientation gives glimpse of what KU life will be like By Ryan Vise Kansan staff writer Kathleen Driscoll / KANSAN The Kansas heat beats down with relentless force. All around, parents and students gather in the Union with Jayhawk Book Store bags and sore feet. It's summertime at the University of Kansas, and thousands of potential Jayhawks are getting their first real glimpse at life on the KU campus. Orientation is the first chance for students and parents to experience "I think it's one of the most beautiful campuses I've ever seen." Shelby Neece Shawnee junior transfer the intricacies of life at a big university. Each summer thousands of students gather from around the nation to take their first steps as Jawhaws. During orientation, students go through various interest sessions and peer meetings. Orientation staff members, who are KU students, help the process run smoothly. "I've noticed more out-of-state people than in-state" said Ryan Colburn, orientation assistant. "They seem to be very energetic and very excited. I think it's going to be a good freshman class." This summer there are 17 orientation sessions planned. The seventh session, and the first of two two-day sessions, were last weekend. "The two-day program brings a lot of out-of-state students," said Lori Reesor, acting director of New Student Orientation. "Overall we have had a very positive response. It is very well organized, and everyone relates well." Orientation will continue through the summer and into the fall. The next two-day session is scheduled for July 7 and 8. "Enrollment is going very smoothly. We haven't had any problems at all," Reesor said. Orientation is a KU tradition. Originally, orientation was called "preview," but the Office of New Student Orientation became a separate office in 1988. Since then the office has been running summer orientation Students gather in the Union after a day of events and registration. Information booths are set up and students and parents have a chance to see what KU has to offer. After walking around campus in the heat, most students seem exhausted. "It's a big campus. It's pretty and very spread out," Ann Eakins, incoming freshman from Nebraska, said. "I'm just glad this is done." Despite his exhaustion, Jeff Evans, of El Dorado, is following a long line of family history at KU. "My brother and my sister both went here before me, and they would have me come up, so I got to know the campus real well. "And I like the atmosphere," Evans said. The Poster Children, Bad Brains on the RECORD By Robert Moczdylowsky Kansan staff writer Midway through their trip, they got a flat tire. Last Thursday the Poster Children had to drive five hours to Lawrence in a cramped van. Midway through their trip, they got a hat tie. When they arrived at 8:30 p.m. for their 6 o'clock sound check, bass player Rose Marshack was catching a cold and losing her voice. I cornered Rose, Rick, Jim and Howie and asked if we still could have our scheduled chat. "No problem," they said. But only if they could talk and eat at the same time. Here's our conversation, held over vegetarian pasta and sandwiches. Q: A flat tire, a five-hour drive, and Rose's cold. Is this a typical day on the road? Rick: Yeah. Actually, the flat tire thing didn't really bother us. In fact, we met this truck driver who was quite amusing. Rose and Howie picked him up at a truck stop 'cause he bet them five bucks that he could take the lug nuts off the tire with his bare hands. Q: Does this sap away your drive to do a good show? Rose: My cold isn't too bad, but I'll probably make the whole band sick. Rose: No, no. It won't affect that. Actually I'll play harder to try to make up for it. **Howie:** Definitely. As far as sheer numbers of people, that'll be our biggest gig ever. Of course, the trick is to get all those people to listen to you. Q: Are you looking forward to your dates on the Lollalalaqa tour? Jim: I really want to see Sonic Youth and Pavement. Rose: Yeah, somebody told me that Pavement asked for us to be added to the second stage. But Q: Let's talk about Champaign for a second. Are you guys upset that Hum is getting all of the attention for a scene that you created? get me excited. What I really want to do is start a fight between Courtney Love and Sinead O'Connor. Rick: I wouldn't say that we created it. There are a lot of really good bands in Champaign. Rose: We started 12-inch Records so that we could put out a Hum record that nobody else would. It's something that I put a lot of time and money into, so naturally I'm happy to see them get rewarded. Rick: Yeah, we put out records on 12-inch that we thought were deserving. It'd be crazy to say that we're disappointed that they're doing so well now. Q: OK, but don't you think the Poster Children deserve some airtime too? Rose: Yeah. That's great when we're making an album, we have total control. But it sucks too 'cause we have to do all of our own promotion. That's why I do all of the on-line stuff. If people want to check us out, talk to us, or find out where we are, they can just e-mail us. Rose: Oh yeah, for sure. Actually, next week we're going to Boston to film our second video from this album. It's for "He's My Star." Rick: We get some airplay for "Junior Citizen," and a little for "He's My Star." It's just that our company, Reprise, is pretty hands-off when it comes to us. badluris GOD OF RAIN Reaching out to 'The Kids' On the record, the Poster Children's show was excellent. It might have been an off night for them, but I guarantee nobody in Lawrence noticed. At the music store on Monday, I got frustratez sorting through stacks of albums by angry white guys with loud guitars. Same half-assed screech, different cover art. The good, the bad and the ugly Find the Poster Kids on the World Wide Web at http://www.prarienet.org/posterkids. Or e-mail them at posterkids@prarienet.org. The worst of these releases is the sophomore Mountain Ugly Kid Joe entangles Menace to Sobriety (Mercury). Not even producer extraordinaire GGArth, who produced Rage Against the Machine and Surgery, could save this one. The bottom line? Ugly Kid Joe — coming to a state fair near you. Ironically, when a lot of these hardcore bands are asked about their influences, one name almost always dropped is Bad Brains. Bad Brains have been around for 15 years, and in that time they've made some of the most unique and honest music around. Originally, Bad Brains was bassist Darryl Jenifer, guitarist Dr. Know, drummer Earl Hudson, and vocalist H.R., a talented performer revered for his stage antics. In the early 1990s HR left the group, opting to work on his own. The rest of the band hung together and put out Rise, an album that managed to turn a few main-stream listeners on to the group's trademark hard-core/reggae blend. It was a decent platter, but it definitely missed HR's voice. 1995 has found Bad Brains reunited with HR on a new record label. Their latest disc is entitled God of Love. Silverchair Frogstars released on Maverick Records and produced by exCars front man Ric Ocasek. The disc has the same rowdy, head-noddin' music you'd expect from the Brains, but for the first time the reggae cuts outnumber the hard-core. That's not to say that the album isn't good because it is. I just suspect that loyal Bad Brains fans will be a little disappointed. One last thing. You can forget what you've heard about the latest modern rock hot spot. It ain't Champaign, ill., and it ain't Austin, Texas. It's Australia Leading the Aussie Invasion is 15-year-old, sugar-pop singer Ben Lee, but I'd rather not mention him or his "Pop Queen" single. You'll get plenty of him on the radio. The band I want to talk about is the guitar-frenzied Silverchair. Sony Records brought their album, Frostgomp, to the United States, and I'm going to write the record company a thank you note. This band uses just the bare minimum guitar-bass drums set-up, but the sound they create is large and thick. Add Daniel John's heavily accented Aussie voice to the mix, and what comes out is raw rock 'n' roll emotion akin to that of Soundgarden and early Alice in Chains. So what if it takes two or three listens to catch on to Johns' accent? Songs like "Tomorrow" and "Leave me out" make repeated listening an absolute pleasure. Next week: Vitreous Humor (I haven't forgotten them; [promise]). Stay tuned. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SECTION R JUNE 28.1995 KU Life Cultural Calendar REEL MOVIE NEWS BOX OFFICE BILLBOARD Top 10 movies For weekend of June 16-18: Pocohontas (G) 1. 2,500 location $29.5 million 2 Batman Forever (PG-13) 2,839 locations $29.2 million 2,830 locations 3 Congo (PG-13) $8.1 million 3 ___ $8.1 million 2,676 locations 4 Madison County (PG-13) 4 Madison County (PG-13) $6.2 million 1,961 locations 1,961 5 Casper (PG) $4.9 million 2,544 6 Braveheart (R) $4 million 1.885 locations Ne Hard...Vengeance (R) 7 Die Hard...Vengeance (R) $3.9 million 1,934 locations Crimson Tide (R) $3.1 million 1,540 locations Forest Paris (PG-13) L $1.8 million 1,048 locations 1 You Were Sleeping (PG) You Were Sleeping (PG) $1.5 million 1,001 locations Knight-Riddler Trilune 2B Wednesday, June 28, 1995 ENTERTAINMENT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BIKE AMERICA 23rd & Louisiana (Behind Schlotzsky's) 842-7822 Ray-Ban xrays KILLER LOOP LIBERTY HALL "Secret of Roan Inish" (PG) 7:30 DAILY "Farinelli" (R) 4:30 7:15 9:40 DAILY "The Sum of Us" 5:30 9:30 DAILY DICKINSON 6239 South 51 Dickinson 6 441 8000 Braveheart® 1.00; 4.30; 8.00 Die Hard III® 1.30; 4.15; 7.00; 9.50 Bridge of Madison Co™-13 1.15; 4.00; 7.00; 9.50 While You Were Sleeping™-13 1.25; 4.00; 9.45 Apollo 13 Sleeping 1.00; 4.00; 7.00 Pocahontas® 1.00; 3.00; 5.00; 7.30; 9.30 $3 50 Adult Before Heating Dolby 00:00 PM Impaired Sleep crown cinema BEFORE 6 PM, ADULTS $3.00 (LIMITED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS. $3.00. VARSITY JOHN MASSACHUSETTS. 841-5191 Congo PG^12 5:00, 7:15, 9:30 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 Batman Forever PG^12 2:45, 5:15, 8:00 Casper PG^12 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 9:30 Crimson Tide B^12 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 Forge Park PG^12 2:45, 4:55, 7:30 Batman Forever PG^12 2:00, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50 CINEMA TWIN 4110 IOWA 811 5911 $1.25 Pulp Fiction® 2:15, 5:15, 8:15 Rob Roy® 2:15, 5:00, 8:00 Dollars make sense in movies and politics SHOWN MIX FOR TODAY ONLY Washington, D.C. notables preview "Batman Forever" despite Hollywood bashing By John Horn The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Just how disgusted is Washington with Hollywood? Not very, judging by the guest list for the splashy benefit premiere of "Batman Forever." Speaker Newt Gingrich was on hand to see the violent action film, as were Sen. Pat Leahy, D-Vt., and Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich. Simply because President Clinton has criticized the film business didn't mean his minions need stay away from the Washington gala: Labor Secretary Robert Reich and Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala witnessed the multiple explosions and brawls, too. Sen. Bob Dole, among the most outspoken Hollywood bashers, was invited but did not attend, organizers said. . . in all-star turnout for The all-star turnout for the Val Kilmer film illus- movies,TV shows and popular music A June 14 Los Angeles Times poll showed that most people, about 70 percent, agreed with Dole's criticisms. More than 60 percent said the content of films was growing worse, and 51 percent had an unfavorable impression of movies. trates what critics of Hollywood don't seem to understand. Movies, like politics, are all about winning. Films often are excessive and popular music sometimes unprintably crude. But it's hardly a campaign or platform issue, since there really aren't two sides to the debate. Who is for more movie violence and nastier rap lyrics? Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, once invested in a sleazy R-rated movie project called "Beauty Queenes," and Gingrich hopes to strike it rich with both his racy novel and memoirs. "It seems wrong that politics is now determining release dates in the creative community." Half the problem, of course, is the audience: A lot more people buy tickets for "Die Hard" Politicians similarly are attracted to condemning Hollywood, because it seems to play well in the media and with the growing family values voters. There are scores of other critical issues — child nutrition, the environment, gun control — on which to plant a moral flag. Yet few have the box-office appeal of blasting Don Murphy and Jane Hamshake producers, "Natural Born Killers" With a Vengeance" than "Circle of Friends." If one of the tabloid TV shows somehow wrangled some Nicole Brown Simpson autopsy photographs, the ratings would be huge. Most politicians say what they believe will get them votes; movie studios make films that will sell tickets. national Sunday TV show even though he is the company's most eloquent free-speech defender. The criticism is beginning to take a toll. Warner Home Video apparently is delaying its director's cut video release of "Natural Born Killers," and major record labels are now scrutinizing lyrics closer than ever before. Said Don Murphy and Jane Hamsher, producers of "Natural Born Killers," in a statement: "It seems wrong that politics is now determining release dates in the creative community. We hope postponement isn't the first step in it being canceled altogether." Fall TV stands strong against Dole's assault Media executives claim they won't be influenced, will aim to please viewers By Lynn Elber The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Oh, those devilish trick questions, like the hoary "How long have you been beating your wife?" folks in the TV industry if the lat- Or asking folks in the 'n' est assault on Hollywood values, courtesy of presi- dential contender Bob Dole, will influence the fall season. The networks flatly refuse comment; they're not wading into that quagmire, one executive helpfully explained. But some producers are willing to respond. In television's annual ritual of reinventing itself, Dole's complaints about pop culture's sex-and-violence fixation will go unheeded, they said. They also seek to reframe the query: Is there a problem; who's making the claim; and emerging preview tapes, is more of what they favored this year — saucy comedies like "Friends" and socially aware dramas such as "Law and Order." what's being left out of the equation? The networks haven't issued a post-Dole call for producers to avoid the bawdy or bloody, Wolf and others said. "There has been a sea change in the American audience toward violence. The bulk of the country is not embracing the same type of imagery when I was running 'Miami Vice' and it was a top 10 show," Wolf noted. Attacks like Dole's, he maintained, were politically motivated and a prelude to censorship. Wolf considered the proposed "V-chip," which would allow the electronic blocking of programs coded objectionable, as a step in "Gratuitous and teen-age hetero- and homosexual sex are portrayed with abandon on television now." Conservative media watchdogs are as eager to broaden the debate: Are criticisms like Dole's or former Vice President Dan Quayle's cumulative in their effect, and is television becoming more open to rightist influence? "One of the great myths is that there are these pigeon-like flutterings, and everybody goes nuts," said Dick Wolf, who has series on NBC and Fox Broadcasting Co. What viewers will get next year, based on L. Bront Bozzel head of the Media Research Center that direction. Veteran TV producer Leonard Hill was struck by the timing of Dole's attack. It came when Republican lawmakers were seeking to deregulate the broadcast TV industry and to eliminate the concept of public interest by the networks, he said. he said. "We are not a ministry and should not be presumed to be and should not be encouraged by government to function in such a fashion," Hill said. That's fine with L. Brent Boell, head of the Virginia-based Media Research Center. He wants television to return to the days when there was no politics, no agenda, no messages. What he and his group want to see are more shows like "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman," respectful of religion, sexual responsibility and family. "Gratuitous and teen-age hetero- and homosexual sex are portrayed with abandon on television now." Bozzell said. Despite that, he sees cause for hope. Television is more willing to feature diverse viewpoints, and network executives who once avoided groups like his are now listening to their concerns. 12 packs of 7 up or RC 5-12 packs $10 with $10.00 in other purchases Limit 5 Alvin's IGA 9th and Iowa 6 a.m. to 12 midnight Hugh Grant arrested with prostitute in LA British actor caught with pants down The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Why would Hugh Grant, the dashing young Englishman who has charmed Hollywood and women everywhere with his bashful grin, pay for sex? The question had Hollywood atwitter after Grant's arrest early yesterday as he allegedly indulged in a sex act with a Sunset Boulevard prostitute in his white BMW. "Last night I did something completely insane." Grant said in a statement without elaborating. "I have hurt people I love and embarrassed people I work with. For both things I am more sorry than I can ever possibly say." It would appear that the suave, 34-year-old Grant could have anything he desires. He's got stardom, wealth, good looks and a loyal following after movies that include "Four Weddings and a Funeral," "The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain" Calls placed to Estee Lauder Inc. in New York seeking comment from Hurley weren't returned. His live in girlfriend is Estee Lauder's new shapey model Elizabeth Hurley, who showed up at this year's Cannes Film Festival in a jaw-droppingly revealing dress. They've been together about eight years. Grant was in Los Angeles to promote "Nine Months" about a guy (Grant) who finds out he's going to be a father. Shortly before 1:30 a.m., vice officers allegedly saw Divine Brown, 23, walk up to Grant's car and get in. and the upcoming "Nine Months." "They were later observed to be engaged in an act of lewd conduct," Officer Lori Taylor said. Both Grant and Brown were booked for investigation of misdemeanor lewd conduct in a public place and released without bail for arraignment July 18. They could get up to six months in jail. Lewd conduct covers such offenses as fondling, oral sex and intercourse. Taylor refused to identify the sex act. Entertainment industry observer Art Murphy doesn't think Grant's career will be damaged. "Nowadays I think people might just raise their eyebrows at the indiscretion of it all," said Murphy, who analyzes box office performance for the Hollywood Reporter. "It depends on the public's perception of the performer. It would probably be commercially disastrous if he were playing a missionary priest opening Friday." Grant played such a character in "Sirens." "What's he doing out there picking up his thrills on the street? He could have sat at the Four Seasons bar and had action in three minutes," said Maryanne Norbum, West Coast bureau chief for the Globe, the supermarket tabloid. Fans heading into a theater yesterday to see "The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill and Came Down a Mountain" remained loyal. "He's a human being and, as humans, we make mistakes," said 24-year-old Michael Harris. "I still admire him as a comedic actor." The Etc. Shop REVO Sunglasses 9 Downtown Keep It Clean Please recycle THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 28, 1995 3B Kevorkian's new clinic to aid suicides The Associated Press SOUTHFIELD, Mich. — Jack Kevorkian has started a clinic and was present there Monday for the death of a woman with Lou Gehrig's disease. It was the 24th death he has attended. Erika Garcellano, 60, died at the clinic Kevorkian established for the purpose of alleviating the suffering of patients, his attorney, Geoffrey Fleger said. Garcellano had suffered for at least three years from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease, a degenerative nerve disorder, Fleger said. She had been living at a nursing home in Kansas City, Mo. Larry Bunting, assistant Oakland County prosecutor, said he was not aware of Garcellano's death. "We don't have anything from the sheeriff's department and we're reserving judgment until we know what the facts are," Bunting said. The clinic, in Oakland County north of Detroit, was named the Margo Janus Mercy Clinic after Kevorkian's sister. Janus, who crushed with her brother for the right of assisted suicide, died last summer of a heart attack. Fieger said the main purpose of the clinic was to provide a place for residents of other states to die. "The intention of Dr. Kevorkian is to provide a foundation where other doctors can come forward and work with Dr. Kevorkian," Flegersaid. Kevorkian, a retired pathologist, also hopes the clinic can be used as a hospice and has long advocated establishing such a place. Feger said. Fieger would not comment on how the clinic is equipped or staffed. He said Kevorkian was not worried about protests at the clinic, because he believed most people supported its concept. Attorney Michael Odette of Davisburg, who is representing the Garcellano family, said neither he nor the family would immediately comment. Before Garcellano's death, Kevinian most recently attended the deaths of the Rev. John Evans and Nicholas John Loving in Mav. Evans died at his home, and Loving's body was found in the back of Kevorkian's van, parked outside the Oakland County Medical Examiner's office. The retired pathologist has not been charged in either of those deaths. Under a recent court ruling, he could be charged with murder in two earlier deaths and assisted suicide in three others. The Michigan Legislature enacted a ban on assisting in a suicide in February 1993. It expired in November 1994. The state supreme court ruled in December that there was no constitutional right to assisted suicide. The court also found that assisting a suicide is illegal under common law. Kevorkian had appealed that ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court, saying the Constitution gives people the right to end intolerable pain, suffering or debilitation. In April, the high court refused to hear the appeal. Parents keep joint custody of Culkin kids NEW YORK — "Home Alone" star Macaulay Culkin and five of his siblings were returned to their parents' joint custody Monday. State Supreme Court Justice David Saxe had given temporary custody to their mother, Patricia Brentrup, on Friday after she alleged that the children's father, Christopher "Kit" Culkin, had walked out on the family and was jeopardizing the youngsters' movie careers. Brentrup's lawyer, Stanford Lotwin, said Culkin vanished for five days with 12-year-old son Kieran, who was due to start filming the movie "Amanda" in Red Lodge, Mont. He said Culkin didn't call until this weekend, saying they were on their way to Red Lodge. Saxe then lifted his temporary custody order. He said he issued it only to ensure that Kieran began work on time. Donald Frank, Culkin's lawyer, denied Culkin had walked out on his family. "In March, Ms. Brentrup up and says, 'Get out,' Frank said. Brentrup and Culkin, who lived together 20 years and never married, have seven children. The oldest, Shane, was not included in the custody order. Miscalculations leave more questions in Simpson trial The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — A top scientist for the O.J. Simpson prosecution admitted Monday his calculations of genetic frequencies in mixed blood stains were consistently wrong because of his computer programming error. "It was worse than I realized," said Bruce Weir, a world-renowned population geneticist whose statistics had been seen as a potentially dazzling capstone to the prosecution's DNA presentation. He said he thought an error had been made in only one of his calculations, but instead the error ran through most of his totals that might link Simpson to the double-murders. "Unfortunately for me, my program had a mistake." Weir told jurors. "So, I was consistent, but consistently wrong." All of Weir's testimony involved stains containing a mixture of blood from at least two people. His role was not to tell jurors whose blood was in the stains, only what the chances were that the blood came from any two or three given people in the world. His mistakes, however, all involved stains that DNA experts already had said probably included Simpson's blood. For that reason, the defense contended Weir's errors were biased, because they made it appear unlikely that someone other than Simpson could have contributed to a stain. Defense attorney Peter Neufeld led Weir through a series of corrections showing, according to his new figures, it was now about 21/2 times more likely that someone other than Simpson could have contributed to mixed blood stains. The North Carolina State University scientist, who revised his calculations over the weekend, was measuring the impact on his career. "I woke up this morning at 5 and wondered how I could avoid embarrassing myself again in court," he said. Under redirect questioning by prosecutor George Clarke, Weir at first insisted he did not give special "So all of these mixtures are calculated without regard to whoever they may or may not be consistent with in this case?" Clarke asked. weight to the fact that some of the blood stains had been linked to Simpson and the victims. "That's correct," Weir replied. But before he left the stand, Weir testified that his figures showed a very rare profile linking blood evidence to Simpson. "Is it just that he's not excluded or something more powerful?" Clarke asked. "The evidence says it's very unlikely we would see that evidentary profile if it came from someone else." Weir said. Loyola University law professor Laurie Levenson said the testimony provided jurors who already might be skeptical of DNA with further reason to disbelieve it. "A lot of it is hard to follow and jurors are ultimately going to have to say. 'We reject DNA because it's too hard to follow,' or accept the bottom-line numbers introduced earlier in the trial," she said. Conservative Democrat moves loyalty Democrats contend Laughlin switch is motivated by seat on committee The Associated Press VICTORIA, Texas — Rep. Greg Laughlin, a conservative Democrat who is on the outs with his party's leaders, is switching to the Republican Party. Laughlin, D-Texas, who took office in 1989, is the fourth congressional Democrat to change parties since the Republicans recaptured control of Congress in November. With Laughlin, the GOP has a 232-202 majority in the House. The 53-year-old Laughlin said the switch would mean he would have a seat on the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, chaired by a fellow Texan, Republican Bill Archer. Republicans have floated rumors for days that he would leave the Democratic Party. One of the House's most conservative Democrats, Laughlin and three other House members recently resigned from a committee that raises money for Democratic congressional candidates, saying it was intolerant of differing views. Earlier this year, Laughlin joined 22 other conservative Democrats in creating a group known as The Coalition. Its stated purpose is to temper the extremes of both parties. Laughlin voted for 14 of 17 major provisions in the GOP's Contract With America, including a $189 billion tax cut package that only 26 other Democrats supported. "Greg Laughlin's party switch is an ill-advised act of a damaged politician who is selling out his district to Newt Gingrich for a choice Ways and Means Committee seat," said Bob Slagle, the Texas Democratic chairman. State GOP chairman Tom Pauken said Laughlin's district, a largely rural strip of Texas stretching from the western outskirts of Austin to the Gulf of Mexico, clearly was a conservative one. 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Reg. size just $11900 --- Atlantis docks with Russian space station CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Space shuttle Atlantis blasted off yesterday on a historic flight to link up with Russia's space station Mir and bring home an American astronaut who has been in orbit a record-breaking 31/2 months. The Associated Press "Godspeed on the 100th U.S.-manned mission in space," launch controller Jim Toohey told the seven-member, U.S.-Russian crew. After days of rain, the weather was nearly perfect as Atlantis roared from its seaside pad at 3:32 p.m. and Mir and its crew of three, including NASA astronaut Norman Thagard, were stationed over Iraq when Atlantis took off. pierced the low clouds. Thunderstorms had forced NASA to postpone the flight twice last week. Russia and the United States plan seven Atlantis-Mir dockings over the next two years to prepare for construction of an international space station. "Very few people get to see their dreams come true, but today I'm seeing it in living color," said NASA Administrator Daniel Goldin, who He was en route to Moscow with Vice President Al Gore for talks with Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin. watched the launch on television in Portland, Ore. Atlantis will spend two days catching up to Mir and dock with it tomorrow, 245 miles above Earth. Thagard and his Russian crewmates will swap places with the two Russians who flew up on the shuttle. Thagard, Vladimir Dezhurov and Gennady Strekalov have been aboard Mirsince March 16. Atlantis will bring eight people back — the first time a U.S. spacecraft will return with more people than it left with. Many space officials, including Goldin, consider the docking the most challenging task since landing men on the moon. Atlantis' commander, Robert "Hoot" Gibson, will have to steer the shuttle to within a few inches and degrees of the docking ring on the huge Mir station as the two spacecraft zoom around Earth at 17,500 mph. He will have to do this within two minutes of the appointed time and at a creep of one-tenth of a foot per second. Such large objects have never docked before in orbit. Mir has a mass of 123 tons in orbit, Atlantis 100 tons. The two spacecraft will be joined for five days. "The specialists from the two countries have a lot to learn from each other," said Yuri Semenov, president of the Russian aerospace company RSC Energia. "Together, we can do much more than individually, and we hope that politicians will not interfere with our work and will actually assist us rather than be in our way." Ex-Chief Justice Burger dies at 87 The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Warren E. Burger, the retired chief justice who wrote the Supreme Court opinion that forced President Nixon to release the Watergate tapes, was a conservative jurist who also won praise from liberals. The nation's 15th chief justice, Burger served from 1969 to 1986, the longest tenure this century. He died on Sunday at age 87. reform, Burger retired in 1986 and devoted full attention to his duties as the unpaid chairman of the Commission on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution. In that post, he led the national celebrations of the Constitution's 200th anniversary in 1987 and the Bill of Rights' 200th anniversary in 1989. "Justice Burger was a strong, powerful, visionary chief justice who opened the doors of opportunity," President Clinton said in a statement issued in Little Rock, Ark. "As chief justice, he On the bench, Burger was a politically conservative judge Warren E. Burger ...Burger was a strong,powerful visionary chief justice who opened the doors of opportunity." Retired Chief Justice Warren Burger died Sunday of heart failure. Bill Clinton President of the United States who rarely showed sympathy for criminal defendants or their asserted rights. was concerned with the administration of the court, serving with enthusiasm and always making sure it was above reproach." But he also wrote numerous opinions praised by liberals. Burger spoke for the court in decisions that inaugurated busing as a top' O PETER S. ROBERTS A champion of judicial Burger died at Sibley Memorial Hospital of congestive heart failure, said Tomi House, representative for the court. "His expansive view of the Constitution and his tireless service will leave a lasting imprint on the court and our nation." for the racial desegregation of public schools, expanded public access to the nation's courts and enhanced women's protections against sexual discrimination. O He wrote the opinion that in 1974 forced Nixon — the man who had nominated him to the court — to surrender White House tape recordings and papers for use as evidence in the trial of presidential aides accused of covering up the Watergate scandal. The ruling was a major factor EARLY LIFE: EARLY LIFE: Born: Sept. 17, 1907, in St. Paul, Minn. Family: Married Evera Stromberg, 1933; two children Education: Law degree, St. Paul College, 1931 1931: Member, Boyeson, Otis, Brill & Fancy (law firm in St. Paul, Minn.) 1933-53: Partner, Fancy, Burger, Moore & Costello (law firm) 1953-56: Assistant attorney general, Civil Litigation Division, U.S. Justice Dept. 1956-69: Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals 1963-80: Chief Justice, U.S. Supreme Court MOST NOTED FOR: 1971: Developed three-part test for separation of church and state 1973: Created the still-used legal definition of "obscenity" SOURCES: News reports, Who's Who in America; research by B. SINK in Nixon's decision to resign. Knight-Ridder Tribur Burger was born in St. Paul, Minn., on Sept. 17, 1907, to a family of Swiss and German descendants. His father worked as a railway cargo inspector and sometime traveling salesman. Burger worked days as an insurance salesman while earning his undergraduate degree at night from the University of Minnesota, and later earned a law degree at night at St. Paul College of Law. He joined a Minneapolis law firm in 1931, and eight years later made his first foray into politics by managing the Minnesota gubernatorial campaign of a young Harold Stassen. President Eisenhower named Burger to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in 1956. Burger's wife of 61 years, Elvaer, died last year. They had a son, Wade, and a daughter, Margaret, and two grandchildren. Funeral arrangements were incomplete. Rabbi claims TV's Sawyer is 'Deep Throat' The Associated Press PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Diane Sawyer denied a rabbi's claim that she was the "Deep Throat" source who helped The Washington Post uncover the Watergate scandal that brought down President Nixon. And Bob Woodward, the Post reporter who has never revealed the identity of his source, said Rabbi Baruch Korff was wrong. The 80-year-old Korff was a friend of Nixon's and stood by him throughout Watergate. Sawyer, now a journalist for ABC, was an assistant in the Nixon press office. She said Monday through a representative that Korff's claim was laughable. "For 20 years we we've always said that the source 'Deep Throat' was a man," said Woodward, now an assistant managing editor at the Post. "There is no evidence that Diane Sawyer in her kind of subsidiary role in the Nixon White House would have that kind of knowledge." Korff said he based his opinion on Sawyer's special relationship with press secretary Ron Ziegler and his observation that Sawyer knew in advance what was going on at the White House. "I believed it was her," Korff said in an interview at his home, where he is ill with pancreatic cancer. "I have no solid evidence of it, but everything points to it." Sawyer's agent, Richard Liebner, said Woodward and his former Post colleague Carl Bernstein probably would have a good laugh because of the story. Korff achieved national attention when he formed the Ad Hoc Committee for Fairness to the Presidency to rally support for Nixon during the Watergate crisis. Korff did not reveal his suspicion in his 1994 book "The President and I," which chronicles his relationship with Nixon. He did not say why he had kept quiet until now about his suspicions. At various times, it has been speculated that "Deep Throat" may have been L. Patrick Gray, then acting FBI chief, or Alexander Haig, who worked then for National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger. Other names also have been mentioned. The secret source led Woodward and Bernstein to discover financial discrepancies and attempts to cover up criminal activity among the president's top staffers. Nixon resigned Aug. 9, 1974, and died last year. KING Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 Current Monthly Magazines Unusual greeting cards BUDGET CUT A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence Nilarious Party Games CHRISTIE'S TOY BOX WHERE THE FUN BEGINS! EARN CASH All Your Money Gone? $15 TODAY $30 THIS WEEK By Donating Your Blood Plasma NABI The Quality Source Rent 1 movie at regular price & get a 2nd movie for 1 cent EVERYDAY! 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Agassi crushed Australian qualifier Andrew Painter 6-2, 6-2, 6-1, in just one hour. 17 minutes. Painter, a 19-year-old Tasmanian with a world ranking of No.530, was playing his first match in a tour-level event. It showed. Painter committed 17 double faults to go with his 13 aces. In one game alone, trailing 5-1 in the first set, he served six double faults and had four aces before holding serve. In the second set, he double-faulted on all four of his serves in the seventh game to fall behind 5-2. in complete command as he took the ball early and ripped shots cleanly to all corners of the court Agassi, looking completely recovered from the hip strain he suffered at the French Open earlier this month, over. While Painter struggled just to win a game in the third set, A gassi showed no mercy. On m at ch point, with Painter stranded at the net, A gassi the Wimbledon crowds bowed and waved to all corners of the Court One stadium. Agassi, sporting a goatee and dan- Sports facts Wimbledon Women with the most singles titles: Titles Martina Navratilova 9 Helen Wills Moody 8 Dorothea D. Chambers 7 SOURCE: Sports Almanac moved up on a short ball and drilled a forehand passing shot close to his body. When it was over, the darling of said it w great to be back at Wimbledon. gling earrings, unveiled a new all-white outfit: knee-length shorts, baggy shirt and a pirate-style bandana over his closely-cropped head — emblazoned with his sponsor Nike's logo. A gassi, whose second-round opponent will be Patrick McEnoen, said it was "I've grown to love it here," he said. "I enjoy being a part of history here ... Every time I come back here, the emotion and the excitement seems to bring out some great tennis." Graf played some of her best tennis to over. power Hingis, the 1994 Wimble d on junior champion who has moved to No. 18 in the world rankings since turning pro last October. Graf repeatedly took advantage of Hingis relatively weak serve. Hingis held serve only once — in the first game of the match. Sports facts What had shaped up as the most intriguing first-round match of the tournamen t turned out to be a one-sided affair Wimbledon Women with the most appearances in the singles finals in the past 10 years: Appearances Won-lost Martina Navratilova 7 4-3 Steffi Graf 6 5-1 SOURCE: Sports Almanac WIMBLEDON STARRING STEFFI GRAF Hingis, who is more comfortable on slower surfaces, showed occasional glimpses of her promise but never mounted a serious challenge. Agassi and Graf were a m o n g seven Wim b l e d o n champions in action yesterday. his opening match at Winnipeg. "He played like he's been out there a hundred times before," Stich said of playing on Centre Court. "I didn't Knight-Rider Tribute Stich lost his growing match at Windsor t Wimbledon. Ninth seeded Michael Stich, the 1991 champion, was ousted in straight sets on Centre Court by Holland's Jacco Eltingh, 6-4, 7-6 (7-3), 6-1. It was the second year in a row that Stich lost do anything right today. I had no timing or feel for the ball. I didn't feel like I had a chance to break him" Martinez, returning to Centre Court for the first time since she beat Martina Navratilova in last year's final, crushed Sweden's Asa Carlsson 6-1, 6-1, in just 47 minutes. In women's play, defending champion Conchita Martinez, second-seeded Arantxa Sanchez Vicario and No. 5 Mary Pierce all won in straight sets. Sanchez Vicario, mixing her strong baseline game with occasional forays to the net, needed less than an hour to beat Slovakia's Katarina Studenkova 6-2, 6-1. Pierce, making her Wimbledon debut, took 57 minutes to dispose of Sandra Dopfer, 6-1, 6-2. "I didn't know what to expect, but it was a great feeling playing here for the first time." Pierce said. Lori McNeil, who eliminated Graf in the first round last year, failed to knock out a seeded player in her opening match this time. NHL on power play against baseball Although McNeil was favored because of her grass-court expertise, she lost 4-6, 6-0, 6-3, to 14th-seeded Nakao Sawamatsu of Japan. By Jim Litke By Jim Litke The Associated Press If I am a baseball owner, I hate hockey. If I am a baseball owner, the New Jersey Devils' sweep of the Detroit Red Wings in the Stanley Cup playoffs could not have come soon enough. I hate competition. I do not need another recipe for octopus. I cannot bear to hear any more about Lord Stanley's Cup, New Jersey's neutral zone trap. Detroit's Soviet imports, hockey's desirable demographics, its improving ratings, exploding merchandising, expanding markets... the whole ball of ice But if I am a baseball owner, what I hate about hockey most of all is this: It reminds me of the things major league baseball used to be and may never be again. Hip, high-spirited, a sport on the make, fun. But even as baseball is adjusting to a diminished status — distant third among the Big Three — it hears new whispers, a rumbling. The sound of more and more people talking about ... hockey. And why not? Hardly anybody talks about baseball any more. People talk about the NBA all the time. And though training camps don't open for a month, people talk about the NFL as though it were already here. Though last year's Stanley Cup boom was largely a New York phenomenon, this year's offered something for everyone. It required very little expertise to enjoy, a point driven home by those wickedly funny, widely imitated commercial spots on ESPN. For those who favored attacking, there were the Red Wings fluid, freewheeling skaters seemingly stuck in forward gear. For those who favored defense, the Devils were big, belligerent and opportunistic. At the outset, the classic contrast in styles made a sweep seem unlikely. Yet so competitive was every game of the series that when a sweep did come to pass, it was not an unsatisfying finish. That was because hockey, like basketball and football, is learning to promote itself on several levels. When the two sides fought their bitter labor war, they managed to do so without running down the product. And when they came back, it was with a long-term agreement. Unlike baseball, fans knew pretty much who and what they were getting back was going to be around for a while. All season long, a ticket to a seat or a zap on the channel charger didn't just get you the play on the ice. It got you access to the sport in all its fullness and all its blemishes in a way that seemed so much less guarded —and so much more authentic than baseball. Take interviews, for instance. In basketball and football, it was called a breakthrough when a coach stopped in the hallway between halves of a game long enough to mumble a few cliches. In baseball, all the explanations are still saved for the end of the game — assuming the guys who figured in the crucial plays also happened to be talking that day. Hockey, on the other hand, provides access to everybody just about any time: the commissioner, the coaches, even sweaty, out-of-breath, just-embarrassed players popped up practically every time television asked. Want the guy whose goal put the Devils ahead going into the final period of the franchise's biggest game? Dentures in or out? How about the Detroit goleie who gave up the score? With tears or without? It makes hockey look and feel real. That's why the NHL can get actor Matthew Perry from the hip TV show "Friends" to do a commercial in which he describes the winner of the Stanley Cup, without blinking, as the greatest team in the coolest game on earth. That might seem like an overstatement at the moment, but there's no doubt hockey is moving up the charts. When Wayne Gretzky moved south from Edmonton, Canada, to Los Angeles, people scoffed at the idea that a game played on frozen ponds in Canadian winters would thrive in warm-wear towns; the league now includes a handful of such cities with sold-out arenas. Hockey may never catch basketball and football. But the damage from baseball's last work stoppage has made it look like a game running in place. It may be more than just coincidence that John McMullen sold baseball's Houston Astros a few years back and bought hockey's Devils. Either way, if I am a baseball owner right about now, I am pricing a pair of roller blades. Knicks talk to Ford about steering team in 1995-96 campaign The Associated Press NEW YORK — Fired Boston Celtics coach Chris Ford has talked with New York Knicks general manager Ernie Grunfeld about coaching next season. Ford met with Grunfeld in New York on Monday after returning from a weekend trip to Bermuda. Pat Riley resigned as Knicks coach June 15. Ford was fired as Celtics coach last month and replaced as coach by Celtics general manager M.L. Carr. Former Golden State general manager and coach Don Nelson also is being considered for the Knicks coaching job. "There's no urgency here," Grumfeld said. "We don't have a pick in the draft, so there's no deadline there. We're just going to take our time." "It was a typical meeting in the coaching interview process," Ford said. "A good, long meeting. I thought it was a good interview. I was very comfortable." Ford, 46, who had a 222-188 record with the Celtics, thinks the Knicks are still one of the NBA's better teams. "I think they're still a very good, very strong team. Their defense is very good. And defense wins." Asked if money would be a factor in taking the New York job, Ford said that was the territory of his agent, Lonnie Cooper. "I'm interested in being a coach," Ford said. He will be paid more than $800,000 a season for two seasons by the Celtics if he does nothing. He will forfeit that salary if he takes another job in the NBA. Ford played 10 years in the NBA. Riley hires lawyer wants to invalidate contract, paper says The Associated Press NEW YORK — Pat Riley hired a lawyer the day he resigned as coach of the New York Knicks to handle a potential breach of contract suit, The New York Times reported yesterday. The newspaper said Riley, who resigned June 15 before leaving for Greece, was believed to have been represented by Stanley Arkin of the New York firm of Arkin, Schaffer and Supino. Riley is attempting to invalidate the fifth and final year of his contract and free himself to coach next season without permission from the Knicks or compensation for his services. "I do think he's got a lawyer looking into that," Madison Square Garden president Dave Checkettts The Times said Riley could contend that significant changes in the Garden's corporate structure had altered the conditions under which he agreed to work. Checketts said he had not been contacted by Riley's lawyer. He denied Riley's contract had been breached and said he would fight to prevent him from coaching next season. said. "He's exploring it, and I think it will intensify when he gets back." The Knicks claim Riley sought part-owned of the team, and Checkets said there was not a transaction Riley did not approve. Riley said at the time of his resignation that he had stressed to management his need to be charged with ultimate responsibility for all significant aspects of the club. Woman says Rodman gave her virus Spurs player is accused of transmitting herpes The Associated Press ATLANTA — A former Atlanta Hawks cheerleader told a federal jury yesterday that she kept a memento box filled with souvenirs of her time with Dennis Rodman, who romanced her with cards and roses before giving her herpes. Her lawyers introduced the cards and basketball game ticket stubs and plane tickets that Judd had saved in a memento box. Lisa Bethe Judd, 24, is suing the NBA star for unspecified damages. She claims Rodman, with whom she'd had an on-and-off relationship since April 1991, gave her herpes on Jan. 14, 1993, when he came to Atlanta as a member of the Detroit Pistons. Judd described herself in testimony as a trusting young woman who never asked Rodman if he dated other women and believed him when he told her he did not have a sexually transmitted disease. She said Rodman was a romantic suitor who gave her cards and roses he bought at a grocery store. Lawyers for Judd claimed Rodman, now with the San Antonio Spurs, gave herpes to two other "He was sweet. He was a gentleman. He was a kind person," she said. women shortly before he transmitted it to her. In a videotaped deposition shown to the jury yesterday, Rodman said he had tested negative for herpes in 1988 but was diagnosed with the virus in March 1993. He said he took the test after another girlfriend accused him of giving her herpes. Judd testified that the same Rodman girlfriend, who testified anonymously Monday on videotape, called her in January 1993 about Rodman. When she learned that she had heres, Judd said,"I felt angry; I felt sad: I felt hurt." She said she had previously asked Rodman about his sexual history and he told her that he was tested for the NBA and was clean. She said she believed him because she didn't think he'd do anything to hurt her. He disagreed with several of his statements in his sworn deposition, telling Judd's attorney he had joked about his net worth and hadn't told them the truth. "He was sweet. He was a gentleman. He was a kind person." Lisa Both Ju He also made varying statements regarding an Lisa Beth Judd plaintiff in Rodmanlawsuit In direct testimony, Rodman offered contradictory statements about whether he had the disease. He claimed his doctor told him he had a bacterial infection. "Before March, I didn't know I had herpes because there were no visible marks. ... I've never had an eruption at all," he said. earlier one, given under oath, that he hadn't believed he had gotten Judd pregnant or paid for her to have an abortion. Judd, who now lives in Orange County, Calif., described their relationship as close and said Rodman often paid for her to fly to see him play. She said he paid $3,000 for her to visit her sisters in California on vacation. Judd claims Rodman was the only one of her sexual partners with whom she never used a condom. "I trusted him," she said. She said he never told her he had married the mother of his young daughter. Rodman's attorneys said there was no evidence Rodman had ever herpes in transmittable form and no medical evidence that the women who said he gave it to them have the disease. 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Downtown Shop Park in the rear State Radiator Specializing in: • Radiators • Heaters • A/C Student Friendly Close to Downtown 842-3333 613 N. 2nd Roller Skate NATURAL WAY We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts Natural Fiber Clothing Natural Body Care PARKER'S BLOOMS Flowers of Summer 820-822 Mass. 841-0100 Kansas women's hoops hard at work Summer routine increases unity physical fitness By Jenny Wledeke Kansan staff writer Instead of spending the summer relaxing and enjoying the sun, the Kansas women's basketball team is spending its time in the weight room. The team has set its sights on a Big Eight Conference title and a trip to the women's NCAA Final Four. The Jayhawks know the sacrifice they must make to reach their goal. "Summer conditioning is just one step in the ladder," Kansas junior forward Shelly Canada said. "The Big Eight title, the Final Four, it all starts during the off-season." The team spends as much as three hours a day, four times a week condition- ing together. Conditioning includes extensive weightlifting and a variety of running exercises. On an average day, the Jayhawks will lift for about two hours and then run sprints "...no team should get out of shape during a break.A vacation from school does not mean a vacation from conditioning." in Anschutz Sports Pavilion or at Memorial Stadium. It is grueling work but also necessary. Leroy Brown strength coach, Kansas women's basketball team Leroy Brown, strength coach for the women's team this summer, said that summer conditioning was all part of a cycle. "The philosophy in the weight room is that no team should get out of shape during a break," Brown said. "A vacation from school does not mean a vacation from conditioning." The women's basketball team shares this philosophy and has dedicated its summer not only to maintaining its condition but also to gaining strength and quickness as well. "The stronger individuals get in the summer the stronger the team will be during the season," Canada said. stay is voluntary and is not required by the University. The tough summer regimen has other benefits, too. The decision for the players to "When we work together, we support and encourage each other, which will carry on to the court during King is spending her first summer in college away from her Memphis, Tenn., home. games and practice," Kansas sophomore guard Tasha Kirsten said. "You do what you have to do," King said. "Both my parents un-derstand and are glad that I'm taking classes while I'm here so I can graduate." In addition to the work in the weight room, many members of the team are playing in a summer league in Topeka. The league, which is NCAA approved, is made up of only women college players. "It's really good competition," Canada said. "The level is raised up since all the players are at the college level." Last year, the Jayhawks finished third in the Big Eight with a 20-11 record. One of the losses came in the first round of the NCAA tournament to Wisconsin. "It takes a lot of work in and out of season to become a great team." King said. "Right now we're out of season and doing all we can to become one of those great teams." Although the team lost All-American Angela Aycock, this year the Jayhawks hope to make the trip to the Final Four with four returning starters and an experienced bench. This puts a big emphasis on preseason conditioning. Devils work just beginning after Stanley Cup victory Team ponders its options for future The Associated Press EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Two days after winning the NIL's Stanley Cup, the New Jersey Devils took another legal step to break their lease and clear the way for a possible move — perhaps to Nashville, Tenn. — after the 1996-97 season. However, even though the Devils notified the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority of their intent to end their agreement in two years that doesn't necessarily mean the team will be leaving. Devils president and general manager Lou Lamorielle said the team was continuing to negotiate with the Sports Authority on a new lease. He said the team issued its termination notice to preserve its legal rights. Gov. Christie Whitman, an ally of team owner John McMullen, remains optimistic the two sides can agree on a new lease, her representative said. The current lease, renegotiated in 1991, expires in 2002. The notice came hours before the Devilis announced a Meadowlands Arena rally in honor of their Stanley Cup victory. "We were looking at a celebration, not a termination," said Rita Manno, Whitman's representative. "It did come as a surprise, but it may be strictly a legal maneuver on the part of the Devils." Harley Hotchkiss, a part-owner of the Calgary Flames and the new chairman of the league's board of governors, said a move by the Devils would be a public-relations blunder for the league. McMullen refused to comment on the situation Saturday night after the Devils won their first Stanley Cup by sweeping the Detroit Red Wings. But the word came from his attorneys Monday. The Devils are seeking to break their lease by using an amendment contained in the original agreement signed in 1982. That amendment allowed the team to end its franchise agreement after 15 full seasons. The renegotiated agreement in 1991 pushed the date the Devils could end their lease to 2002. On Monday, the Devils maintained the 1991 amendment was invalid. "For the past four years, the Authority and the Devils have abided by the terms of that amendment which the Authority maintains is valid," Sports Authority chairman Michael Francis and chief executive officer Robert Mulcahy said in a joint statement. The notice is the second legal maneuver by the Devils in recent months. They also filed a default notice with the Sports Authority listing 13 points on which they alleged the Authority had violated its lease. If any one of those points were proved, the Devils would be free to move. The Devils moved to New Jersey for the 1982-83 season after starting as an expansion franchise in Kansas City that later moved to Colorado. The team was one of the league's doormats during its early years but in 1988 made the playoffs for the first time. The Devils got within a goal of making their first Stanley Cup final in 1994, losing the Eastern Conference final to the New York Rangers in double overtime of Game 7. Jacques Lemaire's team didn't fall short this year, posting a 16-4 record in the playoffs. The recent offer from Nashville included $20 million to move, more luxury boxes and a share of revenues from other events held at 20,000-seat arena — scheduled to be completed in 1996. McMullen, a New Jersey resident, has been troubled not only by his lease but by his team's inability to attract big crowds. Attendance averaged 16,000 this season which was 3,000 short of capacity. NFL football rams back into St. Louis The Associated Press ST. LOUIS — The Rams' long-awaited move became a reality Monday when 11 moving vans filled with everything from footballs to blocking sleds roared into St. Louis. The moving vans are the first in a caravan of 18 vehicles being used to move the Rams from Anaheim, Calif. They arrived downtown shortly after noon for an impromptu welcoming event. The Rams training camp doesn't begin until July 16, so many of players have yet to arrive. "Well, if people will come out to see this, surely they'll have no trouble selling tickets to the games," said Nick Hume of Farmington as the first truck burst through a welcome banner that had been strung across Market Street at Kiener Plaza. The truck had "GO RAMS" spelled on its grill. Hurne, who happened to be in St. Louis for the day, was among about 150 people watching the trucks roar by. Many of them said they were just outside for lunch and wanted to see what was going on. Tim Long's presence was no accident. Long, of St. Louis, already has bought Rams season tickets and is a veteran team booster. He's attended several rallies and other events. "I'm glad they're finally here," he said. "It's been a long wait." The vehicles began the 1,800-mile trip on Friday. Most of the vans drove east toward Oklahoma, where they headed north to Wichita, Kan., up to Kansas City and on to St. Louis, said Richard McClure, an executive vice president at United Van Lines. After the drive-by of Kiener Plaza, the trucks headed for Mathews-Dickey Boys' Club and Maryville University where the Rams have set up temporary facilities. That was the 250,000 pounds of equipment and furniture from California would be unloaded. Cramming nearly 50 years of tradition into trunks and boxes proved just about as tough as convincing the NFL to allow the move. After initially saying no, league owners gave the go-ahead in April. Frontiere was in St. Louis but was unable to attend the welcoming event, officials said. "We've been planning our move to St. Louis since April, and we're delighted to finally settle into our new home," Rams owner Georgia Frontiere said in a prepared statement. "This is the beginning of a new era for the Rams, and we're anxious for it to get under way." Most of the Rams' employees are making the move with the team, officials said. But some will remain in California for an undetermined amount of time. HEY! WE'RE ONE YEAR OLD ON JULY 1ST! JOIN US FOR FOOD, FUN & BALLOONS FOR THE KIDS!! 9 E.8th St. Downtown Lawrence 749-2477 HERBIVORES JUICE BAR & DELI You'll Love Our Food! Hours Mon-Sat 11-10pm Sun 12-7pm Lentil Burgers $2.50 each FREE ICE TEA with purchase And you will be if you hop aboard one of Kawasaki's 1995 JET SKI $^{\mathrm{II}}$ personal watercraft. From the light and maneuverable JET SKI 550SX to the ultimate cross-trainer X-2, Kawasaki has just what you need. And when you're ready, be sure and check out the performance king—the JET SKI 750SX and its 743cc two-stroke twin engine offering 551 pounds of thrust. Take notice and get to your Kawasaki dealer today. JET SKI JET SKIER STAND UP AND BE NOTICED JETSKI ©1995 Kawasaki Motors Corp, U.S.A. Always wear a personal flotation device and other appropriate apparel. Kawasaki Let the good times roll KVI Kaw Valley Industrial 1106 E. 23rd St. • Lawrence (913) 841-9751 New Girls New Girls Brooke Wearing nothing but a smile... S Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 At the top of Naismith Hill $2 admission with student ID Juicers Showgirls Open Tues-Sat, 7:30p-mo 1:40m Fr & sund 2:00m 911 N. Second Wednesdays are STUDENT NIGHTS - Window tinting - Convertible tops - Solar treatment - Targa To Suntint & Audio Free $10 Gift Certificate when you sign-up your new KU student for pre-ordered Books. Auto Customizing Neon Sun Roofs Ground Effects Running Boards ■ Luggage Racks ■ Truck Sliding Windows Alarms Keyless Entry Parents boards 841-4779 841-4779 10% Discount With Any Complete Service 2201 W. 25th located behind Sac's & Food For Less YELLOW HOUSE FIREWORKS FREE ENTERTAINMENT Live Bands - Free Estimates - Come see what we can do for your car. July 4 Train Wreck Band July 3 • Jokers Wild Band July 4 • Train Wreck Band Open July 2, 3, 4 • 6 am - midnight Music Starts at 7:00 • Largest Selection in Lawrence! - Largest Selection in Lawrence! - Great Prices: Roman Candles & Cognic Cones 4/5 * Over 30 new items excuse to our stand! Giant rolls of firecrackers 1 city block long! Alien Invasion * Biggest Blast Yet! LOCATION Same as last year! North Lawrence, Just past Tanger Outlet across from Tee Pee Junction USA - Indian Tacos sold by Haskell Alumni - BBQ Rib Dinners sold by Community Church COUPON Buy 10 Jumping Jacks, Get 10 FREE! COUPON Buy 10 Jumping Jacks, Get 10 FREE! SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 28, 1995 7B Kansas athletes come to the Anschutz Pavilion rehabilitation room to get injuries treated with supplies like these. As many as 350 athletes a day come to the room for some kind of treatment. 944 Mass. 832-8228 SURG CMT EDI-G Framer colorless PUF SKIN Edmee Rodriguez/ KANSAN Injured Jayhawks fly to Anschutz By Dan Gelston Kansan staff writer Jennifer Kaul vividly remembers March 6, when she received an unexpected hiatus from her days as a Kansas cheerleader. She was practicing her tumbling, getting ready for the end of the basketball season, when she heard a loud pop from her right knee. Kaul soon joined other injured athletes who spend much of their time in the training room at Anschutz Pavilion working to rehabilitate sports injuries. Lynn Bott, head trainer for Kansas sports, said as many as 350 athletes a day came in for some sort of treatment. Trainers help the injured with their rehabilitation. Some athletes are there to prevent injuries: taping ankles and soothing minor aches with heat or ice applications. The pop that Kaul heard was a torn anterior cruciate ligament, a rupture in the knee within the joint. The day after the injury, she went to Anschutz for an opinion. After seeing two more doctors, including her own, she underwent surgery on April 5. She began the rehabilitation process immediately but found it difficult at first. "The first day of rehab was hell for me. I was crying," Kaul said. "But I've gotten used to it, and now I love it. It's so exciting, and I've gotten so much better already. I actually look forward to going." Kaul's injury was supposed to keep her out of action for at least six months, but five days a week of strenuous rehab have helped accelerate the process. Carol Jarosky, assistant athletic trainer, said that it was common for athletes with a long-term rehabilitation to experience great progress initially, but that the progress would eventually slow. "By about the better." Kaulsaid. Her exercises have evolved from leg raises and squatting to make her leg stronger, to jogging and more cardiovascular exercises to give the leg more flexibility. Steven Munns, orthopedic surgeon and director of Kansas sports "There are times when it gets discouraging,but I know I'm getting better." fourth or fifth month they don't see the daily progress that they used to, even though it might be there. That's when they get discouraged." Jarosky said. After two months of rehabilitation, Kaul agrees. "There are times when it gets discouraging, but I know I'm getting medicine comes to the training room once a week to check on injured athletes. Jennifer Kaul Kansas cheerleader Munns said part of his job was to determine whether operating was necessary. "There are 12 to 18 injuries a year that require surgery that will put the athlete for a Kaul is aiming to come back in time for junior varsity cheerleading tryouts in August. She said making the squad was possible if she remained dedicated to her rehabilitation. period of time," he said. Some athletes, no matter how hard they work, can't come back. That was the case for Steve Douglas, a defensive tackle and offensive lineman for the Kansas football team, who earned a varsity letter in 1991. Just before the 1992 Aloha Bowl, he was doing jumping exercises in the sand when his knees buckled. The next days he couldn't bend his legs. "The trainers were excellent," Douglas said. "They don't let you go too fast but they push you and work with you depending on your capabilities at that time." Douglas tried to resume his career by doing rehabilitation exercises at the training room. That injury, coupled with previous knee problems, ended his playing career, despite surgery. Bott said that athletes could come in any time they wanted, but that most of them were on some sort of schedule. As a result of his work and trainers' assistance, Douglas is now able to walk and run without pain. But he no longer can play football. For Kau, she knows her road to recovery remains a long one. "The job they've done with me here has been excellent," Kaul said. "I just want to say a giant thanks to all of them because I will be better and stronger because of this." Red Lyon Tavern HAPPY Wake up to Cedarwood Apartments Now leasing Summer & Fall Newly Redecorated Units Air Conditioning & Pool Close to Mall 1 Block from KU Bus route Studios 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom) Call Pat today at 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave. TAPROOM FREE POOL 5pm-9pm EVERYDAY! (New Tables) •801 New Hampshire• CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET Summer Sale All Swimming Suits 40% off CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET Spot Girl Mossimo Roxy SUNFLOWER Outdoor & Bike 843-5000 804 Massachusetts BIANCHI BIKE SALE! Bikes $769.00 CHI Now open Sundays 1-5pm TERRA NOVA BOOKSTORE and CAFE 920 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE, KS 66014 913-832-8300 TERRA NOVA BOOKSTORE and CAFE 920 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE, KS 66044 913-832-8300 NEW BOOKS NEW MAGAZINES NEW HOURS Monday - Thursday 10-9 Friday & Saturday 10-10\ Sunday 12-6 Our Cafe Now Open Serving coffee, teas & juices pastries & desserts Wearing nothing but a smile... New Girls Brooke Wednesdays are STUDENT NIGHTS $2 admission with student ID Juicers Showgirls Open Sun-Thurs 7:30pm:1:00am Fri & Sat until 2:00am 913 N. Second NEW BOOKS NEW MAGAZINES NEW HOURS Monday - Thursday 10-9 Friday & Saturday 10-10\ Sunday 12-6 Our Cafe Now Open Serving coffee, teas & juices pastries & desserts Raise your scores LSAT GMAT MCAT GRE Satisfaction Guaranteed Small Classes • Dynamic Instructors Practice Testing • Free Extra-Help THE PRINCETON REVIEW (800) 2-REVIEW info.chicago@review.com T.P.R. is not affiliated with Princeton University or E.T.S. LOUISE'S BAR DOWNTOWN Wednesday & Thursday $1.50 Schooners! Wearing nothing but a smile... New Girls Brooke Wednesdays are STUDENT NIGHTS $2 admission with student ID Juicers Showgirls Open Sun-Thurs 7:30pm-1:00am Fri & Sat until 2:00am 913 N. Second We sell the sports equipment you want to buy! The best new & used equipment around We BUY, SELL, TRADE, & CONSIGN quality used sports equipment. Just Say Sorbet Try our new sorbet today & receive 50¢ off a medium cone or cup of sorbet! Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500 I Can't Believe It! Yogurt! Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-0440 Wearing nothing but a smile... New Girls Brooke Wearing nothing but a smile... New Girls Brooke Wednesdays are STUDENT NIGHTS $2 admission with student ID Juicers Showgirls Open Sun-Thurs 7:30pm-1:00am Fri & Sat until 2:00am 913 N. Second Wednesdays are STUDENT NIGHTS $2 admission with student ID Juicers Showgirls Open Sun-Thurs 7:30pm-1:00am Fri & Sat until 2:00am 913 N. Second Raise your scores LSAT GMAT MCAT GRE Satisfaction Guaranteed Small Classes ◆ Dynamic Instructors Practice Testing ◆ Free Extra-Help THE PRINCETON REVIEW (800) 2-REVIEW info.chicago@review.com → We sell the sports equipment you want to buy! The best new & used equipment around U baseball golf bag bench weights golf bag bench weights We sell the sports equipment you want to buy! The best new & used equipment around We BUY, SELL, TRADE, & CONSIGN quality used sports equipment. PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Mass. phone 841-PLAY Just Say Sorbet Try our new sorbet today & receive 50¢ off a medium cone or cup of sorbet! Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500 I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-0440 PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS Just Say Sorbet Try our new sorbet today & receive 50¢ off a medium cone or cup of sorbet! Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500 I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-0440 8B Wednesday, June 28, 1995 NBADRAFT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Portland blazing many trails as draft nears The Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. — If the Portland Trail Blazers don't make a trade to move up in tonight's draft, it won't be for lack of trying. Blazers president Bob Whitsitt said he had talked to several teams but, as usual, he was keeping any specifics about prospective deals to himself. Portland has the 18th and 19th picks and, with the team looking to make major moves to rebuild its aging roster, has its sights on moving up among the lottery choices. "We're still interested in doing that," Whitsitt said Monday, "but in all scenarios, it takes two to make a deal." ESPN reported early today that the Blazers would send their two first-round picks and their lone second-round selection to Detroit for the Pistons No. 8 pick. An earlier report had Portland making a three-way deal with Detroit and Washington that would send Otis Thorpe to the Pistons and Rod Strickland to the Bullets in exchange for Washington's No. 4 pick. That report had Portland drafting high school phenomenon Kevin Garnett. Whitsi所叫Garnett the wild card of the draft. But "Trader Bob," as Whitsitt was known when he was running Seattle's basketball operation, likes to take the kinds of risk that drafting a high school player would represent. "Basketball-wise, he's got great potential, but you've got to look at everything." Whitstis said. "It's an exciting, scary, risky, rewarding proposition, which is what makes our job fun." Garnett averaged 25.2 points, 17.9 rebounds and 6.7 assists a game at Farragut Academy in Chicago. If Portland winds up with Detroit's No. 8 pick, that probably wouldn't be high enough to land Garnett. But the Blazers probably could get guard Shawn Respert of Michigan State, considered the best shooter available, or 6-foot-11 center Cherokee Parks of Duke. If the Blazers aren't able to move up, Whitsitt said it was impossible to know who would be available when their 18th and 19th picks were made. He said the team's biggest needs were for shooters and players who could run the floor, but the team wouldn't hesitate to select a power forward, the deepest position in the draft. "Whether they could help right away is a tough question," he said, "but I think we can get two guys who can be good NBA players." Among those who could be available at No. 18 and 19 are power forwards Gary Trent, 6-8, from Ohio; Mario Bennett, 6-9, from Arizona State; David Vaughn, 6-10, from Memphis; and Alan Henderson, 6-9, from Indiana. Among point guards, Cory Alexander, 6-1, from Virginia; Travis Best, 5-11, from Georgia Tech; and Tyus Edney, 5-10, from UCLA, could be available. If Strickland is traded, Portland could use a point guard. One player whose stock has fallen considerably in recent weeks is 6-11, 270-pound center Rashard Griffith of Wisconsin. Whitsitt calls Griffith one of the strongest guys in the draft, but there are many questions about his attitude and lack of polish. Whitsitt has cleared the way for offseason moves in his first full summer in charge of the Blazers basketball operations. His maneuvering led to Toronto's selection of Jerome Kersey in the expansion draft, removing Kersey's $4.4 million salary from the roster. Another possibility is 7-1 Lithuanian Zyndrunas ligauskas. "Tough decisions have to be made, but this team has been paralyzed the last two years" by player contracts, he said. "You have to try to regain some flexibility." Possible hoop heroes take final step in draft By Wendy E. Lane The Associated Press TORONTO (AP) — Even though the calendar says 1995, today's NBA draft is really a draft for the 21st century. Among the players likely to be taken in the top five are three 20-year-olds and two 19-year-olds, players who may not be fully developed pros until the year 2000. Perhaps they'll get there sooner, and a couple may not get there at all. It's hard to tell, say scouts and general managers. Maryland's would-be junior Joe Smith, the probable top pick, is 19, as is Kevin Garnett, the Chicago high school student who's trying to become just the fifth player to play in the NBA without appearing in a college game. North Carolina's Jerry Stackhouse and Rasheed Wallace and Alabama's Antonio McDyess are all 20 and turning pro after playing just two seasons in college. "It's going to be a challenge for everybody to make an adjustment," Stackhouse said. "Some guys will make the adjustment in training camp. Some guys will take until February." What makes this year's draft hard to figure out is, none of the likely top five picks — all 20 years old or younger — have fully developed games. NBA DRAFT "It's not a Shaquille O'Neal-like draft, where you could make the top pick blindfolded," said Washington coach Jim Lynam, whose team has the fourth pick. "I think each of these top four guys are very, very good players. Each one offers something a bit different." Here, then, is a rundown of how the selections might shake out: 11. Milwaukee — Damon Stoudamire, 5-10, guard, Arizona ... This draft's glaring weakness is point guards. Although he's small, Stoudamire is the best of the bunch. Christian ... The NCAA's leader in both scoring and rebounding, he gives Miami a young alternative to Kevin Willis at power forward. 12. Dallas — Corliss Williamson, 6-7, forward. Arkansas ... Great desire will make him a good fit with 13. Sacramento — Randolph Childress, 6-2, guard, Wake Forest ... A fine scorer whom the Kings hope can make the switch to point guard. 14. **Boston — Bob Sura**, 6-5, guard. Florida State ... Quick and loves to shoot. After all, M.L. Carr can't draft himself. Or can he? 15. Denver -- Gary Trent, 6-8, forward, Ohio ... Strong low-post player over games. the rest of the young and hungry Maverricks. Dallas needs a center but will take Williamson's inside toughness. 16. Atlanta — Alan Henderson, 6-9, forward, Indiana ... Hawks the ol' best-player-available route. Henderson's defensive skills are a plus. 17. Cleveland — Brent Barry, 6-6, guard, Oregon State ... The Cavaliers traded for shooting guard Harold Miner but take Barry as insurance. 1. Golden State — Joe Smith, 6-10, forward, Maryland ... New Warriors GM Dave Twardzik decides to go for an inside force with good range. Needs time to develop, but will help Warriors fill the void left by Chris Webber's departure. 5. Minnesota — Kevin Garnett, 6-10, forward, Farragut (Chicago) HS The Timberwolves gamble on a 19 2. Philadelphia — Jerry Stackhouse, 6-6, guard, North Carolina... The 76ers make a deal with the Clippers to trade up one spot and grab a player being hyped as the next Michael Jordan. That praise is probably too high, but he is the most ready among this crop of super sophomores. 3. Los Angeles Clippers — Antonio McDpessy, 6-9, forward, Alabama ... Stock soared after strong performance in NCAA tournament. Athletic player who is a good defender will get a chance to learn the game from coach Bill Fitch. 4. Washington — *Rasheed Wallace*, 6-10, center, North Carolina ... With Webber's great hands and Wallace's ability to run the floor, the two will form an impressive front line and the Bullets should make a quantum leap forward. 7. Toronto — Bryant Reeves, 7-0, center, Oklahoma State ... Big Country comes to the Great White North. Best true center in the draft. 1995 NBA draft order 6. *Vancouver — Ed O'Bannon*, 6-8, forward, UCLA Concerns about his arthritic knee notwithstanding, O'Bannon has the character and the skills to form an excellent foundation for an expansion franchise. year-old with loads of promise as well as loads of immaturity. But new Wolves GM Kevin McHale is the ideal person to help shape him. 8. Detroit — Cherokee Parks, 6-11, center, Duke ... The Blue Devil connection is at work here, rearranging Parks and Grant Hill to play for new coach GM Doug Collins, whose son was also a college teammate. 9. New Jersey ... Shaun Respert, 6-3, guard, Michigan State ... Nets need a shooting guard, and Respert is a great shooter. But his lack of size gives the Nets one of the league's smallest backcourts. 10. Miami — Kurt Thomas, 6-9, forward, Texas ¶ ¶ 1. Golden State Warriors 2. Los Angeles Clippers 3. Philadelphia 76ers 4. Washington Bullets 5. Minnesota Timber wolves 6. Vancouver Grizzlies 7. Toronto Raptors 8. Detroit Pistons 9. New Jersey Nets 10. Miami Heat 11. Milwaukee Bucks 12. Dallas Mavenicks 13. Sacramento Kings 14. Boston Celtics 15. Denver Nuggets 16. Atlanta Hawks 17. Cleveland Cavaliers 18. Portland Trail Blazers 19. Portland Trail Blazers (from Houston Rockets) 20. Chicago Bulls 22. Charlotte Hornets 23. Indiana Pacers 24. Dallas Mavericks (from New York Knicks) 20. Chicago Bulls 21. Phoenix Suns (from Los Angeles Lakers) 25. Orlando Magic 26. Seattle Supersonics 27. Phoenix Suns 28. Utah Jazz 29. San Antonio Spurs 18. Portland — Travis Best, 5-11, guard, Georgia Tech . . . Rod Strickland will be traded, so coach P.J. Carlesimo needs a point guard. 19. Portland — Zyndrunas Igauskas, 7-1, center, Lithuania ... Blazers take a chance on the 20-year-old Lithuanian, who will have countryman Arvydas Sabonis to help ease his transition. 22. Charlotte — Michael Finley, 6-7, guard, Wisconsin ... Streaky shooter who played forward in college. Hornets want someone more productive than shooting guard Hersey Hawkins. 20. Chicago - David Vaughn, 6-10, forward, Memphis ... Will provide the rebounding help the Bulls need. 21. Phoenix — Rashard Griffith. 6-11, center, Wisconsin ... Lackluster pre-draft workouts hurt him, but the Suns go for a center. 23. Indiana -- Mario Bennett, 6-9, forward, Arizona State ... Pacers are deep at his position, but Bennett's too good to pass up at this slot. 24. Dallas --- Greg Ostertag, 7-2, center, Kansas ... Mavericks fill their need at center. 25. Orlando — Sherell Ford, 6-7, forward, Illinois-Chicago Adds 27. Phoenix — Tusx Edney, 5-10, guard, UCLA ... The Suns lost Trevor Ruffin in the expansion draft and Elliot Perry is a free agent, so the talented but tiny Edney will back up Kevin Johnson. 26. Seattle - Eric Williams, 6-8, forward, Providence ... Impressed scouts at pre-draft camp with scoring and rebounding ability. 29. San Antonio — Lawrence Moten, 6-5, guard, Syracuse ... A creative two-guard. Spurs starter Vinny Del Negro was a disappointment in the postseason. 28. Utah — Lou Roe, 6-7, forward, Massachusetts ... Lack of height hurts him, but he's tough, especially downlow. **BIG EIGHT:** Greg Oostergaard and Bryant Reeves are expected to go in the first round of the draft. Page 108. Classified Directory 100s Announcements 105 Personal 110 Business Personal 120 Announcements 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employment Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of the law. 205 Help Wanted 205 Professional Services 235 Typing Services All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which may be illegal if demand "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or dis Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised on this newspaper are available on our website. 卫 300s Merchandise 100s Announcements Avoid long waits in an emergency room. Try LAWRENCE PROMPTCAFE. Full-service urgent care center staffed by experienced and trained nurses. For general care, fracture care, and laceration repair. Open 8am-11pm, Mon-Fri and 12-11pm on weekends. Visit Medical Arts Centre, Kasold, and Clinton Phipps. 120 Announcements --- Miracle Video Summer Clearance. All adult tapes on sale starting at $9.98 and up. N 10.2 N. REFOUND SOUND 1-913-842-2555 100% BUY.SELL.TRADef 623 MASS. LAWRENCE, KS 340 For Sale 345 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy Dance on June 30 at the Hideaway 18 or older to enter Meeting Thursday, June 29 Rm4 in Smith Hall 200s Employment LOST. Your student health insurance. Temporary coverage 14 months plan, monthly (up to 5 days). Medical insurance. Men and Women 140 Lost & Found 205 Help Wanted print. Portfolio availon... prints Management Trainee. Start now! Expanding corporation needing to fill positions. No experience necessary. Call 832-0327 Child care needed for two boys - 8 in my home. Monday - Fridays - 12:00 noon. 13:00- 18:02 Saturday - Sunday Fine art photography seeks model for gallery-oriented projects. Pay hourly or trade for professionals. Call (212) 689-3400. RESUMES *Professional Writing* *Cover Letters* *Consultation* Linda Morton Certified Linda Morton, Certified Professional Resume Writer TRANSCRIPTIONS 842-4619 1012 Mass, Suite 201 A Member of PA RW Professional Association of Brain Writers SUMMER JOBS for the Seeking active person for summer to work with 13 year old boy. Must be patient, soft-spoken and active Prefer someone majoring in psychology development, but not necessary. Call 542-3311 SUMMER JOBS for the Environment $2,500-$3,500/summer Save Endangered Species Protect public lands Campaign against skills Work with the Sierra Club, the nation's oldest and largest environmental group. Just stop the war on the environment. Rapid advance, career - Kansan Classified: 864-4358 WANTED: Photograph for wedding on July 29 in KCMO. Contact Gene at B82-710 or 864-2749. Morning Part-time office Assistant Schumm Food Co. has an immediate opening for a morning P/T office assistant. Previous office experience helpful. Starting pay $flr. approx. Food Co. has business office at 719 Mass. tjp, above the Smokehouse) Mon-Fri.tjp-4pm. Nanny needed: FT for kids (3, 6, 9 up). Must be a reliable, non-smoker who drives. Prefer live-in. Exp prev. and reef. ref. (913) 749-0325. Need part-time child care for ages 2 and 4. Car required. Heliable. non-smoker, likes children. Good with kids. Has exp. year. Experience preferred. Call 841-2228 Attention Veterans All Branches Use your military training and experience in the Kansas Army National Guard. Receive much more than a monthly paycheck. Benefits include: -Educational Benefits in addition to current VA Benefits -Credit of prior service time towards pay & retirement -Commissary/PX privileges -$200,000 Life Insurance -Last pay grade held up to E-6 Try one year! Work only one week-end a month! Call today! 842-0759 842-9293 STUDENT HOURLY BUSINESS SERVICES ASSISTANT $5.00/hr, 40 hours/wk for summer. Deadline: July 7, 1995. Duties: Types, copies and files Business Services documents; mailings and filing pertinent to monthly reports; data entry; vendor calls for account and order status; projections of business activities; daily deposit process; assist with monthly external billing and the mailing of monthly telephone bills. Obtain and complete an application from the Networking and Telecommunications Services reception desk. Address: Networking and Telecommunications Services Center, Kansas, Ellsworth Annex, 1736 Engel Road, Lawrence, KS 66045. Phone: 913-848-9390; Contact: Deanna Reina EO/AA STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT I. Deadline: 6/30/95. Salaries $4.35/.Duties include typing, filing, photocopying, distributing mail, and performing all assigned clerical duties with System Administrator privileges for documentation for this position. Required: Enrolling in 6 hours at the University of Kansas this fall. To apply, complete a job application to www.cmu.edu or the Computer Center. EO/AA EMPLOYER SUMMER WORK $9.75 STARTING - Entry Level - National Company - AASP Scholarships - ALLMAJORS - Work Part Time Around Classes CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION 842-6336 225 Professional Services 400s Real Estate offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-779 405 Real Estate 430 Roommate Wanted Thesis & Dissertations Hardbinding and Gold Stamping 3 Day Turnaround Lawrence Printing Service, Inc. 512 E. 9th Street 843-4600 TRAFFIC-DUIS' Fake D. & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law of offices DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelssey 16 East 13th 842-1133 VISA OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call justice For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 701 Tennessee 843-4023 BRAXTON B. COPLEY Attorney at Law GeneralPractice Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors, Landlord/Tenant 719 Massachusetts 749-5333 PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES Dale L. Clinton, M.D. Lawrence 841-5716 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS VISTORS DV-1. Greencard Program, by U.S. Immigration. 320-569-8881, 320-569-8881 (1010) 989-4625, 320-569-8881 (1010) 989-4625, 320-569-8881 (1010) 989-4625, 320-569-8881 (1010) 989-4625, 320-569-8881 (1010) 989-4625, Sunday - 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. HEADQUARTERS Counseling and information Telephone/In Person 24 Hours Confidential 841-2345 1419 Massachusetts St., Lawrence WE CAN HELP AMERICAN FAMILY INSURANCE AUTO HOME BUSINESS HEALTH LIFE American Family Insurance offers major medical health insurance for both short and long term needs. For more information, or for a quote on the premium, call today. DAVID A. RICE AGENCY 1014 Mass. (913)-749-1771 545 Minnesota SAAB VOLVO next to The Yacht Club Beau's Import Auto Service Quality car maintenance & repair. On or off sn. next to The Yacht Club. and other fine imports. MasterCard 842-4320 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, June 28, 1995 9B 235 Typing Services For ALL, your typing/editing/creative needs. All staff are GUARANTEED! All wives in GUARANTEED! Fast, friendly, reliable, accurate. Call Jael 81 at 980-2555 X 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale Desks, Bookcases, Chest of Drawers, Beds. Everything But Ice. on Mass. MDPED FOR SALE! 1986 Honda Arize 125. Great inexpensive transportation. $255 Call at (304) 728-2922. Full-size mattress set: New, never used. Still in plastic, warranty. $165. Brass headboard $50. (913) 739-9858. Queen size mattress set. New, never used. Will sell it. Brass headboard $29.95. 613-798-1398. Brass headboard $29.95. 613-798-1398. 340 Auto Sales 1983 CHEY MALIBU in good condition. Good in town and out of town vehicle. Asking $100/0 or best offer. Call Julia or Steve evenings at 841-5335 or leave message. For Sale: 1797 Datsun 280 Z. $1550 OBQ. Call Steve at 863-9854 or 863-3046. A 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent Pets Welcome* South Points ALAMEDA 2166 W.26th 843-6446 Swimming Pool • On KU Bus Route • Sand volleyball court - Swimming Pool - Sand volleyball course - Water & trash paid - Water & trash paid 1 2 2 &4 bedroom - 1,2,3&4bedroom apts. available · Ask about our brand apts. available - Ask about our brand new 3 bedroom villas *Restrictions An *Restrictions Apply SUNDANCE APARTMENTS 7th & Florida NowLeasingForFall Furnished Apartments Four Bedroom--Ask About Our Three Person Special Pool and Clubhouse 841-5255 COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5111 Now leasing for Fall Indoor/OutdoorPool 1+2 Bedrooms OnKUBus Route 1&2Bedrooms M-F10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 West Hills APARTMENTS Now Leasing for August Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts. GREAT LOCATION near campus DON'T WAIT ANY LONGER! OPENHOUSE Mon.-Fri. 12:30-5:00 Exercise Room From $345 to $900; Studios, 1, 2, & 3 BR apts. Water Trash pd. in studios, water, trash, gas heatpd. in apts. 2, 3, & 4BR townhomes. "Small" pets OK with dep. Pools, tennis, basketball, on bus route Reserve your home for Fall today! Aspen West Trailridge Apartments 2500 W 6th 913-843-7333, Fax 843-0197 No appointment needed - Water Paid - 2 Bdrm - LaundryonSite - No Pets - 2900 West 15th Lawrence,KS66049 865-2500 - New Dishwashers An exclusive opportunity for 4 students, Luxury, 1.5 year old 4 BHR 2-room Townhouse in Parkway Gardens. 2 Bath, 2 car garage, fully equipped kitchen, D draps, P patio, patio vaulted ceilings, W kitchen, Jawn kitchen, Vee, KU bus route, $800 per month, available, July 15. Call Paul, 843-3894. BERKELEY FLATS studios, super studios, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available for fall. But call today,they are going FAST! 842-2116 11th & Mississippi 2 BR apartment for rent available August 1. Gas heat, water, trash and cable paid. $473/month. 719-3085. --- meadowbrook AVAILABLE NOW! 1,2,and 3 bedroom apartments now available. - Studios LEASE beginning for summer and fall Variety of apartments that sell out fast! MEADOWBROOK APARTMENTS 15TH & CRESTLINE 842-4200 OPEN: MON-FRI-8-5:30 p.m. SAT-10-4 p.m. OPEN: MON-FRI-8-5:30 p.m. SAT-10-4 p.m. Sun-1-4 p.m. Spacious 3 BDRM Apts. Cats Welcome Bradford Square Apartments - microwave - dishwasher Modern Interiorswith *patio/deck - separate dining room - lots of closet space -convenient laundry facility lots of closet space convenient laundry is now leasing2 - on-site management - on KU bus route First Management 501 Colorado #B1 Mon.- Fri. 1-5p.m. Sat. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Stop by or call 749-1556 bedroom apls. forfall! - Gas, Heat/CA M-F 1-5pm 1740 Ohio 749-1436 - Microwave MASTERCRAFT Offers Completely Furnished Hanover Place 14th&Mass. 841-1212 Studio, 1,2,3, & 4bedroom apartments and townhomes Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2415 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-4226 COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND SECURE AN APARTMENT FOR FALL'95 Mon.-Fri9am-5pm Sat.10am-4pm Equal Housing Opportunity MASTERCRAFT Kaw Valley Management, Inc. is now leasing studio 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apartments, town homes, and houses. We have homes for immediate or Fall/Winter vacations. W 24th, W 28th, or call us at 608-4600 for more info *APPELERIO LEAP*. Now showing & 2 BRa for Aug. 1 leap. ACS, heat, water & trash pD. WD, disp& microwave. Call anytime. 843-8200. Sorry, no pets. Excellent Location 104.109, Tenn. Near nwr/KU, 3R bript a1-pt, place CA, pot nets $295 842-4242 Four Bedroom/Three Bath Featuring for Fall of'95 Leanna Mar Townhomes Featuring for Fall of '95 - Trash Compactor - Ceiling Fans in Every Rm. - Full-Size Washer/Dryer - Gas Fireplace - Walk-In Closets - Gas Heat - Carport Per Townhome Carport Pe 4501 Wimbeldon Dr. Call 841-7849 Office Hours (9-5), M-F A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere VILLAGE SQUARE apartments - Closetocampus - Spacious2bedroom - Laundry facility - Swimmingpool LEASE REQUIRED. Available Aug 1, possibly room. Roony luxury 3+ BR duplex on bus line. Baseset. Bowership W/D hookup. no. 680/ mo. negotiable 7378 738 for 5 or leave message. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 - On Bus Route Brand New! Be the First! Now leasing for spring or fall! - Professionally designed interiors - Three bedrooms, two full baths - SOUTHPOINTE ParkVillas - Washer/dryer Included 843-6446 - On KUbusroute - Great Location! PALM ISLAND - 3 Bedroom $595-$615 Nice quiet Setting 211 Mount Hope Court #3 For more info. or AppL. call 843-0011 or 842-3841 Mon-Fri 12 p.m. 2310West26thSt 4 stops on Property - Recently constructed - 4stops on Property - 2 Bedroom $410-$425 - 4 Bedroom $715-$725 - On bus route - On KU Bus Route with Super studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available NOW! Call Berkeley Flats today for the best prices 942-2160 11th & Mississippi Holiday Apartments - 2Laundry Rooms --offer... - Nice quiet setting - Some Washer/Dryer Hookups Volleyball Court Leasing for Summer& Fall Hookups Part25 We are now accepting deposits on apartments for the fall term. We feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence. (sorry no pets) 1 N/W Roommate to share 3BR cando, 2 full bath, 1 N/W College 1. Auggie Hill Condo $250 + mii+刮 1 N/W Apartment $299 + mii+刮 We presently have available a select few 1 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy. Call or stop by today 2401 W. 25th,9A3 842-1455 HOUSE FOR RENT! 1 block to campus, huge rooms, hardwood floors, ceiling fan, W/D. STOP BY AND SEED at t1470 Kentucky, OR CALL at (913) 766-5238 $160/month. 430 Roommate Wanted Interviewing for a roommate. Nice, quiet. Shawnee Lake area in Topeka. 3BR house, 2 car garage, full basement. A great deal! Must see! $350/mo. Call 913-277-9600. RENTALSOLUTIONS 1-800-888-GOKU ROOMMATE FINDER A&S NEED A ROOMMATE? 841-5454 Single Mom needs house mates immediately. 1 BR & full unfinished basement available. N/S preferred. Pets considered with deposit. $150 per room + 3'ful. Please call 842-8724. NAISMITH Hall LOOKING FOR A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE? Come by and see what Naismith Hall has to Lawrence's premier private student housing option-the exceptional, affordable choice for KU students Maidservice - Fully furnished and carpeted suites, each with their own bath - Swimmingpool - Convenient location next to campus and on KU bus route - Featuring our "Dine Anytime" program that serves teriffic meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner Don't forget to ask about our "Fast Back"Bonus! packet! Planned social activities to send an information market! Tours available daily including weekends-just drop by! 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 - IBM and Macintosh computer lab Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information Need Housing* Nice 1982 Rivertest, X 14 K 64, BR. Appl. CA $800. 849-068. 843-8559 --wan EDDINGHAM PLACE 24th and Eddingham Dr. OFFERING LUXURY 2BDRMAPARTMENTS - Swimming pool - Exercise weight room - Laundryroom - Energy Efficient - On site management - Daily 3:00-5:00 Professionally managed by Spacition 2 BF, Central Air, DW Back Porch. Pets Allowed 14th & New Air, Call 81-7591-7630. KVM S Management --- One bdrm, one bath, on bus route. Available April 1. Approx. 900 sq. ft. Unfurnished $380 a month. Call 865-0884. 2512 West 6th St. 749-1288 EAGLE APARTMENTS - 1 Bedroom $320 - 2 Bedroom $420 OPEN HOUSE Monday-Friday 1 - 4:30 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS - 1 Bedroom $520 - 2 Bedroom $380 - 3 Bedroom $600 - By phone: 864-4358 How to schedule an ad: THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Classified Information and order form Stop by the Kansan offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa. Ads charged in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. • Inperson - 119 Sniffle Flint You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund when cancelled before their expiration date. Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gage lines 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 that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kassan 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 | Gas per m³ per day | 2-3X | 2-8X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30+X | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 2.10 | 1.60 | 1.10 | 0.90 | 0.75 | 0.50 | 0.45 | | 1.95 | 1.20 | 0.80 | 0.70 | 0.65 | 0.45 | 0.45 | | 1.90 | 1.10 | 0.75 | 0.65 | 0.60 | 0.40 | 0.45 | | 1.80 | 0.95 | 0.65 | 0.60 | 0.55 | 0.35 | 0.35 | Classifications 105 personal 110 business personals 120 announcements 130 entertainment 140 local fund 385 for sale 205 helped want 340 auto sales 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous 255 home service 170 want to buy 105 for rent 103 roommate wanted ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print: 1 | | | | | | | 2 | | | | | | | 3 | | | | | | | 4 | | | | | | | 5 | | | | | | | Date of begins:___ Total days in paper ___ Total ad cost:___ Classification:___ VISA Account number: Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard (Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas) Furnish the following if you are charging your ad: Print exact name appearing on credit card: Signature: Expiration Date: MasterCard Vintage clothes for guys and gals -1900-1970- *new cottons and rayons* *accessories and costumes Barb's Vintage Rose 927 Mass./ 841-2451/ Mon-Sat 11-5 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE 10B WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28,1995 DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" • Complete Auto Repair • Machine Shop Service • Parts Department 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street HAS YOUR FIZZ TURNED FLAT? FLY A FISHER RICK'S BIKE SHOP 916 Massachusetts 841-6842 OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 5:00 Ostertag, Big Eight standouts near draft 'Mayor,'Big Country could produce in NBA By Robert Sinclair Kansan staff writer Former Oklahoma State center Bryant Reeves lost out to Oklahoma forward Ryan Minor for Big Eight Conference player of the year honors, but "Big Country" is looking to make a big splash in tonight's NBA draft. For the first time, the draft will be held outside of the United States and can be seen live from Toronto's SkyDome on TNT (Sunflower Cable Channel 2). "I think he'll have along, productive career," Pendergraft said of the 7-foot center. "He shows a lot of potential to improve and grow as a player. It's not 'what you see is what you get' with Brvant." Dave Pendergraft, scout for the Vancouver Grizzlies, said that it was very safe to say that Reeves was high on their list of potential draft choices. The Grizzlies have the sixth overall pick. Pendergraft said that Reeves — who averaged 21.5 points and 9.5 rebounds a game while leading the Cowboys to the NCAA Final Four — possessed many qualities which were encouraging to an NBA expansion team. The Grizzlies felt that Reeves was solid, dependable, consistent and professional. Pendergraft also said that Reeves had a defensive presence and great hands. "He has the ability to shoot the basketball and the potential to score in the NBA." he said. Pat Williams, Orlando Magic general manager, said that Reeves would be the first Big Eight player drafted. But Williams has his sights set on other players — namely Kansas center Greg Ostertag and Iowa State guard Fred Holberg. "Hoiberg is an excellent shooter, and you can't have enough shooters," Williams said. Last year, "The Mayor" led the Cyclones in scoring by averaging 19.9 points a game and shooting 43 percent from the floor. Both NBA teams might be looking to the Big Eight for future players, but O what a player! Career Statistics for Greg Ostertag 0 KU Year FG% RB avg. BS PPG Games 1991-92 .545 3.5 34 4.8 32 1992-93 .517 4.1 36 5.3 29 1993-94 .533 8.8 97 10.3 35 1994-95 .608 7.5 91 9.6 31 Career .552 6.1 258 7.5 127 these two teams have different needs. As an expansion team, Vancouver will be building for the future. Orlando will be hoping to find the final piece it needs to win the NBA Championship. The Magic were swept by the Houston Rockets 4-0 in this year's championship series. "You look at talent first of all," Williams said. "Then you need character, people that are going to play every day, work well with coaches and be influential in the community. You don't want to take on any problems." Another player hoping to make an impact in the NBA some day is Colorado guard Donnie Boyce. Boyce hasn't been able to tryout with any NBA teams, because he has been rehabilitating the leg he broke during last year's Big Eight tournament. Despite this, he still is confident. "I've talked to about all of the teams from (picks) 20 to 29 and in the early second round," said Boyce, who averaged 18.5 points a game for the Buffaloes. "I see myself as a late first-rounder." Iowa State's Loren Meyer also is being looked at by nBA teams. He has worked out with Atlanta, Charlotte, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Detroit, Portland, Dallas and Sacramento. "I've heard good things," the 6-10 center said. "In the workouts, I've been hitting the outside shot and been moving pretty good for a big man." **DRAFT:** Projected draft picks for the 29 teams and tonight's draft order. Page 8B. Big 'O' probable NBA pick tonight By Dan Gelston Kansan staff writer The Orlando Magic find themselves trailing by one point with 10 seconds to play. Point guard Anfernee Hardaway brings the ball up the court knowing he has to get it to his big center, who has dramatically altered the game with his shot- blocking ability. Hardaway looks and sees the center wide open. He makes a perfect pass down the lane to...Greg Ostertag? Greg Ostertag It could happen, and the possibility that the former Kansas center could don the uniform of the Eastern Conference Champions looms large entering tonight's NBA draft. At times Ostertag has shown promise, like when he became the most prolific shot-blocker in Big Eight Conference history with 258. Other times he has frustrated coaches and fans with his inconsistent scoring and rebounding. Despite his shortcomings, there is a great demand in the NBA for 7-foot-2 centers who can be intimidating in the middle. That demand has led to workouts with Dallas, Atlanta, Milwaukee, Phoenix and Charlotte. He also is one of For his career, Ostertag averaged less than double-digits in both scoring and rebounding, with 7.6 points and 6.1 boards a game. the Orlando's top prospects. "I think he's going to surprise people," said Pat Williams, Orlando Magic general manager. "He blocks shots, he's a good shooter and a great person. He'll be a late first, early second-round pick." Orlando has the 25th pick in the draft and would strongly consider Ostertag if he were available. Williams said. Ostertag hails from Duncanville, Texas, and might be returning home to play for the up-and-coming Dallas Mavericks. He would be on a young team that needs a center following the ill-fated return of drug-plagued Roy Tarpley. During his stay at Kansas, Ostertag's conditioning was a source of criticism by both coaches and critics. Only twice in his career did he play more than 30 minutes, and 17 times this year he failed to play at least 20. "I wish Greg would have worked a little harder during the summer," Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams said. "But once the season started, from the first practice on, he gave us everything that he could and that we needed. He was really important to us, and never did I question his dedication to the team." Williams also added that he felt Ostertag could make the transition to the pro game. "Greg will be a fine pro," Williams said. "He's a tremendous defensive rebounder and has tremendous size. He has to concentrate more on his offensive skills." Ostertag's sense of humor also should be an addition to any NBA team. "He's got a great sense of humor and that helps out a lot," said Pollard, Ostertag's former teammate. "He can make a team laugh if they're too serious, and he breaks up the tension. He's lots of fun." Have You No Class? London $349 Paris $379 Frankfurt $379 Madrid $369 Tokyo $478 Rome $459 the pardons, restrictions apply, items not included and the subject to charge and availability. 1·800·2COUNCIL (1·800·226·8624) Call today for a FREE Student Travel magazine! Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE June 26th Gospel Porch Singers Skirt Big Mouth June 28th Liquid (formerly known as Mountain Clyde) Marabouts Sun Barrow June 30th Punkinhead Bastard Squad July 1st Ed Hall Shiner Means to an End On Sale Now: 7/5 x-Cops (New Gwar Project) 7/11 Jayhawks 7/14 Tripping Daisy 7/19 Radio Bead Liberty Ball 7/12 Wide Spread Panic Granada The Samples 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 FREE th S FREE PHOTOFINISHING Develop 9 rolls of film at the regular low discount price and the 10th roll of C-41, 12 or 24 exposure standard size, single prints is on us! If 36 exposure only $3.00. Keep and reuse thru 12/31/95 Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Road 843-3826 "At the top of Naismith Hill" Summer Coolers PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS PARTY "10" 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING "NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY $30 TWO-FERS 2-PIZZAS 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES $9.00 CARRY-OUT 1-PIZZA 1-TOPPING 1-COKE $3.50 PRIMETIME 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES $11.50 842-1212 1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Center Attending K.U. COMFORTABLE & AFFORDABLE Living COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS We offer many great locations and floor plans... custom studios,1,2,3 and 4 bedroom apartments & Townhomes Campus Place 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Hanover Place 14th & Mass.841-1212 Regents Court 19th & Mass. • 749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida·841-5255 - custom furnishings •designed for privacy •energy efficient •many built-ins •affordable rates •private parking •locally owned •laundry facilities* Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas·749-2415 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226 - close to campus • locally managed • close to shopping • central a/c • on site managers* • pool* • microwaves* *available some locations 合 Stop by and view these great apartments! EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY MASTERCRAFT Professional Management and Maintenance Company