ADVERTISING: 864-4358 NEWS: 864-4810
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA. KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER
WEATHER CHANCE OF RAIN
OF KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1995
SECTION VOL.104,NO.153
V
High 83° Low 61°
Weather: Page 2A.
(USPS 650-640)
FEATURES
Working the graveyard
Late-night jobs put students on a different schedule. Page 1R
Page 1B
CAMPUS
A one-of-a-kind Hispanic on-line system has made its way to KU.
Students get HAPI at Watson
Page 3A
KINGMAN, Ariz. — A rare rife that federal authorities believe might have been stolen by the Oklahoma City bombing suspects has turned up in a pawnbench
Gun may link bomb suspects
The rifle, a Winchester Model 43
.22-caliber Hornet, is believed to be one of 66 weapons taken from Royal, Ark., gun collector Roger Moore in a $60,000 heist last November.
NEWS
BRIEFS
Jim Fuller, the owner of A&P Pawn, mentioned to FBI agents that he had recently purchased the unusual rife.
"I guess they made the connection and said, 'Jim, don't sell that gun, we'll be right back," Fuller said.
He said he bought the Winchester on May 26 from James Rosencrans, the next-door neighbor of Michael Fortier. Fortier is an Army buddy and close friend of bombing suspect Timothy McVeigh.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
A dozen of the stolen guns were similar to weapons the FBI said it had found at the Herington home of bombing suspect Terry Nichols. Agents said they could not make an exact match because the weapons' serial numbers had not been recorded.
Woman, Citadel continue battle
A federal appeals court ruled that Faulkner must be admitted to The Citadel next month — unless the state develops an acceptable alternative.
On Monday, Faulkner toured the women's college where the state wants to establish a leadership program that would keep her out of the all-male Citadel. After the 90-minute tour, she reiterated her desire to attend the Charleston military school as a cadet.
SPARTANBURG, S.C. — Shannon Falkner had seen most of Converse College before and knew she wouldn't like it any better this time.
"I will not come to Converse," Faulkner said. "It's not The Citadel, and there's no way they can duplicate The Citadel here in just a couple of months because that's not their goal."
U. S. District Judge C. Weston Houck joined Faulkner. He will decide whether to admit her to The Citadel or accept South Carolina's proposal to set up the Institute of Leadership for Women.
Classes may be billed by the hour
Students to pay increased tuition starting Fall 1996
By Kimberly Crabtree
Kansan staff writer
In fall 1996, students not only will be paying more tuition but also will do so in a different fashion.
The Board of Regents voted Thursday in its monthly meeting to convert the University of Kansas and Kansas State University to a linear tuition structure, whereby students will pay by credit hour. Now, fulltime students at both institutions pay a fixed tuition rate.
"This is important because some students will end up paying more while some will pay less," said Kim Cocks, KU student body president.
The Regents also approved a 6 percent tuition increase at KU and K-State and a 3 percent increase at all other Regents institutions beginning in the fall 1996. The additional increase at KU and K-State will cover expected losses from the conversion to linear tuition.
"We tried to keep all students in mind when determining tuition increases," said Stephen Jordan, executive director of the Board of Regents.
The School of Business will increase tuition for its masters of business administration program by $55 a credit hour in fall 1996 to finance expansion of the program by as many as 75 students.
Additionally, the Regents adopted fee increases for the School of Business and the School of Engineering classes at the Regents Center.
Similarly, School of Engineering courses at the Regents Center will cost $30 more a credit hour to meet the growing demand for the program.
The Regents also passed a proposal for KU, K-State and Wichita State University to seek legislative approval to restructure tuition accountability. Tuition accountability is a program designed to give the individual institutions more control over tuition.
Under the program, the three schools would retain all tuition revenue from enrollment growth but no longer would request money to make up for enrollment shortfalls
In other action, the Regents agreed to honor tuition waivers granted for ROTC and National-Guard programs. Students in the program previously have been granted waivers, but it was discovered in a 1994 Legislative Post Audit that the program expired in 1991.
As a result, the Regents approved the honoring of all previously made commitments of tuition waivers but refrained from making any further commitments until the program is acted upon by the legislature.
"The issue here was whether to include WSU," Jordan said. "It passed with WSU included, but there will be more discussion on it."
The Regents passed a policy-manual revision that toughened the spoken English-competency requirements of faculty and graduate teaching assistants,
KU reported on its progress toward meeting school goals. The Regents approved the report.
In other Regents action:
The Regents considered campus plans to respond to a new policy statement concerning academic dishonesty.
RIGHT: Aaron, 12; B.J.,8; Bob, associate professor of history; and Bryn Dekosky,7, look at "The Net Result" exhibit at the Natural History museum. The exhibit is about commercial fishing in Minnesota lakes.
BELLOW: Laura, B; Jill, and Sarah Cline, 5, create cut-out art at the Museum of Anthropology as part of the "Polish Papercuts" exhibit. The exhibit runs until July 9.
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
Mrs. Grosse
TALENT MUSEUM OF ARTS AND CULTURE
Beyond the museum door
Art exhibits showcase local treasures
By Gwen Olson
Kansan staff writer
The KU museums offer a variety of sights for people. With four large museums and several smaller museums, visitors have many ways to spend their days at the University of Kansas.
The Spencer Museum of Art now is holding an exhibit called "Beyond the Drawing Room." The exhibit features the work of Mary Huntoon, a Kansas artist, and includes collections from around the state.
"This is our main exhibition for the summer," said Steve Goddard, curator of prints and drawings at the art museum. "A handful of pieces come from the KU collection and others have been brought here by the Salina Arts Center."
"Mary Huntoune was involved with the Federal Arts Project and was a real pioneer in art therapy," Goddard said. "She is a very significant artist for Kansas."
Goddard said that he thought this exhibit would attract many people because of local interest in Huntoon's work.
This exhibition continues until July 20.
Art museum hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
The Wilcox Classical Museum is holding its regular exhibits of Greek and Roman sculpture throughout the summer. The hours for the museum, which is located in Lippincott Hall, are 8:15 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
"When Worlds Collide" is the next show, and it will arrive in late August before fall classes start. A "Moby Dick" exhibition also is scheduled to begin August 20. Other shows will be announced during the fall.
"The exhibit is a case study of the exploitation of the environment," said Julie Johnson, administrative assistant of the museum.
Many people likely will view "The Net Result" as well as a collection of wildlife photographs that will begin its run in late August. That is because summer is the museum's busiest time of the year, Johnson said.
The Natural History Museum is featuring a traveling exhibit this summer called "The Net Result."
The museum is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
The Museum of Anthropology also has several exhibitions during the summer. "Polish Papercuts," which runs through Sunday, features the works of Wieslawa Contoski of Lawrence. The artwork is paper that was cut into different shapes and designs and is meant to convey Polish and Polish-American beliefs.
Another show appearing now is "Feathers and Fibers: The Natural and Supernatural in Amazonian Indian Belief." This exhibit shows the life of the people of the Amazon Basin.
The anthropology museum also is showing the "Hmong Artistry: Preserving a Culture on Cloth," which runs through July 30. This is a collection of needlework on cloth which displays the beliefs of Southwest-Asian people.
"Another big event for the museum is the Lawrence Indian Art Show, which will be held Sept. 9 through Oct.22," said Alfred Johnson, director of the Museum of Anthropology. "The museum is holding an American Indian bead work workshop in conjunction with the show."
The Museum of Anthropology is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
Watkins expands to serve students
By Billie David Special to the Kansan
New addition cures center's space problem
Students soon will see their health fee dollars at work in the construction of a new addition to Watkins Memorial Health Center.
RMT, an Olathe-based company, received notification to start construction on July 5, said Nancy Trimble, secretary-treasurer of RMT. Recent rainfall is not expected to slow construction.
"We hope it flows smoothly," Trimble said. "To get it done as quickly as possible is our main goal."
The addition is expected to be completed by fall 1997.
Watkins' inadequate size is becoming evident in the longer waiting time required for students to see physicians, said James
Strobl, director of student health services. "We're always trying to continue to upgrade student service." Strobl said.
The new two-story addition will add 20,000 square feet to the existing 60,000 square feet of clinic space. Most of the addition, which is being built on the north side of Watkins, will be used for examining rooms. However, a large conference room will be built on the second floor.
The limited number of examining rooms and the small three-bed urgent-care room motivated Watkins directors to go to the Student Senate two years ago and request the addition. They argued for the addition because there is only one examining room for each of the eight doctors. With more examining rooms, doctors could move quickly between patients, shortening student waiting time.
Students will see the following changes when the addition opens:
An eight-bed urgent care room located across the hall from the present one.
A gynecology clinic on the second floor.
Counseling and Psychological Services expanded to include the area where the
present gynecology clinic is located An expanded physical therapy area.
expanded to include the area where the present gynecology clinic is located.
An X-ray machine that will reduce radiator oxygen by 50 percent
Strobi said KU would have one of the finest student-health care facilities in the nation. He has toured 60 other student health centers and said that KU already had one of the better student health facilities in the nation.
Strobl said that Watkins directors' goal was to offer appropriate services for the student population while keeping costs low. For example, spouses of KU students will be able to obtain health services this fall by paying an $86 health fee each semester, he said.
The new addition will cost about $4 million, an amount lower than the $5.5 million originally anticipated.
GTA talks in jeopardy
Kansan staff report
The first salary negotiations between graduate teaching assistants at the University of Kansas and University officials already have broken down.
Earlier this year, the state Legislature passed a budget amendment not to give GTAs the 3.5 percent raise given to other faculty members at Regents institutions. However, KU GTAs, who unionized this spring, argued that the University still could have given GTAs a raise. "Their position is absolutely contrary to our understanding," said Dan Murtaugh, KU GTA and chief negotiations spokesman for the GTAs. "We are convinced that the amendment placed no such restrictions on university administration."
保
2A
Wednesday, July 5, 1995
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
New service helps fire victims recover
By John Collar Special to the Kansar
When Michelle Bishop, Lawrence graduate student, arrived home one evening this spring, she discovered that the onlookers, firefighters and the rising smoke develop in her neighborhood were all at her apartment house.
Her home was on fire.
After firefighters thought they had successfully contained the fire, a new Lawrence Fire Department crew rushed in with tarps to protect occupants' belongings.
But the fire had spread through the rest of the house at 1447 Massachusetts St. By the time the fire was extinguished, the 110-year-old house was so damaged that it would have to burn down.
However, the crew called in by the 8-month-old Occupant Services program helped
"They were fantastic. If they hadn't done that we would have lost everything."
save most of Bishop's and her housemate's belongings.
"They were fantastic. If they hadn't done that, we would have lost everything." Bishop said.
The crew did a thorough job covering everything from bookshelves to computers, she said.
Occupant Services is a program run by the Lawrence Fire Department that is available to assist fire victims. Residents do not pay for the service's help because it is part of the department.
"Our first intent is to help fire victims and provide whatever services are needed," she said. "Often what firefighters do is a mystery to people. We explain what is going on."
Occupant Services distributes a packet that describes procedures victims should follow. A checklist covers such items as securing the property, contacting the insurance company and cleaning smoke-damaged upholstery and clothing.
The program also helps give victims a sense of security in a chaotic time, said Kathy Saunders, the management analyst who runs the program.
The program also gives any extra assistance that the Red Cross and other organizations may not provide.
"We sometimes give victims' friends and family members rides to the hospital. We also can provide plywood to help board up a residence to keep out looters and the elements," Saunders said. Fire departments around the country recently started these programs.
Michelle Bishop Lawrencegraduate student
Lawrence's program is modeled after a similar one in Phoenix.
Since its conception last December, Occupant Services has helped 37 people at 14 incidents.
Three employees of the department compose the program's staff: Fire Marshal Rich Barr, Lt. Mark Grinstead and Saunders.
The program does not have a separate budget but operates within the fire department's budget.
Bishop has been back to visit the empty lot where the house once stood.
"It's all been really surreal. But it's given me a taste of community that I've never felt before," she said.
The University Daily Kanan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 StaFFirm-Film 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 590. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045.
Kansas pride on display at the Sunflower Games
By Trine Nygaard
All Kansas residents, put on your running shoes and start training.
Kansan staff writer
The annual Sunflower State Games, a multi-sport festival of Olympic-style competition for amateur athletes, is coming to Lawrence for the sixth year.
Competition will begin on July 20 and run until July 31. Events include basketball, golf, disc golf and figure skating to name a few.
Brett McCabe, executive director of the games, said that the event was founded in 1900 by the Government City Council on Physical Fitness
and was specifically designed to attract as many Kansas residents as possible.
"We have worked to make this an affordable, accessible event for both athletes and spectators," he said.
This year a torch run from Topeka to Lawrence and a ceremony in Buford Watson Park will officially open the games on Friday, July 28.
On Saturday,
July 29, athletes can compete in the first-ever Sprint Skills Championship.
athletes to become involved. People can volunteer to operate scoreboards or keep times for track and swimming events. They can also help with registration and souvenir tables, assist in the media center or enter data.
"We would like to get more KU students to volunteer because the Sunflower State Games is the kind of event that students would be interested in," he said. "It is a chance for Kansas residents to be involved in their state and maybe meet people from their own county."
Jennifer Davis, KU graduate, got involved two summers ago when she volunteered to run the bask
Game time
Entry deadlines:
Basketball — Postmarked July 5, hand delivered to 123 Eighth St. July 10
Soccer — Postmarked July 12
For other entry deadlines — call
(913) 841-9600
Sprint Skills Championships Registration Allen Field House
Fee — $5
Event time — 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday, July 29
This championship will determine "The Strongest Arm" in baseball, football and softball as well as "The Strongest Leg" in the punting, field goal kicking and soccer.
Entry handbooks available at TCI Cable offices, Central National Bank locations, Kansas Farm Bureau agent offices and Parks and Recreation offices statewide
batter timer. This year she wanted to get more involved in the preparations and now works as the Volunteer Coordinator.
Kansas Fastest Human, the Best Three-Point Shooter and the Best Free-Throw Shooter also will be decided.
"They can compete in any event at any time on Saturday up till 5 p.m.," McCabe said. "At the end of the day, we'll compare scores and crown the champions."
The games are sponsored by a non-profit organization and primarily relies on volunteers, McCabe said. Volunteers do not have to
She said that preparing for the games was a positive way for kids and adults to spend time together in the summer. For students, she said, it was a way to take a break from the books and help show the rest of Kansas what Lawrence and KU has to offer.
Elaine Joseph,
media coordinator
for the games.
said that most volunteers went to KU. She thought that KU students should get involved because it was convenient and would be a good way to contribute to the community.
"The best reason to get involved is because it's fun," she said.
In 1994, the event drew teams, athletes and volunteers from 90 counties. A total of 5,805 athletes participated, making it the largest of its kind in Kansas. The oldest athlete was 84, and the youngest was 5 years old.
"The event is kind of a pinnacle for a lot of Kansas athletic teams, and we want them to have a great experience," McCabe said.
Weather
Brownsville
Burlington
Dayton
Duluth
Evansville
Fargo
Kansas City
Lawrence
Lubbock
Omaha
Reno
Souix Falls
Wilkes-Barre
TODAY
THURSDAY
Dry.
85 65
WIGH LOW
95 ◦ 78 ◦
88 ◦ 66 ◦
85 ◦ 68 ◦
72 ◦ 54 ◦
88 ◦ 72 ◦
70 ◦ 56 ◦
84 ◦ 66 ◦
83 ◦ 61 ◦
92 ◦ 63 ◦
81 ◦ 61 ◦
86 ◦ 53 ◦
79 ◦ 57 ◦
83 ◦ 66 ◦
8361
8565
FRIDAY
Dry.
8565
Source: The Associated Press
KU Weather line: 864-3300
CALENDAR
Campus information
Today: Last day to submit applications for reductions in rates, tuition and fees for staff rates, reciprocity, residency, staff dependents, field work or military rates
Monday: Last day Second Period Drop Transaction
Tuesday: First day Third Period Drop Transaction
Open Hours
Hours for Watson Library and Anschutz Science Library:
8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. Fri.
noon to 5 p.m. Sat.
Enrollment center hours:
Hours for the Kansas and Burge
■ Enrollment center hours:
8 a.m. to noon, 1 to 5 p.m.
Mon.-Fri.
union bookstores: 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Mon-Fri. The Kansas
Union Bookstore will be open on
the following Saturday 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. Mon-Fri
Parking is restricted in blue, red and yellow lots. Residence halls are not restricted.
Important phone numbers
University directory assistance:
From campus phones, dial 0.1 Off
campus, dial 864-2700
KU Police Department (non-emergency):
864-5572
Safe Ride: 864-SAFE
Watkins Health enter: 864-95C
Watkins Health Center: 864-9500
CORRECTION
Last week's story about new student orientation had two errors. The orientation assistant pictured with a new student was Bhavi Shah, a Wichita junior. And the bags being carried by students were KU Bookstore bags not Jayhawk Bookstore bags.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 5, 1995
3A
CASKOGLOVENRD
Jav Thornton/ KANSAN
The maps collection, which was being stored in Anschutt Science Library, will be moved back into the Government Documents and Map Library on the sixth floor of Malot Hall due to an increase of space in the library.
Library officials say space overdue
Books shuffled into scarce room
By Trine Nygaard
Kansan staff writer
Mary Lou Warren's knuckles are swollen, and her joints are aching. She has spent the summer semester moving books. One third of all KU library holdings is being relocated to make room for new books as the campus libraries fill.
The Government Documents and Map Library on the sixth floor of Malott, where Warren works as a library assistant, is a place in transition. The hallway outside the library looks more like a storage area than the entrance to one of the nation's 10 largest map collections.
Inside, file cabinets the walls, and book shelves are packed with abstracts, statistics and other official documents.
"We keep running out of space," Warren said while reshaping huge volumes of indexes. "We have had to make lots and lots of changes and not only good ones. But we are trying to make the best of a bad situation."
During the summer, the library is retrieving 920 shelves from Anschutz Science Library where they were stored because of lack of space in Malott.
The Documents and Map Library reached capacity in 1990, and so did the Gorton Music Library in Murphy Hall.
Susan Hitchells, music librarian,
said, "We have 8,000 books and
1,000 music scores stored in the science library in open stacks. People can go over there and check out the books, so there is no pull time, but it is inconvenient."
Bill Crowe, dean of libraries, said,
"The library is a learning center. If we make it hard for people to learn,
we haven't done our job."
He had hoped to get $4 million to equip future library space in Budig Hall, which was designed for computer workstations as well as flexible shelving.
"That we didn't get the money was a great blow." Crowe said. "And it forced us to relocate books, a process which is complicated and expensive. We are spending $75,000 that we could have desperately spent otherwise. It is almost like playing very expensive Chinese checkers.
"We have been backed into more and more interim solutions, and we don't know how long interim will be."
The basement of Joseph R. Pearson Residence Hall serves as another temporary solution to a growing space problem at the University.
"We have moved 125,000 infrequently used journals from Watson Library to JRP." Crowe said.
Other campus libraries are expected to reach capacity at the end of the century, creating a need for an overall expansion of the KU libraries.
"This is going to be a major challenge for the whole campus." Crowe said. "We won't compete well for students and faculty if we don't get the newest technology and appropriate facilities."
Slap shots replace serves in Lawrence
Roller hockey offers Lawrence's athletes new summer sport
By Gwen Olson Kansan staff writer
The youth of Lawrence have an alternative to the usual summer sports—rollerhockey.
Mark Ewing, associate professor of aerospace engineering and the Flight Research Lab, has created a team of youth roller-hockey players for the city of Lawrence.
"Ive played for many years with my children," Ewing said. "They play on ice in the winter, and in the summers we have to find an alternative to ice. So we play roller hockey."
The city cleared a tennis court at Edgewood Park, which is on Maple Lane north of 19th Street. First the city removed the tennis net and poles. Then volunteers built goals and set up walls so players' sticks would not get caught in the fence.
About 80 kids are involved with the team, which is funded by the city of Lawrence, Ewing said.
"It is a summer camp for kids," Ewing said. "We have two three-week sessions, and we will start meeting Monday through Wednesday on July 10. The days of practice
During the summer, games are limited to scrimmages at practice. In the fall, however, Lawrence Parks and Recreation is hoping to set up two leagues — one for ages 11 and 12 and another for ages 13 and 14.
are separated by age group and range from ages 7 to 14."
The possibility of a league for younger children has not been discussed.
"Each practice the kids go through 45 minutes of drills for skating, passing and shooting," Ewing said. "Then the last 45 minutes we divide up the kids and they scrimmage against each other. It looks like a real game to the kids, because we have specific teams set up."
The parents of the kids involved seem to be impressed with the way the program has been going.
"Iheard about it through the recreation center advertising, and my son was interested," said Rex Hargis, father and assistant at the KU Center for Research. "I think the program is good," he said. "Mark Ewing is doing a great job. He and his boys give the little ones someone to look up to."
There is a $25 fee that must be paid to Lawrence Parks and Recreation. The next session starts July 10 and runs through July 27.
Both boys and girls are welcome at the camp.
JACKSON COUNTY
SQUASH CLUB
David Hamby, Hutchinson alumnus, shoots on the goal of the new roller hockey rink at Edgewood Park on Maple Lane north of 1.9th street. The rink was converted from a tennis court.
Jay Thornton/ KANSAN
KU library offers unique on-line system
By Luby Montano-Laurel Kansan staff writer
In a matter of seconds, students studying Latin America now can travel to their area of study by using an on-line Internet system.
HAPI, Hispanic American Periodicals Index, is the only indexing tool in the world in which the journals are specifically about Latin America, said Jana Krentz, director of the Spanish-Portugal and Latin America department at Watson Library.
Krentz said that HAPI was a program that could benefit those interested in Latin America because of the broad variety of articles and book reviews it contained.
She said that HAPI not only benefited students, but also professors of Spanish, Portuguese and Latin-American studies.
"Language skills are needed for this program, because most of the articles are published in either
Spanish or Portuguese," Krentz said. "However, there is hope for those who cannot speak these languages; there are some articles printed in English."
Krentz said that many students and professors used HAPI because it indexed more than 160,000 bibliographic citations in all areas of the Latin-American social sciences and humanities that are difficult to find elsewhere.
The database contains more than 200,000 records and is increasing by 9,000 a year.
Krentz said that HAPI listed information in 250 journals concerning Latin-American or Hispanic studies in the United States.
Jill Girardo, program assistant at the Spanish-Portuguese and Latin-American department at Watson, said that HAPI articles covered a wide range of topics including economics, political science, journalism, business and Latin-American
literature. KU subscribes to 95 percent of the journals indexed by HAPI.
"HAPI is an unique system because it allows those students and professors interested in Latin America to get more specific information about an area," Girardo said. "Once you are in the system, you can follow very easy commands to get the info you want."
Girardo said that the index was divided into subject, key word, book review, title, and author sections.
"It's very straight forward. All you need to know is what you are looking for to help narrow-down the search," Girardo said.
HAPI was produced by the UCLA Latin-American Center under the supervision of Barbara Valk, editor of the program.
Although HAPI seems like a new discovery, the index has been in
print form since 1970, Krentz said. In 1992, HAPI was offered on-line as part of UCLA's library catalog system.
Krentz said that Watson had offered the hard-copy version for many years. However, it was not until 1969 that Watson was able to afford the high cost of the on-line service.
HAPI can be accessed on-line via the Internet.
Krentz said that the payment options were expensive for a single subscriber: $40 an hour and about $1,000 a year.
Krentz said HAPI was available in Watson Library between 8 a.m. and
5 p.m.
She said that those interested in using HAPI could stop by the Spanish-Portuguese and Latin-American department located on the second floor of Watson.
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Wednesday, July 5, 1995
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE: DRUG REHABILITATION
Strawberry still a role model
Following a highly publicized stint in a chemical-dependency treatment center, Darryl Strawberry is back in professional baseball thanks to a second chance from New York Yankee's owner George Steinbrenner.
We now have every reason to believe that his addiction is under control. He has successfully completed a rehabilitation program and is regularly subjected to drug tests.
In spite of this, some people want to deny him the chance to play baseball again because they believe he will send children the wrong message.
Unfortunately, many in our society are operating under a misconception about chemical dependency.
It is not a moral failure or an individual weakness that makes an addict addicted. Chemical dependency is a disease recognized by the American Medical Association, the federal government and our own University.
Strawberry isn't a bad role model. He is a real role
The baseball player's attempt to recover from drug addiction should be an inspiration to children, sports fans.
model.
Fighting back from drug addiction requires soul searching and brutal honesty. It is a life-long process that demands great courage and strength if one is to remain sober.
By staying in recovery, Strawberry can do just that.
No one is condoning drug use by allowing him to play ball. Cocaine nearly ruined his life and career, but he is trying to overcome it. Strawberry's story is one of success, strength and courage. It is a story that can help children, not harm them.
Strawberry should be commended for his desire to live sober, and Steinbrenner should be commended for giving him another chance. Instead of criticizing their decision, we as fans and parents should be encouraging their success.
TODD HIATT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Proposal would burn freedoms
THE ISSUE: FLAG BURNING
Last week the House of Representatives passed a proposed amendment to the U. S. Constitution saying: "The Congress and the States shall have power to prohibit the physical desecration of the flag of the United States."
This amendment would be an assault on basic civil liberties protected by the First Amendment.
If the amendment passes the Senate, it still would need the approval of 38 states to be added to the Constitution.
Desecration is an ambiguous concept, too.
Supporters of the bill, including American Legion Commander William Detweiler, said the bill would clarify the importance of the flag and revive national patriotism. However, mandated respect is neither earned nor deserved.
The bill would not affect Americans who "desecrate" a replica of the flag for nonpolitical reasons. Examples include faded, American-flag bumper stickers,flag bikinis or flag cakes. It would only be
The new amendment would ban desecration of the U.S. flag, but it also would destroy our Constitutional rights.
used against protesters expressing anti-American thoughts.
The fact that the bill would criminalize ideas, not acts, is frightening.
In this same vein, the bill would not be used against Americans who burn soiled or worn flags as an honorable means to dispose of them.
Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan addressed this opinion in a previous ruling.
Brennan said, "If there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment, it is that the government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable."
This bill would do exactly that and tinkers with a fundamental freedom that the First Amendment guarantees, the right to disagree with society.
JAMIE MUNN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
GERRY FEY
Editor
ASHLEY MILLER
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH
Technology coordinator
Editorial ... Jamie Munn
Campus ... Jenni Carlson
... Virginia Marghelm
Photo ... Jay Thornton
Design ... David Johnson
Graphics ... Noah Musser
Copy Chief ... Melinda Dia
J. J.COOK
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 ...N.J. Cook
Special Sections mgr ..Stephanie UH
Prod...mgr
Marketing director ...Matt Shaw
Creative director ...Anne Laurenzo
Classified mgr ..Heather Valle
Rob Taplev / KANSAN
let freedom ring
How bout lettin some bullets ring Uncle Sam?
MILITIA
Flight to truth would have prevented conflicts seen in Enola Gay exhibit
Pursuing the truth is a noble mission. It's what I strive for as a journalist.
And I was almost ready to praise protesters of the recent Enola Gay exhibit at the Smithsonian Institute until they were arrested Sunday for destroying government property.
The way they were trying to bring out the truth actually hurts their message, one that I had supported.
To protest the exhibit, a group lagged behind a tour and poured a red liquid and ashes onto the displayed portion of the aircraft. Chanting "We repent. We regret," more protesters handed out pamphlets and unfurled a banner reading, "Never again! Never again!"
With these actions, I lost the respect for them that I had been forming. Their goal of increasing debate on the exhibit was good, but their method was wrong.
Granted, the exhibit is one-sided. Debate on what would be displayed lasted for months. The bitter controversy between veterans groups and anti-war demonstrators eventually
EDITORIAL EDITOR
JAMIE
MUNN
cost museum director Martin Harwit his job.
The display now focuses only on the aircraft and its crew. With a mss s a g e amounting to: "This is the Enola Gay. It dropped the bomb that ended the war," the exhibit is incomplete and cannot
represent a truthful portrayal of what happened in Nagasaki and Hiroshima.
Missing from the display are accounts and graphic depictions of the damage and deaths caused by the first atomic bomb dropped on Aug. 6, 1945. Original plans, which included such accounts, drew criticism from veterans who said the museum would be portraying the Japanese as innocent victims of American aggression without
acknowledging Japan's atrocious or its attack on Pearl Harbor.
In the present exhibit, there are no issues of morality. There is no inclusion of the implication of using nuclear weapons.
And what the display ultimately lacks, a free discussion of facts and various interpretations, has been further hindered by the unwillingness of both sides to compromise their positions.
Veterans groups pressured the museum to back down on its original plans, and now anti-war supporters are grabbing the spotlight with their actions.
Both groups need to take a lesson from John Milton, whose *Apeopagitica* was a landmark for public debate.
Milton argued that opinions should be placed out in the open, in a marketplace of ideas from which the public may choose. Only when this is accomplished will individuals be able to purchase the version of facts, the version of the truth, that they want to believe.
in the Enola Gay case, the search for truth was limited when anti-war views were eliminated from the display.
Now what the public is seeing is anti-war groups using shock tactics to get their point across. These methods, however, are more likely to shun audiences rather than persuade them.
But neither group has succeeded in allowing the public to make its own decision on the historical and ethical ramifications of the event.
In a videotape presentation at the exhibit, Enola Gay navigator Theodore J. Van Kirk sums up his mission. Hopefully, his quote foreshadows a conclusion to this disaster of a discussion.
"We succeeded in bringing that carnage to an end so everybody got to go home."
the protesters and veterans should go home and leave the truth 'or the public to decide.
Jamie Munn is an Enid, Okla., graduate student in journalism.
Racism still lives in reversed word, situation
It's my belief that this world is full of good people, for the most part. Sure, there are hard-core criminals who enjoy watching others suffer. But if everyone was like that, then prisons would outnumber houses.
For this reason, and because many people share my view, the reality that racism still exists in the United States may seem impossible — until you have experienced it.
I'm not just talking about racism against Blacks and minorities either. Racism against whites can be just as damaging.
The other night I was dropped off at my apartment and found — much to my dismay — that I didn't have my key. And, of course, my roommates were nowhere to be found. That meant one thing: a long walk to the Kwik Shop was ahead.
After making a few telephone calls from the store and finally locating my keys, I sat on the curb to smoke a cigarette and wait for my ride.
KANSAN EDITOR
GERRY
FEY
It was 3:30 a.m., and a convenience store is not the coolest hangout spot. Obviously, I felt stupid and a bit dweebish.
The parking lot was empty as a car pulled in and parked about 30 feet away from me. A Black male and female stepped out of the car and walked into the building.
But before they entered, the male looked at me and spoke one word. The female laughed.
I wasn't sure what he said, but I figured that it was derogatory.
I ignored it. Why? I don't know. Maybe because sitting on the curb with a backpack and cigarettes was lame enough, and getting into a fight would have been absolutely humiliating.
First of all, it wouldn't have been a pretty fight — for me that is. And secondly, my name associated in a Kwik Shop brawl would not have been the best career move.
As the couple exited, the male called me the same word, the woman giggled again and I was fuming.
The man probably wouldn't have said anything to me if I wasn't a scrawny, 125-pound guy all by myself. But he did, and I didn't do anything about it.
Discrimination and racism are words that blow around as commonly as the wind. People complain about racism on the news. Politicians rant and rave about discrimination during Affirmative-Action debates. But the definitions are too abstract to understand. The words 'true meanings never hit home until you are on the receiving end of a racial slur.
Granted, this Kwik Shop example is somewhat weak — I didn't get
shot or beat up in a fight, but it made me realize how damaging a word can be. As silly as it may sound, the slur made me look at myself and how pathetic sitting on the curb was. The reason racial slurs are so damaging is because they cut at the very fibers of who a person is. That can cause a chain reaction powerful enough to shatter anybody's self-esteem.
If I was in the same shoes as this man outside the convenience store, I know I wouldn't call a minority a name. However, even though the word isn't verbalized, are we thinking it to ourselves?
Not throwing around racial slurs is a good start because people are not hurt. But just thinking the word means racism still exists as strong as ever.
Keeping it muffled inside does not make it right.
Gerry Fey is a Omaha, Neb., senior in Journalism.
a
measured
Noah
and
Jonah
not only adj. 1. Not so. Used to express refusal, denial or disagreement. No I am not going. 2. Not at all. Used with the comparative, no Neither nor more. 3. Not whether or not, pt notes. 1. A negative response, denial or refusal. The performer produced him/her. 2. A negative side on either ME or OE nor, not did ever. 3. not not adj. 1. Not any, not one. No choice are left. 2. Not at all, not close to being. He is not that ME or OE and much noise.
Usage: When an introduces a compound phrase as elements should be connected with or rather than with man. Thus we write He was no experience no matter in chemical not mere interest. No modification or change will be acceptable to them (not nor changes).
Not also Noh (not pl.) No also Noh. The classical drama of Japan with music and dance performed in a bright skiffle minute by elaborately dressed actors on an almost bare stage. [No talent ability - Chin name]
The symbol for the element nobilium,
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 out-right reject all submissions. For any questions, call Jamie Munn, editorial page editor, at 864-4810.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 5, 1995
5A
Insects avoid rain,bug students
By Leslie Taylor Special to the Kansan
Jane Rodgers discovered she was sharing her apartment with more than her two roommates this summer when she began finding small ants in her bathroom, kitchen and even in her bed.
Many students like Rodgers, Leavenworth sophomore, have found that no matter how clean or well kept their homes may be, they have been infested with insects. Ants seem to be the largest problem this summer.
"This year the pests have been really bad because of all the rain. When it's wet outside, many outdoor insects have nowhere to go but inside. The ants have been especially bad," said Andy Booth of Midwest Exterminators, 2500 W. 31st St.
Booth said that most summer problems were caused by insects, such as ants, that come in around doors, windows and baseboards.
He said that there really was no way to avoid these pests. Making sure the amount of dead leaves,
Getting rid of bugs
Keep the amount of dead leaves, grass and branches
around the house to a minimum.
Keep kitchen counters wiped down.
If bugs still infiltrate, use a granule insecticide with either Dursban or Diazonan and spread it outside around the foundation.
grass and branches around the house are kept at a minimum helps some. He also recommended keeping kitchen counters wiped down and storing all sweets in air-tight containers.
Although keeping a clean kitchen is recommended, Suzy Reinger, Chicago senior, explained that it didn't always work.
"We keep our apartment spotless, and we ended up with ants anyway," she said. "We were so disgusted that we disinfected our entire kitchen. After cleaning, we went to work out, and when we returned an hour later there were swarms of them all over the counters. It was really gross."
Although these small ants and roaches are annoying, they are not harmful, said Robert Brooks, collections manager at the KU Entomology Museum in Snow Hall.
"The only type of ant which a student should worry about would be a carpenter ant," Brooks said. Carpenter ants are large black ants, ranging from 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch long.
"These ants are harmful because they live inside the walls and will eat the wood from the walls," Brooks said.
The best way to get rid of carpenter ants and other small ants, spiders and roaches without calling an exterminator is to purchase a granule insecticide with either Dursban or Diazonan and to spread it outside around the house's foundation. Booth said. Such insecticides can be purchased at any local hardware store.
Booth did not recommend any spray or fogger. He said that such insecticides killed the pests on contact but not the whole nest like a granule would.
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Wednesday, July 5, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Program nurses future med professionals
Clandia Vazquez, Kansas City Kan. resident, was the first in her family to finish high school and soon will be the first to go to college.
By Meng Yew Tee Kansan staff writer
If Vazquez has it her way,her achievements are not going to stop there. She plans to be an obstetrician-gynecologist and become the first doctor in the family.
Although she will attend Benedictine College in Atchison this fall, one of her first steps towards her goal will be at the University of Kansas. Vazquez is one of 60 participants in the Health Career Pathways Program, a program designed to help economically disadvantaged
and minority students to successfully compete for admission to allied health programs throughout the country. Participants also receive daily a $40 stipend during the eight-week summer program.
During the program, Vazquez, who came to the United States from Mexico 11 years ago, has talked to doctors, medical students and academic counselors and gone through academic and time-management tutorials to prepare for college and the MCAT.
"It is really amazing that something like that can happen, because I know in Mexico nobody helps out with anything," Vazquez said, referring to the opportunity offered by the program.
The program, jointly funded by the
U. S. Department of Health and Human Services and the University of Kansas Medical Center, works with five different groups of students. There are programs for high school students, college-bound students, college freshmen and sophomores, college juniors and seniors and graduating medical school students.
In order to apply for the program students must be U.S. citizens, have a 2.7 grade point average and be economically disadvantaged or be a minority. This year, 177 students applied; 50 were accepted.
"What we want to do here is to enrich what we already know," said Trutina M. Sowell, an aspiring psychiatrist and college-bound student from Topeka. "While giving us a
sense of worth, they are preparing us for what lies ahead at medical school."
Vazquez and Sowell belong to the combined group of incoming college freshmen and college freshmen and sophomores known as Health Science Enrichment Institute. This 24-member group has a diverse ethnic make-up, including African American, Nigerian, Vietnamese, Filipino, East Indian and El Salvadorian.
"A special bonding occurs — special friendships and relationships are formed," said Amber Reagan-Kendrick, Health Science Enrichment Institute coordinator. "It is not about their differences anymore but that one common goal that brings them all together."
The program's effectiveness and popularity is reflected by a steady return rate. Pancho Perez, Topeka sophomore, now is involved with the Level 2 Health Science Enrichment Institute program after completing the first level last summer.
Alicia Cardona, Lawrence medical student, was a member of the 1992 graduating students program. Cardona used the program to get herself back on track towards a medical degree after a year's absence from school due to her pregnancy.
"It was very useful to me and would probably be useful to others, too," Cardona said. "The exposure the program gave me helped me adjust through the first week of medical school — the week that some say is the most difficult."
Lawrence development looks to West for fortune
By Dan Gelston Kansan staff writer
When Horace Greeley said, "Go West, young man," he wasn't talking about Lawrence.
But the city has taken his advice, and business has expanded quickly. What once was an unappreciated part of Lawrence now has become an economic hot bed that competes with downtown for consumer dollars and rivals downtown with its many store options.
One of the first success stories to rise from the west has been the Tower Plaza, 24th and Iowa streets, owned by Robert Hopkins. The plaza was constructed in 1993 and reached its full capacity of tenants, 11, in March 1994. Hopkins was one of the first people to take advantage of the location.
"It was a location which for years had been passed by." He said.
Hopkins said there were road problems that forced stores to look elsewhere. Hopkins was able to get around the situation by buying the road with the property and turning it into a parking lot.
John Gieler, retail store manager for Microtech Computers, 2540 Iowa St., said plaza location had allowed his store to flourish.
"This is a great location for us," Gieler said. "More traffic passes by and more people see us and stop in."
We're also helped by being in a plaza because sometimes people come to a store for something else and then end up in mine or another store."
Construction began in early January, and only interior work remains.
Farther down the road at 36th and Iowa streets, construction is winding down on a Target store.
Frank Noreen, superintendent of construction for LRM Industries Inc., said that the project had run tight but was still on target for its early-October opening.
the story will compete with two other national chains, Walmart and K-Mart, which have been at their present Iowa locations for just less than two years.
Osco Drug, at 23rd and Iowa streets, is the newest retail business in Lawrence. It opened on Saturday in the Southwest Plaza and has giant expectations.
"This is a great place to be." Osco manager Frank Novotny said. "We're at the busiest intersection in town and real close to the university."
There is still more room to expand, but no owners of current buildings have expressed that desire. Perhaps the greatest reason for Lawrence to expand was expressed by Hopkins.
"We've generated revenue, created jobs and tore down some unsightly buildings," he said. "Lawrence is a great town to do business."
KU to export newspaper know-how to Koreans
By Sean Demory Special to the Kansan
A group of KU journalism professors will be teaching in the Republic of Korea as part of a summer-long exchange program sponsored by the United States Information Agency.
raul jess, associate dean of journalism; Tom Volek, assistant professor of journalism; and Bob Basow, associate professor of journalism, will be traveling with Cameron Hurst, director of the KU Center for East Asian Studies, to Seoul, South Korea, on July 7. They will deliver a series of seminars on objectivity in reporting and news writing on July 10 through 15.
The professors submitted a paper to the U.S. Information Agency proposing the trip, Volek said.
Hurst said the Republic of Korea had been one of the most dynamically growing economies in the world. Still, more censorship pervades the Korean press than in other countries.
The seminars will share the approach that democratic nations
have toward journalism.
"Journalists in Korea tend to fall in line with what the government and big companies say," Volek said. "The situation has improved with time, but they still don't do much verification or investigation."
The trip will serve a second purpose as well, Hurst said.
"Journalism departments in the United States tend to be somewhat insular," he said. "This gives a group of journalism professors a chance to expand their horizons. I think there will be a good deal of mutual learning."
The trip to Seoul is the beginning of a summerlong program. Returning on July 18, the professors will be accompanied by nine Korean journalists who will meet with area reporters and editors. They will see the differences between United States and Korean journalism, Voleksays.
To further that goal, the journalists also will be visiting the offices of the Marion County Record, the Wichita Eagle-Beacon and the advertising firm of Sullivan, Higdon and Sink in Wichita.
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Dave Eakor, Corvallis, Oregon,
senior, runs off copies during his night
shift at Copy Co., 23rd and
Naismith streets.
Jav Thomton/ KANSAN
They only come out at NIGHT
Jay Thomton / KANSAN
WILLIAMS TEA
Some people start their days after the sun goes down
By James Grau Special to the Kansan
It's 9 p.m., and Scott Dalton turns off his alarm and slowly sits up on the edge of his bed.
He yawns, stretches out his arms and exhales. He rubs his eyes, blinks a couple of times and gets up to take a shower.
While getting dressed, he walks to the kitchen, opens the refrigerator and scans the leftovers.
"Yeechc," he says, and pushes the refrigerator door shut with a soft whump sound.
Scott Dalton is getting ready for work, when most people are getting ready for bed.
Whitney Black, Lawrence sophomore, makes a beverage at the Java Break, 7th and Massachusetts streets.
Dalton, 26, is one of the many night people in Lawrence who work while the city sleeps. These people lead a lifestyle that is unique and affects both their lives and those of others. Without them, many services available 24 hours a day wouldn't exist.
Dalton, who works at Kinko's Copy Center, 911 Massachusetts St., said he could tell the people who worked nights from those who worked days. Night people are a bit nicer and understanding, he said.
"People during the day make their own friends and stuff like that, but when the night comes again there's a whole different community," Dalton said. "To me, it's like a community inside a community."
He said he liked working at Kinko's because of its policy of giving nightshift workers $1 more an hour and four consecutive days off between their four-day periods.
Despite these benefits, working rights has its down side. Because he is a morning person, Dalton often has trouble getting to sleep after work and sometimes gets only two hours of sleep before he goes back to work.
But Dalton believes that working at night also has positive aspects.
"At work, I'll go outside and think, 'Wow, it's a pretty day out here,' Dalton said. "The moon just shines on everything, and the trees up and down Massachusetts are really pretty in the moonlight."
"There are things that you think and things that you see that you really wouldn't notice during the day. Your mind plays little tricks on you. A lot more things are funny; you see a different point of view."
He laughed when talking about drunk students who
come into the store.
"I was sitting there working in the production area, and I looked over and there's some guy with his pants around his knees making copies of his butt," Dalton said. "I didn't clean the glass that day."
Megan Arnaud, manager of The Java Break, Seventh and New Hampshire streets, said her body had adjusted to her night schedule. But the Lawrence senior still has trouble sleeping during the day.
"I prefer to sleep till two, but that rarely happens," Arnaud said.
After drinking coffee all night, sleeping in the morning can be a challenge.
"I try to blow coffee fumes in my husband's face in hopes of igniting in him some of his spill-over energy," Arnau said. "He usually sleeps until sunrise, though."
The combination of working nights, studying and being the editor of Mass Magazine can be stressful, she said.
"I guess I'm living on the brink of insanity," she said. "I don't have any time to get my head together."
Pam Brown has to balance working at night with family life. The 29-year-old is married and has a 5-
month-old daughter, Erica. She supports her family working as a nighttime desk clerk at the Bismarck Inn at the East Lawrence Kansas Tumpike exit. Her husband, Eric, decided to quit working so he could stay home and take care of their daughter.
"When the baby cries at night, I'm not there to calm her." Brown said. "He gets to do that."
Brown has worked nights for eight years.
"I haven't had any health problems, but some of the people we hire to work this shift just can't do it," she said. "They can't adjust to it, and they make them-selsick."
Paul Loney, emergency department physician at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, agreed that the ability to adapt to a night schedule varied from person to person.
"There are night呼声, and there are daytime people," Loney said. "Some people handle it better than others, and others can get really stressed out by working the night shift. You can't generalize on any specific health problems."
Amber Robillard, Wichita senior, knows what working nights can do to a person's body. She is the Saturday night DJ for campus radio station KANU 91.5's Jazz Overnight.
Working at night just once a week wreaks havoc on Robillard's body cycles, she said.
"I feel like I'm recuperating all week long," she said. Even with the odd hours, Robiland enjoys the work.
"You just have to pay your dues," she said. "If you're going to make this a career, you have to start with the not-so-desirable shifts before you have the opportunity to move up."
Robillard said nights could be lonely, especially when no one was calling the station.
"Call-ins just make my day," she said. "I don't care if they're drunk, stoned or whatever. I just want some feedback from my audience."
David Haney is a KU police officer who has worked the night patrol for two years. He said he liked working nights because it was the time when more interesting things went on.
"When you're out in a dark car, it's dark all night long; you might get tired." Haney said. "But when something goes down, your body perks up immediately — an adrenaline rush."
Haney said he thought he could offer more to the public by being on campus at night when the majority of campus incidents happen.
"You get a few bad apples out there, and you got people racing down the streets, hanging out the windows, throwing beer bottles out, breaking glass, this and that," he said. "But the majority of the people up here at night are decent."
Grassroots vs. Lollapalooza on the RECORD
By Robert Moczydlowsky
Kansan staff writer
Sadly, most of you will miss out, opting instead to waste your time, money and ears on the Lollapalooa Music Festival. You will fight crowds, parking jams and bathroom lines, all the while ignoring the other local shows that will offer superior musical performances for a fraction of the cost.
For the next three weeks, Lawrence and Kansas City will offer some of the highestquality modern rock concerts around.
Well, let's take a second to talk about what makes a concert great. For me, it's bands that can perform, not just play.
"But what about all the great bands on the Lollapaloza bill?" you ask.
On the Lollapalooaza stage, those acts will be few and far between. As a matter of fact, the Lollapalooaza bill is full of bands that have a reputation for lousy live shows.
The prime example is Hole, a band that is inconsistent at best on stage. After a recent concert in Washington, D.C., Courtney Love admitted that only recently had her band learned to play together, in tune, on every song.
Singer/songwriter Beck has a style that is dependent upon multi-layered studio tracks and samples. That means he'll either play tape-aided or stripped down versions of his songs. Either way, I get the feeling that his studio-crafted sound doesn't play well in a 20,000-seat amphitheater.
Sinead O'Conner can definitely put on a good show, but more than likely she'll stop her set after three songs to preach to the audience about Northern Ireland or Bosnia or the Save the Whales Foundation. Why she can't let her music do the talking is beyond me.
And what of those art-rock album gods Sonic Youth? The popular word on the street after their R.E.M. opening set was not exactly flattering. To be completely honest, I heard they sucked.
On the main stage, we've got The Mighty Mighty Bosstones, Jesus Lizard, Pavement and Cypress Hill. On the second stage are The Poster Children and Coollo. Those are six excellent acts, all with crowd-whippin' potential. But do you really want to be dancing in the back row while the Bosstones or Cypress Hill are playing 200 vards away?
So where does that leave us?
These are the kind of bands you go to see in sweaty clubs, not stadiums. Wait until
these bands come to the Bottleneck or Liberty Hall. That way you can see them, not just hear them over the p.a.
Sell them. Then take your 60 bucks and buy four tickets to the Grassroots 3 concert Saturday at Worlds of Fun. For half of what it costs to Lollapalooza, you get an excellent lineup that features Juliana Hatfield, Gwen Mars, Triple-fast Action, Rusty and Hum.
Also scheduled to appear are local favorites L.A. Ramblers and Kill Creek, two bands that are on the verge of some hard-earned national attention. Kicking off the day is Frogpond, an all-girl local band that really impressed me when they opened for the Poster Children two weeks ago.
"So what should I do with my two general admission tickets?" you ask.
The Grassroots lineup has bands that, to use a popular sports cliche, are "just happy to be here." That sentiment will no doubt carry over into their live shows, making the small Worlds of Fun amphitheater an ideal place to catch some of the best up-and-coming modern rock in the Midwest.
Tripping Daisy, Bad Brains, Radiohead, Collective Soul and My Life with the Thrill Kill Kult will play in Lawrence in late July. Tickets to these shows will sell fast, so start making your concert plans now. That is, if you have any money left after Lollapalooa?
If festival-style shows are your thing, don't fret. There are plenty of topnotch shows in and around town in the next
The Samples, Widespread Panic and Mango Jam will all play in Lawrence in the next week and a half, offering melodious rock fans a full plate of tasty concert choices.
Tonight, performance-rock fans can hit the Bottleneck to check out Ex-Cops, featuring members of the guts and gore band GWAR and Brutal Juice, the band that has all of Austin, Texas, talking about their one-of-a-kind live show.
three weeks.
Call the Bottleneck and the Granada Theater for ticket information.
And finally, the continuing saga of Vitreous Humor.
Every week I've written that an interview and discussion of their new disc was forthcoming.
To date, there is none.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Next week: Alterno-country with the Jayhawks, and — keep your fingers crossed — Vitreous Humor. Stay tuned.
SECTION B
JULY 5,1995
KU Life
C
MOVIE NEWS
BOX OFFICE BILLBOARD
LOS ANGELES — "Apollo 13" opened in the No.1 spot at North American theaters during the Independence Day weekend with $26 million in ticket sales, according to industry estimates.
Other movies made their debut during the weekend: "Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie," which came in at No. 4 with $14.3 million; and Sylvester Stallone's "Judge Dredd," which earned $12.5 million for fifth place.
The film about the ill-fated 1970 space mission surpassed "Pocahontas" which took in $16.7 million for second place, industry sources estimated Sunday.
4. "Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie" $14.3 million
The following is the list of top 10 movies at U.S. and Canadian theaters, based on estimated ticket sales Friday through Sunday:
1. "Apollo 13"
$26 million
2. "Pocahontas"
$16.7 million
5. "Judge Dredd" $12.5 million
3. "Batman Forever" $15.7 million
6. "Congo"
$4.85 million
7. "The Bridges of Madison County"
$4.3 million
8. "Casper"
$2.51 million
9. "Braveheart" $2.45 million
10. "Die Hard With a Vengeance"
$2 million
2B
Wednesday, July 5, 1995
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Victim's mom to testify in Simpson case
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — After weeks of dry testimony from DNA experts and other scientists, prosecutors in the O.J. Simpson trial will end their case on an emotional note when they call Nicole Brown Simpson's mother to the stand.
Juditha Brown could testify as early as tomorrow, a day after the trial resumes following the long holiday weekend.
She is expected to talk about a telephone conversation she had with her daughter less than an hour before Nicole Simpson and Ronald Goldman were slashed to death outside Nicole Simpson's condominium.
Legal analysts are divided over the effectiveness of the prosecution's tactic to call Brown as the last witness in a five-month-long presentation.
"It makes sense because it provides an emotional impact. It reminds jurors what the trial is all about — a mother losing her child in a brutal murder," said Laurie Levenson, Loyola University law professor.
But veteran defense lawyer Harland Braun said the shift to Brown after a slew of scientific evidence might be too jarring.
"I think the jurors might feel, 'Well, they're putting Mrs. Brown on the stand to manipulate me — appeal to my emotions, not my brain," Braun said.
Prosecutors will have another chance to call witnesses during their rebuttals to the defense presentation, estimated to last about six weeks.
Brown is in a position to back up a number of contentions the prosecution made in opening statements, including the suggestion that O.J. Simpson exerted financial and psychological control over Nicole Simpson.
Prosecutors, however, said they would keep Brown's testimony focused on establishing the time of her daughter's and Goldman's death. Phone records show she spoke with Nicole Simpson about 9:40 p.m. on June 12, 1994. Prosecutors believe
Nicole Simpson and Goldman were killed about 10:15 p.m.
Prosecutors said it was Juditha Brown's prescription glasses that led Goldman to Nicole Simpson's condominium that night. Earlier, Brown had dropped her glasses outside the restaurant where Goldman worked.
Goldman was killed when he tried to return the glasses to Nicole Simpson, who lived near the restaurant. The glasses were found near the bodies in a bloodstained envelope.
Voice of rock'n' roll remembered for his unique style, appeal
Wolfman Jack dies at age 57
The Associated Press
BELVIDERE, N.C. — Barking out his trademark yips and yowls, Wolfman Jack ruled over the midnight airwaves to become the gravelly voice known to several generations of rock'n' rol fans.
The Wolfman had just returned home Saturday from a 20-day trip promoting his new book, "Have Mercy, The Confessions of the Original Party Animal," when he died of a heart attack. He was 57.
"He walked up the driveway, in to hug his wife and then just fell over," said Lonnie Napier, vice president of Wolfman Jack Entertainment.
Born Robert Smith in Brooklyn, N.Y., the Wolfman rose to prominence in the early 1960s on XERF-AM. He played the latest rock 'n' roll on a Mexican station that broadcasted at 250,000 watts, five times the power allowed on any U.S. station at the time.
His howls and yips, and the blues and
Between cuts, he would hawk plastic figurines of Jesus, coffins, and inspirational literature, and exhort his listeners to "get vo'self nekkid."
"This man was an original," said fellow disc jockey "Cousin" Bruce Morrow. "He was energy. He typified 1960s, 1970s radio. And he was a terrific, terrific radio character."
hillybilt records he spun, blanketed much of the United States all night long.
Though already well known, it wasn't until the Wolfman played himself in the 1973 movie "American Graffiti" that America saw the face and the white-striped black beard that went with the voice. Many early listeners mistakenly assumed he was black.
"It took the Wolfman from a cult figure to the rank of American flag and apple pie," Wolfman once said of the movie.
After "American Graffiti," he appeared in advertising campaigns and more than 40 network TV shows. He also had his own syndicated TV show, "The Wolfman Jack Show."
In the 1980s, the Wolfman became host of "Rock'n' Roll Palace" on The Nashville Network. It featured performers such as the Shirelles, the Coasters, Del Shannon, Martha Reeves and the Crickets.
He also played host on a weekly TV show called "The Midnight Special" for eight years, ending in 1982.
More recently, the Wolfman had a weekly syndicated radio show broadcasted from a Planet Hollywood restaurant in Washington, D.C. His last show, picked up by about 70 stations, was Friday night.
"He had just done one of his best shows," Napier said. "He was feeling really good." The portly Wolfman recently had lost 40 pounds. Napier said
"But he still smoked his Camels," he said. "He was going to live the way he lived."
Todd Rundgren, the Guess Who, Leon Russell and Freddie King all wrote songs about him.
The Wolfman's name came from a trend of the '50s, when disc jockeys took nicknames such as "Moondog" or "Hound Dog." He enjoyed horror movies, so he took the name Wolfman.
Wolfman credited his voice for his success: "It's kept meat and potatoes on the table for years for Wolfman and Wolfwoman. A couple of shots of whiskey heels it. It've got that nice raspy sound."
Toll-takers strike on Jersey turnpike
He is survived by his wife, Lou Lamb Smith; a daughter, Joy Rene Smith, 33; and a son, Tod Weston Smith, 31.
The Associated Press
EAST BRUNSWICK, N.J. — Tolltakers on the New Jersey Turnpike walked out of their booths Monday after overnight talks proved fruitless, giving holiday travelers a free ride.
By 6:30 a.m., a half-hour after the day shift was to start work, toll collectors at all 27 interchanges had been replaced by management. Motorists were waved through the booths.
The 148-mile roadway stretches from the George Washington Bridge, which connects New Jersey with New York City, to the Delaware Memorial Bridge, connecting southwestern New Jersey with Delaware. The toll to drive the full length normally is $4.50.
At the Turnpike Authority building in New Jersey, talks had resumed at 10:40 p.m. Sunday and broke off at 5:40 a.m. A picket line developed within an hour.
State officials had no comment Monday morning but set a news conference for later in the day. Earlier, they had vowed to give a judge to issue a restraining order, maintaining a strike would be illegal.
Motorists honked their horns in an apparent show of support as they passed strikers with placards on the toll road approaches.
Roger Nutt, the turnipke's executive director, said the union wanted a 17 percent pay increase during the next four years but was unwilling to bend on work rules. Nutt said the agency wanted concessions to help reduce overtime.
Meanwhile, Garden State Parkway workers are still on the job, deciding their next move. The union representing the parkway workers had said their actions would be tied to the turnpike workers. The parkway runs east of the turnpike, roughly parallel to the state's coast.
Greatful Dead fanatics riot at Indiana concert
The Associated Press
NOBLESVILLE, Ind. — Several thousand ticketless Grateful Dead fans rioted outside a concert, tearing down gates behind the stage to get inside and throwing rocks and bottles at police.
Police broke up the crowd with tear gas and arrested 38 people for drug offenses and resisting law officers during the Sunday night melee. There were no serious injuries.
"It started out as a large group, and then it just grew and it got unruly," said Indiana State Police Cpl. Clint Bundy.
Bundy said the riot began in the outdoor arena's parking lot, about 15 miles from Indianapolis. The sheriff's department said between 3,000 and 4,000 people were involved in the fracas, and at least four police officers were hurt. Earlier, state police had said six officers were injured.
One person was bitten by a police dog while being arrested, the sheriff's department said.
Two hundred state, county and local police officers responded to the riot.
"We object to this sort of behavior," said Grateful Dead representative Dennis McNally. "It's characteristic of some youth. Unfortunately, when you have a public event, you can't dictate necessarily who's going to show up."
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 5, 1995
3B
Professional athletics in need of new attitude
By Jim Litke The Associated Press
Someone too young to know better asked why more stories about the good things in pro sports don't make it into the newspaper. These days, that sounds like a trick question.
Even when posed by a 9-year-old.
The simple answer is that almost nobody playing those games knows how to behave any more. The past weekend offered few exceptions. And if it's true that the tone is set at the top, things only figure to get worse.
When rare commodities like experience, trust and loyalty go unrewarded, they become rarer still. These are the kinds of things we have to look forward to instead.
— From England comes the story of an tennis player Jeff Tarango, who didn't like the way he was being treated by chair umpire Bruno Rebeuh. So Tarango up and walked off the court in mid-match Saturday. At Wimbledon no less. Just before his wife, Benedict, took a slap at the official.
The happy couple's reasoning? Rebeuh was part of some as-yet-unspecified, as-yet-unsubstantiated conspiracy to get Jeff.
— The news in pro basketball, meanwhile, was being monopolized by the lockout and how Michael Jordan and Patrick Ewing have become the front men for a few self-serving agents whose attempt to break the players' union has more to do with control than fairness. Very uplifting stuff.
And what about major league baseball? It found and then squandered a rare chance to celebrate accomplishment. It came as Eddie Murray scaled the 3,000-hit plate; it ended almost as soon as he got there. That's because it's hard to keep a party going unless the guest of honor stays involved. And Murray, who checked out on the media and fans a dozen years ago, still wants to be left alone.
Bad. All of it. But worse news waited farther down the page, down in the small stories about football and hockey franchises moving or threatening to move. And here's the worst news of all: Bad as individual players might behave, the owners are about to prove that players' behavior pales in comparison to how badly a franchise can behave.
But they're just ahead of the curve. "Relocation" is about to become one of the driest words in sports.
The New Jersey Devils have taken heat recently for talking about relocating to Nashville, in part because they just won the Stanley Cup and because they've moved twice already since becoming a hockey franchise in 1974.
The past few weeks also have seen football's Raiders and Rams abandon Los Angeles for former NFL depots in Oakland and St. Louis, respectively. Not that the people on the Left Coast have much to worry about. Rumor it has that the Arizona Cardinals, Cincinnati Bengals, Seattle Seahawks or Tampa Bay Buccaneers — or any combination thereof — may be willing to fill the void before the season after next rolls around.
The owners win either way. According to the latest count in Sports Illustrated, more than three dozen franchises are using a variety of threats to wring concessions from one town or another.
There is such a laundry list of greedy demands that it's surprising cities still vie for franchises. In Tampa Bay, the city fathers built a stadium only a few years ago to lure a baseball team. Now, they'll have to find an additional $50 million to renovate it for the Devil Rays. And they've already signed a 30-year lease absorbing many of the costs while turning over a significant cut of the profits from every event staged there.
"Our chase is over," Mayor David Fischer said at the time the city cut the deal. "Our frustration is over."
But if the recent past is any indication, it may just be beginning.
Times says Nelson to go to Knicks
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Don Nelson has been offered the job as coach of the New York Knicks, the New York Times reported Monday.
"Things are going well, but I'm not going to announce anything until everything is signed and sealed," team president Dave Checketts told the Times.
The Times and Sunday Boston Globe said an announcement would be made this week — possibly tomorrow — but a Knicks spokesman said that no announcement was imminent.
If a multi-year contract is agreed upon, the 55-year-old former coach and general manager of the Golden State Warriors reportedly will receive $2 million a year, the Times said.
The new coach will replace Pat Riley, who resigned after the 1994- 95 season.
Nelson, who also has coached the Milwaukee Bucks, resigned from the Warriors in February with the team's record at 14-34. Before his departure, Nelson had become embroiled in bitter feuds with some of his players, then suffered from viral pneumonia.
In 17 1/2 seasons as a coach, his record is 815-604, making him the sixth-winning coach in NBA history.
He has been chosen the NBA's Coach of the Year three times.
New York general manager Ernie Grunfeld had the final decision and chose Nelson over former Boston coach Chris Ford, even though, according to the Globe, Checkets was not a fan of Nelson.
Ford received official word from Grunfeld on Saturday that Nelson would be coach, the newspaper reported.
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927 Mass./ 841-2451/Mon-Sat 11-5
Angels in America
Angels in America
Part I: The Millennium Approaches
February 2-3.,1996
Part II: Perestroika
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Jesus Christ Superstar November 3-4,1995
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National Theatre of the Deaf An Italian Straw Hat November 1,1995
---
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• Over 1100 Frames In Stock
• In Store Lab • One Day Service (in most cases)
A Tremendous Selection
(in most cases)
SPECTRUM OPTICAL 4 E.7th·841-1113 Offer expires July 31, 1995
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
Apple (Yellow)
Apple (Green)
Apricot
Banana
Black Cherry
Blue Raspberry
Bubble Gum
Cherry
Cherry Cola
Cinnamon
Coconut
Cola (P)
Cotton Candy
Cream Soda
Dalquir
French Vanilla
Grape
Grapefruit
Gueva
Hawaiian Tropic
Hawaiian Punch
Lemon
Lemon Lime
Lime
Licorice
Sno Palace
"Hawaiian Shave ice"
Necta
Orange
Orange-Pineapple
Passion Fruit
Peach
Peppermint
Pina Colada
Pineapple
Pink Champagne
Pink Lemon Juice
Platyclio
Plum
Popeye
Red Hot
Red Raspberry
Rock & Roll
Root Beer
Strawberry
Mango
Tangerine
Tigerblood
Tutti Frutti
Watermelon
Wild Cherry
Over 80
Refreshing Flavors
Soprano Palace
100
Bass
Piano
Cello
Band
Music Director
Mark Heywood
Fabricator
Designer
Manager
Office
Lobby
Balcony
Ground Floor
Ballroom
Tower
Hall
Patio
Restaurant
Gym
Bar
Club
Concert Hall
Museum
Library
Windmill
Solar Panel
Electricity Meter
Telephone
Network
Server
Firewall
Security System
Backup
Plant
Maintenance
Repair
Service
Support
Technical Support
Network Administration
Monitoring
Updates
Maintenance
Preventive Maintenance
Inspection
Inspections
Protection
Mechanical
Electrical
Electronic
Computers
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Audiovisual
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Technology
Networking
Network Admin
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Network Integration
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Cold, Wet, Wild! Real snow with Fantastic Flavors no fat, no cholesterol. Low Calorie Try It!
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4B
Wednesday, July 5, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
And the NBA Draftees are...
PETER SMITH
Fred Holberg
iowa State
Guard
Drafted at #52
Indiana Pacers
1
Donnie Boyce
University of Colorado
Guard
Drafted at #42
Atlanta Hawks
10
Loren Meyer
iowa State
Center
Drafted at #24
Dallas Mavericks
Mike Huffman
Greg Ostertag
University of Kansas
Center
Drafted at #27
Utah Jazz
I
Bryant Reeves
Oklahoma State
Center
Drafted at #6
Vancouver Grizzlies
Big 'O'may have NBA growing pains
Kansan staff writer
By Robert Sinclair Kanean staff writer
You can't coach height.
NBA scouts have been saying this for years. Height is one of the few variables that coaches can't control.
Height is also one of the biggest reasons why former Jayhawk Greg Ostertag was picked by the NBA's Utah Jazz in last week's draft.
"I think they have been looking for a younger big guy, and I hope I fit in," Ostertag said. "I think I run the floor pretty well, and I can block shots and get rebounds."
Utah already has the scoring it needs in all-stars Karl Malone, Jeff Hornacek and John Stockton. However, the Jazz are lacking at the center position where journeyman Felton Spencer is still recovering from a season-ending knee injury.
"Their center doesn't have to score," said Hubie Brown, TNT draft analyst. "He's got to be a defensive force — a shot-blocking guy who can rebound."
The Jazz definitely got what they were looking for in Ostergar.
Last year for Kansas, the 7-foot-2.
ANALYSIS
270-pound center averaged 7.6 rebounds and 2.96 blocked shots a game while setting the Big Eight Conference record for career blocked shots with 250. Last year he averaged 10 points a game, and for his Kansas career he only averaged 7.6 points.
Despite the fact that Ostertag seems like a perfect fit for Utah, he still has a long way to go before achieving recognition as a day-to-day NBA starter.
"I think all players that come from the college level need to work," said Scott Layden, Utah Jazz director of basketball operations. "He just needs to stay active, work on his game and continue to improve."
Rex Walters, a former Jayhawk making a name for himself in the NBA, said Ostertag must make several adjustments. For example, he needed to get stronger and improve his endurance.
"In the NBA you can't give the tired sign. The coach dictates when you come out," Walters said.
Last year for the Jayhawks,
Ostertag averaged just less than 20
minutes a game and will most likely
be expected to play more for Utah
while Spencer recovers.
In college, Ostertag rarely faced an equally tall center. However, that will soon change.
"Everyone in the league has to work on conditioning." Walters said. "Not only do you have to build up, but you have to learn how to use your body in different ways to hold your position."
Ostertag will have to worry about posting up against veterans such as David Robinson, Patrick Ewing and Hakeem Olajuwon. In addition, he also will have to move his family, travel the country and handle NBA business such as contract negotiations and trades.
Nobody expects Ostertag to make an impact right away, but Utah's executives are hopeful.
"I think a lot of it is going to be up to him. He's going to have to come into camp in shape and get himself ready for the tough NBA schedule," Lyden said. "The guy's got talent, and he works hard."
PHOTO SPECIAL
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DAILY SPECIAL
Bananas Tues. July 6, Tue. July 7, Tue. July 7
19¢ in.
BANANAS
FAIRMONT-ZARDA
YOGURT
OZ. CUP
33¢
FA
Bake This Week BANK
LITE TIME FROZEN YOGURT
ASST. FLAVORS 1/2 GAL.
198 EA.
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33¢ EA.
HUDSON BAY BREAD
ASST. VARIETIES
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88¢ EA.
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168 EA.
FRITO LAY. LAYS 7 OZ. FRITOS 10.5 OZ. OR CHEEETOS
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219
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MIXED
VEGETABLES
16 OZ. BAG
69¢
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219
LB.
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248
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89¢
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and Water products
1 PKT.
5 95
EA.
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BING CHERRIES.
128
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MUSHROOMS
8 OZ. PRG.
BREAD
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8 OZ. PKG.
88¢
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ICEBURG
HEAD
LETTUCE
LARGE SIZE
48¢
EA.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
SUNDAY JULY 21
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
BONELESS BEEF
CHUCK ROAST
ECONOMY PAK
SOLD AS ROASTS ONLY
78¢
LB.
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12 OZ. FROZEN
78¢
EA.
---
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FROM THE DELI SLUCED OVER SHAVZED ROAST BEEF, CORNED BEEF OR PASTRAMI 269 LB. ECONOMY PACK
IMPORTED FROM ENGLAND STLTON BLUE CHEESE $68 LB.
WELCH'S ORCHARDS 130 ZUCKER
SWEET JUICY
FRESH
PEACHES
48¢
LB.
FROM THE DELI Sliced OR
SHAVED ROAST BEEF,
CORNED BEER OR
PASTRAMI
269 LB.
COOKIES
PACK
IMPORTED FROM ENGLAND
STILTON BLUE CHEESE
$ 68 LB.
BONELESS PORK LOIN ROAST OR CHOPS ECONOMY PACK 228 LB.
GOLDEN GLO
GROUND
TURKEY
1 LB CHUB
58¢
EA.
GROUND TURKEY
SPLIT FRYER
BREASTS WITH NO BONE
ECONOMY PACK
96¢
LB.
NIKE
FROM THE BAKERY
FRESH BAKED
WHITE BREAD
ECONOMY PACK
2
16 F
OZ. O
R
2 LOWES
IN A BAG
MOOSE BROTHERS
SUPREME
PIZZA
FOR
2$9
LARGE 12" SIZE
VIDEO SPECIAL
3 MOVIES/GAMES
3 DAYS $3.00
NEW RELEASES
NOT INCLUDED
PRICES EFFECTIVE
JULY '95
SUN TUE WED THU FRI SAT
SUN TUE WED THU FRI SAT
5 6 7 8
9 10 11
VUARNET
FRANCE
928 Mass.
Downtown
Park in the rear
EVERYTHING BUT ICE
Beds
Desks
Bookcases
936 Mass.
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Massachusetts 832-8228
Get one of these.
Do Yourself a Favor Dine at The Castle Tea Room 1300 Massachusetts by Reservation Only, Call 843-1151
Red Lyon Tavern
Specials every day of the week
O O
GIANT BOULDER $265.95 Go out and enjoy these.
ck's Bike Shop
Specials every day of the week RUDY'S PIZZERIA HUGE Selection of beer and wine
916 Massachusetts
841-6642
Open Monday to Thursday
till 8 P.M.
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
July5
X-cops
Brutal Juice
Cocknoose
July6
Mango Jam
Deep Blue Something
July7
MU330
Slapstick
July8
Kill Creek
Mercy Rule
July9
Gwen Mars
Cretn 88
Flexi
July11
The Jayhawks
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
Gourmet Pizzas
Pizza by the slice
Gourmet Pizzas
LOOK YOUR BEST THIS SUMMER WITH
SOMETHING FROM CLEOPATRA'S CLOSET
ALL SWIMMING SUITS 40% OFF
SELECTED SPRING AND SUMMER CLOTHING 20----40%OFF CLEOPATRA'S
CLOSET
TETRAEDRATES
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
学
Lawre
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Road843-3826 "At the top of Naismith Hill"
Buy 10 tane for $50
Get 5 tane FREE
Expires 7/15/95
Get Fit KU! VIP Membership Only
749-2424
Call for details
925 Iowa
offer expires 7/15/9⁹
100s Announcements
Classified Directory
200s Employment
Cance's Only Women's Fitness Center
$20 per month
110 Bus. Personals
Avoid long waits in an emergency room. Try LAWRENCE PROMPT ACADEMY. Full-service medical care. Visit board-certified emergency medicine physicians. For general care, fracture care, and laceration open: Open 8am-11am. Mon-Fri and 12:15pm-Holiday. Send Medical Arts Center, Kasdon & Clinton Pfizer
120 Announcements
Miracle Video Summer Clearance. All adult
children under 12 must buy up to 90 N.2m L.
841-893 and 810 Haskell L.
NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Self Server Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center.
BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility
2 months FREE for 1st50 people First Workout FREE!
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange,
Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
WANT TO HAVE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 133 Shrub Street, New York, NY 10017.
T
NETWORK TELEVISION NEWS organization seeking production/administrative assistant. Pay 70/hr with benefits support to start. Seek positions in scheduling, scheduling and administrative skills and a "can do" attitude are a must for this job. Successful applicant will be part of an international team. Topkits — plans to move headquarters to Lawrence this summer. Call (813) 267-NEWS.
LOST CAT: "Ingarag" Brown tiger with orange belly. LOST front-clawed, male, neutered. No collar. Lost near 13th & New York 832-0697
LOST. Your student health insurance.
FOUND: Temporary coverage 1-6 month plans, monthly pay available. CALL: 842-7625.
205 Help Wanted
140 Lost & Found
300s
Merchandise
Attendants needed in Lawrence and KC for FT- and PT work in golf course setting. Paired with a Master's degree in industries preferred. Excellent income and a beautiful work environment. Call (913) 5415-4015 or www.lawrence.edu.
WANTED: Photographer for wedding on July 25
in KCMO. Contact Gene at 8427102 or 8427-249.
一
400s Real Estate
CIRCLE ME
CIRCLE ME
Fast Growing Company
$2,000-$4,000 + mo potual
full training available 865-2708
Looking for people with crazy personalities that are wrong to work hard for huge gains.
140. 1668
Experienced with graphic design using Mac Desktop. Experienced with Quark and Pagemaker. Full time. Great opportunity for talented perfor-mentors in apartment, P, O. P. 1851, Leneza. KS 69285-3100
Frustrated with hourly wage mo. gross job?
Looking for motivated goal oriented individuals.
Full/part time. Full training, excellent income potentials. 842-4622 ext. 633
Nanny needed: F+ for kids (3, 6, 9). Must be reliable, non-smoker who drives. Prefer live-in.
SUMMER WORK
$9.75 STARTING
- National Company
* Entry Level
* AASP Scholarships
* ALL MAJORS
* Work Part Time
Around Classes
CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION
842-6336
SUMMER JOBS
for the
Environment
$2,500,000 each
Save Endangered Species
Protect public lands
Develop campaign skills
theater jobs on the nation oldest and
village land group, stop the war on
onment. Rapid advancement, career
Work with the Sierra Club, the nation's oldest and largest environmental group. Just stop the war on the environment. Rapid advancement, career opportunities.
Call Tracy 749-5465
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER wants you for Fall 1995! Do you have so many interests you can’t keep up with yourself? Are you a clever student who is highly motivated and ready to know KU and the world? You’re the one. We need student hourlies who are excellent students, organized, computer-literate, great communicators, and interested in helping students with their studies. Come to KU Info, 420 Kansas Union, for an application. Work study preferred. We need students who can make KU info their primary work environment. We want them to enjoy and more fun than most jobs you will ever have. Deadline 5th, Friday, July 14, 1995.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 5, 1995
Public Relations
If you like greeting people then this career is for you. No experience necessary. Full training, time and full time positions. Managers/Trainers 2-4000 potential. B2B+ 941-648-9141
Snorts Minded
National company seeking individuals w/ a competitive edge to train for our new team. Must be a team player. Full training and travel options. 842-3277 ext. 650
Student Monthly Position, $50-$65 per month, 2 hours a week. Must have Macintosh computer experience; Quirk, MS Word. Apply at 3093 Dole 844-6068
091348
Looking for a job w/ an environmental twist. 832
1617 ext. 60
We have the MONEY if you have the Time
We have immediate part-time positions available in the various career fields.
Educational assistance and vocational training provided.
Starting salary is $6.94 per hour. Prior service may qualify for higher pay.
To see if you qualify, call Kansas Army National Guard today!
842-0759 or 842-9293
225 Professional Services
offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-779
Dissertations Hardbinding and Gold Stamping 3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
PROMPTABORTIONAND CONTRACEPTIVES SERVICES
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
SURVIVAL
T
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Tennessee 843-4023
Quark X Press Tutoring Contact Society a professional publisher will work one-on-one with you
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID $&$ alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
WECANHELP
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling and information
Telephone/In Person
24 Hours
Confidential
841-2345
INTERNATIONAL, STUDENTS-VISITORS
DV-1 Greencard Program, by U.S. Immigration
Legal Services, Tel. (818) 802-9681; (818) 899-4485;
Stagsi Stgg, Stag岛 Park, CA 91360; Monday
Friday, 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
235 Typing Services
305 For Sale
rely on me to do it RIGHT!
All work is GUARANTEED!
Fast, friendly, reliable, accurate.
Catch the ball at its best.
Makin' the Grade
For ALL your typing/editing/creative needs,
Desks, Bookcases, Chest of Drawers, Beds.
Everything But Ice.
28 Mass.
Full-size matte set: New, never used. Still in warranty, $165. Grass bracehead board, $833. Full-size matte set: New, never used. Still in warranty, $165. Grass bracehead board, $833.
Juan size mattress set. New, never used. Still in
use. Javier size mattress set. New, never used. Still in
use. Brass board box #801. 91 cm x 129 cm. will sell.
165. Brass board box #801. 91 cm x 129 cm. will sell.
REFOUND
SOUND
1-913-842-2555
DVD-ROM
CD-ROM
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE KS.
levigh MY 600 Mountain Bike, Shimano STX, 18' Onza Pedals $500, Almost New Call, Nike
THEK 7000 Mountain Bike. Shimano Deore XT
15. Great condition 4900
VISA
944 WY Sirocew runs great, looks good $1200
all and leave message 473-5686, lv ms.
340 Auto Sales
405 For Rent
1983 CHEVY MALIBU in good condition. Good in town and out of town vehicle. Asking $1,000 or best offer. Call Julie or Steve evenings at 841-5335 or eave message.
2. BR apartment for rent available 81. Gas heater, water, trash and cabin. ID Pool 'null'.
DON'T WAIT ANY LONGER!
Reserve your home for Fall today!
From $345 to $900; Studios,
1, 2, & 3 BR apts. Water
Trash pd. in studios, water,
trash, gas heat pd. in apts.
2, 3, & 4 BR townhomes.
"Small" pets OK with dep.
Pools, tennis, basketball,
on bus route.
Trailridge Apartments 2500W6th
913-843-7333.Fax 843-0197
2 Pools
-2 Pools
Volleyball Court
-OnKU Bus Route with
4 stops on Property
- 2 Laundry Rooms
2 Laundry Rooms
Some Warehouse
Hookups
*Some Washer/Dryer*
Hookups
Park25
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.
We presently have available a select few 1 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Call or stop by today
2401 W. 25th,9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Beau's Import Auto Service
Quality car maintenance & repair.
MasterCard
SAAB • VOLVO
ARROWHEAD
CLUB
545 Minnesota Off of 6th st
Take part in the excitement of NFL Football at Arrowhead Stadium. Levy Restaurants is now hiring for all positions in the Arrowhead Club and Golden Circle Suites. The Season is (10) games, August 5 thru December 24. Experience the thrill of Chiefs Football - and you don't have to buy a ticket! Contact: Nick or Steve, Arrowhead Club, Arrowhead Stadium.
842-4320
**No Phone Calls Please**
Excellent Location, 1019 Tenn. near/kNU RWb
arpl in b4-pt, CA, no妒, $385,842-4242
**K.C. CHIEFS FOOTBALL**
South Points
ACADEMIC
2166 W.26th
843 6448
and other fine imports.
Pets Welcome*
- Swimming Pool
205 Help Wanted
2166 W.26th 843-6446
- Sandvolleyballcourt
- Water & trash paid
- 1,2,3&4bedroom
*Restrictions Apply
- 1,2,3 & 4 bedroom
entr. available
apts. available Ask about our brand
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS 7th&Florida
- Ask about our brand new 3 bedroom villas
Furnished Apartments
NowLeasingForFall
Four Bedroom--Ask About Our Three Person Special
APPLECRFT APTS. Now showing & 2 BAs for Aug. i,lease. AC, heat, water & trash pd. DW, disposal & microwave. Callanytime. 843-820. Sorry, no pets.
Hanover Place
Pool and Clubhouse
Studio, 1,2,3, & 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
841-5255
14th & Mass.
841-1212
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
MASTERCRAFT
Offers Completely Furnished
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
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-Fri 9am-5pm
Sat. 10am-4pm
First Management
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Modern Interiors with:
microwave
Bradford Square Apartments
Equal Housing Opportunity
is now leasing 2
- on-site management
- on KU bus route
- dishwasher
- separate dining room
Spacious
3 BDRM Apts.
Cats Welcome
An exclusive opportunity for 4 students, Luxury,
1.5 year old 4 BR 2 story Townhouse in Parkway
Gardens. 2 Bath. 2 car garage, fully equipped
kitchen, D draps, Fpato, patioVELLED ceilings,
D ceiling, room, court lawn, walk to KU,
KUE bus路 8800/mau, avail 15. Call
Paul, 843-3894.
- lots of closet space
- convenient laundry facility
- patio/deck
749-1556
501 Colorado #B1
Mon.-Fri. 1-5p.m.
Sat.11 a.m.-3 p.m.
Stop by or call
- microwave
bedroom apts. for fall!
- Microwave
- Dishwasher
- Gas, Heat/CA
M-F 1-5pm
1740Ohio
749-1436
Tropical Island
- Garbage Disposal
* Washer/Dryer Hookup
Holiday Apartments
Leasing for Summer & Fall
2 Bedroom $410-$425
3 Bedroom $595-$615
- 4 Bedroom $715-$725
- 3 Bedroom $595-$615
* 4 Bedroom $715-$815
- Recently constructed
- Nice quiet setting
- On bus route
211 Mount Hope Court #3
For more info, or Appt.
call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Mon-Fri 12-5 p.m.
211 Mount Hone Court
VILLAGE SQUARE
- Closetocampus
- Spacious2 bedroom
- Laundry facility
- Laundryfacility
- Swimming pool
Leanna Mar Townhomes
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Four Bedroom/Three Bath Featuring for Fall of 195
- Full-Size Washer/Dryer
- Microwave
- Dishwasher
- Trash Compactor
- Gas Fireplace
- Ceiling Fans in Every Rm.
- Cable in Every Rm.
- Cable in Every Rn Walk In Closets
- Walk-In Closets
- 1500SqFt.
4501 Wimbeldon Dr.
Call 841-7849
Office Hours
Cable Paid Gas Heat
*Carport Per Townhome*
Office Hours (9-5), M-F
Swan
S
GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS
2512 West 6th St. 749-1288
- 1 Bedroom $320
• 2 Bedroom $380
• 3 Bedroom $600
- EAGLE APARTMENTS
- 1 Bedroom $320
• 2 Bedroom $420
Monday-Friday
1 - 4:30 p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Call 749-1288
Kaw Valley Management, Inc. is now leasing studio 1, 2, & 3 bedroom apartments, town homes, and have homes for immediate or Fall move-In. Conn 8: W 24th, St or call us at 610-8608 for more info.
Brand New!
Be the First!
SOUTHPOINTE ParkVillas
*Professionally designed interiors
Persuasion designed interior
a Thunderbass name, turn full bathe
Now leasing for spring or fall!
- Three bedrooms, two full baths
- Washer/dryer included
- On KUbus route – Great Location!
2310 West 26th St
843-6446
2 BR available for Fall. PETS ALLOWED! Central alair, Jacuzzi. Only $407/mo. Call Laurie at 79-548. Leave message.
Modern 3 B 2 bath Condo. Fully furnished.
Modern 3 B 2 bath Condo. Walking distance to
Campul 311-948-3857. Walking distance to
Campul 311-948-3857.
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
Swimming pool
- Convenient location next to campus and on KU bus route
- Planned social activities
- Featuring our "Dine Anytime" program that serves teriffic meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner
- IBM and Macintosh computer lab
Tours available daily including weekends-just drop by!
Don't forget to ask about our "Fast Back"Bonus!
1800 Naismith Drive
843-8559
843-8559
Don't have time to stop by?
Call us and we'll be happy
Call us and we'll be happy to send an information necklace!
packet!
1-800-888-GOKU
524 Frontier
842-4444
Boardwalk
On Trailside Bus Rou
NAISMITH Hall
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PAGE 6B
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1995
Perfect pick-up game search is on
"People gather around six," he said. "It's good competition and the same guys show up night after night, so you become familiar with the games of the people playing. This leads to better games and less selfish play."
By Mark Luce Kansan staff writer
Homolka said he liked to use the court behind the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house, 1425 Tennessee St.
The quest for the perfect pick-up basketball game, even in a city with a well-established basketball tradition, can be frustrating if one doesn't know where and when to look.
Lawrence offers numerous locales for basketball and with a bit of planning, a little luck, and cooperative weather, games can be found at all competition levels.
"It is great to be out in nice weather and not cooped up in the gym," he said. "You have to adjust your game to the wind, the surfaces vary and every rim all over town is different. But you just can't beat playing outside."
Even though more people get outside onto concrete and asphalt courts in summer, Robinson Center has the best facilities and the most courts in Lawrence. The floor was remodeled in June, and all the courts and rims are regulation length and height.
Competitive games at Robinson are played at noon and in the early evening, said Pat Collinsworth, Wichita senior.
"Robinson in the summer is great," Collinsworth said. "You can always run a full game; they have a nice court, and the competition is always there, no matter what your playing level."
Despite being full size, the Beta
For outdoor action, the facilities are not as nice or consistent, but Scott Homolka, Salina senior, said playing outside provided a more fulfilling basketball experience.
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
Theta Pi court has strong rims, which steadfastly refuse to give forgiving bounces. Also, a lack of lights means that as the summer rolls on, the games end earlier.
The court in Buford Watson Park at Sixth and Tennessee streets, known as "The Pit" to frequent players, is another place to find a competitive game, especially in the early evening and on weekends. The competition level varies, with some games intense and physical. There are no lights, and the rims are different heights.
MILLIE WEBB
The Pit has another drawback. After a rain, the court gets flooded, and as the water drains, a thin layer of dried muck covers the court.
Veteran's Park, 19th and Louisiana streets, has some of the most competitive games in town on the weekend, said David Stuber, Lawrence senior. He said that although he liked playing under the lights, the facility was not what it could be.
Eric Meyer, assistant professor of civil engineering, brings the ball down the court during a faculty/staff game in Robinson Center on Monday. The games are played all year on Monday, Wednesday and Friday at noon.
"The courts are simply too small," Stuber said. "There is never enough room to run, and all the rims are different heights. It's just too crowded to run a good five-on-five game."
North Lawrence offers two good facilities, one at John Taylor Park, Seventh and Walnut streets, and lighted courts at Lyon Street Park, Seventh and Lyon streets.
The Taylor court has a new surface, well painted three-point lines and forgiving rims. A game at either location usually must be organized in advance since not many people go to these locales for pick-up games.
For times when players want to slam dunk, but simply can't reach regulation rims, there are three different places to play on goals only 8 to 8 1/2-feet tall. Both Cordley Elementary School at 1837 Vermont St. and Pinckney elementary School at 810 W. Sixth St. have reinforced low goals.
Qualal Run Elementary, 1130 Inventry Dr, has a dunker's dream
court. Set back in a wooded area east of the school lies a narrow full court with 8-foot goals at each end.
Collinsworth, Stuber and Homolka all said the courts around the city were not as well maintained as they could be.
especially in a basketball-rich town, it's too bad there are not more lighted outdoor facilities," Homolka said.
"With the number of students,
"It would be wonderful if some sort of organized outdoor summer league could be started. I am sure the interest is there," he said.
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at are interested Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 1-800-GOKU
ADVERTISING: 864.4358
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS: 864-4810
KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER
ADE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WEATHER
HOT! HOT! HOT!
High 97°
Low 73°
Weather: Page 2A.
A
SECTION VOL.104, NO.154
WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1995
(USPS 650-640)
CAMPUS
Free wheelin' and fly fishin'
A KU student is biking across the U.S. on a mountain bike in search of the perfect fish. Page 3A.
CAMPUS
The King to meet the Bard
University Theatre launches into the future with its production of 'Twelfth Night.'
Page 1B
NEWS BRIEFS
Parolee faces murder charge
WICHTA, Kan. — A man who was paroled four times and returned to prison each time has been charged with killing two people during his final release.
Donald R. Barksdale, 39, was charged Monday in Sedgwick County District Court in the beating deaths of a man in 1991 and a teen-age girl in 1992.
The cases had gone unsolved until Detective Danny Parker, a member of the FBI Violent Crime Task Force, re-examined evidence a year ago in the case of the teen's death.
At the time Jennifer Forgie, an 18-year-old dry-cleaning store worker, and Hosea Davis III, the 38-year-old son of a local minister, were killed. Barksdale was living in Wichita and was on parole for the 1977 slaying of Michael D. Fletcher of Topeka.
Forgie's and Davis families were glad a suspect finally was charged.
"It has been three years; that's long enough," said Jeanne Hawkins, the grandmother of Forgie, who was killed while working alone as a counter clerk.
Mantle cures ills on golf course
DALLAS — Just over a month after receiving a new liver, Mickey Mantle said today he was thankful for the life-saving transplant.
"I'm not well yet. I'm getting a lot better, they say — but I'm not really well," he said at a news conference at Baylor University Medical Center.
Mantle said the donated liver saved his life.
"I can barely remember coming in. I was chilling so bad that they had like four or five blankets on me." he said.
Mantle, 63, received a new liver June 8. Doctors said then that the former New York Yankees slugger could've died within two weeks had he kept his liver, which was being eroded by cancer, hepatitis C and cirrhosis.
Mantle was released from the hospital June 28, exactly one month after he was admitted because of stomach pains. He returns to Taylor for checkups, although he's been able to spend time at his favorite golf course.
Uninsured students run health risk
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Most universities require coverage for medical needs
By Luby Montano-Laurel and Phillip Brownlee
Special to the Kansan
Like most 21 year olds, Stephanie Suetos thought she was invincible. So she didn't buy health insurance.
But last fall, the St. Louis junior was diagnosed as having precancerous cells on her cervix. Even though her surgery was successful, Suetos was classified as high risk and now can't get insurance.
"I never knew how comforting it was to have health insurance until I couldn't get it," she said.
Suetos worries about her future as well as that of her parents. If she gets sick or is in a car wreck, she has no financial protection.
anything would happen."
"It makes me so upset that I could make my parents go bankrupt," she said. "I knew I needed insurance, but I put it off because I didn't think
Suetos is not alone. According to Watkins Memorial Health Center surveys, 20 percent of KU students don't have health insurance and are risking financial ruin in the event of a serious illness or injury.
"Students are gambling with their financial futures," said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins. "If they lose, they lose big."
Nationally, 11 percent of all college students are uninsured and about 34 percent are either uninsured or underinsured, according to a report from the American College Health Association in Baltimore.
Although some students like Sueset cannot get insurance, most are uninsured because they cannot afford the premiums.
The U.S. Census Bureau's 1992 survey also showed that college students are a significant segment of the uninsured population. Excluding those over 45 years old, 54 percent of the uninsured are between 18 and 24 years old.
"There are times I only have $30 left for food," said Deidre Datterfield, Overland Pork sophomore. "I can't even afford my car insurance."
How could I afford health insurance?
The University of Kansas offers student health insurance through GM Underwriters Agency Inc., Rochester, Mich. Last year, the annual premiums were $776 for a student, $2,188 for a student and spouse, $1,717 for a student and children and $2,598 for a family.
Premiums for a student policy this year will be $815, a 44 percent increase from four years ago. Although steep, this increase reflects increases in health-care costs, which doubled nationally between 1984 and 1991.
As health-care costs have increased, so have the financial risks to uninsured students. Common and relatively simple procedures now can cost thousands of dollars.
Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St., charges $300 a day for a room, $200 for an emergency visit due to a broken arm or stitches and more than $5,000 for a Caesarean section. That price doesn't include more than $3,000 in doctor and anesthesiologist fees for the baby delivery.
Suetos was able to keep her medical bills under $1,000. But even so, she is having trouble paying them.
"I've been saving money for college ever since I was a kid," she said. "This took a whole semester of money from me."
Amanda Traxler, Overland Park senior, sprained her ankle while running and for the last six weeks has worn an air cast and used crutches. Her physical therapist recently told her that if her ankle did not heal, she might need surgery.
"I don't have any insurance, and it makes me really nervous," Traxler said. "I can't begin to think how I would pay for surgery."
Yockey said that other KU students have had it worse. One of his patients was in a car wreck last year and incurred $185,000 in medical bills. He had no health insurance.
"His life is a giant disaster," Yockey said. "He had to drop out of school and is now trying to hide from creditors. He is never going to get out of that debt."
But besides the financial risks, not having health insurance can lead to
KU health care costs on the rise
See INSURANCE, Page 2A.
$1000
$800
$600
$400
$200
$0
1991/1992
1992/1993
1993/1994
1994/1995
1995/1996
KU health insurance premiums through the GM Underwriters agency, inc. have risen an average of $50 each year since 1991.
JACKSONVILLE
Jay Thornton / KANBAI
Danny Manning, former Kansas basketball player, drives for a lay-up at Schwegel Elementary School. Manning was in town last week for his annual children's basketball camp.
Noah Musser/KANSAN
1987
It wasn't a conference final, but All-Star game.
1988
It wasn't a conference final, but All-Star game.
April
1988
It was two weeks before national championship.
June
1988
It was two weeks before national championship.
Summer
1988
When defense proved in college games.
Jan. 4,
1989
Teens anterior cruciate ligament to his right knee during game against Milwaukee Bucks.
1993
Makes first ALL-star appearance.
Dec. 7,
1993
Scores a screen high 63 points against Chicago Bulls.
1994
Makes second ALL-star appearance.
Feb. 24,
1994
Is traded to Atlanta Hawks for Dominique Wilkins.
Sept. 8,
1994
Signs with Phoenix Suns.
Feb. 6,
1995
Tears anterior cruciate ligament in left knee.
Manning returns to site of glory days
By Dan Gelston
Kansan staff writer
It seemed like it was 1988 all over again There was Danny Manning, back in Lawrence, putting in uncontested layups, blocking shots and high-fiving teammates with the smile that Kansas fans were used to seeing. Only this time, he was playing against the boys and girls who took part in his basketball camp last week.
Each summer, Manning makes the pilgrimage for the camp and renew friendships from his championship days. He led Lawrence to the high school state championship in 1985 and helped Kansas win the 1988 NCAA national championship.
The 6-foot-11 restricted free agent was at Lawrence High School and local gymnasiums from Sunday through Thursday instructing more than 200 children.
Manning ran gingerly while at the camp as he is recovering from knee surgery. On February 6, Manning tore his anterior cruciate ligament while playing for the Phoenix Suns, which ended his season and may sideline him until mid-December.
Manning was forced to watch helplessly from the sidelines as the Suns were
"It was very frustrating to watch," Manning said. "Not that I would have made a great deal of difference, but I could have done some things that could have helped."
bounced from the playoffs in the second round.
"It is a hard and long process. I found that out the first time," said Manning, referring to a similar injury that he suffered his rookie season.
For now, Manning is resigned to his rehabilitation program.
Some players have petitioned the National Labor Relations Board to decertify the players' association, claiming that union officials had not kept them informed about ongoing collective-bargaining negotiations. On June 30, NBA owners locked out the players, putting a freeze on all NBA transactions.
The damage to Manning's knee might not be as damaging as the NBA labor situation.
"We have to make the best deal we can for 360 members of the unions, not two or three or 150," Manning said. "They are entitled to their opinion, but the union has
As Secretary of Treasury for the union, Manning has remained a staunch advocate of the union.
Manning got support from his high school coach, Ted Juneau, who helped organize and run the camp.
"It's really great when someone like Danny comes to a camp like this," Juneau said. "It makes the kids want to come, and they really get a thrill out of seeing a player of his caliber."
"I really enjoy this," Manning said. "I love coming back and giving something back to the town, and the kids especially."
worked hard and effectively for us."
Manning also said he hoped that the league would learn its lesson from the fan backlash baseball received after an eight-month strike. He wasn't sure whether the NBA lockout would last into training camp, but the Lawrence camp was the only one on Manning's mind last week. And helping out kids was his main priority.
After being named the 1988 consensus college basketball player of the year, Manning was the first overall pick in the NBA draft. Manning said he hoped to add an NBA championship ring to his collection while with the Suns.
"We've got great talent and great coaches," Manning said. "Like we showed in '88, anything can happen in this game."
Student-employee pay upped despite freeze on faculty raises
By Ryan Vise
Kansan staff writer
KU libraries gives workers 15-cent raise
About 300 students had pay increases which went into effect on June 12. Each student was given at least a 15-cent raise, but some longer-standing student employees received larger raises.
Student employees at the University of Kansas libraries will enjoy a bit more cash in their pockets this summer. A recent raise has increased the pay by 15 cents.
The raises are a bit of a shock to KU faculty and staff members, whose raises are being delayed until at least January.
In addition to the pay upgrade, the libraries also have issued longevity raises, which make students eligible for raises on a yearly basis, said Anita Rogier, office assistant at Watson Library.
Assuming each student receives a flat 15-cent raise, it will cost the University about $45 more an hour.
"The delay was not well received," said Anthony Genova, chairman of the philosophy department. "But the faculty does not compete with students. The hourly raise is so low — why talk about it?"
"Our reason was to compete with other departments on campus," Rogier said. "We've had a real hard time recruiting students because many jobs start above minimum wage."
The libraries get many student workers from the work-study program. Until recently, the libraries also used the Student Employment Center to recruit employees, including those on work study.
But the center moved from Strong Hall to the Burge Union last year. Since the Office of Financial Aid is also in Strong Hall, the employment center was in an ideal location, Rogers said.
"Before, people could walk out of financial aid and look at the employment board. Now they have to go to the Burge Union." she said.
The libraries are the second highest form of student employment and are always looking for new employees, Rogier said. With the employment center's move, library officials are working on new strategies to get students.
In addition to those benefits, Mary Clark, student employee at the copy center in Watson, said she was pleased with the raise.
"Everybody's happy about it," Clark said. "It's great."
SUA shortens ticket trek for KU students on foot
SUA is adding a new service for KU students. The box office will be selling tickets to all Lied Center events.
"Students will find it easier to get their tickets," said Susan Cary, SUA box office manager. "They won't have to walk all the way to the Lied Center. It's especially nice for students who live on campus and don't have cars so they can just come to our box office."
Students may have a chance of getting better seats because they can buy their tickets as soon as the seats go on sale.
"It's also a good service for faculty," Cary said. "People will no longer have to go to Hy-Vee or the Lied Center to buy their tickets."
The SUA box office is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
on Saturday.
24
---
2A
Wednesday, July 12, 1995
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lied Foundation donates $3.5 million to University
Contribution fuels art and research at KU Med Center
Kansan staff report
The University of Kansas has
received a $3.5 million gift
from the Lied Foundation of
Las Vegas.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway on Friday announced that the Foundation would donate the money to biomedical research at the University of Kansas Medical Center and to performing arts at the Lawrence campus.
"The University of Kansas is profoundly grateful," Hemenway said. "This gift continues the Lied Foundation's tradition of investing in projects that affect the well-being of humanity."
The Foundation this month gave $2 million to the KU Endowment Association to create a $1 million endowed-research fund at the Medical Center and a $1 million endowment to support performing arts programming at the 'Lied Center.
The foundation will add annual contributions of $100,000 to the Lied Performance Fund for five years.
In addition, if KU officials are successful at reaching fundraising goals from other sources, the Lied Foundation has agreed to add up to $500,000 to the Lied Performance Fund and up to $500,000 to the medical research fund.
To receive the additional funds, KU must raise $500,000 for programming at the Lied Center during five years and $500,000 for the medical-research fund by Aug. 31, 1996.
When the matching funds for these endowments are secured, the Lied Performance Fund will total $2.5 million and the Lied Research Fund $2 million.
The Lied Foundation provided $10 million in 1988 to construct a performing arts auditorium, which was named the Lied Center in recognition of the Lied Foundation's contributions to KU. A scientific research building at the Medical Center also will be named for Ernst F. Lied.
Lied attended KU in the 1920s and was a member of the university golf team. He later established an automobile business in Omaha, Neb.
In 1950, he moved to Las Vegas and entered the real estate business. His estate established the Lied Foundation in 1980.
CORRECTION
Due to a reporter's error, an article last week on Watkins Memorial Health Center renovations erroneously reported that spouses of University of Kansas students will be able to obtain health services this
fall by paying an $86 fee. Spouses of KU students will be eligible for Watkins' services, but they will have to pay for individual services, because non-KU students are not eligible to pay the $86 fee.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 StauFFER-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
INSURANCE: Health financial problems fester
a vicious cycle of health problems. Last year, 30 percent of Watkins' patients were uninsured. Yockey said the percentage was higher than that of uninsured KU students because uninsured individuals were sick more often.
Continued from Page 1A.
"People who can't afford health insurance often have a lot of financial stress," Yockey said. "They then get sick and get bills they can't afford, which gives them more stress."
Satterfield said that she got sick more than she could afford.
"I work a lot to pay my bills, and my immune system goes down," she said. "I can't always afford to eat right."
Additionally, uninsured students sometimes put off going to the doctor because they are afraid they cannot afford it.
"I knew for weeks that I should go back for a follow-up visit for my ankle, but I didn't want more bills," Traxler said.
Regina Anderson, Leavenworth senior, is a lab technician and sometimes treats herself instead of going to the doctor. She doesn't have health insurance.
"I if have the flu or any other sickness, I procrastinate about going to the doctor," Anderson said. "I either treat myself using my knowledge or go to the doctors and pay huge bills."
As of today, KU has no solutions to its student health insurance problem.
The American College Health Association recommends that colleges automatically enroll students in KU's plan unless they show proof of insurance from a parent or another private plan.
Cynthia Launchbaugh, director of member services at the American College Health Association, said that most universities had adopted this mandatory insurance policy, though KU, Wichita State University and Kansas State University have not done so.
Other colleges, like the University of Colorado, allow students to forgo insurance only if they sign a waiver. If the waiver is not signed,
the students automatically are added to the university police.
Dan Newman, president of G-M Underwriters Agency Inc., said that mandatory coverage was beneficial because more participants could mean lower premiums. Newman estimated that if KU's insurance enrollment doubled, individual premiums would decline by 15 to 20 percent.
But not everyone is impressed.
"Mandatory insurance is not a good idea unless the university is willing to lower the cost of tuition," Satterfield said. "I can barely afford to pay tuition, let alone health insurance."
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that KU had no plans to require mandatory insurance.
"I think students who don't have insurance are putting themselves at risk, but trying to enforce that is almost impossible," Ambler said. "It's difficult enough to require immunization."
Yockey said that although he liked the idea of mandatory coverage, he also didn't see it happening anytime soon because many students likely would oppose it.
"Mandatory is not a popular word," Yockey said. "KU isn't going to do something that discourages students from coming here."
Both Ambler and Yockey said that insurance was ultimately the student's responsibility.
"It boils down to priorities and how you spend your money," Yockey said. "I look at insurance as a necessity, just like gas in my car."
But for some KU students, paying for insurance may mean not paying for gas or tuition. As a result, many of these students end up betting that they won't get sick, even though they are playing Russian roulette with their financial future.
Some win this bet; some break even. But some students like Suecos, who gambled and lost, are left with regrets.
"The only thing I did wrong was be a kid and wait too long to get health insurance," Suetos said. "I'm paying for it now. This could haunt me for the rest of my life."
Weather
HIGH LOW
Atlanta 96 ° • 74 °
Chicago 93 ° • 74 °
Des Moines, Iowa 96 ° • 76 °
Kansas City, Mo. 99 ° • 76 °
Lawrence 97 ° • 73 °
Los Angeles 80 ° • 63 °
New York 87 ° • 68 °
Omaha, Neb. 103 ° • 76 °
St. Louis 96 ° • 79 °
Seattle 73 ° • 54 °
Topeka 98 ° • 74 °
Tulsa, Okla. 98 ° • 75 °
Wichita 102 ° • 75 °
TODAY
Warm and clear.
7397
THURSDAY
Hot and Continued dry.
7599
FRIDAY
A chance for thunderstorms.
7699
TODAY
Warm and clear.
7397
THURSDAY
Hot and Continued dry.
7599
FRIDAY
A chance for thunderstorms.
7699
CAMPUS INFORMATION
Friday:
Last day to submit an application for degree to graduate in summer 1995
Hours for Watson Library and Anschutz Science Library: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon-
Thurs.; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fri; noon to
Sat; Sat.; 1 to 5 p.m. Sun.
Enrollment center hours: 8 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m.
Mon.-Fri.
Hours for the Kansas and Burge union bookstores: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri. The Kansas Union Bookstore will be open on the following Saturdays
from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.: July 15
and July 22.
Campus is closed to through traffic from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Mon-Fri.
Parking is restricted in blue, red and yellow lots. Residence hall parking lots are not restricted. Parking areas on workplaces.
University directory assistance
From campus phones, dial 0. Off
campus, dial 864-2700.
KU Police Department (non-emergency): 864-5572
Safe Ride: 864-SAFE
Watkins Memorial Health Center:
864-9500
You'll find it in the Kansas Classifieds.
The Etc. Shop
REVO Sunglasses
928 Mass. Downtown
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PIPELINE PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS
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Wednesday, July 12, 1995
3A
Crankin'solo across the U.S.
KU student takes break from ride in Kansas City
By Trine Nygaard Kansan staff writer
Brent Taylor took a rocky road to a break this summer.
he arrived in Kansas City, Kan., on Sunday night to rest for a few days with friends and family before continuing his solo cross-country mountain bike ride.
Taylor, Prairie Village junior, said he wanted to see the countryside, meet new people and do some fly fishing in some of the world's finest rivers.
Taylor said he had wanted to make the trip for two years. An attempt last summer fell through, but this summer he and his roommate decided to hit the road. Friends took them to Oregon in their 1978 Volkswagen bus
"We covered 1,600 miles in five days," Taylor said. "On the way, we took time for sightseeing, so it was a cool way to start the trip."
The journey began May 23, in Seaside, Ore. Four days later, Taylor's friend quit and took their tent and almost almost all of their food.
"He really did a number on me. I guess he just turned not to be the buddy I thought he was," Taylor said.
Taylor, who rides between 50 and 75 miles each day, decided to continue alone and to turn the misfortune into a positive experience.
"Now I go when and where I want to, and I don't have to wait for anybody," he said. "It turned out to be a blessing to be alone. People are more willing to talk to and help a lonely guy."
Two to three times a week he is invited to dinner by strangers who let him stay in their houses, use their idle campers or cann on their front lawns.
He has not had to pay for a hotel room yet, but one night he had to stay in a public restroom because it rained too hard to camp.
Choosing the route was easy. He wanted to start in
That's a long ride!
Brent Taylor, Prairie Village junior, is resting at his parents' house before completing his cross-country mountain bike journey.
Noah Musser / KANSAN
100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200 1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000 2100 2200 2300 2400 2500 2600 2700 2800 2900 3000 3100 3200 3300 3400 3500 3600 3700 3800 3900 4000 4100 4200 4300 4400 4500 4600 4700 4800 4900 5000 5100 5200 5300 5400 5500 5600 5700 5800 5900 6000 6100 6200 6300 6400 6500 6600 6700 6800 6900 7000 7100 7200 7300 7400 7500 7600 7700 7800 7900 8000 8100 8200 8300 8400 8500 8600 8700 8800 8900 9000 9100 9200 9300 9400 9500 9600 9700 9800 9900
the north and fly fish for trout along the Blue Ribbon streams.
He said that he had the best fishing experience of his life when he caught a 25-inch brown trout in the Madison River in Montana.
Darryl Tichener, one of the friends Taylor made along the way, runs the Madisonian, the local paper in Ennis, Mont.
"One day he walked into the paper looking for a little publicity to show his accomplishment," Tichener said. Tichener, having learned that Taylor also needed a job, invited him to stay at his house in Virginia City, Mont.
He worked for Tichener at one of his gift stores for a day and staved with the family for two nights.
"He is a good kid and a good worker. We just had a good time visiting and partying for a few days," Tichener said.
With an average expense of $4 a day, the trip is inexpensive. So far Taylor has spent $200.
Taylor plans to leave Kansas City on Sunday to finish the second half of his tour, which is scheduled to end Aug. 8 in Myrtle Beach, S.C. From there he will take a bus back to Kansas.
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Wednesday, July 12, 1995
OPINION
U'N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE; THE SUSAN SMITH TRIAL
Insanity defense is justified
As Susan Smith's trial begins this week, many are still asking the same question as when she was arrested: "How could she do it?"
Last fall, Smith was arrested for murdering her two children, 3-year-old Michael and 14-month-old Alex.
In light of what her lawyer David Bruck may claim for Smith's defense — a plea of innocence by reason of insanity — the public may never know the truth.
But Smith, who could face the death penalty if she is declared guilty whether she is sane or mentally ill, still has every right to prove to her jury that past abuses drove her to insanity which ultimately caused her to drown her two sons.
Monday, a psychiatrist for the prosecution said that Smith was legally competent to stand trial despite her feelings of depression, nausea and worthlessness and her fantasies of being reunited with her children.
The 23-year-old Smith has a past of problems which
In this murder trial, a mother's insanity plea is legitimate after a life of abuse, depression
began when her father committed suicide when she was 6 years old. She tried to kill herself twice in the next 10 years and was hospitalized for depression. Smith's stepfather also has admitted to sexually assaulting her.
In her confession, Smith said, "I didn't want to live anymore. I felt I had to end our lives to protect us all from grief or harm."
And although she has not offered an explanation of why she saved herself from drowning, this question probably will be answered during the trial.
Although the outrage of a public that felt betrayed has calmed, Smith now faces a public that isn't sympathetic to her insanity defense. But this may be the only answer to the question of how a mother could kill her own children, and it should be used in this case.
JAMIE MUNN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
THE ISSUE: HATE RADIO
Award mocks free speech
G. Gordon Liddy recently won the Freedom of Speech Award at a ceremony for the National Association of Radio Talk ShowHosts.
Liddy, a former President Nixon aide who went to prison for his role in the Watergate burglary, hosts a syndicated, talk-format program which is heard on 262 radio stations nationwide.
Liddy was honored for his use of free speech, but the award now legitimizes, even dignifies, one of the most base means of mass communication: hate radio.
His program repeatedly has been critical of the botched 1993 federal raid on the Branch Davidian cult compound near Waco, Texas.
He once advised listeners to use "head shots" to defend themselves from attacking agents because "they've got a vest underneath."
This kind of broadcast attracts listeners by being controversial but is within the rights of those radio stations to broadcast.
G. Gordon Liddy's honor praises the shoddy side of journalism and ignores the First Amendment's true purpose and intent.
However, to honor Liddy as a model of free speech is disappointing because his comments are only extreme statements made to raise tempers not the common consciousness.
With this precedent, the award could eventually honor any broadcaster who can create the most attention rather than uplift the First Amendment's intent.
The First Amendment's beauty shines from its high regard for responsible expression.
Telling radio listeners the most lethal place to shoot government officers is not responsible.
Liddy is entitled to the popularity he may have among his listeners. But honoring him with a national free speech award cheapens the ideals that most media members strive to protect and enhance through responsible communication.
JAMIE MUNN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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Matt Hood / KANSAN
HILLTOP
NO WAITING
Pro-sports millionaires force this fan to strike against major leagues
That's it. Forget all professional sports.
From now on, all sports fans should forget that there were ever such entities as major professional leagues in football, baseball and basketball.
Here's a brief and simplistic history lesson. The NFL has a salary cap set for every team, but players don't agree with it and want it changed to get more money.
Major League Baseball players were on strike last season and into this strike-shortened year because owners said they couldn't survive escalating player payrolls and were ready to implement a salary cap.
Recently, NBA players have been locked out by the owners because a group of agent-guided superstars want the current players' union disbanded — for money, of course.
Now you're up to speed, and it's too bad, isn't it?
Don't watch professional sports. Understand the gravity of this request, coming from the computer of a Minnesota Twins, Los Angeles Clippers and Denver Broncos fanatic.
Hometown sports fans, forget the Kansas City Chiefs and the Kansas City Royals.
GERRY
FEY
KANSAN
EDITOR
While this may be a ludicrous idea, professional players have eclipsed the ridiculousness scale. Basketball phenomenon Michael Jordan has said that he could never be paid what he was worth. What the... Elementa
will never be paid what they are worth. Social workers and firefighters, not athletes, are underpaid. Jordan seems to think that playing basketball will end world hunger.
Elementary school teachers
The only real way of measuring a job's worth is to examine its social significance. Professional athletics don't amount to anything in the big picture, but these bloated ego hounds seem to think that they are at the top of the social ladder, when indeed they are not.
Therefore, if you rooted for the Chiefs in the past, start following Kansas State Wildcats or Kansas Jayhawks football. If you cheered for home-run hitting Bob Hamelin
and the Royals, attend Wichita State Shockers baseball games.
If you liked the Chicago Bulls, turn toward Roy Williams and Kansas basketball. Ignore all the money-grubbing players and owners.
Why? College and high school sports display the essence of what these sports should stand for: achievement, striving for a goal and teamwork—not greed.
I'm convinced that money is the root of all evil, at least in professional sports. When the Oakland A's won the World Series in 1974, Reggie Jackson was their highest paid player at $70,000 a year. While players like Jackson, a Hall of Famer, may have been underpaid, the game in those days was baseball. With the average salary at more than $1 million this season, the game has changed to laborrelations.
While money is starting to dampen NCAA basketball, that condition still is better than the NBA.
Maybe the quality of play at this lower level is not what we would see in the professional arena, but at least when we are watching a college game, the players' motives are clear.
Conference basketball trophy, we knew he was striving for that championship and not for a better contract for next season. While there are players in college eyeing sevenfigure contracts, it's the NBA waving the money in their faces, not the schools.
When we watched Kansas guard Jacque Vaughn hoist the Big Eight
When we see Kansas football coach Glen Mason yelling at quarterback Mark Williams this fall, we will know that they are not arguing about how much Williams is worth in dollars.
No professional athlete should be paid more than $1 million. I don't care how unbelievable that athlete is on the field or court, he or she is only playing a game.
Our perspective has been so screwed up that we are meant to believe these athletes should get exorbitant amounts of money.
And for what? To bounce, hit or throw a ball. We need a reality check.
If we are real fans of these sports, we should search the amateur ranks to find the true games.
Money has not spoiled these sports or athletes — vet.
Berry Fey is an Omaha, Neb., senior in journalism.
Importance is in the eye of the beholder
I want to respond to the occasional comment passed my way by our readership.
I'm told that I don't discuss important events or ideas that matter in my columns. Basically, I rarely write about anything significant, readers sav.
I know I commit drive-by references and create sound-bite commentary.
But I try to avoid the kind of significance defined by popular culture and media. There is such a thing as current topics being too important, people being too in touch, news events being too significant.
I admit I am a CNN junkie, and I love my computer's modern because it keeps me even more up-to-date. I see the news stories, the reports and the in-depth interviews.
This is a large world, and there are many events to track. There is a lot of news to think about. But of the thousands of reactions people can have to any single event, we hear maybe half of those responses discussed at best. Among ourselves, we
STAFF COLUMNIST
ISAAC
BELL
end up talking about few.
Ultimately, the very essence of saying something significant — to have an opinion about the balanced budget, trade pacts, illegal immigration or "the trial," — doesn't really matter in day-to-day life. People have
already formed their opinions about news events. Thousands of hours of television are devoted to these subjects, and miles of newsprint cover these topics.
People generally have more opinions about media events than what goes on in our individual lives. We spend so much time trying discuss "significant" events that our perspectives of our day-to-day lives are totally distorted.
More was written about Princess
Diana's marital status than all of the little discoveries that were made by students in the world's schools. A glove in the O. J. Simpson case should not matter more to me than what my day was like.
I'd rather spend time learning about how someone I know decided to devote her life to helping children or how a friend is doing after a few months in a new career.
Stare at a bright object for long enough, and you will go blind. And by looking at camera lights, T.V. screens and movie screens, we forget the simple pleasure of watching your neighbor dancing all alone in the parking lot.
Unfortunately some of our desire for significance comes from the belief that our lives are not important. "I wish I were famous" could mean "I'm not worth while." I am not more important than anybody else. But that does not mean I am less important.
Moths are attracted to bright lights by nature. We don't need to act as they do.
EEEEEK
Emmie Hsu / KANSAN
There is nothing wrong with being aware of news events. It's depressing when someone doesn't know that the Bosnian war is as bad, if not worse, than before.
But I can't stand people who quote Beavis and Butt-Head but yawn while listening to Shakespeare or Lao-tzu.
There is nothing wrong with being introspective, keeping the world at our fingertips and in the range of our vision.
No matter how great the special effects in "Batman Forever" are, a huge, white thunderhead at the edge of a sapphire, Kansas sky always beats them. The best CD sound system still isn't as enjoyable as three friends screwing up the lyrics to "Unchained Melody" while driving home from Kansas City.
Lights need not be media-bright to let us see significance.
Look for importance in every day life.
isaac Bell is a Lawrence senior in Engl. lish.
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 hornetown 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 out-right reject all submissions. For any questions, call Jamie Munn, editorial page editor, at 864-4810.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 12, 1995
5A
April 17, 18, 1995 KU GTAs by a vote of 486-202, vote to unionize. The GTAs are represented by the Kansas Association of Public Employees and the American Federation of Teachers
May, 1995 GTAs, through Kansas Association of Public Education request meetings with KU officials to discuss the salary issue.
July 1, 1995 Start of fiscal year 1996. No further agreements on working terms for this fiscal year can be made.
April 27, 1995 Senate Bill 385 amended by House when the legislature voted to remove provision for GTA salary increases.
June 13, 20 & 29, 1995 GTAs meet with KU officials. No agreement was reached.
KU - GTA negotiations
Noah Musser/KANSAN
KU, GTAs concerned about impasse
Graduate teaching assistants at the University of Kansas will not receive a salary raise this year, and they are not happy about it.
"All we want is equal treatment with other university employees," said Dan Murtaugh, representative for the GTA negotiating team.
By Kimberly Crabtree Kansan staff writer
The GTAs were denied an allocated 3.5 percent salary increase when the part of the Kansas House appropriations bill containing their increase was stricken in April.
Since the legislative action, the GTAs have requested to meet with University officials to negotiate a salary increase for fiscal year 1996, which would have needed to have been made before the July 1 starting date.
The GTAs voted to be represented by the Kansas Association of Public Employees and the American Federation of Teachers in mid-April. University officials met with the GTAs three times in June and both sides agreed to limit discussion to the single issue of salary increases.
"Looking back, discussing only salaries was a handicap because there was no give and take," said Marc Adin, director of human resources and representative for KU's negotiating team. The negotiations now stand at an impasse.
"We believe the legislative intent was so clear that for the University to give the raises, we would be defying the legislature," Adin said.
Mike Johnson, GTA in English and summer public relations representative for the GTAs, claims the bill would not have passed without assurances by Rep. Ralph Tanner of
Baldwin that Regents institutions still would be able to give the raises from general fund allocations.
"It is difficult to support the position that this was a mandate," Johnson said. "The money initially earmarked for GTAs did not disappear, and the bill would not have passed without Representative Tanner's assurance."
The GTAs, however, were forced to compromise their side and live without the salary increase for now.
It is illegal for them to strike, although they could pursue other forms of protest, Adin said, such as distributing leaflets or lobbying.
But both sides do agree on one thing — getting to know the other side was a significant result of the meetings.
"Since they voted to unionize, this is a relationship that will continue either until there is no more University or there is no more GTA union," Adin said. "We're sort of wedded together, and we have to learn to get along."
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2m
Camps are no gold mine for housing
"We will have close to 8,000 guests this summer," Timm said. "Our biggest group, the National Junior Classical League, will have 1,400 people. There are a lot more students staying on campus this year, but we try to keep the students and camps separated."
Students may not enjoy having the extra people around, but the camps are an important program in the department of student housing and will probably continue for a long time.
"There are positive and negative points to the campers," Encarnacion said. "We've played basketball with them, and we have a good time. But I don't like the lines we have to deal with."
"The biggest myth is that hous ing makes money," said Randy Timm, assistant director of student housing. "Usually we lose money, but this year we should be pretty close to breaking even. The problem is that we have to set up places that are not normally used, like Hashinger Theater."
When the University of Kansas residence halls bring campers and conference-goers into their wings during the summer, it isn't to make up for any budget shortfall.
The guests in the halls range from young children to adults. Ellsworth Hall is reserved for high school youth camps, McCollum Hall for student orientation groups and Lewis Hall for KU students.
"There are three different ways to get your conference or camp at KU," Timm said. "You must be sponsored by a department at
By Gwen Olson
Kansan staff writer
The groups are required to pay a fee to the department that covers meals, rooms and any expenses for the facilities that the camp or conference will need, Timm said. Although housing employees staff the residence halls, camps are required to provide their own supervision.
"The program is really good," Timm said. "We provide a public service by offering our facilities, and it's also a good recruitment tool."
Some of the students in Lewis
The camps keep the depart-
from enjoying a leisurely summer.
KU, the office of continuing education, or hosted by housing."
"It's like the first day of moving in every weekend," Timm said. "And the people working in student housing are working harder than they do during the academic year."
"I don't like the long lines at Mrs. E's," Hector Encarnacion, San Francisco junior, said of the Lewis Hall cafeteria. "Sometimes I almost bump into kids in lines and the kids don't know how to line up at Mrs. E's. They cut in front of us a lot."
Many students do not like dealing with the camps but are learning to live with them.
do not feel separated enough, particularly at mealtime.
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Tuesday - $3 domestic pitchers, $5 import pitchers
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Saturday - $1.75 well drinks
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lifestyles
Anight at the THEATRE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Theatre blends Elizabethan prose with contemporary music to tell William Shakespeare's 'Twelfth Night,' a comedy of errors
Stories by Mark Ence
1952
William Shakespeare and Elvis Presley usually are not thought of as compatible.
Carson Elrod, Topeka senior, steals the show with his kinetic portrayal of Feste the Clown. Elrod dances across the stage, jokes with healthy ribaldry, takes a turn as a televisionist, and even does a song as the pelvis-swinging Elvis.
But in the University Theatre's production of Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," which opens Friday night, the Bard and the King get along wonderfully.
Standing against the restrictive order of the self-consumed Malvolio, played to perfection by Lawrence resident Charles Whitman, Toby and his merry band of hedonists drink heartily, pun constantly, carouse in song and plan ways to bedevil the untight steward.
The entire cast turns in strong performances as Meier's vision magically blends the Elizabethan carnivalesque with the haunting questions of life after the bomb.
These elements work together to create a reading of Shakespeare that is unmitigated in its revel while it also intelligently critiques an increasingly repressive society.
Director Paul Meier has taken the celebration of the Epiphany — the Elizabethan equivalent of Mardi Gras — and placed it into a post-apocalyptic world punctuated by chaos, carnival and charm.
Through effective employment of both Shakespearean songs and contemporary music, piecemeal costumes and the junkyard-like setting, Meier creates an eclectic world where things are not as they seem.
"Twelfth Night" follows the travails of Viola and Sebastian, fraternal twins separated in a shipwreck, who are involved in a myriad of mistaken identities and dislocated passions.
The play also foregrounds complex gender issues by casting two women in traditionally male roles. KU alumna Louise Flory turns in a convincing performance as Sebastian, and Brenda Leff, Overland Park sophomore, plays the idiot Fablan with a simple grace.
However, it is Meier's ability to force the conflict between Toby, the drunken uncle of Oliva, and Malvilio, her staid steward, that gives the play its finest moments. This clash of the party animal and the Puritan also provides Meier the opportunity to demonstrate the contemporary relevance of the play.
Viola, played by Caran Snitze, KU alumna, gives a back rub to Orsino, played by David-Michael, Lawrence graduate student. Though disguised as Orsino's page boy, Viola — actually a woman — is secretly in love with Orsino.
Michael Schulz /
SECTION
Michael Schulze / KANSAN
JULY 12, 1995
KU Life
Designer overcomes limited resources
Feste the Clown, played by Carson Elrod, Topeka senior, warbles an Elvis Presley song to the accompaniment of Zanie, played by Jerry Buszek, Omaha, Neb., senior, in The University Theatre's production of William Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night." Michael Schultz/
Michael Schulze/
KANSAN
JOHN PAGE
Costume designers try to capture both the spirit of the character and to work closely with the director, Herman said.
Costume designers for plays usually have a budget to work with.
But Louise M. Herman, "Twelfth Night" costume designer, did not have such a luxury.
Lawrence graduate student, managed to create outfits that accentuated director Paul Meier's postapocalyptic vision of the Shakespearean comedy.
Culling scraps and skirts, belts and bandoleers from the Murphy Hall costume stock. Herman.
Herman's designs run from traditional Elizabethan vestments to post-industrial fashions. This amalgam of the past, present and future allowed Herman to be creative and humorous within the dictates of the play.
...
"I had the most fun putting all of
Twelfth Night
Twelfth Night
Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" will run at 8 p.m. July 14-16, and July 16-21 in Murphy Hall's Crafton-Preyer Theatre. General Admission tickets are on sale at Murphy Hall, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; and the SUA Office, 864-3477. Seating is limited. Tickets are $8 for the public, $4 for KU students, and $7 for other students and senior citizens.
"We must visualize the character so that the audience understands who they are," she said. "Plus, we are trying to advance the director's concept so that it all works together to make a single statement about the show."
fun putting all of the stuff on the thugs — jewelry, chains, catcher's masks," Herman said
Herman said that her background in mechanical engineering and math, as well as drama, helped with her designs. Director Paul Meier said that Herman's work.
especially with the lack of funds, was outstanding.
"During this budget crunch the concept of a future world, with all its eclecticism, allowed us to work with little or no money very easily," he said. "And she has been incredibly inventive with it."
on the RECORD
By Robert Moczydlowsky
Kansan staff writer
In the mid- to late-'80s, the Minneapolis club scene produced some of the decade's most influential and largest-selling bands.
Ten years later, those artists' efforts have paved the way for hip-hop and alternative rock to become a mainstream business. The pop influences of the Minneapolis underground can be heard, in varv-
Prince and the Revolution reshaped rhythm and blues, and Husker Dui And The Replacements
THE JAYHAWKS TRIPPING DAISY
became part of the alternative-rock foundation.
the nitions
Stomp
ing degrees, in songs written by such artists as Better than Ezra, Counting Crows and The Flaming Lips.
Enter The Jayhawks, a 10-year-old band that have taken the best of folk, country and hearty, Midwestern rock to create an honest, unique blend.
I guess it's time we went back to Minneapolis to find a truly alternative sound.
because it all sounds the same.
Now, underneath the alternative tag, music that once was lauded for its difference is being criticized
The Jayhawks, along with other country-spun bands Sun Volt and
On their latest album,
Tomorrow the Green
Grass, The Jayhawks
have taken the distortion
and effects out of
rock without sacrificing
the melodies *o*
Wilco (featuring the guys that made up Uncle Tupelo), have become pioneers on the newest modern-rock trail.
emotion.
From country music, they've borrowed airtight song writing that reminds me of Roger Williams, John Prine and Woody Guthrie. Their latest album offers the best of both realms:
it's a good oil' country sing along with rock'n' roll bite.
album is solid, and if you haven't heard it, you're missing out. Sadly, all of this success could make one of the Midwest's best live shows a little tougher to catch. Last night's sold-out Bottle-neck show may have been the band's last gig in a small local club for a while.
the big reason behind the band's current tour success is the single
TRIPPING DAISY
ELASTIC FIREHAUSER
If you missed the Jayhawks but are still hungry for a jam-packed Bottle-cheek show, don't freet. You can check out *Tripping Daisy* Friday night.
Tripping Daisy are one of the bands that solidified Austin, Texas, as a hub of innovative, modern-rock music.
The band debuted in 1992 with BILL,
and they have been on a solid climb
since then, adding fans after every one
of their frenzied live shows. Check the
And finally, some new stuff in the record stores.
Bottleneck for ticket information.
On Independence Day, Capitol
Records released the debut disc from The Foo Fighters, the band that is fronted by former Nirvana members Dave Grohl and Pat Smear. The Foo Fighters rocked mightily when they opened for Mike Watt here in April, and their disc, full of catchy guitar and choruses, doesn't disappoint.
Other platters worthy of a second listen: Foma, the debut from Oklahoma City's The Nixons, featuring the next hit song of the summer "Sister." And Grand Prix, the newest album from England's Teenage Fan Club.
Next week: a dinner-time conversation with Tripping Daisy, and a rare appearance from England's Radiohead and Drugstore. Stav tuned.
MOVIE NEWS
BOX OFFICE BILLBOARD
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — "Apollo 13" retained its No. 1 ranking at the box office for the second weekend, with strong showings from newcomers "Species" and Hugh Grant's "Nine Months."
"Species," a thriller in the tradition of "Aliens," finished second with $17.2 million — the best opening in MGM history. The fabled studio is in the midst of a top-to-bottom restructuring following the neglectful ownership of Kirk Kerkorian and Giancarlo Parretti.
MGM's previous record came last year with "Stargate" at $16.7 million.
"The opening reinforced our position that we are back in the marketplace," said Gerry Rich, MGM's executive vice president for marketing.
"Nine Months" was shown as a sneak preview in 996 theaters Saturday night. About three-quarters of the theaters were at least 75 percent full, the Fox studio said Monday.
"It played as well as any movie we've had in recent memory," said Fox executive vice president Tom Sherak.
Among other box-office developments, Sylvester Stallone's "Judge Dredd" plunged a disastrous 57 percent in its second week of release.
The following is the list of top 10 movies at U.S. and Canadian theaters Friday through Sunday:
1. "Apollo 13"
19.6 million
2. "Species"
$17.2 million
3. "First Knight"
$10.9 million
4. "Pocahontas"
$10.8 million
5. "Batman Forever."
$9.3 million
6. "Mighty Morphin Power Rangers:
The Movie"
$5.9 million
7. "Judge Dredd"
$6.2 million
8. "The Bridges of Madison County"
$2.9 million
9. "Congo"
$2.7 million
10. "Casper"
$2.1 million
A
---
6
2B
Wednesday, July 12, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
fifi's 9251OWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food
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928 Mass.
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The Eic. Shop
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
July 12
Typewriter Band
Bob Goblin
July 19
Panel Donor
Regraped
July 14
Tripping Daisy
Hagfish
July 15
Tenderloin
Citizen King
July 16
Radiohead
Drugstore
don't miss:
7/20 Bad Brains
7/28 Thinking Fellers
7/29 PAW
7/30 Goo Goo Dolls
Student travels to world conference
Woman serves on Christian council at international religious gathering
By Trine Nygaard
Kansan staff writer
Jolinda Matthews has worn out three sets of luggage since high school. Soon she will break in her fourth set.
The Centennial is expected to attract 500 students.
On Aug. 22 she leaves for the Ivory Coast in West Africa to represent the United States at the Centennial Gathering of the World Student Christian Foundation. The WSCF in Geneva, Switzerland, is the international link between Christian students.
"Going to Africa is one of those lifetime opportunities, and it will be interesting to put faces with people in the other countries," said Matthews, a WSCF executive council member for 1 1/2 years.
She has been the national Episcopal collegiate representative to the Council for Ecumenical Student Christian Ministries, or CESCM, since 1993. CESCM connects nine denominations by keeping track of their individual activities. CESCM is the major financier of Matthews' trip to Africa.
In 1994, her work took her to Poland for three weeks to plan the WSCF Centennial.
"I saw a concentration camp, visited different villages and their churches and was invited in for dinner at people's houses," Matthews said.
"That's also what will be so exciting about the West Africa trip. It won't be all business meetings, I'll get to know the culture a little bit," the Garden City senior said. "I'm sure that when I come back, I'll realize that I knew even less about the world than I thought. And that will make me search for more knowledge."
"We choose only one representative per region, and this region usually produces active white males, so it was wonderful to be able to recruit a woman this time," Chu said.
Thom Chu, the national coordinator for Episcopal Church Young Adult and Higher Education Ministries, said he recruited Matthews' because she stood out as a teen-ager in the Youth Ministry Network. Now she brings different perspectives to the work from her political science and Latin American studies background.
THE WEB
Matthews' family and friends always have been active
Jolinda Matthews, Garden City senior, sits on the swing on her front porch. Matthews will be going to the Ivory Coast in West Africa, on Aug. 22 as a member of the World Christian Student Foundation.
in the church.
"Our involvement is right here close to home," said Clarence D. Matthews, Jolinda's father. "We didn't lead her in that direction. She did it on her own. That's where her interests led her."
"Her mom and I are quite proud of her and happy that we can enable her to do the things she does."
Matthews is active closer to home at the Canterbury House, which is near KU's campus. As a peer minister, she is in charge of hospitality dinners after the house's church service every Sunday. She also acts as a link to the national Christian church organizations.
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---
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DINE IN AVAILABLE = WE ACCEPT CHECKS
A
Does your Mac need service?
The best technology deserves the best service. Luckily for you, the Union Technology Center is on hand to wait on all your Apple computer needs. The convenience of a campus location combined with the low student rates and quality service makes the Union Technology Center the fast, affordable and attentive way to cater to all your computer's needs.
Whether your computer's server is slow, you splash your drink into the keyboard, or the hard-drive is over cooked, the UTC would be more than happy to correct your order. So, if your Mac is demanding some assistance, allow the Union Technology Center to be of service...
gratuity is not necessary.
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 12, 1995
3B
Smith able to stand trial despite mental instability
The Associated Press
UNION, S.C. Susan Smith is legally competent to stand trial on murder charges for drowning her two sons but will take her life at the first opportunity, a state expert said Monday.
Smith suffers from severe depression and an adjustment disorder that causes her to have an emotional reaction to stress, said Donald Morgan, a psychiatrist at the state Mental Health Department.
"If she got out of prison, she said she would take her life as rapidly as possible," Morgan said during her competency hearing.
He said Smith could stand trial on the two murder charges, but he recommended that she not be allowed to testify because she would ask for the death penalty if put on the stand.
"She feels she deserves punishment, and her desire would be not to continue living in prison," Morgan said.
Smith can stand trial because her illness has improved, but she also tried to hide her depression,
he said.
"It's easy to make a mistake thinking that she's better than what she really is," Morgan said. "She fantasizes about, being reunited with her children."
In addition, Smith has crying spells and nausea and takes antidepressants to combat intense feelings of hopelessness, sleepless and worthlessness, he said.
Smith showed no emotion during Morgan's hour of testimony. He was the prosecution's sole witness, and Smith's lawyers did not put any experts of their own on the stand.
Circuit Judge William Howard then adjourned the hearing for the day so he could decide whether Smith was competent and whether the trial could continue.
For nine days after her sons disappeared on Oct. 25, Smith stuck by a claim that a Black carjacker took them, prompting searches and prayer vigils and bringing a national media spotlight to the town of 10,000.
On Nov. 3, she confessed to drowning the boys by letting her car, with them inside, roll into
John D. Long Lake.
Last fall when Smith was arrested, an angry crowd pressed around the downtown courthouse, some shouting "baby killer!"
On Monday, only about 10 people quietly walked by the courthouse and others shopping in stores a block or so away. Neither side requested that the trial be moved out of Union.
While Smith has yet to enter a plea, her lawyer, David Bruck, has said his defense would be based on her mental state.
If Smith is found guilty but mentally ill, she could be sentenced to death.
A verdict of innocent by reason of insanity, which means she did not understand that what she was doing was wrong, would send her to a mental hospital. If she were later declared sane, she could be released.
Prosecutor Tommy Pope has said he believes Smith was sane when she killed her children.
Prosecutors plan to portray her as a manipulative woman who murdered her sons when they got in the way of a love affair.
928 Mass.
Downtown
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Thraher UTNE Reader
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Do Yourself a Favor Dine at The Castle Tea Room 1300 Massachusetts by Reservation Only, Call 843-1151
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I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
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BIKE AMERICA
--expires 8/2/95
23rd & Louisiana (Behind Schlotzsky's) • 842-7822
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PIZZA
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Excludes orange
tag items
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, K8, 68044
CDS & TAPES MIDDLEBROOK CARTERSTRO
913-842-1811 913-842-1438
Spa Palace
"Hawaiian Hospital Spa"
Low Calorie
50 calories per serving!
enjoy our florida!
Buy one menu item, get one 1/2 price! expires 7/31/95
DOS HOMBRES
CATERAION
Buy One Get One same size or smaller FREE Open noon-10:30 daily
Buy one menu item, get one 1/2 price!
expires 7/31/95
call for our daily drink specials.
Sun.-Thurs. only
815 New Hampshire
841-7286
Buy One
Get One
same size or smaller
FREE
Open noon-10:30 daily
---
Clays Crest
12th & Oread (above Yello Sub)
Pasta Dinner
only $249
pasta, homemade marinara
sauce, garlic toast
With coupon only. Not valid whether offers
1 offer/coupon/customer. Coupon expires 7/26/95
---
NATURALWAY
THE BIRD OF HER SAVING
Natural fiber Clothing • Natural Body Care
25% off Swimwear
Exp. July 25,1995
820-822 Mass.Downtown Lawrence
4B
Wednesday, July 12, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NL wins second straight All-Star game
The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas — Wasn't the American League supposed to have all the sluggers?
Houston's Craig Biggio and two-
Angeles' Mike Piazza hit two-out-
homers in the sixth and seventh
innings respectively. Then Florida's
Joffine Conn hit the game-winner, a
leadoff home run in the eighth.
The victory gave the NL its second consecutive All-Star victory and its first All-Star winning streak since the 1984-85 season. The senior circuit improved its overall All-Star record to 39-26-1.
Los Angeles Dodgers rookie Hideo
Nomo got the NL off to a good start by striking out three of the six batters he faced in two innings.
Cincinnati's John Smiley gave up a two-run homer to Chicago's Frank Thomas in the fourth to put the American League ahead 2-0, a lead that seemed much larger considering the AL pitchers were silencing the NL.
Biggio, the first Astro elected to start the All-Star game since Cesar Cedeno in 1973, finally ended the spell with two outs in the sixth inning when he provided the NL's first hit.
His homer to right field off Martinez end the longest hitless stretch ever to begin an All-Star game, breaking the old mark set in 1961 by one out.
Piazza, the star of Monday's batting practice with his tremendous home runs, tied the game inning
"I wasn't swinging the bat well coming in. It's amazing what a little adrenaline will do for you," Piazza said.
later with his two-out, opposite field off Texas' Kenny Rogers.
Conine entered in the eighth as a pinch hitter for Cincinnati's Ron Gant and with one swing put his name into the record book twice.
Conine's homer off Steve Ontiveros of Oakland made him the 10th player to homer in his first All-Star-at-bat.
Conine, who was named the game's MVP, actually was an AllStar for the second time, but he didn't get into last year's name.
Philadelphia pitcher Heathcliff Slocumb recorded the victory, and he earned it by coming in with two runners on and one out in the bottom of the seventh inning. He shut the AL hitters down and kept the score tied.
RECYCLE
Daily
Kansan
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Massachusetts
832-8228
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
HUGE Selection of beer and wine
RUDY'S PIZZERIA
• Bausch & Lomb
Ray-Ban ℮
Killer Loop™
Diamondhard ℮
Glass Polarized
xrays ℮
ORBS ℮
Sports Series ℮
ACTIV ℮
Predator ℮
Classic Metals ℮
The Etc. Shop
Ray-Ban
GAUSEN & LOMB
Factory Direct
Authorized
Dealer
• Serengeti Driver's
• Ravo
The
Etc.
Shop
Ray-Ban
BALMORE & LOMB
Factory Direct
Authorized
Dealer
by Ray-Ban & Lomb
928 Massachusetts • Lawrence • 843-0611
Spice it up
offer
Quality Cheked
DAILY SPECIAL
Regina Thorn, July 13, 8 & EGNO Jul. 14, 7m
BANANAS
19¢ LT
Quality Cheked
QUALITY CHECKED JR. POPSICLES SOLD IN A BOX OF $4
5¢ EA.
BREYERS ICE CREAM
ALL FLAVORS
1/2 GAL. CTK.
238 EA.
OLD HOME DANIEL ROLLS ON 138
BEAR CLAMS, N.Y.
HEYSTONE
BEER
920
24 PACK
180Z CUP
LIMIT 1
KEYSTONE
BLOOD & GRAVITY
ADDITIONAL Purchases
KEYSTONE
24 PK
$9.70
BEER
1202 CANS
FRESH CRISP CARROTS
5 LB. BAG
128
BONELESS
BEEF
RUMP
ROAST
ECONOMY PAK
128
C
WE ACCEPT
FOOD STAMPS
WICE VOUCHERS &
MANUFACTURER'S
COUPONS
BONELESS BEEF TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ECONOMY PAK 229
ECONOMY PAK
229
8
FRESH SWEET
NECTARINES
68¢
LB.
FRESH
SALAD MIX
1 LB. PKG.
88¢
FROM THE BAKERY
FRESH BAKED
SUGAR FREE PIES
24 OZ.
2 FOR $5
FOOD
SWIFT BROWN
'N SERVE
SAUSAGES
ALL VARIETIES
7 TO 8 OZ. PKG.
88¢
EA
OPEN
24
HOURS
EVERY DAY
FRESH CRISP
GREEN
CABBAGE
BLUE BUNNY
LITE "85" YOGURT
4 OZ. CUP, ALL VARIETIES
25¢
RED, WHITE
OR BLACK
SEEDLESS
GRAPES
88¢
LP
THORN APPLE VALLEY SKINL E98
SAUSAGES
ALL VARIETIES, 12 OZ. PKG.
98¢
EA
FRESH CHINESE NAPPA
CABBAGE 25¢
---
ECONOMY PAK
118
LB.
---
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
FRESH SLICED PORK STEAK ECONOMY PAK 128
FRESH SNO-WHITE
CAULIFLOWER
LARGE 9 CT. SIZE
98¢
EA.
COUNTRY STYLE
SPARE RIBS
CUT FROM THE FURNITURE
$1 38
LBS.
BONELESS BEEF ROUND STEAK ECONOMY PAK 118 LB.
100
FROM THE DELI
SLICED OR SHAVED
TURKEY PASTRAMI
198 LB.
ECONOMY PACK
IMPORTED FROM NORWAY
JARLINGBUSH SCREECH
$ 4.88 LB.
BUDGET GOURMET FROZEN
ENTREES
The Etc. Shop
SPLIT
FRYER
BREASTS
WITH RIB BONE
ECONOMY PAK
98¢
LB.
A
SKINLESS BONeless
FRYER BREASTS ACCESS TACK $218
100s Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
98¢
P
MOOSE BROTHERS
PEPPERONI PIZZA
LARGE 12" SQ
398
398
VIDEO SPECIAL
3 MOVIES/GAMES
3 DAYS $3.00
NEW RELEASES
NOT INCLUDED
Classified Policy
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 which may be litigation to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, status or national origin, or an intolerance for any such preference, limitation or discrimination'.
The Kanman 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 Kanman will not accept any admission to the violation of University of Kansas law or regulation.
**PRICES EXPECTIVE**
Min Min Max Min Max
Bid Bid Bid Bid Bid
12 13 14 15
16 17 18
---
卫
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and opportunities in our newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
88c
REVO Sunglasses
100s Announcements
FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BAKED
ENGLISH
MUFFIN BREAD
1 LB LOOP
88¢
110 Bus. Personals
Avoid long waits in an emergency room. Try LAWRENCE PROMPTCARE. Full-service care is available for experienced and board certified emergency medicine students. For general care, fracture care, and laceration repair, open 8:15am, Mon-Fri and 12:1pm on weekends. See the Medical Arts Centre, Kasold and Clinton Klpny.
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon - 6:00 Tues. - Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
Classified Directory
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange,
Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
120 Announcements
205 Help Wanted
235 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
tapes on sale starting at $9.99 and up.
841-8603 and 841 Waskell. B41-7504.
NEED A RIDE/RIDER' Use the Serve Car Swim Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
THE LOVE OF DAVID GARDNER
140 Lost & Found
Da found on both and Illinois. Male, white with
dark hair on both and all brown on top. Very
tame and nice.
LOST: Oversized coffee mug, decorated with multicolor cats. Possibly left in Strong Hall restroom. Sentimental, REWARD. Call Laura at 804-4064
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
?BILINGUAL?
Flexible hrs. Top $$$
822.977
Attendees needed in Lawrence and KC for FT
administration as a waitress or in food service or
industries prepared. Excellent client and a bess
ful environment. Call (913) 815-4015 or
1560.
SUMMER WORK
$9.75 STARTING
- National Company
- High Level
- AASP Scholarships
- ALLMARS
- Work Part Time
Around Classes
CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION
842-6336
300s
Merchandise
Case Manager. The Bert Nash Center has an opening for a specialized office for adults with SPMI required. Bachelor's degree. Send resume to cover/B. Ankerholz. Bert University of Missouri, Lawrence, KS 60442. Ounil until fill in.
308 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
Secretary. Will provide primary clerical support for CEO and key staff. Must be able to handle efficiently the following: database maintenance, direct mail campaigns, central filing system, email systems, data analysis, clerical staff. Qualifications include computer literacy, excellent typing skills, ability to communicate effectively, record management, ability to work with others, must be pleasant and able to work along well with a variety of people, dependable and a self-starter with prior experience as a secretary/administrative assistant, and Haskell graduate preferred. Salary is dependent on experience and education. Please mail resume
Executive Director
The Haskell Foundation
185 Indian Avenue
No phone calls please.
No phone calls please.
Development Director, The Bert Nash Center has 1 full time position open. Bachelor's degree in Business Administration, Finance, Marketing. Master's degree in Business Administration, Finance, or铁ened. At least five years experience in Philanthropy or Senior Management desirable. A knowledge of health care industry and fund raisers is required. Please refer to Sell, Bert NASH CMHC, 338 Missouri, Lawnville, KS, 60944. Open until filled. EEO.
Diversion Specialist. The Bert Napth Center has one opening; part-time up to 20 hours/week, on call days. Case management experience with adults with SPMI required. Bachelor's degree. Resume to b. Annette L. Bert Napth CMIC, 335 Missouri, Lawrence, KS, 86041. Open until filled, EEO.
CIRCLE ME
Fast Growing Company
$2,000-$4,000 + mo potential
Full training available 865-2708
Namely Named **PT** for 3 kids (3, 8, 9) Must be live-in. Prev. exp. and ref. tele (819) 743-0293.
Looking for people with crazy personalities that are willing to work hard for huge paychecks. 748-1466
Emergency Case Manager. The Bert Nahch Center has 2 positions open; part-time, on-call, after hours, as needed to serve server clients. Case management experience with adults with SPMI required. Bachelor's degree. Send resume/career data to John R. Lawrence, KS 6044, DoO until filled, EEO
Four highly responsible part-time student hourly positions available Aug. 1st in Watson Library (M-F) requires ability to work hours between 5am-5pm M-F; three positions require ability to work 20hrs/week; one position requires ability to work 40hrs/week; application and application forms, contact Sarah Cottman, new Periodicals/Microforms 4th, Floor, Watson Library, 864-3650. Application deadline: Wed, July 19, 5pm. An EO/AA Employer Watson Library, 864-3650. Application deadline: Wed, July 19, 5pm. An EO/AA Employer
Frustrated with hourly wage moss. gross job? Looking for motivated, goal oriented individuals. Full/part time. Full training, excellent income potential. 942-4668 ext. 623
**STUDENT ASSISTANT** $50.00/hr, 40 wks/week for summer. Deadline: July 17, 1995. Duties: Inventory responsibilities include stocking, shipping/receiving, preparing stock for technician jobs (staging), maintaining inventory counts and maintaining warehouse required Qualification. Valid KU enrollment, ability to spell and alphabate names correctly and sort numerically; ability to fluently speak and fully understand the English language; ability to work independently and quickly, adhering to established procedures at 8am-5pm. Preferred qualifications: Previous data entry experience and Zenith computer experience. Obtain and complete an application from the Networking and Telecommunications University, Kansas, Eliswarr Annes, Inc. 912-834-6000. Contact: Deanna Reinha GE/OA/
STUDENT HOURLY ASSISTANT $5.00/hr, 18-20 hr/wk in blocks of at least 3 hours. Deadline: July 17, 1995 at 5 p.m. Duties: Data entry and management for all products in Microsoft Windows Application, MS-DOS, word processing software, spreadsheets, and the installation procedures for all of these products. Responsible for setting up and/or keyboarding competency. Ability to follow complex verbal and written instructions. Currently enrolled or enrolled in fall semester as a student at KU. Obtain and complete an application form to receive services reception desk. Address: Networking and Telecommunications Services, university of Kansas, Ellsworth Annes, 1736 S. Elm Street, Dallas, TX 75004-86409; Contact: Reedina Reinbach, EO/AA
**STUDENT HOURLY ASSISTANT** 84/67 hour, 20 hrs/wk during academic year - 30-40 hrs/wk during summer (in 3hr blocks of time or more). Deadline: July 17, 1955 a. 5 p.m. Duties: Assists in maintenance & development of campuses; utilities & equipment; maintenance of the network databases; development of network topology diagrams; installations, moves and decommissioning equipment; maintenance of activity tracking & status databases; report generation from existing databases; diagnosing & correcting low level network problems; design, planning & cost estimation; data analysis & analysis. Qualifications: Currently enrolled or enrolled in fall semester as a student at KU (preference will be given to graduate students). Experience using a microcomputer or UNIX workstation. Ability to understand and carry out complex automated systems for network management; Ability to understand and carry out complex oral and written instructions. Able to lift 40 lbs. Obtain and complete an application from the University of Kansas, Lawrence desk. Address: Networking and Telecommunications Services, University of Kansas, Ellsworth Annex, 173 Engel Road, Lawrence, KS 68045. Phone: 813-864-9900; Contact Deanna Kramer
**STUDENT HOURLY POSITION AVAILABLE.**
Duties: Resception; filing; duplicating; running errands; typing; proofreading; data entry;
retrieval of students' names; verification available July 24, 1965 or as soon as possible thereafter. @ $2.25 hr. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong, 884-6044
400s Real Estate
Student Monthly Position, $500-$650 a month, 2 hours a week. Must have Macintosh computer experience: Quark, MS Word. Apply at 3098 Dole 664-0686
SUMMER JOBS
Work with the Sierra Club, the nation's oldest and largest environmental group. Just stop the war on the environment. Rapid advancement, career opportunities.
SUMMER JOB
for the
Environment
$2.500-$3.500/summer
Save Endangered Species
Protect public lands
and engage in conservation
with the Sierra Club, the nation's oldest and environmental environment. Just stop the war or environment. Rapid advancement, career
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Call Tracy 749-5465
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
Snorts Minded
National company seeking individuals with a competitive edge to train for our new team. Must be a team player. Full training and travel options. 842-5277 ext.650
Psychologist. The Bert Nash Center has an opening part-time, hourly, RMLP required, individual, group, families, couples therapy children and/or adults. Send resume/cover to B. Ankert-holz, Bert Nash CCMIC, 338 Wisconsin, Lawrence, KS, 66044. Open until filled EEO.
Emergency Screening Specialist. The Bert Nash Center has one opening; part-time up to 20 hours per week. Requires management experience with adults with SPMI or management degree in psychology or social work required. Send resume/cover to B. Ankerholz, Kernberg, CA 95431. Email: Lawrence,KS 60644. Open until filled. EMB.
Jon's Notes
Now hire for the FALL 96 semester in the following positions:
Information desk clerk to assist museum visitors and collect donations. Approx. 20 hours/wEEK $5/hour to start. Apply in the Museum Shop, Dyche Hall, by July 20.
Experienced with graphic design using Mac
Desktop. Experienced with Quark and Pagenak.
Full-time. Great opportunity for talented per-
sonal. Available for appointment in the
dartment, P.O. Box 15134, Lenexa, KS 69285-5130.
Advertisers-Distribute fliers before class outside of lectures. Earn $5 for 30 minutes of work. Punctual, dependable, cheerful students need only apply.
Note Takers Earn $10-$15 per lecture taking com-
pany classes in the summer. The entire semester. Qualified candidates will have 3.3+ GPA and related course work experience. Open job: astronomy 19, Psych 33,
Office Assistant- Service customers at our KS
Union Bookstore location W9, 9AM - I4AM.
Duties include proofing and filing lecture notes,
distributing notes to customers. Pay $4.25/hr.
Call Nancy for interview at 843-3485
We have immediate parttime positions available in the various career fields.
Starting salary is $6.94 per hour. Prior service may qualify for higher pay.
Educational assistance and vocational training provided.
To see if you qualify, call Kansas Army National Guard today!
842-0759 or 842-9293
NETWORK TELEVISION NEWS organization seeking production/dministrative assistant. Pay $1,00.hr with benefits to start. Need a Bachelor's degree, scheduling and administrative skills and a "can do" attitude are must for this job. Successful applicant will be part of an internationally recognized TV new service. Current location is Los Angeles, CA. Call or Lawrence this summer. Call (813) 267-NEWS.
Public Relations
If you like greeting people then this career is for you. No experience necessary. Full training, part time and full time positions. Managers/Trainees $3.4-0.00 potential. $3.924-114 ext. 680
RES. ABSOC2. RES. ASSIST. (40% time) may increase to 10% contingent on availability of funding. SALARY: $8,900-9,800/40K. DUTIES: Providing research support for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce's marketing program to identify economic indicators and analyzing economic indicators; identifying strengths and weaknesses; and using a cost-benefit model. QUALIFICATIONS: Required-Graduate degree in Economics, Business, or related field. Research experience. Preferred-Master's or Ph.D. Experience in applied economic and business. Submit resume and cover letter to Dr. Charles Kriden, Exec. Dir., IPBRB, 907 (813) 663-701, Hall University, Kansas Kansas 60455 (813) 663-701. Applications will be reviewed on July 17, 1995 (Position will remain open until filled). AA/EO
Residential Case Manager, the Bert Nash Center has an opening; time, live on site to serve residential clients. Case management experience with adults with SPM1 required. Bachelor's or equivalent to B. in Katherine Bert NASH CMHC, 365 Missouri, KS, 6900 Open until filled. EEO.
Room for you and your horse (or other pet) Live in home or office exchange for approximately 15 hours child care and light housekeeping per week. Children only 7 miles from KU campus. Call 843-269-0281.
ARROWHEAD
CLUB
**K.C. CHIEFS FOOTBALL**
Take part in the excitement of NFL Football at Arrowhead Stadium. Levy Restaurants is now hiring for all positions in the Arrowhead Club and Golden Circle Suites. The Season is (10) games August 5 thru December 24. Experience the thrill of Chiefs Football - and you don't have to buy a ticket! Contact: Nick or Steve, Arrowhead Club, Arrowhead Stadium.
**No Phone Calls Please**
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday,July 12,1995
5B
Teaching Assistant position available. Part time flexible hours. Experience with children 18 mo-6 yrs. Immuamel Lutheran Childhood Center. 842-8131
v 10/348
Looking for a job w/ an environmental twist. B22
1617223, 60
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER wants you for Fall 1995! Do you have so many interests you can keep up with yourself? Are you a clever student, a creative writer, an expert who knows KU and the Lawrence community? You're the one. We need student hourleys who are excellent students, organized, computer-literate, and self-motivated to work with others. Do you have a unique sense of humor? Come to KU Info, 420 Kansas Union, for an application. Work study preferred. We need students who are enthusiastic and committed. Working here is more challenging and more fun than most jobs you will ever have. Deadline 5pm, Friday, July 14, 1995.
WANTED: Photographer for wedding on July 29 in KCMO. Contact Mantel at 842-7128 or 864-2749.
You are wild, and would you like to make crazy money? No phone interviews. Call for app.
225 Professional Services
offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
WE CAN HELP
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling and Information
Telephone/In Person
24 Hours
Confidential
841-2345
1419 Massachusetts
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Ketsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS VISTORS
DV-1 GREATCARD program, by U.S. Immigration
Legal Services. Tel. (811) 892-3681 / (811) 899-4452
Sunday - 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Saturday - Sunday 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Thesis & Dissertations Hardbinding and Gold Stamping 3 Day Turnaround Lawrence Printing Service, Inc. 512 I. E. 9th Street 843-4600
OUI/Traffic
STATE LAW OFFICE
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 NAMES
843-4023
Quark X Press Tutoring
Contact Scout Professional publisher will work one-on-one
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVES SERVICES
235 Typing Services
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
300s Merchandise
X
For ALL your typing/editing/creative needs,
rely on me to do it RIGHT!
All work is GUARANTEED!
Fast, friendly, reliable, accurate.
Call Jacki at 865-2855
Makin' the Grade
305 For Sale
Desks, Bookcases, Chest of Drawers, Beds Everything But Ice 926 Mass
MICROSOSCP FOR SALE! Olympus model
600 CALL at 749-8435 stage equipment with oll.
500 Call at 749-8435
Raleigh Mt 660 Mountain Blu, Shimano STX,
Mag 10*18"忍蔷Pods #503 Amow Alm Call
New
TREK 1700 Mountain Hike. Shimane DEY 15*
*17th grade condition* $400
Great trails, great looks, good $120
000-
REFOUND
SOUND
1-913-842-2555
BUY-SELL TRADE
TEXT CONTROL BOARD
EQUIPMENT MANAGER
BASIC MEMORY
MEMORY STORAGE
MOTOR CONTROL
MOTOR CONTROL BOARD
MOTOR CONTROL BOARD
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KS
340 Auto Sales
1984 Oldsmobile Delta 80 Custom Cruiser Station
Wagon. Loaded. $1,500. Call 842-0378 after
5:30pm.
400s Real Estate
房
405 For Rent
LEASE REQUIRED. Available AU 1, possibly seconder. Room luxury 3+ BR duplex on bus line.
Basement, garage, garage A, W/D, hookup. No lockers. $649,000, negligible 78756 after 5 or leave message.
2 BR available for P Alles ALLOWED Connectivity 1047/mm2/607/mm2 Call Laureus at 1897. Leave message
Aspen West
Now Leasing for Fall!
- 2 Bdrm
- Water Paid
- LaundryonSite
- No Pets
- New Dishwashers
2900 West 15th Lawrence,KS66049 865-2500
BERKELEY FLATS
GREAT PRICE FOR A GREAT PLACE
studios, super studios 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available for fall. But call today they are going FAST!
843-2116 11th & Mississippi
An exclusive opportunity for 4 students, Luxury, 1.5 year old 4 BR 2-story Townhouse in Parkway Gardens. 2 Bath. 2 car garage, fully equipped kitchen, W/D, draps PFP, patio, vaulted ceiling. Courtyard court, lawn care, walk to KI. KU bus service (9800 mgr), avail.午工. Call Pu3, 843-3894.
Professional Services
VISA
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2BDRM APARTMENTS
AT AN AEFORDABLE BUILD
ATANAFFORDABLEPRICE
- Swimmingpool
- Exercise weight room
- Laundryroom
- Energy Efficient
- Daily 3:00-5:00
- On site management
- Fireplace
Beau's Import Auto Service Quality car maintenance & repair.
Professionally managed by
APPLECRYFT APTS Now showing & 2 BRA for Aug.1 leaf, AC heat, water & trash pD, DW disp and microwave Callanytime. #832 $220 Sorry, 90 pet.
BRP apt for Aug. 1 Gas hay water, tran-
sh, water (478/627/149). PW PQS 2415
Louisiana 647/month. 149-635.
--ext to The Yacht Club. and other fine imports.
KVM
First Management is now leasing 2
808W.24th
841-6080
- Gas, Heat/CA
M-F 1-5pm
1740 Ohio
749-1436
- Garbage Disposal
- Washer/Dryer Hookup
545 Minnesota Otl of 6th st.
MasterCard
VOLVO
Renta
WASHER & DRYER
For Only $45 a Month
842-4320
BOWTIE CART
-No Deposit
*Free Maintenance
*GE quality, Heavy
Duty, Large Capacity
Delta Corporation
3301 Clinton Parkway Ct. Suite #5
Lawrence, KS 68047
Excellent Location, 110m Tenm, Teem KU, 3U; BR apt in ipx, CA, no petts, $893-842-4242
Modern Interiors with:
Bradford Square Apartments
Spacious 3BDRM Apts. Cats Welcome
dishwasher
*patio/deck
- on-site management
- on KU bus route
- microwave
PALM TREE
- separate dining room
- convenient laundry facility
- lots of closet space convenient laundry
501 Colorado #B1
Mon.-Fri. 1-5 p.m.
Sat. 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
749-1556
Holiday Apartments
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Four Bedroom/Three Bath
Featuring for Fall of '95
- Full-Size Was
- Dishwasher
- Full-Size Washer/Dryer
- Trash Compactor
Leasing for Summer & Fall
- Microwave
- Ceiling Fans in Every Rm.
- 4 Bedroom $715-$725
- Carport Per Townhome
- Gas Heat
4501 Wimbeldon Dr.
Call 841-7849
027 841-7849
- Recently constructed
Volleyball Court
1300 Sq Ft.
Cable Paid
- 1500 Sq Ft.
Cable in Every Rm.
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
- 3 Bedroom $595-$615
- Cable Paid
4 stops on Property
Excellent location in iplex, 104 Tenn. town/kUK. RB apartment in iplex, CA, no permits. 865-442-442
Park25
Office Hours (9-5), M-F
- 2 Bedroom $410-$425
We presently have available a select few 1 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
- Walk-In Closets
- 2 Laundry Rooms
(sorry no pets)
211 Mount Hope Court #3
For more info, or Appt.
call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Mon-Fri 12-5 p.m.
- Nice quiet setting
Great Location, 1801 Miss, IBJ Studio basement ca, not pa, 6075 872-4242
2401 W. 25th,9A3
842-1455
Call or stop by today 2403 WJ 26th OA3
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
On bus route Fishwasher
2 and 3 bedroom apartments
- 3 Bedroom $595-$615
* 4 Bedroom $715-$725
meadowbrook AVAILABLE NOW!
15th & CRESTLINE 842-4200
OPEN: MON-FRI-8-5:30 p.m.
SAT-10-4 p.m.
Sun-1-4 p.m.
Meadowbrook Apartments
Kaw Valley Management, Inc. is now leasing studios 1. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments, town homes, have home boxes for immediate or Fall move-ins. Combo W 8th W 24th or call us at 604-8600 for more info.
PetsWelcome*
South Pointe AZ AMERICAN
2166 W. 26th
842-6445
Swimming Pool
- OffRc Bus Route
- Sand volleyball court
- Sand volleyball court
- Sand voneybar cod
- Water & trash paid
*1,2,3&4 bedroom*
apts. available
- Askaboutourbrand new2bedroomvilles
*RestrictionsApply
West Hills APARTMENTS
MASTERCRAFT
Now Leasing for August Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
Boardwalk
524 Frontier
842-4444
On Trailside Bus Routes
OPEN HOUSE Mon.-Fri. 12:30-5:00
GREATLOCATION near campus
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
Offers Completely Furnished
14th& Mass.
841-1212
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Sundance
7th & Florida
841-5255
No appointmentneeded
Modern 3 B, 3 bath Condo. Fully furnished.
Walking distance to
Camp Call 913-405-2002.
DON'T WAIT ANY LONGER!
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
Taking deposits for fall
From $345 to $900; Studios,
1, 2, & 3 BR apts. Water
Trash pd. in studios, water,
trash, gas heatpd. in apts.
2, 3, & 4 BR townhomes.
"Small" pets OK with dep.
Pools, tennis, basketball,
on bus route.
SECURE AN APARTMENT FOR FALL '95
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
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
Tangiewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2415
DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
Mon.-Fri9am-5pm
Sat. 10am-4pm
842-4455 Equal Housing Opportunity
Orchard Corners 15th & Kesold
MASTERCRAFT
749-4226
Brand New!
Be the First!
Now leasing for spring or fall!
Reserve your home for Fall today!
SOUTH POINTE ParkVillas
Trailridge Apartments 2500W6th
- Three bedrooms, two full baths
913-843-7333,Fax 843-0197
- Washer/dryer included
- Professionally designed interiors
- On KU bus route - Great Location!
Spiacious 2.0, Central Air, DW, Back Forch Pets Allowed, 14th and New Jersey, Bk 841-759-878
843-6446
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
- Closetocampus
- Laundry facility
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
2310 West 26th St
- Swimmingpool
- Swimmingpoo
- On Bus Route
9th & Avalon 842-3040
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS 7th & Florida
NowLeasingForFall
Furnished Apartments
FourBedroom--AskAbout OurThreePersonSpecial
Pool and Clubhouse
841-5255
S
Super studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available NOW!
Call Berkeley Flats today for the best prices.
86101 11th & Mississippi
Jesan Management
2512 West 6th St. 749-1288
GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS
• 1 Bedroom $320
• 2 Bedroom $380
• 3 Bedroom $600
EAGLE APARTMENTS
• 1 Bedroom $320
• 2 Bedroom $420
Call 749-1288
OPEN HOUSE
Monday-Friday
1 - 4:30 p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
--offer...
430 Roommate Wanted
1 o 2 non-smoking male roommates wanted for
to share now three 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. A/C,
W/D, D/W, $225 per month + utilities. Call Nick at
843-408-7.
Do you need an additional roommate for the 1965-
**school year?** Call 749-3872.
N/R Recommend share B3 bCOE, 2 full bath,
N/R Recommend load cons $285 +/mo /+ call
Todd or Chad at Chad
N/5 females to share large lowhouse w / g grad students W/D, separate pre-maid W17 'x'/17, walk-in rooms D/W.
Male or female, prefer grad student. 2 BR app.
8459 or 8464 (319-782-3302) collect, Available *A*
(319-782-3302) collect, Available *A*
Space shared 2 BR apartment in West Hills. Just off Emery Rd. Pool, short walk to campus, 1' bath, wash in closet, 1st iorr, $200 *mo* 4' ulls, 8' bed, early start, paid day早秋 at; Gary UG 852 2860
Straight male to share expense for Meadow
wagon. Baxter to share expense for York on
KU bus route. Cait Brian (314) 892-5600.
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
- Planned social activities
- Featuring our "Dine Anytime" program that serves teriffic meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner
IBM and Macintosh computer lab
Tours available daily including weekends-just drop by!
Don't forget to ask about our "Fast Back" Bonus!
1800 Naismith Drive
843-8559
Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information packet!
1-800-888-GOKU
NAISMITH
Hall
6B
Wednesday, July 12, 1995
The University of Kansas
The University Theatre presents
THE UNIVERSITY
THEATRE
Kansas Summer Theatre '95
TWELFT
NIGHT
a rollicking comedy by William Shakespeare
8:00 p.m.
July 14,15,16,
21,22,23,1995
Crafton-Preyer Theatre Stage
General admission tickets are on sale in the KU box offices: Murphy Hall, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS, SUA Office, 864-3477; seating is limited; public $8, KU students $4, other students and senior citizens $7; both VISA and Mastercard are accepted for phone orders.
Wednesdays at Dos:
Live Jazz
this Thursday
Come Party on the Patio
Wednesdays at Dos:
Live Jazz this Thursday
“Don't Drink the Water”
25¢ Draws
$1.25 Swillers
$1.00 Margaritas
DOS HUMBRES RESTAURANT
DOS
HUMBRES
RESTAURANT
You've never experienced anything like SuperTarget. We offer the finest in groceries and the best in discount retail. And we're the only store dedicated to providing convenient one-stop-shopping in a Fast, Fun, and Friendly work environment.
KU Students...
And it starts with Fast, Fun, and Friendly people. So bring your personality and a "guest first" attitude, and find out what SuperTarget is all about. You're going to love what you see. Currently we have full and part-time positions available throughout the store:
New Hampshire 841-7286
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- Merchandise Flow/Sales Floor
- Deli/Produce/Bakery/Grocery
* Coffee Bar/Juice Bar
- Coffee Bar/Juice Bar
- Guest Services/Cashier/Service Desk
* Loss Prevention
3.
Y
12
It's time to set your
sights on something
better, call:
1-800-966-4812
ask for ext. 832-ZBBT
O
SuperTARGET.
FAST, FUN & FRIENDLY
We're proud to be a part of Lawrence and the KU community. SuperTarget is an equal opportunity employer dedicated to a drug-free, smoke-free work environment.
Soccer field construction kicks into gear
Carla Pasley of LRM Industries does maintenance work on construction equipment west of Oliver Hall. Pasley is part of the crew building the field.
By Dan Gelston Kansan staff writer
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
With its first varsity soccer team ready to take the field, Kansas just needed to find a field. That problem is being solved with the construction of a soccer-only facility behind Oliver Hall.
Work on the field began June 19. There are two target dates for the field to be ready, said Darren Cook, director of facilities for the Kansas Athletic Department. Cook said he hoped that most of the field would be usable in mid-August, when the team started practice, and that it would be completed by Sept. 8, when the first game is scheduled. Cook said he saw no reason why the field wouldn't be ready in time.
Construction will cost $150,000 and is being financed by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. A practice field and bleachers on the field's east side that will hold as many as 460 spectators are part of the project.
"We're really encouraged at the way progress is being made," Cook said. "The weather has held up, and it's starting to look like a place where you can play soccer."
The quick progress has allowed LRM Industries Inc. to finish its
excavation work earlier than expected. Originally scheduled to complete the excavation on July 15, LRM finished Tuesday which allowed irrigation work to begin.
"Everything has gone as planned," said Vic Schmille, LRM project manager. "It was a good piece of land to work on."
LRM previously has worked for the University on the Lied Center and Memorial Drive.
This will be the first year that soccer will be offered as a varsity sport at KU. As an intramural sport, soccer was played at 23rd and Iowa streets, but the Shenk Complex was not up to varsity standards.
Cook said that there were long-term plans in the works to develop a field on campus for intramural sports but that he did not know where or when.
SAVE ON THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER.
SAVE 50
when you buy a medium or large cup of frozen yogurt. In Original, Nonfat and Sugar Free Nonfat.
THE TASTY THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER.
Louisiana Purchase
23rd & Louisiana
849-5500
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
SAVE 50¢
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-0440
when you buy a medium or large waffle cone of frozen yogurt. In Original, Nonfat and Sugar Free Nonfat.
Offer expires 7/28/95
THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER:
--with multiple purchases.
Just use your Frequent Buyer Card.
Details in store.
Louisiana Purchase
23rd& Louisiana
843-5500
I Garit Ballevo Ns
Yogurt!
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-0440
Offer expires 7/28/85
Offer expires 7/26/95
FREE FROZEN YOGURT
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
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
- designed for privacy
- efficient
- energy efficient
- many built-ins
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226
affordable rates
- affordable rates
·private parking
·locally owned
·laundry facilities*
-close to campus
-locally managed
-close to shopping
-central a/c
-on site managers*
-pool*
-microwaves*
*available some locations*
- close to campus
Stop by and view these great apartments!
合
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company
ADVERTISING: 864-4358 NEWS: 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SECTION VOL.104, NO. 155
WEATHER
CHANCE FOR RAIN
High 90°
Low 67°
Weather: Page 2A.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1995
(USPS 650-640)
KU LIFE
]
There's gold in them czar hills!
A new exhibit at a Topeka museum features priceless treasures from Russia. Page 1B
SPORTS
Hatching new Jayhawks
The University will add soccer and rowing to Kansas' fall lineup.
Page 8B
A disk-drive failure shut down the campus-wide administrative mainframe on Monday.
On-line services down briefly
Dave Gardner, director of computing services, said the failure occurred about 10 a.m. and was repaired by early afternoon.
NEWS
BRIEFS
"Occasionally, the hardware fails," Gardner said. "That affects the on-line systems."
Student and payroll records, University accounting and the libraries were affected.
Despite the shutdown, students could still use some library systems.
John Miller, automation librarian, said the on-line catalog was not available, but students could find article citations on local area networks such as CD-ROM.
"The shut down didn't prevent people from checking out books," he said.
Former'Hawk back to coach
One year after graduating former Kansas softball player Kim Newborn is returning to help coach the Jayhawks, softball coach Kalum Haack said yesterday morning.
Newbern, who spent last year as an assistant coach at Oklahoma State, was hired to replace Gayle Luedke, who retired after last season. Newbern was a two-year starter at third base for Kansas until she graduated in 1994 with an exercise science degree.
"She was a player just a year ago, and now she's got one year of coaching under her belt." Haack said. "She can understand what they're going through, but she has also seen the other side of it. She will be invaluable to the team."
Compiled from Kensan staff reports
Muyskens resigns as dean of CLAS
Frost-Mason will become acting dean
By Mark Luce Kansan staff writer
James L. Muyksenk, dean of liberal arts and sciences, resigned Wednesday to take a position within the University System of Georgia.
Muyksens, who will be the senior vice chancellor for academic affairs for the Georgia Board of Regents, will oversee 204,000 students and
8,000 faculty members at the 34 schools in the University System of Georgia. He has been dean of the largest school at the University of
Kansas since 1988 and was responsible for 16,000 students, 600 faculty members and a $40 million budget.
PETER R. BURKE
sciences, will serve as the acting dean starting Aug. 18. Frost-Mason is out of town and unavailable for
James L. Muyskens
Muyksens, who was considered for KU's chancellor position last winter, said that the offer from Georgia came unexpectedly in early June.
comment.
"If you have been a dean for awhile, your name is going to appear on lists," Muyskens said. "I wouldn't have expected to move. This came out of the blue and surprised me as much as anyone else."
Muyskens said that the opportunity to work more publicly in a state with a progressive legislature and a governor, Zell Miller, who is committed to integrating the educational system made the position attractive.
"I certainly wasn't looking to flee.
but I was surprised to find a state that wasn't pessimistic," he said. "At issue is the opportunity to do some things in educational policy. To make a difference at the state level appeals to me."
David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said Muykens built consensus, unified the college and served as an excellent fiscal manager.
Georgia Chancellor Stephen R. Portch said Musskens would help implement a strategic plan aimed at academic excellence.
"We are are going to be wellserved by his academic expertise, his administrative experience and his interpersonal skills," he said.
"Among his many accomplishments, Jim Muyksen assembled a tremendously able group of associates in the college's offices," he said.
"Sally is committed to providing a liberal arts and sciences education to all. She will continue the emphasis Jim had on education," Shulen-burger said.
Shulenburger said a search committee for a permanent replacement would be formed in the fall. But for the interim, Frost-Mason will be able to meet the challenges.
Muyksen agreed that the college would remain on a steady course.
"We have done as good of a job hiring as anywhere in the United States," he said. "They are committed having a well-developed research and teaching community."
THE FUTURE OF MACHINERY
Brian Flink / KANSAN
Elizabeth Sebranek, Columbus, Neb., Senior, washes genomic DNA to remove salts. Sebranek, a human biology major, was the recipient of a $1,000 Undergraduate Research Award.
getting grant
Research awards give students a leg up in the lab
By Meng Yew Tee Kansan staff writer
Elizabeth Sebranek, sitting cross-legged at the laboratory study table, scribbles down notes as she recalls some of the experimental procedures she conducted a few days before.
"7/5/06: Performed partial digest of genomic TY2 DNA. Due to the conflicting concentration of...," Sebranek, Columbus, Neb., senior, writes in her notebook.
Without a $1,000 award from the University of Kansas, Sebranek probably would have at least two jobs and definitely would be struggling with her research on a bacteria that causes typhoid.
"Without the research award, I probably wouldn't be getting very far at all because I wouldn't have the time," Sebranek said. "Rather than constantly having to worry about getting somewhere at a certain time, I am more relaxed and I am able to come into lab really focused."
Sebranek, who is studying human biology, is one of 21 Undergraduate Research Awards recipients. The awards are exclusively for Lawrence campus undergraduates and are available in the summer and spring. However, the awards are at risk of being shelved due to recent budget cuts. The award is worth $1,000 in the summer and $250 in the spring.
The College Honors Program at Nunemaker Center selects the award winners. Students do not need to be in the honors program to apply.
The awards are made based on the merit of the applicant's research proposal and academic record as well as recommendations from faculty members.
Winners come from a large range of academic fields, including philosophy, human development, English, fine arts and chemical engineering.
Sandra Wick, assistant director of the honors program, said 49 students applied for the 21 awards this summer. Last spring, six of 20 applicants won the award.
The $1,000 award now is
Sebranek's primary income and she
is allowed to spend it as she wishes.
While some winners spend the
money on travel, Sebranek mostly
uses it to pay rent and buy grocerys.
"This is probably the best summer I have had at KU because I am not taking other summer courses," she said. "I feel like I'm learning more and enjoying it more this summer."
Sebranek said that the entire process, from applying in the spring to presenting the results later in the year, would be a great learning experience.
"It is a very good opportunity for undergraduates to gain research and laboratory experience," said Eric Elsinghorst, professor of microbiology and advisor on Sebranek's research project, "particularly for students who are interested in pursuing a graduate degree."
Sebranek, who plans to study for a master's degree in pathogenesis, said it would give her an advantage in her graduate school applications.
Office to orphan Undergraduate Research Awards
By Meng Yew Tee Kansan staff writer
The Office of Research, Graduate Studies and Public Service has decided to stop financing the Undergraduate Research Awards beginning July 1, 1996. The move will cut the office's budget by more than $20,000.
Although the choice was not an easy one, the awards, known as UGRA, had to go, said Robert Bearse, associate vice chancellor of the Research, Graduate Studies and Public Service office. Bearse said that offices university-
wide were expected to prioritize and make cuts after the Kansas legislature cut the University's budget by $3 million effective July 1. Bearse's department must cut $300,000, and the UGRA fell on the wrong side of the priority list.
"For at least 10 years, we have been telling people that it is not appropriate to fund the undergraduate programs from the general research fund," Bearse said.
The general research fund, which is allocated by the Kansas legislature, normally is intended for faculty
research only.
However, the Undergraduate Research Awards are not in absolute jeopardy yet. Support remains strong despite the financial trouble. Bearse wants to see the program continue but said that funding must come from elsewhere. The Honors Program is trying to find a new source for funds.
"I'll do everything I can to keep the program," said Mary Klayder, associate director of the Honors Program. "I really believe in this program, and I think it is incredibly important to undergraduates."
KU officials close off parts of Towers' lots
Top levels to be stabilized before residents can park
Kansan staff writer
By Kimberly Crabtree
Kenan staff writer
Jayhawker Towers residents are looking for new places to park.
"We will fix the parts we can," said Richard Mann, University director of administration. "Other parts we may have to leave permanently closed until we can restructure the entire garage."
Officials knew the structure was deteriorating, but the inspection revealed the extent of the damage.
As a result of a July 13 inspection, KU officials shut down parts of the Towers' garages on Monday in order to stabilize the structures. Officials hope to have most of the garages open again by Aug. 6.
According to the inspection report, permanent steel shores must be installed between the east garage's second and third levels and a new access point for level one. With these improvements, the first and third levels can continue to support traffic. Plastic netting also will be installed on the first levels of both garages to catch falling concrete pieces.
"My guess would be the maximum this will last is two years," said James Modig, director of design and construction management. He said that the cost of stabilizing the structure was between $25,000 and $30,000.
The inspection hasn't prompted any immediate plans for a new garage. Modig said.
"That's a rough estimate because we decided what to do very quickly, and we haven't had time to do any figuring yet," he said.
In April, a complete review of University parking problems was completed by Barton-Aschman Associates. According to that final report, "A recent study determined that it was not feasible to repair the Jayhawker Towers" garages, so they must be demolished. Replacement parking will be needed."
Barton-Aschman Associates proposed a $4,866,000 structure to be built for the Towers, which would have added 415 parking spaces. But that proposal was denied by University Council and Faculty Executive Committee last semester.
"Voting down the proposal had nothing to do with Towers," said Barbara Schowen, FacEx member. "Certain aspects of the proposal we didn't think were well thought out. The idea was to wait for the final comprehensive plan."
"I think we only had six or seven residents come get the courtesies." she said.
While the garage is closed, Towers residents are having to scramble for parking spaces.
Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking, said residents could still park on the surface level of the west garage or in an overflow lot south of the Towers. Additionally, parking services offered the students a courtesy pass to park in the Burge Union lots.
Shelly Canada, Tulsa junior and Towers resident, isn't too disturbed by the parking displacements.
"I only use my car to go get groceries, really," Canada said. "It shouldn't be too big of a deal. But they should have looked into it more."
Native of Lawrence found beaten in Ohio
The Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio — A Kansas State University baseball player remained in critical condition today after being found beaten in an Ohio State University fraternity house.
Other residents found Bradley J. Barker, 10, of Lawrence, on Sunday in a bedroom at the Triangle fraternity house. He was staying there with teammates while playing in a college-level summer baseball league.
He was in critical condition in Ohio State University Medical Center, suffering from severe head injuries, hospital representative David Crawford said today.
Police said they had no suspects or motive for the beating.
2A
Wednesday, July 19, 1995
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Petitioners fight 'Simple' wording
By John Collar Special to the Kansan
Since Lawrence changed its human-relations ordinance to include the words "sexual orientation," no complaints have been filed charging discrimination on this basis.
And supporters of a petition being circulated in Lawrence are hoping to keep it that way.
A petition campaign to rescind discriminatory protections for homosexuals is being sponsored by John V. Watkins, Lawrence attorney and chair of the Republican Party's third district, which includes Douglas County.
If petition supporters receive 2,852 registered-voter signatures, which is 25 percent of last April's election voters, the commission will be forced to change the ordinance to its previous wording or to call a special election.
Watkins declined comment on the petition.
Ben Zimmerman, co-chair of the Simply Equal coalition that successfully changed the ordinance, said the group didn't have any plans yet to campaign against the petition. The group hasn't heard much about it.
"They're holding it close to their vest," he said.
Even though the petition is underway, the city office that processes discrimination complaints is ready to listen.
"Our mandate is to enforce the law," said Allegra M. White, human relations specialist for the city.
White is one of two specialists who investigate discrimination charges in housing, public accommodations and employment. Paul D. Winn and White serve under Rehilo "Ray" A. Samuel, executive director of the Lawrence Human Relations/Human Resources Department.
White gave several tips for anyone who files a discrimination complaint. First, she said to keep a journal of discriminatory acts. A journal may prevent memory lapses that occur with time.
"You don't have to have proof," White said. "You just have to believe that you may have been discriminated against."
Complaints involving employment or public accommodations must be filed within 90 days of the last incident. Housing complaints must be filed within 365 days.
"We urge people to come as soon as possible." White said.
David Brown, Lawrence attorney and member of the Lawrence Human Relations Commission, said even if the time limit had expired, a lawsuit still could be filed in district court.
The commission is a nine-member panel that advises the human-relations department and holds public hearings on discrimination charges.
Before a hearing, every opportunity is made to resolve the dispute through reconciliation. If the parties cannot come to an agreement, the city then investigates the charges.
"We do our level best as human beings to take an impartial and unbiased stance throughout the investigation," White said.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stuart-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.
Paper chase starts early at law school
65 summer starters face intensive initiation during 10-week,10-hour program
By Sean Demory Special to the Kansan
When Connie Shidler graduated in May, she didn't have much time to celebrate. She had an assignment due the next day.
Shidler, Merriam law student, is one of 65 students admitted to the
Law School this
law. Like
many other
summer start-
ers, she said
that she was
more than a bit
driven.
"I'm in a hurry," Shidler said. "I've been in the work world for a long time, and I'm anxious to get my degree."
To obtain her degree as quickly as possible.
Some students didn't choose to be summer starters, though. Karl Keating, Lincoln, Neb., law student, didn't state a preference on her application.
"The law school may not have accepted me due to the number of openings in the fall," Keating said. It was important enough to sacrifice her summer vacation in order to go to the law school of her choice, she added.
"I've been in the work world for a long time,and I'm anxious to get my degree."
started,"McAllister said.
The Law School's summer session consists of 10 hours of class during a 10-week period, which began May 16. About 800 students applied for summer admission.
Shidler, 29, has elected to take the "fast track," a cycle including summer classes that will allow her to graduate in 26 months.
"I have a 10-year-old daughter, I commute and I have a job, so the fast track's my life anyway," Shidler said.
Steve McAllister, associate professor of law and one of the four instructors for the summer session, acknowledged the rigor of the tenweek program. But he said that the students were looking for that level of challenge.
Keating said that the law program
"These are people who want to get
Connie Shidler Merriam law student
was very different than what she had expected.
"I came from the high of graduation and a pretty easy spring semester directly into a very rigorous professional school," she said.
Even with the transition,
Keating said that the summer program had definite
advantages over starting in the fall.
"We've all been able to become very close with this smaller group," Keating said. "In the fall, two-thirds of the people coming in are strangers, but we'll all know each other."
McAllister said 10 intensive weeks together gave the students ample opportunity to get acquainted.
"They get the opportunity to become a very cohesive group," he said.
Despite the ease of getting to know other law students, Shidler said the fast track would be a solid test for her.
"All my life I've wanted to go to law school, and all my life I've been told I couldn't do it," Shidler said. "If I can complete this in 26 months, there's nothing I can't do."
Weather
WEATHER
HIGH LOW
Atlanta 98 ° ☀ 74 °
Chicago 83 ° ☀ 61 °
Des Moines, Iowa 86 ° ☀ 63 °
Kansas City, Mo. 88 ° ☀ 67 °
Lawrence 67 ° ☀ 50 °
Los Angeles 87 ° ☀ 65 °
New York 87 ° ☀ 72 °
Omaha, Neb. 87 ° ☀ 64 °
St. Louis 88 ° ☀ 67 °
Seattle 86 ° ☀ 58 °
Topaka 90 ° ☀ 66 °
Tulsa, Okla. 92 ° ☀ 72 °
Wichita 92 ° ☀ 69 °
TODAY
A chance for thunderstorms.
6790
THURSDAY
A chance for rain.
6595
FRIDAY
Hot and dry.
7699
Source: The Associated Press
NIGH LOW
Atlanta 88 ° • 74 °
Chicago 83 ° • 61 °
Des Moines, Iowa 88 ° • 63 °
Kansas City, Mo. 88 ° • 67 °
Lawrence 87 ° • 90 °
Los Angeles 87 ° • 65 °
New York 87 ° • 72 °
Omaha, Neb. 87 ° • 64 °
St. Louis 88 ° • 67 °
Seattle 86 ° • 58 °
Topeka 90 ° • 66 °
Tulsa, Okla. 92 ° • 72 °
Wichita 92 ° • 69 °
TODAY
A chance for thunderstorms.
6790
THURSDAY
A chance for rain.
6595
FRIDAY
Hot and dry.
7699
CAMPUS INFORMATION
Hours for Watson Library and Anschutz Science Library.
8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.; 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. Fri.; noon to 5
p.m. Sat; 1 to 5 p.m. Sun.
Enrollment center hours:
8 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m.
Mon.-Fri.
Hours for the Kansas and Burge union bookstores:
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
Campus is closed to through traffic from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Mon-Fri.
The Kansas Union Bookstore will be open on July 22 from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
- Parking is restricted in blue, red and yellow lots. Residence hall parking lots are not restricted.
Important phone numbers:
University directory assistance
From campus phones, dial 0. Off campus, dial 864-2700.
KU Police Department (nonemergency): 864-5572
Safe Ride: 864-SAFE
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 19, 1995
3A
KU students draw experience from Arts
Milton Glaser, a painter, is at the forefront of this drawing class. He is surrounded by his students, who are studying from different books and materials. The teacher, likely Bill Warner, is also present in the background. This scene captures a moment of creative collaboration and artistic exploration.
Design program simulates work in the real world
By Kimberly Crabtree Kansan Staff Writer
Graphic design students in the Arts program are not only designing professional projects — they are designing their futures.
"The Arts is a professional design studio," said Chris North, Arts director. "It focuses on every aspect of a graphic design project."
Started in 1981, the Arts program was developed to give students a chance to design for real clients, under real-world conditions such as time and budget constraints. During the semester,
Richard Varney, associate professor of design, critiques the work of Ashley Gamble, Independence, Mo., senior; Fernanda Viegas, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, junior; and Lori Tice, Marion senior. The students are part of the Arts program where they work with real-world clients.
"The experience you gain is a definite advantage, because you get an idea of how a real studio works," said Julie Hillemeyer, St. Louis senior.
students are regularly critiqued by instructors and other students as well as get a grade.
Since the program services only University-related, nonprofit clients, none of the students are paid for their work. The clients pay for the cost of supplies and the printing.
Most of the program's work comes from the department of music and dance and the Lied Center performance series. Projects include logos, brochures and posters.
Brian Flink / KANSAN
"We do 50 to 60 projects in a semester," North said. "It's more true-to-life."
The program's instructors select 15 to 18 participants during regular semesters and six to eight participants during the summer semester. Portfolios, grade point averages and academic history all are taken into consideration when selecting participants.
"Because of the limited space, the competition can get tough," said Scott Gilbertson, Lawrence senior. "But it's a good motivational tool."
North decides which projects to accept from clients and then assigns individual projects to a student who has appropriate experience for that particular work.
The student then sets up client meetings, sketches ideas, develops budgets and gets printer estimates. At each step, students are required to get approval signatures from their clients.
"When I interviewed for jobs earlier this summer, they were impressed I knew how to get a project printed and that I could produce a project on a time element," Gilbertson said.
"We're getting hands-on experience, but it seems like we're getting more," said Lori Tice, Marion senior. "Projects for other classes don't involve budgets, and they are usually just done on the computer. The Arts involves aspects I hadn't known about."
"The bulk of our work goes there," said Karen Christilles, public relations director for the Lied Center. "They're fantastic, and it is a wonderful relationship for both sides. We get to work with different designers who are interested in our projects, and they get the experience."
Out-of-state RAs to lose resident status
The program's clients aren't complaining either.
Budget cuts put student benefits on chopping block
By Gwen Olson
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas' budget-cutting process has eliminated one of the major perks related to becoming a resident assistant.
Lined up to take a similar hit are other student-monthly employees, whose salaries and benefits are under evaluation by the University
RAS still will receive free room and board. But newly hired RAS who are out-of-state students will no longer receive the benefit of in-
state tuition starting fall 1995.
"Anyone hired now will not get in state tuition unless they are instate students," said Fred McElhene, associate director of student housing. He added that out-of-state students hired before June 1 would continue to be given the benefit of paying in-state tuition.
This change may cause a financial problem for many RAs.
"I really don't know how it will affect the number of students who become RAs," McElhenie said. "RAs are not the only group on campus that has gotten this benefit."
"This cut is totally in line with the whole situation," McElhenie said of recent University budget cuts.
Scholarship halls do not have resident assistants that will be affected, but the directors at the scholarship halls will be affected.
V ACCANCI? University blunders
discourage residence hall life. Page 4A.
4A.
"When there is a shortfall, there are steps that the University has to take."
The cut of in-state tuition for out-of-state RAs was a decision made by the University.
"It was a University regulation all along," McElhenie said. "They qualified for it so we got it, but there was no legislation that this had to go through to get passed."
Most resident assistants were aware of the decision before it was implemented. Student housing hired next year's RAs in March.
"Most of this has come about late in the year so I think most of them know about it," McElhenie said. "People will continue to get the benefit of in-state tuition until there
are no longer people who were hired before June 1."
Even though the RAs know about the change, some still will be affected financially.
"It would have probably affected me in terms of the money," said Jennifer Douglas, resident assistant at Lewis Hall. "It was a really nice incentive and a nice bonus. Many of the in-state RAs were not happy about it, though, because we were basically getting paid more money to do the same job."
The department of student housing hires about 95 resident assistants each year. But some might have thought twice about applying.
"I probably still would have have an RA even with the cut," Douglas said. "I wanted to do it anyway, but now that I know how hard it is I might have decided against it."
Texas couple sues Glickman for lapse in loan
The Associated Press
Larry Kemp, 40, and Connie Kemp, 38, filed a federal lawsuit Monday against Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman and George Ellis, state director of Rural Economic and Community Development, RECD.
LUBOCK, Texas — U.S. Department of Agriculture officials have been sued by a Muleshoe, Texas, couple who feel they were left in the "frying pan" over a loan nafta.
The Kemps accuse the USDA's lending agency of misapplying a 1980 note payment and then treating the Kemps' paid notes as default.
"It will set a precedent if the federal judge
The lawsuit seeks no monetary damages. Instead, it seeks to force a decision on the couple's application for loan restructuring through the RECD, formerly called Farmers Home Administration, or FmHA.
"I'm just tired of being run over," Larry Kemp said Monday. "They've done wrong and they don't want to admit it."
rules the FmHA has to make its decisions timely," said Bill Arens, who represented the Kemps at an appeals hearing in March.
P. R. T. S.
Dan Glickman
That hearing — in front of the USDA's National Appeals Division — concluded that the agency failed to act on the Kemps' application within the required 30 days.
"Plaintiffs have faced apocalypse now for two calendar years and for three crop years because
Lubbock attorney Floyd Holder filed the lawsuit on behalf of the couple who raise corn and cotton near Muleshoe, about 80 miles northwest of Lubbock.
The Kemps had been current on their loan payments until two paid-off notes resurfaced as default and the FmHa threatened to foreclose in July 1993, the lawsuits says.
of an agency mistake," reads the lawsuit.
Glickman did not return a telephone message Monday.
Ellis said the case is under review.
The lawsuit says the FmHA in the 1980s had been applying the Kemps' payments to lower-interest promissory notes that were not yet due rather than to higher interest, more secure notes that were due.
"We don't have a very good record over the past 10 to 12 years in meeting our time frames," Ellis said. "We've tried over the past couple of years to speed that up."
The Kemps blame the agency for their loan delinquency. They applied for a loan write-down that the agency has not approved or denied — even though the 30-day deadline has expired.
"In view of the previous experience the Kemps have suffered at the hands of the agency, any further, unnecessary delay is fundamentally unfair," a USDA hearing officer wrote April 18.
"When you deal with them," Larry Kemp said, "I don't know how you can ever get out of the frying pan."
Scorching temperatures pound Lawrence, nation
Air conditioners, students attempt to defeat the heat
By Gwen Olson
Kansan staff writer
Sweltering, boiling, scorching and just plain hot. These are the words many people used to describe the weather last week.
Temperatures were greater than 100 degrees for several days as students were forced to find ways to stay cool.
"We don't have air conditioning in our house," said Tiffani Despain, Lebo sophomore. "We just sit there and try not to move. We also try to stay out of the house as much as possible."
Many students have tried to stay cool by going to places that have air conditioning.
"Since I don't have air conditioning at home, it has increased my attendance at work," said Tanya Lundsford, Utah graduate student.
Many students also have to deal with the problem of having classes in buildings without air conditioning — such as Strong, Bailey, and Blake halls.
"I try to sit next to the window and try to stay cool," said Lundsford. "Also, I wear shorts a lot."
The heat wave blanketed Kansas and caused three heat-related deaths in Topeka and seven in Kansas City. The victims often were found at home in rooms that ranged in temperature from 95 to 120
degrees.
Across the country the heat wave claimed more than 200 victims and knocked out power in Chicago for three days.
The heat wave also has led to an increase in air conditioning repairs.
"We have been averaging about 80 to 95 calls per day," said Mike VanZuiden, sales manager of Cloud Heating and Air Conditioning Co., 920 E. 82th St.
The reasons for the calls range from power surges to problems with old air conditioning units.
"When the power blinks off, it makes the breakers trip on people's air conditioning," VanZuiden said. "It's very frustrating for us because people often won't check their breaker box, so we have to go over and charge them for flipping a switch."
Age seems to be a major problem with air conditioners in Lawrence.
Another factor is that people don't service their units, VanZuiden said.
"Air conditioners run from 1,000 to 1,100 hours each year," VanZuiden said. "That number equals about 100,000 miles on a car. People don't realize that their air conditioning unit needs service just like their car does."
It seems that the heat wave has ended and temperatures are supposed to remain lower than 100 degrees for the remainder of the week.
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Wednesday, July 19, 1995
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE: THE WACO HEARINGS
NRA's role hidden in hearings
Republicans and Democrats this week began their investigations into the botched raid on the Branch Davidian compound on Feb. 28,1993. But it was party politics as usual when the investigations snagged on what group had paid consultants to examine seized weapons-the National Rifle Association.
Although the NRA probably is qualified to examine the weapons seized from the burned compound near Waco, Texas, not identifying itself as the sponsor for the gun consultants was deplorable.
The NRA's role in the investigation wasn't known until last week. The group issued a news release condemning the Clinton administration for not allowing its consultants to X-ray the guns.
NRA experts said that X-raying the guns would help determine whether the weapons seized by the Treasury Department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms had
The gun-advocate group has sponsored consultants in Congress' investigation of the deadly raid on the Waco, Texas, compound.
been converted from semi-automatic weapons.
Justice Department officials claimed that X-raying was not necessary to establish whether the guns were fully automatic.
Whichever side is correct about the X-ray issue, the stealth funding of the gun consultants comes after the NRA openly and harshly has criticized the federal government's handling of the Waco raid. Four ATF agents and six Branch Davidians were killed.
Refusing to identify itself as the consultants' sponsoring organization creates a conflict of interest that Congress should have been aware of.
Both Democrats and Republicans should ensure that all future information in the hearings is available to both parties and to the public.
JAMIE MUNN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Prayer a personal lesson
THE ISSUE: SCHOOL PRAYER
President Clinton last week argued that a Constitutional amendment for school prayer was unnecessary because the First Amendment already gives students ample freedom to pray and practice their religions in school.
Instead of looking to a prayer amendment, schools should work with the administration in the coming school year to determine what forms of religious expressions will be allowed.
Clinton may have been indirectly trying to placate religious conservatives when he said that the government could not discriminate against private religious expression during the school day.
But more importantly, Clinton said that government cannot use schools to convey an official endorsement of religion
"Nothing in the First Amendment converts our
Clinton's stand against the Constitutional amendment would leave religious expressions in schools up to individual students.
public schools into religious-free zones or requires all religious expression to be left behind at the schoolhouse door," he said.
In a society that honors the Constitution, separation of church and state should be a continuing value. And in federally funded schools, mandated religious expression should not be allowed.
The way that students are currently allowed to practice religion, a choice which shouldn't interfere with other students' learning experience, is the way it should remain.
Religion is personal, and that is the way it should stay in schools—a personal choice.
JAMIE MUNN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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Rob Tapley / KANSAN
KU blunders discourage students from returning to residence halls
What does it feel like to shoot yourself in the foot? Just ask the University of Kansas and the KU department of student housing about its handling of residence-hall life.
The latest blunder will take effect this fall when newly hired out-of-state resident assistants must pay out-of-state tuition. RAs are included with all other monthly employees who work more than 40 percent time, 16 hours a week. KU is looking at which of these positions should or should not be classified as monthly and, in turn, get in-state tuition.
Previously, out-of-state students could get free room and board and in-state tuition by becoming an RA because it gave them a permanent address and job in Kansas. This provided incentive for students, who might otherwise find off-campus housing, to remain in the halls.
In turn, these RAs would be in a position to encourage freshmen to stay in the halls as well.
But now, many of these students will be left out in the cold.
GERRY
FLEY
KANSAN
EDITOR
This is another stupid decision in a series of screwy maneuvers continuing to punish residence hall students. More and more students are being discouraged from coming back to the halls after their freshman year. Who could blame them?
next hall, students will pay $418 a month to live in McCollum Hall. The full-meal plan is included, but let's get real. This pays for grade D food — I know, I worked in a hall cafeteria my freshman year. Contrast that with any apartment's cost, and a sophomore's decision on whether to move out of the hall becomes pretty easy.
Next fall, students
The decision might have a different outcome if living in the halls was worth the price. The location is great.
TUITION: In-state tuition kept from some students, Page 34.
It's easy for students to get involved, and all the friends you could ever meet are within walking distance.
In response to these complaints, the housing department will bring up its nifty hall-renovation ideas. The department wants to create suites consisting of two bedrooms and a living room. But these are the same plans that have been thrown around for at least two years.
But give me a break. Rooms are as small as prison cells and about as comfortable. Closet space is almost nonexistent. Living room furniture consists of a bed and a pillow.
If the department keeps dragging its feet on improvements, it will get swallowed by the quicksand of student dissatisfaction. Housing costs have risen by 22 percent since 1992, and improvements in living space have been lackster at best. At the same time, the average apartment rent has risen by only 8 percent.
Soon, if things don't change drastically, Kansas will have to go the same route as many colleges: requiring freshmen to live in residence halls. That would be a dire mistake.
In this scenario, housing improvements could be few and far between because the department would know that freshmen could not escape housing contracts.
If Chancellor Robert Hemenway truly wants to be the students' chancellor and wants to improve our lives, he needs to focus immediate attention to this. Not only will improving the halls make our lives better, but also it will make KU look more enticing to college recruits — also a major problem for Hemenway.
The recent out-of-state RA fisico is continuing the hall's 'downfall'. It's a shame because I don't think most sophomores-to-be really want to leave campus life behind for off-campus housing. I know I was reluctant.
Gerry Fey is an Omaha, Neb., senior maloring in Journalism.
Don't alter sports arenas' winning auras
That may seem to be a small task. It is anything but.
I am in a unique group of survivors. After traveling to the University of Missouri's Hearnes Center as a KU representative, I returned alive.
I was covering the Kansas-Missouri women's basketball game last season. Even though I wasn't wearing any KU apparel, it seemed like anyone could see my name tag on the press table with the Kansan splashed across it.
My paranola grew, and I felt like bait in a snake pit. The center's 13,349 seats sit at a steep angle, making it seem as if the fans were breathing down my neck.
CAMPUS EDITOR
JENNI CARLSON
Tiger fanatics are some of the most unforgiving. I thought that at any moment one of them might realize I was a KU student and yell out, "There's another one!" and come chasing after me.
That never happened, but chants of "Rock Chalk Chicken Hawk" and "KU Sucks" cut deep in the heart of this Jayhawk. Those chants don't seem too bad, but they're the only ones I can print. It seemed that Mizzou backers felt a personal responsibility
to do what ever it took to pull their Tigers through. I'm scared just thinking about the Hearnes Center. And when Joe Castiglione, Missouri athletic director, hinted this summer that building a new arena to replace the Hearnes Center was under consideration I didn't
hesitate in my reaction. Don't do it.
The place scares me to death, and any arena that strikes fear into the hearts of opposing teams, fans and even media should be preserved and treasured. Anyone who has felt the tradition in a storied basketball arena would want it kept around.
That feeling of pride can't be built into a new arena. It isn't hauled in by a dump truck, nailed into place with a hammer or painted onto the walls.
Kansas State University learned that the hard way. The Wildcats left
Ahearn Field House for Bramlage Coliseum. When Ahearn was packing in the Wildcat faithful, the old barn could really rock 'n' roll.
Fans had staked their claim. This was their home, and no one escaped without a fight.
Now in Bramlage, no one seems to feel that strong tie to defend the school's home court. K-State struggles to even come close to regularly filling the arena. Granted, the Wildcats have hit on some lean years in terms of talent, but they might have been able to squeeze more out of that talent had there been a bigger crowd behind them.
The only way to justify tearing down an established arena would be if it were structurally unsound — not because a university wants to increase ticket revenue with more seats. And definitely not because there aren't enough luxury boxes.
If the KU Athletic Department ever deems Alen Field House obsolete, I will be the first to cry foul. Sure, the place is already 50 years old. But where else can you get the feeling that the field house creates?
That feeling is difficult to describe.
For me, I get a quaye, excited lump in my stomach. I expect the unexpected: forward Raef LaFrentz hitting a three-pointer, the alumni actually standing up to cheer or center Greg Ostertag doing his point-guard impression by leading a fast break.
But I get the feeling in my stomach mostly because I know some things always will be the same in the field house. There's guard Jacque Vaughn leading the Jayhawks out of the tunnel, the clap that goes with the fight song and the students chanting "Roy! Roy! Roy!" as the KU coach steps onto the court.
Those things would still happen in another arena, but it just wouldn't be the field house. I don't know how else to put it.
I'm sure Missouri fans are saying that about the Hearnes Center. Anywhere else just isn't home. And no where else would scare the bejesus out of opposing teams.
Despite that, I want to go back to the Hearnes Center. Who knows, I may even wear a Jayhawk T-shirt.
Jenit Carlson is a Clay Center Juntor in Journalism.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SUMMER STAFF
Editors
Campus ... Virginia Marghelm
... Jenni Carlson
Editorial ... Jamie Munn
Photo ... Jay Thornton
Design ... Dave Johnson
Graphics ... Noah Musser
Copy Chief
...Melinda Diao
Reporters
Kim Crabtree ... Angle Dasbach
Dan Gelston ... Mark Luce
Luby Montano Laurel ... Trine Nygaard
Tara Trenary ... Ryan Vise
Jenny Wiedeke ...Meng Yew Tee
Copy Editors
Reporters
Gwen Olson...
Lydia Diebolt...Matt Hood
Chris Oster...Robert Sinclair
Kathleen Driscoll ... Brian Fink
Edmee Rodriguez ... Michael Schuze
Photographers
ASHLEY MILLER TOM EBLEN Managing editor General manager, news adviser
Editorial Board
Editorial Board Jamie Munn, Gerry Fey, Ashley Miller, Todd Hatt, Jolie Haeset
Columnists
Cartoonists
Isaac Bell, David Day, Shelly Falevits
Matt Hood, Emmie Hau, Rob Tapley
Business Staff
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH Technology coordinator
BRANDON HAMLIN Network manager
Campus manager...Jody Groton
Regional manager...Jody Groton
National manager...J.J. Cook
Special sections manager...Stephanie Utley
Production manager...Anne Loeper
Marketing manager...Matt Shaw
Creative manager...Anne Laurenzo
Classified manager...Heather Valler
Retail assistant manager...Anne Loeper
JJ. COOK
Business manager
MATT SHAW
Retail sales manager
J. J. COOK Business manager
MATT SHAW Retail sales manager
Angle Adamson ... Jill Bailey
Norm Blow ... Adrienne Boutly
Sarah Cleary ... Braden Hopkina
Kent McDonald ... Darcol McLain
Ashley Stout ... Alexis Wirth
Doug McGregor ... Stephanie Folech
Regional Account Executive
Zone Managers
Retail Account Executives
Irene Prilutsky ...Stephanie Utley
Regional Account Executive
Keliv Frazier
Account Assistants
Libby Antadel Jon Stenger
Gloria Gonzalez Brian Johnson
Creative Staff
Creative Stem
Klm Kistner
JAY STEINER Sales and marketing adviser
PAT BOYLE Business coordinator
WILLIAM THOMAS Production
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 19, 1995
5A
Special ed ABLE to help children
By Luby Montano-Laurel Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas' special education department is finishing a multimedia package that could help disabled children.
Analyzing Behavior State ane Learning Environments, or ALEB, is an assessment program that has been in development at KU for nine years. The program helps analyze the various behavioral states of those with multiple disabilities and is aimed toward professionals who work with disabled children.
Doug Guess, professor of special education and the program's project director, said that the idea developed with intense research and team work.
"ABLE will help teachers, parents, doctors and any other person who is in contact with a disabled child," Guess said. "This program can better teach them to work with these students' levels of alertness and responsiveness."
ABLE will train teachers to collect data in classroom situations
and use this information to design useful teaching methods for disabled children.
"The bottom line here is to help the disabled students," Guess said. "With ABLE, we train the teachers, and they can better help the students."
For nine years, the special education department has been training educators with the program through lectures and workshops. In two months, it also will be on CD-ROM, said Susan Bashinski, program coordinator.
The CD-ROM version will consist of several facets, including assessment of behavioral states, learning environment analysis, medication analysis, analysis and interpretation procedures, learning environment characteristics analysis, case studies and tests.
Bashinski said that the CD-ROM version was a product of hard work from researchers, doctors, physical therapists, special education students, professors and computer specialists.
and program specialist, said that the program was amazing.
"We truly have a multimedia program that, when we finish it, should be able to reach professionals at their own home." Wibrand said. "It has been hard work."
Ture Wibrand, Lawrence senior
Bashinski said that with the CD-ROM version, teachers could work at their own pace.
"With the CD-ROM, teachers can go back and study the same issue over," Bashinski said. "Now they don't have to be in a workshop to learn it."
But Guess said that the program had some serious drawbacks.
"Not everyone has a computer and a CD-ROM to run the program," "Guess said."
He said that another problem was that the program took a lot of time. It takes about 30 hours to complete.
"We still have a long way to go in developing good programs to help the disabled students," Guess said. "Although ABLE is an excellent program, we still have to do a lot better."
Design professor plans fall return
By Tara Trenary
Kansan staff writer
A KU professor will teach again this fall after having a heart attack last spring.
Victor Papanek, Constant professor of architecture and urban design, suffered a heart attack on Feb. 20 and then contracted pneumonia. Since that time, he has been in and out of the hospital.
"He, fortunately, has had a successful period of recovery from a very serious condition," said John Gaunt, dean of architecture and urban design.
Gaunt said that, as a distinguished professor with a well-deserved
national and international reputation, Papanek's absence left a gap in the School of Architecture and Urban
R.
Design.
Victor Papanek
Papanek, who is known for his common-sense approach to design, has written eight books that have been published internationally. His most popular book, "Design for the Real World."
has been translated into 23 languages, making it one of the most widely read design books in the
world.
Zahir Poonawala, Lawrence graduate student, received an incomplete in one of Papanek's classes because he refused to finish the class without the professor.
"It was the worst part of the semester," Poonawala said. "No one can teach Victor's classes the way he does."
Poonawala plans to retake the class when Papanek returns.
This fall, Papanek will teach seminars on Native-American architecture as well as design ethics.
However, he will not be teaching the introductory architecture class. Steve Grabow, professor of architecture and urban design, will take his place.
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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
Get the book that you can take with you no matter where you go, the PowerBook 520. Powerful enough to store all of your most important information, and simple enough for you to keep it organized. Get the Mac that goes where you go.
$
Pick up a PowerBook 520 (and take it anywhere)
The EAD Software Laboratory Website
SERVICES LIST 1023-2573
Management
Monitoring
Troubleshooting
PowerBook 520 Bundle
- 160 Megabyte Hard Drive
- 4 Megabytes RAM
- Claris Works
- Claris Organizer
Available at
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union technology center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burge Union • Level 3 • 915-804-5690
6A
Wednesday, July 19, 1995
Wearing nothing but a smile...
New Girls
New Girls
Wednesdays are STUDENT NIGHTS
$2 admission with student ID
Juicers
Showgirls
Open Tues.-Sat. 7:30am-10:00am Fri & Sat until 2:00am
913 N. Second
OPPOSITES ATTRACT.
INTRODUCING THE NEW DOUBLE DECKER TACO.
Our new Double Decker to be the perfect union of two pieces is crunchy and soft. We achieve this revolutionary technique by taping a warm, soft, flour-filled original beef trotted in original beef trotted in
TACO
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at the spicy seasoned beef,
mushroom cheese, the crunchy
corn shell, and the soft flour
tortilla in every bite. And
you'll probably think you'll agree our new
Double Duel Taco is
THE BORDER CALLS
Sno Palace
"Hawaiian Shave Ice"
Apple (Yellow)
Apple (Green)
Apricot
Banana
Black Cherry
Blue Raspberry
Bubble Gum
Cherry
Cherry Cola
Cinnamon
Coconut
Cola (P)
Cotton Candy
Cream Soda
Dalquiri
French Vanilla
Grape
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Lemon
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"Hawaiian Shave ice"
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same size or smaller
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HEALTHY MALES AND FEMALES
IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company, is currently seeking healthy males and females to participate in medical research studies.
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1 (800) 669-4682 or (913) 599-2044
16300 College Boulevard, Lenexa, KS 66219
Renters move, deposits may stay
Cleaning can save students from losing money to landlords
By Leslie Taylor
Special to the Kansan
With early August, comes the moving hassles of packing, switching utilities and forwarding mail.
In the process, many students will not clean their apartments thoroughly, which, according to local landlords, could end up costing the students hundreds of dollars.
But this cost can be avoided. "Clean out every single drawer and closet," said Tammy Montayne, property manager of Mastercraft Management, 1927 Moodie Road. "Every square inch of the kitchen and bathroom should be cleaned, and so should every bit of the appliances, from the drip pans on the oven to the freezer shelves.
"Every little thing must be clean. It better be close to perfect if the tenant wishes to receive his or her full deposit."
When moving in, most tenants pay a deposit that can equal 1 1/2
months rent. Most students know that the landlord inspects a tenant's vacated apartment and takes repair costs out of the deposit.
What many students don't know, however, is that apartment managers charge high prices for cleaning the apartment for new tenants if it's not already spotless.
Montayne explained that students are most commonly charged for uncleaned kitchens and bathtubs.
"We hire a professional cleaning team, and the less they have to do to an
For example, Meadowbrook apartment complex charges $25 to clean an oven, $15 to vacuum the apartment, $25 to clean and defrost the refrigerator and $2.50 for every burned-out light bulb.
"It better be close to perfect if the tenant wishes to receive his or her full deposit."
apartment, the less we have to pay them and the more deposit a tenant should receive," she said.
Although Mastercraft apartments charge the tenant by how long the cleaning team takes, other complexes charge for specific labor.
Tammy Montayne property manager of Mastercraft
Not only should the tenant fully clean the apartment but also should make any minor repairs, such as fixing small holes in walls or broken towel racks, said Donna Harris, manager of Southpointe apartments, 2166 W. 26 St.
Bieger
or large holes should be left to the management.
Bigger repairs such as chipped sinks
"One of my roommates was trying to climb the walls when his foot
Brad Gustafson, Oak Brook, Ill., senior, chose to repair his apartment on his own.
accidentally went through the wall," Gustafson said. "We didn't want to be charged for it, so we dry walled it ourselves. We can't get the paint to match up, so the management will know.
"But at least we'll only be charged for the repainting of the wall, and not the repairs."
Many apartments charge the tenant for touching up a wall that is peppered with nail holes.
Although many apartment-management services charge tenants for damages, they cannot charge a tenant for normal wear and tear. Montayne of Mastercraft said that the longer a person lived in an apartment, the less money he or she would be charged.
"If a person has been living in an apartment for five years, he or she will not be charged for scratches on the counter tops like a one-year tenant would." Montayne said. "Obviously the scratches could not be helped over a five year period. Whereas if scratches were found over one year, the tenants probably abused the counters."
"Some things you just have to overlook," she said. "Overall, I think that we are more than fair."
24 HOUR SIDEWALK SALE THURSDAY, JULY 20, 7 AM TO FRIDAY, JULY 21 7 AM
DAILY SPECIAL
Houston, Texas, July 20, Jam & Dines Fri, July 21, Jam
BANANAS
19¢
LB
FAIRMONT-ZARDA
FRUIT DRINK
1 GAL
ASST FLAVORS
68¢
FAIRMONT ZARDA
FAIRMONT ZARDA
DAILY SP
Begins Thurs. July 20, JUN &
BANA
FAIRMONT-ZARDA
FRUIT DRINK
1 GAL
ASST. FLAVORS
68¢
TONY'S MICROWAVE
PERSONAL
PIZZA
4 FOR
5
• REGISTER TO WIN A SHAPE
CAROUSEL, MICROWAVE OVEN
TAYSTEE
AUTUMN
GRAIN BREAD
20 OZ. LOAF
88¢
MICKEY JUMBO
DONUTS, LECTR.
1 79
Friee
Newtons
NABISCO
NEWTONS
ASST. VARIETIES
238
EA.
NABISCO PREMIUM
CRACKERS, LLC BK
1 25
FRITO LAY. LAYS 9 OZ.
FRITO'S 13.5 OZ. OR
CHEEETOS
10.11 OZ
138
EA.
PEPSI, MT. DEW,
DR. PEPPER OR
HAWAIIAN
PUNCH
2 LITTER ITL.
99¢
WE ACCEPT
FOOD STAMPS
WICHWOOD CHEFS &
MAN FACTURER'S
CORPONS
OPEN
24
HOURS
FEED DAY
BUSCH
Buchstaben in der Mitte
Wolters Kluwer New York
TONY'S MICROWAVE
PERSONAL
PIZZA
4 FOR $5
BUSCH OR
BUSCH LIGHT
BEER
965
24 PACK
120Z CAN
LIMIT 1
SPECIAL
DIDOS Fri. July 21, 7am
ANAS 19 CALLS
LB.
BUSCH
BUSCH OR
BUSCH LIGHT
BEER
965
24 PACK,
12OZ. CANS
LIMIT 1
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES $10.15
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES $10^15
BUSCH BEER
11 P.M. 1022 CAS
TAYSTEE
AUTUMN
GRAIN BREAD
20 OZ LOAF
88¢
20 OZ LOAF
88¢
FRYER THIGHS OR
DRUM STICKS
ECONOMY PAK
55¢
LP
FRYER THIGHS OR DRUM STICKS
ECONOMY PAK
FRESH CRISP BROCCOLI
LARGE BUNCH
78¢
EA.
55¢ LB.
5
5¢
Telex
Newtons
Candi
STOCK PRESSURE
250PSI
10.4MPA
150WATTS
1350RPM
FRESH CRISP
BROCCOLI
LARGE BUNCH
78¢
EA.
FRESH SWEET
RED OR BLACK
CALIFORNIA
PLUMS
88¢
LB.
GREEN TOP RADISHES, GREEN
ONIONS, CUCUMBEERS OR
BELL PEPPERS
24¢
FA.
FROM THE BAKERY
FRESH BAKED
CHERRY PIE
8" 26 OZ.
1 78
Cook's WHOLE SMOKED PICNIC HAM
6-8 LB. AVG.
58¢
LB.
58¢
NABISCO NEWTONS ASST. VARIETIES 238 EA.
FRESH SWEET
RED OR BLACK
CALIFORNIA
PLUMS
88¢
LB
FRESH JUICY,
SWEET
SOUTHERN
PEACHES
38¢
LB.
FRESH CRISP ICEBURG HEAD LETTUCE 48¢ FA
888
B
B
CHEEPSUS
10.11 OZ
138
EA.
PEPSI, MT. DEW,
DR. PEPPER OR
HAWAIIAN
PUNCH
2 LITER BTL
FRESH SLICED
1/4 PORK
LOIN
ECONOMY PK
9-11 ASST. PORK CHOPS
158
LB.
NITRAL TOKEN
BONELESS BEEF
SIRLOIN TIP
ROAST OR
STEAK
ECONOMY PAK
128
LB.
GREEN TOP RADISHES, GREEN ONIONS, CUCUMBERS OR BELL PEPPERS
99
GREEN TOP RADISHES, GREEN ONIONS, CUCUMBERS OR BELL PEPPERS
24¢
EA.
FROM THE BAKERY
FRESH BAKED
CHERRY PIE
8" 26 OZ
178
VINE-RIPE
CANTALOUPE
POLICY
WHOLE CRYOVAC
BEEF
BRISKET
89¢
LB.
VINE-RIPE
CANTALOUPE
28¢
LB
10
BONELESS BEEF TOP
SIRLOIN STEAK
ECONOMY PKR
2 29
LB.
FAIRMONT-ZARDA
ORANGE JUICE
1 GAL
188
FROM THE DELI SUCED OR SHAVED DELI HAM 168 LB. ECONOMY PACK BABY SWISS CHEESE SOLD IN WIRES $288 LB. 4LB. WHEEL.
GRADE "A"
WHOLE
FRYERS
ECONOMY PAK
48¢
LB
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1960 DECEMBER 30
LOS NIÑOS DE CALIFORNIA
VIA LAS MONTANA
GRADE "A"
WHOLE
FRYERS
ECONOMY PAK
48¢
LB.
MOOSE BROTHERS
SINGLE TOPPING
PIZZA
LARGE 12" SIZE
398
EA.
WELCH ORCHARDS
FROZEN 12 OZ C AN
78¢
MOOSE BROTHERS
SINGLE TOPPING
PIZZA
LARGE 12" SIZE
398
EA.
FROM THE BAKERY
FRESH BAKED
WHITE BREAD
ECONOMY PAK
16 F $ 1
OZ OR
2 LOAVES IN A BAG
DOWNLOAD
COUNTRY CLUB
SKIM OR
2% MILK
1 GAL.
188
FAIRMONT-GILLETTE
"LITE" ICE CREAM
ALL FLAVORS
1 2 GAL. CIN
88¢
70% LEAN FRESH
GROUND
BEEF
ECONOMY PAK
69¢
LB.
WONDER
WONDER
WONDER
BIG BREAD
16 OZ LOAF
2 FOR $1
ALL FLAVORS
VESS POP
12 OZ CAN
15¢
EA
VIDEO SPECIAL
3 MOVIES/GAMES
3 DAYS $3.00
NEW RELEASES
NOT INCLUDED
70% LEAN FRESH
GROUND
BEEF
ECONOMY PAK
69¢
LB
WONDER
WONDER
WONDER
BIG BREAD
16 OZ. LOMF
2 FOR $1
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
VIDEO SPECIAL
3 MOVIES/GAMES
3 DAYS $3.00
NEW RELEASES
NOT INCLUDED
PRICES EFFECTIVE
JULY '95
SUN TUE WED THU FRI SAT
SUM 19 20 21 22
23 24 25
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 19, 1995
7A
McVeigh refuses request for handwriting sample
The Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY — Bombing suspect Timothy McVeigh defied a subpoena and a judge's order yesterday and refused to provide a handwriting sample to a federal grand jury.
McVeigh refused to give a sample of his longhand writing, claiming that he did not often write that way and that using the unfamiliar style would violate his constitutional rights.
The grand jury had asked McVeigh to appear today and give a sample to FBI handwriting experts. The directive requested he write in cursive.
"It has not been for many years his normal way of writing," said Stephen Jones, McVeigh's attorney.
Chief U.S. District Judge David Russell did not immediately hold McVeigh in contempt of court but asked attorneys from both sides to submit briefs within five days in preparation for a contempt hearing.
"I just don't buy that argument." Russell said of McVeigh's claim.
Prosecutors want McVeigh's handwriting samples to compare them with writing on documents related to the case.
McVeigh was brought in handcuffs yesterday to the federal courthouse, across the street from the empty lot where the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building was destroyed by a bomb on April 19.
McVeigh and Terry Nichols are accused of the bombing that killed 168 people and injured more than 600.
Sitting in court without the handcuffs, McVeigh was alert and occasionally passed notes to his attorneys during a 20-minute hearing before Russell.
Russell ordered McVeigh to comply with a subpoena in which the grand jury directed that he give a sample to FBI handwriting experts. The defense argued that the request was too broad and resulted from illegal surveillance. It also said that ordering him to write in longhand would involve thought processes protected by the Fifth Amendment.
"There's not going to be any probing of his mental processes," countered Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Sean Connelly. "We just want to get a complete and thorough sample of his physical handwriting."
The prosecution mentioned it wanted to compare written documents, but it wasn't specific. Jones said he believed prosecutors wanted to compare the handwriting on a truck rental agreement that was rented in Junction City.
MeVeighl's attorneys had insisted that he write the sample in front of the grand jury, refusing to follow the more common practice of submitting a sample to FBI agents at the El Reno, Okla, federal prison.
Security was tight outside the courthouse. Armed guards searched private maintenance vehicles before allowing them access into the federal complex. A sparse group of onlookers gathered, some of them tourists looking at the bombing site.
Jones spoke of a change of venue as he stood outside the courthouse and talked to reporters.
"any juror that walks out at lunch sees a very great open space where the Murrah building used to be," Jones said. "People say that we can have a fair trial in this building. That's absurd."
McVeigh and Nichols are being held without bail under a federal anti-terrorism statute that carries the death penalty. The grand jury faces an Aug. 11 deadline to indict both men.
Man executed after appeals denied
The Associated Press
STARKE, Fla. — The state yesterday executed a man convicted 15 years ago of torturing and slaying four men who didn't bring enough cocaine to satisfy a drug deal.
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the final appeal of Bernard Bolanar, 42, without dissent less than a half-hour before he was scheduled to die in the electric chair at Florida State Prison near Starke. He was pronounced dead at 10:19 a.m., said Ron Sachs, the governor's chief representative.
In several last-ditch appeals, Bolander's attorneys cited statements obtained in the last week from four prisoners who said co-
defendant Joseph Macker admitted framing Bolander.
Macker pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and is now free. Codedefendant Paul Thompson, 49, is scheduled to be released from prison in 27 months.
U. S. District Judge Federico Moreno of Miami previously refused to give Bolander a reprieve Monday, saying the inmates' statements were not the reliable testimony that the U.S. Supreme Court required for canceling an execution.
The jury that convicted Bolander in 1980 recommended life in prison, but Dade Circuit Judge Richard Fuller elevated it to four death sentences.
He was condemned for the killings of John Merino, Scott Bennett, Rudolf Ayan and Nicomedes Hernandez in Miami on Jan. 8, 1980.
They were to sell 44 pounds of cocaine to Bolander, Macker and Thompson at Macker's house but had only two pounds with them.
The victims were forced to strip and then were stabbed, beaten with a baseball bat and tortured for several hours.
Macker testified that Bolander used a hot knife on one victim's back.
Merino was still alive when all four were placed in the trunk of a car that was doused with gasoline and set afire on a highway ramp, court records show.
• Bausch & Lomb
Ray-Ban ®
Killer Loop ™
Diamondhard ™
Glass Polarized
xrays ™
ORBS ™
Sports Series ™
ACTIV ™
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Classic Metals ™
The Etc. Shop
Ray-Ban
BRIDGET STORE
Factory Direct
Authorized
Dealer
• Serengeti Driver's
• Revo
928 Massachusetts • Lawrence • 842-0611
DOUGLAS COUNTY
Rape Victim/ Survivor Service
RVSS ASAP
Advocacy • Support
Awareness • Prevention
1419 Mass.
843 8985
STUDENT
SENATE
24 HOURS CALL 841-2345
• Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban® Killer Loop™ Diamondhard™ Glass Polarized xrays™ ORBS™ Sports Series™ ACTIV™ Predator™ Classic Metals™ • Serengeti Driver's Revo 928 Massachusetts • Lawrence • 843-0611
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RV55 ASAP
• Advocacy • Support • Awareness • Prevention
1419 Mass. 843 8985 STUDENT SENATE
24 HOURS CALL 841-2345
SAVE ON THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER.
SAVE 50¢ when you buy a medium or large cup of frozen yogurt. In Original, Nonfat and Sugar Free Nonfat.
THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER:
Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500
Cayt's Believe By Yogurt Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-0440
Offer expires 8/295
SAVE 50¢ when you buy a medium or large waffle cone of frozen yogurt. In Original, Nonfat and Sugar Free Nonfat.
THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER:
Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500
Cayt's Believe By Yogurt Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-0440
Offer expires 8/295
FREE FROZEN YOGURT with multiple purchases. Just use your Frequent Buyer Card. Details in store.
Wednesdays at Dos
.25¢ Draws
$1.00 Margaritas
$1.25 Swillers and
DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANT
815 New Hampshire 841-7286
RVSS ASAP
SAVE 50¢
SAVE 50¢
I Can't Believe My
Yogurt!
Wednesdays at Dos
.25¢ Draws
$1.00 Margaritas
$1.25 Swillers
and
DOS HOMBRES
RESTAURANT
815 New Hampshire
841-7286
Quiet study areas
Lawrence's premier private student housing option—the exceptional, affordable choice for KU students
Looking For a Great Place to Live?
Come by and see what Naismith Hall has to offer.
Fully furnished and carpeted suites, each with their own bath Air conditioned
Featuring our"Dine Anytime" program that serves terrific meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner.
Maid service
Coed Fitness Center
Convenient location next to campus and on the KU bus route
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.
BATTLE FOR THE SUN
树
NAISMITH Hall
KAHSA
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, July 19, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sizzling Summer Sale
Mulligan's
COME OUT OF THE HEAT FOR A COOL
BEVERAGE AND A TASTY SANDWICH.
$1 BOULEVARD DRAUGHTS &
$2.49 LUNCH BASKET SPECIAL
FEATURING
PUPS
1016 MASSACHUSETTS
SPEEDY CARRYOUT 865-4055
$1 BOULEVARD DRAUGHTS &
$2.49 LUNCH BASKET SPECIAL
FEATURING
PUPS
1016 MASSACHUSETTS
SPEEDY CARRYOUT 865-4055
Mulligan's
COME OUT OF THE HEAT FOR A COOL BEVERAGE AND A TASTY SANDWICH.
$1 BOULEVARD DRAUGHTS &
$2.49 LUNCH BASKET SPECIAL
FEATURING PUPS GARDEN
1016 MASSACHUSETTS
SPEEDY CARRYOUT 865-4055
Love Garden
Sweatin' to the oldies!!
Come fry with us
for Super Sales on
CDs ★ tapes ★ LPs
-n- durn near everything else!!
★ FREE FANS!! ★
In front of 936
Mass. St.
The Athlete's Foot.
Athlete's Foot
Stop in & Check Out Our Huge
Selection & Huge Saving on:...
Shorts
T-Shirts
Sunglasses
Athletic footwear
...And Other Athletic Apparel
MasterCard
AMERICAN EXPRESS
914 Massachusetts
841-6966
DISCOVER
Love Garden
Sweatin' to the oldies!!
Come fry with us
for Super sales on
CDs ★ tapes ★ LPs
-n- durn near everything else!!
LOVE
SHAK & SXY INSTITUTE
FOR SONG, BETWEEN GARDEN
GARDEN
★ FREE FANS!! ★
In front of 936
Mass.St.
LOVE
SEA & SKI INSTITUTE
FOR SOME INVESTIGATION AND GARDENING
Athlete's Foot
Stop in & Check Out Our Huge
Selection & Huge Saving on:
Shorts
T-Shirts
Sunglasses
Athletic footwear
...And Other Athletic Apparel
MasterCard
914 Massachusetts
841-6966
AMERICAN EXPRESS
JAYHAWK
SPIRIT
Jayhawk Spirit
• All Pro Caps
fitted & adjustable 1/2 price
• Chief Jacket
Chief Merchandise 1/2 price
• Lots of items 1/2 price
935 Massapequa 749-S194®
JAYHAWK
SPIRIT
Jayhawk
Spirit
• All Pro Caps
fitted & adjustable 1/2 price
• Chief Guilt,
Chief Merchandise 1/2 price
• Lots of items 1/2 price
935 Mass. 749-5194
Athlete's Foot
Stop in & Check Out Our Huge Selection & Huge Saving on:
Shorts
T-Shirts
Sunglasses
Athletic footwear
...And Other Athletic Apparel
MasterCard
AMERICAN EXPRESS
914 Massachusetts
841-6946
DISCOVER
Jayhawk Spirit
• All-Pro Caps
fitted & adjustable 1/2 price
• Chief Tanker
Chief Merchandise 1/2 price
• Lots of items 1/2 price
935 Massachusetts 749-5194
THIS IS THE BIG SALE
WE HAVE A SPECIAL BATCH OF 1996 MOUNTAIN BIKES FROM CARNONDALE
SPECIALLY PRiced at $865 THAT'S OVER $80 OFF!
SALE BIKES START AT $140
HELMETS START AT $19.99
EVERYTHING IS ON SALE
& DAYS ONLY
THURSDAY 10-8
FRIDAY 10-6
SATURDAY 9:30-5
SUNDAY 12-5
BUY A BIKE AND GET A LOVELY T-SHIRT
20TH-24TH
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
916 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
LAWRENCE
841-6642
THIS IS THE BIG
SALE
WE HAVE A SPECIAL BATCH OF 1996
MOUNTAIN BIKES FROM CANNONDALE
SPECIALLY PRICED AT $865 THAT'S OVER $80 OFF!
SALE BIKES START AT $140
HELMETS START AT $19.99
EVERYTHING
IS ON SALE
4 DAYS ONLY
THURSDAY 10-8
FRIEDAY 10-6
SATURDAY 9:30-5
SUNDAY 12-5
COME BE A PART
OF OUR GROUP
HELMETS
20TH-24TH
BUY A BIKE
AND GET A
LOVELY T-SHIRT
20TH-24TH
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
916 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
LAWRENCE
841-6642
Bianchi Timberwolf Mntn. Bike - reg$269, now$219 All Winter Cycling Clothing 20% off Specialized & Trek Helmets starting at just $20 Selected Cycling Shorts 15% off Specialized & Trek Tires starting at just $10
DON'T MISS IT!
Eureka Equinox 4 Tent- reg$305, now$229 Kelty Canyon Ridge IV Tent- reg$180, now$135 Thermarest Sleeping Bags- reg$139, now $105 Camp Trails Adjustable II Pack- reg$89 $28, now $67 $0 Selected Women's Swimsuits just $15 $0 Selected Men's & Women's Clothing up to 50% off Selected Winter Clothing & Outerwear up to 50% off Plus BIG SAVINGS on selected Canoes, Water Filters, Boots, Stoves, Mattress Pads, & more! SAVE BIG BUCKS!
SUNFLOWER
Outdoor & Bike
843-5000 804 Massachusetts, Lawrence,KS
SIDEWALK SALE
Our best deals of the year!
July 20
8:00am - 8:00pm
BLUE HERON FUTON SLEEPER SALE
OUR LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR!
CHEAPY SLEEPY
frame & Foam Core Futon combo
now $129
VENTURA
Hardwood frame &
Foam Core Futon combo
now $313
ECLIPSE
now $275
frame & Foam Core Futon combo
CHEAPY SLEEPY
frame & Foam Core Futon
combo
now $129
CHEAPY SLEEPY
frame & Foam Core Futon
combo
now $129
VENTURA
Hardwood frame &
Foam Core Futon
combo
now $313
ECLIPSE
now $275
frame & Foam Core
Futon combo
VENTURA
Hardwood frame &
Foam Core Futon
combo
now S313
ECLIPSE now $275
frame & Foam Core
Futon combo
BLUE HERON
Futons & Home Furnishings
937 Mass. St., 841-9443
open mon.-sat. 10:30, thurs. 10:30, sun. 1:5
The
Unique Boutique...
is Having a Sale
15% off all Regular Priced Items
30%—50% off all clothing
50% off Swimsuits
a unique boutique
743 Massachusetts in Oswintown Lawrence
749-4664
It's all a dollar. Get it?
thursday, july 20-7 am-8 pm
arizona
trading
co.
734 Massachusetts - Downtown Lawrence - (913) 749-2377
open every day to buy, sell and trade clothing
arizona trading co.
lifestyles
treasure OF THE CZARS The Kansas International Museum in Topeka is one of only two sites outside of Russia to display this Romanov dynasty art exhibition
CONTINUED BUDGE
By Luby Montano-Laurel
Kansan staff writer
Tatiana Spektor is in search of her ancestors' history, and she said she would find it in Toneka.
Spektor, a doctoral candidate in the Slavic language department, said that she could not wait to see the "Treasure of the Czars" exhibition, which will be at the Kansas International Museum, 4th and Quincy streets, in Topeka from Aug. 2 to Dec. 31.
Tickets will cost $15 for adults,
$13.50 for senior citizens and $6 for children between the ages of 5 and 16.
"There is a lot of history in that exhibition that I don't know about because I lived under a totalitarian regime in Russia," Spektor said. "I knew the history of my Russia was lost somewhere."
"To me this exhibition means more than just art," Spektor said. "It means a discovery of the Russian identity, culture, society and history. This is a spectacular show that is as new to me as it can be for any American."
Spektor, 44, came to Lawrence from Russia with her daughter in 1900. Spektor said that in the former Soviet Union the czarist side of history was hidden. Although the art of the czars was displayed, it was manipulated to fit communistic ideals, she said.
Organizers said the "Treasure of the Czars" was the most significant collection of the Romanov dynasty, which ruled Russia from the 17th century until the 1917 revolution. There are 270 artifacts that had never before been displayed outside of Russia.
"The objects on this exhibit are regalia from the 17th, 18th, 19th, and early 20th century," said Maria Carlson, director of the University of Kansas Center for Russian and East European studies.
petore been displayed outside of Russia
Carlson said many of the objects were gifts to the Romanos from other countries.
They include the tricentennial "Easter Egg" of the Romanov Dynasty made by the House of Fabergé. It was a gift from Nicholas II, the last Czar, to his wife Alexandra. Also on
display are the Crown of Monomach, used by Peter the Great in his 1682 coronation; the throne of Paul I; and a silver gilded casket lid depicting Zarevich Dmitrii, who died in 1591
THE
MOSCOW
KREMLIN
MUSEUMS
TREASURES
OF THE
CZARS
at age 9.
"This is an extraordinary and major show that everyone must see," Carlson said.
Betty Simecka, president and chief executive officer of the Topeka Convention and Visitor Bureau, said that she initiated the project more than a year ago.
Simecka said she was in Russia and talked to Irina Rodinseva, director of the Kremlin Museums in Moscow, about bringing the exhibit to Topeka. But organizers in Russia had decided on keeping the exhibition in only one U.S. city—St. Petersburg, Fla.
The Russian organizers agreed to show the exhibit in another city, and Simecka said she kept calling them. With the help of many other motivated Kansans, Topeka beat out six other U.S. cities as a second stop for the exhibit.
Simecka said that she expected more than 350,000 visitors during the exhibition's five-month Topeka stay. She said the importance of this exhibition was not only historical but also educational.
"People will experience an exhibition of a culture that we have not been able to be in touch with for more than 40 years," Simecka said. "The most important aspects of this exhibition are the educational, cultural and artistic values that we will receive. But most importantly, the exhibition is about people who have came to work together from Russia to Kansas."
Bart Redford, a graduate assistant in the center for Russian and East European studies, said that the exhibition would make him homesick because he recently came back from Russia.
"I just spent one of the greatest years of my life in Russia," he said. "I was in the Kremlin and saw some of the art. It's amazing."
Redford said that although he had seen some of the art before, he planned to go to Topeka because there would be many pieces in the Kansas International Museum that had never been outside the Kremlin walls.
"If you are interested in Russian history, art or language, this is a must see," Redford said. "This is a once-in-a lifetime opportunity."
The University is also getting ready
One of the exhibition's treasures is this casket lid of Ivan the Terrible's youngest son who was murdered in 1519 at age 9. The lid is made of gilded silver studded with rubies, emeralds, sapphires, diamonds and pearls.
Forth exhibition
Russian flaws every Tuesday in Sep
Carlson said that KU was directly involved with the exhibition because the University has one of 12 national research centers in the country that deals with Russian and East European studies.
"When Topeka got this project, it was only natural that they should talk to us because we have 45 faculties members who are experts in this area," Carlson said. "We are a national resource in the area."
Because of this, the University has planned activities to better teach about czarist treasures, Carlson said.
The center for Russian and East European studies will conduct workshops for teachers on August 10 and 11 that will be broadcast to several locations across Kansas, she said.
Student Union Activities will show
Russian films every Tuesday in September including "Peter the Great," "War and Peace" and "Rasputin."
Watson Library will have a special lobby exhibit of Russian books. "Carl Fabergé," "Catherine the Great," "History of Russia" and "Inside the Kremlin" are among the books to be displayed.
Every Thursday in September a distinguished speaker will visit KU from different universities and lecture about Russian issues, Carlson said.
"There is an importance to this exhibition and that's why KU is contributing," she said. "Years ago, the Russians would have never let this stuff out of the country."
"The very fact that this exhibit exists means that this is a piece of history, and we all want to be part of it."
on the RECORD
RADIOHEAD
Two years ago, Radiohead released "Creep." The song became a smash single in the United States, thrusting the band into the radio and MTV spotlight. They played to 200,000 people at European festivals and headlined a sold out U.S. tour. In 1995, they released their second album, The
Last night Radiiohead played to 450 people at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
In 199b, they released their second album, The Bends, to mass appeal.
RADIOHEAD
the band
Q: When The Bends was released, critical opinion was that, because
or the success of "Creep," Radiohead still had something to prove. Was that the case when you recorded?
A: We never felt that we were one-hit wonders because it really never concerned us. We've been a band for 10 years, so we've seen ourselves progress and improve. Of course, the public's perception of you is much different. In this country we were called one-hit wonders, and yeah, we had something to prove, I suppose.
Q: Was that the case outside of the United States?
A: Yeah, actually it was. See, when that song was big in the States, we were playing to small clubs in Britain. Then we went on an 18-date sold out tour of places two or three times the size of this place (The Bottleneck). What happened was that we were playing to crowds that really only knew one song. We hadn't built a solid fan base over here like we had in Britain. We were basically touring on the strength of one song. But when we got back to Britain, "Creep" subsequently became a big hit. Then
See RADIOHEAD, Page 2B.
New concerts and releases
The those crazy kids f rom Omaha, Neb., have a new al b u m coming out Tuesday.
Attention 311 fans.
31
By Robert Moczydlowsky Kansan music writer
The album was produced by Ron St. Germain, a New York-based 'producer known for constructing the flawless 16-track guitar sound used by Living Colour. It's not the 12-song masterpiece that 1993's Music was, but this new album is head and shoulders above last year's Grassroots.
and I suggest that you drag your butt to your favorite record store and pick it up. The new self-titled disc, the band's third on Capricorn records, marks new-found industry respect for 311.
The Lazer is giving away a trip to see 311 in Florida. You can register at Dillons, 3000 W. Sixth St. The band is scheduled to make a Lawrence appearance at a Clinton Lake festival in late August.
There are plenty of great shows in town this week, too — namely tomorrow's Bad Brains show at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Bad Brains have been big earthmovers in rock since the early '80s, and this is a great chance to catch their original lineup. This tickets still are available.
The highlights are "Don't Stay Home," "All Mixed Up" and "Middirected Hostility."
Other area shows include Primus and Mike Watt on Friday at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kan., and Collective Soul and Canadian sensations Rusty on Sunday at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
If you are a local music fan, check out Dorothy,
featuring the guys who used to be local favorites
Mountain Clyde, at 10 tonight at the Bottleneck.
Next week: Bad Brains set me straight on reli-
next week: Bae brams set me Straight off religion and rock, and Collective Soul and Rusty chat about their tour of the Midwest. Stay tuned.
TRIPPING DAISY, HAGFISH
TRIPPING DAISY
PLASTIC TAPEBACKER
Hometowns and local scenes became an easy way to identify and explain the music. In Dallas, where it seems that every band has major-label potential, the locals have created a stir that has writers and radio disc jockies hailing Texas as modern rock's hottest spot.
When Portland and Seattle burst onto the modern-rock scene in the early '90s, the music media invented a new way to categorize bands.
"We're glad to see Dallas get all of the attention now," said Tripping Daisy bass player Mark Pirro. "We'd rather talk about how good the hands are."
The four guys in Hagfish — singer George Reagan, bassist Doni Blair, drummer Tony Barsotti and guitarist Zach Blair — dressed to the nines in black suits and shades, opened the night with one of the best opening-act performances I've seen. Usually, when the opening band plays, crowds at the Bottleneck drink beer.
Thank God the Dallas scene is led by bands like Tripping Daisy and Hagfish.
On Friday, Hagfish, and the Daisy taught a sold-out Bottleneck crowd about rock 'n' roll music, playing for the love of the music and in the interest of having a raucous good time.
Hagfish took their bravado live show (kind of like a cross between a **Ramones** show and an Andrew Dice Clay stand-up) and laid a back-handed slap on Friday's crowd. Their performance incited not only a pit and stage-diving, but also a couple of cries of "Take your nants off!" for guitarist Zach.
Zach Blair embodies the Hagfish spirit on stage, gyrating and leaping while his silver-sparkled guitar, cranks out the band's just-for-the-heLL-of-it
SECTION B
See TRIPPING DAISY, Page 2B
JULY 19,1995
JULY 19,1995 KU Life
MOVIE NEWS
REEL
BOX OFFICE BILLBOARD
LOS ANGELES — Hugh Grant's "Nine Months" enjoyed the strongest per-screen average among the Top 20 films, but its $12.5 million take in its first weekend was only enough to place third at the box office.
"Apollo 13," with $15.6 million in ticket sales returned to the No. 1 spot, while "Under Siege 2; Dark Territory" came in second with $12.6 million, according to Monday's figures.
The new children's film "The Indian in the Cupboard" made its debut at sixth place despite some very good reviews. The 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, as compiled Monday by Entertainment Data Inc. and Exhibitor Relations Co.:
1. "Apollo 13," Universal, $15.6 million,
2,302 locations, $6,790 per location,
$90.9 million, three weeks.
6. "The Indian in the Cupboard," Paramount, $7.7 million, 1,723 locations, $4,478 per location, $7.7 million, one week.
2. "Under Siege 2: Dark Territory."
Warner Bros., $12.6 million, 2,150 locations, $5,872 per location, $12.6 million, one week.
3 "Nine Months," 20th Century Fox,
$12.5 million, 1,458 locations,
$8,589 per location, $16.3 million, 1
1/2 weeks.
5. "Pocahontas," Disney, $8.1 million,
2,757 locations, $2,929 per location,
$106.3 million, five weeks.
7. "First Knight," Columbia, $6.6 million, 2,161 locations, $3,055 per location, $22.2 million, two weeks.
8. "Batman Forever," Warner Bros., $5,3 million, 2,487 locations,
$2,125 per location, $164.6 million,
five weeks.
9 "Mighty Morphin Power Rangers:
The Movie," 20th Century Fox, $2.8 million, 2,039 locations, $1,369 per location, $30.9 million, three weeks.
10. "Judge Dredd," Disney, $2.4 million, 1,805 locations, $1.31,44 per location, $29.2 million, three weeks
2B
Wednesday, July 19, 1995
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Radiohead is, from left to right, Thom Yorke, Phil Selway, Ed O'Brien, Colin Greenwood and Jonny Greenwood.
RADIOHEAD
Continued from Page 1B.
we stopped touring, and we were writing the new album. So in America, we didn't have the visibility and exposure, and that sort of carried over to the British scene as well.
Q: Now the new album is out,
and the tour is underway.
What's different this time?
A: What's different this time around is that we're playing to Radiohead fans, not "Creep" fans. We spent a long time as the "Creep" band, but now we're over that. I think we've moved on to being Radiohead. It's much nicer to be playing to fans of Radiohead. I mean, when I look out and see people in the front row singing the words to "Bulletproof," that's a much, much better feeling than 2,000 people screaming to hear "Green."
Q: Is there any danger that your current single, "Fake Plastic Trees," will become the "Creep" from your second album?
A: No, no, that's just a totally different song. And the second single is going to be "just," so we've got a
lote more to be proud of — a lot more to promote, if you will. We're just so terribly proud of this album that we think that it's an album that can really be long lasting. For anyone who hasn't heard it, I really urge them to take a listen.
Q: So what's next for Radiohead in the U.S. and in Europe?
A. Well, after we finish this tour, we'll go on as R.E.M. support, and we'll play with R.E.M. in Europe and then in the U.S. later in the year. After that we'll tour with Soul Asylum in the U.S. It's going to be quite a long year.
We're just happy to be building a fan following that is based on Radiohead music, not on one hit single.
"We wear the suits when we play cause it adds just a little more energy and attitude," Blair said.
TRIPPING DAISY
punk music.
For Tripping Daisy — bassist Mark Pirro, singer Tim DeLaughter, guitarist Wes Berggren and drummer Bryan Wakeland — whether they play is not a huge concern. They always play well. Friday marked their fourth Bottleneck appearance, and sadly, possibly their last.
"Girl wasn't exactly our first choice for a single' cause it was too obvious," Pirro said. "Now we have to pick another one, and we really have no idea."
Continued from Page 1B
"I Got a Girl," the Daisy's current hit single, is propelling their sophomore album, I am an ELASTIC FIRECRACKER, off of the alternative charts and into the mainstream.
"Yeah, we're not sure what the next single will be," Berggren added. "We expected 'Girl' to be the hit, and now we need to get something out there that rocks, so that people know that this album is about a lot more than just 'I Got A Girl.'"
When Tripping Daisy finally set-
ties on a second track to release "Piranha" and "Raindrop" would be good ones), radio and public reaction should be warm.
"As far as critics go, we've gotten some pretty good reviews," Pirro said, "except for the guy in Chicago who said that we sounded like Supertramp and that Tim was like a bad Perry Ferrel on whippies."
"Man, filming it was a drag," Berggren said. "I lost all feeling in my hands for like 20 minutes. They had me hangin' on this cross, and I was thinking, 'Man, this ain't worth it.' But in the end, it really came out pretty cool. Maybe it will make us huge, and we won't have to keep drive'n' these broken down vans across the country."
"It's definitely not the video you'd expect for 'Girl'." Pirro said.
But total escape from their hit single is not what Tripping Daisy desires. They play "I Got A Girl" with the same amount of energy that goes into their fast, guitar-driven songs. Recently, they finished a video for "I Got A Girl" that is set to set on MTV.
When it comes to long-distance road travel, Tripping Daisy has little to worry about. They've got i am an ELASTIC FIRECRACKER, and their days in the vans are numbered.
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UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Wednesday, July 19, 1995
3B
Book collector's cache adds chapter to Lawrence literature
By Mark Luce Kansan staff writer
Edmee Rodriguez / KANSAN
MASH
Howard Hartog, owner of Vagabond Bookman, 1113 Massachusetts St., has been collecting books since the 1980s.
Even though Howard Hartog has approximately 13,000 books in both his business and private collection, he still haunts the stacks of libraries all over the country.
"I can't tolerate getting information second- or third-hand," Hartog said from behind his cluttered desk at Vagabond Bookman, his bookstore at 1113 Massachusetts St.
As a child growing up in Edgerton, Minn., Hartog read constantly and always assumed everyone else did too. Despite an ever-expanding library, Hartog never considered himself a collector until the 1980s.
"I started out doing flea markets, finding books in boxes of motorcycle parts," he said. "I would find classics, and it wasn't too long before people began responding with more than a little interest."
tasted moved to Lawrence in
Hartog moved 1990, and because he became frustrated with having six different storage areas filled with books,he finally nabbed retail space in November 1993.
"It began to be painful to exhibit only a few things and have the rest in storage," he said. "Dealing books is not like selling T-shirts. It is an incredibly difficult retail market. And
Highlights of the collection:
well-developed specialties. The popularity of these works led him to specialize in them.
■ "Alcoholics Anonymous," hardbound first-edition, 1939
"Uncle Tom's Cabin," by Harriet Beecher Stowe, medium grade first-edition, 1851
- "Tarzan of the Apes," by Edgar Rice Burroughs, first McGlugh edition, 1914
■ "My Basketball Bible," by F.C. "PhoG" Allen, first edition, 1927
"Sports Stories," by F.C.
"Phog" Allen, signed first
edition, 1947
even though we are in our 20th month, we are still learning to walk."
Early-20th century authors such as Harold Bellright, Gene Stratton-Porter, Thorton Burgess, and Willa Cather, along with children's series like the Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew, are Hartog's
d book store is ever shifting and a combination of blind luck and fortitude. Hartog spends hours on the phone, travels to book fairs and conventions 35 weekends of the year. He also examines private collections. "I have seen some real treasures in private homes," Hartog said. "Often, I don't even want to touch some of the things because they are so valuable. The only thing that
keeps me as a viable business is getting out and finding books, and doing this is fascinating to me."
"He does something completely different than anyone else in
town," Houston said. "His collection of specific authors, especially the children's series, makes Lawrence a better town for books."
Houston credits Hartog's success to a broad knowledge of the business, despite Hartog's less than two years of experience as a salesman.
"His store is still there, which is a good sign," Houston said. "He's been doing this in one way or another for years. He's an old hand, a nice fella and probably knows more than I do."
Hartog, though, is quick to point out that just having thousands of books does not mean financial stability.
MADE IN CHINA
"On any given morning, books are only worth what the junk man will pay," he said. "One can be bullied into a false sense of security and value."
Hartog said he was enraptured by and somehow bound to old books, because they contain a piece of the author's soul.
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Local microbrewery expands beer variety, seating capacity
BELLEAU
By Trine Nygaard
Kansan staff writer
Jay Thornton / KANSAN
David Whitaker, Lawrence resident, removes spent grain from the mash run at Free State Brewing Company Inc., 636 Massachusetts St. The grain will be given to local farmers to feed livestock.
One of Lawrence's popular watering holes will soon be able to soothe more dry throats.
The only brewery in town, Free State Brewing Company Inc., 636 Massachusetts St., plans to expand its brewing capacity this fall.
lagers, Scotch ales and barley wines."
New lager tanks will be installed to increase the production from 2,200 to 3,300 barrels a year. The production increase, which is the third and largest since the brewery opened in 1989, will put the microbrewery among the top 10 percent in the United States.
"We're excited with the possibilities this expansion provides us," said Steve Bradt, head brewer. "Although we've brewed nearly 30 different varieties of beer in the past six years, we've rarely been able to offer more than five to six flavors on tap at any one time."
things to evolve out of the increased capacity."
Chuck Magerl, Free State's owner, said that not only would the expansion allow an increase in the selections on the menu, but also would provide a greater selection of keg beers for parties andceptions.
"The additional vessels will enhance the selection and allow us to branch out with some of the beers we've been developing, like
"We typically turn down requests for kegs," Magerl said. "With the expansion we will always be able to meet the customers' needs.
He said that customers were pleased with the expansion plans
"We're excited with the possibilities this expansion provides us."
Steve Bradt head brewer, Free State Brewing
"Also, although bottling is not necessarily the primary reason for expansion, it might be one of the
because they liked the idea of a greater selection of flavors. "Every day people ask for their particular favorite. Because we have reached the capacity of our facility, we couldn't produce favorites, such as crimsonberry, as frequently as we would like to," Magerli said.
The brewery will continue its tradition of having guest brewers, because it has been well received by customers. The brewery tries to be very selective about the guest brewers it chooses and the products it offers, he said.
Besides the increase in brewing capacity, Free State also is planning to expand the kitchen and turn the beer garden into an all-season dining room. The expansion of the kitchen will result in more daily specials, but mainly it will grant the employees a little more room to do their work, Magerl said.
"When people work in the proper surroundings they take more pride in their job. We have excellent chefs, and we want to keep them challenged and happy," he said.
Robert Parks, server, said that he was excited about the expansion, although he was disappointed that there would be no outside dining.
"But the garden is only good for three months out of the year, so closing it off will be an advantage," Parks said. "We have more and more people coming here so we need the seating capacity to compete with other restaurants downtown."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 19, 1995
5B
New book theorizes about the Ripper
The Associated Press
LONDON — An American doctor has emerged from the fog of 19th century London as the latest suspect in the crimes of Jack the Ripper, who slashed five prostitutes to death and terrorized the streets in 1888.
But he faces strong competition from a string of other candidates ranging from Queen Victoria's grandson to Impressionist painter Walter Sickert.
A new book by two Suffolk, England, policemen says American surgeon Francis Tumblety was a prime suspect in at least four of the murders. He was
arrested soon after the last murder, but fled to the United States after he was released on bail.
The London murders stopped, but several Ripper-style murders occurred in Nicaragua and Jamaica soon afterward, says "The Lodger" by policemen Paul Gainey and Stewart Evans.
Their theory is based on a previously unpublished letter written in 1913 by Chief Inspector John Littlechild, then head of Scotland Yard's special branch.
Century Publishing, which will publish the book August 3, said author Gainey discovered that Tumbletie, who had hoped to set up a practice in England, hated
women after discovering that his wife was working in a brothel.
Gainey also said Tumbleby had a collection of wombs in a glass jar. Four of the Ripper's victims were disembowelled.
The publishers have not yet said where in the United States Tumbletle was from or where he fled.
Tumblety was arrested soon after the last murder when his landlady found blood on his shirt. He was charged with sexual offenses and granted bail. When he fled, police failed to find him.
The story of the Ripper's horrible deeds has fascinated mystery
buffs for a hundred years, and theories about the killer's identity abound.
One theory said the Ripper was the Duke of Clarence, grandson of Queen Victoria. The duke has been described as a frequenter of high-class brothels. He died at age 28 in 1892, reportedly of influenza, but theorizers suggest syphilis might have been the cause.
The Walter Sickert theory suggests the prostitutes were killed to keep them from revealing that the duke had secretly married an artist's model and fathered a child.
Simpson strong enough to kill, doctor says
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — O.J. Simpson's damaged, arthritic wrists would not have prevented him from yanking back his ex-wife's head and slashing her throat, provided she was still and immobilized. Simpson's doctor said Monday.
Robert Huizenga, the physician, is under attack by a prosecutor who accused him of being an advocate for Simpson. Huizenga acknowledged that while the former football player had severe physical limitations, none would have made him incapable of murdering his ex-wife and Ronald Goldman.
"Could he, with his left hand, have grabbed the hair of his ex-wife and pulled her head back?" prosecutor Brian Kelberg asked.
"In a stationary situation, yes," Huizenga responded.
Kelberg went on to question the doctor about
whether Simpson could have slit Nicole Brown Simpson's throat with a knife held in his right hand. Huizenga said it was possible if she was stationary.
The prosecution maintains that Brown Simpson was knocked unconscious and was lying face down on a paved path when her throat was cut.
Kelberg's cross-examination aimed to underline a defense claim that Simpson was so debilitated by arthritis and old football injuries that he could not have killed Brown Simpson and Goldman in a violent confrontation requiring great strength.
The two were stabbed and slashed to death in front of her Brentwood condominium on June 12, 1994.
Huizeng, who examined Simpson on June 15, 1994, said defense attorney Robert Shapiro asked him to evaluate his client's mental condition, but he also did a complete physical exam that
revealed multiple orthopedic problems.
The doctor detailed ailments ranging from deterioration of knee cartilage to rheumatoid arthritis.
Kelberg showed jurors photos of Simpson's muscular body and asked the doctor to evaluate the power of his upper torso.
"I wouldn't hire him to back me up in a bar fight," Huizenga said. "He isn't as powerful as he looks."
At one point, Kelberg took off his jacket and lay down on the counsel table to have the doctor show jurors how he examined Simpson.
A defense objection, however, stopped Huizenga from trying to comply with Kelberg's request to limp across the courtroom to show how Simpson walked into his office.
The doctor said it would be difficult to do such an imitation, and the judge sustained the objection.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rider from Motorola team dies during Tour de France
The Associated Press
CAUTERETS, France — Italy's Fabio Casartelli died yesterday after a high-speed crash involving two other riders during the 15th stage of the Tour de France.
Casartelli, of the American Motorola team, was taken to a hospital after crashing into a concrete block on the side of the road in the Pyrenees, a mountain range on the border between France and Spain.
He was flown by helicopter to a hospital in Tarbes, France, and died after being in a coma for a few hours.
"Dr. Nicolet, who was with him in the helicopter, called me and told me that their revival attempts were unsuccessful," said Jean-Marie Leblanc, the director of the Tour de France. "Casartelli had three cardiac arrests in the helicopter. It's terrible for the Motorola team, for Italian cycling and for the Tour de France."
"He had serious facial and skull
injuries," said Gerard Porte, the Tour's physician. "He went into a deen and immediate coma."
It was the first death on the Tour de France since 1967, when a British rider, Tom Simpson, collapsed during a mountain climb on an extremely hot day.
Casartello, who was married, won the Olympic gold medal in the road race at the 1992 Barcelona Games and had 12 additional wins that year. He would have turned 25 on Aug. 16.
Casartelli, Germany's Dirk Baldinger of the Polti team and Italy's Dante Rezze crashed during one of the deserts of the 128-mile stage from St. Girons to Cauterets.
After riding 18 miles from the stage's starting line on the Portet d'Aspet mountain, the riders were reaching speeds approaching 55 mph. They failed to negotiate a curve and fell.
Rezze and Baldinger were taken to the hospital in Saint-Gaudens. Porte said Rezze injured his left
thigh, while Baldinger suffered multiple injuries.
In Italy, former world champion Vittorio Adorni, now an Italian television commentator, was close to tears as he announced Casartelli's death during a live telecast.
In 1993, Casartelli won a stage in the Settimana Verfasnica and had three second-place finishes in stages of the Tour of Switzerland.
Giani Savio, Casartelli's manager, told Italian television he was heartstick by the death of his friend.
The following year he raced with the Italian team, GB-MG, but a knee injury followed by corrective surgery kept him from competing much of the season.
"He was a splendid, sensible,
frank young boy, 'Savio said.' "Now
the stage, everything, has a minor
importance."
In 1935 another rider, Francesco Cepeda of Spain, died after falling in a ravine.
Former president helps to usher Evert into tennis Hall of Fame
The Associated Press
NEWPORT, R.I. — It's a friendship built on love — love of family and love of tennis.
So it was only natural that the newest member of the International Tennis Hall of Fame and the 41st president of the United States ended the afternoon playing a friendly doubles match.
"More than I
"More than I wanted to win, I hated to lose," Chris Ersitt said, explaining why she is the 163rd person enshrined at the Newport Casino shrine, site of America's first national tennis tournament.
Mary J. Wickman
The competitive fires remain. Shortly after Sunday's center-court ceremony, Evert and former President Bush showed up on a back court and beat Pan Shriver and Evert's husband, former Olympic skier Andy Mill, in mixed doubles.
When he presented Evert, Bush told the crowd of their decade-long
tennis relationship.
"I am luckier than many of you here today because I have actually been on the court with Chris Evert," Bush said. "I say luckier, but whether it was at Camp David, Kennebunkport or at her marvelous charity tournament in Florida, it's been the same thing, just as if she were playing at Wimbledon before the Queen of England: 'Bend your knees! Cover behind me! Up to the net'
"As president, people would give me long putts, or if I up a lousy lob, people would give me a kinder, gentler return. Chris Evert never understood that."
Which is why she won at least one Grand Slam singles title a year between 1974 and 1986 — Wimbledon three times, Australia twice, France a record seven times and the U.S. Open six. She also won three Grand Slam doubles titles, two with archival Martina Navratilova, and 130 other pro singles titles.
Yet it wasn't just tennis that made Evert a champion. On this Sunday, she remembered.
She thanked her parents, who she said were her inspiration. She thanked Navratilova for making her a better player, and she thanked her
husband for easing her way into retirement.
The ceremony climaxed the biggest induction weekend since the late James Van Alen founded the Hall of Fame in 1956.
On hand for the induction ceremonies were Hall of Famers Tony Trabert, Tracy Austin, Vic Seixas, Bill Talbert and Bud Collins; Rhode Island senators John Chafee and Claiborne Pell; Gov. Lincoln C. Almond; and former Gov. Bruce Sundlun.
"Can't get any better than that," Evert said of having Bush take part in the ceremony. "It's the best. He's welcomed us into his family. He always remembers his friends and his family. He still remains very down to earth."
She won 125 consecutive matches on clay from August 1973 to May 1979, when she lost to Austin in the Italian Open semifinals. And she reached the semifinals or better in 52 of the 56 Grand Slam tournaments in which she played.
"I don't miss the pressure," she said. "It's not the best thing and it begins playing tricks with you. But I miss playing great tennis. Because I worked so hard ... there's no moment like it."
Panthers' Collins has hard beginning but pleases crowd
The Associated Press
For 45 minutes after the team's workout Monday night, fans pressed against a chain-link fence, patiently pushing pieces of paper through to Collins, who obliged them with autographs.
"There's no bones about it — I'm being paid a lot of money," Collins said. "And I just want to make sure that they see me coming across as a human being. I'm not an arrogant person. I think it's important to show the community that you care, and I think they appreciate that."
These were the first practices in full pads. The addition of pads enabled the players to be much more aggressive, a factor that was especially evident when Collins went against a defense stocked with veterans. Time after time, Collins' decisions or passes were a fraction too slow to succeed against an experienced secondary.
It had been barely 48 hours since Collins signed an incentive-based contract that could pay him more than $23 million over the next seven years. But Monday's two practices did not exactly turn into showcases for the rookie quarterback's talents.
Collins frequently would choose a receiver and keep his eyes on him the whole time, a tactic that allowed the defenders plenty of time to close in on their target. Again and again, Collins' passes were batted away within inches of the intended receivers' hands.
"Pretty easy. He's making me look good with a bad knee," said strong safety Bubba McDowell, who just returned after knee surgery.
"These days are going to happen," Collins said. "I knew that coming in. I don't expect to set the world on fire right away."
"He's got a lot to learn," McDowell said. "He was looking at them all the way. But he's going to get better with time. There's no doubt about that. He's got talent."
"Kerry's just going to continue to go through that growing process," Capers said. "What you guys see is if you had to take a guy like Kerry and put him out there and have him play right from the beginning. I don't know that it's really fair.
Coach Dom Capers said Collins is performing as expected two days into his pro career.
"But Kerry's a competitor, he's a smart guy and he has the ability," he said. "And what we hope to see is him learning from any errors that he makes and not making the same ones over and over again."
The Associated Press
McClatchy, who made two recent visits to Pittsburgh to meet with Pirates executives and some of the team's 10 owners, is expected to make a tentative bid for the money-losing team as early as this week.
Kevin McClatchy, who owns a minor league team and would like to locate a major league team in Sacramento, may make a bid for the money-losing Pirates later this week.
PITTSBURGH — A California newspaper heir who promises to move to Pittsburgh if he buys the Pirates may be ready to get down to business.
McClatchy's proposal would permit him to sell the team if losses reached a certain level — apparently, $50 million over a five-year period. The Pirates expect to lose $16 million to $18 million this season.
Currently, the Pirates owe $30 million to two of their co-owners, Mellon and PNC banks; $32 million to Citibank on a major league baseball-arranged line of credit and about $5 million in miscellaneous debt.
McClatty's bid probably will be in the $90 million to $82 million range, or slightly higher than the $85.15 million offered by cable TV franchise owner John Rigas. Major league baseball advised Rigas that his bid probably would be rejected because it lacked sufficient equity.
debt.
McClatchy's offer would cover that debt and would return the owners' initial $25.15 million investment.
McClatchy's anticipated bid would be slightly higher than Rigas' offer was, but it is essentially the same proposal because it reflects additional debt incurred by the Pirates. The team recently borrowed an additional $11 million from two banks.
Rigas' proposal also contained an escape clause.
The owners' right to reclaim their investment was an integral part of the public-private consortium's agreement to buy the team from the John W. Galbreath family in 1985. The group also received a city-backed $20 million loan.
McClatchy, who owns the California League's Modesto A'S, took a leave of absence last year from the McClatchy newspaper chain to pursue buying a major league franchise. His group tried and failed to buy the nearby Oakland Athletics.
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
100s Announcements
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, gender identity, etc. The Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that violates the university of Kansas regulation or law.
Classified Policy
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any 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 dis
Classified Directory
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on www.abcnews.com.
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Student Trainer/ Consultant-Microcomputing
Day 7/31: 11:00, 20 hours/week. Required qualifications. Enrollment in 6 hours at KU this Fall.
Required experience as a computer operating systems: MS-DOS, UNIX, or Macintosh OS. working knowledge of at least two major microcomputer applications packages, training on basic programming concepts, skills at least six hours of course work in computing. To apply, submit a cover letter, a curriculum vitae and an application script to Amr Rait, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 6045. Applicants may be asked to give a short instructional presentation and submit a written sample of EE/OA EMPLOYER
Student Hourly Microscopy Consultant.
Deadline: 7/31/95, 20 weeks/week. Required qualifications: Currently enrolled in 6 hours at KU, working knowledge of the following operating systems: Windows XP, Unix, and experience using Telnet, FTP, electronic mail, experience with one of the following operating systems: AIX, VMs, training experience, excellent oral and written communication skills, at least an MS degree in a job description job application description job description apply. To apply, submit a cover letter, a current resume with references, and a current transcript to Ann Rai, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
SUMMER JOBS for the
Environment
$2,500 $3,500/summer
Save Endangered Species
Develop campaign skills
Develop campaign skills
P/7 receptionist/typist for professional office needed ASAP. Must be organized & possess excellent organizational skills. Computer knowledge required. Position offered to P.O. B135 3155, LAWS K6044
Work with the Sierra Club, the nation's oldest and largest environmental group. Just stop the war on the environment. Rapid advancement, career opportunities.
Call Tracy 749-5465
Public Relations
Room for you and your horse (or other pet) live
for free in our 27' l. fully self-contained motor
home in exchange for approximately 15 hours
child care and light housekeeping per week.
Located on 5 acres only 7 miles from KU campus.
Call 842-9268
If you like greeting people then this career is for you. No experience necessary. Full training, part time and full time positions. Managers/Trainees $24.000 potential. $29.941 ext. 680
National company seeking individuals with a competitive edge to train for our new team. Must be a team player. Full training and travel options. 842-5277 ext. 650
Computerized customer service. Manager want job with computer training. Provide staff experience with computer required plus good people skills. Great opportunity for right person. Send Resume to P.O. Box 1530 Ilamenky.
Now taking applications for waitresses. Stop by and apply anytime. Johnny's Taworth. 401 North
Sunflower State Games. Help needed to produce the largest athletic event in Kansas, July 28-30. Tanks, squeeze bottles, food and free entries for the Sports League. No sports experience. Need Call 814-9600.
Looking for a job w/ an environmental twist. 832.
1617 est. 60
WANTED: Photographer for wedding on July 29 in KCMO. Contact me at 842-7100 or 864-2749.
Wild & Crazy
Warehouse Facilitator Needed? Computerized
product flow. Must have through knowledge of
computer operations. Great opportunity for right
person. Send resume to P.O. Box 15130 Lenexa.
Are you wild, and would you like to make crazy money? No phone interviews. Call for appt.
225 Professional Services
For free consultation call
JA
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
STATE LAW
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
Thesis & Dissertations
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping
3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 F. 9th Street 843-4600
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 NBSE 843-4023
The law offices of DONALDG. STROLE
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID (B) & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
the law offices of
Donald G. Strobe Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS VISTORS
DV-1 Greenboard program, by U.S. Immigration
93208-29681, 93208-89681, 9189-49425,
92831 Stagua St, Canoga Creek, CA 91538, Monday
Sunday, 10 a.m - 10 p.m.
545 Minnesota Off of 6th st.
HEADQUARTERS
VISA
WECANHELP
SAAB
Beau's Import Auto Service Quality car maintenance & repair.
Counseling and Information
Telephone/In Person
24 Hours
Confidential
841-2345
1419 Massachusetts
VOLVO
MasterCard
next to The Yacht Club. and other fine imports.
205 Help Wanted
ARROWHEAD
CLUB
**K.C. CHIEFS FOOTBALL**
Take part in the excitement of NFL Football at Arrowhead Stadium. Levy Restaurants is now hiring for all positions in the Arrowhead Club and Golden Circle Suites.The Season is (10) games, August 5 thru December 24. Experience the thrill of Chiefs Football - and you don't have to buy a ticket! Contact: Nick or Steve, Arrowhead Club, Arrowhead Stadium.
**No Phone Calls Please**
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 19, 1995
7B
Quark X Press Tutoring
Contact Seed at Professional publisher
"work done with you"
235 Typing Services
For ALL your typing/editing/creative 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
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
486/32 2X CD-ROM SB-SCARB $8-BRAM,
486/32 2X CD-ROM software & all essentials $900/
Software, idc15874
Desks, Bookcases, Chest of Drawers, Beds.
Everything But Ice.
MCAT study guides - BET2T and KAANLMaternal for sale. Contact Drew 816-531-6837
MICROSCOPE FOR SALE! Olympus model on tour, four stage objective with oil. 609 Calat 814-739-6837
Full-size mattress set. New, never used $11 in plastic warranty). $165. Brass headboard $85.
103759-3620
MCAT study guides - BEP2T and KAIP2M materi-
ties. http://www.mcats.org/RKAP4837.
REFOUND SOUND
1-913-842-2555
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KS
Packard Bell, 386, color monitor, software,
micro. 3.5" X 2.4" drive. $600. 749-3110
mouse, 3.5" & 5" disk drive $609, 749-3110
Queen size matress. New set, new Wear, Still in
Queen size. Regular price $899, will sell
Brand: Braveheart $1,033-939
Raleigh MT 500 Mountain Bike, Stainton STX, 841-287-3762
or ozs. Pedals Patrol, Almost new, Call 841-287-3762
TREK 1700 Mountain Bike Shimano DEO XTE
157. Great condition $400
1984 WV SCIroe runs great, looks good $1200.
Call and leave message 473-5688 lv ms.
405 For Rent
2R brpt at泉1 Aug. 1 Gas heat water, trash,
3R brpt at泉1 Aug. 1 Gas heat water, PET41
Louisiana 487/month, 79-4395.
4R brpt at泉1 Aug. 1 Gas heat water, trash,
DON'T WAIT ANY LONGER!
Taking deposits for fun
From $345 to $900; Studios,
1, 2, & 8 BR apts. Water
Trash pdt. in studios, water,
trash, gas heat pt. in apts.
2, 3, & 4 BR townhomes.
"Small" pets OK with dep.
Pools, tennis, basketball,
on bus route.
913-843-7333,Fax 843-0197
Reserve your home for Fall today!
Trailridge Apartments
2500 W 6th
918 947 3098 Fm 941 8197
Four Bedroom/Three Bath Featuring for Fall of '95
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Townhomes
- Full-Size Washer/Dryer
- Dishwasher
- Microwave
- Trash Compactor
- Ceiling Fans in Every Rm.
- Walk-In Closets
- Gas Fireplace
- Gas Heat
- Carport Per Townhome
Carport Per Roof
4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Call 841-7849
Office Hours (9-5), M-F
meadowbrook AVAILABLE NOW!
2 and 3 bedroom apartments
Meadowbrook Apartments
15th & CRESTLINE
842-4200
**APPLEPRO 4** APTs, now showing & 2 BRAs for Aug. 1, aces. AC, heat, water & trash DW, DISP & microwave. Call anytime. bd3-8220. Sorry, no pets.
OPEN: MON-FRI-8-5:30 p.m.
SAT-10-4 p.m.
Sun-1-4 p.m.
Charming bdrm bdm屋. Natural woodwork,
wallpaper, C/A, appliances, hookups, basement.
Nice neighborhood. References/deposit. No pets.
$500/mo. Call 843-2883
524 Frontier
842-4444
in Torrance Bay Plaza
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
First Management is now leasing 2
bedroomapis.forfail!
bedroom apts. fortfall!
• Microwave
• Dishwasher
• Garbage Disposal
• Washer/Dryer Hookup
• Gas, Heat/CA
M-F 1-5 pm
1740 Ohio
749-1436
Modern 3 BR, 2 bath Condo. Fully furnished,
W/D, DW, MW and More. Walking distance to
Campus. Call 913-489-204.
PALM ISLAND
Holiday Apartments
Leasing for Summer & Fall
- 3 Bedroom $595-$615
- 2 Bedroom $410-$425
- 4 Bedroom $715-$725
- Recently constructed
- On bus route
- Nice quiet setting
211 Mount Hope Court #3
For more info, or Appt.
call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Mon-Fri 12-5 p.m.
Aspen West
Now Leasing for Fall!
- 2Bdrm
- Water Paid
- Laundry on Site
- New Dishwashers
- No Pets
2900 West 15th Lawrence,KS66049 865-2500
BERKELEY FLATS
GREAT PRICE FOR A GREAT PLACE
Pets Welcome*
studios,super studios 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available for fall. But call today they are going FAST!
EDDINGHAM PLACE
- Swimming Pool
- Sandvolleyball court
843-2116
South Point
AFRAMACHS
2166 W. 26th
842-6445
- Exerciseweightroom
- Energy Efficient
11th & Mississippi
- On KU Bus Route
- Water & trash paid
- *RestrictionsApply
- Askabout our brand
new2bedroomstiles
Spacious 2 BR, Central Air, DW Back Porch
Pets Allowed. 14th & New Jersey. Call 841-797-81
- Onsite management
KVM
Monday-Friday
1 - 4:30 p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
OPEN HOUSE
- 1,2,3&4 bedroom
note available
Professionallymanaged by
wan
2512 West 6th St. 749-1288
- Sand volleyball cou.
- Water & trash paid.
- Fireplace
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
Kaw Valley Management, Inc. is now leasing studio,
1, 2 & 3 bedroom apartments, town homes,
and homes. We have homes for immediate or fall
homeowner. 9:48th W. 24th St. or call us at
608-4600 for more info.
1 Bedroom $320
2 Bedroom $420
Management
- 2 Bedroom $380
• 3 Bedroom $600
Call 749-1288
GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS
Now Leasing Four Bedroom FURNISHED Apartments For $800 and Up
- Swimming pool
- Convenient Laundry Facility
VollevballCourt
--interviewing for a roommate. Nice, quiet.
bahwane Lake area in Topaik. 3TB house, 2车
garage, full basement. A great deal! Must see!
1S00/mo. Call (913) 87-4812.
4th and Eddingham Dr
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
EAGLE APARTMENTS
- Pool and Clubhouse
- 2 Pools
- EnergySufficient
ATAN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- On KU Bus Route
- Daily3:00-5:00
7th & Florida
- On Site Management
CALL 841-5255 Or Drop By
*On KU Bus Route with
- Open Until 7pm 7 Days a Week
- Laundryroom
2 Laundry Rooms
2Pools
4 stops on Property
- Some Washer/Dryer
Part25
We presently have available a select few 1 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
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.
Call or stop by today
2401 W. 25th,9A3
842-1455
(sorry no pets)
Quilt & nice studio & one bdm apis. Closer to
Quilt's studio. Discounted. No deposit. $435-$800.
Discounted. No deposit. $435-$800.
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
West Hills APARTMENTS
Now Leasing for August Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
GREATLOCATION near campus
OPEN HOUSE Mon.-Fri. 12:30-5:00
No appointmentneeded
VILLAGE SQUARE
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
- Closetocampus
- *Spacious2bedroom
- Laundry facility
- Swimming pool
Swimmingpo
On Bus Route
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Bradford Square Apartments
Spacious 3BDRMApts. Cats Welcome
Modern Interiors with: microwave
- dishwasher
- *patio/deck
- separate dining room
- lots of closet space
- on-site management
- on KU busroute
- convenient laundry facility
501 Colorado #B1
Mon.-Fri. 1-5p.m.
Sat.11 a.m.-3 p.m.
Stop by or call
749-1556
A
SOUTHPOINTE ParkVillas
Now leasing for spring or fall!
- Professionally designed interiors
- Three bedrooms. two full baths
- Washer/dryer included
- On KU busroute - Great Location!
2310 West 26th St
843-6446
Hanover Place
14th & Mass.
841-1212
Offers Completely Furnished
Studio,1,2,3,& 4bedroom apartments and townhomes
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Tanglewood
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Regents Court 19th& Mass. 749-0445
MASTERCRAFT
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
SECURE AN APARTMENT FOR FALL'95
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
Super studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments avail-
able NOW!
Call Berkeley Flats today for the best prices.
843-2116
430 Roommate Wanted
1 N/S Roommate to share 3 BR condo. 2 full bath.
W/D. Aug. 1. College I Hills Condo $225/mo + 1/3
util. Cal Todd or Chad at 865-390-398.
1 or 2 non-smoking roommates wanted for
fall to share new 3 bedroom, 2 bath room. A/C,
W/D, D/W, $225 per month + utilities. Call Nick at
843-4087.
2 girls in search of roommate for College Hill Condominiums. Call Jennifer at (913) 881-9887
Do you need an additional roommate for the 1965-98 school year?? Call 749-3872.
Female N/5 for 3BR apartment 1 blocks to campus
Male N/4 for 2BR apartment 1 block. No paid. Not
August Available A1 Call 843-4909
MASTERCRAFT
Male or female, prefer grad student. 2 BR mat-
room. 1891729 - 1303 (collect). Available AU.
1891729 - 1303 (collect). Available AU.
Need 3 female roommates to share 4 bedroom
march. Washer/dryer. No pets. Call 811-2788
or call TSA at 612-550-2900.
N/S female to share large townhouse v 7 grad students W/D separate housewives RW 21 x 17' w/ graduate students W/D separate housewives RW 21 x 17' w/ graduate students
Wanted: Roommate to 8drm House. S.E.A.
Roommate, S. no pets, utilizes $300/mo
B42 965-5631
Share spacious 2BR apartment in West Hills. Illust
of Emery Rd, Pool, short walk to campus, 1.12
bath, walk in closet, 1st floor, $20/mo & 1/8 tubs.
July paid, July start, sale ended August 1. Gary
855-2900
Straight male to share expenses for Meadow
knots. Call Brian (314) 829-5000 or yon KU
KU route Cell Brian (314) 829-5000
We are looking for a cool, clean roommate to share a 3 bedroom household. $192/mo. plus. UB32
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
Swimmingpool
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
- IBM and Macintosh computer lab
Tours available daily including weekends-just drop by!
Don't forget to ask about our "Fast Back" Bonus!
1800 Naismith Drive
843-8559
Don't have time to stop by?
Call us and we'll be happy
NAISMITH Hall
packet!
1-800-888-GOKU
to send an information
- By phone: 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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headline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
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Classifications
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
440 lost & found 305 for sale 710 want to buy
205 help wanted 340 auto sales 405 for rent
222 professional services 360 miscellaneous 430 roommate wanted
222 customer services
ADS MUST FLOW KANSAN POLICY
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The University Dairy Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68445
8B
Wednesday, July 19, 1995
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Former Jayhawk explores Team Tennis world
By Dan Gelston
Kansan staff writer
Luke Jensen sends another shot to the baseline with the sole intent of seeing a return better than the one before.
Move those feet!" he shouts
"C'mon Rebecca, push it! push it!
The grunts coming from the lunging Rebecca Jensen and the sweat pouring down her flustered face indicate that Rebecca has been mushing
Rebecca Jensen
it for quite some time.
"Thirty seconds left. Stay up. Stay focused." Luke commands.
Luke moves back, but Rebecca perfectly places a drop shot over the net to win this point. The drill is over, and Rebecca collapses. Luke
nods and smiles in approval. His sister, teammate and trainee is getting better every day.
Three-hour practices have become the daily routine for former Kansas tennis player Rebecca Jensen. Jensen is in her first year as a member of the Kansas City Explorers of World Team Tennis.
Jensen is no stranger to the team tennis concept. She was 89-30 in singles and 79-17 in doubles in three years at Kansas, and won an NCAA Division I doubles title with Nora Koves in 1994. The title was the first NCAA tennis championship for Kansas.
The championship was one of many reasons Jensen decided to forge her final year and turn professional.
"It wasn't really a tough decision for me," the 22-year-old Atlanta native said. "I felt like it was time for me to move on to the next level. I felt I accomplished just about all I could at Kansas."
Rebecca Jensen
Last July, Jensen made her pro debut at the U.S. Open after playing
singles doubles
1992 36-13 28-6
1993 28-6 21-7
1994 25-11 30-4
overall 89-30 79-17
0-2 women's doubles
1-1 mixed doubles
in several minor tournaments. She since has played in all four Grand Slams: the Australian, French and U.S. Opens and Wimbledon. She won first-round doubles matches at the U.S. Open and French Open.
"It is such a thrill to play in these events," Jensen said. "The crowd, the atmosphere, the experience — it's certainly the big time."
Playing on the tour and being in the limelight have their drawbacks, though. The hardest thing is traveling, Jensen said, because the tour has no off-season. Most players on the tour have to pay their own way to events and arrange for accommodation.
Jensen said the top players were, much to her surprise, the nicest and most helpful.
She mentioned Steffi Graf and Mary Pierce as two who had been especially supportive.
"The players who aren't ranked are the ones who won't talk to you
or are cold," Jensen said.
She also has dealt with having two successful, famous older brothers.
Luke and Murphy Jensen, 1993 French Open doubles champions, have been the emotional crutch that Rebecca needs in a sport that stresses individualism and time on the road.
Her brothers also have been a constant source of comparing and questioning for Rebecca, but she doesn't seem to mind.
"My brothers have been there for me and helped my game out a lot," Jensen said. "It's awesome all the attention they get. It's cool for me, too, because whenever we go somewhere people are like, 'Wow, there's another Jensen.'"
Rebecca started traveling with her brothers in April, and the three are now teammates with the Explorers.
"What playing in this league does for Rebecca is help to get her ready to play out on the tour," Luke said. "The physical and mental part of the game is just as important as skills. We want to work on her fundamentals and make her fundamentally sound."
Luke said that he's never seen a woman practice as hard as Rebecca and that practicing with men, who hit the ball harder and play a faster-paced game, could only help her.
Brebcca said that she had improved a great deal in the last year, especially with her serve and baseline play.
Explorer coach Paul Smith said he liked Rebecca's future.
"Her footwork around the net needs a little work and her volley needs more consistency," Smith said. "But I like what I see. She knows what she's doing, and she has tremendous skill and great knowledge of the game, which is a big benefit."
Jensen said she was giving herself three years to see if she could become a consistent winner on the tour.
Soccer, rowing prepare for first seasons
"At least I can say I went for it," she said. "I had an opportunity to turn pro, and I took it and tried the best I could."
By Dan Gelston
Kansan staff writer
Kansas women athletes now will have a greater chance of playing varsity sports with the addition of rowing and soccer for the fall semester.
These former club sports come to Kansas largely as a result of Title IX, which promotes gender equity in intercollegiate athletics.
The federal statute mandates that there must be equal opportunity for women to play varsity sports as there is for men in proportion to the undergraduate population.
The title affects women's sports and football. Because there are so many men playing football in the fall, an equal number of opportunities must be made available to women.
Soccer already is benefiting from its varsity status, getting a new field behind Oliver Residence Hall. The team will be coached by Lori Walker, who came to
Kansas after three-years as an assistant coach at the University of Maryland.
"This is going to be a new and exciting challenge for me," Walker said. "Being able to come in and help develop a building team is going to be a great learning experience for both me and the players."
Right now the team has 21 players, but only two are from the Kansas club team. The others have been recruited nationally by Walker. The team also is holding open tryouts on the first day of fall classes. Walker said she hoped to attract athletes who played other sports and who might be interested in soccer now that it is a varsity sport.
One such player is Heather Heidel, Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich., junior, who joined the team after playing tennis for two years.
"Now that soccer is going to be a varsity sport, it will be a lot more organized and more serious," Heidel said. "I think the dedication will be greater and the talent should be greatly improved than that of a club sport."
As for future expectations, Walker isn't sure what to expect.
"I'm holding off on my preseason picks," she said. "I really want to wait until we get practice under way to see how we'll fare."
Women's rowing will sail into Kansas this year as well. Rob Catloth brings 14 years of rowing experience to Kansas — as both rower and coach — and leads Kansas in its first year of varsity competition. The team has almost 50 rowers, many of which are holdovers from the club team.
"In the next three years I hope to evolve into a full squad, which would be 70," Catloth said. "There were things we couldn't expect from people in a club that I can from a varsity team."
Catloth said there would be three regattas in the fall and five or six in the spring.
The first day of practice is Sept. 5. The team hopes to have their regattas on Clinton Lake or the Kansas River.
Women's Soccer Schedule
**September 3**
Evansville, 1:30 p.m.
Evansville, Ind.
**September 8**
Oral Roberts, 4 p.m.
Lawrence
**September 10**
U. of Toledo, 1 p.m.
Lawrence
**September 15**
Iowa State, 4 p.m.
Lawrence
**September 17**
Mississippi, 1 p.m.
Lawrence
**September 22**
Nebraska, 7 p.m.
Lincoln, Neb.
**September 24**
Creighton, 7 p.m.
Omaha, Neb.
**September 29**
So. Oklahoma, 7 p.m.
Mobile, Ala.
**October 1**
LSU, 5 p.m.
Mobile, Ala.
864-4358
Use the Kansan Classifieds
**October 6**
Minnesota-Duluth, 4 p.m.
Minneapolis
**October 7**
Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Minneapolis
**October 8**
Cent, Missouri St., 4 p.m.
Lawrence
**October 15**
Tusa, 1 p.m.
Lawrence
**October 21**
Dryu College, 3 p.m.
Congrellado.
**October 27**
Eastern Illinois, 3 p.m.
Lawrence
**October 29**
North Texas, 1 p.m.
Lawrence
**November 3**
Cincinnati Rockford, 3 p.m.
Tusa, Okla.
**November 8**
Arkansas-Little Rock, 1 p.m.
Tusa, Okla.
KU Students...
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SuperTARGET FAST, FUN & FRIENDLY We're proud to be a part of Lawrence and the KU community. SuperTarget is an equal opportunity employer dedicated to a drug-free, smoke-free work environment
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
A
WEATHER
SUNNY
High 95°
Low 70°
WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1995
SECTION A VOL.104, NO.156
Weather: Page 2A.
(USPS 650-640)
KU LIFE
DU: The First Renovation
The Delta Upsilon house has gone through its first renovation in more than 60 years.
Page 1B
CAMPUS
The sound of jackhammers
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Repairs are under way to strengthen the structure of Memorial Stadium.
Page 3A
NEWS BRIEFS
Tears mark Smith trial
UNION, S.C. — Susan Smith's ex-husband broke down sobbing yesterday as he told the jury how all his dreams for his sons died when he learned that his ex-wife had drowned the boys.
"Everything I had planned — teaching them to play ball, taking them fishing, teaching them to ride bikes, watching them go to school the first day, watching them grow up — all that has been ripped from me," said David Smith.
Three of the 12 jurors who will decide whether to sentence Susan Smith to death or life in prison also wept during the wrenching testimony.
David Smith has said he believes his wife, who was convicted Saturday of two counts of murder, should be executed. Her lawyers hope to persuade the jury to sentence her to life in prison instead.
Those lawyers had been expected to grill her ex-husband about his taking a $20,000 advance for a book on the case, as well as allegations he had abused her during their marriage. But they decided not to question him.
Citadel to admit female as cadet
CHARLESTON, S.C. — A federal judge Monday cleared the way for Shannon Faulkner to join The Citadel's all-male corps of cadets.
The only way the state-supported military college can prevent her from becoming a cadet is to persuade a higher court to block her. Faulkner knows the fight isn't over.
"Even if I don't enter the corps, some other woman will because I'll fight it to the end," she said.
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in April that Faulkner must be allowed to become a cadet unless South Carolina developed a program giving similar training to women.
The state came up with a $10-million women's leadership program at Converse College, a private school in Snartown, S.C.
U. S. District Judge C. Weston Houck will rule on the program's constitutionality, but he said there was no time to do that before Faulkner became a cadet on Aug 12.
Chancellor prepares for budget cuts
Top brass says shortfall will not hurt students
By Kimberly Crabtree
Kansan staff writer
In light of a $3 million budget reduction, Chancellor Robert Hemenway announced last week the specific amounts to be cut from four general areas of the University.
The areas and amounts cut are:
academic affairs, $1,695,086, a 1.5 percent decrease; administration and support services, $925,498, a 3 percent decrease; research, gradu
ate studies and public service,
$295,335, a 1.6 percent loss; and
student affairs, $97,102, a 1.75
percent decrease.
According to the July 13 memorandum declaring the dollar amounts, Hemenway would like the recommendations to be discussed by staff, student leaders and the University Senate Executive Committee before the list is brought to him.
Hemenway said that Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, and his staff proposed these amounts after comparing KU funding with other schools.
The vice chancellors will be responsible for working with deans and individual departments to determine specific areas for the cuts, Hemenway said.
The University absorbed a $3 million-budget shortfall this year by delaying faculty raises and by implementing a hiring freeze on July 1. Hemenway's budget-cut proposal will take effect in 1996 and accommodate, on a more permanent basis, the same budget shortfall that required the hiring freeze this year.
Academic affairs, which makes up 67 percent of the total University budget, will lose the greatest dollar amount. The $1.6 million loss is 1.5 percent of that area's budget.
By Nov. 15, the proposals will be delivered to the chancellor. Hemenway will announce the final budget-reduction plan by Dec. 1, and the plan will be put in place for fiscal year 1997, which begins July 1, 1996.
"Academic affairs was cut the least
percentage-wise, and that's my desire." Hemenway said.
As for the impact students will feel, it should be minimal, said David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
"Students that notice the cut may find there's not a section offered when they need it," he said. "And there may be a few instances where some units reduce the hours they're open. But most students probably won't notice the cut."
Hemenway agreed that classroom
quality will be minimally affected.
"It will cause there to be larger classes and some longer lines, but I don't believe actual classroom quality will be affected," he said. "We'll just have to get greater efficiency out of classes."
Shulenburger said certain areas would not be cut, including the summer-school budget and library acquisition funds.
"Library acquisition funds have sustained high inflation for a number of years, and there's no way we can cut that," Shulenburger said. "The library has to be able to buy new books and keep subscriptions for students."
Shulenburger said the summerschool budget would not be cut because that budget is all instruction costs. And instruction won't be cut.
Still, administrators are not allowing the cuts to get the better of them.
"Cutting the budget is not the direction we want to go, but it's not a crisis." Shulenburger said.
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Thousands of Deadheads and vendors gather in the parking lot near Soldier Field on the Fourth of July.
THE DEAD ARE STILL ALIVE (and grateful)
Text and photos by Edmee Rodriguez
Although the band canceled its July 4 show in Deer Creek, Ind., when thousands of ticketless Deadheads tried to break through the gate, The Dead finished its 30th year on tour with fireworks in Chicago.
The Grateful Dead is still alive.
After the unpleasant turn of events in Indiana, band members wrote a letter to fans condemning the Deadheads' behavior and warned them the tour would stop if the incident recurred.
At Soldier Field in Chicago, the band started out the first set with "Touch of Gray" and ripped it in the second set with "Shakedown Street" and "Sampson and Delliah."
Phil Lesh showed his stuff with the delicious ballad "Unbroken Chain," then Jerry Garcia followed with "Sugar Magnolia" and "Black Muddy River." Lesh finished the show with "Box of Rain."
N
The Grateful Dead ended its 30th summer tour with fireworks and Jimi Hendrix's version of "The Star Spangled Banner" blaring in the background.
Kenyon Charity, Lawrence freshman, sits outside the gate at Soldier Field in Chicago, waiting for The Grateful Dead show to start.
(2)
The Grateful Dead plays "Touch of Gray," in Chicago, during the first set of the band's final show of the summer.
Olympic torch to burn through Lawrence
Kansan staff report
The torch for the centennial Olympic games will be making its way through Lawrence on May 16. The torch is scheduled for a relay that will cover 42 states and more than 15,000 miles. It is the longest torch relay in the history of the games.
The torch is scheduled to arrive from Kansas City along Kansas Highway 10. The official route in Lawrence has not yet been set. Torchbearers will be chosen by the Lawrence community.
The torch relay is scheduled to begin in Los Angeles on April 27, 1996. More than 10,000 runners will have a chance to carry the famous torch.
After 84 days, the torch will reach Atlanta on July 19,
1996 for the start of the games.
The Olympic Torch Relay begins in Los Angeles on April 27, 1996 and ends in Atlanta on July 19,
1996. Torch carriers will travel more than 15,000 miles.
Noah Musser / KANBAN
Trial of Phelps follower pushed back by dog bite
The Associated Press
EMPORIA — A mistrial was declared Tuesday in the case of a follower of anti-homosexual activist Fred Phelps Sr. because a witness became sick from a dog bite.
The move allows Charles Hockenbarger to be tried at a later date on a battery charge in an alleged
attack on a rock musician last yearin'Toneka.
The man Hockenbarger is accused of attacking, Damian "Brit" Schiesser, was to be a key witness for the state.
But he was bitten by a dog Sunday night and was taken to a Lawrence hospital early Tuesday, prosecutor Joan Hamilton said.
2A
Wednesday, July 26, 1995
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sunflower Games needs volunteers
By Luby Montano-Laurel Kansan staff writer
As in past years, the Sunflower State Games has a big demand for volunteers.
However, this year's games, which go into full swing this weekend and
showcase kansas talent in Olympic-style competition, has a much higher demand because of the addition of seven sports and soccer's rising popularity. Also, the basketball competition has expanded from 190
teams last year to 260 teams this year.
"We have a lot more people participating this year," said Elaine Joseph, Sunflower State Games media coordinator. "We need more volunteers."
said.
Volunteers don't need to be athletic or interested in sports as long as they want to help out, Joseph
SUNFLOWER
STATE GAMES
Jennifer Davis, Sunflower Games volunteers coordinator, said that 500 volunteers already were signed up. However, the games still need more volunteers.
Davis said that there was no age requirement for volunteers, except
Volunteers can work in the buddy system.
that volunteers younger than 18 years old must have an adult sign an injury-release form.
Davis said working
with a friend might make the job more fun. Families also may work together during a shift.
"This is a really fun event to volunteer for because there are all kind of activities," Davis said. "It's a fun way to spend a weekend and get a good taste of the Sunflower Games."
People interested in volunteering can call (913)841-9600.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
STUDENTS LOOK FOR NOTHING IN THE PAPER.
Remember that white space can be an irresistible attraction to a pair of inquisitive eyes. Use itto your advantage when you place your next ad where students look first.
Nothing works better. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Human relations gets no boost from city
Commission says no despite group's push for additional staff
By John Collar Special to the Kansan
A shortage of personnel to handle discrimination complaints has slowed the progress of civil rights in Lawrence, the head of the city's human relations commission has charged.
During public comment on the city's $62.5 million budget, Lisa Blair asked city commissioners to reconsider their decision not to add a full-time position to the city's human
relations/human resources department.
Blair said she asked for the change because the office had been overtaxed and overburdened for too many years.
In a 3-2 vote,
the commission
denied the request.
Commissioners Allen
Levine and Jo
Andersen voted
in favor of the
new position.
"I think this is telling a whole
The number of complaints to the office has doubled since 1976, while the city's population has grown roughly one and a half times, Blair said. From 1976 to 1988, three employees at the department could handle discrimination complaints.
Andersen, who has served on the human relations commission, said, "I do have a first-hand knowledge of how hard these people work and how difficult it is to handle the caseload."
She said that the time of adjudication often prohibited complaints from being filed.
have been denied.
Allegra White, human relations specialist at the department, said complaints took about six months
"I think this is telling a whole class of Lawrence citizens that we don't care about them."
class of Lawrence citizens that we don't care about them," Levine said.
The department requested that a half-time housing position be converted to a full-time human relations specialist. Such a specialist would be able to investigate complaints in any area. This change would increase the number of employees with authority to investigate and resolve complaints to three. Each year since 1988, requests from the department for additional personnel
The office processes complaints of discrimination in the areas of housing, public accommodations and employment.
to process.
Allen Levine citycommissioner
"I've heard no complaints regarding human relations length of adjudication," said Mayor Bob Moody, who voted against adding the position.
Commissioners Bonnie Augustine and John Nalbandian, who also opposed the new position, said the city shouldn't approve the request while
other departments were equally in need of additional employees.
The human relations department projects that it will process 524 informal complaints and 36 formal complaints in 1995. An informal complaint is resolved through a mediation process. If the dispute cannot be resolved, then a formal investigation begins.
Rehelio "Ray" Samuel, executive director of the department, said helping the parties resolve their dispute through an informal process helped the department hear more complaints but placed a bigger burden on the staff.
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Hours for Watson Library and Anschutz Science Library;
- Parking is restricted in blue, red and yellow lots. Residence hall parking lots are not restricted.
8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fri.; noon to 5 p.m.
Sat.; 1 to 5 p.m. Sun.
Campus is closed to through traffic from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mon-Fri.
Important phone numbers:
Hours for the Kansas and Burge union bookstores:
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
Enrollment center hours:
8 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m.
Mon.-Fri.
University directory assistance: From campus phones, dial 0. From off campus, dial 864-2700.
KU Police Department (non-emergency): 864-5572
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CAMPUS/AREA
Wednesday, July 26,1995
3A
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jayhawk football nest gets facelift
(1)
Edmee Rodriguez / KANSAN
The concrete on the west side of Memorial Stadium is being removed and replaced by Western Waterproofing of Kansas City, Mo. The first phase of a three-part project will be completed by Kansas' home football opener against Cincinnati on Sept. 2.
West-side seating is first phase in plan to repair Memorial
After all the concrete has been poured to fill the holes, the conditions will be less threatening for Memorial ticket holders. However, these repairs may interfere with some events to be held at Memorial, such as the Sunflower State Games.
The concrete removal is almost complete, and the holes should be ready for filling by next week, Modig said.
year will finalize the project. The 74 year-old stadium has not had these types of repairs in almost 20 years.
But now, the time limit concerns workers.
"The whole project will probably continue from now until November before all of the top coat material is complete," he said. "But the concrete repair should be completed before the first football game, and the top coat will be applied at different times between each home game."
jects is that sometimes you don't know how much the job is going to take until you actually get to work on it," said Jeff Kelley, branch manager of Western Waterproofing. "But I think we will finish in time."
This is the first phase in a three-step overall improvement, said Darren Cook, KU facilities manager. Repairing the east side next year will be the second phase, and repairs to the bowl the following
"The thing with restoration pro-
By Gwen Olson
Kansan staff writer
The sound of boisterous fans is normally heard from University of Kansas Memorial stadium, but this summer a different sound is heard — the pounding of jackhammers as
— the pounding of jackhammers as workers repair the concrete stands
The project was financed by the KU Athletic Association and contracted through the KU Endowment Association.
Memorial is undergoing structural repairs to sections one through 18 on the stadium's west side. The repair estimate by Western Waterproofing, Kansas City, Mo., is $274,000, said Jim Modig, KU director of designs and construction.
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4A
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Wednesday, July 26, 1995
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE: AMERICAN JUSTICE
Death sentence is too easy
Jurors took only 2 1/2 hours Saturday to convict Susan Smith for the murders of her two children. But as Smith's sentencing hearing continues this week, jurors should think carefully about what ruling will be the most appropriate punishment.
The nine men and three women of the jury, who rejected a lesser verdict of involuntary manslaughter, should sentence Smith to life in prison.
Psychologists testified throughout her preliminary hearing that Smith has been battling depression. Her lawyers had feared that she would have jeopardized her defense, possibly requesting the death penalty if she took the stand.
The death penalty seems like a simple, quick solution to the horrors we associate with a mother killing her children. But this is no simple case.
Smith has a history of suicidal tendencies which stem from Smith being sexually abused by a family member and her father committing suicide. People's hatred of Smith's deception and criminal actions has subsided somewhat. Even the representative for Smith's family has sympathy for her.
Sentencing Susan Smith to life in prison would be more appropriate in this complex case involving a mother's mental state.
"I think it would take what has been a horrible tragedy and make it that much worse," representative Margaret Gregory said of the possible death sentence.
Whether the jury decides to show mercy toward Smith, to take into account the lives of the family or to view the murders as vicious acts, the sentence should be life imprisonment.
This sentence would show mercy. It would appease family members who want justice and those who want forgiveness.
But it also would make a depressed mother of two dead children contemplate her actions for as long as she lives.
JAMIE MUNN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
THE ISSUE: PRISON CELL PROFITS
Manson needs no audience
One of the most famous examples of criminals who have become celebrities, Charles Manson, has entered a new realm of stardom: musician.
Manson has recorded a compact disc that is scheduled to be released next week. About 5,000 copies of the CD were produced.
The curiosity to hear what kind of music could come from his demented mind will be high, and all the copies will probably sell. But the people who purchase the CD will promote criminal behavior by rewarding it.
Mason is serving a life term for convincing his followers to kill actress Sharon Tate and six others in 1969. His album, "Commemoration," contains music Manson recorded between 1981 and 1985. The songs were taped in a small room above a chapel in the California Medical Facility in Vacaville, Calif.
Buying this criminal's new compact disc encourages the criminal behavior of profiting from famous murders.
Michael Moynihan, chairman of Manson's record company, White Devil Inc., said that he had no reservations about promoting the CD.
"There's no connection (with the murders). It's not our intent to capitalize on it," Moynihan said.
What other reason could there be to purchase the album?
The fact that it is Manson is the reason for purchasing the album, and the only redeeming quality about him is that he hasn't requested any royalties from the sales.
Those who purchase this album are succumbing to the marketing of a criminal mind.
Potential customers should remember why he was convicted instead of wondering what his singing voice is like.
These people also should not legitimize Manson's criminal personality by purchasing his album.
JAMIE MUNN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
GERRY FEY
Editor
ASHLEY MILLER
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
CATHERINE ELLSWORTH
Technology coordinator
Editor
Editorial ... Jamie Munn
Campus ... Jenni Carlson
... Virginia Marghelm
Photo ... Jay Thornton
Design ... David Johnson
Graphics ... Noah Musser
Copy Chief ... Molinda Diaz
J. J.COOK
J.J. COOK
Business manager
MATT SHAW
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
PAT BOYLE
Accountant
Campus mgr ...Stephanie Utley
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 Valier
Rob Taplev / KANSAN
Welfare Budget Abortion Drugs
Swimsuit competition drowns American woman's true image
The United States is known as the land of the free and the brave. Obviously, the founding fathers never had to walk down stairs in high-heeled shoes and a swimsuit. There is nothing free about white pumps and Lyca.
But it does take a brave woman to do this in front of bright lights, a studio audience and television screens across the nation.
This is the epitome of America as suggested by the Miss America Pageant, which has included a swimsuit competition since its beginning in 1921. This year, the pageant's officials have elected to let the public decide the fate of the contestants' skimpy shuffle in front of the judges.
By calling a 1-900 number shown during the live Sept. 16 telecast, viewers will be able to vote to continue the swimsuit competition or to replace it with another, as of yet undisclosed, competition.
The call will cost viewers about 50 cents, and proceeds will go to a scholarship or charity.
Last year the pageant's organizers did away with high heels in the swimsuit competition. Contestants went barefoot instead.
Although this was more natural to how women swim in this country, it is still ironic that how someone looks in a bathing suit should determine whether a college woman should get a scholarship.
Being a woman in America is more than parading in various forms of undress for the enjoyment of others. More choices and rights for women today mean more responsibilities, more decisions and more expectations.
JAMIE MUNN
OPINION EDITOR
Today's American woman faces her role as career woman or mother as well as the pressure to conform to society's vision of beauty. She must conquer the oppression of a male-dominated society where her views sometimes are unappreciated by leaders. She faces challenges much like our founders; a need for freedom and expression.
Are a woman's curves more important to being American than the kind of career she has? To me, be able to manage a career is more important than breast or waist size.
Women are not meat. They are Americans.
tition or, finally, the "doing-the-laundry-while-cleaning the apartment-and-preparing-for-tomorrow's-job interview" division.
Fighting for one's ideals against the odds is American. Using your mind to achieve success is American. Choosing the lifestyle you want is American.
not a "Mrs." is skewed. Marriage was seen as women's ultimate achievement for years. Even for those who now believe that careers are important, why should marriage and motherhood be any less of an accomplishment? Managing a household and a family is a tremendous job for married women, much less the millions of single mothers in this country.
More basic, the status of the American woman as a "Miss" and
Although I don't expect the competition to change this year — there are too many lonely men who already eagerly use 1-900 numbers — it is a chance to review how we view women.
What about a "cramming-for-college-exams-while-fighting-with-adomineering-boyfriend" category, the "fixing-a-run-in-the-pantyhose while-fishing-for-dinner" compe-
Instead of the swimsuit competition, the pageant could begin a more realistic event such as the "dressing-a-child-while-making-breakfast-before-sending-the-other-kids-to-school-and-then-catching-the-train-to-work" category.
Stiletto heels and push-up swimsuits are not.
Jamie Munn is an Enid, Okla., graduate
student maturing in Journalism.
Should I get a radio call in show and spout platitudes about how things should be? Or should I go through the hellish campaign and election process only to try to change things in the face of all the opposition?
List of tidbits shows public is dissatisfied
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
In the end, I can't find just one topic to discuss. Eventually the ideas run out.
loses its appeal after a while. There are people out there who have made entire careers out of poking fun at President Clinton or Bob Dole.
Hot, isn't it? In an apartment without air conditioning, getting out of bed is enough activity to require a shower.
I can't imagine a more pathetic job. No matter how much I despise Politician X's views and policies, that person is just trying to do his or her job. And even if my ideas are better, what should I do?
ISAAC
BELL
Sure, I enjoy bashing Newt Gingrich as much as the next guy, but everything
Philip Montgomery
We are never satisfied with the weather. If it is cold outside, we want it hot. If it is hot, we want it cold.
I recently remembered the moment I ceased being a typical student and became a "townie." It was the end of my second summer here, and I began dreading the return of the hordes. When the fall arrives and thousands of people return to town, the impact is noticeable.
The winter will arrive amid complaints of cold, and we will dream of the heat. The heat is here now, but we have no use for it.
STAFF COLUMNIST
Does anyone ever get tired of insulting politicians?
I can imagine it as a 'bos science fiction movie poster: "The Crowds that Ate a Town! Nothing can prepare you for... The Student Body!" From political waves, weather currents and a student tsunami, it's easy to draw this conclusion; humanity is just plain dumb.
Bad picture of housing painted in the Kansan
Three of these four courses, Math 105, 106 and 365, present the same
Scheduling officer, element of mathematics
Math problems solved with class substitution
The return of the students brings lines, traffic jams and the Jayhawk Boulevard herds who shuffle from building to building, clogging the campus' main artery. The dazed freshmen and the bored seniors will be everywhere.
Being aware of the possible difficulties associated with enrolling in a preferred course is another way to increase the probability of scheduling this class. All three are open throughout the pre-enrollment period when seniors and most juniors are going through this process.
problem for students wanting to enroll in them. The department is not able to satisfy the demand for them. We do not have the same problem with Math 115, and hence this class is always open.
I know the problem that Falevits and her friend had are real and anxiety-producing for many students.
The difficulties encountered by her and many other students, however, probably can be eliminated if they remember certain facts when attempting to fulfill the second-level mathematics requirement.
My advice to students with a mathematics course still needed for graduation is to consider other course options available and plan ahead. Some students will still get caught, but maybe some will be able to avoid the problem that plagued Falevits and others.
First, Math 106 is just one of the four courses that can be used to fill that requirement. The others are Math 105, 115 and 365. All four of these have exactly the same mathematics prerequisite: a course equivalent to college algebra.
I would like to respond to the column by Shelly Falevits which appeared in the June 21 issue.
I am writing in reference to a July 19 article in which I was quoted concerning out-of-state resident assistants and their tuition status.
I don't believe the article represented what I said which is why I would like to expand on what housing has meant to me.
I feel that oftentimes the Kansan prints articles that paint an unpleasant picture of housing.
I gained self-confidence as an RA. I learned communication and problem-solving skills. And while I was an RA, I befriended the most important people in the world to me.
Isaac Bell is a Lawrence senior majoring in English.
I am 23 years old and have never lived off campus. If I had not enjoyed my time as an RA, this would not be so.
most importantly, I do not think I would have graduated from KU if it
weren't for my RA job.
It's not to say that the RA job isn't demanding and sometimes difficult. Anyone who lives where he or she works can attest to that.
I feel lucky to have been an RA. The job has defined much of who I am and how I will remember my college experience.
If I had it to do over again, in-state tuition or not, I would do it again without thinking twice.
In the future, please try to write about housing for what it is: people working as hard as they can to make students feel at home.
That is true of dining service employees, RAs, custodial and maintenance staff, and, yes, those who work in the housing department.
Spend some time with any of us and you will learn that.
Jennifer K. Douglas Fayetteville, Ark., graduate student
I SAID, go to bed.
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 out-right reject all submissions. For any questions, call Jamie Munn, editorial page editor, at 864-4810.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 26, 1995
5A
California universities drop affirmative action
The Associated Press
BERKELEY, Calif. — A few years ago, University of California biology professor Richard Steinhardt noticed an affirmative action graduate student who was doing poorly.
The student, a Native American, would do a great job on the first question of his tests, but leave the rest blank.
The problem — and solution — turned out to be simple. The student came from a culture that had no word for time. Coaching and slower paced tests resulted in A's, a Ph.D. and a burgeoning career in research.
"That kind of a person will not be present in the future among our professions if we abandon affirmative action," Steinhardt said Friday.
After a bitterly divided UC Board of Regents voted Thursday night to scrap affirmative action, Steinhardt and others wondered what was next.
The policy, approved Thursday by the UC Board of Regents, eliminates race and gender as a factor in hiring and contracting as of 1996 and in admissions as of 1997.
"It is an unfortunate step backward. I hope it proves not to be a disastrous step backward for higher education," said C. Peter Magrath, president of the National Association of State Universities and Land
Grant Colleges.
Republican Gov. Pete Wilson, who has made repealing affirmative action a key issue of his presidential campaign, said those fears are groundless.
"I think that there are talented people in every race, every ethnic group in California. One of the things that most of us have found wrong with affirmative action is that it is based on a false and demeaning assumption that the bar has to be lowered for members of certain ethnic groups," he said.
It's hard to predict the results of the new policies. Some fear the changes could cut off opportunities for those whose brilliance has been hidden by circumstance.
But the new policy also directs UC officials to draft supplemental criteria that can be considered when admitting students, such as whether they triumphed over such disadvantages as an abusive home or a bad neighborhood.
The admissions policy leaves intact consideration of socioeconomic factors.
On the other hand, enrollment of Asians, who are not considered under-represented at UC, would increase 15 percent to 25 percent. Enrollment of Caucasian students was projected to increase no more than 5 percent.
In May, UC administrators studied the effect of using socioeconomic factors without race and found that African-American enrollment could plunge 40 percent to 50 percent while Hispanic enrollment could decrease 5 percent to 15 percent.
UC admissions administrator Dennis Galligani cautioned that the study could not be used as a direct projection of the new policies because it did not include the yet-to-be-drafted supplemental criteria.
Sanford Lakoff, founding chairman of the political science department at UC-San Diego, believes the Board of Regents' vote would mean an incremental change.
"If it means more blacks and Hispanics go to the community colleges and then transfer in, is that so terrible?" he said.
Those most affected by the change also had mixed reactions.
Cruz Castanon, 42, a Hispanic psychology doctoral candidate at UCLA, said it was unfair because some minorities lack opportunities.
But Patricia Pina, 21, a Hispanic senior at UC-San Diego, supported the new policy.
"I feel people take advantage of affirmative action," she said. "I'm a minority, but I don't think people should get special treatment for it. Not everybody who's a minority has suffered because of it."
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Yello Sub for Lunch?
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With this coupon. I am to 2 pm only. Not valid with other offers.
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COUPON COUPON Miracle Video 1910 Haskell 841-7504 910 N.2nd St. 841-8903
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Bring this coupon in for 50¢ off a Medium or Large Yogurt Cup
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843-5500 749-0440
PIZZA By The SLICE
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With coupon only. Not valid w/other offers
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---
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(min. price must be $5⁰⁰)
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KIEF'S
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Includes orange bag items
24th & Iowa St. P.O. Box 2, Lawrence, KS. 68044
CDS & TAPES MIDWEST CENTER LLC
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6A
Wednesday, July 26, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
RECYCLE your Daily Kansan
Do Yourself a Favor Dine at The Castle Tea Room 1300 Massachusetts by Reservation Only, Call 843-1151
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July 28-August 3
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5 3 50 Adults. Before 8:00 PM • Healing • Baby Impaired. Sleeve
Pick up the University Daily Kansan Back to School edition available Wednesday, August 16
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SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
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(913) 599-2044 or 1-(800) 669-4682
16300 College Boulevard, Lenexa, KS 66219
Librarian is bound to protect preserve literary treasures
By Trine Nygaard
Kansan staff writer
Brian J. Baird pulls an old, leather-bound book out of his desk and does exactly what he is trying to teach KU students to never do: he bends one of the corners.
The paper, brittle from wear and tear, crumbles to dust as he rubs the surface. Little white flakes fall slowly onto his desk. He has proven his point.
"You can't preserve all books," he said. "Some will eventually go brittle no matter what."
While working as a student librarian at Brigham Young, he became interested in book preservation and graduated in 1991 with a master's degree in library science.
Baird, KU's preservation librarian, grew up in Preston, Idaho. Allergies and his love for academia forced him to leave the family dairy farm. He headed to Brigham Young University.
F. B. SMITH
He settled into his office in the basement of Watson Library in December 1994 after two years at Princeton University as a collections conservator and assistant preservation librarian.
"It was a good promotion and a chance to get back west," he said of his choice to leave Princeton for the University of Kansas. "I enjoyed it at Princeton. It was a good experience, but I don't like the East Coast so much. There are too many people so I was excited to go back."
The structure of the job at KU made it very inviting, he said. He got a chance to create a new conservation department and answers directly to the dean of libraries, Bill Crowe.
"He has first class professional preparation and practical experience from Princeton," Crowe said. "He was attracted by our collections and has already put together a proposal for a scientifically valid, systematic study to assess the state of our collections. He is fulfilling my expectations very well."
Crowe said that Baird had his priorities straight and was doing a fine job.
Baird oversees an annual budget of $165,000 and the preservation of materials for the entire library system. His department binds 25,000 volumes each year. Most of these are loose-leaf journals that cannot be shelved until they are bound. In 1994, the preservation department also repaired 6,000 books in need of restoration because of age or mistreatment.
User vandalism is one of Baird's pet peeves. In the lobby of Watson, he has created an exhibit showing some of the damaged KU library books he has encountered.
Edmee Rodriguez / KANSAN
One book has been used as a drink coaster. Another book bears the mark from the burner of an electric stove. Others are marked with different colored highlights, dog ears and rusty lines from paper clips.
Brian Baird, preservation librarian, displays an exhibit of damaged and mistreated books at Watson Library. Baird is in charge of caring for the holdings at all KU libraries.
864-4358
Baird hopes to make a lasting impression on library users and plans to have similar exhibits every year to heighten awareness.
Baird said the preservation of books helped make them available and accessible to everyone who wanted to use them.
"We bind books so they won't fall apart, and we repair stuff that's damaged so that it can continue to be used," he said. "So many books are irreplaceable. Even if you had a million dollars, you couldn't replace them because they simply don't exist."
Preserving books is preserving history,he said.
"Books are Western culture," Baird said. "That's what we inherited from the Greeks. Books have been central to our culture forever and always will be."
Use the Kansan Classifieds
KU Students...
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---
lifestyles
H
ome again, home again
After a $2.8 million renovation and a year of off-campus living, the Delta Upsilon fraternity soon will be moving into its new house.
For 65 years, the Delta Upsilon fraternity house remained relatively unchanged.
Story by Gwen Olson Photos by Brian Flink
"The cost includes the major addition to the west and south of the house and furnishings," said John Esau. Delta U alumni Premi
All that is different now. A renovation project on the house totaling $2.8 million is drawing to a close.
dent. "The house was originally 13,000 square feet, and we added 7,600 square feet."
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The renovation added a library, a computer and study room, a conference and study room and space for 14 new fraternity members to live in the house.
"In this day and age, our house definitely needed to be redone," said Shirley Vaughn. Delta Upsilon house director. "Hopefully, that will
"In this day and age, our house definitely needed to be redone." Shirley Vaughn Delta Upsilon house director
But being inconvenienced and forced out of their house is paying dividends as the renovation nears completion. This is the house's first addition or renovation since it was built in 1929.
The $2.8 million bill was paid by Delta Upsilon alumni contributions.
"We have about 1,000 alumni of the fraternity and for the last couple years we have been contacting them with personal visits, classes for alumni, direct mail and any other means we could use," said Dick Wintermote, retired executive director of the University of Kansas Alumni Association. "The personal visits were our biggest success. We received donations from alumni, parents of fraternity members and some widows of fraternity members."
help us draw more interested students during rush."
The interior of the house, which is located at 1025 Emery Road, had to be gutted last summer, Winternote said. As a result, Delta Upsilon members lived in an off-campus apartment complex last year.
The renovations must be completed before Aug. 10 because Delta Upsilon members will move back into the house at that time.
"I am very pleased with the work that
has been done," Wintermote said. "I am a little concerned about the time running out, but I think the house will be completed on schedule."
Only minor finishing touches are left on the house. The house's interior is being wallpapered and painted, and carpet already is installed, Esau said.
"I have talked to many of the young undergraduates who have been to see the house, and they are very happy with it also," Wintermote said.
Members of the house are excited about the renovations and additions.
The Delta Upsilon fraternity house, 1025 Emery Road, is undergoing a $2.8 million renovation. Members hope the construction, which was financed by Delta Upsilon alumni, will draw more prospective members during rush.
"I think they are great," said Dave Jilec, Fargo, N.D., junior. "It's kind of neat because our living capacity is only going up about 14 or 15 people. This means that the house is a lot more usable facility."
A
**ABOVE:** Construction workers will finish their work on the Delta Upsilon fraternity house by mid-August when fraternity members return.
**RIGHT:** After being gutted last summer, the Delta Upsilon fraternity house's interior is being painted and wallpapered. The renovations forced fraternity members to live in off-campus apartments last year.
on the RECORD
H. R., lead singer of the hardcore/reggae band Bad Brains, has been tagged with multiple descriptions during his band's 15-year climb out of the Washington, D.C. club scene.
PENN STUDIO
He's been called a rasta-rock prophet, a pioneer and a preacher.
THE Bad Brains are Gary Miller, H.R., Darryl Jennifer and Earl Hudson.
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
BY ROBERT MOCZYDLOWSKY KANSAN MUSIC WRITER
When he prematurely ended Thursday's sold-out Bottleneck show by spiking a weighted microphone stand onto two front-row fans, he became a hypocrite.
He was seated in the rear room, staring flatly out of a heavily tinted window. On the table was a news
COLLECTIVE
S O U L
I spoke with H.R. inside the band's bus before the afternoon sound check.
I, too, was nervous. Many of my favorite artists count H.R. and Bad Brains among their chief influences, and I was eager to ask him about his religion and rock.
By his side was a timid woman named Stephanie, and it appeared that she was unsettled by my arrival.
magazine and a half-full glass of water.
As I started into my list of questions, my nervousness turned to embarrassed confusion. H.R. refused to answer any of my questions with anything more than a crisp "yes" or "no."
Inside the bus' thick air conditioning, I started to sweat.
--them to fit the rules of our new game.
I hurriedly rethought my questions, tailoring
}
What about the band's message?
Has it changed?
Now that Bad Brains have been reunited and are touring with the original lineup, are there any aggressions leftover from the split? Yes.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Do you think about your band as one of the few religious bands to
receive modern rock credibility?
Voe
Is the band's message, in a religious context, widely understood?
No.
What about tonight? Will someone get the point tonight?
What about the band's approach to live performance? Will there be anything unexpected?
I don't know.
---
A decidedly punk crowd greeted Bad Brains at
See BAD BRAINS,Page 2B.
SECTION B
JULY 26,1995
KU Life
MOVIE NEWS
BOX OFFICE BILLBOARD
The Associated Press
The teen farce "Clueless" was in second place, taking in $10.6 million during its debut weekend. It was followed by Hugh Grant's "Nine Months" with $9.8 million.
LOS ANGELES — "Apollo 13" stayed on course for a fourth week as the No. 1 box-office attraction, taking in another $12.5 million to push earnings to $111.2 million in just one month. studio figures showed Monday.
The Top 20 movies at U.S. and Canadian theaters Friday through Sunday:
2. "Clueless"
$10.6 million
$10.6 million
3. "Nine Months'
$12.5 million
2. "Clueless"
1. "Apollo 13"
3. "Nine Months $0.8 million
$9.1 million
4. "Under Siege 2: Dark Territory"
5. "Species" $7.4 million
$7.1 million
6. "Free Willy 2: The Adventure Home"
7. "Pocahontas"
7. Pocahontas $5.7 million
8. "The Indian in the Cupboard"
$5.3 million
First Knight
10. "Batman Forever" $2 million
9. "First Knight $4.7 million
11. "Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie" $1,36 million
12. "The Bridges of Madison County"
13. "Judge Dredd"
13. "Judge Dredd $1.2 million
14. "Die Hard With a Vengeance"
$823,874
15. "Congo" $770,089
$779,233
16. "Casper"
$758,515
17. "Braveheart"
$722,365
18. "Forget Paris"
$541,989
19. "A Goofy Movie"
$500,000
20. "Smoke"
$490,472
2B
Wednesday, July 26, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Two songs later, during a number entitled "Thank Jah," H.R. leapt into the crowd.
He turned to the crowd, warning that his band had come for a good time, not a fight. He told anyone who wanted a fight to leave.
A fan, identified only as "some skinhead" by other members of the crowd, spit on H.R. while he made his way back to the stage. He climbed back to the stage and lunged for the mike stand. He swung it hard overhead, and down into the pit.
The stand's weighted base struck the heads of two unsuspecting fans, drawing blood and cries of anger from the crowd.
Two songs later, the show was over. Two fans were at the hospital, and H.R. was in the back of a Lawrence police patrol car.
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At noon Friday, Bad Brains canceled the rest of its God of Love Tour. The other band members and tour manager, Anthony Countey, left Lawrence for St. Louis and a flight home.
At 3 p.m. Friday, H.R. appeared in Douglas County Court and was arraigned on two counts of felony aggrated battery.
As of Tuesday night, H.R.'s bail
Their latest self-titled disc — considered their debut album because it is the first to showcase the writing of the entire band, not just singer/guitarist Ed Roland — is chock-full of quality guitar licks and intelligent lyrics.
remains unposted, and he is still being held in the Douglas County Jail.
I didn't want to write the last Bad Brains concert review.
I wanted to talk about Gary Miller's deft guitar work and H.R.'s insightful Rastafarian rhymes. I wanted to talk about the non-violent, rasta themes in nearly every Bad Brains song.
But it's the band's live show that convinced me that Collective Soul have legitimate long-term potential.
---
But I learned that just because H.R. can preach peace and love, it doesn't mean he can practice it.
My respect for H.R., as a man of religion and musical uniqueness, is gone.
The only positive thing I can say about the evening is that The Bottleneck staff and the Lawrence police should be lauded for their graceful handling of what could have been a very volatile and dangerous situation.
Whether Bad Brains will stay together as a band remains uncertain. I get the impression that H.R.'s outburst may have been the final blow to an already weakened partnership.
The Bottleneck still is offering a $5 refund to anyone who has a Bad Brains ticket stub. If you live out of town, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to the club. It will mail your refund to you.
Collective Soul
Shane Evans, drummer for Collective Soul, is very sensitive to critics who call his band a one-hit wonder.
"Man, we're just a rock 'n' roll band," he said before Sunday's show at Liberty Hall, obviously answering that question for the thousandth time. "We had some success with 'Shine' on alternative formats, but that one tune isn't what we about. It's a good song, but it most definitely isn't the Collective Soul song. A lot of writers can't get that into their heads."
Before I saw Collective Soul perform, I fit squarely into that category.
"When we play live, that's how we really are," Evans said. "There's no reason for us to go up there and pretend we're something we're not. Playing clubs andaters is where we should be right now. We want everybody else to enjoy the show as much as we do."
After Sunday's show, I realized that I had been seriously mistaken when it came to the musical ability of this Georgia quintet.
At this time last year, I was annoyed by the inescapable single "Shine."
Next: Make sure you see Quick-sand on Aug. 1 at Liberty Hall and Everclear on Aug. 13 at the Granada. Stay tuned.
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---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, July 26, 1995
3B
Professor's Wright stuff on display
New book, exhibit illuminate lives of genius, apprentice
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT
AMERICAN ARCHITECT
Edmee Rodriguez / KANSAN
By Mark Luce
Kansan staff writer
Curtis Besinger, an 81-year-old professor emeritus of architecture and urban design, still refers to his mentor as Mr. Wright.
Besinger is talking about Frank Lloyd Wright, the most prominent American architect of the twentieth century, for whom Besinger was an apprentice from 1939 to 1955.
James Heylar, curator in graphics, looks at one of the books in the Frank Lloyd Wright exhibit he put together at the Spencer Research Library.
"I never called him Frank to his face," he said. "It wasn't a question of stiffness, rather it was a question of respect for a unique architectural talent."
Besinger's new book "Working With Mr. Wright," (Cambridge University Press, $49.95) is a marvelously detailed memoir that describes Besinger's association with the Taliesin Fellowship, Wright's community of apprentices.
Tailiesin, a Welsh word meaning shining brow, was Wright's attempt to integrate a system of work, music, film, philosophy, farming and, of course, architecture, to pro-
vidie not only buildings, but also better lives. There were two communities, situated in Wisconsin and Arizona.
Especially intriguing in the book is Besinger's treatment of the tensions at the fellowship during World War II. The group took an anti-war stance, and Wright's vociferous opposition
to the war led to many problems, logistically and financially, for Taliesin.
often tempestuous demeanor and his failure to follow through on certain buildings, Besinger points to the Community Christian Church in Kansas City, Mo., as one of Wright's poorer conceptions, calling it raw and unfinished.
WORKING WITH
MR.WRIGHT
WHAT IT WAS LIKE
CURTIS BESINGER
Wright, who died in 1959, emerges from the book as a self-absorbed genius, whose megalomania is tempered by a desire for camaraderie with and acceptance by his apprentices. Besinger does not hesitate to criticize his former mentor for his
As the book progresses, Besinger's inner conflict between wanting to create on his own and remaining
committed to Wright becomes prominent, especially in his dealings with Wright's wife, Olegianna.
ther forward after Wright's death.
Seeing this increasing problem, which Besinger felt was destroying the group's mission, he decided to break with the group in 1955 to take a position at the University of Kansas, where he taught until 1984.
In his correspondence, Besinger's vulnerability and discomfort are wonderfully, if painfully, delineated. It is his self-critical honesty that ultimately makes "Working With Mr. Wright" successful. Besinger, while compiling a portrait of the architect as an old man, manages to capture the creatively progressive and oftentimes tension-filled flavor of life at Taliesin.
In connection with the book, an exhibition of photographs, correspondence and memorabilia entitled "Frank Lloyd Wright: American Architect," was collected by James Helyar, curator in graphics at the Spencer Research Library.
The show, which runs through the middle of August, features many of Besinger's letters, old editions of the periodical House Beautiful featuring Wright's work, numerous plans and drawings, and copies of the Talesin newsletters that were produced exclusively for the members and friends of the fellowship.
Besinger has given the library documents and photos for nearly 30 years, and Helyar said that the strength of Besinger's collection had led to other donations of materials related to the Taliesin Fellowship.
"Effectively, we are using the exhibition to do two different things," he said. "In general terms, it offers a view of the sequence of Wright's major works. Quite separate from this is the material which provides an intimate view of what life was like at Taliesin."
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July 26
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July 28
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July 29
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July 30
Goo Goo Dolls
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At the Granada:
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4B
Wednesday, July 26, 1995
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jayhawks basketball fan harbors high expectations for next season
Last week I ran into a friend whom I hadn't seen all summer. We talked about the usual topics
- jobs, classes and men. Then the topic of conversation actually
curried to something interesting sports
"So how do you think the Jayhawks will do this year?" my friend asked.
CAMPUS EDITOR
me. They're a little..."
JENNI CARLSON
"Well, with L.T.
Levine and June
Henley in the
backfield, the
offense shouldn't be too bad, I said. "But the defense worries me. That's all!"
"No, no. No. not football. I mean how do you think the basketball team will do?" my friend interrupted.
Basketball? Who's thinking about basketball in July?
Our attention should be directed at football, golf, tennis or something else. Anything else. Right?
Maybe I've thought about the upcoming basketball season a little bit.
OK, I've thought about it a lot.
to tell the truth, I became obsessed with the 1995-96 basketball season on March 24, the day Virginia upset Kansas in last season's NCAA tournament.
I can't help it. I gander at the Jayhawk roster and see the top five scorers returning.
Kansas has more quality guards than Fort Knox. Jacque Vaughn and Jerod Haase will start, but they will get a run for their money
from their teammates.
Calvin Rayford is healthy and more confident than ever after his knee injury. Billy Thomas shows promise of becoming one of the Big Eight Conference's best long-range shooters.
And by the way, Kansas coach Roy Williams happened to sign McDonald's High School All-American Ryan Robertson, an unselfish guard who can also shoot the ball.
If Kansas' entire guard corps happens to have a bad day, which is about as likely as Kansas State winning the Big Eight title, the Jayhawks can always look to their big men.
Scot Pollard and Raef LaFrentz can do it all — score, rebound, play defense and lead.
But most importantly, they can flat out run.
You try to get bodies of their size moving down the court fast enough to catch up with a Jacque Vaughn alley-oop pass.
Personally, I have a hard time believing it, but I've seen them do it numerous times.
Their agility should fuel an even faster playing style this season.
But there's one name that always gets me talking — Paul Pierce. If you missed this 6-6 Los Angeles native in the McDonald's All-American game, try to catch him during CBS's broadcast of the U.S. Olympic Festival. It's worth your time.
Pierce has all the fundamental tools that a small forward needs including strength, a shooting touch and defensive skills. But the thing that will transform Pierce into a superstar in the Big Eight, if
not the nation, is his shooting range. This guy can shoot short-range turn-around jumpers and then step outside and hit the threepointer. Pierce is a Richard Scott who can make shots from outside.
A Final Four trip is so realistic that I'm already thinking about booking hotel reservations in East Rutherford, N.J.
Whoa. What am I saving?
Actually, I'm saying what Calvin Rayford told me about two weeks ago.
He said being a Final Four team was a very attainable goal this season.
Heck, the team won't have its first practice until Oct. 14, which is the tentative date for Late Night. With player, media and fan expectations already so high, I wouldn't blame Williams if he wanted to run far, far away.
But players and coaches, especially those at Kansas, know the pressure that goes with Division I basketball.
Coaches get paid and players get scholarships to overcome expectations and win games. They've been doing it for years and will continue to do so.
But you Kansas fans in Jayhawkland can help ease their burden. Lighten up a little bit and remember these players are 18 through 22 years old and only playing a game.
And I will heed my own advice. Even though the media is supposed to be unbiased, I'm a Kansas student and have loved the Jayhawks all my life.
But for their benefit, I'll try to think about something else until October — if that's possible.
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
ALL THE BEST STUFF IS CHEAPER AT CHECKERS
Couples ages 30-45, married at least
3 yrs., needed for dissertation
research. Pays $5 - $15. Leave message
for Reinholtz Study, 864-4121
卫
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and soldout advertising in this newspaper are available on our website.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which it makes legal to advertise "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
The Kansas 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, disability, national origin, or other. The Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
110 Bus. Personals
$ Marriage Study $
Avoid long waits in an emergency room. Try LAWRENCE PROMPTCARE. Full-service center. See website for details. Board certified emergency medicine physicians. For general care, fracture care, and laceration repair. Open 8am-11pm, Mon-Fri and 12am on weekends. Contact Metrical Arts Centre, Kasol and Clinty Pkowny
100s Announcements
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120 Announcements
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Wanted
The Kansas and Burge Unions are hiring for Fall 1995. We have jobs in the Bookstore, Food Services, Concessions, Wesco Terrace, Building Services, SUA, Prairie Room, Training Table, Food Services, Kansas Union Great jobs with varying schedules. COME MATCH A JOB TO YOUR SCHOULD.
Kansas and Burge Unions' personnel Office,
Level 3, Kansas Union, AA/EE/OE.
Fast Growing Company
$2,000-$4,000 + mo potential
Full training available 865-2708
Computerized customer service. Manager wanted for large furniture operation, manage five person staff, experience with computer required plus the Great opportunity for right person. Send resume to F.O. Box 3130 Lensa, Kansas 66238-5130.
Devon, MA is providing biomedical company interest on staying on the cutting edge of technology. Currently we have approx. 45 workstations with a variety of software including; Windows, MS-Office (Word and Excel), Ms-Works, etc. We are looking to add someone to our Information Systems Dept., part time or full-time to help give us more expertise in dealing with some troubleshooting to our many users. Qualifications include, an understanding of the above software, a basic understanding of networking, print servers and good communication skills. Job responsibilities include providing resume to Bacore Inc. Attn. Human Resources, 1065 SW 51st St., Topeka, KS 66909. Students strongly encourage to apply.
SUMMER WORK
$9.75 STARTING
Child Care positions available in family oriented residential group homes in Lawrence and Topeka. Full-time and part-time positions available. Positions include working with youth between the ages of 6-18 in a group home setting. High school diploma and a valid Kansas drivers license required. Apply at the Villages, Inc., 2209 SW 29th Street, Topeka, KS or call (913) 817-5000. EOE.
Kansan Classified: 864-4358
CRAZY
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* Entry Level
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CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION
842-6336
Looking for people with crazy personalities that are willing to work hard for huge
willing to work hard for huge rewards. Fulfill Part/Full Training. 749-1466 DISTRIBUTED INFORMATION INTERN. Student Hourly. Deadline: 07/31/19. Duties include organizing, maintaining, developing and preparing user-oriented documentation, assembling main content, creating a system. Required qualifications; Enrolled in 6 hours at KU. Complete job description available. To apply, submit a cover letter, resume, and writing sample material to the University, Center of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66455. EOJA Employee Enriched with hourly wage more.
Get connected with people on the leading edge of the digital revolution. BeHOME is bringing home into the technology and technology into the home. Wonderful ground floor opportunity--find out more about the opportunities by exploring http://www.behome.com. Consider BeHOME your new home part-time, single project, multi-home or full-time from your location or our facilities.
MULTIMEDIA PROGRAMMING &
DIGITAL VIDEO WIZARD
Frustrated with hourly wage mug. gross job? Looking for motivated, goal oriented individuals. Full/part time. Full training, excellent income potentials. 824-4669 ext. 623
E-mail your resume with background, experience, examples of your work and salary requirements to elements at behome.com, fax to 714.260.8593 or e-mail to P.O. Box 1310 Lenape, Kansas 62514.
DIGITAL VIDEO WIZARD
We are also looking for a savvy Digital Video Wiz.
We will provide you a Avid digital studio in southern Johnson County, Kansas. Wonderful ground floor opportunity
We are looking for computer programmers, and people familiar with any or all. Web Servers, Visual C++, Virtual Basic, Oracle, Windows NT, Aplos, SQL Server, Apache, MSSQL, API OLE, DDE, DMPT, GUI, HTML, Multimedia, LAN. Do a project segment from home or work at our facilities.
Advertisers Distribute fliers before class outside of lectures. Earn $5 for 30 minutes of work. Punctual, dependable, cheerful students need only apply
Call Nancy for interview at 843-3485.
Note Takers-Earn $10-$15 per lecture taking comp
entences. Must have completed the entire semester. Qualified candidates will have 3.3 + GPA and related course work experience.
Open office Open姿态 1H, Psychology 33
Science 2H, Human Services 2H, Social Welfare
Office Assistant- Customer customers at our KS Union Bookstore location MWF, 9:1AM. Duties include proofing and filing lecture notes, distributing notes to customers. Pay $4.25/hr.
Now hiring for the FALL '96 semester in the following positions:
Kie's is seeking a bright, energetic person to assume a full-time position in office. Bookkeeping experience preferred. Apply in M-W-F, 4am-4pm. *242* Iowa State. See Deb.
SUMMER JOBS!
Word Processors
Secretaries
Administrative Assistants
Kelly® offers challenging opportunities with leading companies. Requirements include: ability to work well under pressure, excellent oral and written communication skills, computer literacy with both spreadsheet and word processing applications. Make your summer work. Call today!
749-2782
14 East 8th Street
KELLY Temporary Services
Never an applicant fee
An equal opportunity employer
©1994 Kelly Services, Inc.
Local Delivery Drivers Part/Full Time. Apply at Midway Auto Supplies 150 W 6. Lawrence.
Morning Part-time Office Assistant
Schumm Food Co has an immediate opening for a
office assistant to work on the office
experience helpful. Starting pay $3/hr, approx.
12-50 wk/h. Apply at the Schumm Food Co business
office at 719 Mass. (upstairs, above the
Smokehouse) Mon-Fri 8am-4pm.
an temporary cleaners for end of July, beg. of Aug. Experience preferred but not required. $5/hr starting. Call for appt. 843-3841/843-0011.
Now taking applications for waitresses. Stop by and apply anytime. Johnny's Tavern, 40 North 2nd.
P77 receptionist/typist for professional office needed ASAP. Must be organized and possess excellent organizational skills in Computer knowledge and experience. Compete for references to P.O. Box 3154 Lawrence KS 65064
Part-time clerical work processing, beg in Aug,
+89/96 student year. Must have 3 GP's exp.
Microsoft Windows 7. Required Microsoft
For Windows for Word. Call MEM-EX SPAN CO. 749
5402 between 2-4 PM
*part-time Help NEEDED in a busy doctor's office, Call 749-0130*
We have the MONEY if you have the Time
Starting salary is $6.94 per hour. Prior service may qualify for higher pay.
We have immediate parttime positions available in the various career fields.
Educational assistance and vocational training provided.
To see if you qualify, call Kansas Army National Guard today!
842-0759 or 842-9293
Looking for a job w/ an environmental twist. 832
1617 ext. 60
Teaching Assistant position available. Part time
flexible hours. Experience with children 18 mo-6
yrs. Immunuel Lutheran Childhood Center. 842-313
8 yrs.
The University of Kansas Parking Department has several openings for student field operations. All hours available from 7:00 AM to Midnight. Students must have parking on streets and parking facilities of the University of Kansas, as well as knowledge of the Parking Rules and Regulations desired but will train in the use of parking equipment. English language. Must have accurate iperience and valid driver's license. Must be a current KU student six hours minimum enrollment. Fill out an interview at the Parking Office and set up an interview.
Warehouse Facilitator Needed! Computerized warehouse needs supervisor management of product flow. Must have thorough knowledge of computer operations. Great opportunity for right person. Send resume to P.O. Box 1530 Lenexa, Kansas 68258-5130.
Student Hourly Microcomputing Consultant.
Deadline: 7/31/19, 20 weeks/week. Required qualifications: Currently enrollment in 6 hours at KU,
working knowledge of the following operating systems: Windows XP, Linux, and experience using Telnet, FTP, electronic mail,
experience with one of the following operating systems: AIX, VMS, training experience, excel experience,
six hours of course work in computing. Complete job description available. To apply, submit a cover letter, a current resume with references,
and a current transcript to Am Rai, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
Student Trainer/ Consultant-Microcomputing Deadline: 7/31/95, 20 weeks. Required qualifications: Enrolment in 6 hours at KU this fall, training in Microcomputer applications, training in operating systems: MS-DOS, UNIX, or Macintosh OS. working knowledge of at least two major microcomputer applications packages, training in application skills, at least six hours of course work in computing. To apply, submit a cover letter, a curriculum description and an Amt Riat, Microcomputer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045. Applicants may be asked to give a short instructional presentation and submit written sample. EOA AA EMPLOYER
Sunflower State Games, Help needed to produce the largest athletic event in Kansas, July 28-30. T-shirts, squeeze bottles, food and free entries for No Sports no experience. Call 841-390-6750.
We would like to have a KU student to work part-time appliance delivery and installation. Apply in person, Hanna's Appliance 983 Mass.
Are you wild, and would you like to make crazy money? No phone interviews. Call for appt.
205 Help Wanted
ARROWHEAD
CLUB
**K.C. CHIEFS FOOTBALL**
Take part in the excitement of NFL Football at Arrowhead Stadium. Levy Restaurants is now hiring for all positions in the Arrowhead Club and Golden Circle Suites.The Season is (10) games, August 5 thru December 24. Experience the thrill of Chiefs Football - and you don't have to buy a ticket! Contact: Nick or Steve, Arrowhead Club, Arrowhead Stadium.
**No Phone Calls Please**
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Wednesday, July 26, 1995
5B
Public Relations
If you like greeting people this career is for you. No experience necessary. Full training, part time and full time positions. Managers/Trainers 2$-4,000 potential. 923-9414 ext. 680
Room for you and your horse (or other pet). Live in an apartment with 5 bedrooms home in exchange for approximately 15 hours child care and light housekeeping per week. Located on 4 acres only 7 miles from KU campus.
Sports WINNED
National competition for individuals with a competitive edge to train for our new team. Must be a team player. Full training and travel options.
842-3277 ext. 650
225 Professional Services
< DRIVER EDUCATION > offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's "license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald Strole
16 East 13th
842-1139
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
Thesis & Dissertations
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping
3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street
843-4600
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT-VISITORS
DV-1 Greencard Program, by U.S. Immigration.
Legal Services, Tel. (813) 892-6841 / (813) 896-4425
/ (813) 897-3001, CA, 91306, Monday -
Sunday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Tennessee 843-4023
Quark X Press Tutoring Contact Society professional publisher will work one-on-one with you
WE CAN HELP
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling and Information Telephone/In Person 24 Hours Confidential 841-2345 1419 Massachusetts
235 Typing Services
For ALL your typing/editing/creative needs
rely on me to do it RIGHT!
All work is GUARANTEED!
Fast, friendly, reliable, accurate.
Call Jacki at 865-2853
Makin' the Grade
300s Merchandise
X
305 For Sale
7-1 foot female Burmese python. No scars and
friendly. Cage included $300 BOB 841-7956
Desks, Bookcases, Chest of Drawers, Beds.
Whole Butie Egg. 800 lb.
MCAT study guides - BETZ and KAPLAN plant
for sale. Contact Drew 816-313-6837
Queen size mattress set. never used. Still in
1911. Brass headboard 605. 813-739-9835.
1915. Brass headboard 605. 813-739-9835.
Raleigh MT 560 Mountain Bike. Shimano STX,
10 in, 18" Oracal Pedals $500. New Allow New Calf.
9 in, 10" Oracal Pedals $500. New Allow New Calf.
TREK 7000 Mountain Bike Shimano DEORE X15"
* Great condition $400.
Packard Bell, 388, color monitor, software,
mouse, "3.5" disk drive; $600. 749-3110
Full-size matress set: New never used. Still in
condition. Price: $165. Bedside bedroom 85*
(91-79-9555) 91-79-9555
Call and leave message 473-5688 lv ms.
Two towelsets Blue and white thick stripes.
100
REFOUND SOUND 1-913-842-2555
100%
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE. KS
360 Miscellaneous
One way plane ticket to Charlotte, North Carolina Aug. 5. Call 804-384-6852
400s Real Estate
I & 3 bedrm mobile homes, W/D hookup, A/C
enyard yard, carport, $75/mo. 9 mo. lease avail.
call 841-5454. A & Management.
405 For Rent
DON'T WAIT ANY LONGER!
Taking deposits for fall
From $245 to $000; Studien
From $345 to $900: Studios,
1, 2, & 3 BR apts. Water
Trash pd. in studios, water,
trash, gas heatpd. in apts.
2, 3, & 4 BR townhomes.
"Small" pets OK with dep.
Pools, tennis, basketball,
on bus route.
Reserve your home for Fall today!
Trailridge Apartments 2500 W6th
2 BR apt for rent Aug 1. Gas heat, water热,
3 BR apt for rent Aug 1. Gas heat, water热,
411 AMB (4472)/month. NO PETS. 411 AMB (4472)/month. NO PETS.
APLEPCREF APT. Now showing & 2 BRs for Aug,1 leaves APS, AC, heat, water & trash DW, DISW & microwave. Call anytime. 843-820. Sorry, no pets.
BERKELEY FLATS
GREAT PRICE FOR A GREAT PLACE
studios,super studios 1 and2 bedroom apartments available for fall. But call today they are going FAST!
843-2116
11th & Mississippi
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
ATAN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Exercise weight room
- Swimmingpool
- Fireplace
- Energy Efficient
- On site management
- Daily 3:00-5:00
Professionally managed by
KVM
808 W.24th
841-6080
Available Aug 10th, Studio apt. under renovation now. Window A/C; Dishwasher, ceiling fan, ceiling fan. Parking 7th. Nice Vermont. No pets. $335 at 1074
225 Professional Services
PALM TREE ISLAND
Leasing for Summer & Fall
211 Mount Hope Court #3 For more info, or Appt. call 843-0011 or 842-3841 Mon-Fri 12-5 p.m.
- Recently constructed
- 3 Bedroom $595-$615
4 Bedroom $745-$725
- 2 Bedroom $410-$425
0 Beds $505-$615
- Nice quiet setting
- 4 Bedroom $715-$725
South Dainte
AIRDANCE
Pets Welcome*
- On bus route
Dishwasher
- On bus route
Beau's Import Auto Service Quality car maintenance & repair.
-Dishwasher
- On RU Bus Route
- Sand volleyball court
VISA
- Ask about our brand new3 bedroom villas
- SwimmingPool
- Water & trash paid
SAAB VOLVO
On a oim st.
next to The Yacht Club. and other fine imports.
- water & trash paid
- 1.2.3 & 4 bedroom
MasterCard
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Now leasing for Summer
& Fall Move-ins.
apts. available
842-4320
- 1,2,3&4 bedroom
ents available
545 Minnesota Off of 6th st.
524 Frontier
842-4444
On Traillge Bus Rout
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Five minutes from KU Lake, Westport. Plaza! Three B, 2 BA, Deck, Basement, Off-street Parking. $55,500. Call Kathy Brandon at 1-800-280-294.
Four Bedroom/Three Bath Featuring for Fall of '95
- Full-Size Washer/Dryer
- Ceiling Fans in Every Rm.
- Trash Compactor
- Microwave
- Dishwasher Microwave
- Cable in Every Rm.
- 1500 Sq Ft.
- Carport Per Townhome
- Walk-In Closets
- Gas Heat
4501 Wimbeldon Dr.
Call 841-7849
Office Hours (9-5), M-F
BUY NOW & BE IN BEFORE SCHOOL STARTS!
Two this bedroom. 1'bath to townhouse has a spacious full basement which offers many possibilities. Vaulted living room opens to upstairs walkway. Large soffit to small deck and trees. Suite #2 refrig. inc. $3,490. Call Sheila 843-260-842. eaz.842-625-87
McGREW REAL ESTATE
2 and 3 bedroom apartments
---
meadowbrook AVAILABLE NOW!
Meadowbrook Apartments
2 rooms for Rent. For Fall & Spring semesters.
Just off 6th & Kasold. I w/ private bath. $250 &
$300, utilizes付费. Call Tom 855-5033
15th & CRESTLINE 842-4200
OPEN: MON-FRI-8-5;30 p.m.
SAT-10-4 p.m.
Sun-1-4 p.m.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
- Close to campus
9th & Avalon 842-3040
- Swimmingpool
* On Bus Route
- Laundry facility
Now Leasing for August Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
- Spacious2bedroom
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
GREATLOCATION near campus
West Hills APARTMENTS
No appointmentneeded
OPEN HOUSE Mon.-Fri. 12:30-5:00
GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS
S
- 2 Bedroom $600
- 3 Bedroom $600
Swan Management
2512 West 6th St. 749-1288
- 1 Bedroom $320
EAGLE APARTMENTS
1 Bedroom $320
2 Bedroom $420
EAGLE APARTMENTS
OPEN HOUSE
Monday-Friday
1 - 4:30 p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
- 1 Bedroom $320
- 2 Bedroom $380
--microwave
Call 749-1288
MASTERCRAFT
Studio, 1,2,3, & 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Completely Furnished
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS
DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
SECURE AN APARTMENT
FOR FALL'95
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm
Sat. 10am-4pm
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasid
749-4226
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
McGREW REAL ESTATE
WHY PAY RENT? - When you can own your own
1 bedroom, 1 bath condo for only $2,000! Fresh
paint and new window treatments. Stove and
refrig. incl. Low HOA covers lawn care, snow
removal, ext. building main & insurance. Call
Shelia Sanite M4-803-205, evan. 842-6268
Modern 3 BRL 2 bath Condo *Fully furnished,*
*Walking distance to*
*Camp. Call 913-409-2800.*
Available August. One bedroom apartment in old house under renovation now. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, dishwasher, claw-foot toilet. Near pots. $175. Bath & Vermont. 841-1074
Charming two bdm house. Wooden workbook, wallpaper, C/A. appliances, hookups, basement. Neighborhood reference. References/deposit. No pets. $500/mo. Call 833-2888
2 Pools
Volleyball Court
- On KU Bus Route with
4 stops on Property
4 stops on Property
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer
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.
Hookups
We presently have available a select few 1 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Part25
--microwave
Call or stop by today
2401 W. 25th,9A3
842-1455
YOUNG
(sorry no pets)
Kaw Valley Management, Inc. is now leasing studio, 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apartments, town homes, movies home for immediate or Fail Move. Come by 808 W. 24th, call or sit at 688-608 for more info.
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
- Three bedrooms, two full baths
- Professionally designed interiors
Now leasing for spring or fall!
Brand New!
Be the First!
- Washer/dryer included
- On KU Dus route-Great Location!
Now Leasing Four Bedroom FURNISHED Apartments For $690 and Up
- Pooland Clubhouse
843-6446
- On KU Bus Route
- Convenient Laundry Facility
- On Site Management.
2310 West 26th St
- Energy Sufficient
CALL 841-5255 Or Drop By
Spacious 2 BK, Central Air, DW, Back Porch, Pets Allowed 14th & New Jersey Call 847-5997 Super studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available NOW! Call Berkeley Flats for the best prices. 843-2168 11th & Mississippi 11th & Mississippi
- Open Until 7pm
7 Days a Week
Bradford Square Apartments
Spacious 3 BDRM Apts. Cats Welcome
Modern Interiors with:
•microwave
- separate dining room
- dishwasher
- *patio/deck*
- lots of closet space
- -convenient laundry facility
- on-site management
- on KU bus route
501 Colorado #B1
Mon.-Fri. 1-5p.m.
Sat.11a.m.-3p.m.
Stop by or call
First Management is now leasing 2
749-1556
bedroom apts. for fall!
· Microwave
· Dishwasher
· Garbage Disposal
· Washer/Dryer Hookup
· Gas, Heat/CA
M-F 1-5pm
1740 Ohio
749-1436
Now Leasing for Fall!
Aspen West
- No Pets
- 2 Bdrm
- Water Paid
- Laundry on Site
- New Dishwashers
2900 West 15th Lawrence, KS 66049 865-2500
430 Roommate Wanted
or 2 non-smoking male roommates wanted for fall to share new 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom A/C, W/D, D/W, $225 per month + utilities. Call Nick at 843-4087.
1/2 mile from KU campus, 2 roommates wanted for new 3 bdm condo. 2 bath, microwave, dishwasher, refrigerator, bridge, A/C, parking area, plus 1/3 utilities. Wash & trash paid. Call 913-962-1334 after 6pm.
Female N/3 for 2BR apartment. 3 blocks to campground. Water and water paid. No pets. Available August 1 and Call 800-745-6489.
Male or female, prefer grad student. 2 BR apt.
419-372-8183 (collect), Available AU 8464-
or 319-372-8183 (collect), Available AU 8464-
Interviewing for a roommate. Nice, quiet.
Shawnee Lake area in Topoak. 3BP house, 2B car.
garage, full basement. A great deal! Must see!
$50/mo. Call (913) 671-4812.
One female non-smoking roommate needed for
a room on KU bus route. $260/mo.
Cellphone: 841-9414-8144
Roommate will to share 4 BR house w/ two
corners. Started August 1. Call 832-1656.
from campus, starting Aug 1. Call 832-1656.
Straight male to share expense for Meadow-
dancing at the University of York yr. On KU bus
Cable Cell Brian (314) 925-8900
Share spacious 2 BR apartment in West Hills. Just off Emery Rd. Pool, short walk to campus; 1 bath, walk in closet, 1st floor, $20/mo & 1 tubs July, July paid, start day insured 1st August. Gary 855-260-8967
855-260-8967
Wanted: Roommate to 3 Bdrm house. S.E. Laundry, N.S. not pet; utilities pd. $800 maid. $800
M/N needs / to share 2 BR houseway. Aug ist. W/D, C/A; Call A: 841-6471
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
- Planned social activities
- Featuring our "Dine Anytime" program that serves teriffic meals with unlimited seconds anytime between breakfast and dinner
*IBM and Macintosh computer lab*
Tours available daily including weekends-just drop by!
Don't forget to ask about our "Fast Back" Bonus!
Don't have time to stop by? Call us and we'll be happy to send an information packet!
1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559
1-800-888-GOKU
NAISMITH Hall
6B
Wednesday, July 26, 1995
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
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass./841-2451/Mon-Sat 11-5
- Serengeti Driver's
• Bausch & Lomb
Ray-Ban®
Killer Loop™
Diamondhard™
Glass Polarized
xrays™
ORBS™
Sports Series™
ACTIV™
Predators™
Classic Metals™
The Etc. Shop
Ray-Ban®
BAusch & Lomb
FactoryDirect
Authorized
Dealer
RESTORED BY BAUSCH & LOMB
928 Massachusetts • Lawrence • 843-0611
JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today!
- 20% off all Columbia Sportswear
- 10% off all Athletic Equipment
Columbia Sportswear Company
840 Mass.
842-2442
STORE HOURS
9:30 - 7:00 Mon-Wed
9:30 - 8:30 Thurs
9:30 - 6:00 Fri-Sat
12:00-5:00 Sun
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DAYCONVER
MasterCard VISA
MasterCard
MasterCard VISA NATIONAL TREASURY ENCOVER
Kansas legend running for His life
By Dan Gelston Kansan staff writer
Ryun rededicated his career to Jesus
silver medal.
Jim Ryun set record after record in the mile and 1500-meter events while running for Kansas during his four-year track career, his achievements filling pages of record books
Through the years, Ryun's dedication to excellence in running has remained strong, but his reasons for running have changed.
However, it was four years later that Ryun reached what he called the pinnacle of his life — he and his wife, Anne, accepted Jesus Christ into their lives.
"I had always been fairly religious," Ryun said. "But I learned more about Him and wanted to bring the spiritual part of my life to the forefront and devote my life to Him."
Since then, Ryun has done exactly that.
With a renewed spirit, Ryun restarted the camp he had left in
Ryun has begun trying to instill the work-ethic and Christian lifestyle that has become his life. Now Ryun runs and lives for Jesus Christ, his personal and spiritual achievements filling the pages of Guideposts, a Christian magazine.
For 14 years something was missing from his mission. His message was not getting the proper outlet. So in June, he resumed teaching the running camp he left in 1981 — the Jim Ryun Running Camp.
Born April 29,1947
1964 Became the first prep athlete to break the four-minute barrier with 3:59.0
1965 Ryun ran a 3:58.3 mile at the Kansas High School Outdoor Championship in Wichita his sen year.
1966 Ryun shattered the existing American record when he won the AAU Outdoor title in San Diego with a 3:55.3 performance.
1966 Ryun set the world record with a 3:51.3 mile, at All-American Invitational Berkeley, Calif., July 17.
It
1967 Ryun ran a 3:51.1 mile at National AAU, Bakersfield, Calif. June 23. Ryun owned the world record for the following nine years. His time stood as the American record for 16 years.
1976 Retire from training so to do so in this year's university by 29 days spent order to raise his family.
sionable to me," Dick said.
1965
Ryon ran a 3:58.3 mile at the Kansas High School Outdoor Championship in Wichita his sen ear.
The passionate religious experience also was a plus for Bill Lundberg, former Kansas runner and Hillsdale (Mich.) College track coach.
Ryun has certainly made the most of his gifts. He made history by breaking the 4-minute barrier in the mile and also has won an Olympic
"The intent of the camp was to teach them to run and convey the personal relationship with Jesus Christ we have as Christians," Ryun said. "It's important to let the campers know that we owe everything we have to Jesus Christ, and we must be thankful for the gifts He has given us."
"The importance of the spiritual aspect of this camp is great," Lundberg said. "It's a great opportunity to help people develop their running and send the message of Christ and salvation."
Ryun stresses the religious part of the camp because he feels devotion to Christ is more permanent and important than running.
Ryun ran a 3-51.1 mile at National AAU, Bakersfield, Calif. June 23. Ryun owned the world record for the following nine years. His time stood as the American record for 16 years. 1967
began with a devotional and testimony and the afternoons were spent running, working and relaxing. The evenings also stressed religion.
Mark Dick, a former Ryun camper and current counselor, led the devotionals.
"Jim has set out to show that his relationship with Christ is more important than the running experience. That was what was impress-
High School senior Catherine Wolfram enjoyed the spirituality of the camp.
"A Christian atmosphere was what I was looking for in a camp," Wolfram said. "It's refreshing to meet
people who not only enjoy to run but share a devotion to Christianity." Ryun also wants to bring back the popularity of the mile with an annual national high school mile championship
It would bring together the best high school milers to establish a champion and
break Ryun's time of 3:58.3.
"I want to reestablish the mile at a grassroots level and have it regain not only interest, but quality." Ryun said.
While other high profile athletes have fallen astray, Ryun has remained true to his convictions.
"My faith, my family and my walk with Jesus Christ are the most important things to me," Ryan said. "We can accomplish a great deal athletically, but it won't mean a thing if we aren't able to live the way Jesus wants us to."
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
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
KAHBS
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
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