THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SECTION A VOL.102,NO.86
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
图2-16
Kansas defeats Oklahoma St.
'Hawks improve their Big Eight mark to 5-0 with a victory against the Cowboys. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Order in the court
KU law students watch the legal process at work in Green Hall. Page 5A
NATION
Clinton speaks history
Clinton urged greater recognition for Black women in his Black history speech. Page 7A
Civil war leads to terrorism
WORLD
An explosivepacked truck crashed into a Sri Lankan bank, killing at least 53 people. Page 8A
WEATHER BITTERLY COLD
High 10° Low 3°
A raven is running away.
Weather: Page 2A.
INDEX
Opinion . . . . . 4A
National News. . . . 7A
World News. . . . 8A
Scoreboard. . . . 2B
Horoscopes. . . . 4B
Dilbert . . . . . 4B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is free. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Local Black history hidden
Booklet, bus tours reveal history of Freedom City
African-American History Month
By Susanna Löof
Kansan staff writer
Say African-American history and most students will think of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X or perhaps Rosa Parks. However, few students will think of people and events in Lawrence.
"If we don't know our history, how can we know who we are?" she said.
Coleman, an employee at Terra Nova Books, 920 Massachusetts St., became interested in local African-American history in 1986 when she read a book about Langston Hughes, an African-American author who lived in Lawrence as a child.
LAKE BAY WEST
But Coleman soon discovered that it was difficult to learn more.
"You have to really dig to find anything about the Black history here," Coleman said. "You have to read the fine print. It's almost like the information is hidden."
After digging through the old records, Coleman wrote a booklet about local African-American history. The booklet, which covers the period from 1854 to 1939, tells how Lawrence, known as the Freedom City among slaves, became a segregated society.
Coleman also began giving summer bus tours of important African-American sights in Lawrence.
The tour, which lasts about an hour and a half, includes Lawrence's two stops at the underground railway, a system that transported slaves to freedom. The tour also visits the location of the Afro House, 946 1/2 Rhode Island St., a center for African-American culture that was founded in the late 1960s.
In addition, Coleman points out the locations of the houses where Hughes lived. She also tells her audience about Lincoln School, one of Lawrence's first schools for African-American children only. The school is located in the building that today houses Ballard Community Center, 708 Elm St.
Steven Jansen, director of Watkins Community Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St., said local African-American history deserved more recognition, even though it was better known now than a couple of decades ago.
Coleman is not alone in her conviction that Lawrence's African-American history should be better known.
Besides Langston Hughes' residency in Lawrence, Jansen wants Lawrence residents to know that George "Nash" Walker was born in here and lived here part of his life. Walker was a famous vaudeville artist who, together with his companion Bert Williams, became the first African American to perform on stage in the United States in the 1880s. Walker is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, 1605 Oak Hill Ave.
Stephanie Coleman discusses the history of the "Afro House". The house was used as a culture center.
Lawrence's local African-American history also includes persistent racism, Jansen said. Records of a survey made in 1955 showed that 33 of Lawrence's 38 restaurants did not serve African Americans.
It happened here
Various locations around Lawrence are recognized as pivotal sites in Black history. Langston Hughes, noted Black author, based his novel *Not Without Laughter* on his experiences in the city.
1 Site of the old Lincoln School
2 Location of the Afro House
3,4 Homes of Langston Hughes
5,6 Stops on the Underground Railroad
700 block of Alabama Street
1 Ballard Center
2 945 1/2 Rhode Island Street
4 700 block of New York St.
Lawrence CAMPUS
6 1111 E. 19th St.
CLINTON PKWY.
Fire Station at Clinton Parkway and Lawrence Ave.
About 110 years ago, 20 to 25 percent of Lawrence's population was African American, Jansen said. In 1990, the number was five percent.
"The black population has been significantly lower in growth during the last 50 years than the white population," Jansen said.
Hemenway changes structure
Plans create new jobs in KU's administration
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Chancellor Robert Hemenway yesterday unveiled what he deemed a leaner, more streamlined administrative structure for the University of Kansas.
The new structure, which will be implemented July 1, establishes academics as the central core of the University and makes clear the lines of authority and accountability. Hemenway said.
The most notable changes to the administrative structure are the creation of a provost position and the creation of a vice chancellor for information services and dean of libraries. The provost position combines the positions of executive vice chancellor and vice chancellor for academic affairs.
"With this model, the academic mission is clearly lined up as the central core of the University of Kansas," Hemenway said. "I think this will be better, and it will be clearer. I think things get lost in the current structure."
Although Hemenway identified the positions of the new administrative structure, no individuals have been selected to fill those jobs. The issue of who will fill the provost position is the most pressing question.
Hemenway said a national search would be conducted to select a provost and that he had invited David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, to be a candidate. Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, last week announced that he would leave the administration to return to teaching July 1.
"I believe that the provost position is so important to the University as a whole that the only way to do this properly is to conduct a national search," Hemenway said.
Shulenburger said he planned to be a candidate for provost.
"There are a lot of functions in that job that aren't in my current job, but I think the provost will receive a lot of support from the dean level." Shulenburger said. "I think it's a very good proposal because it places the teaching and research functions at the core of the University."
Hemenway began work on modifying the 20-year-old administrative structure in August — only a month after he became chancellor — when he appointed a 20-member task force on administration and re-engineering.
"I believe that the existing structure at KU sometimes works against us in getting things done efficiently and effectively," Hemenway said. "We must identify who has
See AXING, Page 2.
Mama mia! Pizza parlors thriving in Lawrence
By Sarah Morrison Kansan staff writer
Each day, Americans consume 90 acres of pizza.
Based on that rate, about 34,000 square feet of pizza is eaten in Lawrence each month.
So it is no surprise that pizza is big business in the River City, said Mike O'Donnell of the Small Business Development Center, 734 Vermont St.
"In 1994 in Douglas County, $102 million were spent in restaurants," he said. "And pizza is a reasonable chunk of that amount."
During the last two years, six new pizza places have opened in Lawrence, bringing the total to 14, he
said. Only two have shut down in that time.
But college students are not the only people in Lawrence eating pizza. As the city grows to the west, a wider niche is being created for new pizza business.
Steve Shrader, co-owner of Mr. Gatti's pizza, 3514 Clinton Parkway, said despite the competitive market, he decided to open his restaurant in December because he felt it could offer something unique.
Pizza Company, 601 Kasold Drive, also looked at more than just the college students when he opened his restaurant last June. He had his eye on the growing residential neighborhoods in west Lawrence.
"The number of pizza restaurants is high, but we've got a little twist on things," he said. "We have a family entertainment center with a game room in the back for little kids and big kids, too."
"The new high school is going to be opening out here soon," he said. "This side of town is going to really start growing."
Chris Coleman, owner of Lawrence
But potential pizza entrepreneurs beware. O'Donnell said the chances of independently owned and operated restaurants surviving longer than two years was less than 50 percent.
However, franchise restaurants have a 100 percent two year survival rate in Lawrence.
Doctor warns of pizza's dangers
Caution: Eating pizza can be hazardous to your health.
By Sarah Morrison
Kansan staff writer
Food may be delicious but it can be hazardous
Well, sort of.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said it was common for students to burn their mouths or their tongues by bitting into pizza that was too hot.
"The reason people get into trouble is because the crust cools more quickly than the cheese," Voyckey said.
However, Yockey said that the burns were minor problems.
A slightly more serious injury occurs when someone takes a bite of pizza that is too large and the crust scrapes their throat as they try to swallow, Yockey said.
"The skin sloughs off, and it is sore for a few days, but I have never seen one get infected," he said. "And I've never seen burns more serious than first or second degree."
A canker sore can then form on the injury, which can be very painful, he said.
"People get a sore throat and don't realize what it is," Yockey said. "They come in with cold-like symptoms and find out it is a canker sore caused by eating pizza."
The canker sore usually lasts for 10 to 14 days, but unlike a burned mouth, it can be treated, he said.
"Students have to come in for treatment. But we can put some siliv nitrate on the sore and speed up the healing process." Yockey said.
For students with a burned tongue or a raw roof of the mouth, Yockey recommends Tylenol or Advil to help ease the pain.
The problem of pizza-eating injuries is more widespread than people might think, Yockey said.
"A lot of pizza is consumed in Lawrence," he said. "So a lot of these injuries occur."
Another health concern involved in pizza eating is proper nutrition. As with anything, too much pizza can result in an unhealthy diet.
Ann Chapman, dietitian at Watkins, said students should watch their fat intake when making pizza choices.
Pizza: The Student Staple
Domino's Pizza
When the pizza urge strikes, you have 14 restaurants in Lawrence to choose from. Each location's specials and average delivery time (when applicable) is shown below.
Domino's Pizza $5.99 for any small pizza, second pizza with unlimited toppings for $4.
Godfather's
Medium specialty pizza and a medium one-
topping plus dessert
pizza for $12.99
Rudy's PizzaLa
Ruby's Pizza企
Wednesday - small one-topping pizza for $3, medium for $5, large for $7
35-45 min
45.60 mm
Lawrence Pizza
Papa John's
Large seven-topping pizza and large two-topping pizza for $14.90
INNOVATION PIZZA
CORNER
Two large single
tappings for $13.95
25-40 mm
Pyramid Pizza
Buy one pizza, get one
free on Mondays
30.45 mm
Papa Kono's
18-inch one-topping for 30-40 mm
$11.25
Gummy's Large one-topping pizza for $5.99
Valentino's
Pizza Shuttle
Little Caesar's
Large one-topping
stuffed crust pizza and
stuffed cheese bread
for $10.99
Montino's Coupon for $2 off a large, $1.50 off a medium, or $1 off a small
Pizza Shrink
Two two-topping pizzas and two soft drinks for $9.25
NO DELIVERY
Pizza Hut
12-inch one-topping
Triple Decker Pizza
for $9.99
SOURCE: Kansan staff research
Old Chicago: Tuesday – 9-inch one-topping pizza for $4.95
Mr. Gatti's: Pizza, pasta, salad, dessert buffet
$3.99 lunch, $4.99 dinner
"If you make it at home and make it wholesome, you could eat it three or four nights a week, or until you got sick of it," Chapman said. "But if
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
you buy commercial pizza, one night a week is plenty because that stuff is loaded with fat."
2A
Thursday, February 1, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Minority Affairs panel discussion, which was scheduled for 7 tonight, has been canceled.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor Great Britain Direct Exchange Program at 2:30 p.m. today at 4067 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call John Hendrix at 864-1529.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mark Hurt at 842-4713.
P. A.R.T.Y., Promote Alcohol Responsibility Through You, will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the first floor conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center. For more information, call Shelly at 749-1819.
Andrew Tsukiab will sponsor KU Ki-Akido Club at 6 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Matt Stumpe at 844-6592.
Jubilee Cafe will sponsor an informational meeting at 6 p.m. today at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amy Turnbull at 832-1548.
KU Meditation Club will meet
at 6 p.m. today at Alceve D in the Kansas town. For more information, call Ravi Hirekatur at 832-8789.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Parlors in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
Michael Yellow Bird and Ray Pierotti will sponsor Native American Student Association at 7 tonight at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Bessie James at 841-3894
Student Alumni Association will meet at 7 tonight at Adams Alumni Center. For more information, call Carrie Williams at 841-9299.
Omicron Delta Kappa will meet at 7 tonight at the Mahlott Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Hillary Franke at 864-8106.
- KU Cycling will sponsor an informational meeting at 8 tonight at 156 Robinson Center. For more information, call Michelle Blair at 841-9699.
Kansas Women's Basketball Booster Club will sponsor a trip to the Kansas women's basketball game on Sunday. Reservations must be made today. For more information, call Renada Mai-Dalton at 841-8488.
ON THE RECORD
A 38-caliber revolver was stolen Jan. 23 from a 5-Star security car parked in the 2400 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police reported.
County woman was arrested on charges of obtaining prescription drugs through fraudulent means on Saturday, when she attempted to refill a tampered prescription at Osco Drugs, Lawrence police reported.
A 43-year-old Douglas
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.
Arson suspected in Towers elevator
Early morning fire extinguished quickly
By Amy McVey Kansan staff writer
An elevator fire in Tower A of Jayhawker Towers early yesterday morning has sparked an aggravated arson investigation.
KU police said the fire was detected at 5:29 a.m. in the north elevator car of Tower A. Richard Cook, assistant
manager of Jayhawk Tower, said he found the fire after hearing a fire alarm and routinely opening elevator doors. He put out the fire at 5:31 a.m. with a portable extinguisher before the Lawrence Fire Department arrive
Although everyone was evacuated and no one was hurt, the fire could have posed a serious threat because so many people were in the building early in the morning, said Allen Johnson, acting battalion chief for the fire department.
Hartmann said.
The fire department and KU police are still investigating the cause of the fire. Because of the fire's unusual nature, aggravated arson is a possibility, said Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek of KU police.
"I thought it was anotherfake alarm."
Stefan Hartmann lives in Tower A and was home when the elevator caught on fire.
"I thought it was another fake alarm," said Hartmann, Baden-Wurtenberg, Germany, junior.
Stefan Hartmann Tower A resident
But 30 seconds later he knew the alarm was real.
The fire damaged the lining of the elevator car, and melted the elevator's grid protector and electronic paneling.
"I saw the smoke, and I turned to my roommates and said, 'We better get out of here, this one's for real,'"
Matt Aschenbrener, Jayhawker Towers complex director, said repairs on the elevator would start today and would take about two weeks to finish.
KU police estimated the fire caused $10,000 in damages.
Matt Aschen-
KU police don't have any suspects but said that anyone with information about the fire should call KU Crime Stoppers at 864-8888.
KU Crime Stoppers is offering a reward of $200 or more for any information leading to the apprehension of a suspect in the case.
Weather
MIGH LOW
Atlanta 40 ° • 30 °
Chicago 12 ° • -10 °
Des Moines, Iowa 5 ° • 0 °
Kansas City, Mo. 15 ° • 4 °
Lawrence 10 ° • 3 °
Los Angeles 61 ° • 55 °
New York 28 ° • 14 °
Omaha, Neb. 5 ° • 0 °
St. Louis 35 ° • 20 °
Seattle 17 ° • 7 °
Topeka 12 ° • 4 °
Tulsa, Okla. 25 ° • 15 °
Wichita 18 ° • 5 °
HIGH LOW
Atlanta 40 ° • 30 °
Chicago 12 ° • -10 °
Des Moines, Iowa 5 ° • 0 °
Kansas City, Mo. 15 ° • 4 °
Lawrence 10 ° • 3 °
Los Angeles 61 ° • 55 °
New York 28 ° • 14 °
Omaha, Neb. 5 ° • 0 °
St. Louis 35 ° • 20 °
Seattle 17 ° • 7 °
Topeka 12 ° • 4 °
Tulsa, Okla. 25 ° • 15 °
Wichita 18 ° • 5 °
TODAY
Chance for light snow.
10 3
FRIDAY
Mostly cloudy and bitterly cold.
5 -3
SATURDAY
Partly cloudy and cold.
15 0
TODAY
Chance for light snow.
10 3
FRIDAY
Mostly cloudy and bitterly cold.
5-3
SATURDAY
Partly cloudy and cold.
15 0
Source: Chian-Wei Chang and Seth A. Loyd, KU Weather Service
CORRECTION
An article about the Computer Center on page 7A of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. The money to purchase the new lark central processing unit came from the academic computing budget, not from dial-in account fees. The new modern lines were added by Networking and Telecommunications Services.
Axing: University to conduct nationwide search for new provost
Continued from Page 1.
In December, the task force on administration and re-engineering released two suggested models for the administrative structure.
the authority to act, identify who has the responsibility to act and who is accountable for the actions. We need to identify these things and build them into the culture of the University."
Hemenway said the new structure was similar to the task force's second model but that he had made
his own changes. Most notably, Hemenway did not follow the task force's recommendation to move graduate studies from the office of research, graduate studies and public service to the area of academic affairs.
"I think that most people on the task force will agree with most of it, but nobody got everything they wanted," Schroeder said. "In general, Chancellor Hemenway has made some excellent choices."
Stephen Schroeder, task force chairman, said he was generally pleased with Hemenway's model.
Hemenway appointed a fourmember implementation team to help iron out remaining details and recommend individuals for particular positions.
The implementation team members are: Shulenburger; Lindy Eakin, associate executive vice chancellor; Sally Frost-Mason, acting dean of liberal arts and sciences; and Del Shankel, former chancellor and special counselor to the chancellor.
Even though Shulenburger likely will be competing for the provost position, Hemenway said it was
important to have Shulenburger on the implementation team because he is an integral part of the administration.
Hemenway said the new structure had fewer jobs but that there would be no layoffs. As individuals leave the University and retire, their jobs will not be filled, and the administration will shrink.
Most positions will be filled internally, but searches may be conducted if needed, Hemenway said. A search committee for the provost position will be named next week.
Artists - Illustrators - Designers
WHAT CAN YOU DO FOR $500?
Create a KU-theme design that can be used on T-shirts, advertisements, and banners directed toward the student market.
CASH CONTEST FOR CURRENTLY ENROLLED KU STUDENTS
Pick up rules and entry form at the Kansas Alumni Association Adams Alumni Center,1266 Oread Ave.,3rd floor.
Deadline for entries is March 15. 1996.
INTRUST
Bank
Sponsored by Intrust Bank and the Kansas Alumni Association
KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 1, 1996
3A
Filmmaker to share experience at KU
University included as one of 10 stops at Burns' request
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
Ken Burns wasn't invited to the University of Kansas, but he's coming anyway to lecture about baseball, politics, and why he chose film to reflect them.
Center. The lecture is free and open to the public. Tickets for Burns' lecture are limited to four per person and can be obtained at the Student Union Activities office in the Kansas Union.
Burns, creator of the public television documentaries The Civil War and Baseball, requested that the University be one stop on his 10-stop national lecture tour of universities. Burns' lecture, Sharing the American Experience, is at 8 p.m. on Feb. 13 at the Lied
Howard Sypher, chairman of communication studies, said the Washington Speaker's Bureau contacted him with Burns' specific request for the University to be a part of the list. Burns' request was then approved by General Motors, who is sponsoring the tour, and graciously accepted by the University.
Sypher said Burns likely chose Kansas because he wanted to hit a few universities in the Heartland during his tour of the nation.
"He is an excellent example of someone who used the medium of film to hold a mirror up to American life," Williams said.
The lecture is the main attraction of a Celebration of the 100th Anniversary of American Film being held throughout the semester, said William Andrews, director of the Hall Center for the Humanities and professor of English.
At previous lectures at the University of Syracuse and the University of Michigan, Burns' lecture featured a variety of topics from history to politics. The lecture's message centered on why he chose filmmaking to teach people about history and its social significance.
"For many of us, we are brought to our history in just this fashion — story, memory anecdote," Burns said at a Syracuse lecture. "These emotional connections become a kind of glue, which makes the most complex of past events stick in our minds and, particularly, in our hearts."
Burns was the director, producer, cowriter, chief cinematographer, music direc
tor and executive producer of the public television series Baseball, which is more than 18 hours long and took more than four years to make. His documentary The Civil War was the most-watched series in the history of public television in the United States and won more than 40 major film and television awards, including two Emmy Awards and two Grammy Awards.
In the previous lectures, Burns has criticized television for not treating the present with any context or perspective. He has criticized those in Congress who want to cut government funding to public television and other art groups.
"Let me say the marketplace could not have made — and to this day could not make — my Civil War series or the baseball series, or indeed any of these films I have worked on," he said.
Well-known filmmakers to celebrate film
Medium turns 100 in America this year
By Jason Strait Kansan staff writer
On April 23, 1886, the film medium was introduced to the United States.
In honor of that cinematic event, A Celebration of the 100th Anniversary of American Film is being held by the Hall Center for the Humanities in cooperation with the department of theatre and film this semester.
The celebration began last week with Hollywood filmmaker and KU graduate Mike Robe receiving a Distinguished Kansan Award.
In addition to the Robe tribute, the University's film celebration will include three documentary filmmakers' lectures and various film series.
Ken Burns will lecture at 8 p.m. on Feb. 13 at the Lied Center; Soraya Mire will screen her film Fire Eyes at 9:30 p.m. Tuesday in Alderson Auditorium and regional filmmaker John Altman will lecture at 7 p.m. on Feb. 29 in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
KU faculty also will present a mini-course called The American Cine-Century: Mapping a Medium, a screening of American documentary films Feb. 24 and a 10-hour film festival March 10 in the Kansas Union.
"We wanted to recognize the impact of film," said William Andrews, director of the Hall Center and professor of English. "Film has been not only a mirror but a lens. It's a way we can look at our culture and lives. We wanted to look at these people who held that camera up."
The celebration's feature attraction will be Ken Burns' lecture Sharing the American Experience, Andrews said.
said Burns would provide the celebration with the perspective of one of the best documentary filmmakers in the world.
"He's not making up a new story, he's giving us stories we've all seen and putting them in a package so we can understand them more completely," Bergsaid.
Chuck Berg, professor of theatre and film.
Berg said he approached Andrews with the idea of a film celebration a couple of years ago, and Andrews was all for the idea.
"It's a date that's a landmark," Berg said. "It's when the American public was introduced to film, and we're holding this celebration in honor of that."
Wealth of information awaits researchers at archives
University's memories housed in little-utilized collections
By Heather Kirkwood
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas has a hidden treasure that many students don't know exists.
tained or where it was.
Located on the top floor of the Spencer Research Library behind Strong Hall, University Archives house the history of the University.
However, Eric Eicher, Colby graduate student, was not sure what the Archives concluded that those who need to use the archives will find it.
"Do you mean by archives the library's special collections?" he asked.
Established in 1969, the archives contain thousands of dusty boxes full of official and unofficial publications, theses, minutes, correspondence, student records, photographs, blueprints, financial records, yearbooks, movie films, video tapes and sound recordings dating back to 1866.
But the fact most students don't know about University Archives does not concern Kehde or Barry Bunch, who have been collecting and organizing the University's history for 26 and 17 years, respectively. They have concluded that those who need to use the archives will find it.
Every day Kehde and Bunch comb local newspapers looking for stories about the University, update the photo collection, which numbers 980,000, and help researchers find documents.
"We're super secretaries — that's all we are," Kehde said. "There is nothing glamourous, or glorious, or woody-zoohy about it."
Even though Kehde and Bunch consider their jobs mundane, Amber Reagan-Kendrick, Lawrence graduate student, said doing research at the archives was fascinating. Reagan-Kendrick is working on a dissertation
about the experiences of African-American students between 1870 to 1970.
"I just love what I do," she said. "I don't know if people believe me or if they think I'm brown-nosing, but I really enjoy what I do."
Reagan-Kendrick has dug through old issues of the University Daily Kansan, correspondence from the past 15 chancellors and publications such as the Dove, an unofficial liberal newspaper with a culturally diverse staff published between 1925 and 1951.
Reagan-Kendrick said that the archives were invaluable to her research and were critical for students who wanted to learn from the past.
Theatre honored at festival
By Jason Stralt
Kansan staff writer
KU students and faculty were honored with awards last week during the regional Kennedy Center/American College Theatre festival in St. Louis.
University entrants included the productions The Adding Machine and The Devil's Game.
Mark Reaney, associate professor of theatre and film, received an award for his technical work on The Adding Machine, and Ronald Willis, professor of theatre and film, was honored for his direction of the virtual reality production.
The Adding Machine is still in contention for the national competition at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., in April. Willis said response at the festival was encouraging and the decision for nationals would be made in mid-March.
"They were quite complimentary with our integration of virtual reality and theatre," Willis said. "They said they were transfixed by a sense of wonder by something that was so exciting."
English Alternative Theatre founder Paul Lim was honored for his contributions to theatre at the festival, and as founder of the alternative theatre, an organization devoted primarily to producing original scripts written by KU students.
the alternative theatre's production The Devil's Game is no longer in contention for nationals, but the festival's experience was extremely helpful for the students, Lim said.
"Everyone was extremely positive about The Devil's Game," Lim said. "I talked to one judge who said the first thing written on his notes was 'wow.'"
Other winners were: Alan Yeong, graduate student, first for graduate costume design; Daisey Hethcoat, Rogersville, Mo. senior, second place for undergraduate design.
Students say skating on Potter Lake is cheap frozen fun
Wil Averill, Lawrence senior, and Bo Price, Wichita senior, both received awards for student playwrights.
Irene Ryan Scholarship Competition: Brian Paulette, Lenexa junior, finalist; Jenifer Nichols, Topeka junior, semifinalist; Emmie Hsu, Topeka junior, semifinalist.
By R. Adam Ward Kansan staff writer
Frigid weather can be hard on cars, but it presents opportunities for students interested in skating.
And students with their own skates can do it right on campus at Potter Lake.
"It's kind of hard to find things to do in the winter time," said Rhonda Houser, Emporia senior. "It's nice to get outside and exercise instead of going to Robinson."
Houser said expense was a big issue for students that skated on Potter Lake, and so was the convenience of having a place to skate that was close to campus. Houser said she also enjoyed skating on natural lakes rather than big skating rinks.
crowded than skating rinks."
"I learned on natural ice," she said.
"It's not so smooth, and it's a lot less
Nils Jergensen, Colorado Springs, Colo., senior, also likes skating on Potter Lake. However, when he first started skating on the lake, he said he was afraid that he might be breaking a University rule.
There are no regulations or laws concerning skating on the lake, and it is legal to do it, said Gayle Reece, KU police community education and media officer.
Jergensen is the captain of the KU hockey team and said he wished the hockey team could practice on the lake, rather than paying $200 an hour at Shawnee Mission Rinks. However, he said it was impractical to practice at Potter Lake because many hockey team members had
"I have seen people skating when I wish they wouldn't, but it's up to their individual judgment," she said.
day classes and at night it was impossible to see the puck.
"Usually the weather is so unpredictable that you cannot skate during the day," he said. "But because it hasn't gotten above 30 degrees during the day, the past couple of days has been ideal for skating."
Jergensen said he talked to the hockey team at Kansas State University about playing a game on Potter Lake but that were problems with the idea.
The largest obstacle is the unpredictability of the weather, he said. Other problems are making the lake smooth enough for hockey and keeping people off of the lake.
89
However, Jergensen said he thought the problems could be overcome and predicted that a game might take place on Potter next year.
David Hill, St. Louis, Mo., Junior, and Nils Jorgensen, Colorado Springs, Colo., senior, practice their hockey skills yesterday on Potter Lake. The University of Kansas has no rules regarding skating on the lake.
Gina Thornburg/ KANSAN
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4A
Thursday, February 1, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Out in four less likely with enactment of tuition plan
You can't squeeze blood out of a turnip. At the University of Kansas, however, administrators will attempt to squeeze more tuition money out of your wallets.
With linear tuition, which goes into effect this summer, students will pay by the hour instead of by a flat rate. The cost to the student planning to graduate in four years will rise.
Kansas requires 124 hours for most department degrees. That means an average of 15.5 hours per semester to graduate on time. Under the flat rate, a student graduating in four years will pay $7,064. With linear tuition, that jumps to $7,812.
Of course, that's just for instate students. Out-of-staters can expect the hit on the checkbook — or in many cases, the loan payments — to be about $4,000. Tuition now costs about $29,000 for four years, but under linear tuition, that cost will be about $33,000.
The University isn't telling the truth about this money squeeze. Administrators say
THE ISSUE:
Linear tuition
it will eliminate class shopping, thus cutting unneeded classes from the budget. But only a few students drop classes — rarely enough to cancel an entire class. Not only is it based on false reasoning, but linear tuition also is a direct attempt to skirt the issue of a price increase.
The University is a good bargain for students, especially in these times of rapidly inflating tuition costs at colleges across the nation.
The administration discussed a guaranteed fouryear graduation plan, but as we see now, that was mere lip service.
The problem is that the University is going to hurt students who are trying to graduate in four years.
If the University wants to raise tuition, then it should do so. But it shouldn't waste our time and insult our intelligence by saying it's going to improve students' standing.
THOMAS PATTISON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
Chaplain's radical remarks have no place on House floor
Guest chaplain the Rev. Joe Wright outraged Kansas State House members last week with a session-opening prayer spouting the radical right's platform, including remarks about homosexuality and freedom of expression. Republicans defended the prayer in the name of free speech, but political platforms have no place in the opening prayer.
Wright, pastor of Central Christian Church in Wichita, was invited by Rep. Tony Powell, R-Wichita, to give the opening speech. This marks the second time in many years that prayer has been controversial.
Democrats initiated change last year because the Rev. Cecil Washington, minister at Topeka's New Mount Zion Baptist Church, prayed "in the name of Jesus."
This led to the invitation of pastors to give blessing by House members, which allowed multidenominational opportunities. Every group is given equal opportunity under the law, which is both morally and legally correct.
THE ISSUE:
Church and state
Wright overstepped the bounds of prayer, blasting many of the evils of the state.
The prayer spoke more of political issues than of a blessing: "We have endorsed perversion and called it an alternative lifestyle...We have killed our unborn and called it choice...We have polluted the air with profanity and pornography and called it freedom of expression...We have ridiculed the absolute truth of Your word and called it moral pluralism."
Wright was invited to bless the assembly, not to impress his values upon the state. Blessings have been included in the House since the state was founded, and this noble tradition is important to uphold. But regulations should be enacted so the guest chaplain's only purpose is to give a blessing.
TH' V-CHIP
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JOHN WILSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
THE RUDENESS OF RACE
Race long has had a rude presence in my life. While visiting relatives in Alabama as a child in the 1950s, I first saw water fountains marked white and colored. I vaguely re-call being excited. I rushed over to the one marked colored and turned it on. To my deep disappointment, the water came out clear, just like the water back home in Ohio.
"Segregation," my dad said.
"There are places white people don't want colored to go," my elders told me in their soft, southern accents. "And white people make the rules."
I'd never heard the word before. My southern-born parents explained that it was something the white folks down home practiced.
We had plenty of segregation in the North. We just didn't have the signs, which made it cheaper and easier to deny. We had to go across town to the separate-be unequal pool for colored people. The steel mill, our town's biggest employer, held separate picnics for colored and white employees. Everyone had a good time, separately and unequally. I think the colored folks, who today would be called the Black community, were just happy to have something to call their own.
When I was about 6 years old, I saw a commercial for an amusement park near the southern Ohio factory town where I grew up. I chose to go. I told my parents. They looked at each other sadly and informed me that little colored kids couldn't go there. I was crushed.
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
"I wish I was white," I told my parents.
"No, you don't!" Mom snapped. She gave me a terrible look, enough to persuade me instantly that no, I didn't want to go.
I remember I wanted to show them what a terrific kid I was. I felt sorry for the little white children who would be deprived of getting to know me.
Throughout our childhood years, my friendships with white schoolchildren proceeded without interruption. Except for the occasional tiff about some injudicious use of the N-word or some other slur we had picked up from our elders, we played in each other's back yards as congenially as Spanky,Buckwheat and the rest
African-
American
History Month
CLEARANCE PAGE SYNDICATION COLUMNIST
of the gang on the old Hal Roach Our Gang comedies. But I could tell from the way one white friend happily discussed his weekend at LeSourdesville Lake that he did not have a clue of my reality.
"Have you been?" he asked.
"Colored can't go there," I said. "Oh, that can't be" he said.
For a moment I perked up, wondering if the park's policy had changed.
"Have you seen any colored people there?" I asked.
My white friend thought for a moment, then realized that he had not. He expressed surprise. I was surprised that he was surprised.
By the time I reached high school in the early 1960s, LeSourdesville Lake relaxed its racial prohibitions. But the lessons of it stuck with me. It taught me how easily white people could ignore the segregation problem because, from their vantage point, it was not necessarily a problem. White people of low income, high insecurity or fragile ego always could say that, no matter how bad off they felt, at least they were not Black.
Segregation helped them uphold and maintain this illusion of superiority. Unwittingly we played to this illusion, I thought, when my friends and I began junior high school and suddenly were thrust into the hormonal world of adolescence. We quickly gravitated into social cliques according to tastes and race.
"Don't be showin' y color," my parents would admonish me in my youth, before we would go out in public, especially among white folks.
Imbued with many subtle meanings and nuances, the showing of one's color could be an expression of chastisement or warning, admonishment or adulation, satire or self-hatred, anger or celebration. It could mean acting out or showing anger in a loud and uncivilized wav.
The showing of one's color connoted the display of the very worst
stereotypes anyone ever dreamed up about people's behavior
"White people are not really white," James Baldwin wrote in 1961, "but colored people can be extremely colored."
Sometimes you still can hear Black people say, in the heat of frustration, "I almost showed my color today," which is a way of saying they almost lost their cool. Losing one's cool shows weakness in a world where spiritual rigor is one of the few things we can call our own. It is cool, in other words, to be colorless.
"Identity would seem to be the garment with which one covers the nakedness of the self, in which case, it is best that the garment be loose, a little like the robes of the desert, through which one's nakedness can always be felt, and sometimes, discerned." Baldwin wrote in The Devil Finds Work. "This trust in one's nakedness is all that gives one the power to change one's robes."
The cloak of proud Black identity has provided a therapeutic warmth for my naked self after the chilly cocoon of inferiority was imposed early in my life by a white-exalting society. But it is best worn loosely, lest it become as constricting and isolating for the famished individual soul as the garment it replaced.
I cannot forget how persistently the rudeness of race continues to intrude between that dream and me. I can defy it, but I cannot deny it.
We must examine the garments of race and identity to loosen the camouflage and constraints on the naked self and its strengths and vulnerabilities. Only then, beyond the confining fashions of race and nationalism, can we express the full rainbow of our true humanity.
I feel like showing my color today. My true colors.
Clarence Page is a columnist at the Chicago Tribune
Name-calling used to thwart Republicans' budget plans
If you can't beat your political opponents, call them fanatics.
This is the tactic many Democrats and liberals have adopted in their crusade to thwart Republican plans to balance the budget in seven years. In doing so, they are employing a classic debate fallacy — calling your opponent names rather than refuting their arguments.
The Democrat's response to the
Republicans' taking of Congress in 1994 has evolved into a rhetoric of extremism.
STAFF COLUMNIST
JOHN HART
Political commentator Joseph Sobran writes, "A liberal who refuses to violate his principles is an 'idealist.' A conservative who refuses to violate his principles is an 'extremist."
We're told the
we're told the extremists in the radical, ultra-conservative right wing of the Republican party want to make the richer by taking money from children and the elderly.
For example, President Clinton, the Michael Jordan of spin doctors, has accused extremists in the Republican party of wanting to destroy Medicare. The President's representative actually said the Republicans wanted old people to die.
The Republican plan seeks to reduce the growth of Medicare by asking seniors to pay an extra $7 a month more than what the President would ask them to pay.
This wouldn't kill old people any more than a $2 per semester fee increase designed to bail out the bus system would make KU students drop out of school.
The 1994 elections sent a clear signal that the public would not support a continued expansion of social welfare programs — the backbone of the Democrat's vision for 40 years.
Also, the Democrats have adopted many Republican themes, which suggests that they have lost confidence in their own ideas. The President's recent State of the Union address sounded like a Rush Limbaugh impersonation with his calls for downsizing government.
As the rhetoric of extremism becomes more strident as the 1996 elections approach, people should remember that today's extremists often are tomorrow's visionaries.
Almost 25 years ago, Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., expressed alarm at the 20 percent rate of illegitimate births among Black families in the United States. At the time he was called a racist and an extremist. Today, the illegitimacy rate among Blacks is close to 70 percent. It is difficult to find a reasonable person who is not alarmed by that.
Only five years ago, then-Vice President Dan Quayle spoke on the importance of family values in his infamous Murphy Brown speech. He argued that strong two-parent families were good for children and society — a truly revolutionary notion. At the time he was called a narrow-minded sexist bigot. Now, President Clinton frequently appeals to the central theme of Quayle's speech.
Today, a Republican Congress wants to balance the budget by the year 2002. They also are being called extremists for their efforts. Their plan isn't perfect, but they have proposed substantial change.
If they succeed, future generations may treat them as visionaries. The most extreme course of action is to take no action at all.
John Hart is a Shawnee graduate student in Journalism
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---
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Thursday, February 1, 1996
5A
P
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
First-year law students watch court in session at the Snell courtroom. The students had the opportunity to see how the courtroom functions during the hearing, which is held intermittently on campus.
Court, class are now in session
Judges conduct trials for KU law students
By David Teska Kansan staff writer
With the words, "All rise," the bailiff brought both the courtroom—and the classroom—to order.
For two days this week, a three-judge panel from the Kansas Court of Appeals in Topeka heard eight cases in the Snell Courtroom of Green Hall. In addition to being actual court cases, the hearings give first-year law students a glimpse at how a true courtrooms operates. The hearings have been held intermittently on campus for several years.
"For me personally, it's a chance to learn the basics of the appellate process," said Greg G arhart, Topeka first-year law student.
Attending hearings also gave him the opportunity to understand the
interaction that occurs between the judges and attornes, he said.
Steve McAllister, associate professor of law, said much of what students learn about in the adjudication process came from the classroom, so attending a hearing helped to build the students' self-confidence in their abilities to present a case before a judge.
"It dispels a lot of myths about the process," he said.
McAllister said law students took a course in appellate advocacy in the second semester of law school. In that class, the students have to defend a hypothetical case. Seeing lawyers work in a courtroom exposes them to a broad range of presentation styles and abilities.
"They'll see lawyers who are effective and attorneys who aren't prepared." McAllister said.
After the trial, which is without a jury and heard before three judges, the students discuss the law with the judges, McAllister said.
Kansas legal system
The Kansas legal system is divided into three parts. First come the 105 district courts, which can have from one to 20 judges, depending on the size and population of the county. The Douglas County District Court has five judges on the court.
District court cases that get appealed go to the Kansas Court of Appeals. From its panel of nine judges, three are assembled to hear appeals. Appellants who lose have one more step—the seven judges of the Kansas Supreme Court. Those seeking an appeal hearing before the Kansas Supreme Court aren't guaranteed a hearing because the court has discretion on what cases it hears. Kansas hasn't always had a court of appeals. Before 1977, all cases appealed from the district courts went directly to the Kansas Supreme Court.
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River dredging scrutinized
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Legislature looking at increasing fees
By John Collar
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA—The Kansas Legislature is wading into the issue of sand dredging in the Kansas River.
The House Energy and Natural Resources Committee heard testimony yesterday on a bill that would increase the price of sand taken from rivers in Kansas.
Many who testified spoke of the damage to the river that would result from increased dredging operations.
"Private corporations are taking public property from our children and grandchildren." Burr said.
"We shouldn't sell the sand in the river at any price," said Lance Burr of Lawrence, co-founder of Friend of the Kaw, a group formed in response to a proposed dredging location about six miles north of Lawrence.
sand, which is 8 cents per ton, to match the amount paid on sand mined on land, which is 15 cents per ton. The royalty is distributed to the state water plan fund and to local drainage districts for water-quality improvement projects.
the bill under consideration would increase the royalty paid on river
William Craven, legislative coordinator for the Kansas Natural Resource Council, said the royalty disparity placed the river at a disadvantage.
"The current royalty creates an incentive to dredge sand from a public resource without due regard for the environmental implications," Craven said. "The Kansas River, for all practical purposes, is the only river in the state where a recreational corridor can be established."
posed dredging operation in part because of worries that the dredging could affect a city landfill near the river. If the river's course was altered by the dredging, material from the landfill could be released into the water, environmental groups contend.
The Lawrence and Douglas County commissions condemned the pro-
Sand dredging in the river has been a contentious issue for about a year since Victory Sand and Gravel Co. applied for a permit to dredge about six miles north of the bridge over the Kansas River in Lawrence. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is considering Victory's application.
No opponents of the bill testified, although several owners of dredging operations were present, including Edward Moses, managing director of the Kansas Aggregate Producers' Association.
State Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, said she had been working on a bill that would impose a moratorium on dredging in the river.
Last summer, State Rep. Laura McClure, D-Osborne, introduced a similar bill to an interim committee, but it was defeated.
Moses said the bill would not create an incentive for the dredgers to move to land-based operations because dredgers don't pay the royalty for the sand. Companies that purchase sand from dredgers would face a higher price.
Pearson to undergo facelift
Former residence hall slated for renovation
By Scott MacWilliams Kansan staff writer
Once buzzing with students living inside, Joseph R. Pearson Hall now houses offices from departments all across campus that are suffering space shortages.
But current occupants also face the prospect of looking for new quarters.
Bob Bearse, chairman of the University Space Committee, said that the tentative starting date for the renovation of JRP was July 1997.
The building is slated to be renovated and enlarged with funds from the proposed $163 million crumbling classrooms construction funding bill.
"JRP is currently used to house a number of programs," Bearse said. "When it is finished, it will be primarily occupied by the School of Education."
Bearse said that the current occupants would likely have to move when the renovation is underway.
The former residence hall is now home to storage for libraries and purchasing, the child clinical psychology program, housekeeping, the University Affiliated Program, fine arts studios, liberal arts offices and the practice area for the university band.
"As to where they are going to go, I really can't answer that," Bearse said. "At this point, we haven't been able to plan anything, because there is no other comparable space available on campus."
Grant Thurman, program assistant in the Gateway Center in JRP, said they had been there since October, 1994.
"The Gateway Center is a program that works to recruit low-income and first-generation college students to KU to study early childhood
education," Thurman said.
Thurman also said the federal grants that funded the Gateway Center were cut last year.
Wayne Sailor is the director of the University Affiliated Program, and oversees the Gateway Project.
"We haven't made any plans for moving yet," Sailor said. "We can't plan anything until the administration tells us their plans for JRP." Sailor said they were working to replace the lost federal funds for the Gateway Center with private donations, and he was surprised to hear of the proposed July 1997 start date of JRP renovations.
Lindy Eakin, associate executive vice chancellor and member of the University Space Committee, said he was concerned about relocating the library storage from JRP.
"We don't have any place to move those things to," Eakin said. "The ideal situation would be to get the basement of Hoch partly finished, at least the air conditioning and lights."
HEDRICK SMITH
author, documentary producer and former New York Times bureau chief
William Allen White Foundation's 1996 National Citation for Distinguished Service
will receive the
at 1:30 p.m.Friday, February 2 in Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
The national citation has been awarded since 1950 to journalists who exemplify the ideals of William Allen White, who was a nationally influential Kansas editor and publisher until his death in 1944. Hedrick Smith has said that William Allen White "was one of my boyhood heroes as a journalist. Indeed, his autobiography helped inspire me to become a reporter."
Smith, for 26 years a correspondent for the New York Times in Washington, Moscow, Calro, Saigon, Paris and the American South, has published national best sellers: "The Russians" (1976), "The Power Game: How Washington Works" (1988) and "The New Russians" (1990).
In the past six years, he has become known for his television documentaries on PBS. His documentary series, "Inside Gorbachev's USSR," won the Columbia Du Pont Gold Baton, grand prize in all categories of public affairs television in 1991.
Smith's latest book is "Rethinking America," which expands on his PBS documentary series "Challenge to America." Smith explores how innovators in America, Japan and Germany are making schools, businesses, jobs and people work more effectively in the global economy.
---
NATION/WORLD
Thursday, February 1, 1996
7A
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clinton honors achievements of Black women
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton used his annual Black history month proclamation yesterday to urge greater recognition for the achievements of African-American women.
He challenged Americans to "embrace the diverse strands of our story," starting with the contributions of African-American women who have fought for social, economic and political empowerment.
The voices of African-American women have called attention to the twin burdens of racism and
sexism and have invited listeners to discover the richness of traditions kept alive in back kitchens and workrooms." Clinton said.
White House representative Mike McCurry said Clinton saw this year's proclamation as another chance to address the wide gulf between Blacks' and whites' perceptions of American society, a theme he has consistently revisited since issuing a call for racial conciliation in October.
Clinton most recently spoke about race in Houston, McCurry said, during the funeral of Barbara Jordan, the first African-American woman elected to Congress from a Southern state
Clinton again recalled Jordan's legacy in yesterday's proclamation.
He also encouraged teachers to craft lessons around the works of African-American women, citing speeches and writings by women such as abolitionist Sojourner Truth, educator Mary McLeod Bethune and author and Nobel laureate Toni Morrison.
Meanwhile, McCurry said, the Clinton administration continues working on a formal strategy for addressing racial concerns through policies and practices.
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Attack ravages Sri Lankan capital
Suicide bombing collapses bank kills at least 53
The Associated Press
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — In one of the worst attacks in Sri Lanka's 12-year civil war, a truck packed with explosives rammed into the Central Bank yesterday, igniting towering fires in the business and tourist district. At least 53 people died, including the driver, and 1,400 were wounded.
Authorities blamed the attack and a fireball caused by a rocket-propelled grenade moments earlier on the Tamil Tiger rebels, whose 12-year armed campaign for an independent homeland has killed almost 40,000 people. There were no immediate claims of responsibility.
In the chaos after the midday attack, dozens of people were trapped atop burning buildings waving for help. Helicopter gunships tried to pluck survivors from rooftops but were repelled by the heat. Many were rescued by ladders. Those on the streets were taken away in public buses and private cars.
As darkness fell, soldiers armed with assault rifles patrolled the center of Colombo, and drizzling rain forced rescuers to scale back their hunt through unsteady buildings for bodies and survivors.
The director of the National Hospital's trauma unit, Hector Weerasinghe, told The Associated Press that 53 people died. About 1,060 injured people were admitted to two hospitals, 100 in critical condition. Scores of people released after treatment raised the estimated number of injured to 1,400.
Most of the dead and wounded
were in the Central Bank building, where Sri Lanka's gold reserves are held and the country's financial policy is made.
Bank guard Prasanna Wijewardana said a blue truck with three men drove into the security barricade outside the bank. Two men leaped out and started firing automatic weapons.
During the gunfire, a rocket-propelled grenade landed in front of a nearby office building, gougling a crater and shattering windows at The Associated Press office 100 yards away.
Police said the driver of the truck died in the explosion. Hours later, they arrested two others seen fleeing with automatic rifles about a mile from the blast.
The bank building burst into flames, which spread to a half-dozen other buildings. The fires raged for much of the day and thick black smoke blanketed the city, hampering rescue efforts.
The explosion caused the first two floors of the 10-story Central Bank to collapse. The building is a few hundred yards from President Chandrika Kumaratunga's office, the naval headquarters and other government buildings.
City streets were an impenetrable mass of twisted metal, fallen bricks and wrecked office furniture.
Amid the debris outside the bank, police found a small card printed with the message: "This vehicle is carrying 4,000 kilograms (8,800 pounds) of explosives. If you try to stop us, we will blow it up."
Officials blamed Tamil Tiger rebels, and claimed that they were trying to unhinge a government plan to give the Tamil minority greater regional autonomy and end the war. There was no immediate statement from the Tigers, who rarely claim responsibility for their attacks.
NATO removes barriers, rejoins Sarajevo
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — NATO troops have rejoined a Serb-held section of Sarajevo to the rest of the city. They pushed away metal containers and other barriers that had divided the capital's inhabitants for 3 1/2 years.
Sarajevo residents awoke to a surprise yesterday. The Bridge of Brotherhood and Unity, a link over the Miljakara river was open again.
"It's so wonderful," said Maja Davic, a Serb woman. "This is a symbol of the normal life we can live
again."
Serbs on the southern side could watch the streetcars hurtling by in the government-held sector. Muslims looking south saw the avenue leading into the Grbavica neighborhood.
Still, suspicions threaten Sarajevo's Serbs and Muslims later the physical barricades are swept aside.
In Ildza, another Serb-held section of Sarajevo, unidentified gunmen wounded a British NATO driver late yesterday and fired at a NATO Land Rover. Two days before, a U.S. officer was hit in the neck by a sniper's bullet.
NATO officials attribute the shootings to apprehension in Serb-held areas about handing territory to the Muslim-led government by March 19.
Many Serbs would rather leave than have their sectors submit to government control, as stipulated by the U.S.-brokered peace agreement.
The government, meanwhile, has
been demanding that Serbs account for Muslims missing in the war. Muslims seeking information about their loved ones rioted Monday and Tuesday in Tuzla, the northeastern city, headquarters for the 20,000 U.S. troops.
However, the city was peaceful Monday and a Red Cross representative denied reports the organization had suspended operations.
Despite the will for reconciliation, difficulties persisted at the Grbavica crossing.
Serb police arrested and slapped two teen-agers who tried to cross without official permission. Both sides were letting in only those on the approved lists.
The list system began during the war to permit brief reunions of a few
aging or dying relatives.
French NATO troopers supervising shrugged when asked why people were not allowed to cross.
"It's up to the two sides to get their act together," a French soldier said.
Sinisa, a Serb policeman, said he was enforcing orders. But he said he went to the other side to bum a local cigarette available only in government-held Sarajevo.
"I was the first one over last night when they cleared away the barriers," he said. "I approached one of their cops and said, 'how about a Drina?'
"We shook hands and we talked, I knew him from before the war," he said. "It was like darkness was lifting and was being replaced by sunshine."
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Nominations will be taken Jan. 31 and Feb. 1 at a table in the Kansas Union from 10-2:00 p.m.
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1996
Kansas senior dives head first into success
SECTION B
Rojohn expects to break more records in her final season on the Jayhawk diving team
By Dan Geiston
Kansan sportswriter
When Kansas senior diver Michelle Rojohn was diving at Olathe South High School , she placed second in the state as both a junior and a senior.
Kansan sportswriter
Those were the first two years she had ever competed as a diver.
When she came to Kansas as a freshman in 1992, she had never been on a three-meter board. Yet in one of first dual
her first dual meets, she set a new school three-meter record.
Kansas men's and women's diving coach Don Fearon is the first to admit that although Rojohn is a hard worker, diving has always come easy to her.
During the past four years, Rojohn has developed into one of the best divers in the country and one of the best ever at Kansas.
ROJOHN CAREER BESTS
■ One-Meter Diving Dual 303.450 (Nebraska) Championship 461.950
She said she might never even have tried diving had it not been for a career-end knee injury during a high school gymnastics meet.
Three-Meter Diving Dual 316.575 (Nebraska) Championship 541.650
MATT GILBERT
First Kansas diver to earn All-America status 1995
Michelle Rolohn
"The knee injury was so
Finished first overall in the NCAA Zone meet 1995
Big Eight champion on the three-meter board 1994
Scored 285.00 on the three-
meter to set new record (later
broken) 1993
severe, the doctors told me I couldn't compete in gymnastics year round, and it's a year round thing." Rojohn said. "I wasn't doing anything else so I just kind of picked up diving."
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Despite her high school diving success, she was new to the sport and wasn't heavily recruited.
"Her ability was very rough," Fearon said. "There were some mechanical problems, and she had limited experience."
Kansas was the only Division I school that tried to recruit her, and Fearon could only offer her a scholarship that would pay for her books.
Since Rojohan has been at Kansas, she's rewritten the record books as a Jayhawk. She owns every Kansas varsity record in the one-meter and three-meter dual and championship meets. She also holds the conference and Big Eight meet record on the one-meter board.
But her collegiate career was stalled during her freshman year. She was forced to miss the second half of the season with vertigo, which was brought on by an innerear infection.
Shortly thereafter, she had to undergo major reconstructive surgery on her right knee, the same knee that ended her gymnastics career.
Rojohn rehabilitated her knee for about six months and came back just one week before the first dual meet of her sophomore year.
"I was a little worried after that, that I wasn't going to be as strong as I was," she said. "I had just completed high school diving so I still didn't have the experience I felt I needed to have."
Fearon said that when Rojoin came back her sophmore year, it was really the start of her diving career.
RoJohn's junior year was her best season. She was the first Kansas diver to earn All-American status by finishing 13th on the three-meter board and 20th on the one meter at the NCAA Championships. She also came in first overall at the NCAA Zone meet, which she has also qualified for this year.
"I'd really like to win the Big Eights this year," she said. "I want to go to the NCAs, make it to the finals and hopefully finish in the top eight. Top four would be incredible."
Roijohn's continued success hasn't surprised Fearon. "I've known it and believed it all along," he said. "She's a talent. She's got a gift of grace."
'Hawks outshoot Cowboys
Kansas assaults zone with 13 three-pointers
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
In preparing for Oklahoma State, the Kansas men's basketball team expected the Cowboys to play zone defense.
Or maybe it was man-to-man.
"After awhile, I had no clue what they would do," Kansas men's basketball coach Row Williams said.
But it didn't take long for the No. 3 Jayhawks to see that an outsized Oklahoma State team would play zone — and the Cowboys stuck to it for the entire game. Kansas shot holes in the defense, though, and won 84-66 last night in Allen Field House.
The Cowboys are still looking for their first Big Eight Conference victory after falling to 0-5 and 10-7 overall. The victory pushes the Jayhawks' record to 17-1 overall and 5-0 in the conference.
Kansas sophomore guard/forward Billy Thomas led the team with 18 points, hitting five of eight three-point shots. The Jayhawks hit 56.5 percent from behind the arc and recorded 13 three-pointers.
"We haven't proved on a consistent basis that we're able to knock down the outside shots," Kansas junior guard Jerod Haase said. "But Billy started things."
"Everybody was just on," said Kansas freshman forward Paul Pierce, who hit three of four three-point attempts. "I don't even remember somebody missing a shot."
The Jayhawks did miss a few but not many, just as Oklahoma State freshman guard Adrian Peterson did. He was 10 of 17 and scored a game-high 27 points. Peterson's performance, which included 22 second-half points, conjured memories of former Cowboy guard Randy Rutherford, who scored 45 points in the field house last season.
"I was a long way away from that," Peterson said. "I just happened to have the hot hand tonight, but we'll run plays for whomever is hot."
That was Peterson last night, but he could not carry Oklahoma State against Kansas.
With 11:44 remaining in the first half, Oklahoma State junior guard Chianti Roberts hit a layup and narrowed Kansas' lead to 17-15.
A seven-point possession started the Jayhawks on a 15-2 run. Thomas hit a three-pointer with 9:51 in the first half.
The pass to Thomas on the left side of the court came from a driving Calvin Rayford. The senior guard ran into Oklahoma State senior center Jerome Lambert, who retaliated against Rayford. Lambert was whistled for his third personal foul, which drew the wrath of Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton.
Sutton rushed onto the court and picked up a technical foul.
Kansas freshman guard Ryan Robertson hit one of two ensuing free throws. The seven-point possession was capped by Robertson, who hit another three-point shot.
"It's a judgment call, and it didn't cost us the game," Sutton said. "That's a good officiating crew, and I'd be happy to have them call a game any night."
Oklahoma State got back within nine points later in the first half, but Kansas extended its halftime lead to 51-32. The Cowboys never threatened in the second half, only getting as close as 18 points.
But it wasn't a game without error for the Jayhawks. They had 17 turnovers, 11 in the second half. Oklahoma State also got some easy baskets. Thomas said.
Sprint
"We had a few mental breakdowns," he said. "Once you're ahead, you tend to let down. But I think this is the closest we've come to playing a 40 minute game."
Kansas freshman forward Paul Pierce attempts to pass as Oklahoma State guard/forward Jason Skaer defends. Kansas won 84-66 last night.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
TENSION
20
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
Kansas sophomore guard Billy Thomas finished with 18 points last night.
Kansas hits three-point bull's eye
Jayhawks complete 53.8 percent of shots from beyond the arc
By Tom Erickson
Kansan sports editor
Faced with a tough Oklahoma State zone defense, the No. 3 Kansas men's basketball team knew it would have to have good perimeter shooting.
The Jayhawks responded with their best three-point shooting percentage of the season, blistering the Cowboys 84-66 last night in Allen Field House. Kansas made 56.5 percent of its shots from beyond the arc, topping its previous season-best of 53.8 percent against both Utah and Cornell.
Watching so many long-range shots fall through the nets was no surprise to
Kansas coach Roy Williams.
"I've said all along that we're a good shooting team," Williams said.
And the Jayhawks did just that last night. Led by sophomore guard/forward Billy Thomas, who was five for eight from three-point point, Kansas consistently got the points it needed.
"It was one of those nights when everybody was on their game," Thomas said of the Jayhawks' shooting performance. "This is one of the best shooting teams we've had, although we make mistakes now and then."
But miscues were rare for Kansas, as junior guard Jerod Hase and freshman forward Paul Pierce both made three shots from three-point range.
Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said the Cowboys' game plan was to use the zone defense to shut down
"We just shot the ball." Pierce said.
"Everyone felt confident."
Kansas junior center Scot Pollard and sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz and force the Jayhawk shooters to work harder. The effort was futile on both ends, however, as LaFrentz scored 11 points and Pollard five.
LaFrentz said although the zone was intimidating, he managed well.
"They did a pretty good job with it execution-wise," he said. "I just had to push though it. The other guys had a good game, especially Jerod and Paul with the outside shot."
Sutton said Oklahoma State needed a perfect game to win last night, and the effort obviously wasn't enough.
"We couldn't play them man to man on the road," Sutton said. "I felt like we had to play zone so that they could take a chance on their outside shooting, or otherwise Pollard and LaFrentz would wear us down. But they were on tonight."
Point guard shuffle stirs competition
Dixon and Reed benefit from their head-to-head competition in practices
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
They control the tempo of the game. They can kickstart their team's defensive intensity. They are the heart and soul of the Kansas women's basketball team.
Reed transferred to Kansas after playing her freshman season at Iowa. After sitting out her transfer season last year, Reed began this season as the Jayhawks' starter at point guard.
They are junior Tamecka Dixon and sophomore Erinn Reed, Jayhawk point guards.
But due to some early-season struggles, Reed moved back to the bench when senior guard Charisse Sampson returned to the starting lineup from a knee injury.
"I tried to look at it positively," Reed said. "Coach was looking for a combination that complimented each other best."
"In high school, Erinn had to do a lot of things," Washington said. "She doesn't have to do it all here. She just had to get used to her role."
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said Reed, who was a high school All-American in Saginaw, Mich., had to adjust to the point guard role.
Dixon, a former shooting guard, said having the lighting-quick Reed to challenge her in practice had helped her learn the position.
"I think playing against each other every day in practice is making us stronger." Dixon said.
Washington agreed that the competition between the two in practice had helped both players improve their game.
"Erinn practices very hard, and I've seen Tamecka's intensity level in practice greatly improve this year."
"I think playing against each other every day...is making us stronger."
Tamecka Dixon
Kansas juniorguard
Washingour hand.
Reed and Dixon both said their practice competition sometimes got fairly intense.
"If people came in off the street and watched us in practice, they might think we're enemies or something the way we go at it on the court," Dixon said.
Despite the heated practice battles, Dixon said the two point guards were still close off the court.
Since then, Dixon has been determined to step into that role.
"When it's all said and done on the court, we leave it there," Dixon said.
After an upsetting loss to Oklahoma earlier this season, Washington said one thing the Jayhawks had locked was a leader on the floor.
"I went to coach's office, and I told her that I was the leader she was looking for," Dixon said.
TULSA
Andy Rullestad/KANBAK
Kansas junior guard Tamecka Dixon (left) has been called upon this season to play both guard positions.
Washington took Dixon at her word, and she has seen the results on the floor in the Jayhawks' last two victories against Oklahoma State and Kansas State.
"She's really working hard to be that leader for us," Washington said. "It's not easy to put yourself last, but that's what a great leader has to do."
Which makes some critics argue that Dixon still has the mentality of a scorer, not that of a true point guard. Dixon does lead Kansas in scoring, averaging 18 points a game, but she disagreed with those who say she can't be a true point guard.
"Last year, I didn't totally understand when I had to distribute the ball," Dixon said. "Now, I know when to distribute the rock, and when to take my shot."
---
2B
Thursday, February 1, 1995
SCORES & MORE
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Top 25 Fared
By The Associated Press
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"How the top 25 teams in The Associated Press' college basketball poll fared Wednesday."
1. Massachusetts (19-0) did not play. Next: at Temple, Thursday.
2. Kentucky (17-1) did not play. Next: vs.
Florida, Saturday.
3. Kansas (16-1) beat Oklahoma State 84-66.
Next: vs. Kansas State, Sunday.
4. Connecticut (20-1)打Rutgers 77-59.
5. St. John at a Madison Garden, Squares.
6. Cincinnati (20-1)
5. Cincinnati (15-1) beat North Carolina Charlottesville 78-84. Next vs. Illinois State, Friday
7. Utah (16-3) did not play. Next; vs. Texas-EI
Paso. Thursday.
- 6. Villanova (17-3) did not play. Next: vs. Pittsburgh, Saturday.
8. North Carolina (15-4) vs. Duke. Next: at
North Carolina State, Saturday.
67. Next: vs. Notre Dame, Saturday.
10. Penn State (15-2) lost to Michigan State
11. Memphis (15-3) did not play. Next: at DePaul, Thursday.
12. Wake Forest (14-3) beat North Carolina
State 68-22. Next: vs. Saint Louis at Greens-
ington
14. Arizona (15-3) did not play. Next: vs.
Washington, Thursday.
13. Vignitaigh (15-2) beat north Carolina
Greensboro 74-48. Nexit at Rhode Island, Sat-
day.
16. Texas Tech (17-1) beat Oral Roberts 78-
14. Next at Rice, Saturday.
16. Iowa (15-5) did not play. Next: vs. No. 10
Peace State, Saturday
15. Purdue (16-4) beat No. 20 Michigan 80-
59. Northwestern State Saturday.
58. Next, vs. Michigan State, Saturday.
59. Next, vs. Michigan State, Saturday.
18. Syracuse (14-6) did not play. Next: vs.
Miami, Thursday.
19. UCLA (13-5) did not play. Next: vs. Oregon, Thursday.
20. Michigan (14-7) lost to No. 17 Purdue 80-
59. Next at Ohio State, Saturday.
21. Boston College (12-4) did not play. Next: vs. Providence, Thursday.
22. Auburn (15-5) lost to Vanderbilt 76-62.
Next: v. Mississippi State, Saturday.
23. Eastern Michigan (15-2) lost to Ohio University.
24. Western Michigan (6-2) lost to Kentucky.
24. Clemson (13-4) did not play. Next: at Duke Saturday.
25. Georgia Tech (13-9) did not play. Next at Maryland, Saturday.
Wednesday's College Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press
EAST Adelphi 65 Stony Brook 52
Adelphi 65, Stirling Brook 52
C.W. Post 16, Concordia, N.Y. 52
Coast Guard 48, Kings Point 58
College 19, Lafayette 76
Fairmont St. 83, West Liberty 77
Freddonia St. 83, Nazareth, N.Y. 60
Lewisville, Roberts Wesleyan 58
Georgetown 91, West Virginia 67
Hunter 77, Medgar Evers 72
Johns Hopkins 71, Dickinson 50
Marist 77, Robert Morris 70
Mass.-Lowell 75, New Hampshire Coll. 61
N.Y. Tech 100, Southampton 89
Navy 82, Lehigh 83
Notre Dame 86, St. John's 83
Pace 82, Dowling 67
Phila. Theatre 75, Queens Coll. 49
Scranton 77, FDU-Madison 74
Skidmore 80, Maloy 74
St. Peter's 86, St. Francis, Pa. 54
St. Rose 128, Mercy, N.Y. 89
Trenton St. 80, Ramapo 54
Ursulus 80, Muhlenberg 71
W. Virginia St. 84, Concord 72
Waynesburg 56, Grove City 53
SOUTH
Davidson 86, VMI 79
Jason 86, VMI 79
Delaware St. 75, Morgan St. 66
East Carolina 66, Richmond 58
Furman 60, Georgia Southern 38
Hampden-Sydney 84, Guilford 76
Lenoir-Rhine 85, Newberry 76
Louisville 57, South Florida 54
Morehouse 100, Clark Atlanta 93
North Florida 64, Eckerd 58, OT
Old Dominion 15, N.C.-Wilmington 59
Pembroke St. 64, Francis Marion 58
South Carolina 82, Wofford 55
St. Andrew's 88, Longwood 70
Tennessee 67, Mississippi 52
Va. Commonwealth 94, George Mason 81
Va. Westley 78, Washington & Lee 57
Virginia Tech 74, N.C.-Greenburg 48
Wake Forest 66, N. Carolina St. 62
Westbrook 107, Husson 93
William & Mary 68, James Madison 51
KANSAS ST. 77, NEBRASKA 68
**BEDSHAK** (17.54)
Garner 3-7-1-37, Boone 3-5-0-07, Moore 2-5-2-
2-6, Lue 1-4-4-7-6, Strickland 7-14-0-18, Wald
4-11-0-10, Hamilton 2-4-3-6-7, Baddett 2-5-0-
5, Marowski 1-2-0-2, Totals 25-57 19-19-68.
**KANSAS ST** (14.5)
Young 3-6-2-4-8, Davis 16-4-5-17-7 Eaker 6-8-3-4-15, Hatch 8-14-0-18, May 3-7-1-2-7, Rhodes 1-2-0-2-0, Dies 0-2-0-0, Swartzendrion 3-5-3-4-10. Tales 30-58 14-21-77.
No. 3 KANAS S48, OKLAHOMA ST. 66
1 ANOHAST. 40, 72
Roberts 4-12 1-10, Krager 2-9 2-7, Lambert 2-4 0-0, Alexander 1-3 3-6, Peterson 10-17 4-4 27, Owens 1-4 0-0, Dorey 0-4 0-0, McQuarters 2-5 0-0, Miles 1-3 0-1 2, Warner 1-1 0-0, Lewis 1-2 0-0, Totals 25-67 10-14 6.
KANSAS (17-1)
LaFrentz 5-7 1-2 11, Pierce 6-9 0-2 15, Pollard 1-3 3-5 5, Vaughn 1-2 1-2 3, Haase 5-1 0-0 13,
Williams 2-3 0-4 3, Pearson 2-4 0-0 5, Pugh 1-3 0-2, Rayford 1-1 0-0 2, Thomas 5-8 3-4 18,
Robertson 1-2 1-4 4, Whatley 1-1 0-0 2, Ransom 0-1 0-0 0, McGrath 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 31-54 9-13 84.
TV
SPORTS WATCH
(All times Central) TVSPORTSWATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Tuesday, Jan. 30 (schedule to change and/or blackouts):
TUESDAY, JAN.30
7:30 a.m.
ESPN — NCAA basketball, Iowa at Indiana
ESPN2 — NCAA basketball, Seton Hall at Pittsburgh.
8 p.m.
PRIME — NCAA basketball, Ala.-
TNT — NBA, Chicago at Houston.
0:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA basketball, LSU at Arkansas.
10 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA basketball, St.
Louis at Memphis
Mich. Supermiddleweights, Thomas Tate vs. Rocky Gannon.
PRO BASKETBALL
All Times CST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L Pct GB L10 Streak Away Conf
Orlando 31 12 714 - 641 12-0 2.9 12-8 18-7
New York 27 15 743 3/4% 6/4 Won 3 15-8 12-7 16-
Washington 21 15 500 9/5% 5/5 Won 15 8-6 16-5 11-5
Miami 19 25 432 12/12 % 5/5 Lost 2 12-8 7/11-14
New Jersey 17 27 365 14 4-6 Lost 12-8 13-8 4-4
New York 17 27 365 14 4-6 Lost 12-8 13-8 4-4
Boston 16 27 372 15 2-8 Won 1 Won 10-14 6-13 11-14
Philadelphia 16 27 372 15 2-8 Won 1 Won 10-14 6-13 11-14
Chicago 39 3 829 — 10 10Won 16 22-0 17-3 23-2
Indianapolis 19 4.748 10/1 9% 10-1 Won 16 12-0 17-3 12-8
Atlanta 24 19.558 1/1 8% 8-2 Lost 2 15-10 9-1 16-10
Cleveland 22 20.535 1/1 8% 8-2 Won 16 19-0 18-12
Central Division
Detroit 21 20.512 179-5 5-5 Lost 2 13-7 8-13 11-14
Charlotte 21 20.512 179-5 6-5 Lost 2 13-7 8-13 11-14
San Diego 21 20.512 179-5 6-5 Lost 2 13-7 8-13 11-14
Toronto 12 31 219 279 27/9 3-7 Lost 3 10-13 2-18 8-21
W L J Pt GB 175 Stl Street Awave Conv
San Antonio 8 10-5 6.175 G-10 Won 4 16-1 5-11
San Diego 8 10-5
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
Uahson 29 18 1674 - 7-3 Wost 15 16 4 13-10 17-10
Utah 29 18 644 - 16% Wost 1 Lost 1 6-4 13-10 17-10
Houston 19 28 1674 - 16% Wost 1 Lost 1 6-4 13-10 17-10
Dallas 14 27 341 - 16% Wost 1 Lost 8-12 8-15 9-12
Minnesota 11 34 321 16% 1%-7 Lost 1 8-12 9-12 3-19
Vancouver 10 34 227 19 4-6 Lost 3 7-14 3-20 3-
Seattle 31 12 714 - 9-1 Won 6 19-2 13-9 19-
Sacramento 23 16 590 - 7-4 Won 4 15-5 18-
11-13 11-11
L.A. Lakers 25 18 581 - 7-4 Won 4 16-6 9-
12-15 12-12
Portland 21 23 477 11½ 5-Lost 2 14-8 7-15 11-14
Phoenix 21 39 452 11½ 5-Lost 2 10-12 9-11 11-14
Golden State 16 15 25 419 14 - 3-Lost 12-12 9-16
16-15
L.A. Clippers 16 28 281 15½ 4-8 Lost 2 10-12 6-15
Thuradav'a Games
L.A. Clippers 16 28 .381 15% 4-6 Lost 2 10-12 6-
4-11 10-12 15% 4-6 Lost 2 10-12 6-11
Oklahoma New York, 6:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at Miami, 8:30 p.m.
Houston at Charlotte, 9:30 p.m.
Indiana at Detroit, 10:30 p.m.
Seattle at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
Chicago at Sacramento, 9:30 p.m.
Friday
Portland at Albany 8:30 p.m.
Alaska at Washington 6:30 p.m.
Boston at Indiana 8:30 p.m.
Phenix at Illinois 8:30 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Utah 8:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Vancouver 6:30 p.m.
Chicago at LA. Lakers at 8:30 p.m.
Toronto at Golden State 8:30 p.m.
INTRAMURALS
INTRAMURAL POLLS
Jock's Nitch's Top 10
1. PhDelt (1-60)
2. U Bet (5-1)
3. Aerial Display (5-1)
4. Savy Veterans (5-1)
5. Drug Dealer (3-1)
6. Pike (2-1)
7. PhDelt 2
8. Ph Pis (1-5)
9. Scott Wards (3-1)
10. Sigma Chi (0-1)
Results
v Count
$ Snatch
$ The Rob Cobins
$ Screaming Bgs
$ Scammy Fire Dm
$ Dye
$ Dive del 1, 36-33
$ AKL 3
$ Slow Bows
$ Kappa Swig (Wh)
$ I. Beta (1, 4)
Others: ZBT (1-1), AKL (1-1), Beta (1-0)
NOTES & QUOTES
Hastings' Women's Top Five
| | Resource |
| :--- | :--- |
| 1.4U2NV (2-0) | v ST Lawrence #2 |
| AGD (1-1) | v PI Beta Phi |
| Women of La Mancha | v Dangerous Dams |
| Tri Delt (1-1) | v Alpha Chi Omega |
| Alpha Delta Pi (0-0) | v PI Beta Phi |
Results
Note: Records are from the Pre-Holiday tournament. Chad Rader, not the sponsors, compiled the rankings.
Note: Records are from the Pre-Holiday tou
TRANSACTIONS
■ The Women's Basketball Boosters Club will charter a bus for the Kansas women's basketball game against rival Missouri in Columbia this Sunday. The cost is $15. At 8 a.m. on Sunday the bus will depart from Allen Field House. Pick ups in the Kansas City area are available. For more information contact Renate Mai-Dalton at 841-8488. The deadline for reservations is today at 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday
BASEBALL
USA BASEBALL—Elected John P. Kelly at-large member
KANSAS CITY ROYALS-
Signed Bob Hamelin, catcher,
to a one-year contract. Named
Tom Poquette named minor
league hitting instructor, and
Sixto Lezcano hitting coach at
Omaha of the American Association
National League
CHICAGO CUBS—Agreed to terms with Sammy Sosa, outfielder, on a two-year contract. LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Agreed to terms with Eric Weaver, Rick Gorecki and Roberto Duran, pitchers, on one-year contracts.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Agreed to terms with Benito Santiago, catcher, on a one-year contract and Rick Wrona, catcher, on a minor league contract. Designated Tom Marsh, outfielder, for assignment.
BASKETBALL National Basketball League
NBA—Fined New Jersey Nets coach Butch Beard $7,500; Golden State Warriors guard Tim Hardaway $5,000; and Orlando Magic center Shaquille O'Neal $5,000; for their comments and actions involving officials in games Jan. 27.
HOUSTON ROCKETS—Signed Henry James, forward, to a second 10-day contract.
ORLANDO MAGIC—Activated Horace Grant, forward, from the injured list. Placed Darrell Armstrong, guard, on
the injured list.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS— Signed Rumelai Robinson, guard, to a contract for the rest of the season.
FOOTBALL
National Football League NEW ORLEANS SAINTS—Named Jim Haslett defensive coordinator.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS
Named Monte Kiffin defensive coordinator.
NEW YORK JETS—Signed Darrick Owens, wide receiver, and Melvin Crawford, 'defensive back'
WASHINGTON REDSKINS—Signed Patrise Alexander, linebacker; Phil Kinney, guard; Anthony McDowell, fullback; Greg McMurtry, Michael Watkins and Bryan Reeves, wide receivers; Matt Storm, tackle; and Eric Sutton, cornerback.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
National Hockey League
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS—
Loaned Patrik Carnback, left wing-center, to Cologne of the German Elite League for the remainder of the season.
DALLAS STARS—Activated Darcy Walkaluk, goaltender, from the injured reserve list. Sent Jordan Walkaluk, goaltender, to Michigan of the IIHF.
EDMONTON OILERS—Loaned Tyler Wright, center, to Cape Breton of the AHL. Recalled Jason Bonsignore, center, from Cape Breton.
OTTAWA SENATORS—Named Andre Savardi assistant coach.
MONTREAL CANADIENS—Reassigned Tomas Vokun, goilie, from Wheeling of the ECHL to Fredericton of the AHL
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS—Loaned Ryan Romaniuk, left wing, to Hershey of the AHL Reassigned Ryan Sittler, left wing, from Hershey to Mobile of the ECHL.
ST. LOUIS BLUES—Loaned Ken Sutton and Christer Olsson, defensemen, to Worcester of the AHL. Recalled Terry Virtue, defenseman, from Worcester.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING—Recalled Chris LiPuma, defenseman, from Atlanta of the IHL.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS— Loaned Mike Pomichter, center, to St. John's of the AHL
Compiled from The Associated Press.
SPRING 1996 CAREER AND EMPLOYMENT FAIR
Abercrombie&Fitch
Adia/ Martin-Smith Personnel
American Multi- Cinema
American Red Cross
Astor Universal Corp.
Astra Merck, Inc.
B'nai B'rith Bee Camp
BDM - Oklahoma
Blockbuster Video
Boatmen's First National Bank
Boeing Commercial Airplane Group
Boys and Girls Club
Camp Birchwood
Camp Buckskin
Camp Chi
Camp Winadu
Camps Airy and Louise
Camp Lincoln & Lake Hubert
Century Personnel
Cessna Aircraft
Champs Sports
City of Lawrence
Coastal Mart
College Pro Painters
Contemporary Group
Cottonwood, Inc.
Deluxe Check Printers
Digi Postal Corp.
Division of Family Services
DST Systems
Ecumenical Christian Ministries
Enterprise Rent-A-Car
Equitable
Famous Footwear
Franklin Financial Services
Frito Lay
Frontier Corp.
Gallup Organization
Greene Family Camp
Heartspring
Hoechst Marion Roussel
Informix Software, Inc.
International Studies Office
J.C. Penney Co.
Johnson County Parks & Recreation
Jones Store Company
Kansas State Admin. Dept. of Personnel
Kansas Technology Enterprise Corp.
Lakemary Center, Inc.
Lawrence Police Department
Luby's Cafeterias, Inc.
Manpower Temporary Services
th of Dimes- Greater Kansas City Area
Merck & Co., Inc.
FULL-TIME, PART-TIME, INTERNSHIPS, SUMMER CAMPS AND VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES
Mt. Oread Book Shop
National Academy of Railroad Science
National Tire Warehouse
Naval ROTC
New York Life
NK Lawn and Garden
Nolan Real Estate Services
Northwestern Mutual Life-Ertz Agency
Northwestern Mutual Life-Hames Agency
Olsen Staffing Services
Osoo Drug / Sav - on Drug
Output Technologies
Overland Park KS Police Department
Overland Park Marriott Hotel
People to People International
Pepsi Cola Co.
Pizza Hut, Inc.
Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City
Pro Staff Personnel Services
Prudential Preferred Financial Services
Pulte Home Corporation
Rainbow Generation
Raytheon Aircraft
Robert Half of Kansas City
Rock Springs 4-H Center
Sallie Mae
Sears, Roebuck &Co.
Seasonality
Signature Staffing
Snow Mountain Ranch
Spangler Printers
St. Lawrence Center/Catholic Network Volunteer Services
State Farm Insurance Co.
Sunflower State Games
Super Target
Superior Chevrolet
The Guardian
Timber Lake/Tyler Hill Camp
Topeka Police Department
Touch Net Information Services, Inc.
U.S. Army Recruiting Station
U.S. Dept. of Health &Human Services
U.S. Marine Corps
United American Insurance Co.
Univ. of Cincinnati College of Medicine
Univ. of Kansas Dept. of Human Resources
Upward Bound Program/KU.Math & Science Center
Visual Components , Inc.
Waddell & Reed
Winning Ways
Worlds of Fun/Oceans of Fun
Wyandotte Co. Health Dept.
YMCA Camp Wood
YMCA of Johnson Co.
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40
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 1, 1996
3B
Mariners re-sign All-Star
Griffey Jr. extends contract to earn $34 million salary
The Associated Press
SEATLE — Ken Griffey will stay with the Seattle Mariners through the 2000 season, signing a four-year contract extension today worth $34 million.
Griffey, the six-time All-Star center fielder, is considered among the best players in the game. The extension starts with the 1997 season.
"I cannot tell you how excited the Mariners organization is to have the best player in baseball under contract through the turn of the century," said Mariners president Chuck Armstrong.
Griffey, 26, appeared in 72 games last season, batting .258 with 17 home runs and 42 RBL. He missed 73 games after fracturing his left wrist on May 26.
In his seven-year career, Griffey has a .302 lifetime batting average with a Mariners-record 189 home runs and 585 RBI in 917 games. He was selected to the startline up in each of the last six All-Star games. Last year, he won his sixth straight Gold Glove award.
Lakers use some Magic
Johnson doesn't miss a beat in his return to Los Angeles
The Associated Press
INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Nick Van Exel's eyes were still wide with admiration, and it was almost 30 minutes after he had finished playing his first game with Magic Johnson.
After going on and on about how wonderful it was to play with his new teammate, Van Exel suddenly stopped and brought up something he had read in a local newspaper.
"Oscar Robertson made a comment about him not being able to play," Van Exel said, shaking his head. "It's unbelievable."
Robertson, an NBA Hall of Famer, said at Sunday's Southern California-Cincinnati college basketball game that he did not approve of Johnson's comeback, saying he thought the game had passed Johnson by and that he was too old to contribute.
Robertson, who, like Van Exel, played his college ball at the University of Cincinnati, might feel differently if he saw Johnson's return to the Los Angeles Lakers
As teammate Vlade Divac said, it had been like Johnson never left.
on Tuesday night.
Coming off the bench, Johnson had 19 points, 10 assists and eight rebounds in 27 minutes as the Lakers beat the Golden State Warriors 128-118.
Divac and Elden Campbell are the only players who were with the Lakers when Johnson last played in an NBA game that counted. That was on June 12, 1991 against the Chicago Bulls in the last game of the NBA Finals, which the Bulls won.
Johnson retired five months later, just prior to the 1991-92 season, after learning he had tested positive for HIV.
"It's amazing." Divac said. "Having him back is great. I can't even describe it. Everybody is a better player with him on the team."
Johnson, 36, announced Monday that he was ending his retirement after several days of speculation. Divac laughed when asked whether Johnson's return might upset the team chemistry.
"How can you detract from the chemistry when you make everybody better?" Divac said.
Van Exel, who had 16 points and six assists, grabbed a box score of Tuesday night's game and showed what Johnson did for the Lakers.
"He does this," Van Exel said, pointing to the 44 assists the Lakers had, the most by any NBA
team in a game this season. "He helps Elden, he gives players wide-open shots, he's a big man who can pass, rebounding, leadership, it's just great. I'm still in shock.
"I told Sedale Threatt, Eddie Jones, Cedric Ceballos, there's going to be a lot of wide-open jumpers for us now."
Threatt was traded to the Lakers by Seattle shortly before Johnson's 1991 retirement.
Threatt, who succeeded Johnson as the Lakers' starting point guard at the start of the 1991-92 season, said it had been a thrill to play for the first time with his new teammate.
"I tell you, he hasn't even missed a beat," said Threatt, who had 13 points and six assists. "It's exciting. You know something exciting is going to happen with him in the game. He's looking to pass, he's a team player. That's his game."
Ceballos, who had 33 points and seven rebounds, said leadership was the most important thing Johnson would provide.
"He's going to improve this team so much more," Ceballos said. "He has the ability to make other players better. He has the ability to take control of a game. He's still got it. He said he's not going to be the Magic of 26, but he's still got it."
"I couldn't wait to get a pass from him."
Media crowd strikes out with Indians
He figures to get many more, he said.
The Associated Press
It was also too much media.
NEW YORK — It wasn't just too much pitching or hitting by the Atlanta Braves that threw off the Cleveland Indians in the World Series.
ing at."
At a meeting two weeks ago with major league baseball officials, the Indians claimed reporters disrupted their pregame workouts at the World Series.
"We don't want this in any way perceived as an alibi or an excuse for what happened. The bottom line is we got flat-out beat by the Braves," said assistant general manager Dan O'Dowd.
Nevertheless, the Indians had off- the-field concerns.
"We didn't play, for whatever reason, as well as we had during the season and we, as an organization, are looking at all aspects at how to improve in the event that we are fortunate to get back there again," he said. "The media issue is only one of several things we are look-
O'Dowd, executive vice president Dennis Lehman and special assistant Bud Black represented the Indians. The half-hour session took place during baseball's winter meetings in Los Angeles.
Except for Albert Belle, whose tirade at NBC-TV's Hannah Storm underscored his dislike of the media, and Eddie Murray, who avoids interviews, the Indians and their front office got along with reporters last season. The long-suffering team became a favorite of the press, although the club was not happy with the on-field congestion reporters caused during the World Series.
With so many media members in the dugout, around the batting cage and in foul territory before games. Cleveland players had trouble preparing to play.
The clogging was bad at Jacobs Field, where there is not much foul ground. The Indians, though, won two of three games at home.
"They brought up some issues that were legitimate and that we will look at," said Rich Levin, baseball's executive director for public relations. "But part of what they went through is the first-time experience that teams go through."
"They seemed to be pretty overwhelmed by the media."
About 1,100 media credentials were issued to see the Indians, who were in the World Series for the first time since 1954, play the Braves, who'd been there in 1991 and 1992. The number of credentials has been roughly the same for six years.
The Indians argued that because of the media crush at Jacobs Field, it was difficult for coach Charlie Manuel to work with hitters in a small cage near the backstop. Also, they said,media members got in the way during stretching drills and soft-tossing practices.
There were no complaints by the Braves, who warmed up in the outfield, out of the range of reporters.
Media members, though, were not the only ones on the field before games. Some Indians players' children were on the sidelines during warm ups.
Manager Mike Hargrove was asked whether the Indians' performance was affected by their lack of World Series experience.
"None of us will really know that unless we get back and try it again." Hargrove said. "Looking back on it, the game itself, not so much. But everything around the game, the media crush, which is what it really was, having experience with that, I'd like to try it again. I think everybody else would, too."
O'Dowd said the Indians would be ready, if there was a next time.
"I think we second-guessed ourselves on how we got ourselves prepared," he said. "We'd done it one way all season long, and couldn't do the same things in the World Series. Give the Braves credit, their advance people did a tremendous job."
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MATCH SCHEDULE
25 KU WOMEN VS. #13 WILLIAM & MARY
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22 KU MEN VS. INDIANA STATE
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25 KU WOMEN VS. #16 NOTRE DAME
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MATCHES PLAYED AT ALVAMAR RACQUET CLUB
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---
4B
Thursday, February 1, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PAGE 2
Horoscopes
By Linda C. Black
Today's Birthday (Feb. 1). Investments now could make your future secure. Extra attention heals a romantic hurt in March. Offer a special gift, too. May and June are good for weddings and honeymoons. In July, you could have a difficult assignment. The key is to cut costs. Wrap up a group effort in December. Something you've been wanting for a long time could start to come true next January. You're winning because of luck and your own hard work.
Aries (March 21-April 19). Get your team to stop arguing and work together! They may never agree completely, so don't wait for that to happen. In romance, you hold lots of aces. Don't get too pushy though, or you'll lose your advantage. Your sweetheart needs compassion.
Taurus (April 20-May 20). Although somebody smart might tell you to act, it's wise to go over your options once more. An older person's advice may be less fashionable, but more appropriate. A visit
with a favorite relative would make good sense tonight.
Gemini (May 21-June 21). If you're getting bored, call a distant friend today. Your friend could motivate you to plan something outrageous, such as a trip across the country! If you want something for home, get the higher quality item. Even if it costs more, you'll save eventually.
Cancer (June 22-July 22). If you can get your plans worked out this morning, you should be in good shape to move this afternoon. Hold back your secret weapon, or your secret recipe, until the last minute. Sell something you don't like and get an item you need.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Before you get too excited about a new idea, figure out the cost. A toy that will cut your entertainment expenses could be a good investment. Ask a knowledgeable friends before you purchase. Also, pay a bill.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Concentrate on your job today, especially the part you don't have memorized yet. There could be a few surprises. Your love life should be going well, though. Focus on your dreams and the troubles of the present will dim.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). If you want something nice for your home, work late! Not to worry — this is temporary. Sacrifice your time now so you can have the money later. A sensitive co-worker can teach you a valuable lesson about love.
Scorpio (Oct. 24.-Nov. 21). You may throw away something valuable. Keep the good parts. Changes should be made at home. Unfortunately, the one who changes most may be you! Call an old friend tonight and set up a time to meet again.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). If you're thinking of a major purchase, read up on the products first. Don't take a risk with family money. Talk to a sibling tonight, who may help you use your old skills to
improve your income.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). A new machine or procedure could make money for you. Figure out how. If you lack experience, you may have to hire an expert. Your best friend may be in a blue mood. Do something extra nice tonight.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today, figure out how to bring more money into your account. Ask an imaginative but quiet person for ideas if you run out of them. Don't spread work-related gossip, but do pay attention. Some of it could affect your next assignment.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). If you're feeling pressured at work, take a break! Talk to friends you can trust. In love, hold out for what you want. You're in a stronger position than you think. Don't get talked into anything until you'll ready.
Note: Horoscopes are not scientifically proven. For entertainment purposes only.
Dilbert By Scott Adams
WE WON THE BID TO REBUILD OUR NATION'S AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEMS.
TALKING
5 Adams I-901-6
YIPPEE!!!
// YES!!
TO THE PHONES!
THEY DON'T USUALLY GET THAT EXCITED.
BUY A THOUSAND SHARES OF "BLUEHOUND BUS LINES."
Trial of Jordan's accused murder delayed
175
Accused murderer of basketball star's father delays trial due to illness
The Associated Press
Green is a Muslim and had been
LUMBERTON, N.C. — The trial of Daniel Andre Green, the man accused of killing Michael Jordan's father, recessed yesterday afternoon because Green said he felt sick.
fasting for the holy season of Ramadan. His mother said in an interview that Green had been eating two light meals a day.
Defense attorney Angus Thompson told the judge that during a break, Green grabbed his chest and complained that his chest and stomach hurt.
The trial was recessed until 9:30 a.m. today.
An ambulance arrived at the courthouse for Green but he refused to use it and left in a sheriff's deputy's car.
The interruption means Green's former co-defendant, Larry Martin Demery, will be back on the stand
again today for cross-examination.
again today for cross-examination. Green's lawyers questioned Demery on Tuesday and yesterday. Demery usually was not daunted by the rapid pace of hostile questions.
Green is charged with the 1993 murder of James Jordan. Demery has testified that he saw his friend pull the trigger after they crept up on the red Lexus Jordan was sleeping in on July 23, 1993. Demery said the pair had planned to rob Jordan and steal his car.
On cross examination Tuesday, Demery said he was mistaken about the date Green bought bullets at a pawn shop.
"And you were badly mistaken
about a whole lot of things, weren't you?" Thompson said.
"Not like you make it sound," Demery retorted. "The main things, I remember."
Jordan's body was dumped into a South Carolina swamp, where it was found by a fisherman on Aug. 3, 1993. Demery, 20, and Green, 21, were arrested Aug. 15 on charges of first-degree murder, armed robbery and conspiracy to commit robbery. Demery pleaded guilty last spring and agreed to testify against Green. He still faces a possible death penalty, and was sentenced to 40 years in prison for nine other robberies and break-ins.
Flight Instruction Scholarship The Willis A. Waas Memorial Scholarship is awarded each Spring to a KU student to assist in obtaining a private pilot license.
N136F
Deadline: March 1,1990
To beeligible, a student must:
To be eligible, a student must:
·be working toward a private pilot license
·have a current flight medical certificate
·have at least 5 hours of dual instruction time logged
(attach a copy of pages from logbook)
·be enrolled at least 50% time at the Lawrence campus
Application available at Aerospace Engineering Department
2004 Learned Hall • 864-4267
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SUN: 11A.M.-2A.M.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
841-PLAY
1029 Massachusetts
Classified Directory
trade &
I
100s Announcements
1.05 Personals
1.10 Business Personals
1.12 Announcements
1.13 Entertainment
1.14 Lost and Found
X
男 女
300s Merchandise
200s Employment
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional Services
235 Tying Services
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
100s Announcements
□
Need Cash?
110 Business Personals
We loan cash on almost anything of value. CP's VC'SR, TV'S stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence's most liberal loan company JAYHAWK PAWN & JEWELRY 1804 W. 684-71919
Hours
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
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GROVED
Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
120 Announcements
SPRING
IN SHOW ON CBS NEWS 12 O'CLOCKS
BREAK
COMPUTER 2.1.7
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Classified Policy
- 1-BOOO-SUMCHAUSE
- A LISTING OF
1-BOOO-SUMCHAUSE
VAIL IBEAVER CREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
OR SHIP OVER TO US OR NEXT BYE AS:
http://www.sunchase.com
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, color, religion, nationality, disability, other reason, nationality, or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation
All real estate advertisers in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1958 which makes it maleficial to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on age, race, color, national origin, status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
120 Announcements
International meeting. Fo. ed. 600, at 7:30 p.m.
Headquarters Counseling Center, 1419 Mass.
Rape Victim / Survivor Service (RVSS) is now forming a peer support group. Confidential and no fee. Informational meeting. Feb. 5th at 7:30 pm
7. $wash ALL DAY EVERY DAY. Intermediate Laun-
cursions 200- and 1500. (Across the door from Dairy
Farm)
Spring break specials, Cancun and Jamaica 11% lower
Spring break nights, 7 nights, and hotel from $428.00
and up
SPRING BREAK Panama City Beach Florida From $ 99
Per Person/Week, Thi Sha Club Bar, Huge Beachside Hot
Tub, Free Information 1-800-498-8828
School of Education Students
http://www.springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386.
Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise? $27.000+
Includes 15 meals an d6 free parties Great beaches
night life Leafs from LP. Lauderdale http://www.
springbreaktravel.com
Spring Break! Panama City 5 days, room w/children.
$119.00 Walk to best bask bars 7 days in Key West, $269.00
to Best Bask Bars 7 days in Key West,aches, near Disney). $160.00 Daysau. $180.00 at breakfast. springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386.
School of Education Students
Students to teach STUDENT TEACH THE PALM 1906 semester s/earr for students to teach STUDENT TEACH the teacher meeting on Monday, February 6, at 2:30 p.m. in Dalby. This meeting is mandatory. Preliminary grades will be announced.
**Spring Career and Employment Fair FB 7/196,**
10am to 3pm, JS Intuition Ballroom. Over 85 employers.
PT, FT, summer jobs and internships. All majors
welcome. For more info contact University Placement
中心 604-8244 or home pagehttp://
604-8244.edu/sysintify/users/ufaceupt/upc_
main.html
Free party room for 20-200 at Johnny's. 842-0377
130 Entertainment
MIRACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale starting at $9.89 and up.
1910 Haskell, 841-7504
SCRABBLE
Join us at the Lawrence Club, Lawrence Public Library,
7:00 p.m. Mon. Feb 5. Gallery Room 843-767-6900
Learn how to ride horses. English or Western. Discount for KU students. Ride twice a week Feb 5- May. Time by appointment. $175 ($800 value). Call Joy (913) 504-6810. Leave message.
**Great low,low prices
**Great low, low prices
**Free Trip on only 15 sales
Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas Panama City, Daytona, Padre
Call for a FREE information packet!
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-426-7710
Spring Break 1996
TRAVEL FREE!!
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Part-time, flexible hour, mostly mornings in house cleaning, $50.80-$70.40; Call 749-2121.
205 Help Wanted
Kansan Ads Pav
205 Help Wanted
A GREAT SUMMER EXPERIENCE
TWO OF AMERICA'S PREMIER SUMMER GAMES:
SOCIAL SPORTS LEAGUE
CAMP WINADU FOR BOYS &
CAMP DANEE FOR GIRLS
BALL
SUMMER CAMP COUNSELOR POSITION AVAILABLE
AT MASSACHUSETTS SPORTS CAMPS.
WE OFFER SALARY + ROOM/BOARD AND TRAVEL!
LOOKING FOR CARING STAFF
NO PREVIOUS CAMP EXPERIENCE IS NEEDED
J HUNDREDS OF STAFF POSITIONS ARE OPEN FOR ALL LAND AND WATER SPORTS AS WELL AS SPECIALTY AREAS SUCH AS VIDEO, DRAMA, DANCE, HORSEBACK RIDING, WOODSHOP AND CRAFTS.
PHYS. ED., EDUCATION AND OUTDOOR REC. MAJORS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. THIS IS A GREAT RESUME BUILDER!! COME WORK WITH THE BEST.
FOR MORE INFO CALL:
1- 800-4-WINADU
A REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE AT THE SUMMER JOB FLAIR FEB. 7TH TO ANSWER QUESTIONS!
MARC JACOBS
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 1, 1996
205 Help Wanted
Retired Professiones need part-time secretary assistance help for taking dictation & typing. 869. R.S. Raymond B41-8534
Day care needed: 2 toddlers and 1 infant, 2 days/week.
Day care hours: 8:00 am - 5:30 pm, 6%/ hour.
**PLEASE RESPOND ONLY TO THE TEAMS.**
Teaching Asst. needed part-time at early intervention program. Call Brookcreek Learning Center 860-0222.
Seeking high energy individual for branch office. Positive attitude required, flexible schedule. 841-8828
WANTED: Facilities Supervisor.
If interested, call Rick
at 894-3546.
Overweight males between 18 and 40 y.o. are needed.
$20 will be included for participation.
Please call if interested. 913-845-1118.
Female personal attendant for female quadriprenatal
CNA preferred but not required. Call 865-0616.
Gymnastics instructors needed now for boys and girls classes at KG, gym about 40 mins from Lawrence. Parttime in AM and Pm. Call Eagles Gymnastics. (818) 941-9629.
**Female student needed for occasional baby sitter.**
Hx for two, well-matched girls age 10 and 2/3. **Call:** 855-694-7358
Looking for emergency individuals to work in a fast-paced environment and advancement, with high income potential. Call 843-762-1900.
Responsible care individual needed care for 9 yr. child 3 yrs a week, and an occasional weekend eight in a row.
Athletes
Better Men and Women Career wear store is expanding. Career assist, manager and part time sales positions available Evening and weekend availability, good wage, and benefits. Apply to person in 210 River Front Plaza.
Christian Daycare needs assistants in the mornings and MWL. All must be reliable, enthusiastic and be able to work with different ages. 18 years above. 842-2088.
Do you like children ages 3 to 57 Do you want to make a difference in a child's life? Do you have a little free time? Volunteer at Head Start, 2 hours, one day a week, call 842-2615 for information.
Full or part-time independent representatives for long-distance company needed. No phone sales, quotas or collections. Serious income potential from your home. You experience or travel knowledge. Call 814-3690.
Responsible person needed to work with my 7 year old son with autism. Must have knowledge in applied behavioral analysis and/or special education. If interested call Gina at 865-0655
Show apartments, help with tenant relations, other office duties, any maintenance experience would be a plus. 3801 Clinton Parkway #E2, Lawrence, KS 60047.
Call 841-7849.
Spirit Industries, Inc., a national sportswear company has an immediate opening for an experienced screen printer. Full or part-time available. Apply M-F 9-5. 1021 E. 31st St. d 749-6868.
Working couple seeks consistent student to watch children, age 5 and 7 from 3-4, M-R; child care experience preferred; requires some meal preparation. Call enrollment: edu@m-r.edu
Economics/Research Assistant, B.A. or A.M.F., or P.T. for consulting firm. Strong computer skills in databases and spread sheets required. Send resumes attention Perkins University, 201, Overland Park, KS 64214. No Phone call please.
Help Wanted. Spirit Industries is now taking applications for our Screen Printing Department. Full-time and part-time immediate position available. Must be relocated to training position. Apply M-F from 9-5, 1021 E. S.J. St., New York, NY 10024.
Positions open. Great jobs for students. Telephone fundraising for SAADD (Students Against Driving Drunk). We work early evenings and sat, mornings. $40r plus pluson rates. Call 643-819 or apply to 619 Mts. St. Bute.
CAMP COUNSELERS Join the adventure and share the memories at SUMMER CAMP. Top tips for your first trip.
CAMP COUNSELORS WANTED for private Michigan boys' girls summer camp. Teach, swimming, canoeing, sailing, water-skiing, gymnastics, riffley, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping, crafts, drama, Orton, computers, maintenance,雪橇, 1250 or more plus R B A. LWC, IWC, G170, Naked Male, IL 60093, 847-46-246
instructors for water and land sports, WISLs *Wilda Guards*, Tennis, Climbing, Arts and more! 2 hours from NYC. Call 215-8780-9700 or write 151 Washington Lane Jenkintown, PA 19027.
Are you looking for a summer of high adventure and rewards? Rocky Mountain Village, Colorado's Easter Seal Camp is bring high-energy & enthusiastic people to work with children & adults with disabilities & special needs. Camp activities include rope course, whitewater rafting, camp sports, crafts, computers, and horse-back riding. For more information about this unique opportunity, contact Sarah at 303/823-8003.
Waterfront Jobs
**STUDENT POSITIONS:** Summayda Infant/Toddler is seeking student applications for Assistant Teacher positions. Duties include assisting in classroom activities and managing students in play activities and facilitating child development. Must be a KU student enrolled in at least 6 credit hours. Prior to enrollment, please complete the application. Please fill out application in room 1149 Haworth.
W. S.I.- summer school's camp - northeast - teach children to swim, coach swim team, dive, water ski (alom), play in the lake (alom), be a boarder, launch, travel allowance. Call 1-800-833-v83 or write: Camp Gvea for girls, PO Box 1771, Duxbury, MA 02832. We will be on campus Tuesday from 10am to 4pm in KU building in k U union. No appointment necessary.
500 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES IN NY, PA
NEW YORK
Choose from over 30 camp. Instructors need tennis, Baseball, Hockey, Rollerblading, Soccer, LaCroise, softball, Volleyball, Basketball, PE Majors, Gymnastics, Ridging, Lifespan, WSA, Water-skiing, Windsurfing, Fitness, Archery, Mountain Biking, Pioneering Rock Climbing, Ceramics, Stainless Steel, Ceramics, Stainless Glass, Jewelry, Wood-Working, Photography, Nature, RN's, Chefs, Food Service, Call Arena: 516-438-8033.
ARE YOU READY FOR A CHANGE?
Financially Career Environment Marketing co. looking for the right individual who is ready. Call 849-4911.
**STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN* Deanie
$20/- $24.50; salary 4.50 per hour, M-W-F 1-5pm.
Duties include performing bursting and decolling functions;
delivery of computer output and interoffice mail using
delivery vane; paper shredding functions; on occasion will
handle electronic data collection; inventory figures, tape library duties; and other warehousing functions; on occasion will operate forklift
and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape
mtenance; performs dudes in conjunction with
the campus wide recycle program; uses personal com-
puter equipment; manages the computer
function. To apply, complete an application available at
the Computer Center in room 202. BA/AA EMPLOYER
NOTE TAKAJO for Boys. Outstanding Maine camp noted for magnificent lakeset setting and exceptional facilities. Over 100 positions for heads and assistants in tennis, baseball, basketball, lacrosse, golf, street hockey, roller hockey, swimming, sailing, canoeing, waterkizing, BCAUY, archery, weight training, ceramics, crafts, drawing & painting, nature study, radio & electronics, dramas, piano accompaniment, music instrumentalist, band director, backpacking, rockclimbing, whitewater canoeing, ropes course, general (w/ youngest camper), secretarial. June 17 – 26th, 2015. Call 840-490-CAMP or write **CAMP TAKAJO**, 828 East 72nd Street, 25th floor, New York, NY 10231 or Fax call 821-218-0212. WEIL will BE ON CAMPUS
for/youngsters, upper grades, course, gen-
eral August 18. Top salaries room & board, travel provided,
400-649-CAMP or write CAMP AKAOJ 725 East
21st Street, 225th Room, New York, NY1021 or Flax
TUESDAY FEB 12TH 10:4PM-ROOMS READ &
REGIONAL BIT N BUCKN. WALK-NICE WELCOME
205 Help Wanted
Temporary, part-time position in building maintenance.
$5.60/hr. Complete application by 2/7/96 at Admin. Services.
2nd floor, City Hall, 6th & Maes, Lawrence, KS 60044
EEO MPWD
MAINTENANCE WORKER CITY OF LAWRENCE
SUMMERJOBS
Female counselors for children's camp northeast/up salary, rm/buddy laundry travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following activities: archery, arts & crafts, athletic training, basketball, canoeing, kayaking, gymnastics, jazz, drama, field hockey, golf, gymnastics (or qualified spotters), horseback riding-hunt seat, lacrosse, nature, photography, videographer, piano accompanist, pioneering camp crafts, ropes (instrumental), music, swimming, w/a/wii instructors, windsurfing. Also opportunities for kitchen cooks, maintenance, nurses, secretaries. call 1-800-838-694 or write for Camp Vogel for gge, PO box 1721, Duxbury MA 06233. We will be on Tuesday, February 9th, 10am, oread, & Reddon at K union. No appointment necessary.
AMERICA'S PREMIERE SPORTS CAMPES
WINADU FOR BOYS/DANEE FOR GIRLS
(Western Massachusetts)
(Western Massachusetts)
OVERVIEW AVAILABLE
All Land and Water Sports, Artis Crafts,
Gymnastics, Horseback Riding, Drama, Woodshop,
Joe and Bocker Waterworks, Hokersville, SDI,
and more!!
No Previews Experience Required
Top skills needed for ALL Allowance
ON CAMPUS INFO AND INTERVIEWS
DATE: FEBRUARY 28-29, 1996
TIME: 9:00AM to 4:00PM
FEB. 28, INFO TABLE
FEBR. 29, OREA AND REGION
ALIST BOOMS
Men Call:
1-800-494-0238
Women Call:
1-800-392-3732
CAMP WNADU
CAMP DANBEE
EARN CASH
ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
Blue Grass Music Lessons. Now at Whitney's Music. Call (912) 432-6438. Ank for Burke Jenkins.
DUJ/TRAFFIC/CIMRAL
OVERLAND PARK - KANSAS CITY AREA
SHARPEN R GREEN
ATTENDEY N W
Call for a free consultation 361-865-0944
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake DUI & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civil matters
Free Consultation
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-1133
Call Today!
LOWEST PRICES TO CANCUN!
AIRFARE, HOTEL,
TRANSFERS, BAGGAGE HANDLING,
HOSPITALITY DESK, &
FABULOUS PARTIES
MANY OTHER DESTINATIONS AVAILABLE
RAVELLERS
LAWRENCE'S TRAVEL AGENT SINCE 1951
831 Massachusetts
749-0700
Hundreds & thousands of grants & scholarships available to all students. Immediate qualification. No repayments EVER.
$$ $$ MONEY $$ $$ FOR COLLEGE
Call 1-800-585-8243
225 Professional Services
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
( 913 ) 887-6307 ( local call )
E-mail red4psg@aol.com
235 Typing Services
Call Jacki at 865-2855 for applications, term papers, theses, dissertations, transcriptions, etc. Satisfaction guaranteed. Makin 'the Grade.'
X
Need Help With Your Research Project ? Kiley Data Analysis and Consulting specializes in Complete statistical analysis of results, SPSS graphs and tables, graphics for text and art design. Lowest rates in Lauvance, Topika team.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
King size mattress set. New. Retail price $99.00, will sell for $275.00, 379-9858
Light table with glidelineer. $100.00 Artwaxer $50.00. Call
887-6307
1984 Nissan 300ZX. 70,000 miles, 5-speed, A/C, AM-FM Cassette, two-time collector car. Garranted & like new. Takes offers. Must call Sell41-8433.
AA Pull size mattresses set, new. Wet used. will in plastic.
Retail price $890.00 will for $150.00. Branhead
base.
Campbell Sound Studio (914) 825-6000 bp@m
**FOR SALE:** Macintosh SE with writer and software. $190 or best offer. Call 832 - 2193 and leave message.
For Sale TICKET FOR "ANGELS IN AMERICA PART II"
Fis. 10rd Feb. 9th before $5.00 Call tim at
www.sales.us
AKC Boxer Puppies
Males/Females, Flashy Bridles, Family Raised
Beds, Dekes, Bookcases, Lamps, Other Stuff
935 Mass.
AA Queens size mattress set, new, never used. Still ill-qualified. Retail Price $880.00 or for $150.00. Queen
Hayes Optima 2400 bpa modem. Mac Software and
called includes : $ 60.00. Yamaha PortaSound mini keyboard. 4preset voices, 10rhythm. $ 60.00. Call 841-7497.
Computer for Sale
386 DX2 40, 340 mb hd, 5 mb ram, Soft. Inc. $600
Computer for sale: 48D/2X, 66/2X, 1.0 gt hard drive,
fast modem, multimedia CD rom, NEC MBI PS1
device, DELL multimedia CD rom
Nice computer table with built in book w3700 with a word processor Corona Smith WPM 3700 with a separate window screen. All for $250 give away price. Both are about a year old. Call 8418-8230 or leave a message.
340 Auto Sales
Sony Car disc man w/esp 749-5285
Runs Great, new tires, some surface rust, $115.00 or best offer. 842-5618 (leave message)
89 Audi 60005 for sale. Price negotiable. Sell ASAP.
Leaving country so don't miss the opportunity. Call
360 Miscellaneous
Wanted: 100 Students to Load B 100 Bn. New Metabolism
Guarantees. Guaranteed Results: 1, 800-600-
7389
PERSONAL SECURITY IS MY BUSINESS.
Key-chain pepper spray with case $12.95. Fountain pen
with case $8.95.
Key-channel pepper spray with case $12.06. Fountain pen spray, undetectable $12.06. Dot stopper alarm $12.06. Handgun alarm $12.06.
Personal clip-on alarm is available to clubs, organizations, fundraisers welcome. D. Roseman
225 Professional Services
110° CLOUD CAPTURE
SPRING BREAK IN
SPRING BREAK IN
CANCUN
MEXICO
110°
GOURMET
BUY 1, GET 1
$299
Net including tax. Free shipping.
LORD ROAD CENTRE
http://www.takeabreak.com
1-800-TAKE-BREAK
TAKE A BREAK STUDENT TRAVEL
Places to Check Out and Meeting on Public Courses. The course will include: Art, Music, History, Sports, Business and Travel.
LORD ROAD CENTRE is a licensed Independent School Association (ISA) Plan approved.
370 Want to Buy
405 For Rent
Out of stature alliums need two to Four Nebraska tickets for
16. B. 14. Embraced Plena call drive (607) 475-8425.
(304) 694-7200.
Need K.U. v KState tickets.
1 BDRM, 4 DBRM House, 2 Rooms, walking distance to campus. On 9th Street, 1 Mumbai paid for
A one bedroom non-bath. Available now. Close to campus.
Dishwasher, microwave, disposal, and storage. Call
400s Real Estate
Available immediately. 3 Bedroom, unfurnished apartment. 12床房从 KU. $700 per room. Overseal Hotel.
3 Bedroom Townhouse. 1.1/2 bath. D/W. Washer/Dryer
hookup. Fireplace. 2 Car Gauage. Microwave. Central
Air. Call 852-4141 or 749-1438
Two btem agent PETS ACCEPTED (no weight limit on dogs) DW 1.5 kg Two story available March 1. Mail to: MALVIN.SCHMIDT@kcps.org
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1409 Tenn. a
student housing alternative. Open & diversi-
membership, non-profit operation, democratic control. Rns
and staff include: Director of Campus Cable Close to campus & Mans. Cal or situ at 814 8444.
405 For Rent
Shannon Plaza Apartments & Townhomes. 2 & 3 bedroom townhouses available immediately.Ask about the location and amenities of the property.
3 Bedroom duplex, 1/2 bath, garage, two.
Excellent location. No nets.
microwave, dishwasher, W/D hookup,
$400/month, 6 month lease. Call 841-8468.
Available Immediately- 2 bedroom, 18th & Ohio.
225 Professional Services
Large 3 bedroom apt. and studio apt.
in remodeled house near KU.
Call 841-784-2500
Beau's Import Auto Service Quality car maintenance & repair.
MasterCard
VISA
Share a 2 BB/2 bath furnished apartment.
Own bedroom and bath. Pool, hot tub,
and weight room. $217/mo. 1/2 utilities.
Call 748-6901 or 1-800-3621-3627. Ask For
Washer/Dryer Microwave Dishwasher Gas Fireplace Trash Can洗衣机 Table Padded Closets Closet Coving Ceiling Fans in All Bedrooms
For More Info : 841-7849 Located at 4501 Wimbledon Dr.
VOLVO
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Lorimar Townhomes
No Leasing For June & August
1,2,& 3 Bedrooms
Washer/Dryer Fireplace
Dishwash Cable Paid
Microwave Back Patio
Now Leasing for June & August 4 Bedrooms / 3 Bath Featuring:
- 1&2 Bedrooms
- Exercise Room
- On KU Bus Route
Fall Leases
GET A JUMP ON NEXT YEAR!
[1301 W 24th & Naismith • 842-5111]
- 3 Hot Tubs
and other fine imports.
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
842-4320
Studios, 1,2, & 3 Bedroom Apts Carson Place, Carousel View, Oread, Chamberlin Court, Abbotts Corner, 1425 Kentucky, Bradford Square
- Full-size washer/dryer or Laundry Facilities
Colony Woods
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
* Private Patios or Decks
- Within 2 blks of campus or on KU bus route
Cats welcome at Bradford Square only
MON-FKI 9 am. 5pm, 1820 West 6th
414 143 68
Cats welcome at Bradford Square only.
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT
TODAY FOR $ 50.00
SAAE
841-8468
405 For Rent
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
3 TWO FEMALE BOOMMATS to share more
2 BIRD coon near campus. Pully furnished in 1/0 W/mts.
Pall kitchen w/dishwasher & microwave. No Peter/ No
Girl/ no ppp. Call: Mary, 843-1013, 843-
2237 event
EDDINGHAM
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
24th and Eddingham Dr.
- Swimming pool
- Spacious2bedroom
- Exercise weight room
- Closetocampus
- Laundry room
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
VILLAGE
SQUARE
next to The Yacht Club
- Fireplace
- Laundry facility
meadowbrook
- On site management
- Energy Efficient
- Swimmingpo
* OnBusRoute
9th & Avalon 842-3040
apartments from furnished studios to three bedroom townhomes available.
STILL LOOKING?
808 W. 24th
841-6080
841-5444
We are also accepting reservations for fall!
KVM
Professionally managed by
Offers
Completely Furnished
MASTERCRAFT
---
- Convenient to shopping and restaurants.
- Garages and carports available.
Hanover Place 14th& Mass. 841-1212
- Walking distance to KU and on bus route.
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Tanglewood
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
- Washer/Dryer hook-ups and fireplaces.
15th & Kasold
749-4226
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
Orchard Corners
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
MEADOWBROOK APARTMENTS
NEWLAK CONSTRUCTION
EVENTAL ASSOCIATION to K-10
1-3-3-4 Bedroom Apia
Appartment List No. 1968
MASTERCRAFT
OPEN: MON-FRI- 8-5:30.
SAT-10-4.
SUN 1-4
405 For Rent
---
Equal Housing Opportunity
Full size washer/dryer, fully equipped kitchen, fireplace,
Walk-in closets, fully monitored alarm, and much more, NO PETS, Harper Square Apartments, Call Today! 913-841-8468
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS 7TH & FLORIDA
FOUR BEDROOM-
ASKABOUT Our Three Person Special $690 and Up Pool and Clubhouse
E.H.O.
841-5255
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
Female grade student to graduate nice 2 BR apt, $800+ tul.
Call Caroline 688-5785. Must lice a bird and be a non-
native resident.
NOWLEASING FOR SPRING
430 Roommate Wanted
*stage Roommate Wanted* • $212.00 / mo. Water and cable paid. Close house, on KU Bus. Call 749-855-6931.
Roommate Needs 2, Bedroom Apt. 1, block from KU $225/month. Please call (0315) 607-3177 (pager).
Male/Female roommate needles for 2 bedroom
公寓 on bus route $12.50 + 1/2 utility.
$8.75 per night.
Female roommate must share 2 bedroom apartment. On bus route, $200.00 + 1/2 utilities. Water and gas paid.
Call Tara 832-8428.
Roommate MF wanted to share 3 room apt. in
Meadowbrook. Smokes well. $20/mo + 1/3Util-
ity.
Roommate needed: gay friendly, M/F, to share 2BR
house, W/D, DW, AC, pets negotiable, must like my dog.
$426 /mO + 1/2 utilities. Amy #814-6736.
Roommate Wanted! 4 bedrooms Townhouse 24th and
Kaiden. Pursued and on KU Bus Route. $250 per month
$399 per month
Roommates need for 3 bedroom house. 3 blocks from campus. $22 per room, includes utilities.
Female roommate needed to share nice, comfortable,
furnished, 3-bedroom, 2-bathroom apartment; located at
15th and Kaskol on bus route. $214 monthly plus 1/3 utilities.
Available now. Call 838-4451.
N/S make roommate to share College Hill Coord. Large master bdm, private bath, W/D, available immediately. #280. Call 1-913-682-4388 or beeper 1-907-397-3249 ext. 8435 and leave phone number.
Share big old house (great porch, hardwood floors) between kU/downstreet with two busy responsible g友 friendly roomsmates. No smoking or pets. $296 includes utilities, w/D.A. Tony 814-2584.
**Wanted ASAP - NS MF roommate to share space 28D bpm at, Albion and Ohio. Walk to campus and downtown, off street parking $250 + 1/2 unit. Call Wade 888-4062. Leave message.**
- By phone: 864-4358
- How to schedule an ad:
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Classified Information and order form
Ads sponsored in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-paym made.
Stop by the Kansan offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be propl charged on MasterCard or Visa.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you
have它 billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a (return) use
unused days when canceled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of ad (the number of gaps in the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the ad rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Refunds:
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available. No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Deadline:
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of Insertions: Cost per line per day 1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 16-25X 32+X 3 lines 2.20 1.70 1.15 0.95 0.88 0.85 4 lines 2.05 1.30 0.85 0.75 0.70 0.68 5-7 lines 2.00 1.15 0.80 0.70 0.65 0.65 8+ lines 1.90 1.00 0.70 0.65 0.60 0.49
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days= $17.00 [4 lines X 65 per line X 5 days]
Classifications
305 for sale
340 auto sales
200 miscellaneous
105 personal
110 business personas
120 announcements
130 entertainment
140 heat & found
225 help wanted
225 professional services
225 typing services
370 want to Buy
465 for rent
438 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
Please print your ad one word per box:
Date ad begins: Total days in paper:
included content: Classification:
Address:
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Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dalian Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
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The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
6B
Thursday, February 1, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Cowboys: The best team that money can buy
I wrote this letter out of a general concern for my favorite team, the Steelers, and not out of animosity for the arrogance of "America's Team."
Former Dallas coach Jimmy Johnson and owner Jerry Jones began to rebuild the Cowboys in 1988 through a series of key trades to acquire draft picks. Those moves allowed Dallas to draft team cornerstones Troy Aikman and Emmitt Smith, both of who continue to pay dividends for Jones long after Johnson's departure.
The Cowboys were built through the college draft, reminiscent of the Steelers' and 49ers' dynasties
of the 1970s and 1980s. True, Dallas has lost a lot of depth and talent because of free agency, but most of those players were backups or role players who could easily be replaced by a draft pick. Free agency increased players' paychecks, but it also has forced owners to dish out enormous signing bonuses, which have drained many bank accounts.
Dallas can afford to pay an overrated cornerback $35 million for five years, but most owners do not have assets that gross the $200 million annually like Jones does. Personal seat licenses (Rams and Panthers), stadium revenue (Art Modell and the Baltimore Brown's) and corporate greed (Jones, in association with Nike, Coca-Cola and American Express) show how eager some owners are to sign a big-name free agent, or re-sign their own player, for the right to hold the Lombardi Trophy in January.
SPORTS RAP
Being a Pittsburgh native — I'm using my Terrible Towel to dry the tears with Bill Petulla — my concern is whether an "everyman" team like the Steelers can afford to sign key free agents like Neil O'Donnell and Kevin Greene without the benefit of having a genuine millionaire.
The Steelers, like the community-owned Green Bay Packers, have proven to be a legitimate contender without having the benefit of Dallas' $62 million payroll, which is close to $30 million over the salary cap.
The Cowboys are clearly the best team in football, but, as a Steeler fan, I just hope the money never runs dry. Why? Because Jerry Jones and the Dallas Cowboys have now proven that money can buy a Super Bowl, even with Barry Switzer as head coach.
Thomas Gallagher Olathe junior
After Dallas and San Francisco: NFC is weaker than the AFC
This year the Super Bowl gained back some credibility. Not only were the commercials entertaining, but the game itself actually held an element of suspense past the first quarter.
It's not so much that the NFC has dominated the Super Bowl as it is that the NFL's two best teams have, and unfortunately, they happen to play in the same conference. Teams like Pittsburgh, Kansas City and Buffalo are probably stronger than most NFC teams, especially when it comes to depth.
Best of all, this trend is likely to continue for the next few years. With all of the salary cap and free agent rules the NFL now enforces, teams like the Cowboys and 49ers will eventually come down to earth. Once you get past Big D and the 'Niners, the NFC is probably a much weaker conference than the AFC.
And who knows, with Jimmy Johnson calling the shots in Miami, Dan Marino and the Dolphins might finally get back to the big one. Some people have complained that NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue is trying to create 30 teams with 500 records.
But after recent Super Bowls, I think most people would prefer parity over another Dallas/San Francisco slaughter.
Matt Woodruff
Olathe junior
Teams set for football classic
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — Brigham Young University and Texas A&M were matched yesterday for the Pigskin Classic to be played at BYU on Aug. 24.
The announcement was made by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics, the game's sponsor.
dy scheduling the game for Aug. 24, at noon, the Pigskin Classic edged the Kickoff Classic for the honor of being the first contest of the 1996 college season.
The Kickoff Classic the next day will have the more prestigious matchup, however, sending Penn State against the University of Southern California at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., in what could be a preview of the Rose Bowl.
Sound Worth Studying
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Detach Face, High Power, Auto Rev. 199.95
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2,1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL. 102, NO.88
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
KANSAS
11
Sunflower rival awaits Kansas
The No. 3 men's basketball team will face intrastate foe Kansas State on Sunday. Page 1B
CAMPUS
I'm OK, you're OK
Staff at Watkins say self-esteem is important to success in college. Page 3A
NATION
New AIDS Drug Presented
A new class of AIDS drugs reduces complications and prolongs life. Page 9A
NATION
Dole Labels opponent
Bob Dole warns that Steve Forbes plans to raise middle-class taxes aren't as beneficial as they sound. Page 11A
WEATHER
CHANCE OF FLURRIES
High 6° Low -5°
(USPS 650-640)
BOSS
Weather: Page 2A
Campus ... 3A
Opinion ... 4A
Nation/World ... 9A
Features ... 12A
Sports ... 1B
Scoreboard ... 2B
INDEX
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas.The first copy is free.Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
Paramedics remove Tony McMechan from his overturned Ford Mustang after a one-car accident in front of Jayhawker Towers yesterday afternoon. McMechan was transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital with a fractured bone and lacerations and is listed in fair condition.
Car flips,then crashes into Jayhawker Towers
Auto accident hurts KU worker
By Amy McVey
Kansan staff writer
1997
A 33-year-old KU employee is in fair condition after his car crashed into Tower B of Jayhawker Towers yesterday afternoon.
Tony McMechan, custodial worker for Lewis Hall, was driving east on 15th Street when his black Ford Mustang hit a light pole, crashed through a concrete barrier, flipped and slid into Tower B, KU police said.
Tom Helling, Overland Park senior, witnessed the accident as he walked home from class.
"I just happened to be looking up when I saw his car," Helling said. "It looked like it was going to be turning into the circle drive.
"The next thing I knew the car appeared to accelerate. I think he was probably trying to hit the breaks. I saw a light post go up in the air, and I saw the car flin."
Kip Grosshans, personnel administrator for student housing, said McMechan
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
Tony McMechan's car rests upside down next to Tower B of Jayhawker Towers yesterday afternoon.
"At 12:30, he should have been coming back to work from lunch," he said.
was on his lunch break at the time of the accident.
McMechan suffered a fractured bone
and numerous lacerations. Paramedics transported him to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Police are unsure of the accident's cause.
Chancellor offers gala to students
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Tickets are free and have been available at the Student Union Activities box office in the Kansas Union for a week.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway does not want his Feb. 11 inauguration to be a stuffy, elitist event. Instead, Hemenway hopes to make the inauguration open to the University community — especially students.
But T.J. Joyce, Lincolnshire, Ill., senior, said yesterday that only five students had picked up tickets at the SUA office.
Invitations were mailed to student leaders last month, and 140 student leaders have re-served tickets, said
Jeanette Johnson, assistant to the executive vice chancellor
More than 1,000 tickets have been reserved by KU faculty, staff, alumni and other guests, but several hundred tickets remain available, Johnson said.
On Monday, tickets will be made available
"I don't see this as a hobnobbing event."
Robert Hemenway
Chancellor
to the general public, but students still may obtain tickets at the SUA office.
"The inauguration is not something for the chancellor; it's not for the faculty, and it's not for alumni," Hemenway said. "The students are the people who have the greatest stake in the future of the University, and this is a chance to take part in an event that looks at the University and where we are going."
The inauguration, which will be held at the Lied Center, will feature original music, an inaugural poem and comments by Hemenway, Gov. Bill Graves and Sen. Nancy Kassbaum.
Although the event will include prominent alumni and politicians, Hemenway said he would be addressing students and the University community.
"I don't see this as a hobnobbing event," Hemenway said. "This is a KU tradition and is an opportunity for students to be a part of history at the University."
The University has not had an inauguration since 1981 when Gene Budig became chancellor. Richard DeGeorge, chairman of the inauguration committee, died
For the students
Chancellor Robert Hemenway's Inauguration
**When:** 2 p.m. Feb. 11
**Where:** The Lied Center
**Tickets:** Tickets for the inauguration are free. Tickets are available to students at the Student Union Activities office in the Kansas Union. Tickets will be made available to the general public on Monday.
this was an opportunity to be a part of a long-standing University tradition.
"Students who are here now have a chance to take part in a new beginning for the University," DeGeorge said.
The inauguration is only one of several events planned for the inaugural weekend.
DeGeorge said the events were planned to appeal to a broad cross-section of the University community.
Acclaimed play flies into KU's Lied Center
There are 3,200 tickets left for this weekend's performances of Tony Kushner's award-winning play Angels in America at the Lied Center.
Four shows set for the award-winning Angels in America
By Susanna Löof
Kansan staff writer
But that does not mean the center's officials are disappointed with the sales, said Karen Christilles, director of public relations.
"We never expected it to entirely sell out," she said. "The size of Lawrence is just not big enough for that."
If there had been two performances of the play, it would have been much more likely to sell out, Chris-
tillessaid.
But center officials scheduled four performances to accommodate more people.
The play has been praised as the event of the decade by critics countrywide. It consists of two parts, Millennium Approaches and Perestroka.
One of the men in the gay couple has AIDS, which is one of the main themes of the play.
The parts are interrelated but independent, and they both focus on two couples, a gay couple and a Mormon couple.
The play also includes historical figures such as Roy Cohn and Ethel Rosenberg.
Cohn was a lawyer famous for his role during the McCarthy era. He was acquitted for fraud, bribery and conspiracy, and he died of complications of AIDS in 1986.
Rosenberg was suspected of being
"Having read the script, I don't think I am going to be able to watch it comfortably."
Kim Miller Erie, Ill., graduate student
a spy for the Soviet Union. She was executed in New York in 1953.
As of yesterday afternoon, 4,500 tickets had been sold to the performances. About 1,100 of those were student tickets.
Miller, who studies American theater history, said she expected the play to be educational and challenging.
Christilles said she did not think that the price, $15, for the least-expensive student tickets to each performance, had deterred students from buying tickets.
"Perhaps the time commitment would be a larger problems for students," she said. "It may be hard for them to find eight hours in a weekend."
"Having read the script, I don't think I am going to be able to watch it comfortably," she said. "There is a man dying of AIDS in it. That's nothing I can sit and watch at ease."
For Kim Miller, Erie, Ill., graduate student, eight hours is not too much to spend on the play. Nor is the expense. She said she thought the play was a landmark because it deals with contemporary issues in an open way.
When and Where to Find Angels
Angels in America, an award-winning play by Tony Kushner, is the tale of two couples, one gay and one Mormon. The play, presented in two parts, ties together their stories.
**Part I:** Millennium Approaches will be performed at 8 p.m. Feb. 2 and at 2 p.m. Feb. 3.
**Part II:** Perrestroika will be performed at 8 p.m. Feb. 3 and at 7 p.m. Feb. 4.
Student tickets are $15 or $17.50 for each part. They are on sale at the Lied Center box office and at the Student Union Activities box office in the Kansas Union.
2A
Friday, February 2, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ON CAMPUS
KU Art and Design Gallery is sponsoring Rick Mitchell: Photography Show Feb. 4-9 in Galleries A and D, Call Marvel Maring at 864-4401 for information.
Multicultural Resource Center is sponsoring a support group for medicine wheel recovery at 3:30 p.m.
International Studies and Phi Beta Delta are sponsoring a lecture at noon today in the International Room at the Kansas Union. Ambassador David Lambertson will speak on The AIDS Crisis in Thailand. Call Hodgie Bricke at 864-4141 for information.
The Jubilee Cafe, a breakfast service for the homeless, is having an informational meeting at noon on Saturday at the Regionalist room in the Kansas Union. Call Amy Turnbull at 832-1548 for information.
KU Dance Club is having a dance lesson at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Call Sonic Ratzlaff at 864-1581 for information.
KU Study Abroad in French Speaking Countries is having an informational meeting at 2:30 p.m. Monday in 4033 Wescoe Hall.
The Office of Study Abroad is holding an informational meeting on the Great Britain Direct Exchange program at 4 p.m. Monday in 4045 Wescoe. Call Nancy Mitchell at 864-
3742 for information.
KU Karate Club is having practice at 5:30 p.m. Monday in 215 Robinson Center. Call Jon Sides at 832-1771 for information.
International Students Association is having its weekly meeting at 6 p.m. Monday at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Meditation Club is having group meditation at 6 p.m. Monday at the Daisy Hill room in the Burge Union. Call Ravi Hrekatur at 832-8789.
KU Yoga Club is having Yoga class at 7:00 p.m. Monday at the Daisy Hill room in the Burge Union. Call Adam Miller at 832-0399 or Paula Duke at 542-1930 for information.
Student Assistance Center is sponsoring Taking Control of Calculus at 7 p.m. Monday in 120 Snow Hall. Call the SAC at 864-4064 for information.
Student Assistance Center is sponsoring a Preparing for Exams Workshop at 7 p.m. Monday in 330 Strong Hall. Call the SAC at 864-4064 for information.
■ KU Kempo Club is having a meeting at 7:30 on Monday in 207 Robinson. Call Mark Hurt at 842-4713 for information.
KU Women's Rugby is having practice at 8 p.m. Monday. Call Stacey Stringfellow at 749-3380 for information.
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Massachusetts
"Unheard since 1993"
832-8228
NATURALWAY
· NATURAL BODY CARE
Open admissions debate continues
TOPEKA — Opponents of qualified admissions tried to whittle away at the proposal during a meeting of the House Education Committee yesterday.
By John Collar
NATURAL FIBER
CLOTHING
820 822 MASS 841 0190
THE LION OF GOD
Kansan staff writer
The bill would establish minimum admissions standards at Regents institutions. The measure has been proposed in various forms in most of the previous eight legislative sessions but has been defeated each time.
"This bill is an idea whose time has come again, again and again," said State Rep. Ralph Tanner, R-Baldwin City, the current bill's sponsor.
The bill proposes that students applying to a Regents university would be required to attain a minimum grade point average of 2.0, a composite score of at least 23 on the American College Testing program or rank in the top one-third of their high-school class. A provision also would allow the school to admit 10 percent of the freshman class who show promise but do not meet any of the requirements.
The committee heard testimony yesterday from a wide range of voices, even a high school student from Shawnee Heights High School in Topeka who opposed the bill.
David DePue, executive director of the Kansas Council on Vocational Education, said the performance of Kansas' students showed that open admissions was a good policy.
- 820-822 MASS. • 841-0100•
"Qualified admissions is one way, among several, of achieving better preparation of our children," he said.
"Kansas has higher statewide high school graduation requirements than most of our neighbors," DePue said. "Kansas has 91 percent of our
"Until a stronger case is made that qualified admissions really will make a difference in helping students succeed, we do not believe Kansas should risk losing the students who are currently succeeding despite the odds." Tallman said.
college students enrolled at public institutions, the highest percentage of our six neighbors."
Stephen Jordan, executive director of the Board of Regents, supported the bill.
Mark Tallman, a representative for the Kansas Association of School Boards, said that open admissions had resulted in better educated and more productive people.
The University Daily Kansa (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan,
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
ON THE RECORD
Mary Soliz, Lawrence, was arrested and charged with driving under the influence at 3 a.m. yesterday in the 2300 block of West 26th Street, KU police reported. Police stopped Soliz because she crossed the center line and had an expired tag. When the officer asked for identification, Soliz gave him a fraudulent driver's license.
It was later discovered that her real license had been suspended, KU police said. Bond was set at $250, and Soliz paid in cash, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's front windshield was broken on Monday between 4:25 and 5:50 a.m. in lot 105. The damage was valued at $225, KU police said.
Weather
HIGH LOW
Atlanta 47 ° • 39 °
Chicago 4 ° • -8 °
Des Moines, Iowa -5 ° • -15 °
Kansas City, Mo. 0 ° • -5 °
Lawrence -6 ° • -5 °
Los Angeles 62 ° • 52 °
New York 34 ° • 23 °
Omaha, Neb. -5 ° • -13 °
St. Louis 39 ° • 21 °
Seattle 4 ° • 0 °
Topeka 3 ° • -5 °
Tulsa, Okla. 10 ° • 6 °
Wichita 3 ° • 0 °
TODAY
Cold with chance for flurries tonight and a wind chill of -20 to -35.
6 -5
FRIDAY
Temperatures very cold again with a chance of flurries late tonight.
3 -5
SUNDAY
Partly cloudy and cold.
8 0
TODAY
Cold with chance for flurries tonight and a wind chill of -20 to -35.
6-5
FRIDAY
Temperatures very cold again with a chance of flurries late tonight.
3-5
SUNDAY
Partly cloudy and cold.
80
6 - 5
6-5
3-5
80
3-5
KU
80
Source: Kevin Mullanii, KU Weather Service
Officer falls off roof rescuing teen-age girl
Kansan staff report
A sheriff's deputy is in intensive care after falling from a roof while rescuing a 16-year-old Lawrence girl who was attempting suicide Wednesday night.
Three deputies and one KBI officer responded to a reported suicide attempt in the 900 block of East 1338 Road, said an official from the Douglas County Sheriff's Department.
When the officers arrived, they found the girl sitting near the edge of the roof with a cord wrapped around her neck.
Officer Ron Wilson and another officer climbed onto the roof of the residence and moved the girl away from the edge. But when Wilson
tried to secure his and the girl's position, the victim and Wilson lost their footing and fell from the roof.
The girl landed on Wilson and was not injured. However, Wilson hit his head on a cement sidewalk and suffered a concussion. He was transported to KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., by Life Flight.
Douglas County Sheriff Loren Anderson said that his officers were shocked by the outcome of the incident.
"It was a shock to the individuals that were there because the feeling was we were going to be able to do this without any great side effects," he said. "And then boom, there they were, both on the ground."
SPRING 1996 CAREER AND EMPLOYMENT FAIR
Abercrombie&Fitch Mt. Oread Book Shop
Adia/ Martin-Smith Personnel National Academy of Railroad Science
American Multi- Cinema National Tire Warehouse
American Red Cross Naval ROTC
Astor Universal Corp. New York Life
Astra Merck, Inc.
B'nai' B'rith Beber Camp Nolan Real Estate Services
BDM - Oklahoma Northwestern Mutual Life-Ertz Agency
Blockbuster Video Northwestern Mutual Life-Hames Agency
Boatmen's First National Bank Olsen Staffing Services
Boeing Commercial Airplane Group Osco Drug / Sav - on Drug
Boys and Girls Club Output Technologies
Camp Birchwood Overland Park KS Police Department
Camp Buckskin Overland Park Marriott Hotel
Camp Chi People to People International
Camp Winadu Pepsi Cola Co.
Camps Atry and Louse Pizza Hut, Inc.
Camp Lincoln & Lake Hubert Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City
Century Personnel Pro Staff Personnel Services
Cessna Aircraft Prudential Preferred Financial Services
Champs Sports Pulte Home Corporation
City of Lawrence Rainbow Generation
Coastal Mart Raytheon Aircraft
College Pro Painters Robert Half of Kansas City
Contemporary Group Rock Springs 4-H Center
Cottonwood, Inc. Sallie Mae
Deluxe Check Printers Sears, Roebuck &Co.
Digi Postal Corp. Seasonality
Division of Family Services Signature Staffing
DST Systems Snow Mountain Ranch
Ecumenical Christian Ministries Spangler Printers
Enterprise Rent-A-Car St. Lawrence Center/Catholic Network Volunteer Services
Equitable State Farm Insurance Co.
Famous Footwear Sunflower State Games
Franklin Financial Services Super Target
Frito Lay Superior Chevrolet
Frontier Corp. The Guardian
Gallup Organization Timber Lake/Tyler Hill Camp
Greene Family Camp Topeka Police Department
Heartspring Touch Net Information Services, Inc.
Hoechst Marion Roussel U.S. Army Recruiting Station
Informix Software, Inc. U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services
International Studies Office U.S. Marine Corps
J.C. Penney Co. United American Insurance Co.
Johnson County Parks & Recreation Univ. of Cincinnati College of Medicine
Jones Store Company Univ. of Kansas Dept. of Human Resources
Kansas State Admin. Dept. of Personnel Upward Bound Program/KU Math & Science Center
Kansas Technology Enterprise Corp. Visual Components , Inc.
Lakemary Center, Inc. Waddell & Reed
Lawrence Police Department Winning Ways
Luby's Cateterias, Inc. Worlds of Fun/Oceans of Fun
Manpower Temporary Services Wyandotte Co. Health Dept.
March of Dimes- Greater Kansas City Area YMCA Camp Wood
Merck & Co., Inc. YMCA of Johnson Co.
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 2, 1996
3A
Accentuate the positive
Positive thinking builds self-confidence level, helps recognize limits
Low self esteem can be common among college students and characterized by alcohol and drug abuse, depression, and poor academic work.
Photo Illustration by Darcy Coles/KANSAN
By Teresa Veazey Kansan staff writer
Call it stinkin't thinkin'
You look into the mirror with a critical eye, only to find something negative instead of something positive. And that can damage your confidence, said Janine Gracy, coordinator of Health Promotion and Education at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
As part of National Boost Your Self-Esteem Month, KU students should take a closer look at how they feel about themselves and what they can do to feel better, Gracy said.
"Self-esteem has everything to do with your health behavior," she said. "If you feel good about yourself, then you are less likely to take risks with your body."
These risks can include alcohol abuse or engaging in unsafe sex, both of which are common to college students.
As a result, accidents are the leading cause of death in the college age group, and complications from AIDS are the leading cause of death for people 25- to 44-years-old. Gracy said.
Recognizing what you can and can't do and respecting those limitations are crucial for good self-esteem, said Joyce Davidson, counseling psychologist and director of training at Counseling and Psychological Services.
"Self-esteem has everything to do with your health behavior."
"It's a balanced mix of positives, skills, abilities and limitations," she said. "I will get tired, but there are many things I can do."
Janine Gracy Health Promotion and Education
Davidson likened self-esteem to a battery in a car from which energy is drawn.
"If the battery is never charged, nothing else works," she said.
But an uncharged battery one day doesn't always mean a person is suffering from low self-esteem. Davidson said everyone feels a little down sometimes, but one bad day after another can mean that a constant feeling of inadequacy has become a habit.
"We get the analogy that if it's short-term, it may be discouragement," she said. "If the thoughts about your self are chronically critical and self-blaming, that's probably more of a self-esteem issue."
Gracy said people with low self esteem had a negative sense of themselves. These
■ isolating themselves — not doing things
characteristics include:
they enjoy or used to enjoy
abusing alcohol or drugs
depression
poor academic work
complaining
Justin Hertach, Hutchinson sophomore, said he noticed how his self-esteem began to dip and affect his academics. He sometimes asked himself why he missed a class or if he really studied for a test.
"My self-esteem is pretty average," he said. "Since being in college, it makes me feel it's a little lower. Seems like everything you do is always less than what you expected."
Not meeting expectations can hurt a person's self-worth, but being too critical can hurt it more. Gracy said.
"It's time for self-approval," she said. "It's time for being able to look in the mirror and like what you see."
Buddhism opens minds at KU
Hyaweel Choi has found a place to practice Buddhism in the very heart of America, thousands of miles from where Buddhism began.
"I was surprised when I came to Lawrence that there was a Zen Center here because it's such a small town," said the visiting professor from Seoul, South Korea.
By R. Adam Ward Kansan staff writer
Choi didn't attend regularly the elaborate temples in Seoul, South Korea, but attends all four of the practices at the Kansas Zen Center, 1423 New York St. she said.
The center isn't well-known, but it has a history in Lawrence.
The center was founded in 1978 and has been operating since then.
It was started by a Zen monk from Korea, and is one of the International Kwan Um Zen Schools, Choi said.
The school started out as a meeting in a KU library with about 20 members.
Next, it moved to the community center. The center has about 40 permanent members, and its own building.
A gravel path leads through an Oriental-style gate. There are rock
sculptures in the yard and an alter with a gold Buddha on it in the building's foyer, said Stanley Lombardo, guiding teacher of the center.
Lombardo, who also is chair of the Classics department, said many members are from the University community.
Chad Snoddy, Charleston, Ill., junior, attends the center regularly.
"It's really nice to have something here in Kansas," he said.
Practices at the Center consist of three parts.
The first part is prostration. Students, dressed in traditional Taoist robes, bow 108 times.
The second part consists of chanting for 20 minutes.
Finally, there is meditation. The students sit on the floor and meditate about their essential nature, Lombardo said.
The practice also may include reading letters written to the Zen teacher about the struggles in people's lives.
As for what motivated Choi to become more involved in Zen Buddhism, she said, "It helped me in really understanding life, managing life, interacting with others and most of all, understanding myself."
Sherry Velasco, director at the Kansas Zen Center, chants in Sino-Korean during a Zen Buddhist ceremony.
Rrian Hott /KANRAN
Pulitzer winner gets local award
By David Teska Kansan staff writer
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Hedrick Smith will be recognized today for both his reporting on the events of the day and his efforts at focusing on the future.
PETER SMITH
Smith, who has written several books on the politics of the United States and the for-
will receive the William Allen White Foundation's 1996 national citation. The award is given annually by the foundation to distinguished journalists.
Hedrick Smith
Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism and director of the foundation, said the foundation's trustees
voted for the recipient each year. After the ballots are returned from more than 100 trustees around the country, a committee recommends five selectees. The foundation's executive committee then approves the list.
Susanne Shaw, professor of journalism and a foundation trustee, said that it was not uncommon for people to remain on the ballot for several years.
Kautsch said he called the five winners to see who could attend the event.
Because of scheduling requirements, Kautsch said, the calls are made eight months in advance.
Smith will join a long line of noted journalists who have received the award, which has been given every year since 1950.
The first award went to former New York Times editor James P. Reston, who died in
December. Previous winners include Walter Cronkite, Robert McNeil, Helen Thomas and Charles Kurait. Boston Globe columnist Ellen Goodman was last year's winner.
"These are all people who have had distinguished careers in print and broadcast journalism." Shaw said.
Smith has shown many attributes also found in the foundation's namesake, William Allen White, Kautsch said. White, the longtime managing editor of the Emporia Gazette, died in 1944.
"He shares with William Allen White an interest on the workings of government and has been praised for his analytical skills." Kautsch said.
Smith, like White, is also a visionary, Kautsch said.
In 1985, Smith made the move to television with his documentary on the Reaganera "Star Wars" program. Since then, he has produced 20 documentaries, including 1988's The Power Game: How Washington Works, and 1991's Inside Gorbachev's USSR, which won a George Peabody Award.
Before going into documentary work, Smith spent more than 20 years as a print reporter, starting with the Greenville (N.C.) News. In 1959, he went to United Press International and, ultimately, the New York Times in 1962. He covered the civil rights conflict in the South and then became the Times' Moscow correspondent.
For his reporting on Moscow and Eastern Europe, Smith won the 1974 Pulitzer Prize. He became the Times' Washington bureau chief in 1979, a position he held until 1985.
The ceremony and Smith's address is open to public and will be at 1:30 at the Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Shimomura highlights artistic career at lecture
Kansan Correspondent
By Eric Weslander
A silent fisherman stood at the front of the darkened auditorium. Images of harbors and fishing docks flashed on the walls, and the sound of crashing waves filled the room as the audience filed in.
Roger Shimomura, university distinguished professor of art, gave his inaugural lecture last night at the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
The lecture, titled A Decade of Performances: Not Made in Japan, used slides, video, and live performance to chronicle Shimomura's performance art pieces.
The ocean images represented the beginning of Shimomura's career as a performance artist, which began with the filming of fishing trips in Seattle 12 years ago.
Last night's lecture was the 47th in a series to recognize distinguished professors upon their appointments.
Shimomura was appointed to the professorship in 1994.
Shimomura's performance art primarily featured Japanese images. One past performance combined traditional Japanese dance with rock music.
"All ethnic traditions of a country mutate as they are passed from one generation to the next," he said.
Much of Shimomura's work addressed stereotypes of Asian Americans.
One performance he discussed, titled Yellow Potluck, featured a woman in Japanese dress dancing and handing fortune cookies to passers-by on 42nd Street in New York City. The fortunes read, "Fortune cookies are not Japanese."
"It's dangerous to generalize," Shimmura said.
To show the meaning of performance art to the crowd of more than 300, Shimomura used performance in the lecture.
A black-robed attendant, known in Japanese theater as a kurogo, occasionally ran through the crowd passing out mementos of the lecture. In his previous performances, Shimomura used a kurogo to interact with the audience.
At the end of the lecture Kelley Hunt, a singer who previously had worked with Shimomura, danced and sang through the audience with her face painted white, wearing traditional Japanese dress and curly blond hair.
a kurogo followed, handing audience members such material things as hamburger buns and bottles of ketchup.
The piece symbolized the limitations and expectations of biculturalism, Shimomura said.
Hunt said that working with Shimomura was energizing.
"He also gives you a chance to be bizarre."
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KIEF'S
24th & Iowa·PO Box 2·Lawrence. KS 66046
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Friday, February 2, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Criticized inauguration becomes more friendly
The chancellor's coming inauguration has been criticized for costing too much in a time of financial cutbacks in higher education, especially in Kansas.
The event, which will be on Feb. 11, costs $27,500, and Student Senate has approved $2,500 more from Senate's unallocated ac-count to help pay for the Branford and Ellis Marsalis concert on Feb. 10. The concert specifically was planned as part of the inauguration weekend to get students involved in the festivities. Student also can pick up free tickets to the inauguration ceremony at the Student Union Activities box office in the Kansas Union.
Sue Morrell, manager for SUA, said that Student Senate asked the organization to coordinate a student event for the inauguration. Thus, they organized a Marsalis performance, but for SUA to break even on this venture, it must sell 1,500 of about 1,900 tickets available. Morrell said the event was a risky one for SUA given that as of Wednesday only 831 tickets had been sold.
Usually performances are paid for by SUA, which receives its money from
THE ISSUE:
Inauguration events
the Kansas and Burge Unions. But since the Marsalis performance was part of the inauguration, SUA asked Senate for help in making the tickets for the concert cheaper for students by helping with the costs. The tickets to the Marsalis concert are $16 for students and $20 for the general public. But without Student Senate's help the tickets could have been much more. $2,500 is only a fraction of the money needed to pay for a Branford and Ellis Marsalis performance.
More than 1,000 people have reserved tickets for the inauguration ceremony, but only five students have picked up free tickets from the SUA box office. Wheth-er students agree with the high cost of the ceremony, they should grab a ticket, put on a dress or a tie and go see what all the hoopla is about because tickets are free.
Despite the $27,500 price tag,the office of the Chancellor has done a good job of making the inauguration festivities open to the student body.
THE KANSAN EDITORIAL BOARD
Punishments don't fit crimes in University residence halls
In some halls, creative sanctions are enforced. This could be an activity such as making a bulletin board for the floor for spray-painting the bathroom. These sanctions will only work, however, if the punishment fits the crime. The temptation could too often be to have the violator do some positive, hallimproving project that the violator doesn't care about anyway.
The KU residence halls can be trashed like dumpsters any time during the week. One can party as loud as possible regardless of the neighbors' complaints, and no disciplinary sanctions will be taken. So far, the department of student housing has not done much to change this situation.
People who violate the noise rules in residence halls are taking valuable time away from those students who need to sleep, relax or study. People who trash or vandalize the halls
THE ISSUE:
Creative sanctions
Residence halls need better discipline policies
cost the students money. Instead of imposing creative arts-and-crafts projects on rule violators, the department of student housing should make violators absolutely pay for any loss of property or defacing of property, and should make noise violators pay tickets issued by the KU police, not the hall monitors.
Granted, most of the rule violations in the residence halls are small enough that they are not given a second thought, but concrete sanctions need to be found that punish violators for their actions and help those students who were inconvenienced. Those students don't need bulletin boards, they need rules that will keep violations from happening.
THE KANSAN EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAS SUMMER DOG DAYS
DON'T SEEM SO BAD
AFTER ALL...
JANUARY...
FEBRUARY...
Happy Winter!
Stay Warm...
Marko
HELD
0'96
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Marko DIELS 96
Marko Fields / KANSAN
JANUARY... FEBRUARY...
Groundhog Day remains most basic among holidays
Next to the Fourth of July, with its glaring disregard for all things safe and controlled, Groundhog Day has to be my favorite holiday. I understand that Groundhog Day lacks that certain alcohol-induced elan of other holidays, yet on a certain level it remains the closest thing to a pagan ritual that we recognize. Even Halloween, complete with witches, goblins and things that go bump in the night, has its roots in some long-forgotten Christian holy day.
Ah, but not Groundhog Day. Yes,
this partless observance of sophisticated rodents, who surely must be as equally amused by our interest in them, remains the most basic of all our recognized holidays. What is this day but an acknowledgement that we are trying to survive yet another brutal season where the hunting, gathering and farming we do to survive is more difficult because of the cold and snow?
The actions of a gooey little rodent, smart enough to hide out for the winter, away from the human toils of scraping ice off of car windows and shivering in a little studio in the heart of the Lawrence student ghetto, satisfies our need for the hope that we will get through another year. Poor pathetic us. What a delightful pity that we need symbols even more primitive than crucifixes and stained glass.
Besides all of that, Groundhog Day always brings to mind my favorite joke. This, of course, is the likely reason for my holiday preference.
Just stop me if you have heard this one.
JOHN MARTIN
STAFF COLUMNIST
Three freshmen Republican Congressmen were sitting in a bar somewhere near Capitol Hill. Davidson Neumoney, a thirty弄 newcomer from the left coast of Florida, made his money in the real estate speculation game and earned his seat in the bar by convincing all the retirees in his district that they deserved a free-range chicken in every Calphalon pot, just like the old days.
Roberto "Bob" DeSlima, a 42-year ex-fruit picker from the central valley of California, made his money by marrying the cannery owner's daughter and earned his seat with a few well-placed lies in Spanish to gatherers of his ex-colleagues.
And, last, Jerry Lee Zenophobe, a fiftyish veteran of the Texas Legislature, made his money selling cars to solid Americans and earned his seat by timing his aspirations for a national seat with the mid-1900s.
After making deficit-cutting small talk for about five minutes, when they gleefly took turns rattling off federal programs that soon would be stripped to the bone, they sat back for the main course of jawbonin'. Jawbonin' took the form of recounting oft-repeated tales of plunder of some chest of booty that had gone undiscovered, waiting for the
morally good and financially astute them, to unearth. The tales of victory against the lazy no-count rednecks and unedge-yu-hated mi-nor-u-tees from back home tightened their slacks with pride but left them bored eventually, swirling the ice cubes in their drinks and staring out the window of the bar.
Representative Neumoney, waxing philosophical, turned to his good buddy, Representative DeSlima, and asked, "Hey, Bob, what the hell's your favorite holiday?"
"That'd probably have to be Groundhog Day, Dave. You know, that holiday where they light off all them firecrackers and I end up naked in the back of the houseboat with one of those cute little legislative interns they always givein' us."
"Bob, you is stupid sometimes," said Representative Zenophobe. "That ain't Groundhog Day. Groundhog Day is when we get trees and decorate those things up. Then everybody gets presents. You remember, like last year when I let you in on that little slush activity comin' from those corporate farmin' boys."
"Sorry I even asked." Representative Neumoney said. "Both of you are ignorant. Groundhog Day is the day that Jesus was crucified. He was buried in a cave, and three days later he came out, saw a shadow and then went back in."
I love that joke. You know, I heard it from a priest. Now, he had this Groundhog thing in perspective.
John Martin is a Lawrence second-year law student.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Students have right to research instructors
As a student at the University of Kansas, I would like to comment on the Student Senate resolution to release instructor evaluations to the student body. After reading the article "Evaluation request draws criticism" in the Jan. 31 edition of the University Daily Kansan, I noticed, specifically, the opinion of Bob Minor, professor of religious studies. According to the article, Minor was disappointed by the resolution's treatment of students as consumers.
I would only like to add that any faculty member who is opposed to the release of evaluations is raising a red flag that they have something to hide.
In response to this, I would like to point out that the students are consumers. We spend a lot of money to get the best education from a quality university with quality instructors. We are purchasing a service and investing in our futures and should have the right to research information regarding the quality of that service.
Jennifer Maenner Marionville, Mo., senior
How to submit letters
Letters: Should be double-spaced typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student, Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
All letters should be submitted to the Kansen newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Rint Hall. The Kansen reserves the right to edit. out to length or reject all submissions.
KANSAN STAFF
Generation gap noticeable in dating habits
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the Baby Boom generation. As this era of parents, care givers and elders moves farther from us, it is obvious that we live in a world very different from theirs.
Our parents see things from different angles than we do. Whereas we might stand and look at things and predicaments, they are perched high above, judging everything, casting a speculative glance on the whole thing.
STAFF COLUMNIST
CARTER VOEKEL
It is not a bad thing, however, that our parents do things in a seemingly archaic and antiquated fashion. It simply means that our generation is coming into our own. But some of our parents' ideals and actions also should ring true today.
Take, for example. the institution of marriage. Our parents married at early ages and stayed married for quite some time. They did not wallow in the mires of single life until it was too late. Our parents actually threw themselves into the world and met someone else. They sacrificed pride and embarrassment for the desire to link up with someone — to be married, in a sense.
We do not hold marriage in the same esteem that our parents did. They saw it as a necessity, something that everyone did. We view it as a barrier to the single life. The idea of marriage has become perverted in that it is no longer a union between two souls. It is just a thing that our parents did because they felt they had to.
We do not approach marriage like our parents. Their world was filled with constant interactions and social gatherings, all thinly veiled as nuptial opportunities. We are more of a group looking for the easy way out; no one wants a long-term commitment or personal obligation. But when people from our generation get married, there is a decent chance that in 10 years their personal lives will wind up looking like a scene from Purple Rain.
It seems to me that we are a generation working too hard for the redundancy of touch. There are no more dates or spontaneous encounters that lead to bigger and better things. Instead, we place personal ads, go to singles' bars and get on line to meet people. There seems to be a lack of intestinal fortitude that drives people to engage in personal interaction.
The problem with these personal ads, bars and on-line experiences is that they are totally false. If you really think that "Sparky-dot-com" looks like the person says, then you have been cheated seriously by the entire technological process. Chances are that the person on the receiving end of your chat-room antics looks a lot like Ernest Borgnine after a thick night of scotch.
We are too scared to confront those whom we wish to meet; we think too much and act too little, and that equates loneliness. This brooding stance of independence can lead you only so far. If people wanted to be alone or emotionally self-sufficient, there would be no bars or nightclubs, no Internet, no hotlines. It is actually a sign that people want to make the effort, but somehow that notion gets lost in the maze of hellos and goodbyes. If we just put aside the differences and acted upon the similarities, then we too might be a generation locked in the throes of nuptial bliss. And then — guess what — we'll be just like our parents.
Carter Voekel is a Dallas junior in English.
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Campus mgr ... Karen Gersch
Regional mgr ... Kelly Connely
National mgr ... Mark Ozdemik
Special Sections mgr ... Norm Blow
Production mgr ... Rachel Cahill
Heather Vuller
Marketing director ... Cary Brewell
Custodian ... Craig Brewell
Creative director ... Ed Kowsella
Cleaned mgr ... Stacey Wongkentin
Internship/co-op mgr ... T.J. Clark
HEATHER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Campus ... Joann Birk
... Philip Brownies
Editorial ... Paul Todd
Associate editorial ... Craig Lang
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Sports ... Tom DeLonge
Associate sports ... Bill Petulla
Plato ... Andy Rulletsted
Graphics ... Noah Messner
Special sections ... Nevada State
Wires ... Annamphyre
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32 oz. of frothy delight
*Daily Specials
•3 Pool Tables
•Wed. - live jazz
•Sat. - $3 large premium bottles.
$3 jam jars of premium beer
•Sun. - live music
the
Harbour Lights
1031 Mass.
841-1960
---
THE RIGHT PLACE for
Textbooks Calculators
Test Preps Computers
Art Supplies Software
KU Gifts and Garments
more than a bookstore...
Jayhawk Bookstore
at the top of Naismith Hill!
1420 Crescent Road 843-3826
F
Three-point goals 7 vs. Nebraska (1-23-95)
CAREER HIGHS
Points 30 vs. Temple (12-22-95)
Field goal attempts 22 vs. Temple (12-22-95)
Rebounds 8 (two times)
Field goals 8 (three times)
Three-point attempts 20 vs. Temple (12-22-95)
Free throws 10 (two times)
Free-throw attempts 15 vs. Western Kentucky (3-18-95)
Assists
8 (two times)
Blocked shots 1 (two times)
Minutes played 40 vs. Temple (12-22-95)* *overtime game
Steals
5 (three times)
HONORS
1996 World University Games Team
1996 John R. Wooden Award Candidate
1995 Big Eight Newcomer of the Year
1995 2nd Team All-Big Eight (AP)
1995 2nd Team All Big-Eight (Coaches)
1995 2nd Team All-Big Eight (Players)
1995 1st Team Academic All-Big Eight
1995 Big Eight All-Newcomer Team
1993 USA Today Fab Freshmen All-America Honorable Mention
No.3 Kansas vs. Kansas State
All-time series: Kansas leads 144-88 Big Eight Conference games: 40-34 All games in Lawrence: 67-34 In Allen Field House: 24-17
Biggest scores By Kansas In Lawrence: 91 in 1974-75 (91-53) In Manhattan: 91 in 1955-56 (91-86) In Kansas City: 90 in 1994-95 (90-45) By Kansas State In Lawrence: 91 in 1961-62 (91-72) In Manhattan: 86 in 1955-56 (86-91 loss) In Kansas City: 93 in 1952-53 (93-87)
Roy Williams vs. Kansas State: 14-4
Wildcat Players to Watch
3 Elliot Hatcher Senior guard
44 Tyrone Davis Senior forward
Look for the next poster in this year's series in the Feb.7 edition of the Kansan.
Reach us at Phone 913-864-4640 Fax: 913-864-5264
E-Mail: Jayhawks@union.wpo.ukans.edu Web: http://www.rock-chalk.com/kubookstores/
KU Bookstores
Your connection to the Jayhawks every season.
LAWRENCER
PRINTING
SERVICE
Fast Turn Around
Gullible Design
Bulky Colors
Clean Oriental
Quality Service
Brooklands
Rowskirts
Stationery & Env
Posters & Maps
Brands & Books
Call: 843-4600
512 E.9th Lawrence, KS 66044
Quality Lithography & Design
JAYHAWK
SPIRIT
Jayhawk Spirit
The Largest Selection of Jayhawk Sportswear and Souvenirs anywhere!
• Starter Jackets & Caps •
• KU T-Shirts • KU Sweatshirts •
• KU Keychains • KU Shorts •
• KU Bumper Stickers • KU Pennants •
• KU License Plates • KU Glassware •
Call For Free KU Gift Catalog
1-800-749-5837
Jayhawk Spirit
935 Massachusetts
(913) 749-5194
Open Late on Game Days!!
Hours Mon - Sat 9:30 to 5:30
Thurs 'til 8:00. Sun 12:00 to 5:00
KU
KU
BOOKSTONES
WE WANT YOU! (And your next printing job!)
Pearson Collision Repair Inc.
Jay Dreamin signed and numbered by Jon Onion
FRAMEWOODS GALLERY 819 Massachusetts 842-4900
Pearson Collision Repair Inc.
749-4455
7th & Connecticut
TOYOTA BMW HONDA NISSAN VOLVO VW SUBARU MAZDA
• Foreign & Domestic • Total Vehicle Repair & Arrangement
• Reusable Comprised Damage Reports • Accurate & Reliable Scheduling
• No Repairs Made Without Approval • Down Draft Paint Booth
• Towing for Qualified Vehicles.
• Car-O-Line Measuring & Repair System
FRAMEWOODS GALLERY
THE UNIVERSITY OF MIDDLE-EAST
PORSCHE
Edmondson-Berger
Retail Liquor
Go'Hawks!
• Service
• Selection
• Competitive Prices
600 Lawrence Ave. 842-8700 (Across from Dillons)
1
Je
the Moyes
DAILY KAISAN
Wake Up To CEDARWOOD APTS Now Leasing Spring & Fall
HAPPY SCOUT
Newly Redecorated Units
Gas Heat & Air Cond.
Low Utilities
Close to Mall
1 Block from KU Bus route
Studios
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom)
Call Pat today for the Summer Special 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave
THURSDAZE
Fresh Drinks
Ladies Night
$1 Pitchers
$1 Drinks
Club
Doors Open At 8:30
No Cover Charge
for ladies 21 & over
18 & Up Admitted
@ 729 NEW HAMPSHIRE 838-4623
Slub
72
Checkers
Low Prices Everyday!
Coca-Cola
BUSCHER
NATIONAL BRAND POP
24 PACK 12 OZ. CANS
1¢ PER CAN
Over Invoice Cost
BABY DIAPERS
1¢ PER DIAPER
Over Invoice Cost
ALL GRADE "AA" EGGS
DOZEN PACK
1/2¢ PER EGG
Over Invoice Cost
NATIONAL BRAND BEER
24 PACK 12 OZ. CANS
50¢
Over Invoice Cost
BANANAS
19¢
LB.
Every Thursday
More...
• Video Department
• Photo Department
• Deli and Bakery
• All Magazines and Books 10% Off Suggested Retail Price
• 25% Off All Ambassador Greeting Cards
*ALL PRE-PRICED ITEMS AT LEAST 10% OFF FROM SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
35
6-3185 Shooting Guard Junior South Lake Tahoe, California
Named the Big Eight Newcomer of the Year last season, Haase spent the 1993-94 season on the bench after transferring from California, where he shared backcourt duty with Jason Kidd, who currently plays for the Dallas Mavericks of the NBA.
Haase, like Kansas backcourt mate Jacque Vaughn, is known for his speed and agility on the court. But unlike Vaughn, he spends lots of playing time diving, sliding and banging into whatever gets in the way. Missouri coach Norm Stewart called Haase a dirty player last season, but others in the Big Eight Conference tend to appreciate the heart and hustle of the junior guard.
Design by Tom Erickson and Jenni Carlson — Photos by Matt Flickner and Tom Leininger
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Celebrate the Big 8 with Big 8 items from the KU Bookstores
Polo shirts, Caps, Long and Short Sleeve Tees, Ties and More!
BIG8 CONFERENCE
Score big with us...
Score big with us...
Purchase a 1996 Jayhawker yearbook
For only $30 you can support the tradition of the yearbook.
The Jayhawker wishes the best for the men's and women's basketball teams on their 1995-96 seasons.
Jayhawker yearbook
428 Kansas Union
864-3728
★
Score big with us...
Purchase a 1996 Jayhawker yearbook
For only $30 you can support the tradition of the yearbook.
The Jayhawker wishes the best for the men's and women's basketball teams on their 1995-96 seasons.
Jayhawker yearbook
428 Kansas Union
864-3728
Good Luck Jayhawks!
DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANT
Call for our great food & drink specials!
815 New Hampshire 841-7286
GO HAWKS!! JAYHAWKS # 1!!
We do hats!
The Best Game Bar hats in town!
STARTER
Champion
842-2992 837 Mass
✩
Good Luck Jayhawks!
DOS HOMBRES
RESTAURANT
Call for our great
food & drink specials!
815 New Hampshire 841-7286
DOS HOMBRES
RESTAURANTE
KANSAS
SPORTS
CLUB
KANSAS SPORTS CLUB
GO HAWKS!!
JAYHAWKS # 1!!
We do hats!
The Best Game Bar hats in town!
STARTER
RUSSELL ATHLETIC
Champion
842-2992
837 Mass
NATION/WORLD
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Friday, February 2, 1996
9A
New AIDS drugs prolong life
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — For the first time, researchers have compelling evidence that a powerful new class of AIDS drugs prolongs life and reduces complications for people at advanced stages of the disease.
These drugs, called protease inhibitors, attack the AIDS virus in a different way from the medicines that have been on the market for years.
Until now, scientists' enthusiasm for these medicines has been based on test tube signs that they work, such as a 100- to 1,000-fold reduction in levels of AIDS virus in patients' blood.
Finally, they have reason to think the drugs truly may accomplish what they are intended to do: Help AIDS patients live longer and better.
Encouraging evidence on two of these drugs — Abbott Laboratories' ritonavir and Merck & Co.'s indinavir — were released to researchers at this week's Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections.
The news produced a sense of optimism that is rare at AIDS gatherings, where the results of drug experiments so often are disappointing.
"Patients need to know this is promising," said William Paul, head of the federal Office of AIDS Research. "Scientifically, it is the best we have seen. It's an unfinished story but a very good beginning."
In a presentation yesterday, John Leonard of Abbott Laboratories showed that ritonavir cuts the death rate in half — at least temporarily — when given in late stages of AIDS.
Ritonavir or dummy pills were given randomly to
1,000 AIDS patients at 67 hospitals in the United States, Canada, Europe and Australia. All of the patients had ominously low levels of T-cells, a type of white blood cell and the main target of the AIDS virus in the bloodstream.
The patients continued to receive the AIDS drugs they already had been taking and were followed for seven months. By that time, 13 percent of the patients on ritonavir had died or had developed new AIDS-related illnesses, compared with 27 percent in the comparison group. The death rate was 4.8 percent in the ritonavir patients and 8.4 percent in the comparison group.
About 15 percent of patients on ritonavir dropped out of the study, and the most common side effect was vomiting and nausea. However, Leonard said some of the patients said they felt better, gained weight and even found that their AIDS-associated skin cancer had cleared up.
Abbott applied to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in December for permission to sell ritonavir, and the company hopes to have the medicine on the market in March.
with AZT, the first AIDS drug, suggested improved survival, but this was disputed by later research.
Earlier, researchers showed that both the Abbott and Merck drugs dramatically reduced levels of the virus in the blood when combined with other standard AIDS medicines, such as AZT and 3TC.
"This is a new milestone for determining progress in AIDS."
"There is no question this is an important step forward," said Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
Showing that any AIDS medicine prolongs life has been extremely difficult. Studies a decade ago
Andre Pernet Research director
Merck's indinavir cut virus levels so low they could not be detected in 90 percent of patients using the most sensitive tests for viral genes. Abbott tried to grow viruses in cultures using blood taken from treated patients. They concluded the virus was gone in 25 percent of them.
"This is a new milestone for determining progress in AIDS," said Andre Pernet, Abbott's research director. "It's very important for the first time to be able to say patients are blood negative."
Some researchers believe it may make sense to start patients on a combination of protease inhibitors and other drugs as soon as they know they are infected.
"The dream is to start patients early when they have very low viral loads," said Pernet. "If you can suppress it without mutation long enough to let the infected cells be replaced by healthy cells, then you could cure it, although that has not been proved yet."
AIDS treatment really heats up
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - AIDS researchers have received government permission to expand an unorthodox experiment: scalding patients' blood in an attempt to fight the deadly virus.
The Food and Drug Administration will let IDT Inc. add 60 AIDS patients to its trial, where the patient's blood is drained, heated to 114 degrees and steamed back in. Blood continues to circulate during the process.
IDT, which announced the expansion yesterday, said the new studies should give the company enough data on the therapy to ask the FDA to allow sales of the treatment.
The FDA's Susan Alpert said the trials merely showed that IDT could heat patients' blood without causing brain damage or other harm.
But the FDA cautioned that nobody has proved that this treatment helps AIDS patients.
some of the HIV roaming through patients' blood, temporarily clearing enough of the virus so that patients' exhausted immune systems have a chance to fight back.
The theory is that heat will kill
But many scientists doubt it. The first U.S. hypothermia attempt caused a scandal in 1990 when the government said the patient declared cured in fact never had HIV.
Still, IDT in 1994 convinced the FDA that it had devised a safer way to heat patients' blood — and to reliably measure the results — and won permission to test six deathly ill patients.
When all survived, the FDA last winter let IDT heat 20 people at a hospital in Lafayette, Ind., and compare them with 10 others treated conventionally. None of the patients whose temperatures reached 108 degrees have suffered any AIDS-related infections since, while two of the control group sickened, as did two whose temperatures didn't rise above 104 degrees.
Sub-zero temperatures continue to slow Great Plains states
The Associated Press
BISMARCK, N.D. — Your face freezes if you're outside more than a minute or so.
And your car, if it starts at all, turns over with a growl that asks: "Where do you think you're going with a wind chill near 90 below?"
Deadly arctic cold that settled in early this week continued to grip the Plains and the Midwest yesterday.
"Even zero looks good right now," said Steve Perkins, who was reading a newspaper and drinking coffee at a Bismarck cafe.
zero and had a wind chill of minus 86. Minot, N.D., Air Force base recorded a noon temperature of 33 below, with a wind chill of minus 93.
The cold has been blamed for several deaths. A 75-year-old woman in Craig, Mont., froze after she fell near her car and could not get up.
Record lows included 51 below zero in Ely, Minn.; 43 below at International Falls, Minn.; 36 below in Aberdeen, S.D.; 55 below in St. Cloud, Minn.; 33 below in Duluth, Minn.; and 25 below in Briggsdale, Colo.
In Nebraska, an 89-year-old man died in a house fire started by a space heater used to thaw frozen water lines.
"It takes your breath away," said Ron Dockter, a principal who called off classes for 440 students in Tioga, N.D. "It's brutal out there. We just didn't want to take any chances with buses and sending children out in this weather."
underwear, jeans, a T-shirt, two more shirts, an insulated flannel shirt, his service station uniform shirt and a winter coat.
Jay Krantz, who drives a tow truck for a Bismark service station, was busy with cars that wouldn't start. Under his coveralls, Krantz wore two pairs of long
By midmorning, Sidney, Mont., was 30 degrees below
"The wind blows right through everything," he said. In North Dakota and Montana, some people had to cope without power in addition to the cold for about nine hours.
About 200 households in Townsend, Mont., were without heat after a gas distribution system broke down. About 350 households in Minot, N.D., were without power when an underground cable broke.
were closed because the tubes through which checks and receipts are sent back and forth between customers and tellers were frozen.
In Burlington, Kan., workers succeeded in melting ice that had clogged the cooling system at the Wolf Creek nuclear plant since Tuesday. The plant remained shut down while workers tried to make sure the ice would not return.
With the temperature near zero in Indianapolis, Gene Mitchell's food cart did a brisk business in coffee. Mitchell, dressed in three winter coats with a hood pulled tightly around his head, said he sells more than 12 gallons a day when the weather is cold.
"Normally, crime does go down," said Stan Lyson, the sheriff in Williams County, N.D. "But we've been a deep freeze since Jan. 4, and we're starting to see the pinch of cabin fever — the number of domestic calls are starting to rise."
Mark Edinger of Fessenden, N.D., brought his two children to a shopping mall: "We're burning up a little energy, getting them out of the house."
In Chippewa Falls, Wis., a bank's drive-through lanes
Crown Cinema
"A rollercoaster ride and a half!
George Clooney delivers a knock-out performance!"
Ball Dial, ABC RADIO NETWORK
From Robert Rodriguez From Quentin Tarantino
FROM DUSK TILL DAWN
5:30 VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-6191 7:30 9:30
DEMI MOORE ALL-CALDWIN
THE JUROR
4:45
7:25 9:50 HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191 5:00 8:00
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00 / LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 ALL DAY
Bed of Roses
Christian Slater PG
Mary Stuart Masterson
5:00
7:40 9:35 HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191 5:00 7:50
EMMA THOMPSON
and
HUGH GRANT PG
SENSE AND SENSIBILITY
BRUCE WILLIS
MADELEINE STOWE
BRAD PITT
12 R
MONKEYS
4:45 7:15 9:45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
MARY STEENBURGEN
POWDER
An extraordinary encounter PGJ3 with another human being.
9:15 Only!
CINEMA TWIN
LILOUWA 841-5191 $1.25
BABE
A LITTLE
PIG GOES A
LONG WAY.
CINEMA TWIN $1.25
31.10 IOWA 841-5191 5:00 7:20 9:35
SUDDEN DEATH
VAN DAMME
TERROR
GOES INTO
OVERTIME
SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
BACON
Crown Cinema
"A rollercoaster ride and a half! George Clooney delivers a knock-out performance!"
BILL DIETK, ABC RADIO NETWORK
VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-6191 7:30 9:30
MR. HOLLAND'S OPUS
Richard Dreyfuss PG
HILLCREST 5:00 7:25 9:50 925 IOWA 841-5191 8:00
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00 / LIMITED TO SEATING
SENIOR CITIZENS + $3.00 ALL DAY.
Bed of Roses
Christian Slater PG
Mary Stuart Masterson
EMMA THOMPSON and HUGH GRANT PG
SENSE AND SENSIBILITY
HILLCREST 5:00 7:40 9:35 925 IOWA 841-5191 7:50
BRUCE WILLIS MADELEINE STOWE BRAD PITT
12 R MONKEYS 4:45 7:15 9:45
HILLCREST 841-5191
MARY STEENBURGEN POWDER
An extraordinary encounter PGJ with another human being.
9:15 Only!
CINEMA TWIN 925 IOWA $1.25
BABE A LITTLE PIG GOES A LONG WAY.
CINEMA TWIN 5:15 7:15 925 IOWA 841-5191 7:20 9:35
SUDDEN DEATH VAN DAMME TERROR GOES INTO OVERTIME R 5:00 7:20 9:35
NATURAL WAY
• NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING • NATURAL BODY CARE
• 820-822 MASS. • 841-0100
kansas track & field
Jayhawk invitational
Saturday, Feb. 3 • All Day
Anschutz Sports Pavilion
KU's Only Home Indoor Meet Features
More Than 30 Teams & 500 Athletes!
FREE ADMISSION CELLULAR ONE
Coupon DESIGNER PERM SPECIAL
$39.95
OUR DESIGNER PERM INCLUDES:
Detecting treatment to purify your hair - Removes foreign deposits and residues to ensure a better look lasting cut.
Reconstructive Treatment for a gray hair restoring condition. A must for damaged and chemically treated hair.
Custom Cut, Mowdry & Style
A '60' value for '39'
Coupon COLOR CONDITION & SHINE
with REDKIN SHADES EQ only
$19.95
Choose from 20 colors!
Beauty WAREHOUSE & HAIRZONE' SALON OF LAWRENCE
Liberty Hall
644 Mass 749-1912
Othello
4:30 7:00 9:30 Today
RESTORATION
4:45 7:15 9:40 Today
DICKINSON
Dickinson 6
Sat-Sun 4:20 5:00
An Eye for an Eye 1:40 7:20
Aumguel 1:40 7:20
Screeners 1:40 7:20
Big Body 1:30
Drummer Old Man 1:30 4:20 7:10
White Bagul 1:30 4:15 7:00 8:40
Black Sheep 1:30 4:20 7:30 8:40
Dead Man Walking 1:30 4:15 7:10 8:40
SAFILMS
FRIDAY-SUNDAY FEBRUARY 2-4
Denzel Washington in DEVIL IN A BLUE DRESS
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 7:00 & 9:30, & SUNDAY 2:00
FASTER PUSSYKAT! KILL! KILL!
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY MIDNIGHT
RTAIL MANAGEMENT
There are NO Boundaries!
What could be more exciting than starting your career in an industry primed for continuous growth?
Starting your career with the acknowledged leader of that industry! The Electronique boutique, a global specialty retailer of sophisticated computer and video-related hardware and software products, invites you to become part of our 19-year tradition of superior cutting edge technology, innovative marketing, and continuous company expansion. We are a fast-growing company with over 300 stores in 40 states, and expanding opportunities in Canada, England and Korea. At EB your career can be as unlimited as your imagination. And, as a management professional you'll enjoy.
• Highly competitive salaries
• Company-paid benefits including medical, dental and life insurance
• 100% company-paid training
• Tuition assistance
• Flexible scheduling
• Opportunities for rapid career advancement
We will be visiting the University of Kansas Interviews - February 28
kansas
track & field
Jayhawk
Invitational
Saturday, Feb. 3 • All Day
Anschutz Sports Pavilion
KU's Only Home Indoor Meet Features
More Than 30 Teams & 500 Athletes!
FREE ADMISSION
CELLULAR ONE
Coupon
DESIGNER
PERM
SPECIAL
$39'95
OUR DESIGNER
PERM INCLUDES:
Detoxifying Treatment
to purify your hair -
remove keratin, bleach,
and traction to remove a
better fragrance last cut.
Reconstructive Treatment
for a deep penetrating
condition - A must for
damaged and chemically
treated hair.
Custom Cut. Blowdry &
Styler.
A '60" value for '39"
Coupon
COLOR
CONDITION
& SHINE
with
REDKIN
SHADES EQ
only
$19'95
choose from
20 colors!
Beauty
WAREHOUSE® & HAIRZONE® SALON
OF LAWRENCE
OPEN
8 DAYS
A WEEK
REDKEN
CALIFORNIA
TAN
SILMICED
AVEDA
Lanza
CHRON
GRAPHICS WEBD
JOICO
BASICS
OPI
IMAGE
TIGI
NeXUS
KMS
Beauty
$3'00 OFF
115 per hour maintenance on sale daily
Hours M 7:30 S 7:60 Sun Noon &
up to 11/26
520 West 23rd. Lawrence • 844 5885
Liberty Hall
644 Mass 749-1912
Othello
4:30 7:00 9:30 Today
DONNY P. NOLL THEATER WALKING MORTGAGE
RESTORATION
4:45 7:15 9:40 Today
Liberty Hall
644 Mass 749-1912
Othello
DONNYJR NALL THORNIS WALKER KENN MCCULLEY GRANY
RESTORATION
4:45 7:15 9:40 Today
STATE UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
FRIDAY SUNDAY FEBRUARY 2-4
Denzel Washington in
DEVIL IN A
BLUE DRESS
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
7:00 & 9:30, & SUNDAY 2:00
FASTER PUSSYKAT!
KILL! KILL!
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
MIDNIGHT
ATTENDED ONLINE
WHOLESALE AT
LAKE 5 KANSAS ST.
FREE LIGHT AT AMSTERDAM
LIBERTY HALL
644 Mass 749-1912
Othello
4:30 7:00 9:30 Today
RESTORATION
4:45 7:15 9:40 Today
REFOUND SOUND
1-913-842-2555
BUY-SELL TRAL
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KS
DICKINSON
PRESENTS
Dickinson 6
641 800
Sat-Sun Fri Mon-Thurs
An Eye For an Eye®
4:20 9:30
Jumseil®
1:40 7:20
Scrammers®
1:40 4:20 7:20
Big Bull®
1:50 4:30 7:10 9:30
Grampier Old Men®
1:30 4:18 7:00 9:40
White Seagull®
1:30 4:18 7:00 9:40
Black Shoal®
2:00 4:20 7:00 9:40
Dark Man Wrangler®
1:30 4:20 7:00 9:40
$30 Adults Before 4:00 P.M. Heading Out/Impaired Store
UA FILMS
FRIDAY, SUNDAY FEBRUARY 2-4
Denzel Washington in DEVIL IN A BLUE DRESS
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 7:00 & 9:30, & SUNDAY 2:00
FASTER PUSSYKAT!
KILL! KILL!
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY MIDNIGHT
1105 Mass
Lawrence, KS
RETAIL MANAGEMENT
There are NO Boundaries!
What could be more exciting than starting your career in an industry primed for continuous growth?
Starting your career with the acknowledged leader of that industry! The Electronics Boutique, a global specialty retailer of sophisticated computer and video-related hardware and software products, invites you to become part of our 5-year tradition of superior cutting edge technology, innovative marketing, and continuous company expansion.
We are a fast-growing company with over 300 stores in 40 states, and expanding opportunities in Canada, England and Korea.
At EB your career can be as unlimited as your imagination.
And, as a management professional you'll enjoy:
• Highly competitive salaries
• Company-paid benefits including medical, dental and life insurance
• 100% company-paid training
• Tuition assistance
• Flexible scheduling
• Opportunities for rapid career advancement
We will be visiting the University of Kansas Interviews - February 28
REFOUND SOUND
1-913-842-2555
BUY-SELL TRADE
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KS
DICKINSON
Dickinson 6
941 BROADWAY
2 339 WEST BROADway
Sat-Sun Fri-Mon Thurs
An Eye for an Eye® 4:20 9:30
Jummeh™ 1:40 7:30
Soreenarms® 1:40 7:30
Big Bully® 4:20 9:30
Grampler Old Wilson® 1:80 4:30 7:10
White Square® 1:30 4:15 7:20
Deadhead Walking® 1:30 4:15 7:20
Deadhead Walking® 1:30 4:15 7:20
$3.50 Adults Before 6:00 PM Heating Impaired Sleep Delay
TIN PAN ALLEY
Fats
A Merluoront & Bc
1105 Mass
Lawrence, KS
There are NO Boundaries!
There are NO Boundaries!
be more exciting than starting your career in an industry primed for continuous growth?
10A
Friday, February 2, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"Just For You Lawrence!"
Dillons
FOOD STORES
We Honor: KU
VISA MasterCard American Express NoVUS
We Honor: KU
KU
VISA MultiFidelity Carvita NAIVUS
Prices Effective Feb. 2-6,1996
Low Prices On The Items You Buy The Most.
EXCELT GROUND BEEF
CREP ENGARATED
NET WT. 25 OZ.
Fresh Ground Beef 5 Lb. Chub
$540
Lower Sodium
BAR
FETCH
BAC
BAR
FETCHED
BACON
NET WT. OZ. (1 LB.)
Bar S Sliced Bacon 16 oz. Regular or Lower Sodium $115
Deli Wafered Ham Water Added
$198 Lb.
Banana
Ripe Bananas
38¢ Lb.
Top Fresh
8BUNS
TOP FRESH
8BUNS
TOP FRESH
Top Fresh Buns & Coneys 8 Pack
Campbells
BREWED
CHEESE &
POTATOES
Cream of Mushroom
SOUP
69¢
Campbell's Mushroom Soup 10.75 oz.
Softin Gentle
4 Rules
to Help Beautiful Families
SOFTIN GENTLE
RESTROOM FURNITURE
801-523-9761
MISSING PLACE
1322 WEST 2ND ST.
COLUMBIA, MO 63001
51¢
Soft'n' Gentle Bath Tissue 4 Roll White
83¢
Joe de Regalar
Folgers
cah
Armin Reinstel
Folgers Coffee
39 oz. Regular Grind
or Auto Drip
$597
PULLMAN
COTTAGE CHEESE
BEST OF THE BEST
LOWFAT COTTAGE CHEESE
BEST OF THE BEST
Dillons Cottage Cheese 24 oz. Small, Large, Nonfat, Lofat
$134
food Club
100% FRUITS CONCENTRATED
Orange juice
12FL OZ 380 mL HH MAKES 16 QUARTERS | 5.47 LITER
HALLS
MENTHO-LYPTUS
FAST ACTIVE VAPOR ACTION
HALLS
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A
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 2, 1996
11A
Forbes gaining on Dole in New Hampshire polls
The Associated Press
Now the income tax we use now or proposed by some Republicans:
INCOME TAX
Income tax and flat tax compared If you have tax to use now compares to the flat tax being
Five tax brackets*
NASHUA, N.H. — Eager to halt Steve Forbes' New Hampshire surge, Bob Dole labeled his rival's flat tax plan "snake oil" yesterday and enlisted the state's popular GOP governor for a TV ad warning Forbes would raise middle-class taxes.
Ending a two-day New Hampshire swing. Dole tried to project a picture
Taxable income
of confidence,
shrugging off a
new poll showing
him trailing
Forbes and calmly predicting victory. "If I worried about every poll, I'd probably have an Excedrin headache." Dolesa said.
Rate Income range
15% Up to $39,000
28% $39,001,$49,250
31% $49,251,$43,600
36% $143,601,$256,500
39.6% $256,501 and up
Taxable income Salary, wages, pension
EXHIBIT INCOME Salary, wages, pension, interest, dividends, capital gains, other income
Self, spouse, dependents
Exceptions Large standard deduction exempts many people from paying tax; dependent deductions
Exemptions
Other deductions
Mortgage interest, charitable donations, state and local taxes,
other deductions
One tax bracket
17%**
Other deductions None
Credits
Bob Dole
Credit
Child care, elderly and disabled,
low-income wage earner, other
credits
PATRICK J.
FLAT
Credits None
But the decision to put Gov. Steve Merrill's prestige on the line in the effort to blunt Forbes reflected the volatility of the GOP race just 18 days before New Hampshire's leadoff presidential primary.
"The Steve Forbes income tax plan increases the deficit and raises our taxes," Merrill says in a 30-second spot that began airing yesterday.
credits
*1995 rates, taxable income for a married couple filing jointly
***Fifth tax rate proposed by House Majority Leader Dick Armen, R-Taxen; Treasury estimate is 21% rate needed to raise same revenue as current income tax
Merrill says the average New Hampshire household would pay $2,000 more in federal taxes under the Forbes plan because it would end deductions for mortgage interest and local property taxes.
Dole and Merrill weren't the only ones targeting Forbes' 17 percent flat tax.
Knight-Ridder Tribune
In Iowa, former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander said the Forbes plan would raise middle-class taxes and suggested it would hurt local education financing because property values would plummet and most school money comes from property taxes.
Forbes, also in Iowa, brushed aside the criticism as sour grapes from professional politicians — "all those who have a vested interest in perpetuating this monstrous status quo."
"It makes about as much sense as something out of the Wizard of Oz," Alexander said.
Sending Merrill into battle against Forbes is part of a calculated Dole campaign effort to leave sharp attacks on Forbes to surrogate or other candidates and have Dole offer a more upbeat message focused on contrasts with President Clinton.
He mostly stuck to that script during a discussion at a Nashua car dealership yesterday, but he used a question about the flat tax to take issue with Forbes' claim that everyone gets a tax cut under his plan.
By exempting investment income from taxes and granting generous exemptions to lower-income families, Dole said, a greater tax burden would fall on the middle class.
"There may be some snake oil here somewhere," he said.
Dole aides expressed confidence that they still had time to stall the Forbes effort before primary day. They said if nothing else, polls showing a tighter race would bring Forbes increased scrutiny.
But even many Dole backers in the state were marveling at the chaos Forbes has brought to the race and said the past offered few clues on how to combat a candidate who is willing to spend millions of his personal fortune while Dole and others adhere to spending limits.
"He's anew face, and he's got a lot of money," said former Gov. Hugh Gregg, a Dole backer. "That's a very powerful mix."
A WBZ-TV/Boston Globe poll showing Forbes leading Dole conflicted with Dole campaign polling showing the senator clinging to a narrow — but shrinking — lead in New Hampshire. Forbes' own polling shows the race a statistical dead heat. Other public polls also have offered a confusing picture of the race.
And despite Forbes' surge, there was data in the new survey suggesting his vulnerabilities: Support for the flat tax fell to 37 percent, down from 54 percent three weeks ago. In addition, 58 percent of respondents said the multimillionaire should release his tax returns and even 69 percent of Forbes' supporters said they needed to know more about his views.
There was sobering data for Dole, too, underscoring how many of the attributes that for months have served as his strengths now are potential weaknesses.
Dole's decades of Washington experience have been attacked by Forbes as evidence he is an insider with "Washington values." The poll found nearly four in 10 of those who said they planned to vote for Forbes said their biggest reason was that he was not a politician.
At the same time, 51 percent of the 400 respondents said they disapproved of Dole's handling, as Senate majority leader, in the budget showdown with Clinton.
"Dole's biggest burden is somehow convincing people unhappy with what they see in Washington that he, not some new face, is the person best suited to deliver change," Gregg said.
One reporter to get Dole to repeat a famous 1988 campaign line, asking the senator if Forbes was "living about your record."
Dole wouldn't take the bait but said. "He's not being very accurate."
Another GOP hopeful, Pat Buchanan, predicted Dole would not be able to reverse his slide but that Forbes, too, would slip.
"I think the Forbes vote is basically a parking place for voters in New Hampshire who have yet to decide on who their nominee is going to be," Buchanan said.
Information sheets for membership in Mortar Board, a highly respected senior honor society, are available in 50 Strong Hall, the OAC, and Numemaker. A 3.0 cumulative GPA is required. Deadline for return of information sheets is Friday, February 9, 1996 at 5 p.m.
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Fri. Feb. 2
HUM
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire • Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
Fri. Feb. 2
HUM
Mercury Rev • Outhouse
Sat. Feb. 3
SHAG
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Sun. Feb. 4
Napalm Death
Sheer Terror
Atrox
Mon. Feb. 5
LUNA
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Tues. Feb. 6
Pampor the Madman
Bubble Boys
Invite
The Orchestra of the University of Missouri
Conductor Richard Kapp reduces the concert hall to a private salon filled with good friends 2:00 p.m., Sunday, February 4, 1996, The Lied Center of Kansas Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); SUA Box Office (864-3477) and all ITICKETMASTER'CENTERS in Lawrence: HyVee, Streetside Records, Music-4-Less or call Ticketmaster at (913) 234-4545.
Everclear
Hill topics
Page 12A
February 2, 1996
Contributed photo
Distilled
Story and Review by
Robert Moczydlowsky
Distilled
?
when looking at Everclear performances in the Lawrence and Kansas City area during the past year, it's
n' roll fans consider them part of the local scene.
In the past nine months they've played the Granada twice, the Hurricane twice, the Bottleneck and the Grand Emporium. All were sold out.
The Lazer has become the flagship station for the grassroots Everclear movement, playing only the band's released and promoted singles but also songs from the band's first album and some lesser known compilation tracks.
A listener can't tune in to the Lazer more than 20 minutes without hearing an Everclear song or a plug for Saturday's show at the 4,000-plus seat Memorial Hall.
Let's just hope that all this Everclear doesn't leave local rock fans hung over. The Everclear has been around for awhile now and the party is out of control.
I spoke recently with Everclear bassist Craig Montoya about his band's rise from the Portland night-clubs to national tours and television exposure. So relax, have a drink and read on. You've had too much Everclear to stop now (I think you ought to give me your keys).
Q: You've played nearly every club in Lawrence and Kansas City, and our radio station absolutely worships your records. You sell out every show, and I even met a guy yesterday who told me you guys were a local band. Isn't all of this adoration a little weird?
A1 (laughs) Oh yeah, definitely. It kinda freaks me out. Those guys at the Lazer have really been good to us
and we've had tons of fun in Lawrence. We really love it there. When we first played there, we expected the clubs to be pretty empty. Then we show up and the kids are jumping around like crazy, singing the words. I can't really describe how cool we think Lawrence and Kansas City are.
Q: Do you play to similar crowds elsewhere?
friends of ours. We asked them to tour with us and thankfully, they said yes. No Doubt is a great band that doesn't really play anything like I've heard before. As far as them being one-hit-wonders, I can't really respond to that because I don't listen to the radio much. I know that both bands play more than one song that I like.
Q: What's been the biggest
Lawrence listeners have adopted these West Coast rockers
A2. Well, not really. I mean, we sell out in lots of places, and at home (in Portland) we do really well. But this is the first time we've had to cancel a show because the venue wasn't big enough. At the same time, I don't like to play in bigger venues. Any place where the stage is taller than the pit is too big. I like the people in the front row right on top of me. There's an energy between us and the crowd, and we can feed of off it when we play. Sometimes that energy just isn't there in a big venue.
Q: The other two bands on the bill, No Doubt and Ruth Ruth, have been taking some flak lately. It seems they've been hit by the standard one-hit-wonder stigma. How well do you know these bands?
A: We've played with Ruth Ruth before, and they've become good
adjustment or change you've made since Everclear signed with Capitol and the album Sparkle and Fade was released? Do you have a new 'rock star' persona?
A: I hope your joking about that ... (laughs).
Q. Yeah ... I'm joking a little. But I also see the video for "Santa Monica" about every ten minutes. That had to make hanging out in public places a little more trying.
A: Oh yeah, every time I see that video I get really freaked out. I don't know how to feel about seeing myself on television. As far as fame goes, we've gotten some really weird letters. Some from lawyers and businessmen, telling us how much they like the record, and a whole lot from younger kids who say the record helps them deal with tough things in their lives. We got a letter from a girl
who went to our show and had a great time. She found out two days later she had AIDS. We heard that right after she mailed us that letter she jumped from a freeway overpass and died. That really freaked us out. How do you react to someone writing you the last letter before they kill themselves? You can't expect to read something like that.
Q: Wow. That's pretty heavy stuff. Do you get a lot of questions about the band's message? I know Art (Alexakis) is a recovered heroin addict and that some of his lyrics seem to be therapeutic and autobiographical. How do you guys respond to that?
A: We write the music first, and then Art plays with a lyric idea as we go. We've never written a song with a message in mind. Recently we've been practicing and writing songs for a record we'll make in April, and we haven't changed the message at all. What Art writes as far as lyrics go is just what comes to mind when we play.
A lot of kids tell us that they can really relate to our songs, 'cause they're angry and up-front.' That's just how we are. I'd say that yes, the songs are about us, but what's more important is that they're honest. We just like to rock'n'roll.
Q: What comes after the April recording session?
A: It looks like we'll play this summer's Lollapaloooa. Last year's lineup was pretty lame, but this year they've got Metallica, Soundgarden, the Foo Fighters and Oasis. I'm not sure where Oasis fits in there...but who cares, they are British. I hope it works out and we can play the tour.
Few tickets remain for tomorrow night's Everclear show. They are $10 and are available at The Bottleneck or through Ticketmaster.
Night topics
Today
Ben Folds Five, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: Advanced tickets, sold out.
Craig Akin House Band, 10 p.m. at Full Moon Cafe, 803 Massachusetts St. Free.
The Billys, 10 p.m. at the Jazzhaus of Lawrence,
926 1/2 Massachusets St. Cost. $3.
Urban Safari, 9 p.m. at Johnny's Tavern, 401 North Second St. Cost: $2.
Tomorrow
Wakeland with Blueshead Beggars and Mouth
Wide Open, 10 p.m. at The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. Cost: $5-$6.
Shag with Justin Case, 10 p.m. at The Bottleneck.
Cost: $5-86.
Everclear with No Doubt and Ruth Ruth at Memorial Hall. Cost: $10.
Howard Iceberg & the Titanics, 10 p.m. at Full Moon Cafe. Free.
Dave Thompson, 10 p.m. at The Jazzhaus of
Lawrence. Cost: $4.
Urban Safari, 9 p.m. at Johnny's Tavern. Cost: $2.
Sunday
Napalm Death, 10 p.m. at The Bottleneck. Free.
Monday
Luna with Shallow, 10 p.m. at The Bottleneck.
Cost: $6.
Tuesday
Tuesday Pamper the Madman with Iodine, 10 p.m. at The Bottleneck. Cost: $3-$4.
Parlor Frogs, 8 p.m. at Full Moon Cafe. Free.
Music
Review
Tori
Amos Boys
for Pele (Atlantic).
On the inside of the Boys for
Pele CD booklet, there is a picture
of Tori Amos breast feeding a small pig.
And though I know it's an image intended to
offend, I can't help but think "Well, I guess that's just
Tori."
Maybe it is that her affinity for usual photos is the very least of what's different to mention Tori Amos. She's kind of hard to classify. Her sound doesn't easily fit into any mainstream category, and she's as far from the alternative-d stereotype as you can get. Which really leaves us with just one thing to talk about. Her music.
and thankfully, her
music is well worth talking
about. Bows for Pete, written and produced entirely by Amos, is a unique musical achievement that I imagine will be well-received by critics and fans alike. The disc opens with two strong songs, "Horses" and "Blood Roses," and though at points it sounds a touch over-produced (at one point an over-dubbed Amos sings a duet with
Tori Amos
her- self) the al- bum quality gener- ally increases as you listen. As far as the nature of the lyrics, this disc shows Amos at her boldest, lustiest
best. I recommend listening to this disc extremely late in the evening, particularly after a rousing night out on the town. Overall: 7 and climbing.
Mr. Mirainga Mr. Mirainga (MCA). This LA-based punk band played a cool little
Mr. Mirainga Mr. Mirainga (MCA). This LA-based punk band played a cool little show at the Replay Lounge last fall.
Unfortunately only two drunk guys, a dog and I saw it. Needless to say, I was looking forward to hearing their coming album. It's got some of the best cover artwork I've seen in a while, and it's obvious from the size
of their press kit that MCA is dedicated to this relatively unknown band's promotion.
Too bad the music has some problems.
Not serious problems, mind
you,
b u t
problems
nonetheless.
The most glaring is
the vocal track. Nearly
every song starts with great
guitar hooks, and — with a cou-
ple of exceptions — these songs are
pretty catchy. But the vocals are over-
mixed and often harsh. After a couple of songs
into the disk, I start to get annoyed. I know this
doesn't make me sound like the punk-
rock fan I claim to be, but I honestly wish
that these guys would learn how to sing.
Overall: 4.
Ruby Salt peter (Creation/Work). Judging by the above review of the new Tori
Mr
Mirainga
Mr. Mirainga
Amos record, one could guess that I'm not a fan of the current crop of women rockers. And to be honest, that's basically true. But here's where I talk out of the other side of my mouth.
Hove this record.
Ruby is the project of
you
are a fan
of the early
Nine Inch Nails
records or the more
rock n' roll based Ned's
Atomic Dustbin, this record
might have the feminine industrial
perspective you were waiting for.
The Lazer is playing the band's first single,
The Lazer is playing the band's first single, "Paraffin," in its rotation, though I seem to hear it
ruby
Ruby
only at night. Which is OK, because with song titles such as "Tiny Meat," "Swallow Baby" and an album called Salt peter, I get the impression that this is music for and about things that most often happen at night. Overall: 8 Next Week: Hum and Mercury Rev at The Bottleneck, plus CD reviews for the new 2Pac double-CD and the latest from KJHK favorites Possum Dixon. Staytuned.
You can reach Robert Moczdywsky at rmozuckd@afcon.ku.edu. Please send any demo tapes, 7" records or CDs to be reviewed to 11.1 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, K.6045
---
KANSAS SWIMMING The No.20 men's team is ready to face No.16 Iowa tomorrow in their final dual meet of the season. Page 4.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 2, 1996
Students deserve good seats
SECTION B
Although by reading this column you may not think so, I have the utmost respect for the Kansas athletic department.
How couldn't I? They have classy coaches in nearly every sport and run a squeaky-clean program.
"Now as the late singer Jeff Garcia said, "Every silver lining has a touch of gray." And it's that touch of gray I'm going to direct my attention upon.
During a Saturday afternoon
broadcast of college basketball earlier this season, Billy Packer said something that I can't get out of my head. The game was at Duke's Cameron Indoor Stadium and it pitted the Blue Devils against a hapless preseason opponent.
ASSOCIATE
SPORTS
EDITOR
Following a timeout caused by an intense
Maybe this is a good place to stop and say why this comment cut so deeply.
BILL
PETULA
Blue Devil defensive stand, Packer turned to Jim Nance and said, "Ya know, Jim, you can't find fans like this anywhere!"
I hate Duke with the angry intensity of 100 Bobby Knights. As a lifelong Jayhawk fan, I died a little when the Blue Devils beat us in the 1986 Final Four and died a lot when Duke topped Kansas in the 1991 Championship game.
Fact is, Billy, you can find fans like the ones in Durham, N.C., right here. You can't look across you announcers' table to the fans, though. Try looking behind the baskets and in the corners at Allen Field House — that's where you'll find the fans.
Back to the story.
SUNFLOWER SHOWDOWN
Unlike Cameron, where the students are given the best seats in the house, Kansas gives the students the leftovers. It's those who graduated in the 1940s and 1950s, or those who forked over a killing in donations to the Williams Educational Fund that get the choice courtside seats.
Courtside seating is crucial for the image of an arena.
During a Duke basketball game, the camera follows the ball and students can be seen jumping, chanting and clapping in the background. However, the background at a Kansas basketball game resembles a tennis match, with those on the courtside sitting down and politely clapping. The cameras don't show behind the goals and in the corners where students can be found doing everything the Blue Devil fans do.
in the sporting world this is nothing new. Fan loyalty means little when it is put up against the almighty dollar. I've never seen any of the alumni that sit courtside camping out for weeks to get good seats.
Heck, one fat check with a lot of zero's covers that!
In a phone conversation, Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick told me that students sitting court side is ideal, but speaking practically, it can't be done. He said that the athletic department depends heavily on private contributions.
Let me see — shoe contracts, TV contracts, $20 adult general admission tickets for men's basketball, and private contributions are the backbone of our athletic department?
I'm not asking to kick the alumni and high rollers out of Allen Field House. Just ask them to take alternate seating — like behind he goals and in the corners. If they can't accept that, there's plenty of people who would gladly take their spot.
For as much hatred as I hold against Duke, the fact is they do student seating right. The students are the ones who attend the school, their classmates are members of the team, and they are the ones who get the best seats.
Frederick did mention that student seating might be a different story if a new arena was built and they could start from scratch.
But until then, and until the students sit courtside, it looks Billy Packer is right, and the Blue Devils beat us again.
Jayhawks ready for hot Wildcats
Kansas State wants to avenge recent losses
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
if the rivalry and Big Eight Conference standings aren't enough motivation, Kansas State need only look back to last season.
The Kansas men's basketball team, which defeated K-State three times last year, ended the Wildcats' season with a 90-45 drubbing in the Big Eight tournament.
"They've probably had that put up on their board all off season and the whole summer," Kansas sophomore guard Billy Thomas said. "Those guys are definitely going to be fired up."
However, Kansas State sophomore guard Mark Young said last season's loss won't be much of a factor when the Wildcats travel to Allen Field House for a 12:05 p.m. tinoff Sunday.
"They came out and killed us. Killed us inside, outside, wherever they wanted to kill us, we told them," Young said. "But it's another season with another team. It's in the back of our mind, but this is the season we're concerned with."
The level of concern has shown. Led by seniors Elliot Hatcher and Tyrone Davis, the Wildcats are third in the conference after going 5-2 and 14-5 overall.
The rivalry has remained strong even though neither team is dominated by in-state players. Four Wildcats hail from Kansas as do three Jayhawks — junior forward B.J. Williams, Wichita; sophomore guard C.B. McGrath, Topelta; and redshirt Travis Williams, Rozel.
With a Jayhawk loss, K-State could narrow the gap between itself and Kansas. The Jayhawks lead the Big Eight and are 5-0 and 17-1 overall after an 84-66 victory against Oklahoma State on Wednesday.
teams out there that are going to play their hearts out."
Despite the rivalry's impact on the state, it wasn't a big deal for B.J. Williams when he was growing up.
"The whole state follows the game," said Kansas sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz. "It's really lots of fun to play in. You have two
"In high school, the only reason I watched KU was because 'Steve was here,' he said of former Wichita So High School teammate Steve Woodberry.
It was during Woodberry's last season that Kansas won the first two games of its current five game winning streak against the Wildcats.
The Starting Lineup
KANSAS Lawhawks 17-1, 5-0
No. Player Pos. Ht. Yr.
34 Paul Pierce F 6-11 Sr.
45 David LaFrenz F 6-11 So.
31 Scot Pollard C 6-10 Jr.
11 Jacque Vaughan G 6-1 JR.
35 Jerod Hacek G 6-3 Jr.
KANSAS ST. Wildcats 14-5, 5-2
No. Player Pos. Ht. Sr.
3 Elliot Hatcher G 6-0 Sr.
5 Mark Young G 6-6 So.
4 Caleb Esker F 6-11 Jr.
4 Tyrone Davis C 6-8 Jr.
12 Ayume May G 6-6 Fr.
Sunday at 12:05 p.m.
in Lawrence, Kansas
W: Channels 4 and 13
Radio: 90.7 and 105.9 FM
KANSAS ST. Wildcats 14-5, 5-2
No. Player Post. Ht. Yr.
3 Elliot Notcher G 6-0 Sr.
5 Mark Young G 6-6 So
45 Gerald Eaker F 6-11 Jr.
49 Tyrone Davis C 6-8 Fr.
12 Ayomo May G 6-6 Fr.
Sunday at 12:05 p.m.
in Lawrence, Kansas
TV: Channels 4 and 13
Radio: 90.7 and 105.9 FM
Kansas State men's basketball coach Tom Asbury said his team would need a great effort to break the streak because the Jayhawks have proven they are multi-dimensional. They are able to pound the ball inside or hit perimeter shots.
"We'll need to play an excellent basketball game to stay on the court," Asbury said. "I think we're capable of doing that, but we're going to have to play very, very, very well."
That will likely start on the defensive end, where the Wildcats have improved the most, said Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams. K-
State is only allowing opponents a 39.2 field goal percentage, just lower than Kansas' 39.5 percent.
"I don't see them trying to do things they cannot do," he said. "I see much more of a team this year. I'm not trying to do this to build them up; their record should build them up."
27
STA
KANSAS
11
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
The intrastate battle between Kansas and Kansas State begins another chapter Sunday when the No. 3 Jayhawks meet the Wildcats in Allen Field House.
Hard trip lies ahead for women's basketball
Kansas will travel to Colorado and Missouri
Kansan sportswriter
By Evan Blackwell Kansas sportswriter
Not only does the Kansas women's basketball team face its nemesis this weekend in No. 16 Colorado, but the Jayhawks are also embarking on their toughest swing of the season.
After taking on the Buffaloores tonight in Boulder, Kansas will take a flight to Columbia to play Missouri on Sunday afternoon. Marian Washington, Kansas women's basketball
"This swing itself is the most challenging, because of the distance between the two schools," Washington said.
coach, said this trip is the toughest of the conference season.
The Jayhawks are 12-7 overall and 5-2 in the Big Eight Conference. Kansas is in a three-way tie for first place with Colorado and Oklahoma State. The Buffalooes, 18-5 overall, have won the Big Eight championship the last three seasons.
Colorado defeated Kansas 60-59 earlier this season at Allen Field House. The game was a tight, defensive struggle. Washington said more of the same should be expected tonight.
"The advantage will be theirs at home," Washington said. "We're going to have to play
with a great deal of intensity."
Washington said transition defense will be the key to stopping Colorado this time around.
"In that game (earlier this season), they got some long passes out against us," Washington said. "We have to get back on defense."
Kansas junior guard Tamecka Dixon said the team is aware of the opportunity for the Jayhawks this weekend.
"Colorado is a great team," Dixon said. "We want the Big Eight championship, and we know how important this weekend is."
While Colorado has been a known power in the Big Eight, Missouri has been inconsistent. Despite struggling on the road, the Tigers have snuck up on several opponents this season in Columbia. The Tigers are 10-2 at home this
year, including a 72-61 win over Colorado last month.
On the road, Missouri made a strong showing in Lawrence earlier this season in 66-64 loss to the Jayhawks. Washington said Kansas remembers the problems the Tigers presented in the previous meeting.
"They did a good job of surprising us with their lineup last time," Washington said. "They went more with a perimeter, offensive team, and we had not anticipated that."
Dixon said that Kansas wouldn't be taking Missouri for granted Sunday, no matter what the outcome is tonight against Colorado.
"They've upset some people this year, and I know it would make their year to upset us," Dixon said. "We can't underestimate anyone."
Galbreath jumps hurdles to compete in two sports
By Adam Herschman Kansan sportswriter
Kansas sophomore running back Eric Galbreath seemed at ease, listening to his headphones in the almost empty stands of the Ahearn Center Saturday.
For the last three years he has spent most of his time on the football team adjusting to a new position and as a special teams player.
"I'm a competitor," Galbreath said. "i mean I really prayed about it. I wanted to run track this year. Whatever college I went to I wanted to do both, and Kansas was one of those schools that said I could."
At about 4:45 p.m., Galbreath stood up in his uniform and set his sweats down — they read Kansas Track and Field.
Finally, he would individually get his chance to compete.
Galbreath signed to play football for Kansas, but at the same time was recruited by the Kansas track and field team.
In his first track and field meet in over three years Galbreath finished sixth in the 55-meter dash in 6.66 seconds, and he finished the 200-meter dash in ninth place.
"I think I did OK, considering I just started practice last Wednesday," Galbreath said after the race. "The 200 was just a lack of conditioning; I got tight and tense. I didn't have the technique around the curb, so I was really out of control."
Kansas assistant track and field coach Theo Hamilton said that he did not expect any miracles from Galbreath in his first performance.
"For a first meet, I thought Eric had a good meet," Hamilton said. "We have a lot of work to do, first of all, but he has a lot of potential."
Galbreath did not seem to be expecting any miracles either. He said he was just happy the coaches gave him a chance to compete.
"Just being able to be out here is a victory," Galbreath said. "Today, I'm not really upset. I know that a lot of people may have beaten me today, but give me a month or so. I'll get them back," he said.
During the football season Galbreath rarely carried the ball this year. Since the team had an abundance of running backs, Galbreath only carried the ball once in the last five games.
While backing up L.T. Levine, Galbreath carried the ball 11 times for 54 yards, and also caught two passes for 17 yards. With the graduation of Levine, Galbreath wants to make the most of next year.
"Whatatever opportunity I get, I'm going to take advantage of it." "Galbreth said.
Kansas track and field coach Gary Schwartz said that the training Galbreath does will help his football skills.
"We're happy to have him," Schwartz said.
"At the very least he's going to make himself a better football player. Working on the flexibility and speed, how can you go wrong?"
KANSAS RELAYS
KANSAS
Darcy Coles / KAMSAM
Kansas harder Eric Galbreth, who is also a member of the football team, will compete in the 55-meter hurdles at the Jawahir Invittional tomorrow in Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
---
2B
Friday, February 2, 1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Big Eight Conference Men's Standings
Conference AntiGames W L Pct. W L Pct. Iowa St. 5 0 1.000 17 1 .944 Kansas St. 4 1 .800 15 4 .789 Kansas St. 5 2 .714 14 5 .737 Nebraska 3 3 .500 15 6 .714 Missouri 3 3 .500 13 7 .650 Oklahoma 2 4 .333 11 8 .579 Colorado 1 5 .167 6 11 .353 Okla. St. 5 0 .500 10 5 .588
Tomorrow's Games
Tomorrow's Games
Kansas State at Kansas: 12:05 p.m.
Colorado at Oklahoma State, 12:47 p.m.
Iowa State at Nebraska, 12:47 p.m.
Missouri at Oklahoma, 3 p.m.
Top 25 Fared
How the top 25 teams in the Associated Press' college basketball not held Thursday.
1. Massachusetts (19-0) at Temple. Next: at Xavier, Ohio, Sunday.
2. Kentucky (17-1) did not play. Next: vs.
Florida, Saturday.
6. Villanova (17-3) did not play. Next: vs. Pittsburgh, Saturday.
3. Kansas (17-1) did not play. Next: vs.
Kansas State. Sunday
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7. Utah (16-3) vs. Texas-El Paso, Next: vs.
New Mexico, San Diego.
4. Connection (20-1) did not play. Next: vat.
St. John's at Madison Square Garden, Saturd
day.
New Mexico, Saturday.
B. North Carolina (16-4) did not play. Next: at
5. Cincinnati (15-1) did not play. Next: vs. Illinois State, Friday.
North Carolina State, Saturday.
9. Georgetown (18-3) did not play. Next: vs
11. Memphis (16-3) beat DePaul 83-62, OT.
Next at quillsville, Saturday.
9. Georgetown (18-3) did not play. Next: vs.
* Notre Dame, Saturday.*
12. Wake Forest (14-3) did not play. Next: vs.
Saint Louis at Greenbush Coliseum, saturday
10. Penn State (15-2) did not play. Next at:
No. 16 Iowa Saturday.
13. Virginia Tech (15-2) did not play. Next: at Rhode Island, Saturday.
14. Arizona (15-3) vs. Washington. Next: vs.
Washington State. Saturday
16. Iowa (15-5) did not play. Next: vs. No. 10 Penn State, Saturday.
15. Texas Tech (17-1) did not play. Next: at Rice, Saturday.
17. Purdue (16-4) did not play. Next: vs. Michigan State. Saturday.
18. Syracuse (15-6) beat Miami 72-51. Next:
vs Alabama, Sunday
19. UCLA (13-5) vs. Oregon. Next: vs. Oregon State, Saturday.
20. Michigan (14-7) did not play. Next: at Ohio State, Saturday.
21. Boston College (12-5) lost to Providence
76-75. 往北威省. Santa Cruz.
Sunday.
22. Auburn (15-5) did not play. Next: vs. Mississippi State, Saturday.
23. Eastern Michigan (15-2) did not play. Next:
vs Akron, Saturday
24. Clemmon (13-4) did not play. Next: at Duke Saturday.
25. Georgia Tech (13-9) did not play. Next: at
Manland, Saturday.
Big Eight Conference Women's Standings
Conference Antigambs W L Pct. W L Pct. Okla. St. 5 2 .714 15 3 .833 Colorado 5 2 .714 15 3 .833 Kansas 5 2 .714 12 7 .632 Nebraska 3 4 .429 13 6 .684 Oklahoma 3 4 .429 11 8 .579 Kansas St. 3 4 .429 11 8 .579 Iowa State 2 5 .286 14 5 .353 Missouri 2 5 .286 11 8 .579
Oklahoma at Iowa State, 7 p.m.
Kansas State at Nebraska, 7 p.m.
Kansas at Colorado, 7 p.m.
Sunday's Gamer
Okahama State at Iowa State, 2 p.m.
Kansas State at Colorado, 2 p.m.
Kansas at Missouri, 2 p.m.
Okahama at Nebraska, 2 p.m.
How Women's Top 25 Fared
How the top 25 teams in The Associated women' college basketball poll fared
No. 1 Georgia (17-2) did not play. Next: vs.
North Carolina at Charlotte, C. N., Sunday.
No. 2 Louisiana Tech (18-1) beat South
Alabama 67-46. Next at New Orleans, Saturd-
ay.
No. 3 Tennessee (17-3) did not play. Next: at No. 20 Mississippi. Sunday
No. 4 Connecticut (19-3) did not play. Next at Boston College. Saturday.
San Francisco (10-2) did not play. Next at California, Friday.
No. 6 Iowa (17-1) did not play. Next: at Ohio State, Friday.
No. 7 Vanderbilt (15-3) did not play. Next: at Mississippi State. Friday
No. 8 Texas Tech (16-2) did not play. Next: vs.
Pied De Lis.
No. 9. Virginia (16-4) did not play. Next: vs.
Wake Forest, Sunday.
No. 10 Wisconsin (16-2) did not play. Next: at No. 23 Northwestern. Friday.
No. 11 Old Dominion (15-2) did not play. Next vs. East Carolina, Sunday.
No. 12 Duke (18-3) did not play. Next: vs. No.
14 North Carolina State, Friday.
No. 13 Penny State (15-5) did not play. Next:
vs Indiana, Friday
No. 14 North Carolina State (14-4) did no
play. Next at No. 12 Duke. Friday
No. 15 Alabama (17-4) did not play. Next: wt LSU, Saturday.
No. 17 Clemson (14-3) did not play. Next: vs.
Florida State. Saturday
No. 16 Colorado (18-5) did not play. Next: vt
Kanaas, Friday.
No. 18 Oregon State (12-4) vs. Southern California.
Next, up to UCLA Saturday.
No. 19 Oklahoma State (15-3) did not play.
TV
Live, same-day and delayed national TV_sports coverage for Friday. (schedule subject to change and-or blackout):
SPORTS WATCH
(All times Central)
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2
1 n.m.
■ ESPN2 — NASCAR Auto Racing, qualifying for 24 Hours of Daytona, at Daytona Beach, Fla.
ESPN — Senior PGA Golf, Royal Caribbean Classic, first round, at Key Biscayne. ( same-day tape)
■ USA — Golf, AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, Second Round, at Monterey, California
**PRIME — NCAA Hockey, Ferris**
St. at Michigan St.
ESPN — PBA Bowling, Columbia
ESPN2 — Women's NCAA Basketball. Auburn at Arkansas
TNT — NBA Basketball, Phoenix
(42-1-2) vs. Louie Espinoza (50-9-2)
for vacant WBU featherweight championship at Las Vegas
TNT -- NBA Basketball, Chicago at Los Angeles Lakers
ESPN — Boxing, Kevin Kelley
9:30 p.m.
ketball, Memphis at Cincinnati (sameday tape)
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Illinois St. at Cincinnati
Next: at Nebraska, Friday.
No. 20 Mississippi (14-5) did not play. Next:
vs. No. 3 Tennessee. Sunday
No. 21 Florida (15-5) did not play. Next. vs.
No. 22. Purdue (12-8) did not play. Next: at No.
13. Penn State. Sunday
No. 24 Arkansas, Sunday,
No. 29 Purdue, Sunday, No. 31
No. 23 Northwestern (15-5) did not play Next:
No. 24 Northwestern (16-7) did not play
PRO HOCKEY
No. 24 Arkansas (16-7) did not play. Next: vs.
No. 25 Auburn, Friday.
No. 25 Abum (15-5) did not play. Next: at No
24 Arkansas. Friday.
| | W L | T L | Pts | GF | GA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| N.Y. Rangers | 30 11 11 | 30 11 | 78 | 69 | 139 |
| Florida | 31 14 14 | 6 14 | 68 | 177 17 | 139 |
| Philadelphia | 25 14 11 | 15 14 | 78 | 139 12 | 131 |
| Washington | 24 21 1 | 5 21 | 53 | 139 12 | 129 |
| New Jersey | 22 22 5 | 5 49 | 53 | 129 12 | 123 |
| Tampa Bay | 21 20 7 | 7 20 | 49 | 143 158 | 163 |
| N.Y. Islanders | 13 27 7 | 8 34 | 34 | 163 183 | 163 |
National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
Pittsburgh 31 16 6 3 65 238 168
Montreal 25 20 6 56 169 157
Boston 21 20 7 49 171 175
Hartford 19 25 6 44 140 160
Buffalo 20 26 3 43 146 160
Ottawa 3 2 3 20 114 199
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division
W L T Pts GF GA
Detroit 35 9 4 74 101 106
Chicago 26 15 11 63 176 141
Houston 20 22 11 63 176 141
St Louis 21 20 9 51 135 136
Winnipeg 21 25 4 46 176 185
Dallas 14 24 11 63 176 167
Yesterday's Games
Colorado 27 15 9 63 197 143
Vancouver 17 20 13 47 180 169
Calgary 18 23 9 45 147 157
Los Angeles 17 23 11 45 171 179
Edmonton 18 26 6 42 135 190
Anaheim 18 27 5 41 141 167
San Jose 11 35 4 26 153 223
Buffalo 6, Florida 1
Boston 3, Ottawa 1
Montreal 1, Washington 3
Tampa Bay 4, Pittsburgh 1
St Louis 4, Toronto 0
Cincinnati 1, lie
Chicago 4, Edmonton 0
Hartford 6, Los Angeles 4
Anheinel 2, Colorado 4
Late Games Not Included
Florida 2, Boston 2, tie
Washington 4, Ottawa 2
Philadelphia 3, Montreal 2, OT
Vancouver 2, St. Louis 2, tie
Colorado 6, Winnipeg 4
New Jersey at Calgary, (n)
Los Angeles at San Jose, (n)
Tonight's Games
Vancouver at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
Hartford at Anaheim, 9:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at at Detroit, 2 p.m.
Philadelphia at St Louis, 2 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Colorado, 2 p.m.
Chicago at San Jose, 2 p.
Florida at Tampa Bay, 2 p.
Buffalo at Boston, 2 p.
New Jersey at Ottawa, 6:30 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Washington, 6:30 p.m.
Montreal at Toronto, 6:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at Calgary, 9:30 p.
Tampa Bay at Buffalo, 2 p.m.
Vancouver at Winnipesau, 6 p.m.
Dallas at N Y. Islanders, 6 p.m.
Chicago at Anheim, 7 p.m.
Sunday's Games
PRO BASKETBALL
| | W | L | Pct GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Orlando | 31 | 13 | .705 — |
| New York | 28 | 15 | .651 2½ |
| Washington | 21 | 21 | .500 9 |
| Miami | 20 | 25 | .444 11½ |
| New Jersey | 17 | 26 | .395 13½ |
| Boston | 16 | 27 | .372 14½ |
| Philadelphia | 8 | 35 | .184 22½ |
National Basketball Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
Chicago 39 3 929 —
Indiana 29 15 659 11
Atlanta 24 19 558 15½
Cleveland 29 20 535 16½
Detroit 22 20 524 17
Charlotte 21 22 488 18½
Milwaukee 16 26 381 23
Toronto 16 21 379 27½
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division
| | W | L | Pct | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| San Antonio | 28 | 13 | 683 | — |
| Utah | 29 | 14 | 674 | — |
| Houston | 30 | 16 | 652 | ½ |
| Denver | 18 | 26 | 409 | 11½ |
| Dallas | 15 | 27 | 357 | 13½ |
| Minnesota | 11 | 30 | 268 | 17 |
| Vancouver | 10 | 34 | 227 | 19½ |
Seattle 32 12 .727 —
Sacramento 23 16 .590 6½
L.A. Lakers 25 18 .581 6½
Portland 21 23 .477 11
Phoenix 19 23 .452 12
Golden State 18 25 .419 13¼
L.A. Clippers 16 27 .372 13½
Boston 131, Vancouver 98
Phoenix 120, Atlanta 84
Cleveland 61, Milwaukee 71
Philadelphia 51, Chicago 10
San Antonio 114, L.A. Clippers 104
Yesterday's Games
Late game not included
Late Game not included
Detroit 87, Indiana 170
Houston 116, Charlotte 111
New York 110, Orlando 104
Miami 124, Philadelphia 104
Milwaukee 108, Denver 102
Chicago at Sacramento (to)
Tonight's Games
Portland at Washington, 6:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Orlando, 6:30 p.m.
Boston at Indiana, 6:30 p.m.
Phoenix at Cleveland, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Utah, 8 p.m.
New Jersey at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
Chicago at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.
Toronto at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.
Tomorrow's Games
Sunday's Game
Portland at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m.
Boston at Miami, 8:15 p.m.
Sacramento at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
Seattle at Houston, 7:30 p.m.
Louisville at LA. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.
New York at Indiana, noon
San Antonio at Orlando, 2:30 p.m.
Phoenix at Washington, 5 p.m.
Charlotte at Atlanta, 6 p.m.
Chicago at Denver, 8 p.m.
Utah at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
Thursday's Sports Transactions
BASFBAIL
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Signed Larry Rodriguez and Vladimir Nunez, pitchers, to two-year, minor-league contracts.
American League
BALTIMORE ORILOLES — Agreed to terms with Jim Haynes, pitcher, on one-year contract.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Agreed to terms with Tim Belcher and Chris Haney, pitchers, on a one-year contract.
MINESOTA TWINS—Agreed to terms with J. J. Johnson and Jamie Ogden, outfielders, and Gus Gandilaria, Dan Naulty, Todd Ritchie and Hector Trinidad, pitcher.
SEATTLE MARINERS—Agrated to terms with
its Polonia, outfielder, on minor-league control.
National League
LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Named Mitch Webster hitting coach at Yakima of the Northwest League, and Tom Thomas hitting coach at Great Falls of the Pioneer League.
MONTREAL EXPOS—Agreed to terms with Rheal Cheral pitcher, on a one-year contract. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Signed Steve Frey, pitcher, to a minor-league contract and invited him to spring training. Signed Ron David Doster, David Doster, in one-year contracts.
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association
DALLAS MAVERICKS—Signed David Wood, forward, to a 10-day contract. Placed Lorenzo Williams, center, on the injured list.
CHICAGO BULLS—Placed Luc Longley, center, on the injured list. Activated James Edwards, center, from the injured list.
PHOENIX SUNS—Activated Danny Manning, forward from the injured list
SACRAMENTO KINGS—Placed Sarunas Mariculionis, guard, on the injured list. Activated Clint McDaniel, guard, from the injured list.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 2, 1996
3B
Men's tennis coach aims for his 100th victory
Center set for Indiana State
By Spencer Duncan Kansan sportswriter
This weekend could be the 100th time Kansas men's tennis coach Michael Center celebrates a victory as head coach.
Center will be going for the milestone win when the No. 25 Kansas men's tennis team faces Indiana State.
"If you stay around awhile, you'll get that many wins." Center said.
Michael Center
Center is entering his seventh season as a head coach at Kansas. He spent his first three years coaching the women's team, where he compiled a record of 39-28 and guided the women to a first place Big Eight Conference finish in 1992.
In 1992, he was also named Big Eight and Central Region women's
coach of the year.
After the '92 season, Center changed jobs and became the men's head coach. Since then, he has led the men to 60 wins and two consecutive conference championships.
"I knew last year that I had 90- something and that this year I would get 100." Center said.
Center was named 1994 Big Eight and Region V men's coach of the year.
Center also has long ties to Kansas. He played his collegiate tennis at Kansas from 1983 to 1986, where he was a four year letterman and two-time NCAA tournament qualifier.
Now his focus is on coaching.
"It's nice to have all the wins."
Center said. "Really, I'm more concerned with the team and what it can accomplish."
When Kansas, with a record of 1-1,
meets the Indiana State Sycamores at
7:30 p.m. on Saturday at Alvamar
Racquet Club, the team will be
searching for its second win of the
indoor season and trying to help
Center reach his mark.
"Our goal is just to win," junior Michael Isroff said.
The Jayhawks will be attempting to avenge an NCAA regional loss it suffered to the Sycamores last year. That will mean fine tuning a few problem areas.
"We have to have a complete match," Center said. "We have played very good doubles. We just need to work on keeping our singles play consistent."
The team believes it should have little trouble in helping Center pick up win 100.
"We have the best players in the conference and the region," Isroff said. "We can win."
Women's tennis team to face two more ranked foes
By Spencer Duncan
Kansan sportswriter
Three ranked teams in one week.
That's what the No. 25 K an s a women's tennis team has been dealing with the past seven days after losing to
K.U. Tennis
No. 26 Northwestern last Sunday. The Jayhawks are preparing to meet No. 13 William and Mary and No. 16 Notre Dame this weekend.
"The girls are working hard," assistant women's tennis coach
"I believe once we get into the season we will get better. This will be
a good meet for us."
Kylo Hunt
Kylie Hunt Kansas junior tennis player
Frank Polito said. "They have been playing well."
Kansas will take on William and Mary at 7 p.m. tonight at Alvamar Racquet Club.
The Jayhawks lost to William and Mary last year, and players said they hope they can reverse
the outcome tonight.
The Jayhawks also lost to Notre Dame last year and have the same desire to beat them when the teams meet at 1 p.m. on Sunday at Alvamar.
"I believe once we get into the season we will get better," said junior Kylie Hunt. "This will be a good meet for us."
Kansas was disappointed with its showing last weekend. The Jayhawks defeated Wichita State for its first win of the season, but the loss to Northwestern was tough.
"We competed hard in every spot," Polito said. "It was tight all the way through."
The entire Jayhawk roster will be playing, and it hopes to bounce back from last week's loss and show the nation that it can compete with other nationally ranked teams.
"We're looking forward to playing these tough two teams," Hunt said. "We have nothing to lose."
Olympic Stadium improvements spark safety concerns
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — The possibility of costly repairs at the Olympic Stadium in a few years — not concerns about a deadly collapse — prompted the decision to reinforce the building's steel supports, an engineer said yesterday.
"It's not necessarily a case of safety. It's a case of serviceability."
he said.
"You could have had cracks in the concrete, sagging steel. But sagging doesn't mean failure," said Antranj Ouzoonian, an executive of Weidlinger Associates, a New York-based engineering firm that recommended the reinforcements.
The report done by Weidlinger, an overall look at the stadium's construction commissioned by the design team after the light tower
Coming nearly a year after a construction worker was killed when a light tower collapsed at the site, the disclosure that repairs are needed renewed questions about the safety of the $230 million, 83,500-seat stadium.
As the centerpiece of the Summer Games, the stadium is the site of the opening ceremony, which will be attended by President Clinton, track and field events and the closing ceremony.
"You're not going to find that in
accident, was not released.
Olympic officials said much of the work recommended by Weildinger already was under way. Lyn May, a representative for the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games, said ACOG was satisfied that the stadium would be safe.
Richard Monteilh, executive director of the Metropolitan Atlanta Olympic Games Authority, a civic oversight board that owns the stadium, said the report did not state the need for improvements in terms of preventing a disaster such as the light tower collapse.
there ... in no way, shape or form." Monteilh said. "I don't think there was a high probability of a collapse or a structural calamity during the Games."
Noah Long, a spokesman for the stadium design team, said that after the March 1995 accident, officials decided to improve any area in which a concern was raised even if the work already met building code standards.
"Any question ... we said, OK, let's reinforce it," said Long, a senior vice president of Rosser International, one of four companies in the joint venture called the Atlanta Stadium Design Team.
Long, told by a reporter about Ouzoonian's comments about maintenance, said he was unaware of any maintenance concerns.
The need for corrections would not have been detected if the fatal accident had not prompted an overall review of the project, a union official said.
Jones believes the structural conditions posed a potential safety problem.
"Everyone would have assumed everything was fine," said Steve Jones, leader of the Ironworkers Local 387. "No way anything would have been done without the accident."
"To what extent, I don't know — it raises questions," he said.
Reinforcement of the girders,
beams, columns and trusses at the
stadium began about three months ago, ACOG said Wednesday. The contractor said the work will be finished in about 10 weeks.
The stadium is to host a pre- Olympic track meet May 3. The Olympic Games begin July 19.
Ouzoonian said he could not say how much stronger the stadium will be with the revisions.
About 3 percent of the stadium, mainly in the media area in the middle of the stadium, needs the work.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Learn to Fly 842-0000 Lawrence Air Services Instruction•Charter Service•Rental
842-0000
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841-SOON
Rib Sale Fri, Sat, & Sun
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Sun-Thur 11-10 Fri&Sat 11-2 AM
There’s no girls like showgirls.
Every Wednesday is Student Night at Juicers.
$2 admission with your student ID.
Juicers Shows
913 N. Second
Open Tues-Thurs 7:30pm-1:00am. Fri & Sat until 2:00am
There's no girls like showgirls.
Every Wednesday is Student Night at Juicers.
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Open Tues-Thurs 7:30pm-1:00am. Fri & Sat until 2:00am
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PIZZA
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
PIZZA
When you pick up the Kansan... please pick up all of it.. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Revenge factor in effect for swimmers
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
Revenge will be on the minds of the No. 20 Kansas men's swimming and diving team this weekend as it heads to Iowa City, to face No.16 Iowa.
The revenge is a result of last year, after the Hawkeyes came to Lawrence and thumped the Jayhawks. 139-104.
Pride will also be at stake as Kansas, which has a 10-3 record, hopes to win its final dual meet as a member of the Big Eight Conference before it becomes the Big 12 Conference.
And both Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf and diving coach Don Fearon have issued challenges to their players that this is the time to prove that they are ready for the postseason conference competitions.
"I need to talk to them about stepping up and really being aggressive at a high level of competition," Kempf said. "Iowa came into our place and beat us pretty good last year. It will be a great challenge."
Kansas, which has a 12-16 series record against Iowa, will use Iowa as a tune up for the Big Eight Championships, which begin Feb. 14 in Oklahoma City.
The Kansas divers will go against a deep Iowa squad. The Hawkeyes have seven divers while Kansas only has three.
Much more than a win is at stake for the swimmers. Only the top 17 scorers on the team will qualify for the conference championships. With 23 swimmers, some are going to be left out on the dock.
Fearon said one of the keys to Kansas' success against Iowa will be the diving of senior Kris Hoffman.
"We should have some good competition on our own team," Kempf said.
Kansas will take on an Iowa team that has admitted to being rusty, with a 2-1 record. Iowa has had its last three meets canceled because of inclement weather and scheduling conflicts. The team also lost five All-American swimmers from last season.
Iowa assistant swimming coach John Davey said his squad will be in for a tougher test than at their previous confrontation.
"We've been hurt by not being able to swim the past couple of weeks," he said. "We lost so many great swimmers and our freshman recruiting class isn't what we were hoping it would be. It's going to be very competitive."
LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS
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Horoscopes By Linda C. Black
Today's Birthday (Feb. 2). If you work hard this year, you might accumulate a nice nest egg. Plan now, so your efforts in March are most productive. Take time for romance in June; you'll be too busy in July.
Constructive criticism may be hard to hear in August, but necessary. Take a cheap vacation to a pretty place in late September. Friends can help you wrap up a great deal in December. Pay back a debt next January, to achieve your goal.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). If you can't manage to be with your family and dearest friends, call them. You need the advice they want to give you. You may absorb information that never seemed to stick before. Your Teflon coating is wearing off. Start using Pam to avoid this sticking. But don't use butter; it's too fattening.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
Be patient with a trouble maker today. Your love, and persistence, may provide the good example that's needed. If you and your sweetheart pool your resources, you may be able to afford dinner at a fancy-schmancy place tonight. You certainly deserve it.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Be careful with your money today. Make sure you know who's getting it. Some worthy causes are not quite as worthy as other's. Charity begins at home, actually. There may be somebody near to your heart that needs
something that only you can give.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Work any kinks out of your plan this morning, so you can put it into action this afternoon. Try to attract as little attention as possible, for best results. Your opposition may be arguing so much with each other they may forget about you.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Even if you have the right answer, you could lose the game if you don't word it properly. If you figure out all of the consequences ahead of time, you can appear more intelligent than you are. Show you're practical as well as imaginative.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). If you're a photographer you should be able to get some good pictures today. If you're a student of life an older person could give you some excellent advice. If you're looking for love, don't fall for a flashy dresser. Pick a quiet, sensitive creature, like yourself.
Aries (March 21-April 19). In order to block the other side's next move, your team will have to stop arguing and work together. Tell them that. If you're having an argument with your spouse or roommate, try a solution that worked before. It will probably work again.
Taurus (April 20-May 20). To make sure your money's in a safe place, listen to advice from people who's opinion you don't often solicit. An unusual development may have changed things. Gather
information, but don't act yet. You won't need any advice in love; just do what comes naturally.
Gemini (May 21-June 21).
Today the advantage is with people who are good at nonverbal communication. That might be something you'd like to learn. If not, find a friend who likes to communicate the same way you do, and go for a drive in the country tonight.
Cancer (June 22-July 22).
The opposition could get tangled up in their own problems, and overlook the fact that you're getting ready to put on the squeeze. With the help of one you love and another old friend, you could win the prize. You'll be the luckiest around the middle of the day.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). You may have to go along with something a loved one wants, even if you've already said you wouldn't. It's not a big deal to you, and it could mean a lot to the other person. Your strong point is your agile imagination today, but your weakness will be love.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
This is a great day to be with the people you love. The more of them you can get together, the better! Take plenty of food, in case somebody shows up that you didn't invite. The surprise will add to the overall festivities. Even a small disaster could be fun.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and are for entertainment purposes only.
DILBERT®
WE WON THE BID TO REBUILD OUR NATION'S AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEMS.
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By Scott Adams
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The Associated Press
Manning to rise again with Suns
Manning, who signed with Phoenix as an unrestricted free agent in September 1994, has been out since tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in
PHOENIX — Forward Danny Manning, sidelined nearly one year with a knee injury, has been activated by the Phoenix Suns and is expected to play tonight at Cleveland.
(1)
Danny Manning
When Manning was injured, the Suns owned the
NBA's best record at 36-10. They lost 13 of the season's final 36 games and were eliminated for the second straight year by the Houston Rockets in the second round of the playoffs.
Manning, a two-time All-Star who played for the Los Angeles Clippers and Atlanta Hawks before joining Phoenix, has been undergoing extensive rehabilitation since his injury.
He tore the same ligament in his right knee Jan.
4, 1989, during his rookie season with the Clippers and didn't return until the 12th game of the following season.
Without Manning, the Suns have struggled this season to a 19-23 record, their worst since 1987-88.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 2, 1996
5B
I
1.05 Personals
1.10 Business Personals
1.20 Announcements
1.30 Entertainment
1.40 Lost and Found
男 女
Classified Directory
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
200s Employment
X
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
300s Merchandise
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, color, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
400s Real Estate
[ ]
100s Announcements
We loan cash on almost anything of value, CD's, VCR'S, TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence is most liberal loan company. JAYHAWK PAWN & JEWELRY 1804 W. 649-7191
110 Business Personals
HEALTH
Watkins
Since 1906
Caring For KU
Need Cash?
$ . 75 wash ALL DAY EVERY DAY. Independent Laudron-
ture. -26th and lows. (Across the street from Dairy
Queen).
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
120 Announcements
864-9500
SPRING BREAK PACA City Beach, Florida from 8:99
Per Person/Week, Tidy Beach Bar, Huge Beachside Hot
Tub. Free. Information 1-800-488-8828
Kape Victim/Survival Service (RVSS) is now forming a peer support group. Confidential and no fee informational meeting. Fb. 5th at 7:30 pm Headquarters Counseling Center, 1419 Mass.
Rape Victim / Survivor Service (RVAS) is now a peer support group. Confidential and no fee
Spring break specials. Cancun and Caribbean 11% lower price guaranteed; 7 nights, and hotel at $425.00 or $625.00.
http://www.springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6286
Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise 7 days, $279.00
Includes 15 meals an d6 free parties! Great beachs
night life! Leaves from Pt Lauderdale; http://www.
springbreaktravel.com Pt 840-678-6386.
Spring Break *Pamana City* $8, days *w/kitchen*, $119.00 *walk to best bites* *t nights in* West *$250.00* *Coccon Beach Hilton* (great beaches, near Disney), $49.00 *Diaynta*, $188.00 *http://www.diaynta.com*
School of Education Students
Students who plan to STUDENT TEACH the FALL 1606 semester (GCSB included) must attend the teacher meeting on Monday, February 5, at 3:30 p.m. in the School Library. Pre-primary information is available in 117 Bailley.
**Women's Transitional Care Services (WTCS)**, the batters' women's shelter, is having its second annual fundraiser on February 8 at 7:00 p.m. and Feb. 10 at 10:00 a.m. Both will be held at Plymouth Community Church, 823 Vermont, Rust Lake, ME 04579.
Spring Career and Employment Fair Feb. 7/9, 10am to 3pm, KS Union Ballroom. Up to 88 employees. PT, FT, summer jobs and internships. All majors welcome. For more info contact University Placement Center at 863-842 or home page://upep.com/career/ews/cellwis/ws/uufyda/tusfapex/tupc_main.html
ial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this publication are available on an equal opportunity basis.
130 Entertainment
Free party room for 20-200 at Johnny's. 842-0377
SCRABBLE
Join us a scrabble Club. Lawrence Public Library
u. p.m. Mon. feb. 6. Gallery Room 843-578
www.lawrencepubliclibrary.org
MIRACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale starting at $9.98 and up
1910 Haskell, 841-7540
Enjoy House Back Riding on our historic and picturesque 140 acres. Oversized Trial Rides any time weather prtmaite. (above 28 degrees) By appointment. $10 per hour. 24 hour notice. Call (913) 694-6810.
Spring Break 1996 TRAVEL FREE!!
** Great low, low prices
** Free Trip on only 15 sales
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-426-7710
$ 25.00 /TON, YT. Income reading, Reading books. Toll
Free (1) $ 988.00-6778.77 Ext. R. 1483 for details.
Part-time, flexible hours, mostly morning in house
cleaning. $65.00-$70.00. Call 749-2121.
140 Lost and Found
**Cut Found** -About 10 month old, Calico -colored.
**Cut Removed** -During the evening, 11:00. Please call
@Chickens on 859-626.
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Retired Profession needs parvise instruction help for
taking dictation & typing #9r. R.S. Raymond 841-8534
Retired Profession needs parvise instruction help for
taking dictation & typing #9r. R.S. Raymond 841-8534
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Teaching Asst. needed part-time at early intervention program. Call Brookelocklear Learning Center 865-0222.
Day care needed: 2 toddlers and 1 infant, 2 days/week.
8:30 am - 5:00 pm, 40 hour.
GRAND OPENING
Seeking high energy individual for branch office.
Positive attitude required, flexible schedule. 841-0828
NEEDED:
Female personal attendant for female quadrupole.
CNA preferred but not required. CBA 856-0161.
Overweight males between 18 and 40 y.o. are needed. $20 will be included for participation. Participants must not have been previously diagnosed with diabetes.
Female student needed for occasion baby sitting 85
For two, well-mannered girls ages 10 and 12. Call
(314) 769-1458.
Responsible caring individual need to care for yr old; 6 day a week, and an occasional nightly visit in the morning.
Gymnastics instructors needed now for boys and girls classes at RC Gym (about 40 minutes from Lawrence). Partime in AM and Pn. Call Eagles Gymnastics. (816) 941-9529.
Christian Dwight needs assistants in the mornings and MWF. All must be reliable, enthusiastic and be able to work with different ages. 18 years and above. 842-2088.
Full or part-time independent representatives for long-distance company need. No phone calls, quotas or collections. Serious income potential from your home. You experience or travel knowledge. Call 841-3698.
Responsible person needed to work with my 7 year old son with autism. Must have knowledge in applied behavioral analysis and/or special education. If interested call Gina at 865-0695
S spirit industries, Inc., a national sportwear company has an immediate opening for an experienced screen printer. Full or part-time available. Apply M-F-9-5, 1021 E, 31st St, R4-798-6588
Working couple seeks concientious student to watch children, ages 5 and 7, from 3-4, M-R; child care experience required; needs some meal preparation.
Econcomis/Research Assistant, B.A. M. or P.A. T, or P.T. for consulting firm. Strong computer skills in databases and spreadsheet sheds required. Send resumes attention Perkins University, 201-917-6050, 917-8017, Park斯。No 62241, Phone calls please.
事先 preferred; requires some meal preparation.
Call events or leave message. 845-0490.
Help Wanted. Spirit Industries is now making applications for our Screen Printing Department. Full-time and Part-time. Immediate position available. Must be reliable in the printing position. Apply A-PF from 86.102 I. E31st St.
Positions open. Great jobs for students. Telephone fundraising for SADD (Students At Driving Drum). We work early evenings and Sat, mornings. **ghr plus** hours. Call 854-3190 apply at GI Mass. St. Suite B.
Graduating Seniors* John Hancock Financial Services is inviting for professional individuals for their market research and consulting work. Call or send resume to: 609 College Blvd #1000 Overland Park, KS 65211; Attn: Paul College Bldg #1000
NOWHIRING
$ 468-648 per week. Paid training. Large Corporation expanding in this area. Management available. Apply: Mon Feb 5th at 10.15 am SHARP LawrenceLab 7th & Maryhower No calls please
MAINTENANCE WORKER CITY OF LAWRENCE
Temporary, part-time position in building maintenance.
$5.00/hour. Complete application by 2/7/96 at Admin. Services,
2nd floor, City Hall, 6th & Mass, Lawrence, KS 66044
EOE M/F
CAMP OZARK, Christian Sports and Adventure Camp — Seeking qualified counselors to work with boys and girls age 8-16. Employment terms for all or part of the summer. If remotely interested, come to our KU informational video gallery. 4:30 p.m., Thursday, Feburuary 29, 9:30 a.m., Hawk Room. Located Mount Ida. AR (501) 867-1631.
CAMP COUNSELORS WANTed for private Michigan boys (girls summer camp) Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterkating, gymnastics, rifley, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, campcats, crafts, dramas, or Drama. Also ride Kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1250 or less. GYC/WGC/WCGC/1706 MIdle, MAPL, IL 60083, B4-746-2444
CAMP COUNSELORS Joins the adventure and
PG Practice Academy of Dance of Providence, WLW Life/We Love Water and Dance Arts, WLW Life/We Love Tennis, Climbing, Arts and more! 2 hours from NYC. Call 215-877-6070 or write 151 Washington Lane, Bowie, MD 20927
TIMBER LAKE / TYLER HILL CAMP, top NY and PA resident camps have over 200 summer job openings for qualified students and faculty. Counsellors, WSL艺术, WSL旅游学院等 also offer flexible allowance in addition to the ‘freshest summer you’ll ever have’. On camp interviews Wednesday, Feb. 7th from 10am to 4pm, 500-388-CAME (60 Weekdays EST) for more information.
Choose from 03 camp sites. Instructors need Tennis Baseball, Hockey, Rollerblading, Lacrosse, Laoschool, Volleyball, Basketball, PE Majors, Gymnastics, Bikifitness, WSI WaterSkiing, Sailing, Windsurfing, Pinsure, Archery, Mountain Biking, Fencing, RockClimbing, Water Sports, Wood-Working, Cranes, Stained Glass, Jewelry, Wood-Working, Photography, Radio, Nature, RN's, Chef, Food Service. Call Arlene: 516-433-8033.
ARE YOU READY FOR A CHANGE?
500 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES IN NY,PA
STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN Deadline: 22/09. Salary: $45.40 per hour. F-15 P-mom. Duties include performing burning and decloiling functions; delivery of computer output and interface mail using delivery van; paper shredding functions; on occasion will work with the construction department in inventory figures, tape library duties, and other ware-housing functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assist in Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; performs dunes in conjunction with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer equipment to perform data management function. To apply, complete an application available at the Computer Center in room 202. BOA EMPLOYER
AMERICA'S PREMIERE SPORTS CAMPS
WINADU FOR BOYS DANESE FOR GIRLS
(Western Massachusetts)
Financially
Career
Environment
Marketing co. looking for
the right individual who
is interested in
financial services.
All Land and Water Sports, Arta and Crafts,
Gymnastics, Horseback Riding, Drama, Woodshop,
ice and Roller Hockey, Watertank, WIS's, and more!!!
No Previous Experience Required.
Top sataries Room and Board, and Travel Allowance
ON CAMCUL INFO AND INTERVIEWS
DATE: FREBRUARY 28-30, 1996
205 Help Wanted
BUMMER JOHNSON
Men Call:
1-800-492-6388
Women Call:
1-800-392-3752
CAMP WINADU
CAMP DANEB
FAEB 32A6A5A8801B0034D/BUILDING
FEB 28 TALE TABLE 2.0 OREAD AND BEGION
SUMMER JOBSS
CAMP TAKAJO for Boys. Outstanding Maine camp for magnificent lakefront setting and exceptional facilities. Over 100 positions for heads and assistants in street hockey, roller hockey, swimming, sailing, canoeing, waterskiing, SCUBA, Archery, rifley, weight training, journalism, photography, videoography, woodwork, music, dance, golf, tennis, radio & electronics, dramas, piano accompanist, music instrumentist, band director, backpacking, rockclimbing, whitewater climbing, ropes course, genetics, summer camp, business. August 18. Top salaries room & board, travel provided. Camp 400-849 camp or write. CAMP TAKAJO 625 East 72nd Street, 2d floor, New York, NY 10212 or Fax (312) 263-4500 Tuesday to Friday TUESDAY 10:4AM-14PM, ROOMS OREAD & REGISTERIN BIKNUNION. WALK-NW WELCOME
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
Do danalion your life saving blood nisease
By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
Safe, effective, easy and permanent hair of hair conveniently located at 1E. Nuthin. B65-4254
Bare Music Lessons. Now at Whitney's Music. Call 913-424-3428. Ask for Jennifer Jenkins.
Need Help With Your Research Project ? Kelley Data Analysis and Consulting specializes in Computer Science, Statistics, SPSS programs and RISP research, Research methods, Survey and test design. Lowest rates in LAwrence, Topena area.
DUI/TRAFFIC/Criminal
OVERLAND PARK- KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATATTNEY - AT-LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964
360 Miscellaneous
OUI/Traffic
370 Want to Buy
(913) 887-8307 (local call)
E-mail red4psg@aol.com
Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Kentucky
843-4023
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
X
235 Typing Services
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-1133
Out of state alumni need two to four Nebraska schools.
14. Hopperman will drive call from (820) 674-5253.
TRAFFIC-DUTS
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
300s Merchandise
FOR SALE: Macintosh with image writer and software
$190 or best offer. Call B2S 8252 and leave a message.
Call Assk 865-2858 for application, term papers, descriptions, transcriptions, etc. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Light table with glideliner $ 100.00 Artwaxer $ 50.00 Call 897-6307
AA Pull size mattr set. New, never used, still in plastic;
Price £60.00 or will sell for £10.00. Brass head-
driver. Req's 20mm diameter blade.
Size big matrix + new. Retail price $699.00, will sell for
$275.00, 379-9858
305 For Sale
913. 897.2880
1048 Nissan 300ZX 70,000 miles, $5-speed, AM-AM FP
Tuscany, Tipo 6, three-tour collector car, Garaged &
Liked by 29,000 customers.
Honda Accord LXI, 1988 model, automatic,
good condition. For sale $40,000. Please
contact Janice at 841-8590.
**RATE** on TICKET for *ANGLES IN AMERICA PART I* 7 Feb *pr3. egv.* 2 Good, good seat. Call Tm at Tm
10:45am. See **TICKET FOR ANGLES IN AMERICA PART II**.
**Computer for sale:** 4D6 X/2 DX, 5/2 GHz, 1/2 gt card drive
fax modem, multimedia CD读机, NME receiver, IBM PS1
mouse.
AA Queen size matte cover. New, never used. Still in plan.
Queen bed base $125.00 or 105.00. Queen size bed base $85.00 or 73.00.
Hayes Optima 2400 bps modem. Mac Software and cables included $ 80.00. Yamaha PortaSonid mini keyboard. 40 preset keys. 10 rhythms - $ 60.00. Call 841-7407.
Quality beds, tables, and dressers. If interested call Janet at 1-859-9900.
Nice computer table with built in wibuild and a word processor Corona Smith WM730 to shell with a separate widow screen. All for $250 give away price. Both are about a year old. Call 842-8230 or leave a message.
Beds, Desks, Bookcases, Lamps, Other Stuff 636 Mass. Everything But Law
We buy, sell and trade clothing every day
PERSONAL SECURITY IS MY BUSINESS.
Key main pepper spray with case #12.50. Foam spray
with case #12.50. Personal alarm with case #12.50.
Personal clip-on alarm #14.10. Welcome to clubs,
organizations, fundraiser goals. D. Roseman
360 Miscellaneous
arizona trading co.
734 Massachusetts 749-2377
Wanted, 101 Students to Lose 8.100 lb. New Metabolic
Breakthrough, Guaranteed Result $ .995. 1,800-600.
*
Power book 180 4/90
With internal modem & stylewriter
$1200 or best offer call 749-9388
405 For Rent
3 Bedroom Townhouse. 1.1/2 bath. D/W. Washer/Dryer ookup. Fireplace. 2 Car Garage. Microwave. Central Air. Call 832-4414 or 749-1488.
400s Real Estate
3 Bedroom duplex, 1.1/2 bath, garage, w/d.
Excellent location. No pets.
$650/month. Available. Call #842-7875.
Available Immediately: 2 bedroom, Ithw & Ohio,
microwave, dial/shower, WD hookup,
Wi-Fi router, HDMI, USB.
Available immediately! 3 Bedroom, unfurnished apartment. 1280sqft from RU $7500. Oriental Hotel Luxury. 1280sqft from RU $9500. Oriental Hotel Luxury.
Shannon Plaza Apartments & Townhouses. 2 & 3 bedrooms townhouses available (immediately Ask about us)
Two birth nets. aPTRS ACCEPTED (no weight limit) on DW, bW, 1.5 kg. Two storage wells. aPTRS ACCEPTED (no weight limit) on DW, bW, 1.5 kg.
COLONY WOODS
301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
On KU Bus Route
1&2Bedrooms
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 HotTubs
ExerciseRoom
M-F10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
---
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th and Eddingham Dr.
4TH AND EDDINGHAM DR
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
AN AEFDABLE PRICE
ATAN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
405 For Rent
- Exercise weight room
- Laundry room
- Fireplace.
- Energy Efficient
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 140 Trees
student housing adaptive, Open & diverse member
sale, non-profit operation, democratic control. Runs on campus. Enrollment open. Call Cone Inc on campus or Mail & Campus at 814-044-0625.
Professionally managed by
- On site management
808 W.24th
841-6080
841-5444
- Daily 3:30-5:00
KVM
AAAAAAAAAA
---
Quail Creek
Running around looking
Shop the Kansan Classifieds!
Apartment& Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
7TH & FLORIDA
"In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good, old, fashioned personalized service."
---
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
Managed & maintained by Professionals
NOW LEASING FOR SPRING
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
FOUR BEDROOM-
ASK ABOUT
Our Three Person Special
$690 and Up
Pool and Clubhouse
E.H.O.
841-5255
meadowbrook
---
STILL LOOKING?
We have a few great apartments from furnished studios to three bedroom townhouses available.
We are also accepting reservations for fall!
- Walking distance to KU and on bus route.
- Convenient to shopping and restaurants.
- Garages and carports available.
- Washer/Dryer hook-ups and fireplaces.
MEADOWBROOK APARTMENTS 15TH & CRESLIINE
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES to share new
3 BR room conew家auply. Partly furnished. W/10 ccu.
Put kitchen w./dishwasher & microwave. No Peter/
No Mary. 925-gpc. tull. Cat. M483, 685 days 649-
2237 evert
Large 3 bedroom apt. and office
in remodeled house near KU.
Call 841-6254
OPEN: MON-FRI 8-5:30.
SAT-10-4.
SUN 1-4.
15TH & CRESTLINE
842-4200
405 For Rent
Completely Furnished
Studio,1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Regents Court 19th& Mass. 749-0445
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansa:
749-2415
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
MASTERCRAFT
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
842-4455
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
Equal Housing Opportunity
430 Roommate Wanted
Roommaker Needs, 2 Bedroom Apt. 1 block from KU
$225 monthly. Please call (913) 691-3771 (paper).
Two rooms available for sublease. Cheap rent. 740-7603.
Females only.
Female graduate to share two 2-hr apt. $200-util
Call Cardine S85-S760. Must be like an
school student.
Male Roommate Wanted. $821.00 / mo. water and cable paid. Close charge, on KU BTans Call: 745-263-3950
Male/Female Roommate Wanted
Furniture and Appliance Mover/plumber and
fireplace. Pets allowed. Call Mate at 818-9652
Available immediately in 1 bedroom in 1 bedroom duplex.
$87.90 plus month plus insurance. Upper male student
units. No deposit required.
NON-SMOKING BOOMMATE WANTED-Male or Female to share a DB2 20th Anniversary WD, W2D, W3D. Applicant must have experience with SQL.
Male/Female roommate needed for 12 bedroom
appartment on bus route $123-501 + 1/2 utilities.
Roommate needed: MF, MFT, to share 28R
WD, WD, AG, pay vegetatiest, must like my dog
WD, WD, AG, pay vegetatiest, must like my dog
NON-SMOKING ROOMMATE WANTED-Male or Female to share $2R $3R townhouses, W/D. or $5R $7R townhouses. Call 1-800-342-2111.
Share a 2B2 b2 bath furnished apartment. Own bedroom and bath. Pool, hot tub, and weight room. $217/mo. + 12 utilities. Call 749-6081 or 1-800-3162-9367. Ask Fee:
Roommate Wanted! 4 Bedroom Townhouse. 24th and Karnold. Furnished and land in KBO Suite. $250 per month.
Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. On bus route. $200.00 + 1/2 utilities. Water and gas paid.
Call Tara 832-8428
Female roommate will need to share space, comfortable,
furnished, 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom apartment; located at
15th and Kasekid on bus route. #214 monthly plus 1/3 utiliz-
ables. Available now. Call 838-4541.
Nice male roommate to share College Hilleo. Large master bdrm, private bath, W/D available immediately.
280. Call 1-913-682-4588 or beeper 1-800-397-3249
ext. 845 and leave phone number
Big share old house (great pach, hardwood floors)
between KUdentown with two bury responsibility
friendly roommates. No smoking or pets. $296 includes
utilities, w/ CA/Tony 841-2584.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIRY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
Wanted ASAP· NSP MV roommate to share spacious 2 bdm. atpt. in 13th and Albio. To walk to campus and downstreet, off street parking $250 + 1/2 use. Call Wade 888-4062. Leave message.
Classified Information and order form
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or VISA.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of apples lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Vita, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused funds. Refinds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.99.
**Possible response:**
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$17.00 (4 lines X $8 per line X 5 days)
165 personal
118 businesspersona
120 enroncompañita
123 onerthemant
Classifications
140 lost & found 385 for sale 737 want to buy
baby wanted 384 sales auto 465 for rent
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous 438 resalemate wanted
225 trade services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
6B
Friday, February 2, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NFL
Seahawks ready to trade Kingdome for Rose Bowl
Seattle plans to play 1996 season in Los Angeles
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — The Seattle Seahawks, faced with high costs of renovating the aging Kingdome, are leaving for Los Angeles and will play next season in the Rose Bowl, team sources said yesterday.
Seahawks owner Ken Behring met with King County officials yesterday to notify them of the move.
The Seahawks would be the fifth NFL franchise to change cities in the last year. The Raiders and Rams moved out of Los Angeles last year. The Cleveland Browns have announced they will play next season in Baltimore, and the Houston Oilers will move to Nashville.
Since the Rams and Raiders moved out of Los Angeles, the nation's second-largest TV market is without an NFL team. Other teams still considering moving are
the arizon
cardinals
a n d
T a m p a
Bay Buc
caneers.
a
reportedly had a study indicating it could cost as much as $90 million to fortify the Kingdome against earthquakes — at least three times more than earlier estimates.
That amount, along with other improvements sought by the Seahawks, could send the cost of renovating the domed stadium past $200 million.
Earlier estimates of seismic repairs to the county-owned stadium have been $10 million to $30 million.
If the county couldn't afford to make those improvements, Behring conceivably could use it as an excuse to break the team's lease, which runs through 2005.
Behring has repeatedly complained that the 20-year-old stadium is not the first-class facility guaranteed in the team's lease and has pushed for $150 million worth
of improvements.
If Behring were able to break the lease, he would be free to negotiate with the league to move the team to another city.
Teams need NFL approval to relocate, and league spokesman Greg Alello said owners voted last year to collectively control the Los Angeles franchise opportunity.
bengring's call for today's meeting had prompted a closed-door session Wednesday night that included King County Executive Gary Locke and Councilman Peter Von Reichbauer.
HOK Sports Facilities Group of Kansas City, Mo. has been hired by the county to study the dome. A report is due next month.
Seattle's NBA and major league baseball teams either have or are getting new venues.
The city-owned Seattle Center Coliseum was redesigned as Key Arena for the SuperSonics.
A firm was chosen this week to design a new baseball stadium for the Mariners, whose owners had vowed to sell the team if it was forced to keep playing in the Kingdome.
NFL Super Bowl web site sets cyberspace record
By John Nelson The Associated Press
It looks like the NFL's Super Bowl web site now holds the single-day record as the most visited Internet address ever, for whatever that's worth.
And thats exactly what the NFL is trying to find out.
"It's the kind of thing that might take 11/2 minutes to eclipse, but in the short history of the web, it's a milestone," said Ann Kirschner, vice president of programming and media development for NFL Enterprises.
Through the end of the January, the site (at http://superbowl.com) registered about 28 million hits, 6 million alone on Super Bowl Sunday,
ANALYSIS
which is thought to be a record. The site will stay open through the end of February.
"It's more then I expected, and the final number will actually be closer to 7 million because it was scattered on so many servers." Kirschner said. "The power of an integrated television show and online program is what this really demonstrates. What's the old saw? 'A rising tide lifts all boats.' The Super Bowl had an astonishing following on TV and on the Internet."
The web site was done in conjunction with NBC, which televised the Super Bowl, and Microsoft, which provided the technical expertise.
Also accessible from the site were live, RealAudio broadcasts of the game in Japanese and German, each of which were heard by about 2,000 people. RealAudio broadcasts of the public address and press box announcements were accessed by about 30,000 people.
"This is a very promising area for the Internet — its international audience," Kirschner said.
Among the things on Kirschner's wish-list would be a breakdown of where these people were listening from and why. Also, she said, the industry needs to come up with some sort of reliable standard to convert hits to actual users. Hits represents the number of times an actual piece of information is accessed and is the current norm
"I'd love to know how many individual users we had. Hits might be the industry standard, but it's not as satisfying as knowing the total number of users," Kirschner said.
for judging traffic through a site
"The accountability of the Internet is an area that, from an advertiser's point of view, is extremely important. And we are preparing numbers for advertisers that will tell them how many times their ads were hit."
Kirschner said numbers also eventually will reveal which parts of the site were most popular.
"My sense so far is that cybercast itself was extremely popular," she said. Gil Brandt, Randy Cross and Jeff Hostetler produced a live, chat-style commentary during the game.
"It was play-by-play but more in depth," Kirschner said.
MISSING LINKS: In a one-day poll taken on ESPNET SportZone, 57.5 percent of those who responded said they were glad Magic Johnson came out of retirement to play in the NBA with the Los Angeles Lakers again.
A total of 7,933 votes were cast. The Internet address for SportsZone is
http://epa.sports.com
The Blood-Horse Inc., a weekly magazine covering the throughbred industry, has launched a new web site on equine health at http://www.thehorse.com.
The site will include most of what already is the monthly magazine, "The Horse: Your Guide to Equine
Health Care."
The site also will include an "Ask the Vet" section, a glossary of equine medical terms, editorsials and a directory of equine-related Internet resources.
The Blood-Horse, a weekly magazine about thoroughbred racing and breeding, can be accessed on the Internet at http://www.bloodhorse.com.
"The Internet allows us to do things that are simply not practical in print," said Charles Manson Jr., director of new media development for The Blood-Horse. "Print publishing forces us to freeze our content at a single moment in time. The virtual world of the Internet allows us to track fast-moving developments in real time."
Big 12 to decide on new quarters
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Will it be Dallas or Kansas City?
Many Big 12 insiders felt Dallas would be the choice. The presidents were to confer this morning and vote after hearing final reports from a team of consultants.
After delaying their decision once already, the presidents of the Big 12 schools promised to make up their minds today on where to base the new conference.
It's one of the last, and perhaps the most nettlesome, decisions they have faced since February 1994, when the Big Eight linked up with Southwest Conference members Texas, Texas A&M, Baylor and Texas Tech.
Since then, the presidents have hammered out revenue-sharing plans, resolved a bitter dispute over academics, separated their schools into two divisions and voted to put a conference football championship game in St. Louis.
But where to locate the conference headquarters became a political tug-of-war drawn generally, but not strictly, along northern and southern lines.
The original list of bidding cities was narrowed to Kansas City and Dallas, longtime headquarters of the Big Eight and SWC, respectively, when the presidents met Nov. 30 to hear final bids.
Kansas City's package was acknowledged to be almost $1 million higher than Dallas'. But the
decision was delayed for another two months.
"If I were one of the college presidents, I'd think we made a superior bid," said Gil Bourke, co-chairman of Kansas City's Big 12 retention committee. "I wouldn't know how my associates and I could turn them down. But then I am also a realist and I recognize there are political issues I am probably not completely apprised of."
The Big 12 will begin competition in August and has already signed
football television contracts worth more than $100 million.
"Whatever their decision, we will certainly support it," Bourke said. "We may not like it if it doesn't go our way. But we won't pout and sulk."
The conference has always been held in Kansas City, but the Big 12 is only committed there for two more years.
"I expect we'll still be a major player in Big 12 happenings over a long period of time," Bourke said.
Sunday, Bloody Sunday
KANSAS
11
NASA
Sunday is the day we've all been waiting for. Time for a little payback to our friendly, in-state rivals from Manhattan. It's been a few months and old wounds have finally healed. We've got a new sport, a new team, and a new way to back up Roy's Boy's. That's right, it's the 1996 KU Basketball Poster Series.
As you may have noticed, the News section today contains a two-page full color spread of one of your favorite players. What we need you to do is to pull this poster out, take it to the game on Sunday, and shake it in support of our noble team. Then, when the 'Cats have been trounced, you can keep the poster as a fond reminder of the 1995-6 KU Basketball season.
Watch for the rest of the posters on each home game day and collect the whole set. Whatever you do, just remember to show your support.
Go Hawks!
Look for Your Poster in Today's News Section
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A
VOL.102.NO.89
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
图
Jayhawks claw the Wildcats
No.3 Kansas remains unbeaten in the Big Eight Conference after a 72-62 win. Page1B
CAMPUS
Latin rhythms popular
Students enjoy going to Latin dance clubs for culture and music. Page 3A
NATION
Police arrest Las Vegas teen
A 15 year old has been picked up for questioning in the deaths of five family members. Page 5A
WORLD
Serbs go home
After fleeing in October, Serbs return to give life to a ghost town. Page 6A
WEATHER PARTLY CLOUDY
High 45° Low 17°
Weather: Page 2A
INDEX
Opinion ...4A
National News ...5A
World News ...6A
Features ...8A
Sports ...1B
Scoreboard ...2B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is free. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Brian Flink / KANSAN
Steve Finney, Shawnee graduate student, and Daniel Potter, resident of Habitat house #14, clean the porch of the house being built by Habitat for Humanity at 1336 New York St. Potter said he and his family helped on Saturday out of gratitude for their own house.
FRED SANTA MARIA
Habitat builds humanity
Students perform constructive work
By Scott MacWilliams
Kansan staff writer
Dust-covered Susan Malone, Linwood senior, hold a screw gun in her hand, waiting for her friends to finish trimming a piece of sheetrock.
"I never thought I'd be able to put up drywall," said Malone. "But I've found out that I am handler than I thought."
Christine Chelosal, owner of Habitat house #16 in North Lawrence, and Samantha Bowman, Wichita sophomore, cut a piece of drywall for the living room.
The old house at 1336 New York St. is being given a new lease on life, and KU students are doing nearly all of the work. On Saturday the KU College Republicans were on the job, getting dirty.
Maggie Wilson, Lawrence freshman, said she learned how to cut and fit sheet rock and operate a screw gun.
"It's a lot of fun," Wilson said. "I didn't see how we could help, but they knew how to put us to work."
Habitat for Humanity has had student volunteers on their past building projects, but this is the first time students have run the whole project.
"This year was the first time Lawrence Habitat has started two houses at once, so they asked me to be site manager," said Mike Beaty, Naples, Fla., senior. "I worked construction this summer and have been involved with Habitat on past projects."
Beaty, an architecture major, said the renovation included tearing out the plaster, rewiring, insulating, removing an old chimney and installing vinyl siding.
"We will be building three houses this spring, so we will be needing lots of KU volunteers," Beaty said.
Beaty said Habitat will hold a volunteer meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. Volunteers are needed for fund raising, publicity and construction, Beaty said.
"Most campus Habitat chapters don't have the opportunity to do a complete project like this." Beaty said.
Steve Finney
Shawnee graduate student, said he had fun working and hoped helping Habitat would become a regular event for the College Republicans.
"I've learned to be able to just fall into a group and start working," Finney said. "We like to balance fund raising with community service in order to give back to the community."
"It's hard to get a bunch of people out to help build a house when they've got studying to do and parties to go to." Bowman said. "But we say it's our responsibility as people to help out where it's needed."
Samantha Bowman, Wichita sophomore, agreed with Finney.
"I've learned to be able to just fall into a group and start working."
Steve Finney Shawnee graduate student
Eleven-year-old Johnhann Potter lives next door in the most recently completed Habitat House. He wore a full tool belt as he climbed a ladder. He was going to mount a piece of sheet rock to the hallway ceiling.
on both houses since they started. And sheet rock is my favorite because you can cover your mistakes," Potter said, laughing. "I've also learned how to wire switches and lighting. When something breaks, I know how to fix it."
"I've been working
African-American History Month
Film star to speak on love
Speaker chosen to honor African-American women
By Susanna Löof
Kansan staff writer
A movie star will give KU students a lecture of love tonight.
Starletta DuPois, who recently starred as Whitney Houston's mother in Waiting to Exhale, will speak at 7:30 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union as part of African-American History Month. The topic of her speech will be Love: The Sublime to the Ridiculous and Back.
The theme of this year's African-American History Month is African-American Women: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow.
Alexandra LeBlanc, corresponding secretary of Black Student Union, said the group chose DuPois because she was motivational and because she would be a good role model.
DuPois' speech will be a tribute to African-American women, according to a news release issued by University Relations. The speech is sponsored by Black Student Union and is free.
"She is encouraging and teaching at the same time," said LeBlanc, New Orleans sophomore.
LeBlanc said she was looking forward to the speech because she always had wanted to meet DuPois. LeBlanc said she hoped to visit with DuPois during a reception after the speech.
The reception is open to the public.
Besides appearing in Waiting to Exhale, DuPois' film credits include A Thing Called Love and Last Breeze of Summer.
She has won two Image awards from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People for performances in Raisin in the Sun and Shakin' the Mess Outta Misery, and she is being considered for an Ace Award for Strapped, an HBO movie directed by For- Whitekeer.
Where to find DuPois
Starletta DuPois, who recently appeared in Waiting to Exhale, will speak at 7:30 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Her topic is Love: the Sublime to the Ridiculous and Back.
DuPois' speech is sponsored by Black Student Union and is part of African-American History Month...
DuPois, who also is an adjunct professor at the University of Southern California, will be available at the reception following the speech. Both the speech and the reception are free.
Latina Sullivan, Memphis, Tenn., senior, said she hoped to attend the speech but that her job schedule might prevent that.
"I want to go because it is very rare that KU has an African-American star come and speak," she said. "I'd be interested in hearing what she has to say."
Weight anxiety may lead to eating disorder
Editor's note: This is the first story in a series about eating disorders, in conjunction with National Eating Disorders Awareness Week.
He threw up after a big meal. She counted every calorie, but rarely ate any food.
By Teresa Veazey Kansan staff writer
Scenes such as these may indicate a desire to lose weight, but can be a smaller part of a much bigger picture, said Ann Chapman, dietitian at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
National Eating Disorders Awareness Week, which begins today.
seeks to educate people about eating disorders and characteristics of the disorders in other people or themselves.
"It is certainly possible that while they may not have the problem themselves, they may know someone who does," said Linda Keeler, psychiatrist at Counseling and Psychological Services.
Eating disorders usually are divided into two groups: anorexia nervosa, when a person has a very low body weight and eats very little; and bulimia nervosa, when a person eats and then throws up, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins.
"Anorexics are the ones you can look at and say You have an eating
disorder," he said. "Bulimics have an unhealthy eating pattern, but they end up with enough nutrients that they look OK."
While the college student population has been affected by eating disorders, Chapman said, she could not guess how many KU students had eating disorders.
"Statistics are inaccurate," she said. "Whatever you see, you can have just as many you don't see."
Helping a friend who may have an eating disorder involves watching for behavior that is not normal, such as absenteeism at work or school, Keeler said.
"Someone who has an eating disorder and will have to eat in public will chose not to be a part of that activity," Keeler said. "There are symptoms that are continual about food—thinking and planning solely about your next meal instead of being involved in social activities."
"Just occasional, erratic eating patterns are not an eating disorder," she said. "Skipping a meal a day or two is not the same thing."
Keeler said that while eating disorders more commonly were seen in women, some men also were susceptible.
With classes, work and other activities, some students may not eat at regular intervals. But Chapman said there was a difference between missing a couple of meals and having an eating disorder.
"When we see eating disorders in
Signs of an eating disorder
Mood swings
Feeling guilty about eating
Missing school or work regularv
Constantly thinking about
and planning the next meal
Avoiding social activities that involve eating
+
7
males, we see the same things: similar distortions of body image, restriction and over-exercise," Keeler said. "But we see and treat far more women than we do women."
4
2A
Monday, February 5. 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Senate postpones campus fee review
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
Hearings on campus fees for women's and nonrevenue sports have been postponed.
The hearings, scheduled to begin on Thursday, won't begin until next fall.
At a meeting last week, Kim Cocks, student president, informed members of the Student Senate fee review subcommittee that they would not hold hearings on campus fees this semester.
"Reviewing campus fees is a difficult task," Cocks said. "This is important to Student Senate, and it needs careful attention. I feel like it deserves an entire year."
The subcommittee was established by Senate legislation last semester.
According to the legislation, the student body president sets the hearing dates.
Cocks originally had directed the committee to review women's and nonrevenue sports, campus lighting and Union fees this semester.
By the original schedule the subcommittee was required to make their final recommendations to Senate by March 15.
With that deadline, only a few meetings could be devoted to examining the financial records of each group being reviewed.
Scott Sullivan, subcommittee chairman, said that postponing the hearings would allow the groups to conduct thorough examinations of how the fees were being used.
"Legislation works slow," Sullivan said. "It takes a good semester to get a working committee off the ground."
Betsy Stevenson, assistant athletic director, said the postponement would give her more time to prepare for the women's and nonrevenue sports hearing.
Ken Martin, Senate executive committee chairman, said the postpone would give the groups more time to prepare for hearings.
"Instead of having only half a fiscal year to review, we'll have a complete fiscal year to look at," Stevenson said.
"We were trying to rush the hearings and we didn't give the groups who were being reviewed enough time to prepare," Martin said.
Station wagon defiled
Cocks said the subcommittee would spend the rest of the semester defining its role and planning extensively for next fall.
Kansan staff report
The owner of the vehicle said the suspect then had tried to break into her trailer home.
An unlocked car provided more than shelter to a disoriented man early Friday morning.
According to police reports, the suspect broke into a station wagon in the 1000 block of East 23rd Street, slept in it, tore up the inside and vomited on the front seat.
"He made just a terrible mess in my car," the victim said.
"He was beating on the door, trying to yank the door open," she said. "My husband is a big man, and it took all he had to keep the door
closed."
The man then went to a neighboring trailer home and banged on that door.
The owner of the vehicle and the first trailer house then called police, but the suspect was gone by the time police arrived.
The victim said she believed the cold weather, alcohol and drugs contributed to the suspect's behavior.
"The man had no coat on in subzero temperatures," the victim said. "It was bitterly cold."
The suspect was described as a 20-year-old white male. Police have no suspects.
ON CAMPUS
- OAKS—Non-Traditional Students Organization will sponsor a brown-bag luncheon at 11:30 a.m. today at Wescoe Terrace. For more information, call Laura Morgan at 864-4064.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about French-speaking countries at 3:30 p.m. today at 4033 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Ted Noravong at 864-3742.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor the Great Britain Direct Exchange Program at 4 p.m. today and tomorrow at 4045 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
KU Karate Club will practice at 5:30 p.m. today at 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jion Sides at 839-1771.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Meditation Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Ravi Hirekatur at 832-8789.
KU Yoga Club will sponsor yoga class at 7 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Adam Miller at 832-0399 or Paula Duke at 542-1930.
Student Assistance Center will sponsor Preparing for Exams Workshop at 7 tonight at 330 Strong Hall. For more information, call Student Assistance Center at 864-4064.
Student Assistance Center will sponsor Taking Control of Calculus Workshop at 7 tonight at 120 Snow Hall. For more information, call Student Assistance Center at 864-4064.
College Republicans will sponsor columnist Zoe Olsen at 7:30 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 7:30 at 201 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mark Hurt at 842-4713.
the Kansas Union. For more information, call Susan Malone at 841-2570.
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor "The Date Rape Debate: What's Fact and What's Fiction?" at 8 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Rachel Lee at 864-3552.
KU Women's Rugby will practice at 8tonight. For more information, call Stacey Stringfellow at 749-3380.
Minority Business Student Council will sponsor a career planning meeting at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at 426 Summerfield Hall. For more information, call Jacinta Carter at 749-3083.
Recovery Medicine Wheel Support Group will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call Samantha at 842-4797.
Student Senate will sponsor multicultural affairs committee meeting at 6 p.m. tomorrow. For more information, call Cesar Millan at 865-3538.
AIESEC, International Association of Students Interested in Business and Economics, will meet at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow at 2023 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Brian Buckley at 841-7675.
AASU will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call Julia at 864-2088.
KCBT Student Ministries will sponsor a Bible study at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Adam Decatur at 841-1683.
Weather
NIGH LOW
Atlanta 38 ° • 10 °
Chicago 22 ° • 10 °
Des Moines, Iowa 22 ° • 0 °
Kansas City, Mo. 43 ° • 15 °
Lawrence 45 ° • 17 °
Los Angeles 65 ° • 55 °
New York 25 ° • 10 °
Omaha, Neb. 40 ° • 12 °
St. Louis 50 ° • 40 °
Seattle 40 ° • 12 °
Topeka 45 ° • 17 °
Tulsa, Okla. 43 ° • 16 °
Wichita 45 ° • 20 °
TODAY
Partly cloudy,
warmer.
4517
TUESDAY
Warming trend
continues, partly
cloudy.
5428
WEDNESDAY
Slightly cooler
continued partly
cloudy.
5030
TODAY
Partly cloudy,
warmer.
4517
TUESDAY
Warming trend
continues, partly
cloudy.
5428
WEDNESDAY
Slightly cooler
continued partly
cloudy.
5030
Source: Dave Nadler/Aaron Johnson, KU Weather Service
ON THE RECORD
The soft top was stolen from a KU student's Jeep between 8:30 p.m. Friday and 2:15 a.m. Saturday in the 1000 block of Kentucky Street. The top was valued at $400, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's license plate was stolen between 6 p.m. Tuesday and 11 a.m. Friday in the 1900 block of Massachusetts Street. The license plate was valued at $10, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's purse, wallet and driver's license were stolen between 12:45 a.m. and 1:45 a.m. Saturday. The items were valued at $325, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's compact disc player and miscellaneous items were stolen from his car between noon Thursday and 11 a.m. Friday in the 1600 block of Louisiana Street. The items were valued at $1,770, Lawrence police reported.
CLARIFICATION
Information about a graduate teaching assistant hearing in the Jan. 31 Kansan was incorrect. The Kansas Association of Public Employees, which represents the GTA union, asked that the GTA hearing be postponed. The University suggested continuing the trial and allowing a sick witness to testify at a later date. However, the GTA union opted to postpone the hearing so that both sides could begin testimony at the same time.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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SPRING 1996 CAREER AND EMPLOYMENT FAIR
Abercombie& Fitch Mt. Oread Book Shop
Adia/ Martin-Smith Personnel National Academy of Railroad Science
American Multi- Cinema National Tire Warehouse
American Red Cross Naval ROTC
Astor Universal Corp. New York Life
Astra Merck, Inc. NK Lawn and Garden
B'nai B'rith Beber Camp Nolan Real Estate Services
BDM - Oklahoma Northwestern Mutual Life-Ertz Agency
Blockbuster Video Northwestern Mutual Life-Hames Agency
Boatmen's First National Bank Olsen Staffing Services
Boeing Commercial Airplane Group Osco Drug / Sav - on Drug
Boys and Girls Club Output Technologies
Camp Birchwood Overland Park KS Police Department
Camp Buckskin Overland Park Marriott Hotel
Camp Chi People to People International
Camp Winadu Pepsi Cola Co.
Camps Alry and Louise Pizza Hut, Inc.
Camp Lincoln & Lake Hubert Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City
Century Personnel Pro Staff Personnel Services
Cessna Aircraft Prudential Preferred Financial Services
Champs Sports Pulte Home Corporation
City of Lawrence Rainbow Generation
Coastal Mart Raytheon Aircraft
College Pro Painters Robert Half of Kansas City
Contemporary Group Rock Springs 4-H Center
Cottonwood, Inc. Sallie Mae
Deluxe Check Printers Sears, Roebuck & Co.
Digi Postal Corp. Seasonality
Division of Family Services Signature Staffing
DST Systems Snow Mountain Ranch
Ecumenical Christian Ministries Spangler Printers
Enterprise Rent-A-Car St. Lawrence Center/Catholic Network Volunteer
Equitable State Farm Insurance Co.
Famous Footwear Sunflower State Games
Franklin Financial Services Super Target
Frito Lay Superior Chevrolet
Frontier Corp. The Guardian
Gallup Organization Timber Lake/Tyler Hill Camp
Greene Family Camp Topeka Police Department
Heartspring Touch Net Information Services, Inc.
Hoechst Marion Roussel U.S. Army Recruiting Station
Informix Software, Inc. U.S. Dept. of Health &Human Services
International Studies Office U.S. Marine Corps
J.C. Penney Co. United American Insurance Co.
Johnson County Parks & Regregation Univ. of Cincinnati College of Medicine
Jones Store Company Univ. of Kansas Dept. of Human Resource
Kansas State Admin. Dept. of Personnel Upward Bound Program/KU Math & Scien
Kansas Technology Enterprise Corp. Visual Components , Inc.
Lakemary Center, Inc. Waddell & Reed
Lawrence Police Department Winning Ways
Luby's Cateleries, Inc. Worlds of Fun/Oceans of Fun
Manpower Temporary Services Wyandotte Co. Health Dept.
March of Dimes- Greater Kansas City Area YMCA Camp Wood
Merck & Co., Inc. YMCA of Johnson Co.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 5, 1996
3A
Gina Thornburg / KANSAN
100
Mike Kautsch, dean of the School of Journalism, presents the William Allen White Foundation National Citation award to Hedrick L. Smith, who won the award for his work in journalism, including 26 years as a New York Times correspondent.
White award bestowed
By David Teska
Kansan staff writer
A two-time Pulitzer Prize winner told listeners Friday that journalism is a worthy and noble profession that is in deep trouble.
Hedrick Smith, author, documentary producer and former correspondent for the New York Times was on campus to receive the 1996 national citation from the William Allen White Foundation. The citation honors the former editor of the Emporia Gazette for whom the University of Kansas' School of Journalism is named.
In commenting on the present state of the media in America today, Smith said that journalists were as unpopular today as lawyers and politicians.
Smith said the problems facing journalists include the mainstream
press having gone tabloid, a rush to judge by reporters and an overall negative tone.
"A cynical brand of journalism is undermining its own credibility," Smith said.
The result, he said, was that newspapers continued to lose 1 percent of market share each year.
Smith has worked as a foreign correspondent and has written on the politics of the United States and the former Soviet Union.
Alan Holiman, Lawrence graduate student, said he first gained an appreciation for Russian history and culture after he read Smith's 1976 book, The Russians.
"His view of the Soviet Union was right on target for the 1970's," Holiman said.
Alexander Tstovkh, visiting assistant professor of Russian and East European Studies from the University of Lviv in Ukraine, said that he was impressed with Smith's presentation.
Doug Sudhoff, Prairie Village graduate student, said that he heard the issues Smith raised before.
"The things he said are problems that everyone in journalism is aware of," Sudhoff said.
Smith referred to William Allen White's personal legacy of integrity and offered some solutions for the present downward trend in the media. Smith said the press should try to remove personal opinions from news stories, draw a sharper line between news and entertainment, seek out what the public wants to know, and cover it and rethink what it defines as news.
Redefining what is news is the most fundamental one of all, he said. "We ignore these lessons at our own peril." Smith said.
Latin clubs prosper
Tunes spice up dance scene provide local entertainment
By R. Adam Ward Kansan staff writer
Bars that offer Latin dance music are big business in Lawrence.
Duffy's, 2222 W. Sixth St., has Casa Blanca on Friday nights and the Low Rider Mexican Cafe, 943 Massachusetts St., has Coco Loco on Saturday nights.
"We get about 150 people on Coco Loco Night. It's our biggest night of the week," said Kelfel Aqui, owner of the Low Rider Mexican Cafe.
Latin dance music is getting more popular in the United States, so it's not surprising to see the number of bars offering Latin dance music increasing, said Peter Szekely, who is one of the DJs at the Orpheum Theater.
The newly remodeled Orpheum Theater in the back of Tin Pan Alley at 1105 Massachusetts St. also features Latin dance music on Friday nights. The Orpheum has the same disc jockeys that work at the Low Rider Mexican Cafe on Saturday nights.
"We had another Latin dance night at the ice House, but the Ice House was to small so we
decided to move here." he said.
Latin dance nights are popular with international students.
About 10 percent of the students that go to Coco Loco are international students. Anuil said.
He is one of the DJs at Coco Loco and will work at the Orpheum.
"International students were not satisfied with the entertainment options in Lawrence. They didn't want to go to a club and listen to techno music all night," said Antonio Moreno. Venezuela senior.
Aquil said that another reason for American students to come to Latin dance nights was to meet the attractive women that come to these nights.
Many American students go to Latin dance clubs to practice Salsa and Merengue, but also like the variety of music played, he said.
"It's a sexy, spicy atmosphere," he said.
He said that his club added variety to the alternative music scene in Lawrence.
"The atmosphere in Latin clubs is physically closer. You greet your friends with a kiss, and dancing is more intimate," said Robert Rodriguez, Orange County, Calif., senior.
Ryan Rama, Tulsa, Olda, senior, said, "I think that going to Latin dance clubs opens you up to the fact that people from different countries aren't as different as you think they are."
Dances dominate in Latin cultures
By Amy McVey
Kansan staff writer
Miguel Abellas doesn't get to go to his homeland, Galacia, Spain, very often, but that doesn't stop him from dancing.
Abellas, teaching assistant in Spanish and Portuguese, enjoys going to Lawrence's Latin dance clubs to celebrate the rhythms of his culture.
"Every culture has its own dance and dancing practices," Abellas said. "We party a lot, and dances go with the scene."
Abellas said one reason why he liked Latin dancing was because it was a good way to meet people.
"Latin music requires a couple, and it's always nice to dance with someone," he said. "When you dance to the kind of music you like, it allows you to have more fun."
"Latin music
requires a couple, and it's always nice to dance with someone."
Migueol Abellas teaching assistant, Spanish and Portuguese
Abellas said there had been a surge of Latin dance clubs throughout the world, and he said he thought Latin rhythms were popular because the dances were easy.
Antonio Moreno, a Venezuela senior and disc jockey at Coco Loco, 943 Massachusetts St., said that there was a big difference between American bars and Latin
clubs.
"In Latin America and in Europe, dancing is a bigger part of going out," he said. "Here people go out to drink and get drunk, but Latins go out to dance, and drinking is just a part of that."
Miritza Machado-Williams, adviser of the Panamanian Student Organization, said dance was an important part of most Latin countries. Through dance, Latinos bring an important part of their culture to America.
In Latin-American cultures, children learn traditional dances at a very early age, she said. It is not unusual to find traditional dance as an extra-curricular activity organized by teachers.
"They use music and dance as a tool for learning," she said.
Machado-Williams said that in Latin America, dance was central to social life.
"For Americans, a party is talking and eating," she said. "For us, a party means dance."
Groovy man, Scooby Doo van is totally out there
By R. Adam Ward Kansan staff writer
"Scooby Dooby Doo! Where are you? We've got some work for you, now," begins the song from the cartoon Scooby Doo, Where Are You? For many people this triggers powerful associations with childhood.
"I used to watch Scooby Doo with my younger brother," said Mark L'Heureux, Lenexa sophomore. "He used to sit in front of the T.V. with a blanket on his head, so no one would interrupt him while he was watching it."
L'Heureux said that his mother would tape the show so that they could watch it more than once.
He turned a beat-up old Volkswagen bus into what is, for some, a symbol of childhood.
Another KU student has found a way to capture those associations.
With a couple of cans of Krylon
spray paint and a sketch, Rob Grondahl, Lawrence senior, turned his bus into the Mystery Machine, the van driven by the cartoon sleuths.
He said the inspiration came when he was trying to think of a creative way to paint his bus.
"I had to make a few modifications on the design," he said. "The original Mystery Machine was a '70s child-molester-type van without any windows."
But Grondahl said he managed to capture the basic impression of the vehicle and it came out better than he expected.
He calls the people who like the Mystery Machine, machine heads. Grondahl said the machine heads always smile and wave, or honk when he drives by.
"It just came to me while I was watching the show. It was the only idea I could think of, so I just did it," he said.
The bus may look like new from the outside, but it is having some mechanical problems, Grondahl said. The battery is dead and constantly needs to be recharged because of an alternator problem.
December was the last time the bus was running, he said.
Right now the van is parked three doors down from Grondahl's house, but one of the renters of that house, Rodney Stuhlsatz, Garden Plain sophomore, said he doesn't mind having the bus parked outside.
"I think the van is really neat and adds character to our street," he said.
Grundahl said that he was worried at first about leaving the bus parked on the street for so long.
But he said he hasn't received any complaints about it, and for now it remains parked on Tennessee Street.
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
"After all it is pretty high profile," he said.
Rob Grondahl, Lawrence senior, turned his beat-up Volkswagen bus into a replica of the Mystery Machine from the Scooby Doo cartoons. Grondahl painted his bus to remind him of his childhood.
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4A
Monday, February 5, 1996
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Quick action against pledges saves fraternity's reputation
When fraternity members mess up,the fraternity should act in a decisive manner.
This is exactly what the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity did. Four of its pledges were involved in an early-morning incident on Jan. 28. The four allegedly threw rocks at a man's car and harassed him with anti-homosexual comments.
The KU police were called and are investigating the incident. The fraternity then revoked the pledges memberships.
After the alleged hazing incident at the Delta Chi fraternity last semester, the fraternity was slow in its action. The offenders were not reprimanded immediately. But the quick action of Sigma Alpha Epsilon sends the right message to the greek community.
Actions such as vandalism and harassment should not be tolerated. Despite being in a fraternity, the members are not above the
THE ISSUE:
Fraternity expulsion
KU fraternity members act decisively in their quick dismissal of four pledges involved in a possible hate crime.
standards set for all KU students. They are part of a community. When one of its members makes a mistake, the fraternity should be just and decisive in its response. This is exactly what Sigma Alpha Epsilon did.
The actions of fraternity members go unchecked too many times. It is the responsibility of the fraternity to reprimand and police its members.
If Sigma Alpha Epsilon had allowed its members to get away unpunished, it would have been just as responsible as the pledges.
By showing zero tolerance for that kind of behavior, the members have set a good example.
DEBBIE THOMPSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
New guidelines for child care discourage education-seekers
The Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitative Services recently has announced a number of welfare-reform changes designed to strengthen families, support and reward work, promote responsibility and simplify program guidelines.
The fundamental tenet of these changes is that Social and Rehabilitative Services no longer will approve child-care services for individuals seeking a four-year baccalaureate degree.
Apparently, the department has determined that receiving a four-year baccalaureate degree does not strengthen the family or encourage work. Perhaps the department's definition of work is part-time and does not include those jobs that might require a college diploma to attain.
The Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitative Services, which prides itself in helping those less fortunate and has long been an agency people turn to when other options have been exhausted, no longer must be interested in helping individuals further their education.
What could be more beneficial than taking care of
THE ISSUE Child care
Social service agency gives impression that receiving education is not important enough to merit state child care.
someone's child if that person wants to go to school and get an education? Of all the services that the department provides to the University community, this was one of the most important.
Perhaps it is the last of the department's aforementioned reasons that is most important — the need to simplify program guidelines. Perhaps it feels that this need should supersede the dream of the naive parent who would like to have the opportunity to go to college and strengthen the family and just reward those who work.
Either the department needs to re-evaluate its version of the effect of its program changes, or it needs to come forward and explain how not providing child care for college students can help achieve its so-called goals.
CHRIS VINE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
MKREELY Chicago Tribune
DOLE
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PRESIDENT
WE'RE DOING
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Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNI
Diversity group will attempt to open minds, change hearts
Yesterday, I woke up feeling a little homophobic. I was tired, a little cranky and in the mood to kick some butt. But I also wanted to be original.
Simply yelling the same old slurs was beginning to lose its appeal. Then an idea slowly leaked into my head. How it got past the layer of dead brain cells and the dam of rocks, I will never know. Nonetheless, it was there. Why not go down to Potter Lake, I thought, and throw a rock through the car window of an obvious homosexual? If you are familiar with their winter plumage, they are easily spotted.
Disappointed, I sat down and began to consider the other questions raised in the morning's brief excitement. For example, why doesn't the code prohibit racial and sexual harassment?
A little wanton violence was just what I needed to burn off the morning blues. I looked through the Student Code of Rights and Responsibilities first to make sure I wasn't doing anything wrong. Since I found nothing to prohibit my actions, the excitement began to build.
Imagine my disappointment when I opened the Kansan and found that it already had been done. Four pledges of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house had beaten me to it.
Danny Kaiser, assistant dean of student life, said it is because there is no need. A University policy already exists addressing harassment based on race, ethnicity and
STAFF
COLUMNIST
TODD
HIATT
sexual orientation. The fact that the policy is not in the Time-table next to the policy on sexual harassment is merely an oversight that soon will be remedied.
from throwing the rock? Another idea slipped through. A policy without teeth won't change anyone's mind. And no matter what, it never will change hearts.
This is good, and it is long overdue. But why didn't that policy deter the Sigma Alpha Epsilon pledges
We have tried, though. Since the '60s we have passed law after law meant to promote equality in our country. In the name of social justice, we have enacted civil-rights laws and established a variety of programs collectively called affirmative action.
But in reality we have changed very little.
As Colorado passes horrific anti-homosexual legislation and conservatives attempt to repeal what little economic justice has been secured by affirmative action, our dark underbelly of hate is exposed for the world to see. Racism and homophobia haven't gone away.
Look at the disparity in employment rates and just compensation between minorities and Cau
casians. Look at our cafeterias, and see how many mixed-race groups you see. Look at people that almost have had heart attacks because Hawaii is trying to legalize same-sex marriages.
Then ask a member of a minority group how many times he or she has been discriminated against or harassed — not if, but how many times. Social justice has a long, long way to go.
Here in our little corner of the world, we have taken a small step in the fight for equality.
Gloria Flores, associate director of minority affairs, and Amy Turnbull, Lawrence senior in social welfare, are starting a peer-education group for diversity awareness. Every incoming freshman, greek organization and residence hall should be required to hear this group speak.
Adding the anti-harassment policy to the Timetable may increase awareness.
If some sanctions are added, the policy may even change the mind of a potential hate crime perpetrator. But the student-led diversity awareness group has the opportunity to change hearts.
If you would like to be a part of the organization or have the group speak to your classroom, residence hall or social organization, call Gloria Flores at 864-4351.
Join the struggle for social justice.
Todd Histit is a Lawrence senior in social welfare
QUOTES OF THE WEEK
"THE THING THAT I OBJECT TO IS THE SHOPPING MENTALITY THAT I FIND SO ANTI- INTELLECTUAL."
Betty Banks, associate professor of classics, about releasing faculty evaluations to students.
"THIS IS ROTTEN. IVE NEVER HEARD OF THIS HAPPENING. I HAD TO DISMISS CLASS EARLY BECAUSE I COULDN'T HAVE KIDS SITTING ON THE FLOOR."
Beverly Boyd, professor of English, about the lack of chairs in Wescoe Hall classrooms
"I'M PRETTY ANGRY. WHO KNOWS, ANYTHING COULD BE HOT HERE."
"I M PRETTY ANGRY. WHO KNOWS, ANYTHING COULD BE HAPPENING."
Jarrod Ramer, Tulsa, Okla., senior, after having his bicycle, which turned out to be stolen, confiscated by KU police. Ramer bought the bicycle at Play it Again Sports, 1029 Massachusetts.
"I CAN'T SPECULATE WHY THERE WEREN'T ENOUGH CHAIRS. YOULL HAVE TO DIRECT THAT QUESTION TO FACILITY OPERATIONS."
"MY UNDERSTANDING IS IT COMES FROM THE REGISTRAR'S OFFICE WHO DECIDES HOW MANY GO IN WHICH ROOMS.
Mike Richardson, director of facility operations, about who decides how many chairs to put in classrooms.
Brenda Selman, assistant registrar, about who decides how many chairs to put in classrooms.
KU experience diminishes sense of individuality
As students of the University of Kansas, we are all too familiar with the seemingly endless crowds of people everywhere from Jayhawk Boulevard during class breaks to the enrollment center during add/drop times. We have all learned to accept that this is part of life for those who attend a large school such as the University.
However, is it possible that the KU bureaucracy machine may be promoting, perhaps inadvertently, a diminished sense of individuality
GUEST COLUMNIST
MARK
BURGER
towards students who attend this great University? I believe that this is not only possible but actually is the case.
I'll share with you some observations that helped to heighten my awareness of the University's impersonal and dehumanizing academic atmosphere.
Closed class
KANSAN STAFF
openers. These "green cards" can be lifesavers or, more commonly, morale breakers. It seems as if though some, albeit very few, instructors are more than willing to accommodate the needs of students wishing to gain entry into their classes by nondiscriminately giving the openers to anyone who desires them.
This presents an obvious question — why did I have to go through enrollment to be told that the class was closed if, in reality, the instructor will let me, and everybody else, in if we are patient enough to wait until add/drop? Still, I can't complain too much; at least I got into my class, and I can rest assured knowing that I now have a chance of graduating before the end of this millennium, if I'm lucky.
A far more likely situation is not getting the closed class opener. I can't recall how many instructors I have pleaded with, trying to convince them that I'm somehow special and deserve to be in their class. To date, my favorite response is that of the rather nonchalant professor who snarled, "You are not in any way unique at all! Put your ID number on line 63 of the waiting list." You'd think that anyone would jump at the chance to give out one more falling grade.
This presents an obvious question
But at least I'm not bitter.
OK, I know this is far from an original criticism, but I really empathize with those poor souls who have to take chemistry 184. Is there really any need to shove 900 sardines into one tin can?
I think it would be beneficial to hire more GTAs to reduce the number of students per class. It is remarkable to me that many of them do a job equivalent to, or even better than, many professors, simply because they tend to have more time available for discouraged students seeking assistance.
The list goes on, but let me conclude with one memorable event of the past week.
I went to officially declare my major, feeling such pride in myself for coming to a decision that might actually hold for a couple of months. I handed the professor the little of slip of paper with a grin and just a hint of pretension.
Unfortunately, the sense of accomplishment didn't last long. The professor didn't even look at me; he simply signed it and told me to leave. It's not as if I were expecting a free toaster or anything, but a nonverbal recognition of my presence would have been most appreciated, if not entirely expected.
Perhaps the faculty and administration could do more to accentuate and enrich the scholastic and personal atmosphere that the students provide here by acknowledging that each one of us is unique.
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Mark Burger is a Topeka sophomore in physics
Campus ... Joann Birk
... Phillip Brownlee
Editorial ... Paul Todd
Associate editorial ... Craig Leng
Features ... Forestwood
Spruce ... Tom Brickson
Associate sports ... Bill Patula
Photo ... Andy Ruelletod
Matt Flockner
Graphics ... Nush Mussel
Special sections ... Naval Commissary
Nen Humphrey
Wire ... Tara Treynay
On-line coordinator ... Tina Fassett
HEATHER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Karen Gerach
Regional mgr ... Kelly Connery
Administrative mgr ... Dan Frost
Special Sections mgr ... Norm Blow
Production mgr ... Rachel Cahill
Marketing director ... Cary Breeloff
Public Relations dir ... Angle Adamson
Creative director ... Ed Kowaldis
Head of Human Resources ... Steve Ward
Internship/co-op mgr .. T.J. Clark
HUBIE
By Greg Hardin
HOO-WEE! IT SURE IS COLD OUT HERE TODAY!!!
HOO-WEE! IT SURE IS COLD OUT HERE TODAY!!!
HOO-WE IT SURE IS COL OUT HERE TODAY
HOO-WE IT SURE IS COL OUT HERE TODAY
YEAH, LIKE I SAID...
HOO-WEE! IT SURE IS COLD OUT HERE TODAY!!
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 5.1996
5A
Police arrest son of victims for questioning
The Associated Press
VISTA, Calif. — A teen-ager visiting his grandparents with his family was arrested and held for questioning yesterday, a day after his parents, sister, grandmother and grandfather were found dead in a burning condominium.
parents' silver Mercedes. He did not resist.
Joshua Bradley Jenkins, 15, of Las Vegas, was arrested for investigation of murder a few miles away while driving his
Investigators believe the five were killed before the apparent arson fire began at 3:45 p.m. Saturday, said San Diego County sheriffs Lt. Kathy Fulmer. She declined to elaborate on how the victims were killed, how the fire started or a possible motive.
minimum and then were moved to the same room.
The five apparently were killed in different places in the grandparents' condo
Their bodies were discovered by firefighters.
Fulmer refused to discuss a report in yesterday's San Diego Union Tribune that the five appeared to have been stabbed to death.
An autopsy probably will be performed today, said Charles Kelley, an investigator
with the county medical examiner's office.
Fulmer identified the victims as Jenkins' parents, George Jenkins, 50, and Lynn Jenkins, 48, of Las Vegas; grandparents, Bill Grossman, 78, and Eileen Grossman, 74, of Vista; and sister, Magan Jenkins, 10.
The condominium is in a quiet community known as "The Terraces," 40 miles northeast of San Diego.
Dexter's not his usual self.
You suspect the salsa.
The call is cheap. (Too bad about the consultation fee.)
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6A
Monday, February 5, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Mortar Board
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Information sheets for membership in Mortar Board, a highly respected senior honor society, are available in 50 Strong Hall, the OAC, and Nunemaker. A 3.0 cumulative GPA is required. Deadline for return of information sheets is Friday, February 9, 1996 at 5 p.m.
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Serbs return home to ghost town
MRKONJIC GRAD, Bosnia-Herzegovina — One of Bosnia's biggest ghost towns is coming back to life
The Associated Press
Mrkonjic Grad, with a pre-war population of 28,000, was so devastated by Bosnian Croat forces that NATO and relief agencies suggested the homecoming be gradual while basic services were restored.
Serbs must yield territory near Sarajevo. But as of Sunday, they also regained control of a large, wedge-shaped region around Mrkonjic Grad in northwest Bosnia.
By the thousands, Serb civilians who fled last October when Mrkonjic Grad fell to Bosnian Croats returned yesterday to their ravaged homes.
Some weeping, they were the first wave of the largest Serb homecoming to result from the U.S.-negotiated peace accord.
Those who returned were warned that there could be land mines or
But the road to Mrkonjic Grad from the Serb stronghold of Banja Luka was clogged yesterday with hundreds of cars and buses.
booby-trapped explosives in and around their homes.
Relief workers estimated 3,000 to 5,000 people made the trip.
Among the heartbroken returnees was an Orthodox priest, Slavoljub Tegeltija, who sifted somberly through rubble strewn across the floor of his gutted stone church.
He pointed to singed pages of religious books which he said had been set ablaze after the church was looted.
"Everything it is burned, destroyed," Tegeltija said. "I knew it would be hard coming back, but I didn't think it would be this bad."
His residence, next to the church, also had been gutted, but the black-robed priest said he was determined to stay.
The Croats who captured Mrkonjic Grad started to rebuild the city, restoring utilities and fixing houses. But before leaving last
month, they took what they could with them — and burned what they couldn't carry away.
They left Mrkonjic Grad a ghost town.
There is no electricity, and none is expected for at least two months. The water system is damaged. The hospital, main hotel and telephone center all are stripped of vital equipment.
Some homes have been leveled. Many others are gutted by fire, and even the homes that remain intact have broken windows and missing doors.
"I feel very sad, but we're lucky compared to others," said Slobodan Udovcic, 38, as he and his wife inspected their ransacked apartment.
How long would it take for the town to return to normalcy?
"Ten years at least," Udovici said. At a former military building, representatives of a dozen relief agencies discussed plans to help Mrkonjic Grad and nearby Sipovo recover.
Bosnia
Mrkoniic Grad
"It's a political thing," he said, "It's hard to get money for Serb areas."
Attila Kulcsar of the American Refugee Committee said the organizations were worried about persuading donors to send aid.
The local chief of the main Serb political party, Luka Culic, said he expected the international community to attach conditions to aid for the Serbs, such as requiring that they cooperate with war crimes investigations.
Investigators open office in Bosnia
The Associated Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic agreed yesterday to permit international war crimes investigators to open an office, a move that could accelerate the gathering of evidence of ethnic cleansing in the four-year war in Bosnia.
office in Kosovo, a predominantly Albanian province whose autonomy the Serbian leader reversed in 1989.
The gesture of cooperation with the tribunal in The Hague reverses a two-year refusal by the Serbian leader to grant investigators access.
There have been occasional meetings here between tribunal and Serb officials but no direct evidence-gathering permitted.
Christopher said the U.S. intention in opening the office was to bolster political and cultural rights of the people there. Many Kosovo nationalists now want to go beyond autonomy to independence, which would mean further splintering of Yugoslavia.
In another conciliatory move, Milosevic told U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher he would permit the U.S. Information Agency to open an
The stop in Beilgrade completed a three-day trip by Christopher through the Balkans.
He urged leaders in Croatia and Bosnia to free remaining prisoners and to protect the human rights of residents of the three former Yugoslav republics as the Bosnian peace accords are implemented.
However, Milosevic again insisted that war
crimes suspects should be tried where the crimes were committed and not turned in to the international tribunal, which has indicted 52 people and is conducting additional investigations.
Christopher especially wanted Milosevic to compel the Bosnian Serbs to hand over Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic, the Bosnian Serbs' political and military leaders, to The Hague.
Before he left the region to go to the Middle East, Christopher told reporters he expected continued compliance.
Milosevic remains the key figure in the Balkans in U.S. peacemaking efforts. At the same time, his backing of Bosnian Serbs with weapons and other aid ignited their rebellion against the Muslim-led government in Sarajevo and led to the 44-month war.
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Monday. February 5. 1996
7A
Crime evidence may be found on-line
The Associated Press
EAST WINDSOR, N.J. — They met through an on-line chat room, an electronic gathering place for gay men.
In time, they agreed to move from computer screens to a face-to-face encounter.
But their off-line meeting Jan. 4 turned deadly, police said, when George Hemenway shot Jesse Unger in the head as a 15-year-old boy watched.
The last homicide in this Trenton suburb of 22,000 people was 10 years ago and stemmed from a homosexual street encounter, police said.
This time, the investigation led to the back streets of the Internet. America Online complied with a search warrant and gave authorities computer files and copies of e-mail between the two men.
That set off lively, occasionally profane debate on the Internet about privacy rights. But experts said that on-line correspondents should not expect privacy and predicted that electronic communications eventually would be routinely examined by everyone from government officials to attorneys.
As homes and businesses become more computerized, more information would be available to private people as well as law enforcement personnel, unless there were a high degree of legal intervention, said noted First Amendment attorney Floyd Abrams of New York.
He added, "For people who haven't done anything, it's a serious danger for their privacy."
"Most people...don't realize that when they delete-mail it doesn't necessarily go away," added David Banisar, representative for the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington.
He said that computer users should not expect to hide what they have bought, what they have read, where they have been, to whom they have talked or even their sexual orientation and fetishes from those who seek that information.
"I think you're going to start seeing the use of online records in divorce proceedings," Banisar said
on Wednesday. The next day, news broke of a New Jersey woman being sued for divorce by a husband who had read her e-mail and accused her or an adulterous on-line relationship, although the wife had yet to meet the man with whom she had corresponded.
Authorities already had used computers to track child pornography, credit card fraud and embezzlement on the Internet, but this was the first time police obtained an on-line service's computer files for a murder investigation.
Local authorities called in a computer expert to examine both the America Online files and those in several state-of-the-art personal computers
seized from the murder site, the house Hemenway shared with his father. They also examined computer files found in the homes of the 15-year-old and of Unger.
The boy claimed that both the victim and the accused had molested him on prior occasions, said police Lt. John T. Funda.
The boy had communicated regularly with Hemenway and Unger in an America Online chat room called "NJM4M," or "New Jersey men for men," where up to two dozen people can type comments back and forth.
help from two on-line friends: Timothy R. Brown, 23, of neighboring Hightstown and Michelle R. Benson, 24, of Trenton.
Hemenway was charged with murder and weapons offenses. Police said that he has confessed. Benson and Brown were charged with evidence tampering.
Benson later called police.
Hemenway, also 39, told police he was a car mechanic and carpenter.
Unger, 39, was a computer systems analyst in nearby Princeton.
Most people.. don't realize that when they delete email it doesn't necessarily go away.
Trooper Michael Geraghty of the New Jersey State Police Technical Assistance Unit is going through every file on the seized computers along
When Hemenway could not drag Unger's 250-pound body out of his basement, police said he got
away.
David Sanisar
Electronic Privacy Information
Center representative
with hundreds of computer disks,
data tapes and cartridges.
Because those weren't sought until two weeks after the killing, and America Online computers automatically delete e-mail five days after it has been read, Geraghty said that the files probably would contain only unread e-mail, which is retained for 25 days.
Geraghta has yet to tackle the America Online files and may not find much when he does.
The case is being watched by organizations that monitor computer privacy and free speech.
"Many America Online users may have a sense they're being misled and that their privacy is being invaded," said Mike Godwin, staff counsel of the Electronic Frontier Foundation in San Francisco.
---
If both sender and receiver deleted a message, she insisted, "it's absolutely private."
America Online representative Pam McGraw said that the Vienna, Va.-based service did not save chat room conversations, but retained read e-mail for five days because members wanted to be able to re-read it.
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Art Inclusion
Lawrence is home to many talented student artists. Downtown is a showcase of many fine works of art. But rarely are student works displayed downtown.
Story by Jason Strait
Photos by Brian Flink
In the next two years, the city of Lawrence will spend $502,000 on art. And the city will not make an effort to include KU students in the art-life of Lawrence.
About $250,000 will be spent on the construction of a new arts center. The rest will be spent on the "Percent for the Arts" and the downtown art/sculpture display. Although these programs don't exclude students, they don't include them.
The "Percent for the Arts" program was started in 1987 to reserve a percentage of the city's budget for artwork.
"It's a great shot in the arm for the arts community," said Mike Wilden, city manager.
But isn't the KU student body a large part of that arts community?
KU students never have played a major role in Lawrence's art displays, said Jim Patti, a member of the Kansas Sculpture Association and founder
The sculpture Libertine, at Eighth and Massachusetts streets, is a part of art that decorates downtown.
of the downtown program,
Comment
Lawrence Arts Commission.
which is sponsored by the Kansas Sculpture Association and the
The artists receive a $500 honorarium, and their works are displayed in downtown for a year. Afterward, the sculptures are returned to the artist.
New art is selected in March, and new sculptures are displayed in May.
Both programs are intended to increase the quality of life and appreciation for the arts.
For the downtown program, students' work rarely has been selected in the past in favor of artists from other states. While students are not excluded from the project, they are not given consideration for being what they are: works in progress.
Patti said that one of the 22 artists who submitted work for this year's program might be a KU student.
Among the works of these artists, 11 or 12 works will be selected for display.
"We do have a lot of work submitted by Lawrence artists," Patti said. "But the selection committee doesn't select based on where the art is from."
In addition to the $500 honorarium, the downtown display becomes a gallery for prospective buyers.
Inclusion in the program would give students a chance not only to display, but also to sell their works.
John Hackmeister, a lecturer in the department of art and design, said KU students had the talent that downtown-displayed artists had but might not be informed of the opportunity.
"KU is its own world sometimes," Hackmeister said. "Students don't know about the opportunities offered to them. It would be nice if the students were notified more."
In addition to the lack of information, Hackmeister said students might be too involved with school projects to fulfill the requirements of the
downtown art program. Artists whose works are chosen, must spend time and money to weather-proof their artwork.
"I believe KU student work is really great."
Hackmeister said. "There is a lot of talent here."
If city officials want to increase the quality of life and appreciation for the arts, they need to take KU students into consideration. Students may be busy with projects for classes, but they shouldn't be ignored.
The city could support education while boosting the quality of life. The student artists, sculptors and designers are among the best in Lawrence.
Displaying art is important. Displaying art that represents the community and its student artists is important, too.
Woman at the Well, 800 block of Massachusetts Street
Sculptures by student artists such as Richard Kennedy, Stillwell junior (right), never have been a major part of the downtown art scene. Instead, professional pieces like All in a Life-time, Sixth and Massachusetts streets, (far right) are chosen.
---
THE MOMENTS OF THE WEEK
Hill
Hill topics
Page 8A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
February 5, 1996
Hill
topics
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Page 8A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
February 5, 1996
BIG 12 Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick gives his reaction to the decision to put the conference office in Dallas. Page 3.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1996
SECTION B
Roy's trust cultivates new talent
Kansas freshmen Paul Pierce, Ryan Robertson and T.J. Pugh have, in my mind, officially shed their titles as newcomers.
No, the three men's basketball players haven't completed enough credits to be sophomores, but they have shown the maturity and poise of veterans. And that is exactly what the No. 3 Jayhawks will need for the rest of the season.
How did these — to borrow a term from Dick Vitale — "Diaper Dandies" elevate to such great
heights? One
heights? One would have to start with Kansas coach Roy Williams.
SPORTS EDITOR
Williams puts his full confidence and trust in every player, from the fifth-year seniors to the freshmen. Pierce, a starter in every game this season, has been given even more of Williams'
TOM
ERICKSON
trust than his fellow newcomers.
And it has worked. Despite struggling a bit in his first few games, Pierce has become one of the Jayhawks' leading scorers and a rock-solid defender. His ability to shoot from almost anywhere between the three-point line and the basket is incredible.
Although Robertson and Pugh are not part of Kansas' starting five, they form two key elements of the second team. I can recall watching Robertson's St. Charles West High School team win the Missouri state championship last season on television, thanks to great passes and shots from Robertson.
What I saw that afternoon may have been a preview of what the Jayhawks will see when Robertson becomes the starting point guard in 1997. But for now, he rarely sees any playing time at the point and has yet to start a game.
The demotion doesn't seem to bother Robertson, however. With senior Calvin Rayford running the second-team offense, I think it has given Robertson a chance to work on his ever-improving shot.
Pugh's situation is similar to Robertson's in that the playing time and scoring averages are way down from his days at Creighton Prep in Omaha, Neb., but he continues to improve some raw skills.
Quietly, Pugh comes in for junior center Scot Pollard and sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz, plays tough down low, and sits back down again. But I have noticed many big improvements in Pugh that aren't always so easily seen.
Although his scoring average is just more than four points a game, Pugh seems to follow his shots and pick up key rebounds on offense and defense. His stamina has also been given a lift, most likely from practicing against Pollard, LaFrentz and junior forward B.J. Williams everyday.
I can't think of a replacement word for these freshmen, but they have definitely dropped the freshness from the title and become men.
After seeing two technical foul calls on Kansas' last two opposing coaches, there is much more to like about Roy Williams.
Kansas State coach Tom Asbury should consider enrolling in some sort of 12-step program to alleviate his anger. After he was whistled for arguing with officials yesterday, the television camera focused on Asbury, and my girlfriend read his lips. Let's just say his words were not suitable for children.
I was courtside on Wednesday night when Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton stormed toward the officials, his actions resulting in a technical. The noise of the crowd prevented me from hearing what was said, but I can only guess that it wasn't nice.
Coach Williams seems to have a better grasp on his temper, and that leads to success in the win column. I have no doubt that Williams gets angry from time to time, but at least he has the class to keep it bottled up.
Good players are the direct result of good coaching, and that is why I believe Kansas is consistently a winner.
Jayhawks skin Wildcats, 72-62
Kansas edges intrastate rival
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
Tom Asbury said a little bit too much.
During the second half of Kansas 72-62 victory yesterday in Allen Field House, the Kansas State men's basketball coach walked to midcourt during a timeout, yelled at the referees and promptly picked up an technical foul.
But as to what the verbal outburst was about, Asbury was mum.
"Let's not talk about it." he said
The technical was part of a sixpoint possession when the No. 3 Jayhawks led 57-50. When the Wildcats got the ball again, with 5:05 remaining in the game, they trailed by 13 points, 63-50.
"Lots of times coaches do that early in the game to get their team fired up," Kansas freshman guard Ryan Robertson said. "But today, I don't know why the coach would do that."
Asbury might have seen a chance to fire his team up after Kansas junior guard Jacque Vaughn was whistled for his fourth personal foul with 6:05 left.
But the Jayhawks didn't appear to miss Vaughn as his replacement, senior guard Calvin Rayford, started the six-point possession.
Rayford caused a Wildcat turnover and started a fast break. He found Kansas sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz, who hit a lay up and was fouled by Kansas State senior forward Tyrone Davis.
But the Jayhawks kept possession because of the technical.
"It's really a tough position to come off the bench cold and shoot." Robertson said. "But we all
have roles. When I don't fill my role, that's disappointing."
The momentary disappointment was quickly overshadowed when Kansas junior forward B.J. Williams hit a 14-foot jumper from the top of the key. The field goal completed the Jayhawks' six-point possession.
Kansas built its lead to 13 after that but K-State never let the game get completely out of reach. The Jayhawks held the Wildcats off, pushing their record to 18-1 overall and 6-0 in the Big Eight Conference. K-State fell to 14-6 overall and 5-3 in the conference.
"I don't know if it was a turning point, but we definitely used it to our advantage," Yaughn said.
"They're playing great basketball right now," Kansas junior center Scot Pollard said, "and I'd be surprised if they didn't make the NCAA tournament."
K-State senior guard Elliot Hatcher led all scorers with 30 points, hitting 10 of 23 shots and seven of nine free-throw attempts.
But Hatcher was outscored in the second half by LaFrentz, who had 16 points compared to Hatcher's 15. LaFrentz finished the game with a career-high 24 points, including 10 of 13 free-throw attempts.
"Today was the best we've done for awhile in getting the ball inside," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "But we missed some from point-blank range. That happens when you've got two good defensive teams because you feel like they're always coming at you, even if they aren't."
KANSAS
45
in the second half, LaFrentz improved on his two-of-six first-half performance, hitting five of nine shots from the floor.
LaFrentz said he happily accepted big games such as yesterday's whenever he could get them. Nonetheless, he understands individual players rarely shine because of the team's depth.
But LaFrentz's efforts are not overlooked by his teammates.
"He's not forgotten by me," Vaughn said. "In the second half, there were three or four plays in a row that I called his number."
Kansas forwards Paul Pierce and Reaf LaFrentz both soared up to catch a pass from sophomore Billy Thomas. "It wasn't a very good pass," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "I don't know if he knew who he was throwing it to."
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
10
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
Kansas junior guard Jacque Vaughn throws a pass to a Jayhawk teammate in yesterday's game. Kansas used a strong second half to win, 72-62.
'Hawks come from behind again to win
Kansas has won three games this season after being down at halftime
O
Bv Bill Petulla
Kansan associate sports editor
Although the Jayhawks shot just 33 percent from the floor in first half, Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams said he wasn't nervous.
"At halftime I was discouraged about how we played," Williams said. "But I was confident that in the second半长we'd show up and play. I didn't give them one of those hell-fire, win-one-for-the-Ginner kind of sneeches."
Whatever he said, though, the Jayhawks responded in the second half, hitting 46 percent of their field goals.
No. 3 Kansas overcame a four-point deficit three minutes and 14 seconds into the second half when sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz got fouled as he tipped in a missed shot. That basket gave the Jayhawks a lead they would not relinquish.
Kansas junior guard Jerod Haase felt Kansas had scoring
Kansas State coach Tom Asbury said he was pleased with the Wildcats' defensive effort in the first half, but felt they didn't give that same effort in the final 20 minutes.
"I think the main difference was in the first half we were getting good shots and they just weren't falling." Haase said. "But you've got to give credit to their defense. They play extremely hard and made things tough for us."
opportunities in the first half but credited the Kansas State defense for the Jayhawks' stymied shooting.
"I thought we did a nice job on our defense," he said. But he added that the Jayhawks didn't need to resort to sleight-of-hand to win. "They're not No. 3 in the nation by using mirrors. We just simply didn't come out in the second half."
Yesterday's victory marks the third time this season that the Jayhawks have won when trailing at the half.
Williams said that he was proud of the team's maturity and ability to improve its shooting at halftime.
"It was one of those games when our outside shot wasn't going and we missed from point blank in the first half," Williams said. "But we have an intelligent team and they have the ability to make adjustments and adapt to what we tell them in the locker room."
31 31
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
Weekend split helps, hurts Kansas
Kansas junior guard Tarnkee Dixon tries to get a pass past over two Missouri defenders in yesterday's game.
Women's basketball team upsets No.14 Colorado, but Missouri returns favor
By Evan Blackwell
Kansan sportswriter
COLUMBIA, Mo. — The Kansas women's basketball team took one giant step forward and then took one giant step backward in the Big Eight Conference race this weekend.
The Jayhawks lost to Missouri 86-66 yesterday at the Hearnes Center, just two days after they took sole possession of first place in the Big Eight with a 67-57 win at No. 14 Colorado Friday night. Kansas is now 13-8 overall and 6-3 in the Big Eight.
The Tigers jumped on Kansas early, led by senior forward Erika Martin, who scored 17 points in the first half. Martin got to the free throw line 11 times, making nine.
Foul trouble hampered the Jayhawks most of the game. Kansas was forced to play most of the first half without the services of junior guard Tamecka Dixon and senior guard Charisse Sampson. Both picked up two fouls in the first ten minutes of the game.
With the Jayhawks' two leaders on the bench, Missouri pulled away to a 44-26 halftime lead and never looked back.
Kansas pulled within 11 several times in the second half but could never all the way back. The Jayhawks were unable to stop Martin, who finished with 36 points.
"They got 12 points from the foul line in the first half," Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said. "You just can't let that happen."
Missouri women's basketball coach Joaun Rutherford said the strategy to get the ball in Martin's hands was obvious.
"I told her to start taking the ball because I knew they couldn't stop her," Rutherford said. "She's too quick on the wing."
While Martin dominated on the offensive end, Rutherford said she was just as impressed with her player's defense.
"I look at her D more than I do the offense," Rutherford said. "She held Sampson to eight points."
Washington said the team was not able to overcome the physical and emotional fatigue from their win Friday night in Boulder, Colo.
"We weren't as rested as them, and it showed," Washington said. "We were a step behind all day."
Kansas took hold of first place with its come-from-behind triumph against the Buffaloes. After trailing by seven points at halftime, the Jayhawks took control with a 10-0 run midway through the second half.
"I didn't feel we played that well in the first half," Washington said. "But we came out of the locker room with much better defense and more action on the boards."
Junior guard Angie Halbleib led Kansas in scoring both games with 18 against Colorado and 20 against Missouri.
---
6
5.
Monday, February 5, 1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
USA TODAY-CNN Top 25
The USA TODAY-CNN basketball coaches' poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Feb. 4 and previous rankings, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote:
1. Massachusetts (28) 21-1 79 Pts 1
2. Kentucky (3) 18-1 765 2
3. Kansas 18-1 723 3
4. Connecticut (1) 21-1 715 4
5. Cincinnati 17-1 657 5
6. Villanova 18-3 618 6
7. Utah 18-3 567 7
8. Georgetown 19-3 565 9
9. Wake Forest 14-3 493 10
10. Penn State 16-2 491 11
11. North Carolina 16-2 493 8
12. Virginia Tech 16-2 411 14
13. Purdue 17-2 403 15
14. Texas Tech 18-1 341 20
15. Arizona 18-1 338 12
16. Memphis 16-4 309 13
17. UCLA 16-5 305 19
18. Syracuse 16-6 264 16
19. Michigan 16-7 184 18
20. Iowa 15-6 131 17
21. Boston College 15-6 115 23
22. Auburn 15-6 86 22
23. Eastern Michigan 15-6 75 21
24. Stanford 13-5 70 24
25. Louisville 13-5 56 25
Others receiving votes: Clemson 46, Wis-
Green Bay 47, Iowa St. 44, Washington 37,
Georgia 34, Marquette 25, Duke 24, New
Oakland 20, Ark-Little Rock 19, Mississippi St.
18, California 14, George Washington 14,
Georgia Tech 14, New Mexico 12, Temple 12,
Arkansas 11, Santa Clara 9, Virginia 9, Tulsa
Davidson 7, Indiana 6, College of Charleston
5, Illinois 5, Kansas St. 5, Fresno St. 4, Michigan
St. 4, South Carolina 4, Maryland 3, Iona
2, Vanderbilt 2, Drexel 1, Long Beach St. 1, North
Carolina St. 1, Rhode Island 1.
Men's Top 25 Fared
Top the 25 teams in The Associated Press college basketball ballot fared Sunday:
1. Massachusetts (21-1) head Xavier, Ohio 78-
Ot. NXT: Fornish at Fordham, Ohio 79-
Miami: Fordham, Miami 79-
2. Kentucky (18-1) did not play. Next: at Vanderbilt, Wednesday.
3. Kansas (18-1) beat Kansas State 72-62.
Next vs. Iowa, state Wesndadav
4. Connecticut (21-1) did not play. Next: vs.
Providence, Tuesday.
5. Cincinnati (16-1) vs. South Florida. Next:
vs. Saint Louis. Wednesday.
6. Villanova (18-3) did not play. Nex: vs. No. 9
Georgetown at the Spectrum, Monday.
8. North Carolina (16-5) did not play. Next vs. Maryland. Tuesday.
7. Utah (18-3) did not play. Next: at Colorado State, Saturday.
9. Georgetown (19-3) did not play. Next: vs.
6. Nillovia at the Spectrum. Moody.
10. Penn State (16-2) did not play. Next: vs.
Illinois; Thursday.
11. Memphis (16-4) did not play. Next: at North Carolina Charlotte, Thursday.
12. Wake Forest (14-3) did not play. Next: vs.
Florida State, Wednesday.
13. Virginia Tech (16-2) did not play. Next: vs.
Duquesne, Tuesday.
Diaqueeue. Tu-dailey.
14. Aransas (16-4) did not play. Next: At Ari-
lons.
Lola State, Wednesday.
16. Texas Tech (18-1) did not play. Next: vs.
16. Iowa (15-6) did not play. Next: at Northwestern, Wednesday.
17. Purdue (17-4) did not play. Next; at Wien-
cinein, Wiedereich
19. UCLA (15-5) did not play. Next vs. California at Oakland Coliseum. Thursday.
16. Syracuse (16-6) beat Alabama 81-68.
Next: Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh Civic Arena,
Wednesday.
20. Michigan (15-7) did not play. Next: At No.
14 Purdue, Saturday.
21. Boston College (13-5) did not play. Next:
at St. John's, Wednesday.
at ST John's, Wednesday.
2. Abub (15-6) to Mississippi State 78-
o, OT. Next: vs. South Carolina, Wednesday.
E3. Eastern Michigan (16-2) did not play. Next:
4. Cleison (13-5) did not play. Next: vs.
Wofford, Tuesday.
25. Georgia Tech (13-10) did not play. Next:
vs. Duke, Wednesday.
No.3 KANSAS 72, KANSAS STATE 62
KANSAS STATE (14-6)
Davies 6-14 2-1-2 14, Hatcher 2-5-2 4, Eaker 8-2-0 0, May 1-3 0-0 2, Hatcher 12-7 9-3 9, Rhodes 1-1 0-3 0, Swartzdruder 3-8 1-7 1, William 0-1 0-0 2, Diver 0-1 0-0 10, Tressle 23-5 17
KANSAS (18-1)
, 140-61-1-6 14, LaFrenz 7-15 10-3 13,
Poltard 4-7 2-10, Haase 1-7 3-4 5, Vaughn 2-6 1-2 6, Williams 2-3 0-4 0, Marshall 2-5-0 6, Pearson 2-0, Pugh 0-1-2 2, Rayford 0-1 0, Robertson 0-1-2 1, McGrath 0-0 0, Ransom 0-0 0-0, Whately 0-0 0-0. Totals
24.60 20.39 72
Halftime—Kansas State 34, Kansas 30, 3-point goals—Kansas State 51 (Hatcher 38, Rhodes 1, 1-Swirtdenzerbrook 1, May 1, 9)
Kansas 4-18 (Thomas 2, Vaughn 1, Pierce 1-4, Pearson 0-2, Hase 0-5), Fouled out.
Young. Rebounds—Kansas State 37 (Hatcher 9), Kansas 44 (LaFrenz 8), Assists—Kansas State 5 (Hatcher 3), Kansas 12 (Harel 3), Total fouls—Kansas State 21, Kansas 17, Technical—Kansas State bench A-16,300
Women's Top 25 Fared
How the top 25 teams in The Associated
Women's college basketball poll fared
Sunday.
No. 1 Georgia (18-2) beat North Carolina 80-
75. Next: at No. 20 Mississippi, Wednesday.
No. 2 Louisiana Tech (19-1) did not play. Next:
at Western Kentucky, Friday.
No. 3 Tamnessee (17-4) lost to No. 20 Masterson
78-72. Next: at No. 10 Wiscoura. Thurs:
Fri 6:30 p.m.
No. 4 Connecticut (20-3) did not play. Next:
TV
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Monday (schedule subject to change and or blackouts):
SPORTS WATCH
(All times Central)
5 p.m
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5
5 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Hockey, Great College Rivalries at Potem Tournament, Northeastern vs. Harvard, at Boston
PRIME — NCAA Basketball, Virginia Union at Noduk St
6:30 p.m
ESPN — NCAA Basketball,
Georgetown at Villanova
ESPN2 — NCAA Hockey, Great College Rivalries Beanpont Tournament, Boston U. vs. Boston College, at Boston
10 p.m.
PRIME — Boxing, card TBA, at
north park college
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Oklahoma State or Oklahoma
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, UNLV at Long Beach
No. 5. Stanford (16-2) did not play. Next: at Southern Cal, Friday.
vs. St. John's, Wednesday.
No. 6 loaws (19-1) beat Indiana 77-51. Next: at Michigan State. Friday.
No. 7 Vanderbilt (16-4) beat No. 14 North Carolina State 93-61. Next: vs. No. 25 Auburn, Tuesday.
B. Texas Tech (17-2) did not play. Next: vs.
Texas Christian, Wednesday.
No. 17. Clermont (15-3) did not play. Next: vs.
South Carolina, Monday.
No. 9 Virginia (16-4) vs. Wake Forest, ppd,
weather: At no. 14 North Carolina State.
No. 10 Wisconsin (18-2) beat Minnesota 98-
64. Next vs. No. 3 Tennessee, Thursday.
N. 11 OLD Dominion (16-2) vs. East Carolina,
weather. Next vs. East Carolina, Monday.
No. 12. Duke (18-4) did not play. Next: vs.
Wake Forest, Thursday.
No. 13 Penn State (16-5) vs. No. 22 Purdue.
Next:vs. Michigan, Friday.
No. 15 Alabama (18-4) did not play. Next: vs.
Oral Roberts, Wednesday.
No. 14 North Carolina State (15-5) lost to No.
13 Georgia (93-61). Next vs. No. 9 Virginia.
Wednesday.
No. 16 Colorado (19-6) beat Kansas State
54-50. Next: v. Missouri, Saturday.
No. 20 Mississippi (15-5) beat No. 3 Tennessee 78-72. Next; vs. No. 1 Georgia, Wednesday,
No. 18 Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
vs. Washington State, Thursday.
No. 19 Oklahoma State (16-4) beat Iowa
State 59-57. Next: at No. 24 Arkansas,
Wednesday.
No. 21 Florida (16-5) beat No. 24 Arkansas
73-57 vs. No. 20 Mississippi, Sunday.
No. 22 Purdue (13-8) at No. 13 Penib State.
Next vs. Indiana Friday.
No. 23 Northwestern (15-7) lost to Michigan State 60-59. Next at Illinois-Chicago, Tuesday.
No. 24 Arkansas (16-8) lost to No. 21 Florida vs. No. 19 Oklahoma State, Wednesday.
No. 25 Abun (15-5) did not play. Next: at No.
7 Vanderbilt, Tuesday.
PRO FOOTBALL
Pro Bowl
NFC 20 AFC 12
NFC 20, APF
UFC 7 0 6 0—13
UFC 3 17 0 12
AFC—Thlign 93 pas from Blake (Elam kick),
2:12
Second Quarter
NFC—Rice 1 pass from Favre (Andersen kick),
14-6.
NFC - Harvey 36 interception return (Andersen kick), 11:20.
AFC - Martin 17 pass from Harbaugh (kick failed).
14:50.
Andersen, 15:00
Third Quarter
First downs 21 12
Rushes-yards 25-127 22-49
Passing 263 238
Punt Returns 1-3 1-17
Kickoff Returns 3-52 3-62
Interceptions Ret. 0-0 4-79
Comp-Att-Int 19-40-4 19-31-0
Sacked-Yards Lost 4-25 1-7
Punts 4-56 6-47
Fumbles-Lost 0-2 0-0
Penalties-Yards 5-25 9-80
Time of Possession 32:46 27:14
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—AFC, Warren, Seattle, 7-43,
Anders, Kansas City, 8-42, Milburn, Denver, 3-
15, Martin, New England, 4-14, Harbaugh, Indi-
anapolis, 3-13, NIP, Watters, Philadelphia, 6-
1B Sanders, Detroit, 7-17, E. Smith, Dallas,
Washington, 4-20, D. (2-milus) 2, Mitchel
Washington, 1-milus) 2.
ASING- AFC, Blake, Cincinnati, 6-13-0
138, Harbaugh, Indianapolis, 12-25-3-14,
Bono, Kansas City, 1-2-1-6, NFC, Favre, Green
Bay, 7-14-0-111, Young, San Francisco, 8-17-
0-10, Moon, Minnesota, 4-6-0-31.
RECEIVING—AFC, Costas, New England, 5-66, Brown, Oakland, 3-27, Anders, Kansas City, 3-8, Miller, Denver 2-41, Pickens, Cincinnati, 2-31, Martin, New England, 2-20, Thigpen, Pittsburgh, 1-83, Warren, Seattle, 1-2 NFC, Rice, San Francisco, 6-82, Irvin, Dallas, 3-60, Heyward, Atlanta, 2-37, Moore, Detroit, 2-24, Carter, Minnesota, 2-19, Chmura, Green Bay, 1-15, Watters, Philadelphia, 1-6, Mitchell, Washington, 1-4, B.Sanders, Detroit, 1-(minus 2)
MISSED FIELD GOALS—NFC, Andersen,
Atlanta, S3.
PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division
| | W L | T Pts | GF GA | 142 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Florida | 32 14 | 6 | 70 | 184 |
| N.Y. Rangers | 30 12 | 10 | 70 | 189 |
| Philadelphia | 28 14 | 10 | 67 | 179 |
| Washington | 25 21 | 5 | 55 | 145 |
| New Jersey | 23 22 | 6 | 53 | 133 |
| Tampa Bay | 22 21 | 7 | 51 | 151 |
| N.Y. Islanders | 24 28 | 1 | 61 | 148 |
Pittsburgh 31 17 3 65 238 171
Montreal 26 20 6 386 168
Boston 22 20 7 51 175 177
Hartford 20 25 6 465 144 163
Buffalo 20 28 3 43 150 169
Ottawa 20 40 2 20 116 202
Central Division
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Detroit 36 9 4 76 104 106
Chicago 28 15 11 67 184 143
Boston 28 15 11 67 184 143
St. Louis 21 21 9 51 136 143
Winnipeg 21 26 4 46 178 169
Dallas 14 26 1 46 179 177
Colorado 28 15 9 65 204 144
Vancouver 19 20 13 154 175
Calgary 19 23 10 48 150 159
Los Angeles 17 24 12 165 178 187
Miami 17 24 12 165 178 187
Anahiem 18 29 5 41 145 175
San Jose 11 36 5 27 160 233
Tampa Bay 5, Buffalo 2
Vancouver 4, Winnipesau 2
N.Y. Islanders 5, Dallas 3
Chicago 4, Anaheim 1
*Tonight's Games*
Montreal at Colorado, 8 p.m.
Toronto at San Jose, 9:30 p.m.
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L Pct GB
NOTES & QUOTES
"They say this is the house that Ralph built. Well, maybe it can be the house that Wendy remodeled." — Wendy Palmer, Virginia women's center, who along with Ralph Sampson are the only players in Virginia basketball history to get 1,000 points and 1,000 rebounds.
Orlando 33 13 717 —
New York 28 16 636 4
Washington 22 22 500 10
Miami 20 26 435 13
New Jersey 18 26 409 14
Boston 17 8 378 15½
Philadelphia 28 36 182 24
Chicago 41 4 .911 —
Indiana 31 15 .674 10½
Atlanta 25 20 .556 16
Cleveland 20 20 .556 16
Detroit 22 21 .512 18
Charlotte 21 21 .477 19½
Milwaukee 16 17 .372 24
Toronto 13 32 .299 28
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division
| | W | L | Pct GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Utah | 10 | 14 | 682 — |
| San Antonio | 29 | 14 | 674 % |
| Houston | 30 | 17 | 638 1/2 |
| Denver | 19 | 26 | 422 11/4 |
| Dallas | 15 | 28 | 349 11/4 |
| Minnesota | 12 | 31 | 279 17/2 |
| Vancouver | 10 | 35 | 22 10/2 |
Seattle 33 12 7.33 —
Sacramento 24 17 5.85 7
L.A. Lakers 25 19 .568 7½
Portland 22 24 4.75 11½
Phoenix 20 24 4.58 11½
Golden State 19 25 4.32 13½
LA. Clippers 16 29 3.56 17
Yesterday's Games
Late Games N
O. New York 03
Late Games Not Included
Indiana 90, New York 83
Orlando 122, San Antonio 109
Phoenix 123, Washington 115, OT
Atlanta 108, Chattanooga 104
Utah at L.A. Lakers (n)
New Jersey at Golden State (n)
Tonight's Games
Portland at Toronto, 6 p.m.
Detroit at New York, 6:30 p.m.
Sacramento at Miami, 6:30 p.m.
Dallas at Minnesota, 7 p.m.
Utah at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
Golden State at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Artists - Illustrators - Designers
5
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Create a KU-theme design that can be used on T-shirts, advertisements, and banners directed toward the student market.
Pick up rules and entry form at the Kansas Alumni Association Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave., 3rd floor.
Deadline for entries is March 15. 1996.
INTRUST Bank
Sponsored by Intrust Bank and the Kansas Alumni Association
KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Monday, February 5, 1996
3B
Kansas men's tennis beats Indiana State
Win gives coach Michael Center his 100th career victory
By Spencer Duncan
Kansan sportswriter
The Jayhawks defeated the Indiana State
Sycamores
6-1 at Alvamar Racquet Club.
It was a sweet victory for the No. 22 Kansas men's tennis team on Saturday night as it accomplished two objectives.
K.U.
Tennis
In winning the team gave Kansas men's tennis
"If you stay around awhile, you'll get that many wins," Center said. "It's a nice number to have."
coach Michael Center the 100th win of his career and a career mark of100-51.
The Jayhawks' second objective was to avenge last year's loss to Indiana State. The loss in the NCAA Tournament ended the Jayhawks' season.
"Last year we overlooked them," senior Victor Fimbres said. "It was nice to come back and beat them."
Kansas began by winning two of the three doubles matches, capturing the doubles point.
Teams are awarded one point for winning the entire doubles competition and one point for each singles match.
"We had gotten bad breaks before," Fimbres said. "We fought back and won, and it was good to get the victory."
Fimbres, No. 26, defeated No. 27 James 6-4, 6-3 while Avila, sophomore Trent Tucker, and freshmen Luis Uribe and Fernando Sierra were Kansas' other winners.
In singles competition Kansas had a relatively easy time, winning five of six matches.
The upset of the night came when Fimbres and his partner, sophomore Xavier Avilla defeated the No. 15 team, Indiana State's John James and Claas Westlin. The match went into a tie breaker, and Fimbres and Avilla pulled it off by winning 9-8, (7-4).
Senior Michael Isroff was the only defeated Jayhawk, falling to Westlin in three sets. 6-4, 4-6, 6-3.
Kansas sophomore Enrique Abaroa was unable to play because of a sore shoulder. Abaroa was resting so he could compete Wednesday in the Rolex Indoor National Championships in Dallas.
The victory moved the Jayhawks to 4-1, and members of the team said they believed their record would continue to improve.
"We are playing much better than before," Fimbs said. "We are just getting better every time."
WOMEN SPLIT: The No.25 Kansas women's tennis team lost to William & Mary but defeated Notre Dame. Page 6.
Big 12 chooses Dallas
The Big 12 Conference selected Dallas as the site of its headquarters on Friday.
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
In a conference call of the 12 university chief executive officers, Dallas was selected against Kansas City, Mo., which is the home of Big Eight Conference headquarters.
Dallas has been the headquarters of the Southwest Conference, which will disband after Texas, Texas Tech, Texas A&M and Baylor join the Big Eight schools later this year.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway, who placed Kansas' vote, said that the CEOs received two excellent proposals for the location of the conference's offices.
"In my opinion, the Kansas City proposal was superior, and I voted for it," Hemenway said. "Others obviously felt differently."
Kansas' vote for the headquarters' location had been discussed since Hemenway arrived in Lawrence last summer, said Bob Frederick, Kansas athletic director.
With the headquarters going to Dallas, Frederick believes keeping the men's basketball tournament in Kansas City may have become a little bit easier, he said.
"I hope the Big 12 realizes what we've known for a long time — that Kansas City does a great job," Frederick said.
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FEBRUARY 5 - 10, 1996
SPECIAL PROGRAM
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Monday, February 5, 8:00 p.m.
Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
Peer Educators at the Information Table Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program February 5 - 10, 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
You Can Help Stop Sexual Assault.
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall,
University of Kansas. For more information contact Rachel Lee at 804-389-8981.
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Gallery Hours
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Sun. 12 p.m. - 4 p.m.
Opening Reception:
Mon.,Feb.5th 5-7 p.m.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
4B
Monday, February 5, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansas men lose to Iowa by one point
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
In his preparation for Saturday's meet against No. 16 Iowa, Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf challenged the men's team to be aggressive with tough competition.
The Jayhawks responded to the challenge in the second half of the meet, placing first in the last five events.
But they responded too late.
Kansas couldn't overcome a slow start and technical mistakes in a 150.5 to 149.5 loss to Iowa in Iowa City.
"This was one of the closest meets I've ever been involved in, in my life." Kemp said. "We made some mistakes that really cost us."
Kempf also said he made an error in calculating the points needed to win. He told the team they had to finish 1-2-4 in the 400-yard individual medley and 1-2 in the 400-yard freestyle medley.
Kansas did that but were still short the points needed for the victory.
"I'm not disappointed with the guys, I'm disappointed with the loss," Kemp said.
The Jayhawks were led by junior Erik Jorgensen, who came first in the 500- and 1,000-yard freestyle events and the 400 individual medley.
"We came on at the end, but that one point difference could have been made up earlier in the meet," Jorgensen said. "I think we're going to look at this like we swam a great meet. We had a chance to win, but we just made mistakes that are fixable."
Kansas senior Dan Philipps won the 100- and 200-yard butterfly events. His 100 time of 49.75 was the best by a Jayhawk this season.
The Kansas divers didn't perform as they had expected. Sophomore Brian Humphrey finished third in the three-meter event.
"When Iowa made mistakes and the opportunity was there, we just didn't capitalize," Kansas diving coach Don Fearon said.
The focus for the Kansas men is now the Big Eight Championships, Feb. 14-17 in Oklahoma City.
"In a week and a half when we win the conference championship, we're not going to remember this loss to Iowa," Jorgensen said.
Horoscopes
Today's Birthday (Feb. 5). You may not be able to avoid practical matters any longer. Get realistic about romance in March. Study in April so you can make a commitment in May. June's romantic, but August could be confrontational. September could be very expensive or very profitable, depending upon how you play it. December is for completion. Your dreams could start to come true by next January. Make your plans now, so you can get started on them!
Arles (March 21-April 19). Resist the temptation to move too quickly. That's one of your most persistent problems. Remember to be sensitive and gentle, no matter what you do. At work, pay attention to the details. A little extra time spent now will be greatly appreciated later.
Taurus (April 20-May 20).
Somebody could try to push through a proposal that has serious flaws. If the idea will work, give it your agreement. If it's half-baked, send it back! For a good time, check out a club meeting or seminar tonight. You could meet an old friend.
Gemini (May 21-June 21). Watch for a brilliant idea from an unexpected source this morning. Study a technical subject to keep ahead of the competition. The more you know, the more valuable you are. If your house needs cleaning, you should do that tonight. Company could drop by
Cancer (June 22-July 22). You should be able to concentrate well today. If you have accumulated a stack of highly-detailed work, dive into it. Avoid a person who wants to talk about something other that what you're trying to get done. Be firm, but polite, in defending your privacy.
tomorrow.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Is there something in your life that needs cleaning up? Now is the time to do it! There is not much point in talking things over, though. Put off the delicate negotiations for a couple of days. Your love life should get better then, too.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). The moon is going into your sign, and that always makes you feel great. There may be controversy raging around you, however. They're arguing about the best course of action to follow. You may be the only one who really understands the bottom line. Be firm, but gentle.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). This is not a good day for negotiations. People will waggle about every little detail. If you're trying to get a group to work together, concentrate on the business aspects, like how much it's going to cost and who's going to pay for it.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). A hassle this morning should be settled by this afternoon. It should be easier to get interested in highly detailed work then. Discuss a household project with your true love this evening. You may decide to throw out the old and buy new.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). Today, your boss may
expect perfection. You know
what is supposed to be done. Stop
arguing with reality and do it!
Show you can play by the rules,
and you may move up the ladder
toward your next promotion
more quickly than you expected.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Your memory should be working well, along with your ability to spot errors. So, if you have quality control inspection in your stack of work to be done, tackle that today. Postpone most social interactions until later in the evening.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Today will be marked by petty annoyances. They might get in the way of your peace of mind, but shouldn't stop you from getting the job done. They might help you develop a better product or service. Learn to accept constructive criticism gracefully.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20).
Life doesn't have to be overwhelming. If there's too much to do, spread the work around! A practical friend might be willing to help, if you would just ask. That would certainly make your afternoon more enjoyable. Expect a change in orders tonight.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
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HEY, I MADE SOME CALLS AND I'M WAITING FOR INFORMATION!
Eats TIN PAN ALLEY 1105Mass
The Women's Fitness Facility $20 per month VIP Membership expires 2-15-96
BODY BOUTIQUE
Call for details 749-2424
///////
OPEN TIL 10 PM Lifecycles
- Yoga Classes
- Body
Sculpting
- Treadmills
- Hip Hop/Funk
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
- Stair
Masters
- Step Aerobics
Class
- Nautilus
- Freeweights
DANCE FOR FUN • DANCE FOR JOY
DANCE FOR HEART
WHEN: Saturday, Feb. 10
WHERE: 215 Robinson
TIME: Noon to 3pm
925 IOWA
Buy 1 Tanning Card, Get 1 Free (only S30)
DANCE FOR FUN • DANCE FOR JOY
DANCE FOR HEART
WHEN: Saturday, Feb. 10
WHERE: 215 Robinson
TIME: Noon to 3pm
Win prizes and help fight America's
1 killer
Sponsored by
Recreation Services &
KU FIT TEAM
for more information
All donations go to
call 8643546 or stop by 208 Robinson
T
Association.
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
SERVICED
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
SPRING BREAK Panama City Beach Florida From $ 99
Per Person/Week, Tiki Beach Bar, Huge Beachside Hot
Tub. Free Information: 1-800-488-8828
7. $7 wash ALL DAY EVERY Day INdependent Launcher
300ml / 100ml and IOWA ( across the day from Dairy
Town)
www.springbakamac.com 1-800-678-6386
Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise 7 $279.00
light meals on an 46 free parties! Great beach/s
lights! www.springbakamac.com /www
springbakamac.com 1-800-678-6386
120 Announcements
864-9500
Rape Victim / Survivor Service (EW8S) is now forming a peer support group. Confidential and free.
We loan cash on almost anything of value, CDA, NCRS, TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence's most liberal loan company, JAYHAW PAWN & JEWELYR W 6th. Bd 740-1910
Spring break specials, Cancun and Jamaica! 111%lowest price guarantee! 7 nights, air and hotel from $429.00.
Save $100 on food and drinks!
Informational meeting. Feb. 5th at 7:30 pm Headquarters Counseling Center, 1419 Mass.
Women's Transitional Care Services (WTCS), the battered women's shelter, is having two informal sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training. Feb. 8 at 7:00 p.m. and Feb. 10 at 10:00 a.m. Both will be held at Plymouth Congregation Church, 925 Vernont, Lawrence. For more info, call WTCS at (818) 943-3833.
**Spring Career and Employment Fair** Fri. 7/19, 10am to 3pm, KS Union Ballroom. Over 96 employers. FT, PT, summer jobs and internships. All majors welcome. For more info contact University Placement Center at 864324 or on home page//kultp.ku.edu/csns.us/hans/yimli/sysfwd/u括face/uplc_kultp
Spring Break! Panama City! 8 days, room w/kitchen,
$119.00 Walk to best bars! 7 nights in Key West, $250.00
Cocoa Beach Hilton ( great reaches, near Disney).
$399.00 Breakfast Hilton ( great reaches, near Disney).
springbreakcreature.com / 1-877-683-6786.
Students who plan to STUDENT THE FALL 1906 semester (GCPs included) must attend the teacher meeting on Monday, February 5 at 2:30 p.m. in the library. Information is available in L78.14. Preliminary information is available in L78.17.
School of Education Students
PARTY ON THE BEACH
SPRING BREAK 96
110 Business Personals
100s Announcements
INCLUDES DAILY BEACH PARTIES,
EVENING CLUB PARTIES AND
GREAT DISCOUNTS !!
(800) 998-TOUR
CANCUN MEXICO FROM $ 339
PANAMA CITY BEACH FROM $ 129
1
GET A GROUP OF 14 TOGETHER & YOU TRAVEL FREE!!!
GUARANTEES LONGER FIELDS ON CANVAS
Spring Break
Local Contacts:
Kevin @ 749-1399
Ash @ 838-3247
Kevin @ 838-4339
Classics @ 499-1555
Deestinations Unlimited
@ 842-7447
GAMBANTESS
LOST PRESS
ON CARPENTER
The software will not be required to perform any data analysis or management functions. The software will only be used for research and/or development of new products. Any research and/or development based on machine learning, neural network, machine learning frameworks, artificial intelligence (AI) models, or other proprietary technologies will not be provided by the company or its affiliates. If you are interested in using the software for research and/or development purposes, please contact us at [email_address](mailto:[email_address]) or visit our website at [website URL](http://www.company.com).
Classified Directory
Enroll any weekday of the year Bam to 4pm!
Jamaica Cancun Florida
Kaneae Learning Network Independent Study Continuing Education
BIOL 305c. Principals of Human Physiology MATH 365c. Elementary Statistics PSYC 566c. Psychology and the Law WC 205c. Western Civilization II
Rush over to the Independent Study office north of the Kansas Union, and pick up a catalog. Over 120 classes available.Call 864-4440 for more information.
How about...
from $439
from $399
from $119
Time Flying By?
M
GYPSY STARRY NIGHTS
1344 Aphition Rd, Hanover, MD 21076
Toll free 1-800-648-4849
http://www.statravel.com/
Let a correspondence class help you graduate
1 OUT
PANCHERO'S OFFERS A BETTER BURRITO FOR YOUR BUCK!
PANCHERO'S
OFTERS A
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AN EVEN
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Get $1 off any regular or EJ Gordo Burrito at Panchoero's.
You't watch our chefs fill each burrito with fresh, authentic
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area. Experience Panchoero's Batter Burrito
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Pancho's
Mexican Grill
OPEN
LATE
NIGHT!
814 MASSACHUSETTS
843-6760
M-TH: 11A.M.-2.30A.M.
F&S: 11A.M.-3A.M.
SUN: 11A.M.-2A.M.
SPRING IS SEEN ON CBS NEWS, EJOURNS BREAK
COMPUTER A & B & C
ALLOWABLE
SENIOR TURNS
15th
Sellout Year!
$69
PARTY
ONLINE
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
KEY WEST
STEAMBOAT
VAIL BEAVER GREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
FOR PERSONS CONTACTING ON INFORMATION / MARKETING / MEMBERSHIP OF BOOK
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION
NAXIUM 240 756 3488
120 Announcements
NEVER FORGE AGAIN
Receive unlimited postcard reminders
FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE
for your important dates. Order your
Valentine gift packet now. Call
749-2211, $19.00. Six or more
to the same address, $16.00.
Great gift for your office.
100%
130 Entertainment
Free party room for 20-200 at Johnny's. 842-0377
Join us at Scribble Club, Lawrence Public Library
7:00 p.m. F6. Refresh 5. Gallery B 843-7579
SUN
MIRACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale starting at $9.88 and up
1910 Hankell, 841-7504
Spring Break 1990
TRAVEL FREE!!
Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas
Panama City, Daytona, Padre
**Great low, low prices
**Free Trip on only 15 sales
Call for a FREE information packet!
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-406-7710
Spring Break 1996
电话
140 Lost and Found
Cat Found - About 10 months old, Calico - colored,
short full fawn, on the evening of 12/05. Please call
911 or 817-644-3700.
200s Employment
男 女
205 Help Wanted
GRAND OPENING
NEEDED 42 PROPEL to lose weight now! Guaranteed:
100% Natural 1-800-299-627 ext. 3235.
Retired Professor needs part-time secretarial work for retiring by dictation at 4pm, 6thhr. R. Raymond 841-6843
Wait, the word "dictation" is in bold.
The word "retirement" is in italics.
The word "secretarial" is in italics.
The word "retiring" is in italics.
Let's re-read the first line.
"Retired Professor needs part-time secretarial work for retiring by dictation at 4pm, 6thhr. R. Raymond 841-6843"
Actually, it might be "Retired Professor needs part-time secretarial work for retiring by dictation at 4pm, 6thhr. R. Raymond 841-6843".
Let me look at the font again.
It's a simple, sans-serif font.
The word "retiring" is in italics.
The word "dictation" is in bold.
The word "secretarial" is in italics.
The word "retiring" is in italics.
I will output:
Retired Professor needs part-time secretarial work for retiring by dictation at 4pm, 6thhr. R. Raymond 841-6843
Overweight males between 18 and 40 y.o. are needed.
$820 will be included for participation.
Seeking high energy individual for branch office.
Positive attitude required, flexible schedule. 841-0682
NEEDED:
$20 will be included for participation.
Please call if interested. 913-843-1118.
Female personal attender for quadripridial
CNA preferred but not required. Call 865-061-816
Long-term, part-time, multi-task oriented aid for children's experiences. Experience or enthusiasm required. Mostly in a school setting.
Female student needed for occupational baby sitting. 85 female students received gifted girls age 12-13. Cell for births at 841-751.
part time Carded Hill Gun Club employee needed for Thursday afternoon and occasional Sunday.
Gymnastics instruction needed for boys and girls classes at KC gym) about 40 minutes from Lawrence. Partime in AM and Pm. Call Eagles Gymnastics. (816) 941-9028.
Christian Daycare needs assistants in the mornings and MWF. All must be reliable, enthusiastic and able to work with different ages. 18 years and above. 942.0288.
Highly motivated students with car, Deliver and post
firms for large advertising company. Flexible hours,
great pay plus bonus. Inquire. Chris Loney 1-800-404-
1230 code 0851.
Full or part-time independent representatives for long-distance company need. No phone sales, quotas or collections. Serious income potential from your home. You experience or travel necessary. Call 841-3688.
Responsible person need to work with my 7-year old son with autism. Must have knowledge in applied behavioral analysis or special education. If interested call Gin at 865-0665
Spirit Industries, n.a. a national sportwear company has an immediate opening for an experienced screen printer. Full or part-time. Apply M-F 9-5, 1021 E.31st St, or T4 765-568.
University Photography is needing part-time photographers. Individuals must be outgoing. Weekend work a definite. No experience necessary. Contact Tom between 11 and 4, Friday at 843-6278.
Economist/Research Assistant, B.A. or M.A.F.T., or D.P.T.
for consulting firm. Strong computer skills in
datasheet and spreadsheet tests. Send resumes attention
Perkins University, 20110 Winstead Park, KS
66214. No phone calls please.
Positions open. Great jobs for students; Telephone fundraising for SADD (Students Against Driving Drunk). Work early evenings and Sat, mornings; 84hr plus weekly commission. Call 848-6109 to apply at 610 Mans. St.
Graduating Seniors - John Hancock Financial Services is looking for professional individuals for their marketingsales training program, which is specifically designed for recent college graduates. Call or send resume to 600 College Bldg #1000, Overland Park KS 65212, Attn: Pam Swain 913-845-9090
Student Driver Positions for the Spring Bemer-
to drive physically disabled students to claustom. Must have a valid driver's license receiving receipt six to twelve hurs per week, $5.60/hour. February 5. Apply at Facilities Operation Office.
CAMP OZAKER, Christian Sports and Adventure Camp — Seeking qualified counselors to work with boys and girls age 8-16. Employment terms for all or part of the summer. If remotely interested, come to our KU informative video presentation. 9 p.m., Thursday, February 25th. 9 a.m., Friday, February 26th. Boosted Room. Located Mount Ida. (A) 501 (86) 487-431.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys
/girl summer camps. Teach: Swimming, canoeing, canailing,
waterkilling, gymnastics, riffley, archery, tennis,
golf, sports, computers, campains, crafts, dramatics, Or-
ganize summer programs.
Call: 617-582-4444 or more plus R & B CAMPAIGN LWC/GWC, 1765 Maple, NBD,
I 60003, 8487-46-2444
CAMP COUNSELORS Join the adventure and share the memories at SUMMER CAMP!
Top ranked camp in Pocosin of PA need experienced instructors for water and land sports. Wills' Life
1
Carlsbad county 1 records of PA need experienced
instructors for water and land sports. Wsla/ Life
Guards, Tennis, Climbing, Arts and more 2 hours from
N.C. Call 212-870-6970 or write 151 Washington Lane
Full-time Position Available
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 5, 1996
5B
205 Help Wanted
TIMBER LAKE / TWILER HILL CAMP, top, NY and PA resident camps have over 200 summer job openings in the college and faculty. Consultors, W3 Arts, Athletics Specialist, and travel allowance in addition to the *finest summer you will have*. On camp interview Wednesday, February 17th at Timber Lake High School - 68-CAMF / 8-Wednesday BST) for more information.
Choose from over 30 camp. Instructors need Tennis, Baseball, Hockey, Rollerblading, Soccer, LaCrose, softball, Volleyball, Basketball, PE Majors, Gymnastics, Ridges, LEGALSH, WATER- skiing, Biking, Windsurfing, Windsurfing, Dance, Biking, Pioneering, Rock-climbing, Dance, Dance, Pioneering, Ceramics, Stained Glass, Jewelry, Wood-Working, Photography, Nature, RN's, Chef, Food Service. Call Arlene: 614-483-8033
500 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES IN NY, PA,
NEW ENGLAND
ARE YOU READY FOR A CHANGE?
STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT. Deadline:
09/15/2009; Salary: $4.40 + $6.50 / hour; Duties include
terminal server billing; assists with sales of Terminal Server
accounts; makes daily deposits; records microcomputer
workshop registration performing receptionist
office duties; performs office duties. Must be enrolled in 6 hours at the Univ.
fortable campus. To apply, complete a job application
to Room 80% of the Computer Center EO/AE
EMPLOYER.
Financially safe Environment Marketing co. looking for the right individual who can manage a portfolio
WANTED: Free-lance Artists and Jewelry Makers
Sampler Stores, Inc. is seeking talented artists to design both serious and humorous full chest and left pocket designs for T- shirts, polo shirts and sweatshirts using a KU Jayhawk*, *Kansas*, *Wizard of Oz*, sunflower, wheat are wanted. Also, jewelry and silk screen designs charms and molds featuring these same motifs. If interested, call 913-432-3355 10 AM to PM or leave message on our voice mail, 913-881-0185.
**STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN** Deadline 2/29. $185. Cash or 4.50 per hour, M-W-1 P.M. 6pm. Includes performing buring and decolling functions; delivery of computer output and interoffice mail using delivery van; paper shredding functions; on occasion will provide training in the use of inventory figures, tape library duties, and other warehousing functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; performs duties in conjunction with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computers to perform research and application function. To apply, complete an application available at the Computer Center in room 202. BOA EMPLOYER
PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN MASSACHUSETTS
Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Golf, Archery, Rifley, Pioneering Overnight Camping, Ropes and Rock Climbing, Weight Fitness and Cycling, other openings including Performing Arts, Fine Art, Figure Skating, Newpaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Cooking, SEWing and Rocky; Waterfront/Canning, SEWing and Rocky; Sailing, Windsurfing, Canning/Kayaking, Top Teams, room, board, travel and June 18th August 17th.
inquire
MAH-KEE-NAC (Boys): 1-800-753-0118
DANBEE (Girls): 1-800-392-3752
CAMP TAKAJO for Boys. Outstanding Maine camp for magnificent lakefront setting and exceptional facilities. Over 100 position for heads and assistants in the street hockey, roller hockey, swimming, sailing, waterkipping, SCUBA, archery, rifley, weight training, journalism, photography, videography, woodwork, radio and film production, radio, radio and electronics, dramas, piano accompaniment, music instrumentist, band director, backpacking, rockclimbing, whitewater climbing, ropes course, general (young camper), secretarial, June 17. Call 800-409-489 or write a CRAM call: 800-409-CRAM or write a CRAM call: 212-858-0122 WE WILL BE ON CAMPUS 212-858-0122 REGIONAL HIKING NEW YORK, NY 10212 Or fixation to 212-858-0122 WE WILL BE ON CAMPUS 212-858-0122 REGIONAL HIKING NEW YORK, NY 10212 OR REGIONAL HIKING NEW YORK, WALK-NW Welcome
AMERICAN PREMIERE SPORTS CAMP'S
WINADI FOR BOYS/DANIEL FOR GIRLS
(Western Massachusetts)
OVER 100 POSITIONS AVAILABLE
All Land and Water Sports, Art and Crafts,
Gymnastics, Horseback Riding, Drama, Woodshop,
Ice and Roller Bckery, Waterski, Wsls & more!
No Previous Experience Required
Top salary opportunities
ON CAMPUS INFO AND INTERVIEWS
DATE: FEBRUARY 28-29, 1996
TIME: 9:00AM to 4:00PM
PLACE KANSAS UNION BUILDING
FEBR 28 INFO TABLEHEAD AND REGION
INFO TABLEHEAD
Men Call:
1-800-494-6238
CAMP WINADU
OBBS!!!
Women Call:
1-800-362-3752
CAMP DANBEE
Why work when you can dance?
Hiring attractive dancers and waitresses 18+
Apply in person after 7:30 Ses-Tat
Call 841-4122 or 1-800-323-6117
Ask for
Juicers
Showgirls
205 Help Wanted
Teschnach Alg.要求班培技术 at ery intemprovement
$ \text{Alg} $Am.要求班培技术 at ery intemprovement $ \text{Gm
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
Bu danahan waur life anan blond namaun
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
205 Help Wanted
FREE T-SHIRT
+ $1000
Credit card fundraisers for
fraternities, sororites, & groups. Any
campus organization can raise up to
$1000 by earning a whopping $5/VISA
application.
Call 1-800-932-0528 ext. 65
Qualified callers receive a
FREE T-SHIRT
225 Professional Services
Blue Grass Music Lessons. Now at Whitney's Music, Call (813) 742-4583. Ask for Basker Jenkins.
Carol Brown Electrolysis
Safe, effective, and permanent removal of hair
conveniently located at 1 N. Nith St. 86-4255
DUI TRAFFIC/CIMRINAL
OVERLAND PARK·KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLESTON·GREEN
AMERICAN-ONE YEAR AFTER
Call for a free consultation (815) 861-0944
Need Help With Your Research Project ? Keley Data Analysis and Consulting specializes in: Complete statistical analysis of results, SPSS graphs and descriptive statistics, data design. Low-rates in Lawrence, Laptop area.
(913) 887-6307 (local call)
E-mall red4oag@aol.com
II
S
OUI/Traffic
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Nassau 443-4023
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake I&D's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th
642-1133
$$ $ MONEY $$ $
FOR COLLEGE
Hundreds & thousands of grants & scholarships available to all students. Immediate qualification. No repayments EVER.
A GREAT SUMMER EXPERIENCE
Call 1-800-585-8243
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
205 Help Wanted
HUNDREDS OF STAFF POSITIONS ARE OPEN FOR ALL LAND AND WATER SPORTS AS WELL AS SPECIALTY AREAS SUCH AS VIDEO, DRAMA, DANCE, HORSEBACK RIDING, WOODSHOP AND CRAFTS.
soccer ball
CAMP WINADU FOR BOYS
AND CAMP DANEEE FOR GIRLS
TWO OF AMERICA'S PREMIER SUMMER CAMPS:
SUMMER CAMP COUNSELOR POSITIONS AVAILABLE
AT MASSACHUSETTS SPORTS CAMPS.
WE OFFER SALARY + ROOM/BOARD AND TRAVEL!
LOOKING FOR:
AT MASSACHUSETTS SPORTS CAMPS.
WE OFFER SALARY + ROOM/BOARD AND TRAVEL!
LOOKING FOR CARING STAFF
NO PREVIOUS CAMP EXPERIENCE IS NEEDED.
PHYS. ED., EDUCATION AND OUTDOOR REC. MAJORS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. THIS IS A GREAT RESUME BUILDER!! COME WORK WITH THE BEST.
FOR MORE INFO CALL:
1-800-4-WINADU
A REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE AT THE SUMMER JOB FAIR FEB. 7TH TO ANSWER QUESTIONS!
METAL MACHINE
Call Jacki at 865-2855 for applications, term papers,
theses, dissertations, transcriptions, etc. Satisfaction
guaranteed. Makin' the Grade.
235 Typing Services
图
300s Merchandise
King size mattress set. New, Retail price $99.00, will sell for
$275.00, 379.9858
305 For Sale
Lighttable with glideliner $ 100.00 Artwaxer $ 50.00. Call 878-4307
**Ninion 1002XE** 70,000 rows, 5-spaced, A/C, AM-FM
**Ninion 1002XF** 60,000 rows, 5-spaced, A/C, AM-FM
**Takara 1002XF** 40,000 rows, 5-spaced, A/C, AM-FM
AA Pull size matress set. New, never used, filled in plastic.
Ballet pods $149.00 will sell for $150.00. Bundle
$250.00.
**POR SALE** SEHINGE SEHINGE BE WITH image writer and softw-
rite $100 or best offer. Call 212-745-3286 and leave me a
message.
Honda Accord LXI, 1988 model, automatic
good condition. For sale $40,000. Please
contact fancei at 841-4569.
Quality beds, tables, and dressers. If interested call Janice at 814-8590.
Moving out sale!
Power book 180 4/80
With internal modern & stylewriter
$1200 or best offer call 749-9388
AA Queen size mattress set. New, never used. Still in stock.
Queen size bed frame set. New, never used. 850$ or 1950$. Queen size
bed frame set. New, never used. 850$ or 1950$.
Hayes Optima 2400 bps modem. Mac Software and
cables included. $ 50.00. Yamaha Portasound mini key-
board. 40 preset keys. 10 rhythms. $ 50.00. Call 841.
7497.
386 SX, 52 Mk. 130 Meq hard drive, internal modem,
card sound, m卡 co-processor, monitor, speaker, keyboard, mouse, and lots of well-organized software. $500 or best offer. 912-725-9412 Leave message
Nice computer table with built in book shelf, and a word processor Coronavirus WPM 730W with a separate window screen. All for $250 give away price. Both are about a year old. Call G842-8230 or leave a message.
Past Fundraiser - Raise $600 in 5 Days: Greylaws, Groups,
Chubs, Mutual Individual, Easy, Easy - No Financial
Impact.
360 Miscellaneous
Wanted: 100 Students to Load 8.100 Lb. New Metabolic
Breadthout. Guaranteed Result $2.99. 1-800-660-1000
PERSONAL SECURITY IS MY BUSINESS.
Key chain pepper spray with case 12.95. Fountain spray, undetectable 12.96. Door stop alarmes $12.95.
Money bags, fire extinguisher $12.95.
organizations, fundraising welcome. D. Rosterman.
organizations, fundraiser welcome. D. Roseman
913,807,280
SPRING BREAK IN
CANCUN
MEXICO
LUXURY DRIES
SHOWN NEVER
PRIMO JUNIOR
$299
Not Including tax. BOMBAS
LAUREN LEE CURL
http://www.takealearn.com
1-800-95-BREAK
TAKE A BREAK STUDENT TRAVEL
(Flags to Octavian, Harriet and Judith on Public Chairs). The class will include Dance, Music, Art, History, Science and more. Place a Map in front of the classroom.
370 Want to Buy
Out of state altimnas need two to four Nebraska tickets for
P. 14, Bermuda Please call Dave at (876) 474-6565.
A
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Across the street from the Glass Onion $876/month. Water paid. Call Dannon at 806-2984. February rent paid.
2 bedroom apartment for sub-base. $48/month. Cable
Painless. dishwasher, balkony. On KU bus route.
Kitchen appliances included.
Available immediately. 3 Bedroom, unfurnished apartment. 1/2 block from KU. $700 per month. Oread Heights Apartments, 114 Indiana, 842-7068.
Shannon Plaza Apartments & Townhouses 2 & 3 bed
room townhouses available immediately Ask about
them.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1408 Tenn., a student house alternative. Open & diverse membership, non-professional operation, democratic control. Rentals: $250/month. Call or sit by 814-644-8144. Cable Close to campus & Mass. Call or sit by 814-644-8144.
cinnamon cream, 10 oz.
microwave, dishwasher, W/ both.
$40/month, 6-month lease. Call 841-8448.
Available Immediately- 2 bedroom, 18th & Ohio.
Full size washer/dryer, fully equipped kitchen, fireplace,
Walk-in closets, fully monitored alarm system, and much
more. NO PETS, Harper Square Apartments, Call Today!
913-841-8468
Now Leasing for June & August 4 Bedrooms/8 Bath Featured
NEWLY CONSTRUCTED
Easy Access to 10-1
3-1-3-Bard Aptis
Available March 1, 1986
Washer/Dryer Microwave
Dishwasher Gas Fireplace
Trash Compactor Cable Pald
Fan Factory Ceiling Fans in All Bedrooms
405 For Rent
For More Info : 841-7849
Located at 4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Ceiling Fans in all Bedrooms
Lorimar Townhomes
Now Leasing For June & August
1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms
Includes:
Washer/Dryer Fireplace
Dishwash Cable Paid
Microwave Back Patio
1&2Bedrooms
COLONY WOODS
1301 W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
On KU Bus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3HotTubs
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
GET A JUMP ON NEXT YEAR!
405 For Rent
Studies, 1,2, & 3 Bedroom Apts Carson Place, Stadium View, Oread, Chamberlin Court, Abbots Corner, 1425 Kentucky, Bradford Square
- Full-size washer/dryer or Laundry Facilities
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Private Patios or Decks
- Within 2 blks of campus or on KU bus route
Cats welcome at Bradford Square only
MON - FRI 9 am-5 pm, 1820 West 6th
54 114 348
welcome at Brigham Square only
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT
TODAY FOR $ 50.00
841-8468
Pets Welcome*
South Pointe
AFRAID GARDEN
2166 W. 26th
- Swimming Pool
* On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- On RU Bus Route
- Sand vollevball court
- Water & trash paid
- 1,2,3&4 bedroom
apts. available
*Restrictions Apply
- Ask about our 3 bedroom villas
---
meadowbrook
STILL LOOKING?
We are also accepting reservations for fall!
we have a few great apartments from furnished studios to three bedroom townhomes available.
- Walking distance to KU and on bus route.
- Garages and carports available.
- Convenient to shopping and restaurants.
- Washer/Dryer hook-ups and fireplaces.
15TH & CRESTLINE 842-4200
MEADOWBROOK APARTMENTS
405 For Rent
SOUTHPOINTE ParkVillas
OPEN: MON-FRI- 8-5:30.
SAT-10-4.
SUN 1-4
AAT
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Call E
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--to share house. Dishwasher, washer/ dryer and fireplace. Pet allowed. Call Mike at 836-9552.
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Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
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Male/Female Roommate Wanted
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430 Roommate Wanted
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Call Carrion 983-3705. Must like cats and dogs.
Call Rachel 983-3705. Must like cats and dogs.
Male/Female roommate needs for nice 2 bedroom
partment on bus route 8. $12.10 + 2 / ultites
in the room. No pets. Welcome!
Available immediately 1 bedroom in 4 bedroom duplex.
$187.50 per month plus utilities. Upper classman male preferred.
Close to campus. 748-4300.
Roommate Needs, 2 Bedroom Agt. 1 block from KU. $225/month. Please call (913) 853-7377 (pager). Two room options for sublease. Cheap rent. 740-7603. Princess only.
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NON-SMOKING ROOMMATE WANTED-Mate or Female to share 3B2 Bathroom W/D. W/ROOM MATERIALS ONLY.
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Roommate Wanted! 4 bedroom Hotel: 24th and
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60045
i
6B
Monday, February 5.1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansas dominates track invitational in record-setting day
By Adam Herschman
Kansan sportswriter
Some of the toughest competition presented to the Kansas track and field team Saturday at the Jayhawk Invitational in Anschutz Pavilion came from within.
In one of the closest races of the meet, Kansas junior spinner Brian Martin edged out fellow junior Pierre Lisk in the 200-meter dash by a hundredth of a second.
Martin's time of 21.70 seconds made him the new Kansas 200-meter dash record holder, a title that Lisk captured on Jan. 13 when he tied Hassan Bailey's mark of 21.73 seconds.
The Jayhawks competed against schools from different collegiate levels, such as Baker University and Garden City Community College.
But Kansas did face Division I opponents Tulsa, Wichita State and Missouri at the meet.
"It's a chance to get some good competition in for our kids in a meet that isn't all of pressure," Kansas track and field coach Gary Schwartz said.
"We've got an excellent facility. We're providing that facility for the area schools to come in, and it helps the sport of track and field."
TRACK & FIELD
Besides setting a school record, Martin also won the 400-meter dash in 47.63 seconds.
Despite finishing second in the 200-meter dash, Lisk finished first in the 55-meter dash with a time of 6.29 seconds.
Kansas freshman high jumper Jason Archibald leaped 6-11 3/4 inches to earn first place.
In the men's shot put, Kansas junior thrower Brad Schepers won the event with a toss of 48 1/2 inches. Kansas sophomore Darin Schmitz finished second in the event.
On the women's side, the 20-pound weight throwers swept the top four spots. Kansas senior Lisa Brien took first for the fourth consecutive meet with a toss of 50-7 inches. Sophomore Lisa Beran, junior Kim Feldkamp and senior Amelia Holmes finished second, third and fourth, respectively.
Feldkamp also won the shot put with a throw of 46.2 1/2 inches.
Kansas sophomore Candy Mason jumped 5 1/2 inches to capture first in the high jump.
Although some the Jayhawks did not compete this weekend, Kansas senior jumper Afton Moxey said this was a good meet to see
"I think this meet is a great meet for athletes, in terms of finding where they're at, and what they need to do, and I think it gets us excited as a team," Moxey said.
where everyone stood.
The only Kansas woman to win two events was Kansas junior spinner Carleen Roberts. She finished first in the 55-meter dash with a time of 7.16 seconds, as well as the 200-meter dash with a time of 26.31 seconds.
Kansas junior Amy Cook won the 600-yard run in 1:28.95.
In the 800-meter run, Kansas dominated,
capturing the top five spots. Kansas sophomore Tracey Thompson crossed the finish line first in 2:20.25.
Kansas senior Kerri Woolheater won the 1000-meter run in 2:58.72.
Kansas freshman distance runner Tiffany Spratt won the mile in 5:19.79.
in the 5000-meter run, Kansas sophomore Lynn Lopresti won with a time of 18:43.78.
Kansas will travel to Lincoln, Neb., on Saturday to compete in the Husker Invitational. The Jayhawks will not be competing at home again until the Kansas Relays begin on April 17.
"It's just kind of nice being home for a meet." Kansas junior jumper Marcus Scheid said.
YOUNG
Brian Hott / KANSAN
Kansas freshman Jason Archibald makes a successful high jump at the Jayhawk Invitation on Saturday in Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Archibald won on to win the event.
Women fall to William and Mary, beat Notre Dame in weekend action
By Spencer Duncan Kansan sportswriter
The No.25 Kansas women's tennis team thought it would be a tough weekend, and it was right.
The Jayhawks split a weekend series with No. 13 William and Mary and No. 16 Notre Dame. They lost to William and Mary 4-3 and beat Notre Dame 4-3. Both meets challenged the team.
"Our motto is 'any way you can.'" Kansas
women's tennis coach Chuck Merzbacher said. "We don't have any automatic wins in any spot we play in. We just gotta fight hard and put it on the line."
The Jayhawks first captured the doubles point by winning two of three doubles matches against William and Mary on Friday.
Kansas' No. 2 doubles team, junior Kyle Hunt and Jenny Atkerson, defeated the No. 37 team of Lauren Nikolaus and Lauren Tsaggaris 8-2.
Teams are awarded one point for the doubles competition and one point for each singles match.
In singles competition, Kansas dropped four of six matches.
Kansas' two winners were No. 7 Hunt and No. 74 freshman Kris Sell. Hunt defeated No. 20 Nikolaua 2-6, 6-6(3), 6-4. Sell upset No. 35 Tarin Ann Toro 2-6, 5-7, 6-2.
Losing the four singles matches cost the Jayhawks the meet, 4-3.
"We played well," Hunt said. "Every match
was tough, but we just didn't turn it up."
On Sunday evening against Notre Dame,
though, the Jayhawks did turn it up.
Against Notre Dame, Kansas lost all three doubles matches but won four of six singles matches, capturing a 4-3 victory.
"You've got to give the girls a lot of credit," Merzbacher said. "We got smoked in the doubles, but we won the second half."
One single loss for Kansas was between Sell and undefeated Notre Dame freshman Marisa Velasco. Velasco was 11-0, and Sell
took the match to three sets before falling 6-4, 6-1, 7-5.
Winners for Kansas were Hunt, sophomores Maria Abatjoglou and Christie Sim and junior Bianca Kirchof.
The weekend split brought the Jayhawks record to 2-2, and Merzbacher said he saw hard work as helping his team increase the numbers in the win column.
"We've gotta fight hard and scrap," Merzbacher said. "We're a blue collar team all the way."
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"EVERYDAY
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
842-1212
TWO-FERS THREEEFFERS PARTY "10" CARRY-OUT
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DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Lunch • Dinner • Late Night
1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center •Lawrence
DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
K U O U T B A C K (KU's newest camping and hiking club!)
OUTBACK
(KU's newest camping and hiking club!)
Our first meeting will be February 6, at 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
We will be discussing our Spring Break trip, and watching an alpine camping video. Anyone is welcome to attend!
For more information, call Rob at 842-0069.
funded by Student Senate
STUDENT SENATE
Bucky's
9th & Iowa • 842-2930
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BE PART OF KU HISTORY
COME TO THE INAUGURATION OF CHANCELLOR ROBERT HEMENWAY
2 P.M. SUNDAY, FEB. 11
LIED CENTER
Free Tickets Available
AT STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
BOX OFFICE, 864-3477, AND AT
BURGE UNION BOOKSTORE
CUSTOMER SERVICE COUNTER
PROGRAM INCLUDES:
HISTORIC PROCESSION
ORIGINAL POEM
R.I.P. Prophcy in Lullaby Verbalities
MUSIC
University of Michigan Choir
Orangutan
REVARKS
Ocea Bill Grace
San Antonio Kardushin
INSTALLATION CEREMONY
INSIGHT SPECIAL
Chattanooga Honor Society
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6.1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SECTION A VOL.102.NO.90
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
100
Throwing out the first pitch
First year Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall spoke at a preseason party. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Evaluation debate goes on
A student senator petitioned administrators for access to personnel files. Page 3A
NATION
President outlines budget
Clinton presented a preliminary $1.64 trillion budget to Congress yesterday. Page 5A
WORLD
Pope visits Guatemala
Guatemalans hope the Pope's visit will put an end to the 35-year civil war. Page 6A
WEATHER PARTLY CLOUDY
High 50° Low 21°
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
Weather: Page 2A.
INDEX
Opinion...4A
Nation...5A
World...6A
Sports...1B
Scoreboard...2B
Horoscopes...4B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is free. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Quiet alarms leave residents hot
By Amy McVey and Nicholas Charalambous Kansan staff writers
Several residents from Tower A of Jayhawker Towers that slept through a fire alarm Wednesday morning are worried they might not be safe if there were another fire.
"I wish I would have heard it," said Donald Trainer, Okalsoka junior. "If it were a serious fire, I would have been flat out of luck."
them before they could evacuate the building.
The fire, set by a burning piece of paper in the elevator shaft, triggered alarms in each hallway. But many residents didn't hear the alarm and had to rely on Towers' staff to rouse
"Someone came in screaming — that's the only way we woke up," Antonio Olivas, Los Angeles graduate student, said.
Ross Boelling, Kansas state fire chief, said residents should have been able to hear the alarms.
"If they are designed and installed properly, they provide the kind of noise that wakes people up," he said. "There may be some placement problem in the building."
Most residents that complained about not hearing the alarms live on the north and south ends of each wing—away from the alarms, which
are inside alcoves near the center of each floor.
Fred McElhene, associate director of student housing, said he was unaware that the volume of the fire alarm had not been loud enough to wake residents.
"That's probably an area we need to investigate with our maintenance folks," he said. "The first line of defense ought to be the alarms."
According to the National Fire Alarm code, fire alarms should have a sound level of 85 decibels. The Department of Student Housing reported that the engineer for Simplex, the company that installed the alarm system, assured it that the
Tower's alarms met the code.
"It probably wasn't even as loud as the telephone," he said.
But David Addams, Independence,
Mo., graduate student, said the alarm
was barely audible inside the apartments.
Phil Garito, associate director of student housing, said that the alarms at the towers met state fire codes.
"I know they're within whatever the Fire Marshal set," Garito said. "I'm not aware of any complaints."
Lawrence Fire Chief James McSwain said the fault sometimes did not lie with the loudness of the fire alarm. Because of many false
alarms, residents sometimes develop a callousness to the alarms.
"If you hear it enough, it's kind of like living by a railroad track," McSwain said. "If you live there long enough, you don't even hear the trains go by in your sleep."
The Kansas State Fire Marshal Department is investigating the possibility of any problems with the Towers, but advised that the University conduct its own investigation.
"KU is responsible for its residents," Rick Fay, fire protection specialist, said. "Just because we are in once a year, we're not responsible for taking care of them while we're gone."
Educators work to halt sexual assault
Program focuses on rape awareness
By Teresa Veazey
Kansan staff writer
No one deserves to be sexually assaulted.
That's the message during Sexual Assault.
Awareness Week, Feb. 5-9.
Peer educators in the Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program will spend their lunchtime this week in the Kansas Union providing information about sexual assault and rape. The educators, both male and female KU students, also will let people know that there is a place to turn if they or someone they know has been sexually assaulted.
"We don't do it because it's running rampant," said Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student life and director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. "We do it because it happens."
"No one deserves to be sexually assaulted." Ballard said. "There can be poor judgment, but that's still not an excuse to say 'she asked for it.'"
Ballard said the effort to increase awareness was begun three years ago. With education, she said she wanted to put its slogan, "You can help stop sexual assault," into effect.
When talking about sexual assault or rape, people tend to focus on women because they are usually the victims, she said. However, men also are victims of rape sometimes.
If men don't discuss and help prevent sexual assault, the message is that it is a woman's problem, Ballard said. Most sexual assaults are committed by men, but only a small percentage of men commit sexual assault.
If everyone became involved in preventing sexual assault, then it would be possible to reach that small percentage, she said.
"When most people think of sexual assault, they don't think of it as relevant to themselves," said Rachel Lee, graduate assistant at Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and coordinator of the Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program. "They think of stranger rape and it being someone they don't know. But in the majority of cases, that's not what really goes on."
Lee said 80 percent to 90 percent of raps or attempted rape cases on college campuses involved a person that the victim knew. A majority of those cases involve alcohol.
Pam Dishman / KAN$AN
"People use it as an excuse to not be responsible for what they do when they're drunk," Lee said. "Legally, they're still responsible for their actions."
Lee said that communication was crucial to avoid mixed messages.
"We make the presentation more dialogue rather than lecture, which is very important because sexual assault prevention starts through awareness and communication," he said.
Victor Dawson, former peer educator, speaks about date rape while Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, and other panel members look on.
Tony Coast, Cimarron junior and peer educator, said that student involvement helped create a more open atmosphere.
"There are assumptions being made on both sides about what each person wants to happen," she said. "You have to be clear about your intentions."
Guidelines to follow
For women:
You have the right:
— to say no
— to dress as you please
— to be treated with respect
— to agree to have sex but then change your mind
If you feel threatened by somebody you know or by a stranger, stand up for your self. Be willing to make a scene if you need to.
Trust your instinct. Be aware of situations in which you don't feel in charge of yourself.
For men:
Be aware of sex-role stereotypes that define women as passive, weak or irrational.
Make decisions for yourself. Decide what your own limitations are.
it's not OK to force someone to have
say even it.
Support your friends. If a friend asks you to leave with her from a party, do it.
— she dresses provocatively
— you paid for the date
— she asked you out
— you think she enjoys or expects some force
It's not successful seduction to pressure a woman to have sex with you. It's rape. It's also rape if the woman is too drunk to consent.
— you ve had sex with her before
you think she is loading you on
— you've had sex with her before
— she agrees to have sex, then changes her mind
— you think she is leading you on
Physical affection does not always have to lead to sex.
Source: Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Be aware of sex role stereotypes that encourage aggression and force. No means no.
No means no.
Panel debates causes effects of date rape
Bv Susanna Lööf
Kansan staff writer
Men and women don't communicate well when it comes to sex—which is one reason why date rape is a problem.
That was a conclusion of last night's panel debate on date rape at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
Six student leaders were panelists, and Barbara Ballard, director of Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, led the debate, which was attended by about 50 students.
"We're all in college and supposed to be intelligent," said panelist Chris Hane, Lawrence senior and one of the center's peer educators. "But men and women are afraid to discuss sex openly."
There are no statistics showing how common date rape is at the University of Kansas. But it does occur, Ballard said.
"It is very difficult to say how common it is because rape is one of the most under-reported crimes we have," she said. "But we know date rape occurs. Even if it occurred once a week that would be too much."
Alcohol is a factor in more than 90 percent
of all rapes, and that was addressed during the debate.
Panelist Stevie Case, Olathe sophomore and president of the Association of University Residence Halls, said alcohol can be dangerous because it can bring people together who normally wouldn't be attracted to each other.
"I know that we all have put on our beer goggles sometimes and looked around and seen things that weren't there," Case said.
Ballard stressed that rape is not okay even if the victim is too drunk to say no.
Nor does a miniskirt or a see-through blouse excuse rape, she said.
Agreeing to go home with a man also is not an agreement to have sex.
"If I go home with somebody I don't know, it's stupid on my part, but that doesn't make it right for date rape to happen to me," she said. "You're not to blame if it happens."
The debate also addressed how to react if a friend is raped.
"If that happens, make the decision to support that person," Case said. "Don't question how they got into that situation."
Dave Meyer, Overland Park freshman, said he came to the debate to learn the female point of view.
He said he thought date rape was a problem at the University, even though it was not talked about.
Career fair serves a smorgasbord of prospective jobs
By David Teska
Kansan staff writer
More than 100 full-time and parttime employers will gather tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom for the University Placement Center's Spring Career and Employment Fair.
Kansan staff writer
The fair, the sixth one planned by the placement center, will have companies ready to talk to potential employees both about full-time employment after graduation and part-time and internship positions for the summer, said Ann Hartley, assistant director of the placement center.
"It's the first year we've invited full-time employers," Hartley said.
Some of the full-time employers attending include Frito-Lay, PepsiCo Inc., Boeing Co., Abercrombie & Fitch and New York Life.
This year's fair will be a bigger event than last year, when about 65 companies came, Hartley said. The placement center also is expecting more than 800 students, an increase from last year's 700 students.
A new feature of this year's fair is accessibility to the names of firms coming to the fair via the placement center's home page on the World Wide Web. Hartley said.
The home page, managed by Michael Heuring, assistant director of the placement center, recently added a listing of part-time jobs available to students on campus. Heuring
said he spent up to an hour each day maintaining the site and always was looking for new site links that might be beneficial to students.
"It's kind of intimidating if you don't know about it," Hearing said.
"We act like goalies, sending students in the right direction," Burge said.
Throughout the fair, it will take the efforts of all the placement center's student staff to make sure students can find the company they want, said David Burge, Wichita senior, and an employee of the placement center.
Because this is a job fair, Hartley said that students needed to keep in mind that they are getting looked at by potential employers. In addition to bringing a supply of resumes, Hartley said students should not dress in regular street clothes. Even employers looking for summer camp employees and interns like to see students dressed professionally, she said.
For more information on the services provided by the placement center and an up-to-date listing of companies coming to the fair, see the placement center's home page on the World Wide Web: http://kuhttp.co.ukans.edu/cwis/unit/sydfacts/u扑acts/upc_main.html.
Students also should plan to come early and come often, Burge said, since the volume of students is expected to increase. This also will help students get more one-on-one contact with recruiters, he said.
Spring Career and Employment Fair
When: Wed.. Feb. 7
Times: 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Where: Kansas Union Ballroom
Tips for success:
- Bring a stack of resumes
- Dress in attire appropriate for the job desired.
---
2A
Tuesday, February 6, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Senate decides it's time for rhyme
By John Collar
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Although state senators did not recite the poetry of Langston Hughes or William Shakespeare, they did agree yesterday to invoke the poetic muses of Kansas.
In a unanimous vote, the Senate passed a bill that would create the position of poet laureate for the state.
"Computers have driven our kids away from reading and writing," said State Sen. Paul Feleciano Jr., D-Wichita, who introduced the bill in the Senate. "I think it's time we create an importance for the written word."
Feleciano said 12 states and the United States currently have a poet laureate.
Under the bill, the governor would appoint the poet laureate from a list of three candidates selected by the Kansas Arts Commission. The poet laureate, who must be a Kansas resident, would receive an honorarium of $2,500 per year and serve a two-year term.
The bill now will be considered in the House.
The Joint Committee on Arts and Cultural Resources passed the proposal last year. State Rep. David Adkins, R-Leawood, a former KU student body president, served as chairman of the committee.
Adkins said that even though the bill had been subjected to hallway snickering and ridicule, it should be taken seriously.
"The position of poet laureate would be a significant professional honor." Adkins said.
He said that the poet laureate's job would be to provide a role model for young Kansans and would provide an outlet for literary ability.
"Kansans are a talented lot," he said.
KU professors said establishing the position would be a windfall for poets and students.
"Having a poet laureate will do wonders for educating people about poetry," said Luci Tapahonso, associate professor of English. Chancellor Robert Hemenway commissioned Tapahonso to recite an original poem during his inauguration Sunday.
Tapahonso said the poet laureate should be an ambassador to promote poetry in the state.
"It's important to let young people know that people are writing poetry," she said.
Tapahonso contends that Lawrence is a vital area for poetry, but many students are not aware of this activity.
"Students are very surprised and pleased when they are introduced to poets from this area," she said.
Tapahonso has published several books of poetry, such as The Women Are Singing, A Breeze Swept Through and Seasonal Woman.
Michael Johnson, professor and chairman of the department of English, said the ideal candidate for poet laureate needed to be grounded in the culture of the Midwest.
"Their poetry ought to deal with the Midwest experience and typically the region," Johnson said.
He said Kansas poetry typically covers such topics as rural life, the landscape, flora and fauna, the political temper of Kansas and even sunflowers.
"We should realize that poetry is so important that we make time for it," Johnson said.
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.
ON CAMPUS
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor Great Britain Direct Exchange Program at 4 p.m. today at 4045 Wescoc Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today for 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call John Hendrix at 864-1529.
Minority Business Student Council will sponsor a career planning meeting at 5:30 p.m. today at 425 Summerfield Hall. For more information, call Jacinta Carter at 749-3083.
Student Senate will sponsor a Multicultural Affairs committee meeting at 6 p.m.today at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Cesar Millan at 865-3538
AIESEC will meet at 7:15 tonight at 2032 Worthah Hall. For more information, call Brian Bucklev at 841-7675.
AASU will meet at 7:30 tonight
KCBT Student Ministries will sponsor a Bible study at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Adam Decatur at 841-1683.
at the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call Julia at 864-2088.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor Semester at Sea starting at 9 a.m. tomorrow at the fourth floor in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting on study in Spanish-speaking countries at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at 4045 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Ellen Strubert at 864-3742
Le Cercle Francais will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at 2058 Wesco Hall. For more information, call Sarah Pethan at 865-0696.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's television was stolen Jan. 28 between 12:01 a.m. and 8:30 p.m. in the fourth floor of Oliver Hall. The television was valued at $550. KU police reported
A KU student's parking permit was stolen Jan. 25 between 8:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. in the S.E. Memorial Stadium parking lot. The permit was valued at $53, KU police reported.
A VCR was stolen from the Multicultural Resource Center between Jan. 25 and Jan. 29. The VCR was valued at $478, KU police reported.
A KU student's parking permit was stolen Jan. 26 between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. in the Sunnyside Avenue parking lot. The permit was valued at $53. KU police reported.
A KU student's CD player was stolen and car was damaged Friday between 8:35 a.m. and 11:45 p.m. in the S.E. Memorial Stadium parking lot. The compact disc player was valued at $350, and the damage was estimated at $600, KU police reported.
A KU student's CD player and discs were stolen and car was damaged Saturday between 6 and 10 p.m. in W. Lewis Hall parking lot. The items were valued at $330, and the damage was estimated at $150, KU police reported.
A KU student's car was damaged between Friday at 11:30 p.m. and Saturday at 11 a.m. in the McColllum Hall parking lot. The damage was estimated at $70, KU police reported.
Michael Burt was arrested on a charge of operating under the influence on Saturday at 1:51 a.m. by Strong Hall. His bail was set at $500, KU police reported.
Lance Rahden was arrested on a charge of driving while intoxicated Saturday at 2:22 a.m. in West Campus. His bail was set at $500, KU police reported.
Weather
NIGH LOW
Atiana 45 ° • 18 °
Chicago 30 ° • 10 °
Des Moines, Iowa 30 ° • 8 °
Kansas City, Mo. 45 ° • 18 °
Lawrence 50 ° • 21 °
Los Angeles 68 ° • 53 °
New York 28 ° • 14 °
Omaha, Neb. 39 ° • 17 °
St. Louis 40 ° • 14 °
Seattle 53 ° • 42 °
Topeka 50 ° • 20 °
Tulsa, Okla. 52 ° • 23 °
Wichita 55 ° • 23 °
TODAY
Partly cloudy; the freeze is over.
5021
WEDNESDAY
Partly cloudy and still getting warmer.
5528
THURSDAY
Unseasonably warm with a slight chance for showers.
6335
TODAY
Partly cloudy; the freeze is over.
5021
WEDNESDAY
Partly cloudy and still getting warmer.
5528
THURSDAY
Unseasonably warm with a slight chance for showers.
6335
Source: Kim Friedrichsen, KU Weather Service
Heat arrives—for now
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
With record-breaking warm weather on the horizon, Lawrence residents comfortably can shelve their long underwear and replace them with shorts, at least for a week.
Weekend temperatures are expected to reach highs in the upper 60s to lower 70s, and with the warmer temperatures KU students are making plans to come out of their winter hibernation.
Scott Diergan, meteorologist from the National Weather Service office in Topeka, said temperatures will approach record highs this weekend, which is unusual after a week of record low temperatures.
"We'll come within a few degrees of them this weekend, but I don't know for sure if we'll break them," he said.
Diergan said arctic air from the northern jet stream was responsible for the flesh-freezing lows last week.
And now that the stream has moved northward, warm southern air has made its way to Kansas.
The moderate conditions will bring a pleasant, though temporary, change for most students.
Janel Harting, Derby freshman,
said the warm weather would give
her a chance to shake the cold she's
had for a week.
"I'm very happy with the change," she said. "Maybe if I get better and get my homework done, I'll be able to go outside."
Diergan warned students not to get too comfortable with the warm weather, because regardless of whether the groundhog saw his shadow, winter is not over.
"Mother Nature has a way of evening things out," Diergan said. "I think we'll have another couple of snowfalls before the winter is out. Early March is usually a typical time for wet snowfall. But at least it will be good snowball snow."
Artists - Illustrators - Designers
WHAT CAN YOU DO FOR $500?
CASH CONTEST FOR CURRENTLY ENROLLED KU STUDENTS
Create a KU-theme design that can be used on T-shirts, advertisements, and banners directed toward the student market.
Pick up rules and entry form at the Kansas Alumni Association Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave., 3rd floor.
Deadline for entries is March 15.1996.
INTRUST
Bank
Sponsored by Intrust Bank and the Kansas Alumni Association
KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 6, 1996
3A
Artist balances life
By Eric Weslander
Kansan Correspondent
Sara Brooks / KANSAN
The Japanese paper crane is a small part of Justin Baldwin's art display Ascending to Balance. The art is in the Kansas Union Gallery through Feb. 16.
Some artists find their inspiration in everyday life. Justin Badwin was inspired when he spoke to a Shinto priest in the mountains of Japan.
"He got on the subject of balance between the good and bad things in life," Baldwin said. "I remember hanging on to what he said because I knew it was important, but I didn't know why."
Baldwin, Olathe senior, applied the priest's lesson to his artwork. After seven months of preparation, an exhibition of his work, titled Ascending to Balance, opened last night in the Kansas Union Gallery.
The gallery contains things such as a gallows for two and a giant paper crane, which Baldwin said traditionally is folded to symbolize a wish, prayer or dream. An ancient Japanese form of music known as gagaku plays in the background.
"You can think of the exhibit as a large poem, with each part being like a different stanza," Baldwin said. "They all complement each other."
Everything in the exhibit, Baldwin said, was about balancing the positive and the negative.
"Our whole existence often comes down to not dealing with bad things," he said. "It's much more healthy to
acknowledge the bad and to learn from it."
Baldwin, whose mother is Japanese, went to Japan two years ago for his grandfather's funeral. In addition to meeting the priest who inspired his artwork, Baldin said that he was overcome by the beauty of the country.
"There is art in everything," he said. "I was just blown away."
Although the conversation with the Shinto priest made Baldwin think about the idea of balance, he said that it was not the only inspiration
behind the exhibit. He said that seeing a piece of trash on the ground could be as much of a source of inspiration as a conversation with a priest.
"When you create something, it comes from everything around you," he said. "I would be hesitant to say that it came from anything directly."
Steve Harman, Hull, England Junior, said that he was struck by the atmosphere of the exhibit.
"The whole thing works once you walk around and get an idea of what it wants to say," he said. "It made sense to me."
Formal request is filed for viewing evaluations
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
Scott Sullivan, a student senator who last week sponsored a Senate resolution asking administrators to release instructor evaluations to students, is pushing administrators one step further.
As a personal initiative, separate from the Senate resolution, Sullivan, Leawood sophomore, filed a formal request under the Kansas Open Records Act yesterday demanding the right to inspect and copy the statistical data from instructor evaluations.
Sullivan filed his request with the chancellor's office, the general council's office and the Office of Academic Affairs. The University has three days to either deny him the information or compile it for him.
Sullivan said although he believed personnel records were exempt from release under the open records act, case precedent prevents public bodies from placing documents in a personnel record for the expressed purpose of keeping them confidential.
He cited a November 1900 court case in which the Denver Publishing Company brought action under the Colorado Open Records Act against the University of Colorado requesting the release of information contained in the University's personnel files.
Sullivan said the judge in the Colorado case ruled that placing information in personnel records specifically to keep it private was contrary to public policy.
Ted Frederickson, professor of journalism and a licensed attorney, said that since the instructor evaluations historically have been part of personnel files, Sullivan's claim that the University is purposely keeping them in those files to prevent disclosure may be invalid.
Frederickson said that the University may prevail legally in this battle, but as an instructor, he has no problem with his evaluations being released to the public.
"As a journalist I'm one of those who thinks we're better off knowing more about ourselves than knowing less," Frederickson said. "I think a lot of professors feel that way — that students have the right to see them."
At a Senate Executive Committee meeting last week, David Shulburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that there would need to be a consensus on this issue within the University community before any action could be taken.
In response to Shulenburger's comment, Sullan said he accumulated about 400 student signatures on a petition asking the University to release the evaluations.
"We have reached a consensus, and we believe that the records should be opened," he said.
Exchange students find a new home on the range
Sullivan said he had received calls voicing support for his initiative from faculty members who had refused to identify themselves.
"There are faculty who support this out there, but a lot of them are afraid to sign their names to something." Sullivan said.
Shulenburger could not be reached for comment.
By Scott MacWilliams Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Twenty-four Japanese students traveled across seven time zones and arrived in Kansas on Friday night, greeted by sub-zero temperatures.
"It is very cold where I am from, but this place is much colder," said Hiroki Aoki, a sophomore from Nagano, Japan, home of the 1998 Winter Olympics.
The students are part of the Kanagawa Exchange Program and are spending a month at the University of Kansas studying English by reading, writing and speaking in an American society.
Some already have seen a few sights in Lawrence.
Schmidt said Kano also was impressed with how big the Kansas Union and Wal-Mart were.
"We went to McDonald's for lunch Saturday, and then ordered from Pizza Shuttle that night," said Amy Schmidt, Whitehouse Station, N.J., freshman and roommate of Kaori Kano in Ellsworth Hall.
In their first class on Monday morning, the students already were working on their English.
"They want to speak English right away," Toshio Matsuoka, Kanagawa University professor of business administration, said.
Matsuoka is traveling with the group and has been to Lawrence with previous exchange students.
Each student also will spend one weekend with a family in Lawrence, attend a KU men's basketball game after learning the Rock Chalk chant from cheerleaders and make a number of side trips around Lawrence.
"They'll take part in classroom exchanges in Japanese language classes at KU," said Liz Byleen, director of the Kanagawa Exchange Program. "They will also go to Pinckney School and visit a second-grade class on Valentine's Day."
Byleen said the students also will visit the Kansas Cosmosphere in Hutchinson, Cowtown in Wichita, the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City, Mo. and Haskell Indian Nations University.
This is the sixth year that Japanese students have come to Lawrence for the one-month stay, and some have met with Lawrence residents who have visited Hiratsuka, Lawrence's sister city in Japan.
However, KU students wanting to improve their Japanese might have a little trouble getting these students to speak their native tongue.
1985
"it's hard to get them to speak Japanese to you," Carl Masters, Lincoln, Neb., junior, said. "They only want to speak English to Americans, so they can improve their English as quickly as possible."
Luby Montano-Laurel / KANSAN
Mary Head, Applied English Center instructor, teaches English to Japanese students from Kanagawa University. The students began their one-month English classes this week.
Hope is a necessary ingredient in the recipe to reach goals
Psychology professor's new book details plans
By Heather Kirkwood
Kansan staff writer
Dwight Lay, Hoyt sophomore, knows he wants to pay off his car, get an internship and do well in his classes, and he has a plan to reach these goals. But not everyone is as fortunate as Lay.
To some students, deciding on a major, motivating themselves to study harder or planning for graduation are daunting tasks.
It is not a lack of self-esteem or optimism that keeps these students down, but rather a lack of hope $j$ said Charles Snyder, professor of psychology at the University of Kansas and author of The
Psychology of Hope.
People who are hopeful set reasonable goals, have the motivation to pursue them and the ability to develop successful strategies. Snyder said.
To become more hopeful, Snyder offers several suggestions.
Begin by setting specific short-term and long-term goals that are not either out of reach or certain to be achieved.
Do not be afraid to change goals if they seem unattainable, he said. Next develop strategies to reach them by talking to people who have been in similar positions and who have achieved similar goals. If existing strategies are not working, look closer at them.
"Hopeful people are not interested in a sure thing because it is not very challenging," Snyder said. "But they are not interested in something that is impossible."
"Look for something that is new and not characteristic of something you would do," shyder said.
He also said people should not be afraid to step away from a goal temporarily.
"Sometimes if you just wait a while, solutions will come to you." Snider said.
Snyder also suggests several ways to stay motivated once you have devised a plan. Eating right, exercising and getting enough sleep will make staying motivated easier. Breaking goals into small steps also can help students stay motivated and not feel overwhelmed.
"I get really overwhelmed and don't do anything," Ferris said. "But then when I take some time and start working, it makes me feel better."
This strategy worked well for Lisa Ferris, Lincoln, Neb., graduate student.
"I'd never write a book if I knew cumu-
latively how much work it would be, Snyder said. "Instead, I do little baby steps and write a few pages a day."
Expecting road blocks also can make reaching goals easier. When something gets in the way, think back to how you handled an obstacle in the past, Snyder said.
Another way students can stay motivated is to laugh at themselves.
"It can be very freeing and increase your sense of mental energy," Snyder said.
Finally, Snyder said high-hope people enjoyed the path to reaching goals as much as obtaining the goal itself.
"American society is very product-oriented," Snyder said. "But high-hope people like the trip of moving toward their goals. It seems to be a source of energy and willpower for them."
A checklist for setting goals
Set a goal because it is your goal, not your parents' friends' or spouse's goal.
Be conscious of the decisions you are making about your goals.
Make goals for all areas of your life, not just school.
Prioritize your goals.
Structure your life so that you are not bothered by things that will keep you from reaching your goal.
- Set goals that demand more from you than repeating past performance.
Adapted from The Psychology of Hope by Charles Snyder.
Did you go to this show?
If you did ... show us your ticket stub and take 30% off the manufacturer's list price of the CD of your choice. It's Kief's way of saying thanks for helping break Everclear.
Kief's is always happy to be instrumental in the introduction of new artists who deserve a wider audience. Everclear is already a "platinum" act by Kief's standards. Since 1959, we've helped set the pace others follow.
KIEF'S
24th & Iowa•PO Box 2•Lawrence, KS 66046
SEC C1 SEC C1
EVERCLEAR
MEMORIAL HALL
J J
758 NO BODY SURFING ALLOWED
3FEB6 SAT FEB 3 1996 8:00 PM
KIEF'S
4A
Tuesday, February 6, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
University works to improve underclassmen experience
The freshman and sophomore years at a large university can be a very confusing time.
Although her advisers helped Alisha Ewertz figure out which classes she needed to take this semester, they didn't help her with the rest of her time at the University of Kansas.
Ewertz, Salina freshman, said she wished the University had a system to help her plan her entire college career. University administrators know the experience could be better.
"Probably the biggest obstacle is that this has become a large university," said David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs. "It's possible for students to disappear into the nether regions."
Fortunately, plans are underway to improve the academic experience for freshmen and sophomores. The University is acting on most of the 30 recommendations made by the Freshman-Sophomore Academic Experience Committee, a group of faculty and administrators who are trying to help provide a positive academic environment for un-
THE ISSUE:
Underclassmen
derclassmen.
One plan would ensure that freshmen have at least one class with fewer than 25 students. The plan would expand a summer program that helps underclassmen adjust to college life and provides a center for teaching effectiveness.
Because students know best what they want from their advising sessions, it would be wise for the University to allow the students to decide.
Shulenburger said students would revise the most challenging problem, advising. A committee has been appointed by Student Senate to discuss the best ways to improve advising for underclassmen.
What happens during the freshman and sophomore years can influence a student's entire college experience. By making this time more comfortable and less confusing, the University is helping underclassmen get the most out of their academic experience.
CRAIG LANG FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Drinking on Statehouse floor impairs legislative process
Most people believe that the elected officials working in the Legislature are sober when making important decisions. That is not always the case in the Missouri Statehouse. Missouri legislators retain an obscene, yet time-honored tradition which allows drinking on the job.
Although the majority of alcohol consumption takes place in private offices, it is not unusual to see legislators in the hallways or even on the House floor holding alcoholic drinks. Can you imagine? It is unnerving to even consider the idea that these powerful politicians may not always be making decisions with a clear head.
Alcohol does indeed affect one's ability to act appropriately, and, most importantly, make well thought-out and reasonable decisions. It is frightening to think elected officials legally can get drunk on the grounds of the Statehouse.
Recently a bill was introduced in the House that completely would ban
The Missouri Statehouse tradition of allowing alcohol on its grounds should be banned.
drinking or possessing any kind of alcoholic beverage on the property of the Missouri Statehouse. Without a doubt, this bill needs to pass, and the behavior of those who consume alcohol on the job needs to stop.
It is perfectly reasonable for voters to expect sober representatives, and it is absurd that drinking while conducting session has been allowed this long.
The scary thing is, it is possible some lawmakers are working, thinking and voting while intoxicated. Drinking at the Statehouse does not exemplify responsible behavior, gives the general public a negative impression of their lawmakers and should not be tolerated.
TARA FITZPATRICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
---
OTHER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Campus Joann Birk
Philip Brownlee
Editorial Paul Todd
Associate editorial Craig Lang
Feature Sheridan
Reporting Tom Erickson
Associate sports Bill Petula
Photo Andy Rutledge
Matt Flickner
Graphics Noah Musser
Special sections Novaelle Summery
Marketing Matthew
Wire Tara Trenayn
Illustration Micleo Leaker
Business Staff
Campus mgr...Karen Gerch
Regional mgr...Kelly Connelys
National mgr...Mark Otkmenk
Special Section mgrs...Norm Blow
Production mgrs...Rachel Gahlil
Marketing director...Heather Valler
Public Relations dir...Cary Brealhoe
Creative director...Ed Kawaltse
Clearedmgr ...Stacy Wehngarten
Intermphy co-op mgr...T.J. Clark
EVALUATION
See what you think
The following are general student comments that were given to Hector Clark, associate professor of mechanical engineering, on his evaluations for Mechanical engineering 306, which he taught last semester.
Professor Clark's dry sense of humor made the lectures more interesting as well as humorous.
He is humorous and adds color to the class. The quizzes came before we really covered material and became kind of annoying, though.
Cynical, crusty old bastard,
but amusing at times. I love not
having homework.
I think the only thing that disturbs (in a slight early-morning-neck-che-sort-of-way) is the predominance of old tests. It seems that the frat boy and old ME buddies system is favored, which leaves those without these resources rather clueless.
The personal anecdotes were funny and informative. After all, I'm convinced 90 percent of engineering is people — people skillis.
The GTA did a very poor job in Dr. Clark's absence. Dr. Clark made a dry subject interesting. I like your wit.
Speak up during lecture.
Liked: It's over. This class was unclear from the start. Class was entertaining at times, but the subject matter could have been disclosed on 18 and 1/2 by 11 sheet of paper.
One wonders if this class has any practical uses. Why the heck is this class required for anything?
Liked: the professor teaching it. Professor Clark uses wonderful examples to illustrate his points in class—actual parts of equipment, models of molecular arrangements, etc., which are quite helpful in understanding concepts and processes. He inspires interest in engineering and in learning in general.
A little enthusiasm every now and then would be nice.
You are a good teacher, but you need to have a better attitude toward the students and helping them. Thanks, though.
I'm proud to say I have had the Hector Clark experience, and it wasn't that bad. I disliked the quizzes very much. However, I didn't read, so it is my fault. Overall, Hector Clark is an effective teacher.
As consumers students deserve right to evaluate product
By Tom Moore for the editorial board Illustration by Micah Laaker
We live in the information age — an age where information is supposed to flow freely and without restriction. Given that, the present KU policy on faculty evaluations looks as if it is drawn by the CIA. Students have the right to know if the faculty member they are about to be subjected to is a bad instructor. Students are consumers who have a right to know about the quality of the product they are purchasing.
0 1 2 3
Some professors want evaluations to remain unavailable to students. Elizabeth Banks, professor of classics, said that proposals to open faculty evaluations were "incredibly tasteless." Her hostility to the proposal that students be allowed to read what their peers have said about faculty stems from what she perceives as a consumer mentality that has burst onto college campuses.
"Consumer mentality does not have a place in higher education," said Banks, who has been at the University of Kansas since 1966. "It is anti-academic." Students deserve value for their money. They have a right to information which pertains to their education. If Banks had her way, they wouldn't be entitled to any of these.
"This University and its administration thrive on secrecy," he said. "Secury is wrong; it is dishonest. I congratulate students for parading around the walls in the hope that they will come down."
Thankfully, not all faculty members share Banks' view. Hector Clark, who has been an associate professor of mechanical engineering at the University since 1981, said that it was reasonable for students to look at evaluations.
To those who think other professors could do a better job or that students are incapable of accurate evaluations of faculty, Clark charged that the faculty, when examining colleagues, was like junior high-school students selecting cheerleaders.
"They look for conformity," he said. "This is one of the reasons why we have a mediocre University."
"If students think it gives them more information then fine, but I don't see evaluations telling them that much," he said. "When I was a graduate student at Northwestern, evaluations were open to students, and nothing much either good or bad happened."
Some faculty see no severe consequences one way or the other. Scott Harris, assistant professor of communication studies, said that evaluations were neither a good nor a bad thing.
"My own sense is that the instrument itself is so flawed, so varied from department to department, that the things really have no utility," he said. "If students are going to engage in shopping for courses based on these evaluations, then they should improve the evaluations. The problem is that some faculty already feel under siege. They may see this as one more problem"
Allan Cigler, professor of political science and government, found that present methods of evaluation simply were too flawed to be of use.
The University of Kansas is no ivory tower, yet its policy on faculty evaluations makes it seem like a concrete bunker. Secrecy breeds mediocrity, and mediocrity surely is tasteless. It is not an infringement into the privacy of the faculty to say that the lowest of the low - the students - have a basic right to information that may well affect the course educational career.
---
We live in a free and open society. Higher education is not set apart. It should be subject to the same pressures that the rest of the nation is.
The debate is how much secrecy is good and how much credit the faculty and the administration of this university give the student body. There is no reason to assume that public exposure would hurt the quality of education at this University.
OUT FROM THE CRACKS
I DONT KNOW...
IT SEEMS LIKE MY
BOYFRIEND DOESN'T
FIND ME ATTRACTIVE
ANY MORE?...
WE EVEN STOPPED
KISSING?!
COFFEE
450
Mmm... MAYBE YOU SHOULD SURPRISE HIM WITH SOMETHING SEXY!
IT MIGHT SPICE UP THE LOVE LIFE!
WESCO COFFEE $50
LATER THAT NIGHT...
ARE YOU
TURNED ON?
WHAT
THE...!
By Jeremy Patnoi
THE ONLY THING GETTING TURNED ON IN HERE IS THE T.V.
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 6.1996
5A
Budget outline released
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The bare-bones budget that President Clinton sketched yesterday is more campaign manifesto than spending blueprint, challenging Republicans for political turf they have long owned outright.
The 20-page pamphlet points the way to zero deficit in 2002 and makes room for a modest tax cut. Yet it also proposes more than the Republicans want for Medicaid.
A. S. BALAKRISHAN
Bill Clinton
education, the environment and other politically popular programs.
"Government should not do for individuals what they can do for themselves," says a three-page introductory essay.
Most of the pain that would result from shrinking government wouldn't be felt until well after this fall's election — and even after the 1998 balloting. Of nearly $600 billion in deficit reductions for seven years in Clinton's budget, about $363 billion, or 61 percent, would take effect in 2000 and 2001.
Beyond laying out broad goals, the material released offered scant details.
It avoided any mention, for example, of how to achieve nearly $300 billion in projected budget savings over seven years in so-called discretionary programs.
Specifics will follow in mid-March, when Clinton is expected to submit to Congress a more traditional, multivolume budget that tracks programs, trust funds and economic assumptions in detail.
That's when the administration will say which programs — and voting blocs — would win and which would lose in a blueprint that calls for spending $1.64 trillion in the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1.
For now, the president has gained the political advantage. He has embraced a budget that would be balanced in seven years, using economic estimates developed by the
Congressional Budget Office — as Republicans demanded. Yet it presents a more moderate face than the plan Republicans wrote on their own, and that he vetoed last year.
"The plan I propose cuts hundreds of programs, continues our efforts to downsize the government, but it protects Medicare, Medicaid, education and the environment and cuts taxes for working families," the president said in remarks to the nation's governors, most of them Republicans.
"It reforms welfare and addresses our challenges to renew schools, provide economic security, and preserve the environment with the initiatives that I announced in the State of the Union."
Clinton says that after 50 hours of negotiations, he and Republicans are close enough to write a balanced budget into law and defer any outstanding issues until after the election.
"I hope we can set aside partisanship and divisions, as you often do in the (governors' association) and provide a balanced budget plan to the American people in the near future," he said.
Experts link race, diabetes
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — African Americans appear to have a genetic predisposition to diabetes that may be triggered by obesity or other health habits — but lifestyle changes could lower the risk, diabetes experts said yesterday.
"This is a problem we can beat, and it's time to begin," said physician James Gavin as he unveiled the American Diabetes Association's African-American Program.
The $500,000 education campaign will cover how to prevent and control diabetes, a disease in which the body either doesn't produce enough insulin or can't use the hormone properly.
African Americans are twice as likely as Caucasians to get diabetes.
Nobody really knows why. But physician Kwame Osel of Ohio State University said yesterday that he had uncovered symptoms of a genetic predisposition.
Osei studied 80 African Americans, 60 Caucasians and 32 recent African immigrants for three years. All were young and healthy and had normal blood sugar levels.
The African Americans and African immigrants produced twice as much insulin as the Caucasians, and their insulin worked only half as well, Osei found.
Yet only 1 percent of Africans have diabetes, while 12 percent of African Americans do, Osei said.
Osei thinks obesity, a proven diabetes risk, could be the difference. He cited studies showing 10 percent
The ADA's African-American Program will emphasize losing weight and exercising.
of Africans, 30 percent of Caucasians and 40 percent of African Americans are overweight.
The ADA program's centerpiece will be "Diabetes Sundays," where doctors and celebrities will visit churches to alert people at risk: anyone who is African American, overweight, older than 45, doesn't exercise, has a relative with diabetes or had a baby who weighed more than 9 pounds.
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Pope John Paul II
GUATEMALA CITY — Guatemalans laid a giant welcome mat of rose petals and colored wood shavings along a parade route yesterday in preparation for the arrival of Pope John Paul II, his first visit to Central America in 13 years.
"Welcome, Filgrim of Peace," read posters strung on lamposts.
The pope last visited Guatemala in March, 1983, when the country was under military dictatorship. Today, it remains the only Central American nation still engaged in civil war, and many
"The pope's visit is a message of peace. All of us in Guatemala desire peace," said Ana Maria Saenz de Davila, 49, a mother of four who joined hundreds of others to help decorate the pope's mobile route.
Guatemalans hope the pope's presence will spur efforts to end the 35-year conflict, the longest in Central America.
The Associated Press
Pope sends message of peace
Rising at dawn, the volunteers laced the cathedral gates with palm
The pope's tour is being viewed as a mission of peace after decades of violence and civil war. He was to spend yesterday and today in Guatemala, visit Nicaragua tomorrow and El Salvador on Thursday, before heading to Venezuela.
The Roman Catholic Church long has been fighting inroads by Protestant evangelical groups across Central America, and the pope is ex-
804 Massachusetts 843-5000.
"We hope this was nothing more than an isolated incident," said Rodolfo Mendoza, Interior Minister. Officials gave no sign of any changes in the papal visit as result of the attack.
The pope was to be welcomed yesterday by newly elected President Alvaro Arzu, and was to tour Guatemala City, stopping outside the cathedral to address the faithful.
The mood was festive, although about 4,000 police and security forces were on heightened alert following an attack Sunday on Arzu.
fronds and strung garlands of red, pink and white flowers on an outdoor altar erected for Mass today.
Authorities said Arzu and his wife were riding horses on a rural road when a man drove his pickup truck toward them, knocked a bodyguard off his horse and struck two security vehicles before troops shot him dead. A motive for the attack was not given.
出图
Pope John Paul II arrived in Guatemala Monday for a seven-day tour of Central America
Kniaht-Ridder Tribune
accords that ended civil wars in both countries in the 1980s. And some were unsure whether the pope could help Guatemala's peace process.
A woman arranging flowers atop an altar on a football field yesterday said she believed the pope was coming at an historic moment.
"The pope's visit is going to revitalize the Catholic faith and help contribute to peace in Guatemala," Damaris de Ranero said.
Guatemala's leftist rebels have announced a cease-fire for the pope's visit — the third cease-fire since November.
3 EL SALVADOR: Feb. 8; Celebrate Mass, meet with president, visit San Salvador cathedral
4 VENEZUELA: Feb. 9-11; Celebrate Mass, meet with social, political, cultural leaders, meet with local youth
GUATEMALA: Feb. 5-7; Celebrate Mass, visit with president, prayer service in Equipus Basilica
Tensions remain high in Nicaragua, the scene of recent church bombings, and in El Salvador, despite
pected to remind the flock of the faith that dates to the Spanish colonization.
"The pope's visit is a tremendously happy moment, but we don't really know how much good it's going to do," said Efrain Laroj, plucking garbage from the field where the altar was being completed.
2 NICARAGUA: Feb. 7; Celebrate Mass, vsp with president, tour Managua cathedral
1
3 2
ROME: Feb. 12;
Return to Vatican
4
visit
al
s,
Not even the threat of jail has persuaded the 15 year old to visit the father she says deserted her family in a bitter divorce battle.
Visit dad or go to jail, judges say
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — She gets straight A's and swims like a champion, but Galatea Kapsimalis is a lot like other teen-agers when it comes to being told what to do.
The threat came from the same court that in July ordered a 12-year-old girl jailed for refusing to visit her father. That girl was released a day later pending the outcome of an appeal that could determine how far Illinois judges may go in trying to resolve visitation disputes.
The two cases have caught the attention of family law experts nationwide.
"Ordering children to obey their parents...is, except in rare circumstances, no business of the court," said Benjamin Wolf of the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, which filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the appellate case and is watching the Kapsimalis dispute. He called the judges' decisions in both cases an intrusion of the families' privacy.
Galatea agrees.
"It's definitely not fair," said the teen-age, who lives in the Chicago suburb of Bolingbrook. "We have our rights. He can't force us to see our father."
Judge Robert C. Lorz in Joliet, Ill., has indicated he will await the appeals court ruling before deciding whether to send Galatea and her 14-year-old brother, Peter, to jail. Lorz held the youngsters in contempt of court on June 27.
"If it comes down to seeing him or going to jail, we'll go to jail." Galatea said.
Jailing children in such cases is almost unheard
"I can't imagine that we would even dream of treating adults that way — forcing them to spend time with someone they don't want to spend time with," Becker said.
of, said Mary Becker, a University of Chicago law professor.
Kostas Kapsimalis is seeking to divorce his wife, Bess, after nearly 15 years of marriage.
Since moving out of the family home and filing for divorce in 1994, Kostas Kapsimalis said he had seen his children just twice outside court, despite court orders granting him regular visits. Even then, he said, his children wore headphones and imposed his
"Ordering children to obey their parents...is...no business of the court." Benjamin Wohl American Civil Liberties Union
phones and ignored him. He said he thought his wife brainwashed them.
"I do love my children," he said. "I do miss them very, very much."
Kostas Kapsalmis said that seeking a contempt ruling against his children was a last resort.
"I don't want them to be punished," he said. "I honestly didn't think it would ever reach this point."
"I've always said if they wish to see their father they can," she said. "You can't force them."
Bess Kapsimalis said that her children, both excellent students and competitive swimmers, have been too busy to see their father on scheduled visitation days and his efforts to find them in contempt have only increased their bitterness.
The youngsters are equally angry with the judge, who was red-faced and screaming when he issued
the contempt ruling, Bess Kapsimalis said.
Lorz and his colleague Judge Ludwig Kuhar — who sent 12-year-old Heidi Nussbaum to jail in July — won't discuss the cases.
Ben Mackoff, a Chicago lawyer who recently retired as presiding judge of Cook County's domestic relations court, said it was debatable whether Illinois law even allowed judges to hold children in contempt in custody disputes. That's a question the state appeals court will answer in the Nussbaum case.
In that case, Kuhar ordered.
Heidi, of suburban Lisle, Ill., jailed indefinitely for defying a court order that she make a month-long visit to her father in North Carolina. Heidi's mother Kathy Marshall appealed, and the appeals court halted the punishment pending its ruling.
The children recently began meeting with their father in Illinois, under the supervision of a psychologist.
Mackoff said he understands the pressures that may have led to both decisions.
"You're between a rock and a hard place out there. You don't want it to appear that the court order has no validity," he said. "What do you do to kids who come before you and thumb their noses at you?"
But Mackoff said that under the circumstances, the use of jail time might very well be counterproductive.
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Jerry Tarkanian slighted, as George Gervin and David Thompson are voted into Basketball Hall of Fame, Page 3.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 6,1996
KANSAS BASKETBALL
SECTION B
Big Eight play is 'smaller' this season
Departure of the tallest affects game
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
With the departure of centers Greg Ostertag, Bryant Reeves and Loren Meyer from the Big Eight Conference, many thought a big change was forthcoming.
Smaller interior players looked forward to this year, when they wouldn't be shooting over and rebounding against these three big men.
They all measure 6-foot-10 or taller and were first-round NBA draft picks.
"Play in the conference has changed somewhat," Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams said. "But it's not anything as big as the media says it is. I'm just as concerned about Iowa State, and they
don't have Loren Meyer."
Nonetheless, shot blockers such as Meyers affected other players. Ostertag, who broke the Kansas and the Big Eight block record, is an obvious example.
"They were always looking for
Greg," Williams said. "They were always making that extra pump fake."
E v e n though that intimidation is not as prominent in the league, the makeup of this year's conference
But the rest of the conference's top scorers were listed as forwards or guards.
Through Sunday's game, the Big Eight's top 10 scorers consisted of three forwards and seven guards.
"We still have an outstanding con-
"Play in this conference has changed somewhat." Roy Williams
scoring leaders is relatively the same as last year. At the end of last season, the top 10 included Oklahoma State's Reeves, 21.5 points a game, and Iowa State's Meyer at 15.7.
Roy William:
Kansas men's basketball coach
ference even though we did lose a lot of big people," Oklahoma State men's basketball coach Eddie Sutton said. Kansas is one of the few Big Eight teams that has more than one experienced interior player. Of the 15 active players who are 6-10 or taller in the conference this season, six are playing it
their first Division-I season. Two others averaged less than 15 minutes a game last year.
Kansas sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz and junior center Scot Pollard were second and third in
team scoring last season and averaged 23.6 and 20 minutes a game respectively.
After Sunday's 72-62 victory against Kansas State, LaFrentz leads the team in scoring with 13.8 points and 8.5 rebounds a game. Pollard is second in rebounding at 7.6 a game, and first in blocked shots with 2.7.
"That's one of the reasons Kansas has probably gone undefeated," Sutton said of the No. 3 Jayhawks, who are 6-0 in the Big Eight. "They've got two quality big men."
LaFrentz and Pollard proved instrumental in the Jayhawks' victory against the Wildcats on Sunday.
"Lots of people have played with Kansas for a half, primarily because they get the team's best shot," Asbury said. "But that only goes up to a certain point. In the end, it boils down to talent and depth."
Kansas State men's basketball coach Tom Asbury said they wore the K-State big men down, especially in the second half.
KAYATI
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Kansas sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz battles with Kansas State's Gerald Eaker during the Hawkys' 72-62 victory Sunday.
Best of times and worst of times for Jayhawk women
The Tale of the Tape
Statistics for leaders in Big Eight women's basketball:
W-L Pts. per game Opp. pts. per game FG pct. Defense FG pct.
KANSAS 14-8 73.1 67.6 46% 40%
OKLAHOMA ST. 16-4 68.3 58.4 44.8% 40.1%
COLORADO 19-6 69.3 62 42.7% 38.5%
Women's basketball hits highs and lows in Big Eight action
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
COLUMBIA, Mo. — The Kansas women's basketball team took one giant step forward and then took one giant step backward in the Big Eight Conference race this weekend.
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
The Jayhawks lost at Missouri 86-66 yesterday, just two days after they took sole possession of first place in the Big Eight with a 67-57 win at No. 14 Colorado Friday night. Kansas is now 13-8 overall and 6-3 in the Big Eight.
The Tigers jumped on Kansas early, led by senior forward Erika Martin, who scored 17 points in the first half. Martin got to the free throw line 11 times, making nine.
Foul trouble hampered the Jayhawks most of the game. Kansas was forced to play most of the first half without the services of junior guard Tamecka Dixon and senior guard Charisse Sampson. Both picked up two fouls in the first ten minutes of the game.
With the Jayhawks' two leaders on the bench, Missouri pulled away to a 44-26 halftime lead and never looked back.
"They got 12 points from the foul line in the five."
They got 12 points from the 10 half," Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said. "You just can't let that happen."
The Jayhawks were unable to stop Martin, who finished with 26 points.
Missouri women's basketball coach Joann Rutherford said the strategy to get the ball in Martin's hands was obvious.
points."
"I told her to start taking the ball because I knew they couldn't stop her," Rutherford said. "She's too quick on the wing."
While Martin dominated on Sacrive end, Rutherford
"We weren't as rested as them, and it showed,"
Washington said the team was not able to overcome the physical and emotional fatigue from their win Friday night in Boulder. Colo.
"I look at her D more than I do the offense," Rutherford said. "She held Sampson to eight
said she was just as impressed with her player's defense.
"We weren't as rested as them, and it showed."
Marian Washington Kansas women's basketball coach
d as them, and it showed." Washington said. "We were a step behind all day."
Kansas took hold of first place with its come-from-behind triumph against the Buffaloes. After trailing by seven points at half-time, the Jayhawks took control with a 10-0 run midway through the second half.
defense and more action on the boards."
"I didn't feel we played that well in the first half," Washington said. "But we came out of the locker room with much better
Junior guard Angie Halbleib led Kansas in scoring both games with 18 against Colorado and 20 against Missouri.
Randall talks baseball at Diamond Club to pitch the upcoming Jayhawk season
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
SAMMER CAMPBELL
Bobby Randall, men's baseball coach, says a few words about the seniors at the annual Kansas Diamond Club kickoff.
Preseason event features new coach and former players
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
Fans at last night's Kansas Baseball Diamond Club preseason special got a chance to hear from a former major league baseball player who, at one point in his career,
combined with a teammate to hit 576 career home runs.
"I hit one and Harmon Killebrew hit the other 575," Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall said about himself and his Hall of Fame teammate on the Minnesota Twins.
Randall kept the mood light
annual event to allow fans to meet the team, and to sell season tickets
Kansas pitchers Josh Belovsky and Clay Baird, second baseman Josh Kliner, and catcher Ted Meadows addressed the audience, and
"I really like our baseball team this year," said Randall, who is in his first year as coach of the Jayhawks.
"They have a good work ethic, and that was one thing that was really already established here."
"I really like our baseball team this year. They have a good work ethic..."
at the event, which featured talks by Kansas baseball seniors and former major league players before a crowd of 75 fans at Hadi Auditorium in Anchors Sports Pavilion.
Bobby Randall Kansas baseball coach
The Diamond Club sponsored the
Kansas baseball.
followed the lead of their coach by talking about the coming season, and thanking the fans for their support.
Renko, who pitched for Kansas in the 1960s, was encouraged about the coming season.
The highlight of the evening came when former Kansas City Royals pitchers Steve Renko and Paul Splittorff talked about their support of
"I think that they're going in the right direction," he said. "They've got a good baseball man in coach
Randall, and I know he'll have them working hard."
Splittorff said he remains an ardent supporter of Kansas baseball.
"I still have tickets, and I'm going to try and make it up here as much as I can," he said.
Janie Splitorff, who pitched for Kansas from 1993 to 1995 and is now in the Twins organization.
For Kansas fan Cliff O'Bryhim,
Overbrook, the event was a great
chance to let his 8- and 12-year-old
sons meet their favorite players.
"The boys here really enjoy it," he said. "We have season tickets and come up as much we can.
"They've been to the camps and clinics the team puts on."
4
Jayhawks compete in Wildcat septathlon
Track members take first and sixth place at KSU invitational
By Adam Herschman Kansan sportswriter
Mike Evers, Kansas junior, took first in the event, and Travis Perret, Kansas junior, finished in sixth place.
Three Jayhaws traveled to Manhattan Friday to compete in the two-day KSU Invitational Septathlon.
Unfortunately for the Jayhawks, Nathan Prenger, Kansas junior, pulled out of the competition because of a foot injury and did not compete in the second day of the meet. He was in second place.
The Jayhawks' next meet will be at the two-day Husker Invitational Friday and Saturday in Lincoln, Neb.
"The Big Eight changed from a pentathlon to a septathlon, and we needed to get experience at the septathlon," Perret said. "It was great, probably the best competition in the Big Eight multi-wise. It just kind of shows us where we're at in the season compared to everybody else."
Kansas multi-event performers competed in the seven-event competition because of a Big Eight Conference rule change affecting the track and field indoor season.
1.
"The Husker meet is very high caliber, very high pressured type of meet," Kansas track and field coach Gary Schwartz said. "We're coming off a couple scoring meets, and next week will be something high-intensity that will be similar, like the conference stuff."
"This year it will be good because we're running Big Eight's at Nebraska, so will get used to the track,"said Nathen Hill, Kansas junior. "We'll probably have a week off, some people might go to K-State, and then we come back to Big Eight at Nebraska. It will work out really good this year."
Nebraska will also host the Big Eight Indoor Championships Feb. 23 and 24.
The Husker Meet is one of the biggest indoor meets of the season. The Jayhawks will be competing against track and field athletes from many schools, including UCLA, Louisiana State, Oklahoma, Colorado and Nebraska.
"We're all getting ready for the Cornhusker meet next weekend, and we're just going to take it easy so we can really go all out next weekend," said Lisa Beran, Kansas sophomore.
n Former Kansas distance runner and 1994 cross country All-American David Johnston won the men's 5,000-meter run at the Jayhawk Invitational last Saturday. He finished in 14:44.76.
2B
Tuesday, February 6. 1996
SCORES & MORE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
The Men's Top 25
By The Associated Press
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press college basketball ball, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Fab. 4, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote; and previous ranking:
| | Record | Pts Pts |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Massachusetts (58) | 21-10 | 1,641 1 |
| 2. Kentucky (7) | 18-1 | 1,586 1 |
| 3. Kansas | 18-1 | 1,483 3 |
| 4. Connecticut (1) | 21-1 | 1,468 3 |
| 5. Cincinnati | 17-1 | 1,398 5 |
| 6. Villanova | 18-3 | 1,300 6 |
| 7. Utah | 18-3 | 1,216 7 |
| 8. Georgetown | 19-3 | 1,176 9 |
| 9. Wake Forest | 14-3 | 1,020 12 |
| 10. Penn St. | 16-2 | 1,004 10 |
| 11. Virginia Tech | 16-2 | 976 13 |
| 12. North Carolina | 16-5 | 930 8 |
| 13. Texas Tech | 18-1 | 798 15 |
| 14. Purdue | 17-4 | 781 17 |
| 15. Memphis | 16-4 | 729 11 |
| 16. Arizona | 16-4 | 707 14 |
| 17. UCLA | 15-5 | 609 19 |
| 18. Syracuse | 16-6 | 500 18 |
| 19. Iowa | 16-6 | 275 16 |
| 20. Louisville | 16-6 | 273 — |
| 21. Iowa St. | 16-4 | 238 — |
| 22. Boston College | 13-5 | 229 21 |
| 23. Michigan | 15-7 | 174 20 |
| 24. E. Michigan | 16-2 | 137 23 |
| 25. Stanford | 16-3 | 126 — |
Other receiving staff: Arkansas 125, Washington 107, Mississippi St. 79, Wise-Green Bay 77, Auburn 58, California 51, George Washington 46, Marquette 32, Duke 21, New Mexico 17, Clemson 15, Indiana 13, Coll. of Charleston 8, Murray St. 5, Kansas St. 4, Maryland 4, South Carolina 4, N. Carolina St. 3, Michigan St. 2, Tulsa 2, Vanderbilt 2, Ark-Little Rock 1, Miss. Valley St. 1, Texas 1.
The Women's Top 25
The Top Twenty Five teams in the Associated Press' women's college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Feb. 4, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week's ranking:
| | Record | Pts Pr |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Georgia (39) | 18-2 | 998 1 |
| 2. Louisiana Tech | 19-1 | 945 2 |
| 3. Connecticut | 20-3 | 910 4 |
| 4. Stanford | 16-2 | 862 5 |
| 5. Iowa | 19-1 | 822 6 |
| 6. Tennessee (1) | 17-4 | 820 3 |
| 7. Texas Tech | 17-7 | 770 8 |
| 8. Wisconsin | 18-2 | 669 10 |
| 9. Virginia | 16-4 | 667 9 |
| 10. Old Dominion | 16-4 | 639 11 |
| 11. Vanderbilt | 16-4 | 614 7 |
| 12. Penn St. | 16-4 | 558 13 |
| 13. Alabama | 18-4 | 478 15 |
| 14. Duke | 18-4 | 443 12 |
15. N. Carolina St. 15- 5 415 14
16. Oregon St. 14- 4 357 18
17. Mississippi 15- 5 355 20
18. Clemson 15- 3 334 17
19. Colorado 19- 6 307 16
20. Florida 16- 5 248 21
21. Oklahoma St. 16- 4 166 19
22. Auburn 15- 5 112 25
23. Purdue 13- 9 96 22
24. Notre Dame 14- 5 46 —
25. Stephen F. Austin 16- 2 42 —
Other receiving votes: Arkansas 45, Northwestern 38, Middle Tenn. 32, SW Missouri St. 31, Southern Miss. 28, Montana 27, North Carolina 23, Kansas 19, Colorado St. 14, Mississippi St. 14, DePaul 13, George Washington 12, Texas AAM 11, Southern Meth. 7, Texas 4, Ohio St. 3, Villanova 3, Washington St. 3, Kent 2, Grambling St. 1, Hawthorn 1, LSU 1.
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
AT A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
| | W | L | Pct GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Orlando | 33 | 13 | .717 | — |
| New York | 29 | 16 | .636 | 4 |
| Washington | 22 | 22 | .500 | 10 |
| Miami | 21 | 26 | .435 | 13 |
| New Jersey | 18 | 27 | .400 | 14½ |
| Boston | 17 | 28 | .378 | 15½ |
| Philadelphia | 8 | 36 | .182 | 24 |
Chicago 41 4 9.911 —
Indiana 31 15 674 10½
Attanta 25 20 556 16
Cleveland 25 20 556 16
Detroit 22 21 512 18
Charlotte 21 23 477 19½
Milwaukee 16 13 372 24
Toronto 16 32 289 28
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division
| | W | L | Pct | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| San Antonio | 29 | 14 | 1.16 | — |
| Utah | 30 | 15 | 667 | — |
| Houston | 30 | 17 | 638 | 1 |
| Denver | 19 | 26 | 422 | 11 |
| Dallas | 15 | 28 | 349 | 14 |
| Minnesota | 13 | 31 | 279 | 17 |
| Vancouver | 10 | 35 | 222 | 20 |
Seattle 33 12 .733 —
Sacramento 24 17 .585 7
L.A. Lakers 26 19 .578 7
Portland 23 24 .478 11½
Phoenix 20 24 .455 12½
Golden State 20 25 .444 13
L.A. Clippers 16 29 .356 17
Sunday's Games
Indiana 90, New York 83
Orlando 122, San Antonio 109
Phoenix 123, Washington 115, OT
Live, same-day and delayed national TV, sports coverage for Tuesday (schedule subject to change and or-blackouts):
SPORTS WATCH
(All times Central)
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6
ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball, Rhode
6 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball, Providence at Connecticut
6:30 p.m
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Indiana
7 p.m.
TNT — NBA Basketball, Chicago at Shooter
8 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball, Maryland
8:30 a.m.
9 p.m.
ESPN NCAA Basketball.
USA — Boxing, champion Lonnie Bradley (20-2-0) vs. Randy Smith (16-1-3) for WBO middleweight championship; heavyweights, Alex Stewart (38-5-0) vs. opponent TBA, at New York
Atlanta 106 Charlotte 104
Denver 105, Chicago 99
L.A. Lakers 110, Utah 103
Golden State 96, New Jersey 92
Monday'a Games
Portland 90, Toronto 87
New York 97, Detroit 91
Miami 103, Sacramento 92
Minnesota 104, Dallas 92
Utah at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
Golden State at A.L. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.
at 2 LAT. Clippers, 9:50 p.m.
Tuesday's Games
Sacramento at Orlando 6:30 p.m.
San Antonio at Charlotte 6:30 p.m.
Boston at Cleveland 6:30 p.m.
Chicago at Phoenix, 7 p.m.
Dallas at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Denver, 8 p.m.
Houston at Seattle, 9 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Milwaukee at Toronto, 6 p.m.
San Antonio at Boston, 6:30 p.m.
Washington at New York, 6:30 p.m.
Indiana at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Miami, 6:30 p.m.
Orlando at Detroit, 7 p.m.
Portland at Minnesota, 7 p.m.
Vancouver at Utah, 8 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.
New Jersey at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.
Chicago at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.
INTRAMURALS
INTRAMURALPOLLS
JOCK NITCH'S MEN'S TOP 20
JOCK NITCH'S MEN'S TOP 20
Team Result
1. Phi Delt I W,76-22 Fiji 2
2. U Bet idle
3. Aerial Display W,101-44, Rob Cobins'
4. Savy Veterans W,81-48, Screaming Beaqs
5. Phi Pai W,73-17 AKL 3
6. Up Yours W,78-40, Army Rotc
7. Pike W,forfeit
8. Dream Team W,74-27 BSKUL
9. The Scott Ward's W,89-39 Slow Boys
10. Sigma Chi W,68-36 Kaup Si Wh
HASTINGS' WOMEN'S TOP FIVE
1. 4U2NV idle
2. Alpha Gamma Delta idle
3. Tri Delt W, 43-10, Alpha Chi
4. Alpha Delta Pi W, 29-17, Sig Kap
5. KUVB idle
NEWS AND NOTES
Several hundred tickets will go on sale this morning for the Kansas versus Nebraska men's basketball game on Monday, Feb. 19. The game will be part of ESPN Big Monday with tin off scheduled for B-35 n m.
A few tickets remain for the Feb. 7 Iowa State vs. Kansas game and the Feb. 14 Colorado game. Both games have 7:05 starting times.
Tickets are $20 and there is a limit of four per individual. Tickets may be purchased by calling 1-800-HAWKS or (913) 864-3141. Fans may also buy tickets in person at the Kansas Athletic Ticket Office in the east lobby of Allen Field House.
Yesterday former Pittsburgh Steelers offensive coordinator Ron Erhardt was named offensive coordinator for the New York Jets.
National Hockey League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All times CTST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
PRO HOCKEY
| | W L | T L | Pt Ts | GF GA | 142 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Florida | 32 14 | 14 | 70 | 182 | 142 |
| N.Y. Rangers | 30 12 | 10 10 | 70 | 189 | 146 |
| Philadelphia | 26 14 | 14 11 | 63 | 179 | 134 |
| Washington | 25 21 | 5 | 55 | 145 | 134 |
| New Jersey | 23 23 | 6 | 52 | 133 | 128 |
| Tampa Bay | 22 21 | 7 | 51 | 151 | 165 |
| N.Y. Islands | 14 28 | 8 | 51 | 165 | 192 |
| | W | L | T Pts | GF | GA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Detroit | 38 | 9 | 4 | 76 | 104 |
| Chicago | 29 | 15 | 11 | 67 | 184 | 143 |
| Toronto | 22 | 19 | 6 | 124 | 143 |
| St. Louis | 21 | 21 | 9 | 51 | 138 | 143 |
| Winnipeg | 21 | 26 | 4 | 46 | 178 | 189 |
| Dallas | 24 | 16 | 11 | 39 | 140 | 177 |
Colorado 28 15 19 9 65 204 144
Vancouver 19 10 23 11 65 104 175
Calgary 19 23 10 48 150 159
Los Angeles 17 24 12 46 178 187
Edmonton 18 26 6 42 135 190
Anaheim 18 29 5 41 145 175
San Jose 11 36 5 27 160 233
Detroit 3, Pittsburgh 0
Philadelphia 7, St Louis 1
Colorado 7, N.Y. Rangers 1
Chicago 4, San Jose 1
Florida 5, Tampa Bay 3
Boston 4, Buffalo 2
New Jersey 3, Ottawa 2, OT
Washington 6, N.Y. Islanders 5, OT
Montreal 4, Toronto 1
Calgary 2, Los Angeles 1
Sunday's Games
Tampa Bay 5, Buffalo 2
Vancouver Bay 5, St. Brule 2
Vancouver 4, Winnipeg 2
N.Y. Islanders 5, Dallas 3
Chicago 4, Atlanta 3
Monday's Games
Montreal at Colorado, 8 p.m.
Toronto at San Jose, 9:30 p.m.
Tuesday's Games
Boston at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at N.Y. Islanders, 6:30 p.m.
Florida at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.
Dallas at St. Louis, 7:30 p.m.
Ottawa at Calgary, 8:30 p.m.
Chicago at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS
By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League
BASKETBALL
CHICAGO WHITE SHOE —Agreed to terms with Kevin Tapani, pitcher, on a one-year contract.
ORLANDO MAGIC—Activated Jon Konslair, center from the injured list, placed Jeff Riess, left, on guard.
FOOTBALL National Football League
Arena Football League
OAKLAND RADERS--Named Rusty Tillman
special needs coach
FLORIDA BOBCATS—Signed D'Antoni Grayer, defensive specialist.
ARIZONA RATTLERS—Anounced the retirement of Greg McClellan, wide receiver-defensive back. Signed Carlos Anderson, defensive specialist.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
NHL—Suspended Montreal center Marc Buresu five games and fired him $1,000 for elbowing Philadelphia defenseman Petr Svoboda on Thursday.
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS—Recalled J.F. Jomphe and Jim Campbell, forwards, from Baltimore of the AHL.
KARAOSE HARSHERS - Sanit Vitality™
KARAOSE HARSHERS - KATKAN USAMI
KARAOSE HARSHERS
American Hockey League
ALBANY RIVER RATS—Recalled Mark Strobel, defenseman, from Raleigh of the ECHL.
ADIRONDACK RED WINGS—Recalled Sylvain Cloutier, forward, from Toledo of the ECHL.
FREDERICTON CANADIENS—Sent Tomas Vokoun, goaltender, to Wheeling of the ECHL.
East Coast Hockey League
LACROSS COURT HOCKEYS League
CHARLOTTE CHECKERS—Added Pat
LaRose, defensman, to the roster.
ERIE PANTHERS—Added Ben Glenn
RALEIGH ICECAPS—Activated Spencer
ERIE PANTHERS -Added Ben Glauner,
forward, to the roster.
Meany, forward, from injured reserve.
RICHMOND REDENAGES - Released
Andy Davis, goaltender.
WHEELING THUNDERBIRDS—Released Rocky Bragg, goaltender
Major League Soccer
MLS - Assigned Brian Bliss, defender, and Adrian Paz, forward, to the Columbus Crew
COLLEGE
ORGINA SOUTHERN - Announcer
Cliett, forward, has left the basketball team.
IOWA - Extended the contract of Hayden Fry, football coach, through June 30, 2000.
BLUEPRINTS
“Drafting New Visions”
Saturday, February 17, 1996
Registration information available in the QAC
864-4861
Spring Break '96
Hey, University of Kansas, Emporia State University, Kansas State, Wichita State University, and Fort Hays State University, why not head to the tropics for break this year, where the weather is fine and the party never stops!
Cancun
Trips starting at;
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- Round Trip Air & 7 Nights Hotel Accommodations
* V.I.P. On-site Party Program
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COLLEGE TOURS
Call for details 1-800-244-4463
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 6, 1996
3B
Six stars shoot their way into the Basketball Hall of Fame
Tarkanian snubbed despite holding the best winning record of any college coach
Associated Press
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — George Gervin and David Thompson, two of the game's most prolific scorers, were elected yesterday to the Basketball Hall of Fame.
But Jerry Tarkanian, who has the best winning percentage of any college coach, fell short. He didn't get the 18 votes needed from the Honors Committee.
Also elected were Gail Goodrich
Nancy Lieberman-Cline, George
Yardley and the late Kresimir Cosic.
Tarkanian's 83-percent success rate in 25 years at Long Beach State, UNLV and now Fresno State is rivaled only by his run-ins with the NCAA about recruiting and other alleged violations.
Yardley, whose nickname was "The Bird," became the first player in NBA history to score more than 2,000 points in a season in 1957. He scored 2,001 for the Pistons.
Twenty years later, Gervin, playing for the San Antonio Spurs, scored more than 2,000 points in six consecutive seasons.
On April 9, 1978, the battle for the league scoring title came down to Gervin and Thompson. On the last day of the season, Thompson, of the Denver Nuggets, put up 73 points to take the lead. But Gervin scored 63 in a night game to take the first of his four NBA scoring titles.
"This is the ultimate in athletics," Gervin said. "It's truly an honor to be going in with David. We had quite a few battles."
Thompson and Gervin also had problems off the court.
Gervin, who averaged 26.2 points during his 14 seasons in the ABA and NBA, turned pro after losing his college scholarship for slugging an opponent in an NCAA tournament game. Later, while with the Spurs, he entered a drug rehabilitation program.
"Overcoming that addiction is the Hall of Fame in itself." Gervin said.
The acrobatic Thompson, who led North Carolina State against UCLA and Bill Walton on the way to the 1974 NCAA championship, also fell prey to cocaine as a pro. At the height of his drug problems, he spent time at a prison camp for beating his wife.
Both now run programs aimed at helping disadvantaged youngsters, Gervin in San Antonio and Thompson in North Carolina.
Goodrich led UCLA to its first titles under coach John Wooden in 1964 and 1965, then he went on to star with the Los Angeles Lakers.
"It's humbling," Goodrich said of his election. "I reflect back when I was a kid starting to play ... the hours and hours of practice and the fun."
Goodrich said he would ask Wooden to be a presenter at induction ceremonies May 6.
"Coach Wooden saw something in me as a little high school kid," Goodrich said. "He had confidence that if this little kid grows, he can play ... others didn't think so."
Lieberman-Cline, an Olympic silver medal winner at age 17, led Old Dominion's women's team to two national championships. She then became the first woman to play in a men's professional league with the Springfield Fame of the United States Basketball League.
She saw her election as the recognition of a new, more bruising style of women's basketball that is closer to the men's game. She said she had learned her approach to the game in the schoolwards of New York.
"Growing up in New York, it was a style that I knew, being physical and aggressive," she said.
Cosic, a 6-foot-11 center from Croatia, starred for Brigham Young in the early 1970s before returning to Europe. He won a gold medal at the 1980 Olympics with the former Yugoslavian national team.
When civil war erupted in his country, he quit his basketball career and served in Washington as a deputy ambassador to the United States. He died of cancer last May 25. He was 46.
"Lionarried since 1980
Also nominated as players were Dick Barnett, Roger Brown, Jo Joe White, Dennis Johnson, Larry Costello, Artis Glimore, Jamaal Wilkes and Arnie Risen.
Also nominated as coaches were Don Haskins of Texas-El Paso, Guy Lewis of Houston, Tex Winter, who coached in both the pro leagues and college, and Antonio Dias-Miguel, who guided Spain's national team for 27 years.
Carol Eckman, who started the first women's national collegiate tournament in 1969, was nominated as a contributor.
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❤
the Actives
An Installation by Justin Baldwin
Ascending To Balance
Mon., Feb. 5 - Fri., Feb. 16th
Kansas Union Gallery - Level 4
Gallery Hours
Mon. - Sat. 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Sun. 12 p.m. - 4 p.m
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
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BODY BOUTIQUE
Food and thinness shouldn't be an obsession.
864-9575. There is a minimal fee for each dietitian visit. Call for details.
HEALTH Since 1906 Watkins Caring For KU CENTER
a part of Eating Disorders Awareness Week
For more information:
Counseling & Psychological Services 864-2277 or Health Promotion & Education 864-9570
The Women's Fitness Facility
$20 per month
VIP Membership
expires 2-15-96
Call for details 749-2424
Eating concerns are a serious matter. If you have questions about food, eating patterns, or weight loss/gain/maintenance—make an appointment with Ann Chapman, Watkins Dietitian at
864-9500
- Yoga
- Lifecycles
Lecture and Video — 2:00-3:00 p.m.
Anonymous Eating Disorder Screenings
for KU students - 3:00-5:00 p.m.
OPEN TIL 10 PM
- Treadmills
Eating Disorders Information Program
Classes
- Stair
Body
Thursday, February 8; 2:00-5:00 p.m.
Watkins Health Center
1st Floor Conference Room
For more information:
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APPLICATION DEADLINE: Friday February 9th at 5PM
Check out the Senate Homepage on the WWW @ : http://ukanaix.cc.ukans.udu/~senate/senate.html
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Tuesday, February 6, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Horoscopes
Today's Birthday (Feb. 6). A plan you're formulating now requires action in March. Restate your love then, too. A tough problem in July could cause you to work overtime. You'll be stronger once that's finished. Get expert help with a financial matter in September. If you're debt-free, you may qualify for what you want then. Clean up an old misunderstanding in December.
By Linda C. Black
Aries (March 21-April 19).
There's a big job to be done, and you may get to do it. Remember to play your part exactly the way it was rehearsed. A group of friends will be relaxing and informative tonight.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Reconsider an option you've been
resisting. A compromise now
could result in more security later.
Take your sweetheart out to visit
friends tonight, but get home early.
Gemini (May 21-June 21).
You'll have to listen with your
heart this morning to hear an older person's unspoken request. Travel may be in your near future, but there's something at home to be handled first. Make plans, while taking care of your other responsibilities.
Cancer (June 22-July 22).
You'll learn new material easily today, but you may not know everything yet. A partner can help you solve a problem this morning.
Let people know what you're working on, so one of them can offer to help.
Leo (Lily 23-Aug. 22). Don't use your best arguments today, even if you think up some pretty good ones. It's more important to get the job done quickly. Also, do whatever's necessary to keep things squeaky clean. If you want a new toy or component, shop for it later tonight.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
Things could move fast today, but you should be able to handle whatever happens. If you can't do a new procedure perfectly yet, don't worry. It'll be easier if you relax.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).
Although you may not agree with a perfectionist, now is not the time to argue. After all, he or she is perfect. Try reading upside-down, while you're in the shower, but don't get the pages wet.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
Make a bold move in business or education. Luck will be on your side. That, and a little help from your friends, should get you there.
At home, however, there may be a problem. Your roommate may want to discuss an issue you'd just as soon ignore.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
If you're under pressure to get better organized, stop arguing. A new electronic gadget might make it fun. This is a good time to learn how to use one. Your sweetheart might be worried about impending changes.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan 19). Be prepared to move quickly today. You can justify your actions after you win the prize. If you need to discuss sensitive details, a visit might be required. Sometimes a phone call alone just won't do it.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
If you're doing anything that involves another person's money, get your accounting straight. You could be asked about it soon, and you'll look better if you know the answers. Money may be a little tight, but buy something your sweetheart wants.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20).
Get together today with a person you respect and admire. The two of you might be able to accomplish a goal that's too big for either of you alone. If you're under pressure to change, you may have to comply.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
Dilbert
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Take the first step toward your future as an independent health care professional. Write for a free admissions packet, or call toll-free. Financial aid is available.
training Doctors of Chiropractic since 1922, and there has never been a better time than now to join this growing profession.
Attention Juniors (and first semester seniors)
Information sheets for membership in Mortar Board, a highly respected senior honor society, are available in 50 Strong Hall, the OAC, and Numemaker. A 3.0 cumulative GPA is required. Deadline for return of information sheets is Friday, February 9, 1996 at 5 p.m.
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POLLO-ESPINACANACHOS
Learn to Fly 842-0000
A boneless, skinless chicken breast is diced and grilled, then spread on corn tortillas over beans and creamy spinach, with cheddar and Monterey Jack
cheeses melted on top!
$6.95
Classified Directory
1
1.10 Business Personale
1.20 Announcements
1.30 Entertainment
1.40 Lost and Found
100s Announcements
男士 女士
105 Personals
200s Employment
X
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Servi-
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
310 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
105 Personals
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
...
100s Announcements
I
SPRING BREAKS 'HOTTEST TRIPS'
CANCUN-SOUTIED PADRE ISLAND - BELIZE
1-800-728-7513
http://www.studentadtravt.com
Call Tlarmi @ 838-8039
FREE FOOD & DRINK BACKAGES FOR EARLY
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
110 Business Personals
HEALTHY
Watkins
Since 1906
Caring For KU
We loan cash on almost anything of value, CD a, VCRS, TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence's most liberal loan company, JAHWK APAWN & JEWELRY W 8th. G 6b-179-10
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
120 Announcements
NEED A RIDE/BIDE? USE the Selfserve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kanaus Union.
Classified Policy
4. 75 wash ALL DAY EVERY DAY. Independent Laundromat - 29th and Iowa. ( Across the street from Dairy Queen).
Spring break specials, Caribbean and Jamaican! 11% lower
price given room, night air and hotel from $429.00
or more.
http://www.springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386
Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise 7 days # 782-
Includes 15 meals an 16 dives free! Great beach!
night life! Leaves from FI. Landalandra. http://www.
springbreakravel.fi/48-678-6838.
Spring Break Panama City City $8 days, room w/kitchen,
$119.10 Walk to best bed *7 nights in Key West, $259.00*
Cocos Beach Hilton (great beaches, near Disney),
$349.00 springbreak travel.com/springbreaktravel.com
$1,699.00 springbreak travel.com/springbreaktravel.com
Women's Transitional Care Services (WTCS), the battered women's shelter, is helping two informational sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training. Feb. 8 at 7:00 p.m. and Feb. 10 at 10:00 a.m. Both will be held at Plymouth Congregation Church 253, Vernon Lawrence. For more information, call WTCS at (913) 843-3333.
HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center
All real estate subject in this newspaper is subjected to the Federal Filing Act of 1985 which makes it illegal to advertise any 'requirement, color or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status or any other such factor to make any such permission, limitation or discrimination.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
24 hrs. Free
MILITARIA SHOW & SALE
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
FEBRUARY 11, 1996
AMERICAN LEGION HALL
4TH & SENECA
LEAVENWorth, KANSAS
LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS
ALL TYPES OF MILITARIA
ANCIENT BOME
TO DESERT STORM
COLLECTIBLES/PRINTS/BOOKS
ADMISSION $ 1.00
The Kenan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, gender, age, race, color, creed, religion, education, nationality or disability. Further, the Kenan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
120 Announcements
kutbook.co.uk.ucus/cwis/unitss/sydfacts/upecfet/upe_
main.html
SPRING BREAK Panama City Beach Florida From $99
Per Person Week, 15% Off. Huge Benefit Hot
Shoes!
Spring Career and Employment Fair Fri. 7/16, 10am to 3pm, KS Union Ballroom. Buf. 95 employer. PT, FT, summer jobs and internships. All majors must have contact information. University Place Center at 2405 West 26th Street.
Graduating in May 7? Look for a job or be both? Then you should be signing up for interviews at the University Placement Center. Visit with reps from summa-college, public interest research, search, etc. Find out how to apply to UPC at 843-6434, or visit us at the Burge Union, Level One. Don't delay. Deadlines are approaching. Oh, by the way, the complete interview schedule on the Internet at: www.edu.cuny.edu/science/faceuptop facts/OC.html
SPRING IS SINN OVEN NEWS IN HOURS BREAK
COMPLETE B. 7 WORK SESSION
http://www.sunshake.com
KEY WEST
STEAM BOAT
VAIL BEAVER CREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY REACH
DAYTONA ILEACH
AFFORDABLE
$69
15th
Sellbut
Year!
PARTY
1-800-SUNCHASE
Free party room for 20-200 at Johnny's. 842-0377
MIREACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale starting at $9.98 and
1810 Haskell, 841-7504
130Entertainment
Spring Break 1990
TRAVEL FREE !!
Jamaca, Cancun, Bahamas
Panama City, Daytona, Padre
** Great low, low prices
** Free Trip on only 15 sales
Call for a FREE
information packet!
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-426-7710
Spring Break 1996
TRAVEL FREE!!
电话
Male and Female
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
NEEDED 42 PEOPLE to lose weight now! Guaranteed!
100% Natural 1-800-293-627 ext. 3235.
Teaching Amt. needed part-time at early intervention program. Call Brook Creek Learning Center 605-0223.
Seeking high energy individual for branch office.
Positive attitude required, flexible schedule. 841.082
Lawrence resident want to employ a person from Chile, Argentina, or Ecuador to engage in conversation in Spanish two hours a week. Call Mariage at 843-4813. Long term, part-time, multi-task oriented aid for childcare. Experience and/or enthusiasm required. Mostly an沪人. Phone 842-1851.
NEEDED:
Female personal attendant for female quadriplicate CNA preferred but not required. B65-081-651.
Overweight males between 18 and 40 y.o. are needed.
$80 will be included for participation.
$30 will be included for participation.
Weekend news reporter for KLWN/KLZR. Prior experi-
ence required. Tape and resume to Barb Quinn, P.O. Box
3007, Lawrence, KS 60046.
Gymnastics instruction needed now for boys and girls classes at RC Gym (shoot 40m from Lawrence). Parttime in AM and Pm. Call Eagles Gymnastics. (818) 941-9620.
Highly motivated students with ear. Deliver and post files for large advertising company. Flexible work great plus bonus. Inquire. Chita Looney 1-800-494-1230 code 0931.
Spirit Industries, Inc., a national sportwear company has an immediate opening for an experienced printer. Full or part-time available. Apply M-F-9.6 - 1021 E.318 S. or 748-6868.
SPRING BREAK WOES?
NO FUNDS? NO FUN!
MarketingTraining Co. Seeks Sindiv, needing
some extra cash. Flexible hourly (913) 845-8350
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 6, 1996
205 Help Wanted
Female student needed for occupational baby sitting, $5
/hr. for two, well-mannered girls ages 10 and 2 1/2. Call
Benee at 810-8100.
Int'l Marketing Co. seeks ambitions, 86 motivated
individuals to work as an entry level availabl-
able ind. for appls. mail (913) 842-5888.
SUCCESS101
University Photography is seeking time-part photo
rangers. Individuals must be outgoing. Weekend work
definite. No experience necessary. Contact Tom
between 11 and 6 p.m. Friday 843-8579.
Economist/Research Assistant, B.A. M.F., A.C.E. P, or T.P. for consulting firm. Strong computer skills in databases and sheetless sheets required. Send resume attention FAX 516-284-3971, 201, Overstreet Park, RS 66214. No Phone calls please.
INSTANT CASH!
*Flexible Schedule *Extra Income *Training
*Rapid Advancement opportunity
*Training
FRUSTRATED?
I received 2 degrees after 5 1/2 years of college and when it hit the "real world" I made 4.58 Now I'm being trained to bear 3k a month. If you're ready for a change call 913-643-4410.
Positionism open, Great jobs for students; telephone funding for SADD (Students Against Driving Drunk). We work early evening and Sat. mornings, 4hr plus time. Call 849-3510 apply to MGs Mass. Suite B.
Graduating Seniors - Hancock Financial Services is looking for professional individuals for their marketing training program, which is specifically designed to meet their needs. Call院源result to: 6000 College Bldd. #1000, Overland Park, KS 6213, Attn: Paul Swendlb 813-344-9000
Student Driver Positions available for the Spring Semester to drive physical disabled students to class. Must have a valid U.S. driver license and good driving record. Ski to twelve hours per week, 45.50hr. Application deadline February 9. Apply at Facilities Operation office. 864-5066
CAMP OZARK, Christian Sports and Adventure Camp
- Seeking qualified coaches to work with boys and girls ages 8-16. Employment terms for all or part of the summer. If interested remotely, come to our KU informational center on Tuesday, p.m., Thursday, February 8 at Monaco Union Room 807. Boosted. Mount Ida, IL (451) 867-4131.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys & girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, seaining, waterkilling, gymnastics, rifley, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping, crafts, dramas, or music, instruments, maintenance, HABITats 1309 or more plus R & B. Camp C/W/G/CW, 1365 Magpie, Ml. 61003 849-464-2444
CAMP COUNSELORS Join the adventure and share the memories at SUMMER CAMP!
share the memories at land and sea.
ranked 1st in PA need experienced
land and sand lands. *Wilda Life*
Guard, Tennis, Arts and more! 2 hours from NC. Call 215-8790-4790 or write 151 Washington Lane.
Waterfront Jobs
W. S.I. - summer camp营 - northwest - teach children to swim, coach swim team, water, dive (sailboat), board, landry, travel allowance. Call 1-800-839-894 or write: Camp Vega for girls, PC Box 1717. Duxbury, MA 02533. We will be on campus. Rate is $10 per person. Regionalist in K union. No appointment necessary.
**STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN** Deadline: 19/04/1999 $169.99 Salary
*A 48-hour, M-F, 5-days休假! Requires balancing and accrediting assembling and maintaining function cases; vascular撕裂 function cases; ancecting airship stacking and storing in inventory figures library tapes; library data entry; data archiving and maintenance issues; maintenance assistance in Open Library Pursuit maintenance performance data in conjunction with campus wide recycle programs; use personal computer or software台件 as part of required training; and maintain the Campus Center in room 2003 ROAD EMPLOYEE
500 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES IN NY, PA.
NEW ENGLAND.
Academic Advisor sought for KU School of Education Math & Science Center. Salary $2,200.00 to $2,300.00 Must have a bachelor's degree in education, counseling, or related field, an experience working with high school/ first year college students in an admissibility career. Deadline: May 18, 2016. Description and list of requirements, contact Karly Hepert at (913) 864-3848. KU is an equal opportunity/affirmative employment employer.
Choose from over 30 camp. Instructors need: Tennis, Baseball, Rocky Rollerball, Soccer, LaCrosse, softball, Volleyball, Balleroy, PE Majors, Gymnastics, lifeguard, Lifesail, WWS water-skiing, Windsurfing, Fitness, Archery, Mountain Biking, Pioneering, Rock Climbing, Water Polo, Cranium Artistry, Stained Glass, Jewelry, Wood-Working, Photography, Radio, Nature, RN's, Chef, Food Service. Call Asher: 516-433-8033
Financially
Career
Environment
Marketing co. looking for
the right individual who
can speak English
ARE YOU READY FOR A CHANGE?
WANTED:Free-Jance Artists and Jewelry Makers
Sampler Stores, Inc. is seeking talented artists to design both serious and humorous full chest and left pocket designs for T- shirts, polaris and swashstains using a KU Jahway, "Kansas," Wizard of Oz, sunflower, or similar theme. Embroidered and silk screen designs by Catherine Gale are also welcome and charms and molds feature these same colors. In order, call 912-432-3555 10 AM 8 PM or email message on our voice mail, 912-381-8185.
**STUDENT CLEERICAL ASSISTANT** Deadline: 02/04/19. Salary: $450 - $650 / hour. Duties include assisting in invoicing, mailing a filing of Computer Center billing; assists with sales of Terminal Server accounts; makes daily deposits; recording microcomputer workshop registrations/performing receptionist duties on a fill-in basis and miscellaneous Business office duties. Must be enrolled in the at the University level of complete job applications in Room 302 of the Computer Center EO / AA EMPLOYER.
205 Help Wanted
Time part Cedar Hill Gun Club employee needed for Thursday afternoons and occasional Sundays.
PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN MASSACHUSETTS
Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Rolley Rockey, Gymnastics, Field Hockey, Soccer, Volleyball, 30 Teams openings; also participation in Golf, Swimming, Rockets and Rock Climbing, Weightlessness and Cycling other openings including Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Picture Skating, Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Bookstation, Cooking, Sewing, and Rockets All Water/Pool Activation (Swimming, Skating, Winding泳池,游泳,滑水,绕水,操场,board,旅游 June 18th August 17th.
**inquire**
MAH-KEE-NAC (Boys): 1:800-753-0118
DANEER (Girls): 1:800-392-3752
SUMMERJOBS
Female counselors for children's camp northeast/top salary, rm04/daundry travel allowance. Must have skill in one of the following activities: archery, arts & crafts, ballet, dance, gymnastics, balloon, bowling dancing, apache pole, jazz, modern jazz, drama, field hockey, golf, gymnastics (instructors or qualified staff), horseback riding-hunt-seat, lacrosse, nature, photography, videographer, piano accompanist, pioneer camp crews, rope (murtenter climbing), horseback riding-walking, w.a.i.w instructors, windsurfing. Also opportunities for kitchen cooks, maintenance, nurses, secretaries. call 1-800-838-gua or write: Camp Vega for girls, PO box 171, Duxbury, MA 05238. We will be on call Monday through Saturday. Email us & Regional in Kelson. No appointment necessary.
AMERICA'S PREMIREFRE SPORTS CAMPUS
WINADU FOR ROYS/DANBEE FOR GIRLS
OVER 100 POSITIONS AVAILABLE
All Land and Water Sports, Arts and Crafts,
Fine Arts, Dance, Yoga, Gymnastics, Woodshop,
Ice and Rocker Hockey, Watersports, WIS's, and more!!!
No Previews Experience Required
Top salaries Room and Board, and Travel Allowance
ON CAMPUS INFO AND INTERVIEWS
DATE: FEBRUARY 28-29, 1996
OFFICE: 735 NASHVILLE ROAD
PLACE KANSAS UNION BUILDING
FEB. 28: INFOTABLE FEB. 29: READ AND REGION
ALIST ROOMS
205 Help Wanted
Men Call:
1-800-494-6238
CAMP WINADU
Women Call:
1-800-392-3752
CAMP DANBEE
Juicers
Shrewgirls
Why work
Apply in person after 7:30 Tues-Sat
Call 841-4122 or 1-800-323-6117 Ask for Pat
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
Do donation your life sustain blood donors
WALK-INS WELCOME!
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
Bare Music Lessons. Now at Waltney's music. Call 913-8242-5483. Ask for Bottleneck Jenkins.
Carol Brown Electrolysis Safe, effective and permanent removal of hair conveniently at 10 E. Ninth St. 865-4255
DUI/TRAFFIC/CIMINAL
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R.GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964
--available immediately 1 bedroom in 4 bedroom duplex.
$187.50 per month plus utilities. Upper classman male preferred. Close to campus. 749-4303.
Need Help With Your Research Project?
Kelley Data Analysis and Consulting specializes in:
Complete statistical analysis of results, SPSS graphs and tables, and test and design. Lowest rates in Adoptera, Topopea X.
(913) 887-6307 (local call)
E-mail red4pag@aol.com
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI's
Fake D.I. & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th
842-1133
205 Help Wanted
BASEBALL
Soccer Boot
CAMP WINADU FOR BOYS &
CAMP DANBEE FOR GIRLS
TWO OF AMERICA'S PREMIER SUMMER CAMPS;
A GREAT SUMMER EXPERIENCE
HUNDREDS OF STAFF POSITIONS ARE OPEN FOR ALL LAND AND WATER SPORTS AS WELL AS SPECIALTY AREAS SUCH AS VIDEO, DRAMA, DANCE, HORSEBACK RIDING, WOODSHOP AND CRAFTS.
225 Professional Services
A REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE AT THE SUMMER JOB FAIR FEB. 7TH TO ANSWER QUESTIONS!
*Professional Writing
*Cover Letters
*Consultation
Linda Morton, Certified Professional Resumé Writer
PHYS. ED., EDUCATION AND OUTDOOR REC. MAJORS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. THIS IS A GREAT RESUME BUILDER!! COME WORK WITH THE BEST.
Call Jacka @ 465-885-3951 for applications, term papers,
thoughts, diathesis, transcription etc. Satisfaction
will be guaranteed.
X
RESUMES
235 Typing Services
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
SUMMER CAMP COUNSELOR POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT MASSACHUSETTS **SPORTS** CAMPS
King size mattress set. New. Retail price $699.00, will sell for $379.98-679.98
AA Full size mattresses set. New, never used, 8tlp in plastic.
Brand headboard for $10.00 or $10.00. Brass headboard
$79.99 or $99.99.
TRANSCRIPTIONS
842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite 201
A Member of
PA RW
Professional Association of
Resume Writers
FOR SALE Macrosoft IMC with image and software,
$100 or best offer. Call BS21.200 and leave
message.
Light table with gliderlizer $100.00 Artwaxer $60.00 Call 897-607
Honda Accord LXI, 1988 model, automatic,
good condition. For sale 86,000. Please
contact Jancee at 841-8599.
Hayes Optima 2400 bpi mode. Mac Software and
cables included. $ 5.000. Yamaha PortaSound mini keyboard, 49 preset sounds, 10 rhythms - $ 50.00. Call 841-7497.
400s Real Estate
Quality beds, tables, and dressers. If interested call Janice
at 81-16509.
GOLF CENTRAL
FOR MORE INFO CALL:
1- 800-4-WINADU
Powerbook 100% WS
With internal modem & stylewriter
$1200 or best offer call 749-9388
Wanted: 100 Students to Bust- 8 Low 120 bx. New Metabolism Breakthrough, Guarantee Result: 8 bx. 1-800-000-7640
AA Queen size mattress set, new. never used. Sill in plastic.
Rental Price $689.00 or for $105.00
Available Wednesdays through Fridays.
Out of state alumna need two for Nebraska籍
Please call Dawn at (503) 472-6518
(503) 472-6518 or (503) 472-6519
Fast Fundraiser : Raise $ 800 in 5 Days - Greets, Groups,
Past Fundraiser : Easy $ 350 - Easy - No Financial
Obligation (800) 901-1062
370 Want to Buy
360 Miscellaneous
1/2块 from campus, studio apartment $ 310.00
month, all utilities included. Bk64-764-74
405 For Rent
NO PREVIOUS CAMP EXPERIENCE IS NEEDED
AT MASSACHUSETTS SPORTE WE OFFER SALARY + ROOM/BOARD AND TRAVEL! LOOKING FOR CARING STAFF
2 bedroom apartment for sub-laundry. $490/month. Cable
paid. Pipingless, dishwasher, balcony. On KU bus route.
Cheapest prices.
For More Info: 841-7849
Located at 4501 Wimbledon Dr.
1
Leanna Mar Townhomes
405 For Rent
Washer/Dryer Microwave Dishwasher Gas Fireplace Trash Compactor Table Pad PAD Compactor Bed Cabinet Ceiling Fans in All Bedrooms
Now Leasing for June & August 4 Bedrooms/3 Bath Featuring:
Shannon Plaza Apartments & Townhomes 2 & 3 bedroom townhouses immediately Ask about our specials Call 841-7726
Across the street from the Glass Ordn. $375/month.
water paid. Call Damon at 854-2984. February rent paid.
Available immediately. 3 Bedroom, unfurnished apartment. 1/2 block from KU. $700 per room. Oread Heights 1440, Indiana 842, 706-708
Lorimar Townhomes
Now Leasing For June & August
1,2, & 3 Bedrooms
Includes:
205. Help Wanted
Washer/Dryer Fireplace
Dishwash Cable Paid
Microwave Back Patio
For Appointment: 841-7849
Located at 3801 Clinton Pkwy
EDDINGHAM PLACE
--available immediately 1 bedroom in 4 bedroom duplex.
$187.50 per month plus utilities. Upper classman male preferred. Close to campus. 749-4303.
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Exercise weight room
- Swimming pool
- Laundry room
- Energy Efficient
- Fireplace
- Daily 3:30-5:00
- Professionally managed by
- On site management
KVM 808 W.24th
841-6080
841-5444
KVM
OPEN: MON-FRI- 8-5:30.
SAT- 10-4.
SUN 1-4
We have a few great apartments from furnished studios to three bedroom townhomes available.
STILL LOOKING?
- Convenient to shopping and restaurants.
- Walking distance to KU and on bus route.
- Washer/Dryer hook-ups and fireplaces.
- We are also accepting reservations for fall!
- Garages and carports available.
MEADOWBROOK APARTMENTS
205 Help Wanted
15TH & CRESTLINE
842-4200
*
PART TIME JOBS
HPS
PRODUCING SYSTEMS
WORK OUT WITH US
EARN TUITION ASSISTANCE $$
IRPIS
ROOMWAY PACKAGE SYSTEM
- Load/unload packages
Up to $8.75 after 30 days with tuition assistance
- 20 minutes from KU in Western Shawnee
- 4 shifts to choose from ( up to 5 hrs)
- No weekends
- Representatives will be on campusTue, Feb 6 at the Burge Union
- Earn up to $ 9.75 after 1 year
10 am-2 pm
Sign up for an interview in the Burge Union Feb.6 or call 913-321-4410
Two bobapt臣. PETS ACCEPTS (no weight limit on log). DW, 1.5 lb. Two story available March 1. Call
RPS is an EOE, Affirmative Action Employer, Females & minorities are encouraged to apply
405 For Rent
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7TH & FLORIDA
NOWLEASING FOR SPRING
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
FOUR BEDROOM-
ASK ABOUT
Our Three Person Special
$690 and Up
Pool and Clubhouse
E.H.O.
841-5255
MASTERCRAFT
Offers
Completely Furnished
Studio,1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Large 3 bedroom apt. and studio apt.
in remodeled house near KU.
Call 841-8254
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Regents Court Campus Place
19th & Mass. 1145 Louisiana
749-0445 841-1429
Sundance Orchard Corners
7th & Florida 15th & Kasold
841-5255 749-4226
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
405 For Rent
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400 Tenn. a member, student housing intensive. Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation, democratic control. Rm. 1228. Office: 529-637-8540, closet Cloe Store & Campus & Maen. Call or stop by 814-0484.
Fall Leases
1 & 2 Bedrooms
- On KU Bus Route
- Indoor/Outdoor
Pool
- 1301 W. 24th & Naismith • 642-5111
- Exercise Room
* 3 Hot Tubs
Colony Woods
430 Roommate Wanted
Two rooms available for sublease. Cheap rent. 748-7903.
Female only.
Male/Female Roommate Wanted
to share townhouse. Dishwasher, Dryer,
sink, refrigerator, dishwasher at
838-0502.
NO-SMOKING ROOMMAKE WANTED-Male or Female to share BREA Kishown School, WID.
Female grad student to share two 2-BR apron. $800 to call Carol Serrill 635-791-3807. Must like us and be a non-
numerator.
NON-SMOKING ROOMMATE WANTED-Male or Female to share 3BR 2 bath townhouse, W/D, microwave, bus to route B250 $650+ share utilities
Roommate needs: gay friend, MF, to share 2BR
home, W/D, WD, AC, take vegetable, must like my dog
pet.
Roommate Wanted! 4 Bedroom Townhouse 24th and
15th Floor. Call 843-188-6200, Battery 8250 per month,
14伏ature, Call 843-188-6200.
BOOMMATE WANTED Huge bedroom. $178/mo.
Wood floors. Café. Sunspill. Climbed big. Bed 38"
$240/mo. Rugs, bedding, pillows.
2k apartment for sublease. Close to campus & on bus route. Ful-purified. Swimming pool & club house. Washer & dry on sight. $250 per month & 1/2 utilities Call Heather 855-605-9067
Share a 2 BR/2 bath furnished apartment.
Own bedroom and bath. Pool, hot tub,
and weight room. $217 mo. 12 utilities
Call 749-8901 or 1-800-6231. Ask For: Von
Female roommate needed to share 2 bedroom apartment. On bus route $260.00 + 1/2 utilities. Water and gas paid. Call Tara 839-8428.
How to schedule an ad:
Ms female roommate to share College Hill Cope. Large master bdrm, private bath, WD, available immediately.
$280. Call 1-913-582-4388 or beeper 1-800-397-3249.
ext. 8452 and leave phone number.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIIY KANSAN
**Wanted ASAP:** NP MOV会议室 to share spaces 2
Bapt. atm, 13th and Albio. To campus and
offreet street parking $250 + 1/2 unit. Call Wade 838-
4002. Leave message.
ROOMMAST WANTED Roommate got married need
sublease. Person needed to share nike & B2 bathroom
w/ W.D. fireplaces, $25/mo + $130 until. Feb rent
free. No pets. Call 841-6370
A phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Classified Information and order form
Stop by the Kauai office between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas cities. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of apile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Bewaffer:
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused money. Refinances on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by cash or with cash are not available.
Dinner bad memoirs:
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Classifications
108 personal
118 lumbago personals
129 announcements
138 entertainment
140 last & found 305 for sale
298 help wanted 340 auto sales
223 professional services 360 miscellaneous
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The University Daly Kanean, 119 Stauffer Flint Half, Lawrence, KS. 68045
4
6B
Tuesday, February 6, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sneakers
841-6966
---
914 Mass.
REFOUND SOUND
1-913-842-2555
BUY-SELL TRADE
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KS
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For all your repair needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS 842-86652858 Four Wheel Dr.
3
PLAY TO WIN!
MICROTECH COMPUTERS
841-9513
2540 Iowa (Tower.Plaza)
1996 Olympics: record telecast
NBC promises more coverage of Atlanta Summer Games
The Associated Press
In four years, however, those numbers will look minuscule.
Addressing the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association, Ebersol, president of NBC Sports, began laying out his plans for coverage beyond Atlanta. He said the network will have at least two cable partners for the 2000 Summer Games in Sydney, Australia, and the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City.
ATLANTA — NBC, already projected to televise a record 168 hours of the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, will add up to four more hours to its coverage, sports chief Dick Ebersol said yesterday.
"The Atlanta Games will be unique in that they are the last Games ever to be seen on one channel in the United States," Ebersol said.
In the future, coverage will probably include 500 to 600 hours at the Summer Games and 400 to 450 hours at the Winter Games, he said.
In an unprecedented $3.5 billion bid, NBC gained TV rights to the five Olympiads after the 1998 Games in Nagano, Japan, which will be televised by CBS. The NBC contract includes the events in 2004, 2006 and 2008, for which host cities have not even been selected.
As for Atlanta, Ebersol said the network probably would announce in the next two months that it would show 171 or 172 hours during the 17-day Games, which begin July 19.
He said the extra hours probably would be spread over the last two weekends of the Games, with complete coverage of the marathon on the final day, Aug. 4. Ebersol said he supported a proposal to switch the marathon to an early-morning event because of the blistering afternoon heat in Atlanta.
He also dismissed criticism that the past two Olympic telecasts — NBC at the 1992 Summer Games in Barcelona, Spain, and CBS at the
1994 Winter Games in Lillehammer, Norway — focused too much time on taped features rather than live events. He said about 70 percent of NBC's coverage in Atlanta would be live.
"People love the stories of the Olympics," he said. "It's unlike watching other sporting events in American television, where people are consumed with the results."
A U.S. team handball player in the crowd, Joseph Fitzgerald, drew a big cheer when he asked whether NBC planned to beef up its coverage of sports that are less popular in the United States.
"I wouldn't have to explain it every day to people what our sport is if they could do a little better job showing it," Fitzgerald said.
Ebersol said the coverage in Atlanta would continue to focus on the most popular sports, such as basketball and gymnastics, while leaving two-thirds of the sports with only peripheral coverage, mostly in highlight form.
"I think you'll be happier in the year 2000," he told Fitzgerald.
Henry T's Bar&Grill
T
2 FOR 1
GOURMET BURGER BASKETS ON TUESDAY NIGHTS. THIS IS THE BEST DEAL IN TOWN!!!
VOTED LAWRENCE'S #1 SPORTS BAR
$2.50 GUSTOS OF BUD,
BUD LIGHT AND COORS LIGHT
Roller skates
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
749-2999
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
841-PLAY
1029 Massachusetts
VUARNET
FRANCE
6TH & KASOLD
The 928 Mass.
Etc. Downtown
Shop Park in the rear
TIN PAN ALLEV
Fals
A Restaurant E Kee
1105 Mass
Lawrence, KS
DANCE FOR FUN·DANCE FOR JOY DANCE FOR HEART
WHEN: Saturday,Feb.10 WHERE: 215 Robinson TIME: Noon to 3pm
Sponsored by Recreation Services-KU FIT TEAM 864-3546 or 208 ROBINSON
2
Win prizes and help fight America's #1 killer
All donations go to
American Heart Association
---
SPRING 1996 CAREER AND EMPLOYMENT FAIR
Abercrombie & Fitch Mt. Oread Book Shop
Adia/ Martin-Smith Personnel National Academy of Railroad Science
American Multi-Cinema National Tire Warehouse
American Red Cross Naval ROTC
Astor Universal Corp. New York Life
Astra Merck, Inc. NK Lawn and Garden
B'nal B'rith Beer Camp Nolan Real Estate Services
BDM - Oklahoma Northwestern Mutual Life-Ertz Agency
Blockbuster Video Northwestern Mutual Life-Hames Agency
Boatmen's First National Bank Olsen Staffing Services
Boeing Commercial Airplane Group Osco Drug / Sav - on Drug
Boys and Girls Club Output Technologies
Camp Birchwood Overland Park KS Police Department
Camp Buckskin Overland Park Marriott Hotel
Camp Chi People to People International
Camp Winadu Pepsi Cola Co.
Camps Airy and Louise Pizza Hut, Inc.
Camp Lincoln & Lake Hubert Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City
Century Personnel Pro Staff Personnel Services
Cessna Aircraft Prudential Preferred Financial Services
Champs Sports Pulte Home Corporation
City of Lawrence Rainbow Generation
Coastal Mart Raytheon Aircraft
College Pro Painters Robert Half of Kansas City
Contemporary Group Rock Springs 4-H Center
Cottonwood, Inc. Sallie Mae
Deluxe Check Printers Sears, Roebuck & Co.
Digi Postal Corp. Seasonality
Division of Family Services Signature Staffing
DST Systems Snow Mountain Ranch
Ecumenical Christian Ministries Spangler Printers
Enterprise Rent-A-Car St. Lawrence Center/Catholic Network Volunteer Services
Equitable State Farm Insurance Co.
Famous Footwear Sunflower State Games
Franklin Financial Services Super Target
Frito Lay Superior Chevrolet
Frontier Corp. The Guardian
Gallup Organization Timber Lake/Tyler Hill Camp
Greene Family Camp Topeka Police Department
Heartspring Touch Net Information Services, Inc.
Hoechst Marion Roussel U.S. Army Recruiting Station
Informix Software, Inc. U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services
International Studies Office U.S. Marine Corps
J.C. Penney Co. United American Insurance Co.
Johnson County Parks & Recreation Univ. of Cincinnati College of Medicine
Jones Store Company Univ. of Kansas Dept. of Human Resources
State Admin. Dept. of Personnel Upward Bound Program/KU Math & Science Center
Kansas Technology Enterprise Corp. Visual Components , Inc.
Lakemary Center, Inc. Waddell & Reed
Lawrence Police Department Winning Ways
Luby's Cafeterias, Inc. Worlds of Fun/Oceans of Fun
Manpower Temporary Services Wyandotte Co. Health Dept.
Dimes- Greater Kansas City Area YMCA Camp Wood
Merck & Co., Inc. YMCA of Johnson Co.
FULL-TIME, PART-TIME, INTERNSHIPS, SUMMER CAMPS AND VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES
Sponsored by the University Placement Center, 864-3624 home page http://kuhttp.cc.ukans.edu/cwis/units/sydfacts/upcfacts/upc_main.html
WED. FEB. 7, 1996
10:00 AM TO 3:00 PM
KANSAS UNION BALLROOM
How do you go to class with Paul Pierce?
ANGAS
34
Okay you rabid fans, here's your dream come true. Beginning Wed. January 31, the University Daily Kansan will print full color two-page spread posters of Paul, Jaque, and the rest of Roy's Boys for every home game.
Each game day poster will feature a different player that you can take to class, to the game or hang up in your room.
The best part is that you don't have to wait in line for hours or even pay extra for this special product. All you have to do is pick up that day's Kansan and it's yours.
As for taking classes with the real Paul Pierce ... add/drop is still available.
The NEW KU Basketball Poster Series
Brought to you by:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Every hot player. Every home game.
WEDNESDAY,FEBRUARY 7,1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
SECTION A VOL.102 NO.91
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
BEST
Cyclone warning
First place is at stake as No. 3 Kansas and No.21 Iowa State meet tonight. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Rock Chalk preview
In-between acts give students a glimpse of this year's event. Page 9A
NATION
Hillary Clinton promotes her new book, and taxpayers pay for the trip. Page 11A
Taxpayers pick up book bill
WORLD
Peace may pause
The Bosnian government may indict two senior Serb officers for war crimes. Page 10A
WEATHER
WARMER
High 55° Low 32°
ADVERTISING 864-4358
[ ]
Weather: Page 2A
INDEX
Opinion ... 4A
National News ... 11A
World News ... 10A
Scoreboard ... 2B
Horoscopes ... 6B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is free. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
1
Hell hath no fury
Church alters idea of afterlife
By Jason Stralt
Kansan staff writer
Going to hell just isn't what is used to be.
On Jan. 11, the Church of England altered the traditional meaning of hell in a report, The Mystery of Salvation. In the report, the notion of a fiery hell where sinners are eternally punished was redefined as an absence of God and a state of non-being.
Although hell's eternal burning fires have been quenched by the Church of England, KU staff and students disagree about the new definition. Traditionalists stand firm by the Bible's literal meaning of a hell, while others accept liberal interpretations of the Bible as a reflection of the times.
mission attempted to define salvation and sin in ways that would make the Christian faith easier to understand.
"In the past, the imagery of hellfire and eternal torment and punishment have been used to frighten men and women," the report said. "Hell is not eternal torment, but is the final and irrevocable choosing of that which is opposed to God so completely that the only end is total nonbeing."
The concept of reading the Bible in an interpretive way has been debated for the last century, said Paul Mirecki, associate professor of religious studies. Bible views between nonliteralists and literalists have differed between using the stories as examples of human life and taking the Bible's stories and text literally.
"We have mythic concepts, such as Adam and Eve, that explain what it is to be human. It's an error to take them literally," he said. "What the Church of England is saying is 'Hey folks, let's be adults and live in the 20th century.'"
Mirecki said the church was de-
Father Vince Krische of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road, said that by making hell into a simple state of nonbeing, any incentive to lead a good and moral life would be taken away. In addition, the notion of an eternal soul, which is central to many faiths, no longer would exist if hell were simply a state of nonbeing.
But for others, taking the Bible literally is the only option.
Students were asked yesterday whether they agreed with the Church of England's redefinition of the sinner's afterlife.
"They are either ignoring what the Bible says, or it's an attempt to interpret it in a way that is inconsistent with traditional Bible interpretation."
"This idea of people going to a state of non-being is contradictory to two things that we believe in," he said.
Students discuss Anglican Church's evolution of hell
PUNJAB
"I would agree with not reading the Bible literally,
mythologizing the Bible, reading the Bible as poetic language rather than as science.
Donny Rausch, Hoyt freshman,
agreed.
"it's a cop-out," he said. "It may sound vengeful, but I think that there is a punishment for those who don't lead good lives."
more as metaphor.
For hell as nonbeing, it
Jason Theel Lawrence senior
would be difficult to comprehend for someone who has existed."
"The classic conception of Hell, fire and brimstone,
SAN JOAQUIN
It could be true though.
I find that pretty ridiculous.
Mehdi Rlazlkermani,
Havs senior
Who's to say? And it could be fun.
I've never been kicked in the balls
real, real hard by a demon before.
That might be kind of fun."
"I do believe there is an afterlife.
With heaven and hell,
when you're tempted to
do something you shouldn't
(1)
Cheyenne Graves,
Lawrence graduate
student
you might have a second thought.
It's a discipline you must follow.
"I think if the Bible helps someone to lead a moral life,
it's defn itely a good thing.
Corey Johnson, Emporia soph more
Everyone should be
able to interpret the Bible for themselves. For the Church of England and others to do it for them is wrong."
(USPS 650-640)
Students might get to vote on rec center
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
A student referendum about a proposed $21 million recreation center soon may be put to the test.
The bill will face the full Senate Feb. 13. If the bill is approved, a referendum would be held Feb. 27 and 28.
The Student Senate finance committee passed a bill unanimously and without debate last night calling for a referendum on whether to increase campus fees $30 per semester to finance the center.
Dan Hare, student body vice president and a member of the recreation facility program planning committee, warned finance committee members that they were not voting for or against building the recreation center.
"Whether you personally believe that a recreation center is needed or not, this is just asking you to send it to the students to determine if it is a worthwhile project." Hare said.
Some finance committee members said there was no debate on the issue because many members favored letting students decide whether they wanted to pay the fee increase.
"I think it's a very good idea," said Girish Ballolla, graduate senator and finance committee member. "I just hope that all the students realize this and come out and vote."
With a referendum, 10 percent of the student body would have to vote on the issue. A simple majority of those voters would have to approve the proposal for the project to continue.
If approved by the student body, the proposal then would have to be approved by Chancellor Robert Hemenway, the Board of Regents and the State Legislature.
Though the finance committee passed the bill, some senators said they were worried that less than 10 percent of the student body actually would vote.
"I think it will pass through Senate, but I'm more concerned about getting voter turnout," said Art Yudelson, graduate senator and finance committee member.
Other senators, however, said they were confident that 10 percent of the student body would vote.
"I'm sure we'll get 10 percent," Bailola said. "I definitely hope that people get to know about the issue."
The center would include seven gymnasiums, an aerobic center, an indoor jogging track, a combatarts room, a rock-climbing wall and free weight, circuit training and cardio-areas.
In other action, the finance committee passed a bill to pay $8,000 for a lecture series. The lecture series board is trying to sign filmmaker Spike Lee as the premiere speaker.
Sleeping at youth hostels can help students sleep for cheap
Editor's Note: This is the second of five stories o., affordable travel alternatives for students.
Most students have heard of youth hostels as inexpensive alternatives for lodging while traveling.
By Sarah Morrison Kansan staff writer
But what most students don't realize is that staying in a youth hostel doesn't necessarily mean crowded rooms and dirty beds.
Students can find hostels in light houses near San Francisco, chelts in the Swiss Alps and castles in England — and for only a fraction of the price of a hotel room.
Toby Pyle, press manager of Hostelling International in Washington D.C., said lodging in hostels in the U.S. and Europe could cost between $7 and $22 a night.
Hostels are dormitory-type lodgings where patrons pay cheaper rates but bring their own bedding, cook their own meals, and sometimes participate in light cleaning at the location. Some hostels have an age limit, but most do not.
The price varies with the type of sleeping quarters students choose. The large shared rooms are cheaper than private or double rooms.
Sara Donnelly, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said she shelled out a measly $12 a night for lodging in the Pink Palace, a hostel on Corfu, an island off the coast of Greece.
"It was almost like a resort," she said. "It was incredible, and it was amazingly cheap. It was like paradise island. We stayed there for 10 days."
The style and condition of the hostel varies from location to location.
in Greece was the best and that the location in Amsterdam was the worst.
Despite the sacrifice of personal space, Donnelly said she recommended that students stayed in the larger, shared rooms if the hostel looked like a nice, clean location.
"If you're on a budget, hostels are really the only place you can stay." Sara Donnelly Kennesaw City Mo. juror
"We stayed in
Sara Donnelly Kansas City, Mo., junior
half the price. We didn't realize how fun they were until the end of the trip."
double rooms most of the time," she said. "But the dorm rooms are
The chance to interact with travelers from all over the world made
in the room," Donnelly said. "Be conscious of your stuff, but not
the shared space worth while, she said.
"I never had any problems, but you have to be careful about leaving your backpack
But the shared space also can lead to security problems. It is important that students keeping an eye on their baggage when staying in a hostel.
overly conscious. Some people would bring bike chains to lock their backpacks to the bed if they were worried."
Pyle said many hostels had security rooms or lockers where travelers could store their belongings.
Donnelly said she would recommend hostels as an affordable option for other students traveling abroad.
"If you're on a budget, hostels are really the only place you can stay," she said.
There are 150 hostels in the U.S. and thousands abroad. Students traveling between June and September should make reservations in advance to ensure space at a hostel, Pyle said.
For more information, students can contact Student Union Activities in the Kansas Union or call Hostelling International at 202-783-6161.
3
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SECTION A VOL. 102, NO. 91
TODAY
KANSAN
SPORTS
Cyclone warning
CAMPUS
First place is at stake as No.3 Kansas and No.21 Iowa State meet tonight. Page 1B
ADVERTISING 864-4358
Rock Chalk preview
In-between acts give students a glimpse of this year's event. Page 9A
NATION
Taxpayers pick up book bill
Hillary Clinton promotes her new book, and taxpayers pay for the trip. Page 11A
WORLD
Peace may pause
WEATHER
WARMER
The Bosnian government may indict two senior Serb officers for war crimes. Page 10A
High 55° Low 32°
L
Weather: Page 2A
INDEX
Opinion . . . . . 4A
National News . . 11A
World News . . 10A
Scoreboard . . 2B
Horoscopes . . 6B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is free. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
J
Hell hath no fury...
Church alters idea of afterlife
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
Going to hell just isn't what is used to be.
On Jan. 11, the Church of England altered the traditional meaning of hell in a report, The Mystery of Salvation. In the report, the notion of a fiery hell where sinners are eternally punished was redefined as an absence of God and a state of non-being.
Although hell's eternal burning fires have been quenched by the Church of England, KU staff and students disagree about the new definition. Traditionalists stand firm by the Bible's literal meaning of a hell, while others accept liberal interpretations of the Bible as a reflection of the times.
Anglican Bishop Alec Graham of Newcastle, Northern Ireland, who drafted the report, said the commission attempted to define salvation and sin in ways that would make the Christian faith easier to understand.
The concept of reading the Bible in an interpretive way has been debated for the last century, said Paul Mirecki, associate professor of religious studies. Bible views between nonliteralists and literalists have differed between using the stories as examples of human life and taking the Bible's stories and text literally.
"In the past, the imagery of hell-fire and eternal torment and punishment have been used to frighten men and women," the report said. "Hell is not eternal torment, but is the final and irrevocable choosing of that which is opposed to God so completely that the only end is total nonbeing."
"We have mythic concepts, such as Adam and Eve, that explain what it is to be human. It's an error to take them literally," he said. "What the Church of England is saying is 'Hey folks, let's be adults and live in the 20th century.'"
Mirecki said the church was de-
mythologizing the Bible, reading the Bible as poetic language rather than as science.
Father Vince Krische of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road, said that by making hell into a simple state of nonbeing, any incentive to lead a good and moral life would be taken away. In addition, the notion of an eternal soul, which is central to many faiths, no longer would exist if hell were simply a state of nonbeing.
Students were asked yesterday whether they agreed with the Church of England's redefinition of the sinner's afterlife.
But for others, taking the Bible literally is the only option.
"This idea of people going to a state of non-being is contradictory to two things that we believe in," he said.
"They are either ignoring what the Bible says, or it's an attempt to interpret it in a way that is inconsistent with traditional Bible interpretation."
30
"I would agree with not reading the Bible literally,
Students discuss Anglican Church's evolution of hell
Donny Rausch, Hoyt freshman,
agreed.
more as metaphor.
For hell as nonbeing, it
"It's a cop-out," he said. "It may sound vengeful, but I think that there is a punishment for those who don't lead good lives."
Jason Theel, Lawrence senior
would be difficult to comprehend for someone who has existed."
SCO
"The classic conception of Hell, fire and brimstone.
I find that pretty ridiculous.
It could be true though.
Mehdi Rlazikermani,
Havs senior
Who's to say? And it could be fun. I've never been kicked in the balls real, real hard by a demon before. That might be kind of fun."
"I do believe there is an afterlife.
With heaven and hell,
when you're tempted to do something you shouldn't
1987
Choyenne Graves, Lawrence graduate student
you might have a second thought.
it's a discipline you must follow."
"I think if the Bible helps someone to lead a moral life,
It's definitely a good thing.
(USPS 650-640)
Corey Johnson, Emporia sopho-
Everyone should be
able to interpret the Bible for themselves. For the Church of England and others to do it for them is wrong."
Students might get to vote on rec center
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
A student referendum about a proposed $21 million recreation center soon may be put to the test.
The Student Senate finance committee passed a bill unanimously and without debate last night calling for a referendum on whether to increase campus fees $30 per semester to finance the center.
The bill will face the full Senate Feb. 13. If the bill is approved, a referendum would be held Feb. 27 and 28.
Dan Hare, student body vice president and a member of the recreation facility program planning committee, warned finance committee members that they were not voting for or against building the recreation center.
Some finance committee members said there was no debate on the issue because many members favored letting students decide whether they wanted to pay the fee increase.
"I think it's a very good idea," said Girish Ballolla, graduate senator and finance committee member. "I just hope that all the students realize this and come out and vote."
With a referendum, 10 percent of the student body would have to vote on the issue. A simple majority of those voters would have to approve the proposal for the project to continue.
If approved by the student body, the proposal then would have to be approved by Chancellor Robert Hemenway, the Board of Regents and the State Legislature.
Though the finance committee passed the bill, some senators said they were worried that less than 10 percent of the student body actually would vote.
"I think it will pass through Senate, but I'm more concerned about getting voter turnout," said Art Yudelson, graduate senator and finance committee member.
Other senators, however, said they were confident that 10 percent of the student body would vote.
"I'm sure we'll get 10 percent," Ballolla said. "I definitely hope that people get to know about the issue."
The proposed recreation center would be built on West Campus. Admission to the center would be free for students.
The center would include seven gymnasiums, an aerobic center, an indoor jogging track, a combative arts room, a rock-climbing wall and free weight, circuit training and cardiovascular areas.
In other action, the finance committee passed a bill to pay $8,000 for a lecture series. The lecture series board is trying to sign filmmaker Spike Lee as the premiere speaker.
Sleeping at youth hostels can help students sleep for cheap
Editor's Note: This is the second of five stories on affordable travel alternatives for students.
Most students have heard of youth hostels as inexpensive alternatives for lodging while traveling.
By Sarah Morrison Kansan staff writer
But what most students don't realize is that staying in a youth hostel doesn't necessarily mean crowded rooms and dirty beds.
Students can find hostels in light houses near San Francisco, chalets in the Swiss Alps and castles in England — and for only a fraction of the price of a hotel room.
Toby Pyle, press manager of Hostelling International in Washington D.C., said lodging in hostels in the U.S. and Europe could cost between $7 and $22 a night.
The price varies with the type of sleeping quarters students choose. The large shared rooms are cheaper than private or double rooms.
Hostels are dormitory-type lodgings where patrons pay cheaper rates but bring their own bedding, cook their own meals, and sometimes participate in light cleaning at the location. Some hostels have an age limit, but most do not.
Sara Donnelly, Kansas City, Mo.
juniar, said she shelled out a meessy $12 a night for lodging in the Pink Palace, a hostel on Corfu, an island off the coast of Greece.
"It was almost like a resort," she said. "It was incredible, and it was amazingly cheap. It was like paradise island. We stayed there for 10 days."
The style and condition of the hostel varies from location to location.
Donnelly stayed in hostels in Greece, Amsterdam, Paris, Munich, and Prague. She said that the hostel
in Greece was the best and that the location in Amsterdam was the worst.
Despite the sacrifice of personal space, Donnelly said she recommended that students stayed in the larger, shared rooms if the hostel looked like a nice, clean location.
"We stayed in
"If you're on a budget, hostels are really the only place you can stay." Sara Donnelly Kansas City, Mo., junior
double rooms most of the time," she said. "But the dorm rooms are
half the price. We didn't realize how fun they were until the end of the trip."
The chance to interact with travelers from all over the world made
y
in the room," Donnellay said. "Be conscious of your stuff, but not
But the shared space also can lead to security problems. It is important that students keeping an eye on their baggage when staying in a hostel.
the shared space worth while, she said.
overly conscious. Some people would bring bike chains to lock their backpacks to the bed if they were worried."
Pyle said many hostels had security rooms or lockers where travelers could store their belongings.
Donnelly said she would recommend hostels as an affordable option for other students traveling abroad.
"If you're on a budget, hostels are really the only place you can stay," she said.
For more information, students can contact Student Union Activities in the Kansas Union or call Hostelling International at 202-783-6161.
There are 150 hostels in the U.S and thousands abroad. Students traveling between June and September should make reservations in advance to ensure space at a hostel, Pyle said.
I
2A
Wednesday, February 7, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Five attack student for language choice
Men and car suffer only minor damage in late-night assault
By Amy McVey
Kansan staff writer
A KU student and his friend were attacked early Monday morning when five men overheard them practicing foreign languages.
The two victims were speaking Spanish and French while walking
from a friend's house to their car, which was parked outside the Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St.
Five men came out of the bar, and one, who said that he was from Argentina, tried to speak in Spanish with one of the victims.
"They heard my friend say something in Spanish," the 20-year-old KU
and he didn't understand him.
"I said in French to my friend, I don't know these people. Let's get out of here."
When they tried to get into their car, the five men attacked them, Lawrence police reported.
Three men attacked the friend, one man attacked the KU student and the fifth man attacked the car.
"He was jumping all over the hood of the car," the KU student said. "I was frantic, to get the heck out of there."
"He was jumping all over the hood of the car. I was frantic, trying to get the check out of there." KU assault victim
KU assault victim About one of his assailants
student said. "Then a skinhead-looking guy started rattling off something in Spanish to my friend,
The driver's side mirror was ripped off, and the car's hood and side panel were dented.
No arrests have been made, but police said they had suspects.
The victims suffered only minor injuries and said they were confused about why they were attacked.
big shock.
"Nothing like this has ever happened to me," the student said. "It was a
ON THE RECORD
"We're pretty much going to be homebodies for a while."
A Kansas State University student's CD player and miscellaneous electronic equipment were stolen and car damaged between 5 p.m.Saturday and 9:15 a.m. Sunday in lot 127. The items were valued at $1370, and the damage was valued at $800. Warning sign reported
A Telex remote transmitter was stolen from the KU Department of Speech, Language and Hearing between January 30th and February 1st. The transmitter was valued at $300, KU police reported.
A lobby chair and love seat were stolen from Templin
Hall between January 16th and January 29th. The chair was valued at $1250 and the love seat was valued at $450, KU police reported.
A KU student's wallet and its contents were stolen between 8:15 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Monday in the Spencer Museum of Art. The wallet and contents was valued at $74, KU police reported.
A KU student's jacket and wallet were stolen between 9:20 p.m. and 11:10 p.m.
Monday in Robinson Gymnasium. The jacket and wallet were valued at $87, KU police reported.
CRIME BRIEF
Kansan staff report
The Douglas County Sheriff's Department late Monday morning arrested two youths suspected of burglarizing a KU staff member's home in the 1500 block of North 450 Road in Baldwin.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
The suspects, a 16 year old from Baldwin and a 17 year old from Lawrence, were arrested near the victim's home while trying to hitchhike.
35 compact discs. The youths were carrying all of the items when they were arrested.
The two are suspected of breaking into the house late Monday morning and stealing a radio, a 22-caller rifle and
The victim reported that she was in her barn when she heard her dog bark. When she looked, she saw two boys walking out of her home carrying a rifle and a bag.
While the youths walked toward the road, the victim called the police.
The Lawrence youth had been charged on 11 prior counts of burglary, 11 prior counts of theft and two prior counts of criminal damage to property.
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.
Keep It Clean
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Weather
ATLANTA 51 ° • 38 °
Chicago 37 ° • 29 °
Des Moines, Iowa 40 ° • 30 °
Kansas City, Mo. 51 ° • 35 °
Lawrence 55 ° • 32 °
Los Angeles 76 ° • 56 °
New York 33 ° • 25 °
Omaha, Neb. 44 ° • 28 °
St. Louis 55 ° • 48 °
Seattle 52 ° • 38 °
Topeka 53 ° • 36 °
Tulsa, Okla. 60 ° • 41 °
Wichita 55 ° • 36 °
TODAY
Partly cloudy and warmer.
5532
THURSDAY
Mostly cloudy.
5228
FRIDAY
Partly cloudy.
5838
TODAY
Partly cloudy and warmer.
5532
THURSDAY
Mostly cloudy.
5228
FRIDAY
Partly cloudy.
5838
Source: Chian-Wei Chang, Mike Rohleder. KU Weather Service
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor "Semester at Sea" at 9 a.m. today at the 4th floor in the Kansas Union. Call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742 for more information.
The University Placement Center will sponsor the Spring 1996 Career and Employment Fair from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union. Call Ann Hartley at 864-7677 for more information.
TIN
PAN
ALLEY
Fats
International Co.
will sponsor an informational meeting on studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 1:20 p.m. in 4045 Wescoe. Call Ellen Strubert at 864-3742 for more information.
Le Cercle Francais will meet at 5:30 p.m. in 2058 Wescoe. Call Sarah Pethan at 865-0696 for more information.
The Office of Study Abroad
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7tonight at the Walnut room in the Kansas Union. Call Jason Brown for more information.
CORRECTION
The women's basketball story that appeared on page 1B of yesterday's Kansan was the same story that ran on Monday. Readers can find the correct story for yesterday's paper on page 4B of today's Kansan.
Come Party on the Patio
Wednesdays at Dos:
Karaoke Karaoke
“Don't Drink the Water”
50¢ Draws
$2.00 Swillers
$1.50 House Margaritas
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Come Party on the Patio
Wednesdays at Dos:
Karaoke Karaoke
“Don’t Drink the Water”
50¢ Draws
$2.00 Swillers
$1.50 House Margaritas
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Papa's Choice™
One Large Up to Five Toppings
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Free Pepperoncinis & Special Garlic Sauce
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Customer pays all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 7, 1996
3A
SenEx OKs additions to misconduct rules
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Class clowns and troublemakers beware: The definition of academic misconduct and what professors can do about it may be expanded.
The Senate Executive Committee yesterday approved recommendations from the academic policies and procedures committee to make several additions to the University's policy on academic misconduct.
The changes included the addition of threats to instructors as academic misconduct. A statement of an instructor's authority to request that a student leave a classroom when he or she is disrupting or obstructing learning is also included. Ignoring such a request could be considered academic misconduct with the changes.
Doug Houston, chairman of the academic policies and procedures committee, said in the committee's report to SenEx that the changes were made to clarify the responsibilities of students and instructors and to clarify and strengthen the authority of the instructor to ensure that the learning environment is not jeopardized.
Grey Montgomery, SenEx member, said that as a student, he had considered the fairness of the changes to other students and was confident that the changes were needed.
"The policy previously didn't address certain issues, and they needed to be clarified," Montgomery said. "I think that in general, the changes will serve to improve the quality of the classroom environment."
Montgomery said that the changes were proposed in response to complaints issued by faculty members. For example, the addition of threats as academic misconduct came after a faculty member received threats from a student who had received a poor grade.
Redefining academic misconduct
The Senate Executive Committee yesterday approved changes to the rules and regulations dealing with academic misconduct. The major changes to the code were:
Addition of threats as academic misconduct and addition of the sanction of suspension from a specific course to relieve such threats.
Inclusion of language regarding tampering with grades, unauthorized use of approvals and forgery.
Expansion of instructor authority to assign an F for a course because of academic misconduct. Now, only individual assignments can be graded as a failure.
- Addition of an explicit statement of the instructor's authority to request that students leave a classroom when he or she is disrupting or obstructing learning.
- Addition to require departments and schools to send academic misconduct findings to the Office of Academic Affairs to keep a University wide record system.
The proposed changes now will be presented to University Council on March 7. Pending approval from University Council, the proposal will be sent to University Senate and then to Chancellor Robert Hemenway for consideration.
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KANSAN
Modern dance leaps to Lied Center
CHD of LOUISVILLE
Acclaimed dancer holds auditions for coming show
By David Teska
Kansan staff writer
Choreographer Mary Anthony demonstrates a modern dance movement to students auditioning for the KU Dance Company's rendition of Threnody. The dance will be performed Anil, 25, and 26 at the Liet Center.
Brian Flink / KANSAN
Standing unobtrusively to one side, Mary Anthony carefully watched students go through their warm-up session.
"When you see movement, you see life," Anthony said.
And Anthony knows what it takes to turn a person with raw talent into a world-class dancer. For more than 40 years, Anthony has been a modern dance performer and choreographer.
From Feb. 1 to 16, Anthony is sharing her expertise at the University of Kansas, where she is teaching modern dance techniques classes and working with the KU Dance Company.
Anthony said she first became exposed to modern dance during
Anthony held auditions last week for Threnody, a dance adaptation she created in 1956 from John Millington Synge's play, *Riders to the Sea*. KU Dance Company will perform Threnody April 25 and 26 at the Lied Center.
Muriel Cohan, associate professor of music and dance, said Anthony's interpretation of Syngge's play was special because it enabled people to see the living process between the literary source and the dance. Cohan and her husband, Patrick Suzeau, instructor of music and dance, met while dancing with Anthony's company in New York City.
high school in Newport, Ky. After seeing a live performance by famed dancer Martha Graham, Anthony said she knew her future lay in dance.
"I do what I love to do," she said.
At the rehearsal, students auditioned for seven female and three male parts in the dance. One舞 student, Amanda Burud, Verona, Wis., freshman, said she first heard of Anthony in a dance class video. Although she preferred ballet, Burud hoped for a part in the dance.
"I like to try anything." Burud said
Cohen said modern dance broke from ballet's classical style by using the floor and a style that was more off-center.
Modern dance started around the turn of the century and has been changing and evolving ever since, she said.
"I like to try anything," Burud said.
During the audition, Anthony, 79, demonstrated the visceral aspect of modern dance. Using metaphorical examples from the story, like imitating a sailor's walk, biting knuckles in a gas of surprise and hauling in fishnets, Anthony pressed the
students to imagine themselves dancing in different parts of the story.
Anthony said that she enjoyed teaching students and that she had been surprised at the level of ability the students had demonstrated so far. Students today have few opportunities for exposure to quality dance, and this situation could worsen as the National Endowment for the Arts cuts funding for its dance programs, Anthony said.
"We are a culturally starved nation," she said.
Housing hears coed concerns for Templin
Students want new hall to cater to men, women
By Scott MacWilliams Kansan staff writer
Templin Hall is slated for renovation into suites from the old residence-hall room style, and many students also want to change it to coed housing.
The general assembly meeting of the Association of University Residence Halls held an open forum on the topic last night. While few students supported keeping Templin an all-male hall after renovation, they disagreed about potential arrangements for coed living.
"It would be good to have the floors either male or female, rather than having the wings be male and female," said Ashleigh Self, Clearwater freshman. "When maintenance comes in to clean the bathrooms, it can make for real problems on coed floors."
Some students expressed concern that not making Templin coed would be unfair to those excluded from the new hall. The purpose of the forum was to hear students' concerns and preferences.
"I think it would be a good idea to make it coed," said Regan Bramblett, Hannibal, Mo., sophomore. "It would make for less controversy in the halls, and I also think it would be best to have the floors separated by sex, because it is better for safety and privacy."
Randy Timm, publication writer for student housing, said another possibility for Templin was a University welcoming center built on the back of the hall.
"This is just a possibility, but it would be much easier for people coming to visit KU." Timm said.
Another proposed change is a 12-month housing contract for students who want to live there year-round. Timm said that the nine-month contract still would be available but that students with 12-month contracts likely would get priority treatment.
Other students asked whether current Templin residents would have first priority in moving back in to the new hall. Timm said the issue had not yet been decided.
Templin now is less than half full, with only 159 residents in a building built for 400. Timm also said that the new room rates were expected to be very close to the current rate charged a single person for a double room.
Rising publication costs force libraries to cut subscriptions
By R. Adam Ward Kansan staff writer
A decrease in the KU libraries' purchasing power means that students may not be able to write their term papers at the last minute.
That's because the time it takes for students to get the periodicals or books they need will increase, said Richard Ring, librarian.
Growing numbers of students are having to rely on the library's ability to locate and borrow important research materials through sources outside the University to get the reference materials they need.
The KU libraries have had to cancel their subscriptions for 799 periodicals for fiscal year 1996, Ring said.
Ring said the cutback in materials the library could purchase was due to inflation.
He said that more than $297,000 in magazine subscriptions had to be cut, despite the fact that there was no cut in the library budget.
Libraries across the nation are experiencing a similar decline in the number of materials they can purchase, he said.
Richard Givens, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the University had tried to protect libraries from budget cutbacks with money the University had left
Declining Number of Books
43,977 43,206 43,577 41,957 In the past five fiscal years,
the number of books
purchased has declined.
Library officials say
the trend will continue.
1992 1994
Source, Richard Ring, collection
development librarian
Noah Musser/KANSAM
in its budget at the end of the year.
But this year, it is possible that the money that the libraries depend on to offset the rising costs of publications might not be there.
Lindy Eakin, associate executive vice chancellor, said keeping the libraries' acquisition budget from declining had always been a top priority for the University.
Some KU students are worried about the University libraries' dwindling collections.
EVERCLEAR
MEMORIAL HALL
NO BODY SURFING ALLOWED
SAT FEB 3 1996 8:00 PM
Did you go to this show?
If you did ... show us your ticket stub and take 30% Off the manufacturer's list price of the CD of your choice. It's Kief's way of saying thanks for helping break Everclear.
Kief's is always happy to be instrumental in the introduction of new artists who deserve a wider audience. Everclear is already a "platinum" act by Kief's standards. Since 1959, we've helped set the pace others follow.
KIEF'S
24th & Iowa • PO Box 2 • Lawrence, KS 66046
KIEF'S
1
4A
Wednesday, February 7, 1996
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Discussion of campus fees is too important to delay
Student body president Kim Cocks has passed up the opportunity to leave the indelible mark of her administration on the University of Kansas. By postponing the campus fee review hearings for women's and nonrevenue sports, Cocks has shirked her presidential responsibility and obligation to these organizations and to the student body at large.
If more time is needed, then postpone the recommendation deadline until later in the semester. Is the rest of March, April and May so busy that Senate couldn't squeeze in a committee recommendation and some expedient debate?
Hiding behind the words "it needs careful attention," she has postponed the hearings because she feels the Senate subcommittee on fee reviews could not get everything together in time to have a recommendation by March 15.
Given that the issue pertaining to women's and
THE ISSUE:
Campus fee reviews
nonrevenue sports is vital to the existence of these sports and to the University's compliance with Title IX, the committee should fulfill its duty with careful attention. It long has been a desire that Student Senate would pay careful attention to its job. Perhaps Cocks is implying that next semester's administration will.
Cocks and subcommittee chairman Scott Sullivan should make this issue a priority and conceivably the legacy of their administration. So far the status quo has been acceptable to them. It is time that they took a serious issue by the horns and did something important with their elected power.
CHRIS VINE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Departments, sponsors make up for absence of KU lecture series
The students at the University of Kansas need to recognize the quality speakers that visit the University to share their experiences and knowledge with the entire student body. The University does not have an established lecture series, but individual sponsors and departments do a wonderful job bringing people here to speak.
People always criticize the University for not having a lecture series such as Kansas State University's Landon series, but these are two very different programs. K-State has a sponsor and is able to pay for expensive, famous speakers.
In comparison, the University lacks a sponsor and must rely on departments, professors, and University organizations to recruit quality speakers. The speakers who are invited here may not be as well-known as the speakers at K-State, but overall, there is a lot of variety and experience represented by the lecturers.
The caliber of guests who speak at the University is
THE ISSUE:
Speakers at KU
amazing since there is no one lecture series.
With guests ranging from Latin American presidents to author Kurt Vonnegut, people of all backgrounds should be able to find lectures they are interested in attending. Students need to be aware of all the guest speakers who speak on campus because there are plenty that cover a wide range of interests. It takes some research and awareness, but these events are educational and worthwhile.
It would be beneficial if the University of Kansas could find a sponsor and work to create a strong lecture series, but in the meantime, individual departments and organizations are required to invite and to finance their own guests. These organizations should be commended for recruiting the quality speakers they do and for making up for the lack of an established lecture series.
TARA FITZPATRICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Marko Heids / KANSAN
Editors
Invisible workers deserve simple acknowledgement
Campus ... Joann Birk
... Philip Brownlee
Editorial ... Paul Told
Associate editorial ... Craig Lang
Features ... Matt Hood
Teams ... Tom Prattie
Associate sports ... Bill Potula
Photo ... Andy Rulletsted
Graphics ... Mosh Musser
Special sections ... Novelta Sommers
Illustration ... Kermode
Wire ... Tara Ternary
Illustration ... Miho Le
Generic prayers are not chaplains' purpose
GATHER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
intimate feelings to each other, all while I moved sugar containers and wiped around their elbows. I was invisible. I would get home exhausted and broken, and who knew? Who cared?
Many of the workers we see on campus arrive here several hours before we do. Their work is backbreaking at times, and they constantly are on their feet. They lift and haul and clean for hours. Yes, that is their job, and yes, they are getting paid — but people like to think they are doing something useful each day. Most of us want to feel like what we do with our time matters to somebody. And since what they do clearly is important to the daily operation of the University, it doesn't seem too much to ask to have this fact acknowledged.
Two things I try to do: Tip decently at restaurants and say hello to custodians. It's not much, I know, but back when I was schlepping filthy food platters all about the place. I would have loved a little acknowledgement. I would have loved to have not been invisible.
Donna Davis is an Overland Park graduate student in education.
For many people in this world, the act of prayer is more than simply a ritual act for consecrating assemblies. They regard it as an act of communicating to the most glorious and high God of the universe. Of those people, especially Christians, many fervently believe that true prayer takes place during repentance and through the name of Jesus. How they pray is just as important as what they pray.
In the bitter cold you see her — her shadowy figure blending eerily with the dark mist of the morning. She moves slowly, deliberately, in and out of the darkness, watching the day begin and working with purpose. She pulls a yellow waste can along behind her, moving inside buildings and deep into offices and classrooms. Young people move beside her and all around her, but they don't see her. She knows this and has gotten used to her invisibility.
Business Staff
Marko
MHELD$ @'96
Campus mgr ... Karen Gorsch
Regional mgr ... Kelly Connelys
National mgr ... Mark Ozdemik
Special Sectiona mgr ... Norm Blow
Production mgr ... Rachel Cahill
Instructor director ... Heather Valier
Public Relations dir ... Cary Breifold
Creative director ... Ed.Kowaldski
Classified mgr ... Stacey Wolkengart
Internship/o-op mgr ... T.J. Clark
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
When I pass, I say, "How are you?" She is amazed but clearly happy that I have spoken. We chat briefly about the cold, the snow, and how hard it is for her to get her work done when it is this way — freezing. I go on to class, but I wonder how many people she will talk with today — how many people will even see her? How many people will notice what she does for them.
I am often a little saddened by the way campus custodians seem to be treated. I don't mean by their superiors or by the system or anything so large as all that. I am talking about how students and staff treat them. It seems — and I may be wrong — that we often don't take
MAR
DIEL
In his article, John Wilson claimed that two chaplains have overstepped their boundaries by praying in the name of Jesus and by repenting for activities that certain parties did not view as sin. I suppose that Wilson's ideal prayer is one that includes everyone, a prayer to a generic celestial unit that everyone worships in one form or another.
SERBIAN FORCES SET THEIR SIGHTS ON PEACE.
Maybe I have a little more respect for what they do since my days working in a restaurant as a hostess. I did my fair share of bathroom clean-up and paper towel changing during that time. I also scraped muck and grime from underneath countless dinner tables, wiped old ketchup and dug out mashed-up string beans from the carpet. I grabbed dirty dishes too, and I cleaned off crummy counters. More often than not, nobody noticed. Dinners would talk about their most
DONNA DAVIS
STAFF COLUMNIST
enough time to say a simple thank you for the job they are doing. We see them dumping our trash and picking up after us and sprinkling salt on slick pathways for us. And we walk on by. I don't expect students to spend hours getting to know these workers, but just
acknowledging that they exist would be nice.
aforementioned school of thought.
If they believe that the only way to pray to God is through the name of Jesus Christ, then a restriction that prohibits closing the prayer in Jesus' name leads them to pray to a generic god or an idol.
Such censorship imposes quite a dilemma upon chaplains of the
Webster's Dictionary defines tolerance as "readiness to allow others to believe or act as they judge best." If the Kansas Legislature really wants the blessings of God over its assembly, then it should stop playing back-seat chaplain, and let the men do their jobs.
But if the dissenting instructors call publicized evaluations a stimulant to a shopping mentality, so be it. I call it responsible financial sense, a demand for quality, and fairness in the journey for a future to which we, the paying students, have a right.
David Hintz
Overland Park senior
Chaplain's message contained no politics
Thoughtful people also will realize that God does not have a political affiliation. Therefore, Pastor Wright's prayer, interpreted by the Kansas editorial board as political platforms of the radical right, was indeed a blessing, but not for those who subscribe to the agenda of the radical right, the liberal left, or even the moderate middle. Political philosophies notwithstanding, Pastor Wright was invoking God's blessing upon all who give total allegiance to God and his ways. That is the most that he or any chaplain can do.
It should be noted that God is pro-choice! God gives us a choice between blessings and curses, life and death. God is under no obligation to bless one who chooses to ignore God's authority. All blessing such a person receives is purely because of God's grace and mercy.
give a blessing."
Regarding prayers offered by chaplains in the Kansas Legislature, John Wilson, for the editorial board, concluded that, "regulations should be enacted so the guest chaplain's only purpose is to
Verma Froese Library assistant
Teachers who have tenure are not free from public scrutiny
When a student enters the University, he or she has only been able to examine the reputation and course descriptions of the institution. It is not until you get into the heart of the course before you can know truly how the instructor is, and by that time, it is usually too late. You can either drop the course and lose the money you worked so hard to earn, or you can ride out the semester, sometimes with agonizing irritation and with your mind constantly on your depleting bank account.
from sailing through the air.
For me, money never has come easy. Throughout my college experience, work has meant more than driving to the bank to cash daddy's check. Like a lot of us, it times have had to work two or three jobs to earn enough for classes, rent, books and various other expenses. Has it been worth it? You bet. Am I satisfied I chose KU? I usually need to bite my tongue to keep the emphatic "No!"
STAFF COLUMNIST
LESLIE BOWYER
through the air.
The reason I restrain myself is found in my belief that tenure promotes and encourages lazy attitudes, inept preparation and, for some reason, an amazing ego stimulant. I restrain myself from being too down on the University because I
think the problems here are universal to most educational institutions
So when I know that I will emerge from these last four years very much in debt, I demand quality from the entity to which I have given so much money. And quality is all most of us are asking. But when professors insult these wishes by limiting them to a "shopping mentality" — the term used, ironically, by one of the worst instructors I've ever had — I am offended.
We need teacher evaluations publicized because of the tendency for professors, once they attain tenure, to sit back and take it easy. This, of course, does not mean that they all succumb to the temptation. But it seems the ratio of bad to good is equal. And in a position where your job is guaranteed as long as you do not trade grades for sex, it would be impossible to expect everyone to maintain a high instructional standard.
My college career has not been a resounding failure, but I seem to be guaranteed one poor instructor every semester. Graduate teaching assistants help the curve, as do professors striving for a permanent position on the faculty. The tenured ratio, as I said, has been roughly 50/50, but this is my own personal experience and certainly not a scientific evaluation. The disappointment of my experience, like many others, is great.
The insult lies in the attitude that I should be on my knees, thankful for the professor's kind and generous dissemination of his or her knowledge toward the ignorant students of the class. I should be grateful regardless of the quality of the instruction. I should consider it a blessing simply to be a member of the class, and if the instructor would rather massage his ego, blather on about his failing marriage or simply stumble through the text as if he never had read it, well, those are the breaks, right?
Leslie Bowyer is an Ottawa senior in art history
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CAREER HIGHS
Points
22 vs. Missouri (1-9-95)
Three-point goals none
Field goal attempts 13, two times
Field goals 8, two times
Rebounds 14 vs. Temple (12-22-95)
Three-point attempts
none
Free-throw attempts 15 vs. Colorado (1-20-96)
Free throws 10 vs. Colorado (1-20-96)
Blocked shots
6 vs. St. Peter's (1-15-96)
Assists 4, at North Carolina St. (12-10-94)
Minutes played
33 vs. Temple (12-22-95)*
*overtime game
Steals
3, three times
HONORS
HONORS
1995 Honorable Mention All-Big Eight
1995 Big Eight All-Underrated Team
1995 Big Eight All-Bench Team
1995 CBS Player of the Game vs. Western Kentucky (3-18)
1995 ESPN Player of the Game vs. Missouri (1-9)
1994 Big Eight All-Freshman Team
No.3 Kansas vs. Iowa State
All-time series: Kansas leads 143-50 Big Eight Conference games: 50-24 All games in Lawrence: 74-12 In Allen Field House: 33-6
Biggest scores By Kansas In Lawrence: 127 in 1988-89 (127-82) In Ames:100 in 1977-78 (100-82) In Kansas City: 118 in 1989-90 (118-75) By Iowa State In Lawrence: 89 in 1972-73 (89-65) In Ames: 97 in 1988-89 (97-89) In Kansas City: 91 in 1971-72 (91-88)
Roy Williams vs. Iowa State: 11-5
Cyclone Players to Watch
13 Kelvin Cato Junior center
22 Dedric Willoughby Junior forward
Look for the next poster in this year's series in the Feb.14 edition of the Kansan.
JAYHAWK
SPIRIT
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6-10250CenterJunior San Diego,California
With the departure of center Greg Ostertag to the NBA, Pollard has become the new kid on the block for the Jayhawks. Though he will most likely not equal the blocking record Ostertag set last season, the 6-10 junior has filled in well this season Along with sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz, junior forward B.J Williams and freshman forward T.J. Pugh, Pollard gives the Jayhawks power and depth down low.
Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton said that the Cowboys switched to a zone defense for the Jan. 31 game with Kansas simply because of the power of Pollard and LaFrentz — proof that the San Diego native is king in his neighborhood.
Design by Tom Erickson — Photos by Matt Flickner
Celebrate Valentine's Day With Us! Kansas & Burge Unions Open House Wed. Feb. 14th 10a.m.-2p.m. Hawk
Hawk of my Heart
Drawings for giveaways including a mystery trip for two, computer software, dinner for two and much more! Register for various prizes at the Kansas Union, Burge Union, Wescoe Terrace, Murphy Hall & Visual Arts Snack Bars.
Score big with us...
Purchase a 1996 Jayhawker yearbook
For only $30 you can support the tradition of the yearbook.
The Jayhawker wishes the best for the men's and women's basketball teams on their 1995-96 seasons.
★
Jayhawker yearbook
428 Kansas Union
864-3728
✩
is just around the corner.
The Hill
Look for it Feb.22nd in the Kansan.
This issue is dedicated to your ENTERTAINMENT!
t
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 7, 1996
9A
Show gives a Revue preview
Rock Chalk groups perform at Granada.
Darcv Coles / KANSAN
Abbey Road
By R. Adam Ward
Kansan staff writer
Rob Gaither, Lawrence resident and Rebecca Ashbrook, Minneapolis senior, sing in a show featuring the in-between acts of Rock Chalk Revue. The acts were performed last night at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St.
The in-between acts for Rock Chalk Revue stood in the spotlight last night.
The four groups that will provide entertainment between the show's acts performed at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St., in the First Annual Rock Chalk Preview.
"I think it's a fantastic idea to promote Rock Chalk and the individual in-between acts," said Stephanie Sears, Manhattan senior. "It's an opportunity for the acts to get more exposure and a half-hour set to perform."
Previously, the in-between acts only performed in the 8 minutes it took to change stages in the show, said Bud Anderson, Lawrence senior.
Anderson, a veteran of five Rock Chalk Reviews, said the preview helped to put the spotlight on inbetween acts.
Anderson said he had called local businesses and asked them to pay for the preview's advertising. The performance space and sound system were donated by the Granada.
In addition to providing more performance time for in-between acts, the preview was another way for participants to raise money for the United Way.
Barb Brown Smith, executive director of United Way of Douglas County, said the $5 admission fee helped her organization without being too expensive for those who went to the preview.
Members of the in-between acts appreciated the additional performance opportunity. Rebecca Ashbrook, Minneapolis, Minn., senior has participated in Rock Chalk Review since her freshman year. She said the crowd at the preview was enthusiastic and fun to sing to.
Dain Kloner, De Pere, Wis., junior,
said the preview offered a chance
for the community to support the
United Way and Rock Chalk Review.
Melodi Wolf, Junction City senior.
said the preview also prepared everyone for the Rock Chalk Review and helped promote the review.
Those who attended the show were excited about the performers' quality.
Josh Saunders, Pittsburg senior,
said he wanted to see what all the
hype about Rock Chalk Review was
about.
Saunders said that he never had seen the review but that after watching the preview, he was eager to go.
Tickets for the review can be purchased from the Student Union Activities box office, Dillons stores and the Rock Chalk Review office at the Organizations and Activities Center in the Kansas Union.
Graves' budget ideas examined by Senate
By John Collar Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A Senate subcommittee endorsed most of Gov. Bill Graves' budget recommendations for Regents universities yesterday, but a proposal for a $163 million bond issue for capital improvements remains on the table.
The Regents Systemwide Issues subcommittee submitted its evaluation of the governor's proposed budget, which included recommendations of where the committee could improve on the governor's budget, to the Senate Ways and Means committee.
"There are substantial changes, but they mainly go along with the governor's recommendations," said Sen. Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson, chairman of the committee.
The subcommittee endorsed the Regents' tuition accountability plan. This proposal would give institutions more freedom with additional funds resulting from tuition or enrollment increases.
However, senators expressed concern that the freedom to keep the additional revenue might cause universities to recruit out-of-state students at
the expense of resident students.
The Regents' proposal to sell $163 million in bonds for capital improvement projects still remains one of the major sticking points in the committee. Several senators expressed concern with the way the Regents were seeking to determine the constitutionality of the proposal.
Two weeks ago, the committee requested that the Regents obtain an additional opinion on the legality of using property taxes to pay interest on revenue bonds, which the crumbling classroom proposal advocates.
State Sen. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland Park, said he was concerned that the agency that issued bonds for the state also was seeking the legal opinion in the Regents' case. This is a conflict of interest, he said.
"It's in everyone's interest to see that we get a valid opinion," Vancrum said.
Chairman Kerr said that appropriating funds for salaries would be easier after the governor's salary proposals were considered in the House.
The subcommittee also recommended cutting $78,266 from the fund to service new buildings. The governor's budget has allocated $1.07 million for this fund.
LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS
842-8665
2858 Four Wheel Dr.
Attention Artists!
Submit your work!
Now thru February
19th by 5 p.m.
Photo and sculpture Exhibition
All Students welcome to apply! Exhibit dates are April 22nd - May 3rd To be exhibited in the kansas union gallery
pick up applications at the SUA office from 9 - 5 pm, level 4, kansas union for more information call 864-3477
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APPLICATION DEADLINE: Friday February 9th at 5PM Check out the Senate Homepage on the WWW@ : http://ukanaix.cc.ukans.udu/~senate/senate.html
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10A
Wednesday, February 7. 1996
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--criminals by the international tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands. Only one of 52 people indicted by that tribunal is in custody.
PATRICIA MARY
Join us for a Susan B. Anthony Birthday Celebration
1820-1906
- 1872 Arrested for attempting to vote
* 1892-1900 Servied as President of the American Woman Suffrage Association
* 1920 Finally, women are granted to right to vote
Thursday, February 15, 1996
Rotunda, Strong Hall,
2:00 - 4:00 p.m.
Cake and punch will be served
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 135 Strong Hill University of Kansas. For more information, contact Mailto B464-8552.
KOREA
Samui Cinema
DRUMMING AND DANCING SamulNorl
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents
Percussion Master Class February 14, 1996, 5 p.m.
Performance for Students Grades 5-12:
February 18, 1996. 10 a.m.
New Directions Series Event
Led Center
February 15, 1996, 8 p.m.
Gripped by the Drum, Drawn by the Dance
ENSEMBLE
Tradition meets The Present
SUPRENT
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS). Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3477) and all Ticketmaster Box Office tickets. Ticketmaster at (913) 234 4045.
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina—Pulling the pin on one of the most explosive issues in the Bosnian war, Bosnia's government announced yesterday that it would press for war-crimes indictments for two top Serb officers arrested after they made a wrong turn near Sarajevo.
The Associated Press
Angry Bosnian Serb leaders immediately broke off contacts with the Muslim-led government. Even NATO denounced the arrests of the officers, whom Bosnia accused of slaughtering civilians.
"The city of Sarajevo has, sadly, become the Beirut of Europe and has disqualified itself as a possible joint Serb, Muslim and Croat capital," Serb leaders said in a statement. Serb officials said they no longer would travel to areas of Sarajevo held by the Bosnian government.
Bosnia seeks war-crime trial
Bosnia claimed Gen. Djordje Djukic and Col. Aleksa Krsmanovic bear responsibility for mass killings of civilians around Sarajevo.
The peace accord doesn't address what might happen if Bosnia decided to charge the two with war crimes in conjunction with its own laws.
The Muslim-led Bosnian government disclosed Monday that it had detained eight Serbs in the past three weeks and that it was holding five on suspicion of war crimes.
Brig. Andrew Cumming, a spokesman for the NATO force, described the arrests as provocative and inflammatory, noting that neither Serb officer had been indicted by the international tribunal investigating war crimes in the former Yugoslavia.
Djukic, Krsmanovic and their driver were arrested Jan. 30 after taking a wrong turn onto government territory near Sarajevo, Cummings said.
The driver and two other Serbs being questioned as witnesses soon will be freed, said Bakir Alisphak, the chief of Bosnia's security service.
The pursuit of war criminals is one of the touchest issues in bringing peace to the former Yugoslavia. The Dayton peace accord requires all sides to cooperate in bringing war criminals to justice, but it appears to speak mainly of those labeled as
Djukic, in his seventies, is the highest-ranking Serb detained by the government. He was a logistics specialist and close aide to Bosnian Serb military commander Gen. Ratko Mladic during the war.
The other three suspects in custody were believed to have killed civilians in eastern Bosnia and were arrested recently in a civilian car carrying rifles, hand grenades and ammunition, Bosnian officials said.
"It would be a pity if this encouraged a retaliatory reaction," Cuming said. "Everything is very fragile."
The Bosnian government has asked the U.N. tribunal to examine evidence against the five and has promised to release them if the tribunal does not indict them.
bike
Serb leaders protested that the arrests violated the peace accord, which stipulates that those who stray into hostile territory should be turned back rather than arrested.
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina
Love Your Cycle.
GOP candidates battle in bayou
BATON ROUGE, La. — Phil Gramm and Pat Buchanan battled for conservative support yesterday as Louisiana Republicans cast the first votes of the 1996 presidential race.
The first 21 delegates to the Republican National Convention were at stake, but the balloting was boycotted
The Associated Press
Phil Gramm
by most of the GOP field, including Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, publishing heir Steve Forbes and former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander.
They stayed away to assuage state GOP leaders and activists in Iowa, which holds its presidential preference caucuses next Monday and traditionally has gone first in the nominating chase.
Gramm, a Texas senator, was heavily favored because of deep support in the state GOP establishment. His supporters included state party leaders who designed the event, and Buchanan complained to the end that the process was tilted in Gramm's favor.
I am a man of many experiences. I have lived in many countries, but my home country is China. I grew up in Beijing and has been there for many years. I love Chinese culture and food, and I enjoy learning about it. I also love music and dance. I am a very proud member of the Chinese community and I always look forward to meeting new people.
Valentines Day Special:
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Foster complained the event was poorly organized but nonetheless predicted it would frame the race for Iowa and beyond.
"We could have Louisiana decide who the real challenger to Bob Dole is going to be," he said.
The boycotting candidates begged to differ. Alexander, campaigning in Iowa, told reporters he had no regrets about staying away.
Using secret ballots, not a traditional caucus setting, voters were electing three delegates and three alternates from each of the state's seven congressional districts.
YCLE WORKS
CYCLING AND FITNESS
1601 W. 23rd. 842-6363
local time. In one last tweak at Iowa Republicans, who tried unsuccessfully to derail the Louisiana event, polls opened a half-hour earlier in tiny Iowa, La.
C
A.
Nine more national convention delegates will be allocated based on the March 12 Super Tuesday primary, when Dole, Forbes, Alexander and others plan to be on the ballot. It takes nearly 1,000 delegates to clinch the nomination.
Only registered Republicans were allowed to vote yesterday.
"The presidential race begins next Monday in Iowa," he said. "Louisiana is a media sideshow arranged to help the campaigns of two sagging candidates—Mr. Gramm and Mr. Buchanan."
Pat Buchanan
traveling to Louisiana. Gramm said he would consider 11 delegates a victory, trying to lower expectations from earlier predictions he would get all or most of the 21 delegates.
Although the event was dubbed a caucus, it amounted to a mini-primary.
Buchanan hoped to deny Gramm's bid for momentum heading into Iowa and New Hampshire, where they are competing for many of the same conservative voters.
"L'univers arce 1993
my step, I'll have a little broader smile on my face if we win than if we lose."
The state GOP set up 42 voting sites in the state, and polls were open from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Buchanan spent the entire day in the state, capping a spirited effort in which he campaigned often and invested in television advertising.
"Any delegate we get away from Phil Grann is a victory," Buchanan said.
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 8228
"University of Warwick 1993"
How about...
Rush over to the Independent Study office north of the Kansas Union, and pick up a catalog. Over 120 classes available.Call 864-4440 for more information.
Be an early bird!
Let a correspondence class help you graduate
Enroll any weekday of the year 8am to 4pm!
BIOL 305c. Principals of Human Physiology
MATH 365c. Elementary Statistics
PSYC 566c. Psychology and the Law
WC 205c. Western Civilization II
7
Independent Study Continuing Education
Music and Dance
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Department of
KU Symphonic Band Robert E. Foster, conductor
featuring guest soloist Paul Garner Dallas Symphony Orchestra clarinet soloist
7:30 p.m.
Monday, February 12, 1996
Lied Center
General admission tickets are on sale in the KU box offices: Murphy Hall, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; SUA Office, 864-3477; public $5, students and senior citizens $3; both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders.
ATTENTION:
PRE-BUSINESS STUDENTS
who will complete the minimum
requirements for admission
by the end of the Spring Semester
APPLICATIONS FOR SUMMER AND FALL 1996
ADMISSION TO THE
- SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ARE DUE:
ARE DUE:
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15 IN 206 SUMMERFIELD
APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN 206 SUMMERFIELD 864-3844
864-3844
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 7. 1996
11A
Taxpayers pick up first lady's tab
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Taxpayers will pick up the lion's share of Hillary Rodham Clinton's air fare for a tour to promote her best-selling book about children, according to government and airline estimates.
Mrs. Clinton is flying on a 12-seat Air Force jet that costs $2,890 per flying hour because the Secret Service wanted the first lady to use a government plane for security reasons.
The book, It Takes a Village and Other Lessons Children Teach Us, is No.1 on The New York Times best-seller list. Most of the proceeds from it will go to children's hospitals and other charities.
Mrs. Clinton's aides said the tax-payer expense was an unfortunate but necessary cost, but critics said the first lady should have found a cheaper way to promote her book, which is a private endeavor.
Footing the bill
Taxpayers will likely pay about 80% of the $2,890-an-hour cost of flying Hillary Rodham Clinton around the country on an Air Force jet to promote her new book. A breakdown of the expense:
San Francisco
Second trip starts
Chicago
Detroit
Boston
New York
Denver
First trip starts
Los Angeles
Little Rock
Dallas
Wash., D.C.
Total flying time: 24 hrs.
Paid by taxpayers: $53,196 to $57,402
Hourly cost of jet: $2,890
Reimbursed by Clinton's publisher: $11,958 to $16,164
Cost to fly both trins: $69,360
SOURCE: News reports, figures are approximate
The total bill for the plane will come to about $69,360 by the time the tour ends later this month. Taxpayers will absorb about 80 percent of the cost.
Mrs. Clinton's publisher, New York-based Simon & Schuster, will
Knight-Ridder Tribune
reimburse the government the amount of a first-class air fare ticket for each leg of the trip for both Mrs. Clinton and the two aides accompanying her.
That reimbursement would total between $11,958 to $16,164, based on fares quoted by several airlines.
That would leave taxpayers to absorb between $53,196, or 77 percent and $87,402, or 82 percent, for
the flights. The Secret Service protection the first lady always is provided would be extra.
"The security comes at some expense to the taxpayer, and we regret that, but the Secret Service made a recommendation, and we listened to it," said Neel Lattimore, deputy press secretary for Mrs. Clinton.
grich, R-Ga., traveled to promote his new book last year, he agreed to pick up the cost of air travel out of his own pocket. Taxpayers paid to have plainclothes U.S. Capitol Police provide his usual security.
When House Speaker Newt Gin-
There is a precedent for presidents' wives using government planes for personal book tours. Barbara Bush used a military jet to promote her best-selling book about the Bush's dog, Millie.
David Keating, executive vice president of the National Taxpayers Union, a nonpartisan group that advocates lower taxes, said Mrs. Clinton could have chartered a jet or done live video presentations to save money.
But in an atmosphere of cost-cutting and budget-balancing, critics said Mrs. Clinton should have found a less expensive alternative than the $2,890-an-hour Air Force plane.
Parking in the rear
Using the Air Force jet is the most expensive way to tackle this, Keating said.
The exact cost of the trip won't be known until some weeks after the final leg of the tour is complete, Lattimore said.
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Many students refuse to leave childhood behind. For them, college can be a...
manda Traughber
Toyland
**DAMMER II**
Story by Amanda Traughber
Photos by James Grau
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THE UNIVERSITY
DAILY KANSAN
M
Mike likes to play.
He takes pride in his toy collection, which includes a Star Wars Death Star play set, crayons, Micro Machines, a Lego medieval adventure figure, a Nerf football, a yo-yo and a cloth Frisbee disk.
Among his favorites are a Star Wars Millennium Falcon spaceship and a tauntaun, a kangaroo-like creature from The Empire Strikes Back.
"The Millennium Falcon opens up into this rebel base with X-wing fighters inside," he said. "It's like two toys."
Despite his boyish enthusiasm, Mike McGuire is not a child — he is an Omaha, Neb., senior.
McGuire is not immature, and he is not alone in his appreciation for toys. He said that like many other students, he turned to toys to fight the boredom he sometimes felt while doing homework.
Pam Botts, associate director of the University's Counseling and Psychological Services, said toys helped students relieve stress through laughter and reminded them of happy times. But most important, they're fun, she said.
"One thing college students like to do and should do is have fun," Botts said. She recommends toys as a stress reliever because playing is important to developing emotional flexibility, which represents part of a healthy lifestyle.
Botts said that playing with toys also helped students through transitions from one place in life to another.
"Sometimes toys can function in such a way as to provide a connection between home and previous times and more security," she said. "We call those things transitional objects."
Although playing is part of a healthy lifestyle, it can be harmful if it interferes with a student's ability to complete homework and other necessary tasks.
"If all one does is play, that's a problem," Botts said.
Whether the need for play is rooted in a desire to return to happier days or is merely a way to fight boredom, toy manufacturers have caught on and are beginning to market their toy lines to older groups.
One example is a February 1993 Brandweek article, Turbo-Powered Toy that charted the growth of Hasbro Inc.'s line of Nerf toys. Part of Hasbro's expansion of the Nerf line included marketing foam toys to young adults.
Joe Johnson, assistant manager of Fun and Games, 816 Massachusetts St., estimated that about one-third of the store's customers were college students.
He said that many students were interested in role-playing games, especially Assassin. Groups of students organize the game, in which each player is assigned to "kill" another with a toy weapon, Johnson said. The last one "alive" is the winner.
When the game is announced, we might sell a whole bunch of guns right away," he said.
The most popular toys at the store right now are board games because the weather forces students to stay indoors, Johnson said.
Jen Beaird, Lawrence junior, prefers toys such as paints, plastic construction pieces from Germany, papers and cameras, which allow her to build or invent things.
Instead of using her toys as a study break, Beaird waits to play until she is done with her homework.
"It's better than watching TV," she said. "You can be more creative."
Hill
---
TRACK Student volunteers are needed for the Kansas Relays. Page 3. NBA Magic may join the Dream Team. Page 5.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1996
SECTION B
Upstart Cyclones visit'Hawks
15
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Kansas senior forward Sean Pearson keeps the ball away from Kansas State's Tyrone Davis in Sunday's game. The No. 3 Jeyahaws will face Will. 21 Iowa State tonight in Allen Field House.
Big Eight lead is on the line
By Jenni Canson
Kansan sportswriter
Roy Williams knew little about No. 21 Iowa State at the beginning of the season.
The Kansas men's basketball coach is not ashamed to admit it. That's probably because he wasn't the only one.
The Cyclones lost 10 lettermen, so second-year coach Tim Floyd brought in 10 new faces.
"He basically had to rebuild his team," Williams said. "But he was able to recruit. He knew what style he wanted to play."
Floyd's style has led to a 5-1 record in the Big Eight Conference and 16-4 overall. With No. 3 Kansas standing at 6-0 in the conference, Iowa State could share the lead with a win tonight. The game tips off at 7:05 in Allen Field House.
"I wouldn't have dreamed of this kind of record early." Floyd said. "We've grown together, and we're playing extremely hard right now."
Much of the success is due to the play of transfers. Seven Cyclone players have experience at either a junior college or another four-year school. The four leading scorers are transfers who account for 51.6 points a game.
Dedric Willoughby, a transfer from New Orleans, where Floyd coached before moving to Iowa State, leads the Cyclones in scoring. The junior guard's 20.2-point-a-game average is third in the Big Eight.
"They're doing it with great defensive play and good guard play," Williams said. "The one thing I see that scares me, though is how much
they get to the free-throw line."
The Cyclones have gotten to the line almost twice as often as their opponents, attempting 562 free-throws compared to their opponents' 288.
Even with this disparity in his team's favor, Flond is still worried.
And Iowa State will be facing the Big Eight's best rebounding team tonight. The Jayhawks average 7.3 more boards a game than their opponents.
Kansas sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz is a major contributor to that advantage. He has the Big Eight's third-best rebounding average at 8.5.
"I don't know that we're out of the woods yet," he said. "We've been a terrible rebounding team."
Williams said LaFrentz might have been as active in the victory against K-State on Sunday as he had been in a long time. He scored a career-high 24 points and grabbed eight rebounds, including several off his own missed shots.
"I'd like for him to go ahead and get it the first time, unless he's trying to pad his rebound numbers," Williams said.
LaFrentz won't need much motivation to hit shots, rebound or do anything else tonight. The Monona, Iowa, native got heavy criticism from Iowans when he signed with the Jayhawks two years ago.
"I've got a lot of people coming down from home and want to set the record straight," he said. "I'll look forward to playing them here, but I'll really look forward to playing them there."
During the game in Ames, Iowa, last season, LaFrentz was booed by Cyclone fans and scored only five points.
The date of that opportunity is burned into LaFrentz's mind.
"The 17th of February," he said. "Till be read."
Women's basketball recruit rebuilds strength
Kansan sportswriter
By Evan Blackwell
Pruitt, a 5-foot-5 point guard from Jonesboro, suffered the injury in the season-opening game of her senior year.
One of the Kansas recruits for next season, Casey Prutt, had torn the anterior cruciate ligament in her right knee.
When Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington got a call from Arkansas three months ago, she learned that one of her worst nightmares had come true.
"Nobody even hit me. I just planted my foot, and I heard the knee pop." Pruitt
said. "The first thing I thought of was the ACL, because I've heard about that so much on TV."
Pruitt soon learned that she would miss her entire senior season and that surgery would be required to repair her knee.
Washington said it was easy to assume the worst in a situation like Pruitt's.
"The thing that hit me first was the overwhelming number of young women I've seen getting injured," Washington said. "Here's a young girl who has never suffered an injury before, and it happened to her."
Pruitt underwent successful knee surgery Dec. 20. She is nearing the mid-
die of a seven-month rehabilitation program.
"It was hard the first day," Pruitt said. "My leg felt so heavy. I could barely lift it."
Pruitt said her doctors had said she was ahead of her reh schedule. However, the target date for her return to the court is not until June or July.
"I'm really excited about coming to Lawrence this summer and working out with the team and working at the summer camps." Pratt said.
Pruitt was chosen as an honorable mention in Street and Smith's magazine's National All-American contest
after her junior year.
She chose Kansas over Virginia, Wake Forest and Arkansas State.
"I loved the team, and I loved Coach Washington," Pruitt said. "She cares about you, not just as an athlete, but as a student athlete."
Washington said Pruitt's work ethic helped alleviate fears surrounding her injury.
"I knew she was the kind of kid who wouldn't stay down," Washington said. "With some kids, an injury can become a mental game, but I knew it wouldn't be with Casey because of her determination."
Tennis trio ready for elite event
By Spencer Duncan Kansan sportswriter
The finest players in college tennis will compete to prove who among them is the best, and three players from Kansas will have the chance to be No.1.
Kansas sophomore Enrique Abaroa and juniors Kyle Hunt and Jenny Atkerson will begin play tomorrow in the first round of the Rolex Indoor National Championships in Dallas. The tournament is the third Intercollegiate Tennis Association Grand Slam of the season, and it is the deciding factor in who are the best indoor players in collegiate tennis.
"These are the best players around," Hunt said "But I really don't let that
The tournament is divided into men's and women's divisions. Each division has a field of 32 players in singles competition and 16 teams in doubles competition. The tournament is small and allows for only the top collegiate tennis players to compete against one another.
K.U.
Tennis
Hunt knows the field is an elite one.
"There are tough players there, but it really doesn't worry us." Hunt said. "We're ready to go and play. We just have to do what we can."
Hunt holds two national rankings and will be pulling double duty at the tournament. She is ranked sixth in singles and with partner Atkerson is No.2 in doubles. Both of these rankings will be put on the line
Abaroa enters the tournament untested in the last two weeks. He was upset in the second round of the Big Eight Indoor Championships two weeks ago, and has not played since then because of soreness in his shoulder.
Kansas men's tennis coach Michael Center thinks the tournament will give Abaroa the chance to to strut his stuff, despite the two week layoff.
"He has been getting treatments and medication to help his shoulder," Center said. "He is in good shape even though he hasn't played. Enrique should play very well."
Although all the players hold national rankings, they couldn't count on the ranking to get them into the tournament. Each player had to win another tournament to get to Dallas.
Abaroa earned a bid by winning the singles title at the Rolex Regional V Championships in October. Hunt received an automatic berth after winning the singles title at the Central Region Rolex Championships.
Atkerson and Hunt received their doubles bid after claiming victory at the T. Rowe Price National Clay Court Championships in Baltimore, which was the first grand slam of the year.
The chances of victory are good, according to the athletes. Center also thinks the players have a good chance of proving themselves.
"It's a tough field to play," Center said. "I think everything will go well."
Kansas greets new baseball coach with preseason uncertainties
Bv Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
The winds of change blew harder than a Tom Seaver fastball on the Kansas baseball team during the offseason.
It had more departures than a metropolitan airport.
The result of the changes is preseason question marks surrounding the team.
He comes to Kansas after 11 years at Iowa State, where he compiled a 309-311-1 record. Iowa State's 28-24 mark last year was good enough for a third-place Big Eight Conference finish.
Who will pitch — and in what role? Who will play third base? Who will play left field? Right field? Can the team overcome a lack of experience early on?
The man who must answer these questions is Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall.
He replaces Dave Bingham, the most successful Kansas baseball coach in terms of postseason appearances. Bingham resigned last August after guiding Kansas to a 24-33, sixth-place conference finish.
Randall, who is joined by assistants Wilson Kilmer, Rick Sabath and Steve Lienhard, knows of the challenges ahead. But he isn't setting goals for wins.
"I'm not going to say, 'We're going to win this amount of games,'" he said. "I want to win all 56. Right now, I'm worried about Friday, Feb. 9. And when that game is over,
ANALYSIS
we're going to start worrying about the next game."
There may be plenty to worry about if the pitching staff cannot overcome the losses it has suffered
"If ever there was a year to be a pitcher at the University of Kansas, this is it. There is unlimited opportunity," Randall said. "There's not much experience on the field. There's little, if any, on the mound. And if they had experience, it wasn't good."
Gone is Kansas ace Jamie Splittertorr and last season's Big Eight saves leader in Robert Keens.
Splittorff was drafted in the 13th round by the Minnesota Twins. Keens quit the team late last season.
The Jayhawk' pitching staff has lost 79 percent of its innings pitched, 74 percent of its strikeouts and 71 percent of its wins.
The only certainty on the mound, if he is healthy, is junior Aric Peters. He appeared in just two games last year before suffering an elbow injury.
"Everything seems to have gotten better," Peters said. "Right now I'm completely healthy, and I'm ready to show Kansas what I can do."
Early reports have him throwing in the low 90s, and Randall expects him to be the ace.
Kansas also is counting on seniors Clay Baird (3-7, 8.27) and Josh Belovsky (1-0, 5.56 with Texas Tech) and sophomore Linus Williams (2-1, 6.75).
SAM BROOKSTON
Junior centerfielder Isaac Byrd, junior shortstop Joe DeMarco, junior second baseman Josh Kliner and senior catcher Ted Meadows form the nucleus. The arms of the defense are in
The strength of this team is the four players up the middle of the diamond.
"The core of the defense is excellent." Randall said. "We have excellent team speed. We have some guys that can run."
DeMarco said expectations were high within the team.
"Last year there were a lot of negative attitudes and tension between players and coaches. It seemed like we were always at each other's throats," he said.
Steve Punoe / KANSAN
Kansas seniors Ted Meadows, Josh Kliner, Clay Baird and Josh Belovsky will be counted on heavily this season by firstyear coach Boby Randall. The Jayhawks begin the 1996 season on Friday in Grand Canyon, Ariz.
"It's totally different this year. From what I've seen, the attitude is 10 times greater. We're really positive, and that starts with the coach."
Byrd will be the captain of an outfield that doesn't have a starting right or left fielder. Sophomore Eric Vann, junior Mario Opioi, freshman Les Walrond and junior Justin Headley head the list of candidates.
Junior Craig Stewart and freshmen Nick Frank and Andy Juday will compete for the third baseman's job, taking over for Brent Wilhelm, who was drafted by the Chicago White Sox last June.
If Kansas can exceed the Baseball America preseason prediction of sixth in the Big Eight, Randall will know why.
"This team hasn't had to learn work ethic," Randall said. "I can demand it, and they know what it means."
Baseball
24-33 overall, 9-17 in the Big
Eight Conference, sixth place
18-11 home
5-20 away
1-2 neutral
Bobby Randall
Iowa State 28-24, third place
309-311-1.498 11 years
Head Coach: Bobby Randall
(1st year)
Assistant Coaches:: Wilson
Kilmer (ninth year)
Steve Lienhard (first year)
Rick Sabath (first year)
---
y
8
2B
---
Wednesday, February 7, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SCORES & MORE
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Big Eight Conference Men's Standings
Conference All Games W L Pct. W L Kansas 6 0 1.000 18 1 .947 Iowa St. 5 1 .833 16 4 .800 Kansas St. 5 3 .625 14 6 .700 Oklahoma 4 4 .500 13 6 .619 Nebraska 3 4 .429 15 7 .682 Missouri 3 4 .429 13 6 .619 Okla. St. 1 6 .143 11 6 .579 Colorado 1 6 .143 8 12 .333
Tonight's Games
Colorado at Kansas State. 7 p.m.
Nebraska at Missouri. 7 p.m.
Iowa state at Kansas. 7:05 p.m.
Men's Top 25 Eared
How the 20 team in the Associated Press' college basketball court fared Tuesday:
1. Massachusetts (22-0) beat Fordham 73-47.
Next: vs. Temple, Sunday.
3. Kansas (18-1) did not play. Next: vs. No.
21 Iowa State, Wednesday.
2. Kentucky (18-1) did not play. Next: at Vanderbilt, Wednesday.
Moon (42-21) Day, February 30, 1975
Next: vs. West Virginia, Wednesday, Feb. 14.
5. Cincinnati (17-1) did not play. Next: vs.
Saint Louis, Wednesday.
6. Villanova (19-3) did not play. Next: at Rutgers, Saturday.
18-33 did not play. Next at Colorado State, Saturday.
8. Certified by AAU. Did not play.
8. Georgetown (16) did not play. Next: vs.
No. 18 Syracuse, 4-14).
9. Wake Forest (14-3) did not play. Next: vs.
Florida State, Wednesday.
10. Penn State (16-2) did not play. Next: vs.
Illinois, Thursday.
11. Virginia Tech (17-2) beat Duquesne 69-63 Next at Xavier on Saturday.
Sunday:
12. North Carolina (16-5) lost to Maryland 84-
78. Nyed. from Greenville
78. Next: vs. Georgia Tech, Saturday.
13. Texas Tech (18-1) did not play. vs.
Texas Christian, Wednesday.
Texas Christian, Wednesday.
14. Purdue (17-4) did not play. Next at Wisconsin, Wednesday.
15. Memphis (16-4) did not play. Next: at North Carolina Charlotte. Thursday.
16. Arizona (16-4) did not play, Next: at Arizona State, Wednesday.
17. UCLA (15-5) did not play. Next: vs. California at Oakland College Arena, Thursday.
Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh Civic Arena, Wednesday.
20. Louisville (16-6) did not play. Next: vs.
Tulane. Thursday.
19. Iowa (15-6) did not play. Next: at North west, western, Wednesday.
21. Iowa State (16-4) did not play. Next at:
No. 3 Kansas, Wednesday
22. Bosion College (13-5) did not play. Next:
at St John's, Wednesday.
3. Michigan (15-7) did not play. Next: At No.
14 Purdue, Saturday
14. Sunday, Saturday.
24. Eastern Michigan (16-2) did not play.
Next: at Western Michigan, Wednesday.
25. Stanford (13-5) did not play. Next: vs.
Southern California, Thursday.
Big Eight Conference Women's Standings
Conference All Games W L Pct. W L Pct. Okla. St. 6 3 .667 16 4 .800 Colorado 6 3 .667 19 4 .760 Kansas 6 3 .667 13 8 .619 Nebraska 5 4 .556 15 8 .614 Missouri 4 5 .444 13 3 .619 Iowa St. 3 6 .333 15 6 .714 Oklahoma 3 6 .333 11 10 .524 Kansas St. 3 6 .333 11 12 .478
Oklahoma State at Arkansas, 7 p.m.
Women's Top 25 Fared
How the top 25 teams in The Associated Press' women's college basketball poll fared
No. 1 Georgia (18-2) did not play. Next at No.
17 Mississippi, Wednesday.
No. 2 Louisiana Tech (20-1) did not play. Next:
at Western Kentucky, Friday.
No. 3 Connecticut (20-3) did not play. Next:
vs. St. John's, Wednesday.
No. 4. Stanford (16-2) did not play. Next at Southern Call, Friday.
No. 5 Iowa (19-1) did not play. Next: at Michigan St. Friday
No. 6 Tennessee (17-4) did not play. Next at:
0. 8 Wisconsin, Thursday.
No. 7 Texas Tech (17-2) did not play. Next: at Texas Christian, Wednesday.
No. 8 Wisconsin (18-2) did not play. Next: vs.
No. 6 Wisconsin, Thursday.
No. 6 Tennessee, Thursday.
No. 9 Wisconsin (16-4) did not play. Next at No.
No. 9. Virginia (16-4) did not play. Next: at No.
15 N. Carolina St., Wednesday.
No. 10 Old Dominion (16-2) did not play. Next:
vs. East Carolina. Wednesday.
No. 11 Vandebilt (16-5) lost to No. 22 Auburn
*1-66. at LSU; Saturday.
No. 12 Penn State (17-5) did not play. Next:
vs Michigan, Friday
No. 13 Alabama (18-4) did not play Next: vs.
Rolls-Royce
No. 14, Duke (18-5) did not play. Next: vs.
Wake Forest, Thursday.
No. 15 North Carolina State (15-5) did not
meet Michigan (15-6).
play. Meet vs. no. 9 Virginia, Wednesday.
10. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
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151. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
152. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
153. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
154. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
155. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
156. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
157. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
158. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
159. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
160. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
161. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
162. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
163. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
164. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
165. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
166. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
167. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
168. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
169. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
170. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
171. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
172. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
173. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
174. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
175. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
176. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
177. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
178. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
179. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
180. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
181. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
182. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
183. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
184. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
185. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
186. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
187. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
188. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
189. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
190. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
191. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
192. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
193. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
194. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
195. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
196. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
197. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
198. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
199. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
200. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
201. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
202. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
203. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
204. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
205. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
206. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
207. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
208. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
209. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
210. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
211. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
212. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
213. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
214. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
215. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
216. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
217. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
218. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
219. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
220. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
221. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
222. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
223. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
224. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
225. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
226. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
227. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
228. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
229. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
230. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
231. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
232. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
233. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
234. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
235. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
236. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
237. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
238. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
239. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
240. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
241. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
242. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
243. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
244. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
245. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
246. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
247. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
248. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
249. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
250. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
251. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
252. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
253. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
254. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
255. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
256. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
257. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
258. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
259. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
260. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
261. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
262. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
263. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
264. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
265. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
266. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
267. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
268. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
269. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
270. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
271. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
272. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
273. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
274. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
275. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
276. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
277. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
278. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
279. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
280. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
281. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
282. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
283. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
284. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
285. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
286. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
287. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
288. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
289. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
290. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
291. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
292. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
293. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
294. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
295. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
296. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
297. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
298. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
299. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
300. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
301. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
302. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
303. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
304. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
305. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
306. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
307. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
308. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
309. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
310. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
311. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
312. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
313. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
314. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
315. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
316. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
317. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
318. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
319. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
320. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
321. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
322. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
323. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
324. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
325. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
326. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
327. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
328. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
329. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
330. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
331. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
332. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
333. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
334. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
335. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
336. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
337. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
338. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
339. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
340. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
341. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
342. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
343. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
344. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
345. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
346. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
347. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
348. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
349. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
350. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
351. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
352. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
353. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
354. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
355. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
356. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
357. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
358. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
359. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
360. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
361. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
362. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
363. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
364. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
365. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
366. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
367. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
368. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
369. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
370. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
371. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
372. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
373. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
374. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
375. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
376. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
377. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
378. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
379. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
380. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
381. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
382. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
383. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
384. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
385. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
386. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
387. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
388. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
389. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
390. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
391. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
392. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
393. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
394. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
395. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
396. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
397. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
398. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
399. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
400. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
401. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
402. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
403. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
404. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
405. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
406. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
407. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
408. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
409. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
410. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
411. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
412. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
413. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
414. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
415. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
416. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
417. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
418. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
419. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
420. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
421. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
422. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
423. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
424. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
425. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
426. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
427. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
428. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
429. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
430. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
431. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
432. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
433. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
434. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
435. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
436. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
437. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
438. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
439. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
440. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
441. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
442. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
443. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
444. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
445. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
446. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
447. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
448. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
449. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
450. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
451. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
452. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
453. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
454. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
455. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
456. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
457. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
458. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
459. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
460. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
461. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
462. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
463. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
464. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
465. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
466. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
467. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
468. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
469. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
470. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
471. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
472. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
473. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
474. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
475. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
476. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
477. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
478. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
479. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
480. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
481. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
482. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
483. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
484. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
485. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
486. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
487. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
488. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
489. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
490. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
491. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
492. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
493. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
494. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
495. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
496. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
497. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
498. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
499. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
500. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
501. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
502. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
503. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
504. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
505. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
506. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
507. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
508. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
509. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
510. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
511. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
512. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
513. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
514. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
515. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
516. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
517. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
518. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
519. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
520. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
521. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
522. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
523. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
524. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
525. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
526. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
527. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
528. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
529. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
530. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
531. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
532. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
533. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
534. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
535. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
536. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
537. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
538. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
539. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
540. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
541. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
542. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
543. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
544. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
545. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
546. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
547. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
548. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
549. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
550. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
551. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
552. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
553. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
554. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
555. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
556. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
557. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
558. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
559. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
560. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
561. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
562. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
563. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
564. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
565. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
566. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
567. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
568. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
569. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
570. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
571. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
572. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
573. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
574. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
575. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
576. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
577. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
578. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
579. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
580. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
581. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
582. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
583. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
584. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
585. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
586. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
587. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
588. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
589. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
590. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
591. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
592. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
593. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
594. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
595. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
596. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
597. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
598. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
599. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
600. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
601. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
602. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
603. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
604. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
605. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
606. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
607. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
608. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
609. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
610. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
611. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
612. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
613. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
614. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
615. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
616. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
617. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
618. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
619. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
620. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
621. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
622. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
623. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
624. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
625. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
626. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
627. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
628. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
629. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
630. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
631. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
632. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
633. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
634. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
635. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
636. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
637. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
638. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
639. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
640. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
641. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
642. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
643. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
644. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
645. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
646. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
647. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
648. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
649. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
650. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
651. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
652. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
653. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
654. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
655. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
656. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
657. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
658. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
659. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
660. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
661. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
662. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
663. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
664. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
665. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
666. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
667. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
668. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
669. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
670. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
671. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
672. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
673. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
674. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
675. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
676. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
677. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
678. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
679. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
680. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
681. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
682. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
683. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
684. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
685. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
686. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
687. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
688. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
689. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
690. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
691. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
692. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
693. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
694. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
695. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next:
696. Oregon State (14-4) did not play. Next
vs. Washington St., Thursday.
No. 17 Mississippi (15-5) did not play. Next:
No. 17 Mississippi (15-5) did not play. Next:
vs. No. 1 Georgia, Wednesday.
No. 18 Clemson (16-3) did not play. Next: vs.
Maryland, Westford
No. 19 Colorado (19-6) did not play. Next:
vs. Missouri. Saturday.
No. 20 Florida (16-5) did not play. Next: vs.
No. 17 Mississippi, Sunday.
No. 21 Oklahoma State (16-4) did not play.
Next at Arkansas, Wednesday.
No. 22 Auborn (16-5) beat No. 11 Vanderbilt
*11-66 North Kenton, Kentucky* Saturday
No. 23 Purdue (13-9) did not play. Next: vs.
Indiana. Friday
No. 24 Notre Dame (14-5) did not play. Next:
Wednesday.
12. In the last word, is there a comma?
No. 25 Stephen F. Austin (16-2) did not play.
TV
DIE
SPORTS WATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Wednesday (schedule subject to change and-or blackouts):
(All times Central)
WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 7
1 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7
1pm
**ESPN2** — ARCA Auto Racing,
practice for the ARCA Bondo/Mar-
Hyde Supercar 200, at Daytona
Beach, Fla.
ESPN --- NCAA Basketball, Duke at Georgia Tech
ESPN2 — NHL Hockey, Pittsburgh at New Jersey
TBS NBA Basketball, Orlando at Detroit
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Seton Hall at Runners
WDAP, WIBW — NCAA Basketball, Iowa State at Kansas
PRIME NCAA Basketball,
East Kansas
8 a.m.
TBS — NBA Basketball, New Jersey at L. A. Lakers
South Florida at Marquette
Next: vs. North Texas, Thursday
PRO FOOTBALL
1996 NFL Draft Order
NEW YORK — The selection order for the first round of the NFL draft will be held April 20-21. The draft will be on Thursday, April 23.
1. New York City
2. Jacksonville
3. Arizona
4. Cleveland
5. New York Giants
6. Washington
7. New England
8. x-Carolina
9. x-Houston
10. Cincinnati
11. New Orleans
12. Tampa Bay
13. St. Louis
14. Seattle
15. Denver
16. Minnesota
17. Oakland
18. Chicago
19. Atlanta
20. Miami
21. San Diego
22. Indianapolis
23. Detroit
24. Buffalo
25. Philadelphia
26. San Francisco
27. Green Bay
28. Kansas City
29. Pittsburgh
30. Dallas
PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division
| | W L | T L | Pts | GF | GA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| N.Y. Rangers | 31 | 12 | 10 | 72 | 148 |
| Florida | 32 | 15 | 6 | 70 | 184 |
| Philadelphia | 26 | 14 | 11 | 63 | 179 |
| Washington | 25 | 21 | 5 | 55 | 145 |
| New Jersey | 23 | 22 | 6 | 55 | 133 |
| Tampa Bay | 22 | 21 | 7 | 51 | 151 |
| N.Y. Islanders | 14 | 29 | 8 | 36 | 150 |
Pittsburgh 32 17 3 6 67 244 176
Montreal 26 11 6 58 168 162
Boston 22 21 7 51 180 183
Hartford 22 21 5 64 144 163
Buffalo 20 28 3 43 150 169
Ottawa 9 40 2 30 116 202
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division
| | W L | T L | Pts | GF GA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Detroit | 37 9 | 4 9 | 181 | 108 |
| Chicago | 28 15 | 11 67 | 184 | 143 |
| Toronto | 22 21 | 9 53 | 156 | 157 |
| St. Louis | 22 22 | 9 51 | 140 | 148 |
| Winnipeg | 21 26 | 4 46 | 178 | 189 |
| Dallas | 15 26 | 11 41 | 179 | 179 |
Colorado 29 15 9 67 208 146
Vancouver 19 10 13 51 189 175
Calgary 19 23 10 48 150 159
Los Angeles 17 24 12 46 178 187
Edmonton 18 26 6 42 135 190
Anaheim 18 29 5 5 41 145 175
San Jose 12 36 5 29 165 237
Pittsburgh 2, boston 1
N.Y. Rangers 4, N.Y. Islanders 2
Detroit 4, Florida 2
Dallas 5, St. Louis 2
Ottawa at Calgary (n)
Chicago at Los Angeles (n)
Tonight's Games
Boston at Buffalo, 6:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at New Jersey, 6:30 p.m.
Montreal at Dallas, 6:30 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Colorado, 8 p.m.
Washington at Edmonton, 8 p.m.
Hartford at Vancouver, 9:30 p.m.
Toronto at Anaheim, 9:30 p.m.
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
| | W | L | Pct GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Orlando | 34 | 13 | .723 — |
| New York | 29 | 16 | .644 | 4 |
| Washington | 22 | 22 | .500 | 10 |
| Miami | 21 | 26 | .447 | 13 |
| New Jersey | 18 | 27 | .400 | 15 |
| Boston | 17 | 29 | .370 | 18 |
| Philadelphia | 8 | 36 | .182 | 24 |
Atlantic Division
Chicago 41 5 891 —
Indiana 31 15 674
Cleveland 26 20 565 15
Attanta 25 20 556 15½
Detroit 22 22 500 18
Charlotte 21 24 467 19½
Milwaukee 17 27 386 23
Toronto 13 33 283 28
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division
| | W | L | Pct | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| San Antonio | 30 | 14 | .68 | — |
| Utah | 31 | 15 | .674 | — |
| Houston | 30 | 17 | .638 | 1½ |
| Denver | 19 | 27 | .413 | 13 |
| Dallas | 15 | 30 | .333 | 15½ |
| Minnesota | 13 | 31 | .295 | 17 |
| Vancouver | 10 | 36 | .217 | 17 |
Seattle 33 12 .733 —
L.A. Lakers 27 19 .584 6½
Sacramento 24 19 .558 8
Portland 23 24 .489 11
Phoenix 21 24 .467 12
Golden State 21 25 .457 12½
L.A. Clippers 16 30 .348 17½
Yesterday's Games
Late Game not
Cleveland 91, Boston 73
San Antonio 90, Charlotte 102
Orlando 112, Sacramento 124
Phoenix 106, Chicago 96
Detroit 113, A. L. 114,
L.A. Lakers 98, Denver 78
Houston at Seattle, (n)
Tonight's Games
Milwaukee at Toronto, 6 p.m.
San Antonio at Boston, 6:30 p.m.
Washington at New York, 6:30 p.m.
Indiana at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m.
Attanta at Miami, 6:30 p.m.
Orlando at Detroit, 7 p.m.
Portland at Minnesota, 7 p.m.
Vancouver at Uptown, 8 p.m.
Houston at LA. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.
New Jersey at LA. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.
Chicago at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS
Tuesday's Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORILOLES—Agreed to terms with Greg Zeun, catcher on a one-year contract.
CALIFORNIA ANGELS—Agreed to terms with Pete Janicki and Joe Rosselli, pitchers, and Chris Turner, catcher.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX—Signed Joe
Magrine, pitcher to a minor league contract.
DETOIT TIGERS—Named Tim Torricelli manager of the Visalia Oaks of the California League.
NEW YORK YANKEES—Agreed to terms with Matt Luke, outfitter, and Tate Seetried, first baseman, on one-year contracts. Sent Blaise Kozeniiewski, pitcher, to the Chicago White Sox to complete the Jan. 23 Tim Raines trade.
TEXAS RANGERS—Agreed to terms with Mark Mimbs and Julio Santana, pitchers, on one-year contracts.
FOOTBALL
HOUSTON ASTROS—Named Trey Wilkinson assistant director of media relations.
COLORADO ROCKIES—Agreed to terms with Eric Young, outfielder, on a one-year contract.
DETROIT LIONS—Named Jim Eddy defensive coordinator.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS—Named Mike Shute offensive coordinator.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BUFFALO SABRES - Sent John Blue, goal-tender, to Rochester of the AHL. Recalled by Cleveland.
DALLAS STARS—Recalled Teel Richards, defenseman, from Michigan of the IHL. Placed Shane Churfa, forward, on the injured reserve list retroactive to Feb. 3.
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS—Acquired Bob Corkum, center from the AnahaleMighty Ducks for Chris Herperger, center, and a 1997 seventh-round draft pick. Sent Yanku Dickep, left wing, to Hershey of the AHL. Recolled Aris Brimani, defenseman, from Hershey
COLLEGE
DRAKE--Named Dale Ploesl offensive line coach.
EAST TENNESSEE STATE—Extended the contract of Mike Cavan, football coach, for three years.
FORDHAM—Announced Maurice Curtis, basketball forward, has transferred from West Virginia.
IOWA—Suspended Chris Kingsbury, basketball guard, for three games because of unsportmanlike behavior in a game against Penn State last Saturday.
NORTHERN ARIZONA—Announced the resignation of Chris Burkhalter, sports information
STETSON—Announced the retirement of Bob Jacoby, athletic director, effective May 31. Named Jeff Atilier intern athletic director.
UNLV—Named Jaina Preston director of NCAA academic services; Mark Richard director of NCAA compliance and student services; Tim Pavelchik administrative assistant for operations and facilities.
VILLANOVA—Announced Louie Quintana, track athlete, has been barred from NCAA competition due to NCAA policy violations.
Artists - Illustrators - Designers
$
Compiled from The Associated Press.
5
0
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Create a KU-theme design that can be used on T-shirts, advertisements, and banners directed toward the student market.
INTRUST Bank
Pick up rules and entry form at the Kansas Alumni Association Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave., 3rd floor.
Deadline for entries is March 15. 1996.
Sponsored by Intrust Bank and the Kansas Alumni Association
KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
7
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 7, 1996
3B
Student help needed for the Kansas Relays
Volunteers' duties to include mailings, race organization
Kansan staff report
The 71st Kansas Relays, April 17-20 in Memorial Stadium, needs students to volunteer for the four-day event.
Kansas students are wanted.
About 2,600 athletes from high schools and colleges will compete during the Relays. Student volunteers are needed to help with the Headquarters, Officials and Road Race committees.
The Headquarters Committee is in charge of Kansas Relays mailings before the meet. During the Relays, this committee helps out with results, check-in and other headquarters requirements.
The Officials Committee will work in the officials booth helping to call officials and check on assignments and availability.
It also will assist with mailing notifications to officials prior to the relays.
The last committee is the Road Race Committee, which will be in charge of helping with road race mailings and updates before the day of the race. This group will see to all aspects of the road race.
Last year the Kansas Relays Road Race was held about a week prior to the relays.
The date of this year's race has not been announced.
Student Relays Committee applications can be picked up between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at the Kansas Track and Field Office, 150 Allen Field House.
For more information, call the Kansas Track and Field office at 864-3486.
VOLLEYBALL
Brian Hott / KANSAN
CITY OF NORTH BAY
**Student volunteers are needed for the 71st Kansas Relays, to be held April 17-20 in Memorial Stadium. Call 864-3486 for more information.*
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LIED CENTER
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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841-4124
NATIONAL ENQUIRER LARGEST CIRCULATION OF ANY PAPER IN AMERICA ELMER OF CANADA November 20, 1996
BRIAN WILLIAMS,
National Enquirer
General Editor,
to speak at
University of Kansas
8 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Free Admission
February 8, 1996
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
5UA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Jayhawks mired in tight race for Big Eight title
Editor's note: The following story was scheduled to run on page 1B of yesterday's Kansan, but was replaced with Monday's story by mistake.
One wild weekend has thrown the Big Eight Conference women's basketball race up for grabs.
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
Kansas, No. 14 Colorado and No. 19 Oklahoma State have emerged from the weekend as the front runners. Now the teams are in a threeway tie for first place at 6-3 with five games remaining on the conference schedule.
The Jayhawks, who stand at 14-8 overall, temporarily took over one possession of first place Friday when they upset the Buffaloes 67-57 in Boulder, Colo. On the same night, Oklahoma State fell out of first place by losing to Nebraska 53-43.
On Sunday, the top became muddled once again as Kansas was ambushed at Missouri 86-66. Meanwhile, Colorado held off Kansas State 54-50, and Oklahoma State rebounded with a win at Iowa State.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
The Jayhawks now have split their season series with Colorado, and already have a 85-58 win over Oklahoma State earlier this season in Lawrence.
Kansas will have a week to deal with the loss to Missouri, dulling its euphoria from the win at Colorado. Despite the ugly performance Sunday, Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said she was pleased with the Jayhawks' position in the Big Eight.
"The Colorado game was a great win," Washington said. "I'm extremely pleased with where we stand."
Washington said that rebounding and playing better defense were the most important reasons behind the Jayhawk's rise to the top. Before the loss to the Tigers, the Jayhawks had held four of their last five opponents to less than 60 points.
Oklahoma State, 16-4 overall, will have three of its final five games at home, and women's basketball coach Dick Halterman said maintaining that advantage would be the
key to the rest of the season. Kansas will face Oklahoma State in Stillwater on Feb. 16.
"We've got to win our home games," he said. "Kansas drilled us up there, and we need to beat them here."
Colorado, the highest nationally ranked team in the Big Eight with a 19-6 overall record, is no stranger to the pressures of first place. The Buffaloes have won the conference championship in each of the past three seasons.
No Big Eight team has ever won four consecutive conference championships. The title could come down to a season-ending Feb. 25 match up against Oklahoma State in Boulder.
This season also marks the final year of the Big Eight, with Big 12 Conference play beginning next season. Halterman said winning the last title would be meaningful for the Cowgirls.
"It's something our players have talked about," he said. "Our seniors have never won a Big Eight title, and I think it would be something special to win the last one."
Colorado will hire new coach by end of March, official says
The Associated Press
BOULDER, Colo. — Colorado athletic director Bill Marolt has reiterated plans to name a new basketball coach next month even though a committee hasn't been assembled to find Joe Harrington's permanent successor.
Marolt said Monday that a search committee with broad representation would be formed and that a nationwide search would be conducted.
He said a permanent coach probably would be named after the Big Eight Conference tournament March 8-10.
Assistant coach Ricardo Patton was named interim
head coach when Harrington resigned Jan. 16.
Marolt said that he was pleased with what Patton had done and that "we've gotten good feedback from the community on what he's done."
Patton, 37, has sought to reshape the Buffs on and off the court by stressing better conditioning, citizenship and greater overall effort. Colorado's record since Patton took over is 1-3.
But he noted that wins and losses still must be among the criteria used to evaluate Patton's first head-coaching performance.
Everything that goes on in the program will affect the decision to retain Patton or hire an outsider, Marolt said.
Keep It Clean
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Mon., Feb. 5 - Fri., Feb. 16th
Kansas Union Gallery - Level 4
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UNIVERSITY DAILY. KANSAN
Wednesday, February 7, 1996
5B
Dream Team considering a spot for Magic
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — For Pete Babcock, the issue of whether Magic Johnson should play at the 1996 Olympics is simple.
"My personal feeling is we ought to select the two best players," said Babcock, general manager of the Atlanta Hawks. "If a player sat out 10 years, it wouldn't make a difference to me if he played well enough to earn a spot."
Babcock is part of the USA Basketball committee that will get together at the end of the NBA season to pick the final two members of the U.S. basketball team for the Atlanta Games.
A. J. HARRIS
Already, the third installment of the Dream Team includes Shaquille O'Neal. Hakeem Olajuwan, David Robinson, Scottie Pippen, Glenn Robinson Karl Mal
Magic Johnson
one, Grant Hill, Anfernee Harday,
John Stockton and Reggie Miller.
Johnson played on the original Dream Team that won the gold at Barcelona in 1992. Last week, he rejoined the Lakers after a 4/12-year
"I know I can get out there and do my thing," said the 36-year-old Johnson, who had 21 points in a victory Sunday night against Utah.
retirement and immediately began lobbying for a spot on the Atlanta team.
Johnson retired from the NBA in 1991 after contracting the virus that causes AIDS. He played at Barcelona the following year even though some foreign players expressed concerns about banging elbows with someone who had contracted HIV.
Babcock doesn't think Johnson's physical condition would be an issue if he was selected this year.
"I would assume that's because
people are a little better educated today than they were four years ago about how the infection is spread, what's viable and what's not viable in terms of the danger," Babcock said. "That includes Earvin's own health. More is known today about how strenuous activity affects his own health."
The Dream Team will be coached by Lenny Wilkens of the Hawks, the winningest coach in NBA history. He steadfastly refused to take a stand on whether Johnson should be part of the U.S. squad.
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
"I don't have any thoughts about it," Wilkens said. "It's not my decision, so why should I even think about it?"
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VOLLEYBALL
NFL antitrust law seen as an incentive to move
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue faced a skeptical, sometimes hostile House Judiciary Committee yesterday and asked for a change in federal law that would make his job more powerful.
Tagliabue said court interpretations of antitrust law and the $50 million price tag of losing the court case filed by Raiders owner Al Davis had made football owners reluctant to fight teams that wanted to change cities.
"Right now we are powerless in this area because of the antitrust uncertainties," he said. The committee of lawmakers stacked the hearing and gave priority to cities that had lost or feared losing their professional football teams.
"I'm just one fan. There are hundreds of thousands of NFL fans across the country that have the same investments that I do and also the same feelings," said John Thompson, 18-year season ticket holder who has been part of a community effort to fight malaria.
Paul Taglilabue
ort to fight moving the Cleveland Browns
to Baltimore.
Gary Locke, King County (Wash.) Executive, and Bob Lanier, Houston Mayor, made pleas of their own, asking lawmakers to improve the negotiating positions between cities and team owners' who demand new or improved stadiums.
Lanier's city is losing its Oilers to Tennessee, and the Seattle Seahawks' owner said he was moving his team to Los Angeles.
"If we let this team leave Seattle with 10 years left on a valid lease, what is to stop any other owner from betraying any other community?" Locke said.
Wake Up To CEDARWOOD APTS
SQUIRREL
Newly Redecorated Units Gas Heat & Air Cond. Low Utilities
1 Block from KU Bus route
FAIRMONT-GILLETTE LITE ICE CREAM 98¢
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom)
Call Pat today for the Summer Special
843-1116
2411 Cedarwood Ave
THE METROPOLITAN
GLOBALITY
Ake
1/2 GAL. SO. CTN. ALL FLAVORS
2411 Cedarwood Ave
ALL GRADE "AA" EGGS DOZEN PACK
1/2¢ PER EGG
Over Invoice Cost
ALL 12QT. TUB ICE CREAM
DRAMATIC MUSIC
VOLUME V
Over Invoice Cost
1¢ PER QT.
JACK'S ORIGINAL PIZZA
Duck Duck
NATIONAL BRAND BEER
24 PACK 12 OZ CANS
2 FOR 4
50¢
---
INDIA
86
100
DIAPERS
1¢ PER DIAPER
HUGGIES
LUNES
1984
Nuevo Juego
No. 20
50 EUROS
DAILY SPECIAL
Beginners Thurs, Feb. 8 & 9am & EMS Fri, Feb. 9, 7am
BANANAS 19¢
JOB
50¢
Over Invoice
Cost
AMERICA'S FINEST
FRISKIES
CINEMAS
BEST IN AMERICA
Cost
1¢ PER POUND
CHANEL WINDOWS
COST
Shipment
DOG FOOD 18 LB. & LARGER
RUFFLES OR
BLUE BELL
SHERBET
QT. CTN.
ALL FLAVORS
148
EA
FRITO LAY
NATIONAL BRAND POP
12 & 24 PACK
12 OZ. CANS
1 PER CAN
Over Invoice Cost
Natural
Light
RUFFLES ON
TOSTITOS
14 TO 15.5 OZ BAG
188
EA.
Chewy
Chips Ahoy!
NATURAL LIGHT
BEER
780
24 PACK
12 FL OZ CANS
LIMIT 1
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
NATURAL LIGHT BEER
14 P.M. 1022 CONS
$830
IRR
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
MT. DEW OR
DR. PEPPER
2 LITER BTL.
88¢
EA.
COFFEE TART
TAYSTEE
OLD FASHIONED
BREAD
20 OZ. LOAF
88¢
COLGATE
SHAVING CREAM
ALL VARIETIES
11 OZ.
98¢
BONELESS BEEF
K.C. STRIP
STEAK
ECONOMY PAK
348
LB.
COLGATE SHAVING CREAM ALL VARTIES 11 OZ. 88¢
RED FLAME OR THOMPSON SEEDLESS GRAPES 118 LB.
348 LB.
BONELESS BEEF RIB EYE STEAK OR ROAST ECONOMY PAK (LARGE END) 358 LB.
20 OZ LOAF
88¢
COGNIT
WASHINGTON
XTRA-FANCY
RED OR GOLDEN
DELICIOUS
APPLES
58¢
LB.
BONELESS BEEF
RUMP
ROAST
ECONOMY PAK
118
LB.
3
CRISP ICEBURG HEAD LETTUCE LARGE HEAD 39¢ EA.
TOMATOES
FRESH CRISP
BROCCOLI
Hormel
Broadway Theater
HORMEL BROWN
'N SERVE LINK OR
LITTLE
SIZZLERS
7 TO 12 OZ. PKG.
88¢
FA.
FAIRMONT-ZARDA
LOW FAT
YOGURT
1.0Z CUP
33¢
EA.
CHILEAN
CANTALOUPES
48¢
LB.
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PORK
STEAK
ECONOMY PAK
88¢
LB.
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68¢
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48¢
LB.
---
RADIO TELEFONO
UNIVERSIDAD DE MADRID
MADRID, MEXICO
STARBUCKS COFFEE
BREWED IN NEW YORK, U.S.
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SPARE RIBS
FULL SLAB
128
LB.
FROM THE BAKERY
GERMAN
CHOCOLATE CAKE
24 OZ
298
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39¢
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BREASTS
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SPECIAL
SELECTIONS
10 TO 11 OZ. PKG.
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EA.
MOOSE BROTHERS
PIZZA
ANY SIZE SETTING
LARGE 12" SIZES
498
FA
LOBSTER TAILS
6 OZ.
2 FOR $14
WE ACCEPT
FOOD STAMPS.
WIC CUSTOMERS &
MANUFACTURER'S
COUPONS
OPEN
24
HOURS
EVERY DAY
IMPORTED FROM DENNARK $ 448
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LB.
OPEN
24
HOURS
EVERY DAY
FROM THE BAKERY
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CROISSANTS
5 PIC.
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Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
We reserve the right to limit quantities
able complete best.
VIDEO SPECIAL
3 MOVIES/GAMES
3 DAYS $3.00
NEW RELEASES
NOT INCLUDED
PRICES EFFECTIVE
FEBRUARY 98
SUN TUE WED THUE FRI SAT
BORN 10 11 12 13
7 8 9 10
11 12 13
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Minimum Delivery
Limited Delivery Area
Cash & Checks Accepted (.25 Check Charge)
14th & Ohio "Under The Wheel"
842-3232
"We Pile It On!"
Everyday Low Prices
2 Med. ...S12.00
2 Small...$8.00
WEDNESDAY
1 TOPRING
2 Large...$15.00
THURSDAY
Small 1 Topping
$4.00 Carryout Only
Order 2 or More
For Delivery
From the Heart For Your Valentine
SINCE 1902
FTD
FESTIVAL WORLD DECEMBER
Send the FTD
Celebration of
Love Bouquet
Owens
FLOWER SHOP
9th & Indiana • 843-6111
Wednesday. February 14th
Johnny's Lonely Hearts Club Pub Crawl.
The only 3 bar inside 1 bar pub crawl in Lawrence.
Featuring great drink specials all night long.
Every Wednesday $1.75 Schooners 50¢ Draws
M
JOHNNY'S
TAVERN
This Weekend's Band
Fast Johnny
401N.2nd.Lawrence.842-0377
6B
Wednesday. February 7. 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Expos roster is unclear
The Associated Press
SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic — Spring training hasn't even started, and Montreal Expos manager Felipe Alou already is frustrated with his club.
Last spring, the Expos had to make do without Larry Walker, John Wetzeland, Ken Hill and Marquis Grissom. This spring, Wil Cordero is gone, too.
"I'm in for
a long
year a r,
Alou said
yesterday
w h i l e
watching
part of the
Caribbean
Series who
MONTREAL
EXPOS
son, Expos centerfielder Moises Alou, is playing. "In today's baseball, it is tough to compete with teams that spend $60 million a year. Better vet. it's just not fair."
The Expos, seeking franchise stability, are one of two teams not signing free agents. Oakland is the other. The team re-signed Moises Alou, still recovering from season-ending shoulder surgery, to a one-year deal worth $3 million.
"We are an example of the trampling going on," Alou said. "Last year we saw Larry Walker, Ken Hill and John Wetteland march off because we couldn't pay them. Then Marquis Grissom goes, and we get back a few rookies. What kind of deal is that?"
Alou's West Palm Beach, Fla., camp will open later this month with dozens of prospects, a handful of recovering regulars and many questions.
"Right now, I may have three or four rookies in the lineup," Alou said. "That's right now because I don't know how the guys who got hurt will respond to spring training. Ah, and then there's the pitching. I wonder what that's going to be like."
Cliff Floyd, a converted outfielder, defied odds and came back after shattering his wrist in a collision with New York Mets catcher Todd Hundley. He went through rehabilitation in the offseason.
Henry Rodriguez, acquired from Los Angeles to fill the void left by Floyd, is recovering from a fractured leg.
Alou is looking at hard-throwing right-hander Pedro Martinez, one out away from a 10-inning perfect game last year, to be his ace. Alongside Martinez is Jeff Fassero, rumored to be on the trading block since the end of last season.
Then there's Carlos Perez. Perez, an All-Star in his rookie year, was charged with the rape and aggravated sodomy of a 20-year-old woman in Atlanta. A December hearing to set a trial date was postponed.
Alou does have four good reasons to smile.
"Last year, we opened camp with the strike on us. This year, everybody is planning while I'm speculating," Alou said. "But I have to make do with what I have."
Rondell White, Sean Berry, Darren Fletcher and Mike Lansing emerged last season as possible leaders.
"If my injured players can come back, I think we'll have a good core from which to build on," Alou said. "That's good, but I don't like to have so many ifs a week before camp opens."
White Space...
the
visual
whisper
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
the visual whisper
Horoscopes
By Linda C. Black
Today's Birthday (Feb. 7) A crazy idea deserves decisive action in February. It might work. Romance beckons in March, if you're willing to pay the price — not in money, but in attention. Buy real estate in May, and plan a fun jaunt for June. Save up for something you'll want to purchase in September. This an investment in your own future. Finish a team project in December. A private conversation helps you achieve a goal in January.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If it feels as if someone's leaning over your shoulder and watching your every move, maybe you're right. Don't complain. With a little extra effort, you can do excellent work. Then you won't mind the attention! Meanwhile, a co-worker thinks you're fabulous.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21)
Call a meeting to review details.
Don't wait for the others to decide. Tell them what to do.
They'll admire you and appreciate your ability to make a decision. If you're unsure, discuss your situation in private with an older person.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Don't get in a fight with the boss that you can't win. If you want to set your own rules, you may have to go into business for yourself.
Before you do that, though, maybe you ought to learn what this older person has to teach you. It could be valuable.
Your thoughts may drift to far-off shores. If you're efficient enough, maybe you can go there in person soon. Discuss the possibility with a gentle, imaginative friend over dinner tonight. A voyage of a thousand miles begins with one commitment.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) If you're worried about money, maybe you're going about it wrong. Instead of hassling with a subject you care little about, maybe you could delegate the chore. A person who loves you might be better suited to handle practical matters than you are.
Plisces (Feb. 19-March 20) If you're feeling overwhelmed, maybe you're trying to do too much. Sure, there are lots of items on your list, and they must get finished. But they don't all have to get done at the same time. Learn to set priorities. A well-organized friend can help.
Aries (March 21-April 19) Your job may threaten to interfere with your social life. Don't plan anything for before or during working hours; you'll just have to cancel. Tomorrow night is better for romance, anyway. Help an airhead stay on track at a meeting this morning.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
This would be a marvelous day for you, except for one thing: Your boss, or some authority figure, won't let you do what you want. Your idea may be the best of the litter, but if you can't
explain it, you may lose your chance. A friend can help.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Expect changes — lots of them.
You'll be kept hopping from early till late. A person who lives far away can answer one of your questions. Later, your roommate may be in a picky mood. If you've left dirty dishes in the sink, you'll hear about it.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) A close friend or sibling can help you with a shopping decision. You know what you want; you just don't know where to find it. A phone call could save you lots of running around. Planning a vacation would raise your spirits, and those of your true love.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Sort out your money and find out how much of it is really yours. You may feel better if you repay a loan rather than buying a new toy. There's another way to solve this problem: Earn more money! More work is available if you're willing to do it.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You should be lucky in love around lunch time. If there's someone you'd like to get to know better, make a date. An imaginative person is a good match for you. If that one's not very practical, don't worry. You can supply the common sense.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
DILBERT®
By Scott Adams
I NEED EVERYBODY
TO HELP IN THE
SHIPPING DEPARTMENT
TODAY
RENT TODAY
COF
S. A. MUNG S - NOUVE : SCOTTAL
EVERY PRODUCT THAT SHIPS BEFORE THE END OF THE MONTH GETS COUNTED AS REVENUE FOR THE FISCAL YEAR. UNFORTUNATELY, WE DONT HAVE INVENTORY.
SO WE'LL SHIP WHATEVER
IS LYING AROUND, BOOK
IT AS REVENUE AND SORT
IT OUT LATER.
INSTORY.
THIS ONE'S GETTING GUM.
SEC coaches look for answer as teams' poll woes continue
The Associated Press
By Paul Neuberry The Associated Press
ATLANTA — They used to say the two favorite sports in the Southeastern Conference were football and spring football. The way this basketball season is going, that might be the case again.
No. 2 Kentucky is far and away the best team in the conference, winning its first eight SEC games while hardly breaking a sweat. To make matters worse, none of the other 11 teams is even ranked - a bitter blow for one of the country's largest conferences.
Compare that to the Big East, which has three teams in the Top 10 and two more in the Top 25.
"What happens is some people look at Kentucky and see what they're doing, and they just assume the rest of the league is down," said Mississippi state coach Richard Williams. "Kentucky is just that good."
And the other SEC teams aren't Arkansas (14-6), which reached the championship game last season, lost all five starters and got off to a slow start. Alabama (11-7) and Florida (9-10) also suffered major losses from their 1995 NCAA tournament teams. Georgia (12-7), expected to be among the top teams in the conference, has been a major disappointment under new coach Tubby Smith, while Mississippi State (14-5) has only recently started playing
ANALYSIS
like the team that began the season in the Top 10.
Despite the dearth of ranked teams,SEC coaches grow testy when the quality of their league is questioned.
"I don't think the league is down," said LSU coach Dale Brown, whose team is struggling at 11-9 overall, 3-5 in conference play. "I think we have destroyed each other. If you take Kentucky out of this league, all 11 teams, including Ole Miss, can beat each other on any given night."
"I've been in the league for 24 years, and I've seen it as balanced as it is with most of the teams and so out of whack with one team," he said. "I think Kentucky is the best team in the country, bar none."
While Kentucky returned the bulk of its 1995 team, which won the SEC last season and reached the finals of the Southeast Regional, the other traditionally strong programs seemed to lose everyone at once. No one was harder hit than Arkansas, which lost Corliss Williamson (19.7 points a game), Scotte Thurman (15.4) and its other three starters.
Brown only can shake his hand when he looks at the league standings, which show nine of the 12 teams with between four and six losses.
Alabama lost every starter but one, the most devastating blow coming when center Antonio McDyess
In all, the league lost five of its top 10 scorers and six of the top eight rebounders.
decided to leave school two years early. Florida had to replace fouryear starters Andrew DeClercq and Dan Cross.
It always has been difficult to win on the road, in part because of the brutal travel that must be endured in a league which stretches over nine states and includes such obscure campus locations as Starkville, Miss, and Favetteville, Ark.
"From a marquee player standpoint, the league is probably not what it has been the last couple of years," Alabama coach David Hobbs conceded.
Also, six schools — Georgia, Vanderbilt, South Carolina, Tennessee, Auburn and Ole Miss — have hired new coaches in the past four years and still can be considered in rebuilding modes.
Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson contends there is something else: anti-SEC bias among the poll voters. Three Top 25 teams have as many losses as the Razorbacks; one — Michigan, at 15-7 — has more.
"I watch games every night, and I don't see teams that are so much greater than the (SEC) teams we have to play against," he said. "We were ranked No. 16, then we lost one game and we were totally out of the rankings. Other teams lose games and are still in the rankings, but maybe they aren't as good as us."
Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care
No one deserves to be sexually assaulted.
DIAGNOSTICS
LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS
"We Stand Behind Our Work, and WE CARE!"
Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program a program of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 Strong Hall. 864-3600
If she says "No" it's rape.
II
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
男 女
1.05 Personals
1.10 Business Personals
1.12 Announcements
1.30 Entertainment
1.30 Lost and Found
X
842-8665
2858 Four Wheel Dr.
200s Employment
300s Merchandise
Housing
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
1
100s Announcements
105 Personals
SPRING BREAKS 'HOTTEST TRIPS'
CANCUN-SOUTH PADRE ISLAND - BELIZE
1-800-328-7513
wtdetestadat.gov.tw
Call Teller 980-9093
FREE FOOD & DRINK PACKAGES FOR EARLY
SIGN.UPPS
Need Cash?
110 Business Personals
We loan cash on almost anything of value. CD's, VCR'S, TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence's most liberal loan company. JAY-HAWK FAN J WELLENW 1984 W. 6th 749-1019
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Hours Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the federal regulation of advertisement it lits to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, national origin, familial status or regional origin, an intention, to make any such impression.
864-9500
120 Announcements
NEED A RIDE/ BIDE? Use the Self Serv Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Classified Policy
COMMUTERES Self serve Car Pool Exchange. Main
Lobby, Kauai Union.
7. $#. wash ALL DAY EVERY Day, INDEPENDENT Laun-
nment (201), and JAWS (Across the street from Daimy
Station)
Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise 7 days $79.00
Includes 15 men an 45 women free partied Great Beachs night life Leave from PI Landauerdal. http://www.
spiritbreakravel.com/1-878-688-6386
Attendance students: Do you have a great GTA? Nona-
milimh him / her for the Outstanding Graduate Teaching
Assistant Award! Information and forms available at
Assistant Award! 222 Strong Nominations Deadline:
February 23.
Spring Break Panama City! 8 days, room w/kitchen,
$119.00让 walk to best bask! 7 nights in Key West, $250.00 Cocos Beach Hilton (great beaches, near Disney)
$349.00 Sea Lion Resort ($68.00 travelman retreat) 1-800-787-6888.
Spend Spring Break biking the Stern Marshes of Mexico's Copper Canyon March 23-31. This low impact, cultural immersion trip will rock your world. $480 for a two-night stay at the Copper Canyon Camp Southeast (at 900) 567-7322 for info.
Women's Transitional Care Services (WTCS), the battered women's shelter, is having two informal sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training. Feb. 8 at 7:00 p.m. and Feb. 10 at 10:00 a.m. Both will be held at Plymouth Congregation Church, 925 Vernon, Lawrence. For more info, call WTCS at 912-8433-3833.
The Kansasan not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons whom the Kansasan cannot sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansasan will not knowingly accept advertisement in violation of University of Kansas regulation
Red Lyon
Tavern
Altitude of Irish
in downtown Lawrence
944 Massachusetts
"Unheard since 1993"
832-8228
- ADULT NOVELTIES
• UNUSUAL GREETING CARDS
• HILARIOUS PARTY GAMES
• SENSUOUS OILS & LOTIONS
• CURRENT MONTHLY MAGS
• COEED MAKED & BIG JOHN-
SON T-SHIRTS & HATS
206 W 23rd
SON T-SHIRTS & HATS
1206 W 23rd
842-4266
LINGERIE • GAGS • ADULT GIFTS
TOY BOX
Lift and Joke Store
I've waited so long for this to happen.
My dream has finally come true...
I can't believe it's not butter---it's body
butter. Who would have thought...
120 Announcements
Rent 1 movie at regular price & get 2nd movie for 1c everyday!
SOUTTH PADRE HILO - SPRING BREAK
Why settle for a cramped hotel room? Sunchase IV has, spacious 1.2, & 3 bedroom furnished condos at affordable rates. Deal directly with on-site management, not third party promoters. Great location, on the beach, and excellent amenities. Special Rates: 1 bdmr $605 (people) & 2 bdmr $605 (6 people) / 3 bdmr $1358 (9 people). Internet: http://bluehive.net/internet/
Check out our "Costumes" for your "Private" party!
LINGERIE · GAGS · ADULT GIFTS CHRISTIE'S TOY BOX America's #1 Adult Gift and Joke Store
Safari
Coxed Wallet
Spring Career and Employment Fair Feb. 7, 1996
10am to 3pm, KS Union Ballroom. Over 95 employers.
PT, FT, summer jobs and internships. All majors welcome.
For more info contact UW Student Placement
8242 or uws@uw.edu. Contact kukitp.co.uk/uaus/kukitp/sydftdts/upsfact/tup.maine.html
HEADQUARTERS
Counseling Center
841-2345 • 1419 Mass.
Free
SPRING BREAK Panama City Beach Florida @ 909 Phone:
0843-757-2156 Bar, Hare Beachside Hitches
F. Information: 0843-757-2156
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
FEBRUARY 11, 1996
AMERICAN LEGION HALL
4TH & SENECA
LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS
MILITARIA SHOW & SALE
ALL TYPES OF MILITARIA
ANCIENT ROME
TO DESERT STORM
COLLECTIBLES/PRINTS/BOOKS
ADMISSION $ 1.00
GUARANTEES
GAMING PRICES
ON CAMPUS III
Spring Break
Local Contacts:
Kevin @ 749-1399
Ash @ 838-3247
Bush @ 838-3474
Clinton @ 1555-1655
Destination Unlimited
@ 842-7447
from $439
from $399
from $119
Jamaica Cancun Florida
SUNTRAIL SERVICES
1344 Allison Rd. Ashland, WA 98020
Toll free 1-800-648-4449
www.straightair.com
SPRING
IS SLEEP ON LESS NAMS BE HOURS
BREAK
GREAT PARK SUMMER FESTIVAL 2014
SPRING
INSHIN ON THE MAIN BEHINDERS
BREAK
COMPLETE AT 8 A.M. & HIGH VOL.
AFFORDABLE
DAY
TURNS
$69
in our best
party
15th
Sellout
Year!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
KEY WEST
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
* FOR PERSONS DEPRENDED, OR IN STUDENTS / ROCKING STAGE OF DRINK
* TOLL: FROM NICHORELAND TO SUNCAUSE
ON OUR OWN DAY ON EVERY FRIDAY
http://www.suncause.com
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 7, 1996
120 Announcements
Spring break specials, Carnicom and Jamaica $119 low-
cost fare. Targes, airfare and hostages $625
Save $100 on flights.
http://www.springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6388
**Graduation in May? Or looking for a job? Or both?**
Then you should be sign up for interviews at the University Placement Center. Visit with rpm fromums at the UPC, www.upc.edu/sales, research sales, etc. etc. Find out how to get started by calling the UPC at 864-3634, or visit us at the Burge Union, Level One. Don't delay. Deadlines are approaching. Complete the interview schedule on the internet at:
```http//koptt cc.ukams.ku.edu/cwis/units/sydfafts/upecfsacts
PARTY ON THE BEACH
SPRING BREAK'96
INCLUDES DAILY BEACH PARTIES
EVENING CARTIERS AND
GREAT DISCOUNTS !!!
(800) 998-TOUR
CANCUN MEXICO FROM $ 339
PANAMA CITY BEACH FROM $ 129
130 Entertainment
GET A GROUP OF 14 TOGETHER & YOU TRAVEL FREE!!!
Free party room for 25-200 at Johnny's 842-2377
MIRACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult taps on sale starting at $9.98 and up.
1910 Haskell, 841-7504
电话
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-426-7710
140 Lost and Found
Pound Keys between Strong and Balley. Go to 302 Car G O Learly or call K UP. D
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$ 35,000 /YR. Income reading. Readings told. Toll Free (1) 800-8788-977 Ext. R: 1824 for details.
GRAND OPENING
NEEDED 42 PEOPLE to lose weight now. Guaranteed!
100% Natural 1-800-299-627 ext. 3253.
Seeking high energy individual for branch office.
Positive attitude required, flexible schedule. 841-0882
Counselor resident want to employ a雇员 from the
University of Texas at Austin in Spanish two hours a week. Cally Marge at 842-4013.
NEEDED:
Long term, part-time, multi-task oriented aid for children with hearing impairment are required. Mostly月收入 841-2400. Phone 814-2500.
Female personal preferred for female quadriplegic:
CNA preferred but not required. Call 865-0616.
Overweight males between 18 and 40 y.o. are needed.
$20 will be included for participation.
Meals will be provided.
Now bring morning and evening walk, staff and morning cook to expect you. Will train. Apply per position. Call 1-800-552-9364.
Weekend news reporter for KLWN/GLZR. Prior expert-requests law firm Barquio Q.F., Practice law firm NS 60047.
Gymnastics instructions needed now for girls and boys classes at KC gym (about 40 min from Lawrence). Part-time in AM and KPm. Call Eagles Gymnastics. (816) 941-9219
Highly motivated students with car. Delivery and postfliers for large advertising company. Flexible hours, great pay bonus. Inquire. Chris Loney 1-800-494-1230 code 9831.
Responsible person need to work with my 7 year old son with autism. Must have knowledge in applied behavioral analysis and/or special education. If interested call Gina at 865-0065
HELP WANTED: Delivery drivers needed for Wed.
Feb. 14th. Must be able to start at 8 AM sharp. Must
have your own transportation. Apply in person. Engle-
wood Florist 939 Massachusetts.
SPRING BREAK WOES?
NO FUNDS - NO FUN!
MarketingTraining Co. Seeks 3 ind. needing
some extra cash. Flexible hourly.
842-5252
Economic/Research Assistant, B.A. or M.A.F.T., or P.t. for counseling firm. Strong computer skills in databases and spread sheets required. Send resumes externally to EECS, 1075 Main Street, 211-834-2011. Overland Park, KS 66214. No phone calls please.
University Photography is seeking part-time photographers. Individuals must be outgoing. Weekend work a definite. No experience necessary. Contact Tom between 11 and 4, pm, Friday at 843-8279.
INSTANT CASH!
*Flexible Schedule *Extra Income *Training
*Rapid advancement opportunity
Positions open. Great jobs for students. Telephone fund-raising for $AAD (Students Against Driving Drunk). We work early evenings and Sat. mornings. @Arb plus area calls. Call 845-8108 or 10ap.
FRUSTRATED?
I Received 2 degrees after 5 1/2 years of college and when I hit the "real world" I made 4.68hrs. Now I'm being trained to earn 3K a month. If you're ready for a change call 918-838-4410.
Graduating **Seniors:** John Hancock Financial Services is looking for professional individuals for their major in accounting. He will be designed for recent college graduates. Call or send resume to 600 College Bldd. SW1, 0010 Overland Park, KS 66214.
Students Driver Positions available for the Spring Semester to drive with physically disabled students to clush. Must have a valid U.S. driver license and good driving record. Six to twelve hours per week, 85.50$/hr. Application deadline February 9. Apply at Facilities Operation office. 894-5506
CAMP OZARK, Climate Sports and Adventure Camp — Seeking qualified counselors to work with boys and girls age 8-16. Employment terms for all or part of the summer. If remotely invited, come to our KU information video presentation # 6, @ thursday, Feb. 23th at Climbing Mountain, Rocked Local Mountain Id. AR (601) 887-4131.
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private Michigan hikes in campgrounds. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterboarding; gymnastics, rifley, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping,戏剧, drama. Ride Also Included: kayaking, surfing, B.C. Camp LWC / WCW, 1765 Mapple, ND, Illinois 887-446-2444
CAMP COUNSELORS Join the adventure and share the memories at SUMMER CAMP!
Guards, Tennis, Climbing, Arts and more 2 hours from
Cail. Call 215-870-4700 or visit 151 Wisham on Law.
Phone: 215-870-4700
205 Help Wanted
Top maked courses in Pocoson of PA need experienced instructors for water and land sports, Wisla/ Life
Part time Cedar Hill HUI Club employee needed for Thursdays Occasions and occasional Sundays.
**STUDENT SUBMISSION TECHNICAL DEVELOPMENT:** $90.50, LASER 1: M-M-F 8:30-10:30 Dates inclusive perform detailed labelling of applicable functions delivery of computer input and interfacing using the delivery functions delivered by the Lab Equipment team, including data processing and multimapping and multi-mapping inventory figure libraries, and other warehousing functions on occasion will open facility for maintenance in a masterclass on Open Landscape furniture maintenance performance in accordance with the CPD. All applications must be registered or made online to a permanent software in an issue of receiving kerning work. To apply, complete an application available at Computer Center in room 2024.
Full-time Position Available
Academic Advice sought for KU School of Education Math & Science Center. Salary $2,500 to $2,800. Must hold a Master's degree in Mathematics or related field, an 6 experience working with high school/ first year college students in an advertising company. Deadline: May 31, 2014. Please describe your description and list of requirements, contact Hikari Keipur at (303) 853-4880. KU is an equal opportunity institution.
500 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES IN NY, PA.
SUMMER CAMP WEEKEND 13TH - FEB 28TH
Choose from over 30 camp. Instructors needed: Tennis, Baseball, Hockey, Rollerblading, Soccer, Lacrosse, Volleyball, Basketball, PE Majors, Gymnastics, Riding, Lifeguard, WSI, Water-skiing, Sailing, Windboarding, Fitness, Archery, Mountain Biking, Pioneering, Survival, Hiking, Jumping, Camping, Cermas, Ceramics, Glazed Glass, Wood-Working, Photography, Radio, Nature, RN's, Chef's, Food Service. Call Arlene: 516-433-8033.
ARE YOU READY FOR A CHANGE?
Financially
Career
University
Marketing co. looking for
the right individual who
is ready. Call 843-491-01
ANTED: Free-Inance Artists an
WANTED: Free-Jance Artists and Jawlane Hakim
Sampler Stores, Inc. is seeking talented artists to design both serious and humorous full chest and left pocket designs for T- shirts, polo shirts and sweathirts using a KU Jayhawk, "Kansas," Wizard of Oz, sunflower, wheat or similar theme. Embroidered and silk screen designs are available. Design charms and molds feature these same motifs. If interested, call 913-432-3355 10 AM to 5 PM or leave on our message mail, 913-818-1018.
**STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT:** Deadline: 02/09. $149.00; $4.50 + $5.50 hour. Duties include assisting in invoking mailing & filing of Computer Center billings; assists with sales of Terminal Server accounts; makes daily deposits; recording microcomputer workshop registrations/performing receptionist duties on a fill-in basis and miscellaneous Business Office tasks in the context of Kansas. To apply, complete a job application available in Room 392 of the Computer Center. ROA EMPLOYER
PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN
MASSAUNSETTS
Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Hockey, Soccer, Football, Volleyball, Wrestling, Pineapple, Ice Skating, Poetry/Writing, Overnight Camp, Ropes and Rock Climbing, Weight/Fitness and Cycling, other openings include Performing Art, Fine Arts, Figure Skating, Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Cooking, Sewing, and Rockery; All Waterfront Pool Activities (Swimming, Skiing, Windsurfing, Canoeing) in salaries. All Waterfront 18th April 17B
**inquire**
MAH-KEE-NAC (Boys): 1-800-753-0118
DANBEE (Girls): 1-800-392-3752
AMERICA'S PREMIERE SPORTS CAMPS
WINADU FOR BOYS/DANBEE FOR GIRLS
(Western Massachusetts)
Ice and Rocket Hockey, Waterworks, WISX, and more!!!
No Previous Experience Required
Top salaries Room and Board, and Travel Allowance
ON CAMPUS AT MIDDLEWATER
DAY DECEMBER 28-29 AT 10AM
TIME: 9:00AM TO 6:00PM
PLACE KANSAS UNION BUILDING
PLACE KANSAS UNION BUILDING
FEB 28 INFO TABLE
FEB 28 OREAD AND REGION
ALIST ROOMS
SUMMER JOBS!!!
GUMBER JOBS!!!
Women Call:
1-800-392-3752
CAMP DANBEE
Whv work
Why work when you can dance? Hiring attractive dancers and
waitresses 18+
Apply in person after 7:30 Tues-Sat
Call 841-4122 or 1-800-323-6117
Ask for Pat
225 Professional Services
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
FREE T-SHIRT
+ $1000
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750
WALK-INS WELCOME!
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
235 Typing Services
X
TRAFFIC-DUIS'
Fake Id's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-1139
Call Jacki at 865-8855 for application, term paper,
thesis, dissertation, etc. *Satisfaction*
guaranteed by the college.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
225 Professional Services
King size mattress set. New, Retail price $ 990.00, will sell for $275.00, 379.9868
15x8 American Racing wheels type AKB3. Under 200
miles brand new condition. Purchased for $620, will
for $403. Looks awesome on Toyota 4X4. 794-929-7
AA Pull a state mattress set. New, never used, will spend in plastic.
PR保价 $680.00, will sell for $165.00.
BROTHERS 323 WEST 40th ST., NEPA, WA 98021
360 Miscellaneous
Credit card fundraisers for fraternities, sororites, & groups. Any campus organization can raise up to $1000 by a whopping $5VISA
AA Queen size mattress set. New, never used. Still in place. Price $150 plus will sell for $150.00. Sale ends 12/31.
application.
1-800-1-9302-0528 ext. 65
Qualified callers receive a
FREE TSHIRT
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon, 600 Tues - Sat.
Fender Strat & Seymour Duncan humbucker,
subsurb, wistarm, wstand Crate 8C1212R amp, new preamps, great tone, $17.15-wah pedal $25, everything or $40. Call Brent B88-4435
Victoria
Wanted: 100 Students Love B-10e 8.00 Bills. New Metamora
broadcast. Gauanced. Certified $2.95 - 1.00
370 Want to Buy
Out of state alumnus need two 4 Newbrida tickets
Please call Dave at (520) 472-8681
(520) 472-8681 (520) 472-8681
Paint Trainer - Raised $80 in 5 Days Greases, Groups
Paint Trainer - Raised $80 in 5 Days Greases, Groups
Obligation (100) + 100/125 Fees - No. Financial Obligation (100) + 100/125 Fees - No. Financial Obligation (100) + 100/125 Fees - No. Financial Obligation (100) + 100/125 Fees - No. Financial Obligation (100) + 100/125 Fees - No. Financial Obligation (100) +
THE CHAPMAN USED & CURIOUS GOODS
arizona
trading
co.
Buy • Sell • Trade
DUI/TRAFFIC/CIMRINAL
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R.GREEN
ATTRONEY-AT-LAW
400s Real Estate
图
We buy, sell and trade clothing every day
734 Massachusetts 749-2377
405 For Rent
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964
Caro Brown Electrolysis Safe, effective and permanent removal of hair conveniently located at 10 E. Ninth St. 865-4255
Carol Brown Electrolysis
2 bedroom apartment for sub-lease. $430/month. Cable paid. Fireplace, dishwasher, balcony. On RU bus route. Call Michelle at 749-1541.
1/2 block from campus, studio apartment. $310.00
all months, all utilities. Call 842-7644.
Across the street from the Glass Onion . $375/month.
Water paid. Call Damon at 865-264-5281. February rent
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964
1 Bedroom Sublease. Rent Paid. rent. Water, Cable.
Laundry. Laundress Cap. Call Army
Anyone at 748-2706.
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Tennessee 843-4023
For free consultation call
Need Help With Your Research Project? Kelley Data Analysis and Consulting specialist. Provide data analysis, RPSS graphs and charts, Research methods, Survey and test design. Lowest rates in Lawrence, Topaia area.
JI
OUI/Traffic
1&2Bedrooms
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
M-F10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
405 For Rent
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
843-5113
3Hot Tubs
ExerciseRoom
01 W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
Shannon Plaza Apartments & Townhomes. 3 B 3 bed
room townhouse available immediately Attort on
residences. Free parking.
On KUBus Route
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406 Tern
student housing aative Open & diverse member-
ship, democratic democratice control. Rms
1814-1818, 1818-1825, 1825-1835.
Cable clocte to Campus & Maus. Call or stop at 814-0494.
Available immediately. 3 Bedrooms, unfurnished apartment. L2 beds from KC to PPG. Great room. 1 bedroom from KC to PPG.
GET A JUMP ON NEXT YEAR!
Full size washer/dryer, fully equipped kitchen, fireplace, Walk-in closets, fully monitored alarm system, and much more, NO PETS, Harper Square Apartments, Call Today! 913-841-8408
405 For Rent
NEWLY CONSTRUCTS.
Easy Access to K-10
1-2-3-4 Bedroom Apts
Available March 1, 1966
Studios, 2, & 8 Bedroom Apts Carson Place, Stadium View, Oread, Chamberlin Court, Abbotts Corner, 1425 Kentucky, Bradford Square
- Full-size washer/dryer or Laundry Facilities
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Private Patios or Decks
- Within 2 blks of campus or on KU bus route
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT FOR A YEAR $50.00
RESERVED FOR RENEWAL TODAY FOR $ 50.00
MON- FRI 9 am- 5 pm, 1820 West 6th
Pets Welcome*
SouthPoint
AUTO REPAIR
2166 W. 26th
843-6446
- Swimming Pool
*Restrictions Apply
- On KU Bus Route
• Sand volleyball court
• Water & trash paid
• 1, 2, 3 or 4 bedroom
- 1, 2, 3 & 4 bedroom
apts. available
* Ask about our
3 bedroom villas
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 RDPM APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
- Exercise weight room
- Fireplace
- Energy Efficient
- On site management
808 W. 24th
841-6080
841-5444
KVM
is what you want your new home awaits...
meadowbrook If BIG
townhomes are available now.Walk or ride the bus to KU.Enjoy the quiet feel of the country with the convenience of the city.
---
MEADOWBROOK
15th & Crestline
842-4200
2 & 3 bedroom
Mon - Fri 9:5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
405 For Rent
SOUTHPOINTE ParkVillas
- Professionally designed interiors
- Three bedrooms, two full baths
- Washer/dryer Included
- On NI Bus route - Great Location!
Adobe
Southbound
and Westbound
405 For Rent
Now Leasing for Spring and Fall 1996
Great Location!
Two baited ints. PETS ACCEPTED (no weight limit) to device. DW, 1.5 lb, two acrylic attachments. Gail weight limit device.
2166 W. 26th St.
Call For Appt. 843-6446
--roommates wanted to share 2 bounn furnished
apartment at the Ankil, Feb. through August. Call back at
(415) 553-8700.
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7TH & FLORIDA
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
NOW LEASING FOR SPRING
MASTERCRAFT
E.H.O.
841-5255
FOUR BEDROOM-
ASK ABOUT
Our Three Person Special
$690 and Up
Pool and Clubhouse
Offers
Studio,1,2,3,& 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
Completely Furnished
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2415
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
MASTERCRAFT
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
842-4455
Large 3 bedroom apt. and studio apt.
in remodeled house near KU.
B电话 841-0254
Equal Housing Opportunity
405 For Rent
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES WANTED to share more
3 BR condo near campus. Plywood furnished. W/ID:
units. Full Kitchen w/ dishwasher & microwave. No
breakfast. 280pp- unit. ppc. Mary, C4511
day/ 849-2237 even
VILLAGE SQUARE
Close to campus
Spacious 2 bedroom
- Laundryfacility
- Swimming pool
* On Bus Route
9th & Avalon 842-3040
430 Roommate Wanted
1.
Male/Female Roommate Wanted
Two rooms available for sublease. Cheap rent. 740-
7603. Females only.
Made in New York
Marble Floor Tile
Dishwashers, dishwasher, washer/dryer and
Penelon. PermaLite. Call Milner at 838-6525.
Female grad student to share two 2-BR付, $200.00
Call Carol 835-7698. Must like cats and be non-
aggressive.
Non-smoking male roommate wanted to share 2 Br.
quaint close campus. $250/mo + call Uffl 3481
(718) 958-4654
Available immediately! 1 bedroom in 4 bedroom duplex.
$187.50 per month plus utilities. Upper classman male preferred. Close to campus. 749-4303.
NON-SMOKING ROOMMATE WANTED-Male or Female to drive 3BR B&B townhouse. W/D, microwave, close to bus route. $250-share utilities.
NON-SMOKING ROOMMATE WANTED-Male or
female to share 32 Bath 2Bath townhouse. W/D,
microwave, close to bus route. $250/mo + share utilities
Roommaid needy: gay friend, MF, to share 2BR
wizard, WD, DW, DAC, peep negligible, must like my dog
and boyfriend.
ROOMMATE WANTED. Huge bedroom. $178/mo.
Wood floors. Heat cabin. Fans climbed. Climbed 3 bedrooms.
Large closet. Tile flooring.
Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. On bus route, $260.00 + 1/2 utilities. Water and gas paid. Call Tavair 832-8478
2 bdm apartment for sublease. Close to campus & bus route. Run full-furnished. Fishing pool & club house. Washer & dry on sight. $250 per month & 1/2 utilities. Call Heather 865-505-61
Formula roomette needed. Almost new home west of campus, Roommate, WDY, AC, DW, Garage, Deck. Near bus route. Short or long term lease available starting March 1st. $275.00/month.月票 B3-854-66.
ROOMMATE WANTED. Roommate got married, need sublease. Person needed to share nice 3-BR, 2-shanty townhouse w/ W/D, fireplace, $225/mo + $130 fee. Feb rent free. No pets. Call 841-7670.
Nice roommate to share College Hill Condo. Large master bmfr, private bath, W/D. available immediately.
$290. Call 1-915-852-4386 or beeper 1-800-397-3249.
ext. 8435 and leave phone number.
Wanted AABP - N/S/MF moonite to share piacecions 28 up, at 13th and 8th. Walk to campus and downstairs, off street parking $250 + 1/2 utility. Call Wade 838-4062. Leave message.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
As phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Stay by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or VISA.
Classified Information and order form
my account. I to calculate the balance, take out cash,
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified class that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Excludes on cancelled ads that were not paid- by-check or with cash are not available.
When cancelling a classified file that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be cremated for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
He responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Dial and memorize
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Check per pair for only
Num. of importions:
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
3 lines 2.20 1.70 1.15 0.85 0.80 0.88
4 lines 2.05 1.33 0.85 0.75 0.70 0.88
5-7 lines 2.09 1.15 0.80 0.70 0.65 0.48
8+ lines 1.96 1.90 0.70 0.60 0.60 0.48
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=817.06 (4 lines X 866 per line X 5 days)
105 personal
118 business persons
120 noncommunicants
128 entertaimment
148 lost & found 355 for sale
268 hals made usable 340 metal sales
222 professional services 380 miscellaneous
225 justin mandela
ADS MUST FOLLOW KAMSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper.
Please print your ad one word per box:
Name: ___ Phone: ___
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Account number:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
---
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
The University Daily Kannan, 11 Staircase Fflint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 80045
***
.
198
Single Stem Roses
Assorted Colors
SuperFloral™
198
Single Stem Roses
Assorted Colors
SuperFloral™
Happy
Valentine's
Day
148
Valentine's Day
Mylar Balloons
Assorted Single Sided
SuperFloral™
198
Single Stem Roses
Assorted Colors
SuperFloral™
Happy Valentine's Day
148
Valentine's Day
Mylar Balloons
Assorted Single Sided
SuperFloral™
198
Fresh Baked Valentine Cookies
12-COUNT
198
Fresh Baked Valentine Cupcakes
6-COUNT
The Language of the Heart.
Let our SuperFloral™ take care of all your FTD orders. We're here to help, just call!
SuperTarget Coupon
Good 2/7/96-2/13/96
FREE
BETTY CROCKER
SUPERMOIST CAKE MIX
ASSORTED VARIETIES
18.25-OZ. WITH
$10 PURCHASE
Limit one item per coupon,
one coupon per guest.
Reproductions not accepted.
CASHIER:
Scan product, scan coupon.
Key in retail amount and write in retail
$___
Super TARGET
5 85239 90701 1
Happy Valentine's Day
148
Valentine's Day
Mylar Balloons
Assorted Single Sided
SuperFlora™
198
Fresh Baked
Valentine Cookies
12-COUNT
198
Fresh Baked
Valentine Cupcakes
6-COUNT
S
198
Fresh Baked
Valentine Cupcakes
6-COUNT
198
Single Stem Roses
Assorted Colors
SuperFloral™
Happy Valentine's Day
148
Valentine's Day
Mylar Balloons
Assorted Single Sided
SuperFloral™
198
Fresh Baked
Valentine Cookies
12-COUNT
198
Fresh Baked
Valentine Cupcakes
6-COUNT
The Language of the Heart.
Let our SuperFloral™ take care of all your FTD orders. We're here to help, just call!
Super Target Coupon
Good 2/7/96-2/13/96
FREE
BETTY CROCKER
SUPERMOIST CAKE MIX
ASSORTED VARIETIES
18.25-OZ. WITH
$10 PURCHASE
Limit one item per coupon,
one coupon per guest.
Reproductions not accepted.
CASHIER:
Scan product, scan coupon.
Key in retail amount and
write in retail
Super TARGET
5 85239 90701
Advertised prices good Wednesday, Feb. 7 through Tuesday, Feb. 13, 1996.
文
Betty Crocker
Super Moist
VERY NICE
NEW MOIST MOUSSE!
Betty Chocolate
Super Moist
MILK CHOCOLATE
NO MORE WORKS
FREE
BETTY CROCKER
SUPERMOIST CAKE MIX
ASSORTED VARIETIES
18.25-OZ. WITH
$10 PURCHASE
Limit one item per coupon,
one coupon per guest
Reproductions not accepted.
CASHIER:
Scan product, scan coupon.
Key in retail amount and
write in retail
$___
Super TARGET
5 85239 90701 1
O
5 85239 90701
3298
One Dozen
Arranged Red Roses
SuperFlora™
168
Green Giant
Potatoes
10-LB.
9'98
Valentine's Day
Jumbo Cut Flower Bouquet
SuperFloral™
16'98
Heart-Shaped
Ivy Wreath
SuperFloral™
98¢
Pepsi
2-LITER BOTTLE
3'98
lb.
Hormel
Pork Roast
SuperDeli
3'98
lb.
Sterling Silver®
Rib Eye Steak
SuperTARGET™
EXPECT MORE. PAY LESS."
iowa Street and 33rd Street, 832-0660
• Pharmacy 832-0312 • SuperFloral™ 832-8233
Open seven days a week 7 am to midnight
998
Valentine's Day
Jumbo Cut Flower Bouquet
SuperFloral™
1698
Heart-Shaped
Ivy Wreath
SuperFloral™
Valentine's Day
Jumbo Cut Flower Bouquet
SuperFlora™
1698
Heart-Shaped
Ivy Wreath
SuperFloral™
PEPSI
PEPSI
98¢
Pepsi
2-LITER BOTTLE
PEPSI
PEPSI
398 lb.
Hormel
Pork Roast
SuperDell
3'98 lb.
Sterling Silver®
Rib Eye Steak
SuperTARGET
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8,1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SECTION A VOL.102.NO.92
ADVERTISING 864-4358
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
XU
Future football players
On the first day of Spring signings, Jayhawks sign 24 recruits, including Dariss Lomax. Page1B
CAMPUS
A musician on every corner
A Lawrence man wants the City Commission to repeal a law banning street musicians. Page 6A
Charter jetliner crashes
WORLD
Rescuers work among sharks and debris looking for the 189 passengers. Page 7A
NATION
Senate passes farm bill
The 64-32 vote gives farmers fixed and declining payments. Page 8A
WEATHER PLEASANT
High 65° Low 42°
(USPS 650-640)
A Zebra
Weather: Page 2A.
INDEX
Opinion ... 4A
National News ... 7A
World News ... 8A
Sports ... 1B
Scoreboard ... 2B
Horoscopes ... 4B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is free. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Fighting for a relationship
(1)
Joyce
YANISHA LARIA
Couples learn from arguments and strengthen mutual respect
By Heather Kirkwood Kansan staff writer
Katie Paletta, St. Louis sophomore, sometimes argues with her boyfriend about how little time they spend together. But rather than screaming at him, she tries to see things from his point of view.
"I try to understand that we both need to do our own thing, that he needs to spend time with other people," Paletta said.
But unlike Paletta, many people don't look at arguments as opportunities to learn. Instead, they want a quick-fix list of ways to resolve conflicts in a relationship, said Francis DeSalvo, director of KU counseling and psychological services.
Photo illustrations by Matt Flickner
First of all, don't approach arguments from the standpoint of trying to win or lose, DeSalvo advised, because if one party won, it meant the other had lost something and would likely be hurt.
DeSalvo said resolving differences seldom was easy, but he offered advice for couples who found themselves in an argument.
Jason Carr, Lawrence senior,
said he learned that lesson in his
own life. Carr said he loved a good
debate, but learning to know
when to back off was important.
"Otherwise you will end up hurting the other person's feelings," he said.
rebutal before their partner had finished talking. But this only resulted in an escalation of the problem, rather than an understanding of what was being said.
When arguing, DeSalvo said many people tried to formulate a
Instead, DeSalvo said the best way to turn an argument into a learning experience was to hear people out. If the person arguing starts repeating himself, stop him long enough to tell him what has
been heard and ask if he has more to say. If so, continue listening.
As the person talks, try to walk in his shoes, DeSalvo said.
"That doesn't imply that you have to agree with their position," he said. "Simply focus beyond your position."
After a partner has finished talking, DeSalvo said to feel free to respond, but not to be afraid to take a minute to think about what had been said.
"The idea that someone is thinking about what has been said changes the whole complexion of the thing," DeSalvo said. "Things become more of a discussion."
Once both partners have heard each other out, DeSalvo said they should examine the situation to find a resolution that would appeal to both parties.
"Where people get into trouble is when they agree to something that they really don't want to do," DeSalvo said. "Then they make sure the other person really knows that they aren't having a good time."
Finally, after both partners have listened to each other and have respect for the 'other's position, DeSalvo said they could use what they had learned about each other to develop their own style of dealing with differences.
"It is that kind of uniqueness that makes couples feel very special," DeSalvo said.
Students again drop Freeman courses
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
Students eager to attend Bryant Freeman's classes on Haiti this semester are again out of luck.
For the second consecutive semester, students will have to drop the courses because Freeman will be in Haiti.
The department of African and African-American Studies has canceled the courses Elementary Haitian I and II and Haiti Today that were to be taught by Freeman, professor of African-American studies.
Linda Wiley, secretary in African-American studies, said Freeman's teaching status was uncertain until after enrollment this semester, so some students may be unaware of the cancellation.
The canceled courses were posted in Strong Hall, and Wiley sent notices to all students enrolled in the classes, but she was unsure if all students got the word.
"Students who have addresses that are different from the directory may not have gotten it," she said.
Wiley said she would work with them to find replacement courses.
None of Freeman's classes were scheduled to begin until Feb. 20.
Freeman, who is considered an expert on Haitian language and culture, said his status for this semester had been uncertain because he didn't know until the last minute if he was going to receive a grant to go to Haiti.
Freeman said that although the cancellation was last minute, it was not unusual to take leave from the University for other opportunities.
"It happens all the time with the faculty here at KU," he said. "I would say about 5 to 10 percent of the faculty take leave each semester, so it's not all that unusual."
Freeman will not receive a salary from the University while he is absent. He will work on a national literacy program while in Haiti.
Freeman said he expected to teach at the University next fall.
Makin'a break for Haiti
Bryant Freeman's cancelled classes:
HAIT 110, Elementary Haitian I
HAIT 120, Elementary Haitian II
AF S 320, Studies In Haiti Today
KU recreation fee could be tops in Big 12
But KU officials say $77 fee increase needed for center
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
Future Track/Soccer Stadium
Led Center
Proposed Student Recreation Center
KEY
Construction Phase Two
Streets/Parking
Teacher Court
Educator Tower/Soccer Field
IOWA ST.
CLINTON PKWY.
The proposed $20 per semester student fee to pay for a new recreation center may seem steep — because it is.
If the proposed recreation center is approved, KU students' recreation fee would increase from $13 to $90, which would be more than recreation fees at other Big 12 schools. KU's recreation fee increase would be phased in during a four-year period if passed.
Students at Kansas State University pay $30.25 per semester in recreation fees, even though the university recently built new facilities similar to the one being proposed for the University.
But Mary Chappell, KU recreation services director, said there were
In contrast, the proposed $21-million KU facility would be completely senarate from Robinson Center.
several reasons why the proposed center would cost KU students more
K-State's new facility is only an expansion, at a cost of $7.9 million, Chappell said.
The KU Recreation Center Planning committee considered expanding Robinson to cut costs, but Jade Shopp, a committee member, said an expansion was not feasible.
Rec Center Plans
A new recreation center would raise recreation fees by $77 per semester. KU's ranking in comparison with other Big 12 schools:
UNIVERSITY ENROLMENT REC.FEES
Kansas (today) 26,000 $13.00
Kansas (with 26,000 90.00
new rec center)
Colorado 23,000 61.00
Iowa State 26,000 24.55
Kansas State 19,000 30.25
Missouri 24,000 30.36
Nebraska 24,600 41.65
Texas 48,555 40.53
Texas A&M 43,000 70.00
Texas Tech 24,000 28.50
Oklahoma and Oklahoma State calculate their fee based on credit hours. Baylor would not release it for information.
Shopp said adding to the center would make it impossible for the center to expand later because of limited parking and space near the gymnasium.
Derek Walters, facility manager of the K-State recreation center, said K-State's complex included 10 gymnasium courts, two running tracks and a free weight, circuit training and cardiovascular area. The expansion opened last summer.
and Iowa Streets. It would include seven gymnasium courts, a free weight, circuit training and cardiovascular area, an aerobic center, a four-lane jogging track, a combative arts room and a rock-climbing wall.
The proposed KU center would be similar to K-State's facility. The center would be located on West Campus at the corner of Clinton Parkway
Shawn Beach, San Bernadino,
The proposed recreation center will face Student Senate on Tuesday.
Calif., junior, said he would be willing to pay the recreation center fee.
"I think it would be worth it," he said. "It would be a lot nicer than a lot of the clubs around town."
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
If approved, it would go to a student vote Feb. 27 and 28.
If the student referendum passes, the center would then have to be approved by Chancellor Hemenway, the Board of Regents and the Legislature.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8,1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SECTION A VOL.102.NO.92
ADVERTISING 864-4358
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
KU
Future football players
On the first day of Spring signings, Jayhawks sign 24 recruits, including Dariss Lomax. Page 1B
CAMPUS
A Lawrence man wants the City Commission to repeal a law banning street musicians. Page 6A
A musician on every corner
WORLD
Charter jetliner crashes
NATION
Rescuers work among sharks and debris looking for the 189 passengers. Page 7A
Senate passes farm bill
The 64-32 vote gives farmers fixed and declining payments. Page 8A
WEATHER PLEASANT
High 65° Low 42°
(USPS 650 640)
Weather: Page 2A.
INDEX
Opinion ... 4A
National News ... 7A
World News ... 8A
Sports ... 1B
Scoreboard ... 2B
Horoscopes ... 4B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is free. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
一
Fighting for a relationship
THE NEW YORKER
12
LAUREN AND BRYAN
Couples learn from arguments and strengthen mutual respect
By Heather Kirkwood Kansan staff writer
Katie Paletta, St. Louis sophomore, sometimes argues with her boyfriend about how little time they spend together. But rather than screaming at him, she tries to see things from his point of view.
"I try to understand that we both need to do our own thing, that he needs to spend time with other people," Paletta said.
But unlike Paletta, many people don't look at arguments as opportunities to learn. Instead, they want a quick-fix list of ways to resolve conflicts in a relationship, said Francis DeSalvo, director of KU counseling and psychological services.
DeSalvo said resolving differences seldom was easy, but he offered advice for couples who found themselves in an argument
First of all, don't approach arguments from the standpoint of trying to win or lose, DeSalvo advised, because if one party won, it meant the other had lost something and would likely be hurt.
Photo illustrations by Matt Flickner
Jason Carr, Lawrence senior,
said he learned that lesson in his
own life. Carr said he loved a good
debate, but learning to know
when to back off was important.
"Otherwise you will end up hurting the other person's feelings," he said.
When arguing, DeSalvo said many people tried to formulate a
rebutal before their partner had finished talking. But this only resulted in an escalation of the problem, rather than an understanding of what was being said.
Instead, DeSalvo said the best way to turn an argument into a learning experience was to hear people out. If the person arguing starts repeating himself, stop him long enough to tell him what has
been heard and ask if he has more to say. If so, continue listening.
As the person talks, try to walk in his shoes, DeSalvo said.
"That doesn't imply that you have to agree with their position," he said. "Simply focus beyond your position."
After a partner has finished talking, DeSalvo said to feel free to respond, but not to be afraid to take a minute to think about what had been said.
"The idea that someone is thinking about what has been said changes the whole complexion of the thing," DeSalvo said. "Things become more of a discussion."
Once both partners have heard each other out, DeSalvo said they should examine the situation to find a resolution that would appeal to both parties.
"Where people get into trouble is when they agree to something that they really don't want to do," DeSalvo said. "Then they make sure the other person really knows that they aren't having a good time."
Finally, after both partners have listened to each other and have respect for the other's position, DeSalvo said they could use what they had learned about each other to develop their own style of dealing with differences.
"It is that kind of uniqueness that makes couples feel very special," DeSalvo said.
Students again drop Freeman courses
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
Students eager to attend Bryant Freeman's classes on Haiti this semester are again out of luck.
For the second consecutive semester, students will have to drop the courses because Freeman will be in Haiti.
The department of African and African-American Studies has canceled the courses Elementary Haitian I and II and Haiti Today that were to be taught by Freeman, professor of African-American studies.
Linda Wiley, secretary in African-American studies, said Freeman's teaching status was uncertain until after enrollment this semester, so some students may be unaware of the cancellation.
The canceled courses were posted in Strong Hall, and Wiley sent notices to all students enrolled in the classes, but she was unsure if all students got the word.
"Students who have addresses that are different from the directory may not have gotten it," she said.
Wiley said she would work with them to find replacement courses.
None of Freeman's classes were scheduled to begin until Feb. 20.
Freeman, who is considered an expert on Haitian language and culture, said his status for this semester had been uncertain because he didn't know until the last minute if he was going to receive a grant to go to Haiti.
Freeman said that although the cancellation was last minute, it was not unusual to take leave from the University for other opportunities.
"It happens all the time with the faculty here at KU," he said. "I would say about 5 to 10 percent of the faculty take leave each semester, so it's not all that unusual."
Freeman will not receive a salary from the University while he is absent. He will work on a national literacy program while in Haiti.
Freeman said he expected to teach at the University next fall.
Makin'a break for Haiti
Bryant Freeman's cancelled classes:
HAIT 110, Elementary Haitian I
HAIT 120, Elementary Haitian II
HAP 120, Elementary Haitian II
AF S 320, Studies In Haiti Today
KU recreation fee could be tops in Big 12
But KU officials say $77 fee increase needed for center
Future Track/Soccer Stadium
Proposed Student Recreation Center
Lake Center
KEY
Construction Phase Two
Director/Parking
Tennis Court
Cabotier Drive/South Fork
IOWA ST.
CLINTON PKWY.
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
The proposed $90 per semester student fee to pay for a new recreation center may seem steep — because it is.
If the proposed recreation center is approved, KU students' recreation fee would increase from $13 to $90, which would be more than recreation fees at other Big 12 schools. KU's recreation fee increase would be phased in during a four-year period if passed.
Students at Kansas State University pay $30.25 per semester in recreation fees, even though the university recently built new facilities similar to the one being proposed for the University.
In contrast, the proposed $21-million KU facility would be completely separate from Robinson Center.
K-State's new facility is only an expansion, at a cost of $7.9 million, Chappell said.
But Mary Chappell, KU recreation service director, said there were
several reasons why the proposed center would cost KU students more.
The KU Recreation Center Planning committee considered expanding Robinson to cut costs, but Jade Shopp, a committee member, said an expansion was not feasible.
Rec Center Plans
A new recreation center would raise recreation fees by $77 per semester. KU's ranking in comparison with other Big 12 schools:
UNIVERSITY ENROLLMENT REC. FEES
Kansas (today) 26,000 $13.00
Kansas (with 26,000 90.00
new rec center)
Colorado 23,000 61.00
Iowa State 26,000 24.55
Kansas State 19,000 30.25
Missouri 24,000 30.36
Nebraska 24,600 41.65
Texas 48,555 40.53
Texas A&M 43,000 70.00
Texas Tech 24,000 28.50
Oklahoma and Oklahoma State calculate their fee based on credit hours. Baylor
Shopp said adding to the center would make it impossible for the center to expand later because of limited parking and space near the gymnasium.
Derek Walters, facility manager of the K-State recreation center, said K-State's complex included 10 gymnasium courts, two running tracks and a free weight, circuit training and cardiovascular area. The expansion opened last summer.
and Iowa Streets. It would include seven gymnasium courts, a free weight, circuit training and cardiovascular area, an aerobic center, a four-lane jogging track, a combative room and a rock-climbing wall.
Oklahoma and Oklahoma State calculate their fee based on credit hours. Baylor would not release its fee information.
The proposed KU center would be similar to K-State's facility. The center would be located on West Campus at the corner of Clinton Parkway
Shawn Beach, San Bernadino,
Calif, junior, said he would be willing to pay the recreation center fee.
The proposed recreation center will face Student Senate on Tuesday.
"I think it would be worth it," he said. "It would be a lot nicer than a lot of the clubs around town."
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
If approved, it would go to a student vote Feb. 27 and 28.
If the student referendum passes, the center would then have to be approved by Chancellor Hemenway, the Board of Regents and the Legislature.
---
2A
Thursday, February 8, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CAMPUS BRIEFS
The KU libraries are accepting applications for employment in several departments. The libraries employ more than 200 students in about 20 departments. To see which departments are hiring, check the job board just north of the circulation desk in Watson Library.
--eases (HPER 713C). All are three-hour courses for undergraduate credit. Students who wish to enroll may do so at the Continuing Education building, one block north of the Kansas Union. Classes must be completed within nine months of enrollment.
Students looking for opportunities to practice speaking English can attend free conversation groups sponsored by the Applied English Center.
The center's staff recommends that international students who take the center's courses or have difficulties with conversation attend the conversation groups at the Kansas Union.
The conversation groups, led by American students, are offered several times each week throughout the semester. For more information, call the center at 864-4606 or visit the center at 204 Lippincott Hall.
Graduate students who need help to finance their education should consult Graduate Funding Opportunity Group, a self-directed computer search program that locates funds for graduate study and research. The program is free and provides addresses and phone numbers of agencies offering scholarships and fellowships in all fields of study.
The opportunity group computer program is located at the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences computer lab at 17 Strong Hall. Chris Robinson, group assistant, is available by appointment for students needing assistance. Robinson can be reached at 222 Strong Hall, 864-7242 for appointments or further information.
--eases (HPER 713C). All are three-hour courses for undergraduate credit. Students who wish to enroll may do so at the Continuing Education building, one block north of the Kansas Union. Classes must be completed within nine months of enrollment.
The Independent Study program has introduced four new courses available through correspondence. The courses are: America and World War II (HIST 340C), Adult Development and Aging (HDFL 342C), Foundations of Education (EPL 440C) and Advanced Concepts in Communicable and Degenerative Diseases (HPER 713C). All are three-hour courses for undergraduate credit. Students who wish to enroll may do so at the Continuing Education building, one block north of the Kansas Union. Classes must be completed within nine months of enrollment.
The Office of Study Abroad is offering a 23-day program in Rome, from June 13 to July 6.
The program offers four classes: music, literature of Rome, history and High Renaissance baroque art and architecture. All classes begin at 8:30 a.m. and tours related to the area of study will follow. This program is open to alumni, their friends and families, KU faculty and staff, and enrolled students.
The cost for room and board is $2,450, and air fare from Chicago to Rome is $833. Two or three person rooms are available. Single rooms are available for an additional $300. Meals will be provided three times a day with box lunches available for excursion days.
For more information, contact the Office of Study Abroad in 203 Lippincott Hall.
ON CAMPUS
Students who are interested in becoming officials for Recreation Services can attend meetings on March 10 or March 18. Positions are available for intramural softball, indoor soccer and sand volleyball. No experience is necessary. Participants must be enrolled in at least six hours.
For more information, call the Recreation Services Office at 864-3546, or stop by 208 Robinson.
---
The Student Assistance Center, 22 Strong Hall, will conduct a series of seminars titled "Reading for Comprehension and Speed," from 7 to 9 p.m. Feb. 13, 20 and 27. The seminars will include six hours of demonstration. Students must register and pay the $18 fee in advance at the center.
Contributed by Carole Rich's Reporting I class
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting at 1:30 p.m. today at the Wainut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ellen Strubert at 864-3742.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about studying in Rome this summer at 2 p.m. today at 203 Lippincott. For more information, contact Mary Elizabeth Debicki at 864-3742.
Friends of Lawrence Planned Parenthood will sponsor a "Choice" Auction and Chocolate Extravaganza at 5 p.m. today. For more information and reservations, call Tamara Morris or Tim DeBoer at 816-756-2277 before 4 p.m. today.
American Association of University Women will sponsor Carmaletta Williams' Portrayal of Zora Neale Hurston at 7:30 tonight at the Alvamar Country Club. Conversation with Chancellor Robert Hemenway will follow. For more information, call Sheryl Jacobs at 888-8397 Ext. 1604.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call John Hendrix at 864-1529.
Andrew Tsubak will sponsor KU Ki-Alkido Club at 6 p.m. today at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Matt Stumpe at 864-6594.
KU Meditation Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ravi Hirekatur at 832-8789.
Public Relation Student Society of America will sponsor "An Inside Look at Nonprofit Public Relations" at 6 p.m. today at the Reading Room in Stauffer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Ted Miller at 842-0766.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Parlors in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erlk Lindsley at 841-4585.
KU Psychology Club & Psi Chi will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at 547 Fraser Hall. For more information, call Hillary Franke at 864-8106.
Native American Student Association will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Spencer Art Museum. For more information, call Lori Hauxwell at 864-1799.
KU Democrats will sponsor "Campaign '96: What's Ahead" at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ted Miller at 842-0766.
Native American Studies Task Force will sponsor Joe Bird, Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation, at 7 tonight at the Spencer Art Museum. For more information, call Brooks Newton at 864-3459.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Scott Nissen at 838-9719.
Recovery Medicine Wheel Support Group will meet at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call Samantha at 842-4797.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-840) 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 Daly Kansan,
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60645.
Weather
TODAYS
Atlanta 62 • 43 •
Chicago 42 • 11 •
Des Moines, Iowa 43 • 26 •
Kansas City, Mo. 63 • 44 •
Lawrence 65 • 42 •
Los Angeles 79 • 59 •
New York 43 • 32 •
Omaha, Neb. 49 • 31 •
St. Louis 52 • 35 •
Seattle 50 • 43 •
Topeka 58 • 34 •
Tulsa, Okla. 68 • 38 •
Wichita 64 • 37 •
TODAY
Unseasonably warm.
6542
FRIDAY
Mostly sunny and pleasant.
7043
SATURDAY
Partly cloudy.
6543
TODAY
Unseasonably warm.
6542
FRIDAY
Mostly sunny and pleasant.
7043
SATURDAY
Partly cloudy.
6543
FRIDAY
Mostly sunny and pleasant.
7043
6542
SATURDAY
Partly cloudy.
6543
Sources: Chian-Wel Chang, KU Weather Service
ON THE RECORD
An AM/FM receiver, scanner,
amplifier and electrodex were
stolen on Monday from Dole
Human Development Center.
The items were valued at $415,
KU police reported.
A KU student's purse, wallet and contents were stolen between 1:30 a.m. and 1:40 a.m. on Sunday at the Yacht Club, $56 Wisconsin St. The items were valued at $440, Lawrence police reported.
Recycle your
Recycle
for a Sustainable
Future
Daily Kansan
Spring Break'96
Hey, University of Kansas, Emporia State University, Kansas State, Wichita State University, and Fort Hays State University, why not head to the tropics for break this year, where the weather is fine and the party never stops!
Cancun
Trips starting at;
*$ 449 00
Mazatlan
Trips starting at;
*$ 459 00
* Round Trip Air & 7 Nights
Hotel Accommodations
* V.I.P. On-site Party
Program
COLLEGE
TOURS
Call for details
1-800-244-4463
BLACK WOMEN'S STUDIES RETROSPECT AND PROSPECT
SYMPOSIUM
The Hall Center for the Humanities of the University of Kansas will host a symposium to discuss the impact and future of Black Women's Studies in the academy and the general culture.
Program of events:
Friday, February 9: Individual colloquia on Black Women's Studies and the disciplines of history, literary studies, religious studies and filmmaking.
2:00-3:30—Nell Irvin Painter, History, Princeton University, author of Exodusters (1977), Standing at Armageddon: the United States, 1877-1919 (1987), and a forthcoming biography of Sojourner Truth. Centennial Room, KS Union
4:00-5:30—Katie G. Cannon,
Religious Studies, Temple University,
author of Black Womanist Ethics(1988)
and Katie's Canon: Womanism and the
Soul of the Black Community(1995).
Centennial Room,KS Union
2:00-3:30—Soraya Mire, Somali filmmaker, creator of Fire Eyes (1994). Pine Room, KS Union
4:00-5:30—Cheryl A. Wall, English, Rutgers University, author of Women of the Harlem Renaissance (1995) and editor of the two-volume Library of America edition of the writings of Zora Neale Huston (1995). Pine Room, KS Union
Saturday, February 10, 2:00-3:30, Kansas Union Ballroom. Dialogue among the four speakers and the audience on issues relating to Black Women's Studies in the academy and the general culture.
All events of the Symposium are free and open to the public.
This symposium is in conjunction with the inauguration of Robert Hemenway as Chancellor of the University of Kansas. Support for this symposium comes from a large number of academic and administrative units; no state funds have been used to underwrite this symposium. For further details, please contact The Hall Center for the Humanities, 211 Watkins Home, Lawrence, KS 66045-2967 • 913-864-4798 • fax 913-864-3884 • hallcntr@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu
...
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 8, 1996
3A
Groups cash in on cards
Campus organizations paid to promote plastic
Kansan staff writer
By Heather Kirkwood Kenyon staff writer
Campus organizations are discovering there is money to be made promoting credit cards.
Marketers are paying organizations to help hawk T-shirts, sunglasses and cups to KU students who will fill out credit card applications.
BROOKLYN'S 1970S WEEKEND
Gina Thornhurst / KANSAM
Julia Lu, Wichita sophomore and member of the Asian-American Student Union, said her group had participated in several credit card fund-raisers during the last few years and usually made $300 to
$600 in a week.
"For us it has been a really great opportunity, because it gets the members to work together as a team," Lu said.
Teresa Hopkins, Overland Park sophomore and member of AIESEC, said her organization made between $400 and $500 sponsoring credit card marketers last fall.
"The best time to do it is at the beginning of the year when the
Oscar Ramus, Panama City, Panama, senior, uses his credit card at the Kansas Union Bookstore. Many students pay for items the University requires for classes with credit cards.
One is enough. One major credit card, paid on time for several months, is all you need to establish a squeaky clean credit rating.
Tips about credit cards
Brand loyalty is not to be desired. Keep looking for the best deal and don't be afraid to change your credit card.
Know what you want from your credit card. If you plan to pay your balance during several months, look for the card with the lowest interest rate. If you plan to always pay the bill as soon as it arrives, look for a card with a 25-day interest free grace period.
Source: Bankcard Holders of America
year when the freshman don't have their cards yet," Hopkins said.
But the amount of money organizations make from the fund-raiser varies. Lu said her organization's success depended on the company's sales representative.
"Some of them are better at selling, and some of them aren't as good," she said. "It really depends on those representatives. To us, the club is just there to provide them with the help they need."
The amount of money clubs make by sponsoring credit card marketers also depends on the contracts they negotiate with the companies.
Most companies offer the sponsoring organization a fee, usually about 50 cents, for each credit card application filled out. Some companies offer a guaranteed minimum fee if the group fulfills the contract. Others offer bonuses if a certain number of applications are completed.
The University has relatively few rules about sponsoring credit card marketers on campus. Students interested in this fund-raiser must obtain permission from the University Events Committee at the Organizations and Activities Center and must follow the following guidelines:
The fund-raiser can only take place for ten days at a time.
- Organizations can have tables at more than one site, but only one at each site.
Credit card marketers must remain behind the table and always be accompanied by a member of the sponsoring student organization.
All students must be eligible to apply for the credit card being marketed.
Food can not be given away as a gimmick unless it is obtained through the Kansas Union.
Other than these guidelines, the University has no policy about what the companies must tell students about the credit cards or what they may offer students to apply.
Ann Eversole, chairwoman of the University Events Committee, said she thought marketing credit cards was an easy and popular way for student organizations to raise money. However, she said she did have some misgivings.
"I always have concern about students obtaining these cards without any understanding or care," she said.
Students targeted for credit
By Heather Kirkwood
Kansan staff writer
Debbie Henry is the kind of college student credit card companies are after.
Like 61 percent of undergraduates nationwide, the Topeka senior has one or more credit cards and uses them to buy things such as gas, tuition and clothes.
In addition, Henry, like one-third of college students who have credit cards, got her first credit card when she was 18. She also has kept the card for the last five years.
College students are a lucrative market for credit card companies.
Students have no established brand loyalty, and every year a new crop of freshmen provide new opportunities, said Cathy Cummings, public relations director for American Express. In addition, a majority of college students keep the same credit cards for many years.
Unlike any other group in the United States, college students easily can obtain credit, regardless of their jobs, assets or established credit histories.
Perhaps that is why college students hold a privileged position in the eyes of companies such as American Express, Discover, Citibank, and Chase Manhattan.
As for paying the bills, college students are not any better or worse than the general public. Cummings said.
"Tens of millions of people who work for a living have no access to credit in this country, while students' mailboxes are brimming with credit card offers," said Ruth Susswein, executive director of Bankcard Holders of America, a consumer advocate group.
Cummings said the difference between college students and these customers was the deals American Express offered them. College students were not considered for the same credit limits offered to other customers.
"We also try to educate students and remind students how credit cards work and what the responsibility is." Cummings said.
While that may be the policy of American Express, it is not the policy of all card issuers.
When Leanne Brown, Olathe sophomore, signed up for a Citibank Visa about three months ago, the representative gave her a huge T-shirt that went down to her knees. However, Brown received no explanation about how the card worked or what her responsibilities would be.
Now she is paying as much as she can every month to pay off the $275 she charged during Christmas.
But if students keep their credit record clean, credit cards can be helpful.
After graduation, students may find it difficult to obtain a credit card and establish a credit rating. Those who earn good credit ratings now may benefit when future landlords, insurance companies, employers or loan officers review their credit history.
Enquirer editor to deliver lecture
By Nancy Friberg Special to the Kansan
Brian Williams, the general editor of the National Enquirer, has dug through celebrity garbage, paid thousands of dollars to sources for information and crashed wedding receptions to get information about public figures.
Williams will deliver a 60-minute, multimedia presentation at 8 tonight at the Kansas Union Ballroom. His speech will cover how the Enquirer gets information for stories and other topics such as media law and payment of news sources.
The speech is titled, "Everything I Need to Be Successful I Learned at the National Enauir."
Williams said that the same qualities people needed to put out a newspaper enabled them to be successful at anything.
"Perseverance, handling adversity and presenting yourself and your product help people be successful at whatever they do." he said.
In 1972, after he graduated from Princeton University with a political science degree, Williams taught high school for three years and worked as a sales manager for several companies. He landed a job as a rookie reporter at the Enquirer seven years ago. As general editor, he oversees celebrity coverage in the supermarket tabloid, which now boasts a readership of more than 20 million.
Williams has appeared on "Good Morning America", "Geraldo", "Entertainment Tonight", and in a public television documentary designed to teach journalism in college.
Ted Frederickson, professor of journalism, said that he thought it would be interesting to hear what Williams has to say. Frederickson, who teaches media law, said that the
"Perseverance handling adversity and presenting yourself...help people be successful."
Brian Williams General editor, National Enquirer
Enquirer was lumped with other tabuloids that offer stories such as sightings of Elvis and reports of space aliens. The Enquirer focuses on news about the personal lives of stars and public people, he said.
"I don't know that we can look down our noses because other dailies, including the New York Times, report on celebrities," he said.
The speech is a free presentation of Student Union Activities.
General Editor of the National Enquirer
When: 8:00 tonight
- When: 8:00 tonight
- Where: Kansas Union Ball-
room
Free vouchers are available at the Student Union Activities Office
Kansan staff report
Robber gets away with store's money
A KU student working at a Lawrence convenience store was the victim of a robbery Tuesday night, Lawrence police said.
The student, a clerk at Miller Mart, 3300 West Sixth St., was sweeping the floor in an aisle away from the cash register when a man wearing a ski mask walked into the store.
Reportedly, the man opened the cash register, took out an unknown amount of money and told the clerk to wait to call the police.
The clerk waited until the man left, pushed an alarm and called the police.
The suspect was described as a 5-foot-8-inch Black male.
The Miller Mart has been robbed four times before — three times in the last two months.
Icy trick wakes junkie just as police arrive
Kansan staff report
Lawrence police responded to an apparent heroin overdose when friends were first unable to revive a man by putting ice down his pants.
The 23-year-old man had been sniffing the heroin about 1:40 p.m. Sunday at his home in the 1500 block of West Third St. When his friends noticed he had become unconscious,
they tried to wake him with the ice.
The police arrived at the man's residence while he was regaining consciousness.
He refused medical treatment. No arrests were made
The Lawrence man had been arrested prior to this incident for attempted burglary in 1991, intent to sell 1,207 hits of LSD in 1993 and possession of marijuana in 1994.
Too Low to Quote (the record companies don't approve)
6.7.2.1.1.3.4.5.6.7.8.9.10.11.12.13.14.15.16.17.18.19.20.21.22.23.24.25.26.27.28.29.30.31.32.33.34.35.36.37.38.39.40.41.42.43.44.45.46.47.48.49.50.51.52.53.54.55.56.57.58.59.60.61.62.63.64.65.66.67.68.69.70.71.72.73.74.75.76.77.78.79.80.81.82.83.84.85.86.87.88.89.90.91.92.93.94.95.96.97.98.99.100.101.102.103.104.105.106.107.108.109.110.111.112.113.114.115.116.117.118.119.120.121.122.123.124.125.126.127.128.129.130.131.132.133.134.135.136.137.138.139.140.141.142.143.144.145.146.147.148.149.150.151.152.153.154.155.156.157.158.159.160.161.162.163.164.165.166.167.168.169.170.171.172.173.174.175.176.177.178.179.180.181.182.183.184.185.186.187.188.189.190.191.192.193.194.195.196.197.198.199.200.201.202.203.204.205.206.207.208.209.210.211.212.213.214.215.216.217.218.219.220.221.222.223.224.225.226.227.228.229.230.231.232.233.234.235.236.237.238.239.240.241.242.243.244.245.246.247.248.249.250.251.252.253.254.255.256.257.258.259.260.261.262.263.264.265.266.267.268.269.270.271.272.273.274.275.276.277.278.279.280.281.282.283.284.285.286.287.288.289.290.291.292.293.294.295.296.297.298.299.300.301.302.303.304.305.306.307.308.309.310.311.312.313.314.315.316.317.318.319.320.321.322.323.324.325.326.327.328.329.330.331.332.333.334.335.336.337.338.339.340.341.342.343.344.345.346.347.348.349.350.351.352.353.354.355.356.357.358.359.360.361.362.363.364.365.366.367.368.369.370.371.372.373.374.375.376.377.378.379.380.381.382.383.384.385.386.387.388.389.390.391.392.393.394.395.396.397.398.399.400.401.402.403.404.405.406.407.408.409.410.411.412.413.414.415.416.417.418.419.420.421.422.423.424.425.426.427.428.429.430.431.432.433.434.435.436.437.438.439.440.441.442.443.444.445.446.447.448.449.450.451.452.453.454.455.456.457.458.459.460.461.462.463.464.465.466.467.468.469.470.471.472.473.474.475.476.477.478.479.480.481.482.483.484.485.486.487.488.489.490.491.492.493.494.495.496.497.498.499.500.501.502.503.504.505.506.507.508.509.510.511.512.513.514.515.516.517.518.519.520.521.522.523.524.525.526.527.528.529.530.531.532.533.534.535.536.537.538.539.540.541.542.543.544.545.546.547.548.549.550.551.552.553.554.555.556.557.558.559.560.561.562.563.564.565.566.567.568.569.570.571.572.573.574.575.576.577.578.579.580.581.582.583.584.585.586.587.588.589.590.591.592.593.594.595.596.597.598.599.600.601.602.603.604.605.606.607.608.609.610.611.612.613.614.615.616.617.618.619.620.621.622.623.624.625.626.627.628.629.630.631.632.633.634.635.636.637.638.639.640.641.642.643.644.645.646.647.648.649.650.651.652.653.654.655.656.657.658.659.660.661.662.663.664.665.666.667.668.669.670.671.672.673.674.675.676.677.678.679.680.681.682.683.684.685.686.687.688.689.690.691.692.693.694.695.696.697.698.699.700.701.702.703.704.705.706.707.708.709.710.711.712.713.714.715.716.717.718.719.720.721.722.723.724.725.726.727.728.729.730.731.732.733.734.735.736.737.738.739.740.741.742.743.744.745.746.747.748.749.750.751.752.753.754.755.756.757.758.759.760.761.762.763.764.765.766.767.768.769.770.771.772.773.774.775.776.777.778.779.780.781.782.783.784.785.786.787.788.789.790.791.792.793.794.795.796.797.798.799.800.801.802.803.804.805.806.807.808.809.810.811.812.813.814.815.816.817.818.819.820.821.822.823.824.825.826.827.828.829.830.831.832.833.834.835.836.837.838.839.840.841.842.843.844.845.846.847.848.849.850.851.852.853.854.855.856.857.858.859.860.861.862.863.864.865.866.867.868.869.870.871.872.873.874.875.876.877.878.879.880.881.882.883.884.885.886.887.888.889.890.891.892.893.894.895.896.897.898.899.900.901.902.903.904.905.906.907.908.909.910.911.912.913.914.915.916.917.918.919.920.921.922.923.924.925.926.927.928.929.930.931.932.933.934.935.936.937.938.939.940.941.942.943.944.945.946.947.948.949.950.951.952.953.954.955.956.957.958.959.960.961.962.963.964.965.966.967.968.969.970.971.972.973.974.975.976.977.978.979.980.981.982.983.984.985.986.987.988.989.990.991.992.993.994.995.996.997.998.999.000.001.002.003.004.005.006.007.008.009.010.011.012.013.014.015.016.017.018.019.020.021.022.023.024.025.026.027.028.029.030.031.032.033.034.035.036.037.038.039.040.041.042.043.044.045.046.047.048.049.050.051.052.053.054.055.056.057.058.059.060.061.062.063.064.065.066.067.068.069.070.071.072.073.074.075.076.077.078.079.080.081.082.083.084.085.086.087.088.089.090.091.092.093.094.095.096.097.098.099.100.101.102.103.104.105.106.107.108.109.110.111.112.113.114.115.116.117.118.119.120.121.122.123.124.125.126.127.128.129.130.131.132.133.134.135.136.137.138.139.140.141.142.143.144.145.146.147.148.149.150.151.152.153.154.155.156.157.158.159.160.161.162.163.164.165.166.167.168.169.170.171.172.173.174.175.176.177.178.179.180.181.182.183.184.185.186.187.188.189.190.191.192.193.194.195.196.197.198.199.200.201.202.203.204.205.206.207.208.209.210.211.212.213.214.215.216.217.218.219.220.221.222.223.224.225.226.227.228.229.230.231.232.233.234.235.236.237.238.239.240.241.242.243.244.245.246.247.248.249.250.251.252.253.254.255.256.257.258.259.260.261.262.263.264.265.266.267.268.269.270.271.272.273.274.275.276.277.278.279.280.281.282.283.284.285.286.287.288.289.290.291.292.293.294.295.296.297.298.299.300.301.302.303.304.305.306.307.308.309.310.311.312.313.314.315.316.317.318.319.320.321.322.323.324.325.326.327.328.329.330.331.332.333.334.335.336.337.338.339.340.341.342.343.344.345.346.347.348.349.350.351.352.353.354.355.356.357.358.359.360.361.362.363.364.365.366.367.368.369.370.371.372.373.374.375.376.377.378.379.380.381.382.383.384.385.386.387.388.389.390.391.392.393.394.395.396.397.398.399.400.401.402.403.404.405.406.407.408.409.410.411.412.413.414.415.416.417.418.419.420.421.422.423.424.425.426.427.428.429.430.431.432.433.434.435.436.437.438.439.440.441.442.443.444.445.446.447.448.449.450.451.452.453.454.455.456.457.458.459.460.461.462.463.464.465.466.467.468.469.470.471.472.473.474.475.476.477.478.479.480.481.482.483.484.485.486.487.488.489.490.491.492.493.494.495.496.497.498.499.500.501.502.503.504.505.506.507.508.509.510.511.512.513.514.515.516.517.518.519.520.521.522.523.524.525.526.527.528.529.530.531.532.533.534.535.536.537.538.539.540.541.542.543.544.545.546.547.548.549.550.551.552.553.554.555.556.557.558.559.560.561.562.563.564.565.566.567.568.569.570.571.572.573.574.575.576.577.578.579.580.581.582.583.584.585.586.587.588.589.590.591.592.593.594.595.596.597.598.599.600.601.602.603.604.605.606.607.608.609.610.611.612.613.614.615.616.617.618.619.620.621.622.623.624.625.626.627.628.629.630.631.632.633.634.635.636.637.638.639.640.641.642.643.644.645.646.647.648.649.650.651.652.653.654.655.656.657.658.659.660.661.662.663.664.665.666.667.668.669.670.671.672.673.674.675.676.677.678.679.680.681.682.683.684.685.686.687.688.689.690.691.692.693.694.695.696.697.698.699.700.701.702.703.704.705.706.707.708.709.710.711.712.713.714.715.716.717.718.719.720.721.722.723.724.725.726.727.728.729.730.731.732.733.734.735.736.737.738.739.740.741.742.743.744.745.746.747.748.749.750.751.752.753.754.755.756.757.758.759.760.761.762.763.764.765.766.767.768.769.770.771.772.773.774.775.776.777.778.779.780.781.782.783.784.785.786.787.788.789.790.791.792.793.794.795.796.797.798.799.800.801.802.803.804.805.806.807.808.809.810.811.812.813.814.815.816.817.818.819.820.821.822.823.824.825.826.827.828.829.830.831.832.833.834.835.836.837.838.839.840.841.842.843.844.845.846.847.848.849.850.851.852.853.854.855.856.857.858.859.860.861.862.863.864.865.866.867.868.869.870.871.872.873.874.875.876.877.878.879.880.881.882.883.884.885.886.887.888.889.890.891.892.893.894.895.896.897.898.899.900.901.902.903.904.905.906.907.908.909.910.911.912.913.914.915.916.917.918.919.920.921.922.923.924.925.926.927.928.929.930.931.932.933.934.935.936.937.938.939.940.941.942.943.944.945.946.947.948.949.950.951.952.953.954.955.956.957.958.959.960.961.962.963.964.965.966.967.968.969.970.971.972.973.974.975.976.977.978.979.980.981.982.983.984.985.986.987.988.989.990.991.992.993.994.995.996.997.998.999.
FEATURING
Quotable but Low Prices
Aimpa 12.97
Billy Goetl 10.80
Hellcat Trio 9.99
Eazy-E 11.88
Dan Williams 12.97
Presidents of the United States of America 12.97
Selt 12.97
W. H. MURPHY
A.C. PARKS
Replikans 10.88
Southern Culture on the Skies 9.88
Victoria Williams 9.88
Squirrel Nut Zippers 9.98
Rocket from the Crush 10.88
G-Love and Special Sauce 10.88
Lee M.Dee 11.88
"Boys for Pele"
Alice in Chains, Candlebox Edwyn Collins, Everclear, Green Day, Eric Matthews, Menswear Joan Osborne, Toad the Wet Sprocket, Urge Overkill, Victor Mike Watt, Enya, P.M. Dawn Frank Black, Alimee Mann, Mary Me Jane, Geraldine Fibbers, Beaties, Pretenders, Van Morrison, C.I.V.
KIEF'S
24th & Iowa•PO Box 2•Lawrence, KS 66046
2.
44
Thursday, February 8, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEW POINT
Being a student senator means getting involved
The KU Student Senate is a powerful voice of the student body. It decides how to spend $35, or 17 percent, of the $208 that you pay in student fees. But do students join and run for Senate to be a voice for the students they represent, or is it a resume builder?
Being a senator means more than showing up for meetings and voting on legislation. It means sponsoring legislation, joining or being appointed to various boards, representing constituents and taking on other responsibilities as an elected official.
Being a senator is a way to get involved at the University of Kansas.
But this involvement means doing more than the minimum required. Many senators do no more than what is necessary to keep their offices: showing up for the required number of meetings. More than half of the 70 student senators never have sponsored any legislation. It is amazing that some get re-elected without ever having sponsored a single bill.
So far this year, 35 senators have sponsored about 50 bills. Only 15 have sponsored two or more bills. A small number of hard-working senators have sponsored five or more bills.
These senators should be commended for sponsoring bills to fund various organizations or to change rules and regulations for the better. Why are these senators so involved in Senate?
Arthur Yudelson, graduate senator, said sponsoring bills helped senators make a difference.
"That's what I'm here for," he said.
One reason that senators don't sponsor legislation is that it requires time that they don't have.
Senate does require a lot of time from students. But, if some senators can commit their time, then they all should. Students should pay close attention to what is going on in Senate and hold these elected officials responsible for performing their duties, especially those that are running for re-election this semester.
Senators should not use the Senate as a résumé-building scheme but rather a way to get involved and make a difference for all students.
SARBPAL HUNDAL FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD.
Commentator deserves his place in Athletic Hall of Fame
Ascreaming Allen Fried House voiced its appreciation last weekend as Max Falkenstien was honored as the first media representative inducted into the KU Athletic Department Hall of Fame. The Athletic Department made a classy decision by acknowledging the contributions of a nonathlete to the growth and success of the program.
Falkenstien established himself as a radio pioneer in terms of college athletics. His career started at an NCAA playoff game against Oklahoma A&M (Oklahoma State) in 1946. His tenure ranks second in the nation, and he has been behind the microphone for more than half of all Kansas football games.
Falkenstien has watched 8 bowl games,9 head football coaches,10 athletic directors and an estimated 1,600 broadcast hours. He never has missed a football broadcast and has missed only
THE ISSUE:
Max Falkenstien
three or four basketball games.
Falkenstien has been instrumental in the rise of Kansas athletics to the national sporting eye. He has called the exploits of countless heroes of the past: Danny Manning, Gale Sayers, John Riggins, Wilt Chamberlain and even Greg Ostertag. He relayed successes to our parents and grandparents; his voice helped to build the mystique of the Phog and all of the traditions of the Jayhawks.
Falkenstien is one of the great traditions of Kansas sports, and the Athletic Department made a wise move by inducting a truly deserving figure. Whenever the fieldhouse gets rockin' on a cold winter night, and the Phog comes out to play, you know Max will be on the sidelines.
JOHN WILSON FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Editors
Campus ... Joann Birk
... Phillip Brownlee
Editorial ... Paul Todd
Associate editorial ... Craig Lang
Pastures ... Matt Wood
Routines ... Tom Ridolson
Associate sports ... Bill Petalina
Photo ... Andy Ruillett
Photo ... Matt Flokker
Graphics ... Noah Musser
Special sessions ... Norvall Dunn
Jen Humphrey
Wire ... Tara Treany
Illustration ... Milo Leaker
Shawn Trimble / KANSAN
HEATHER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Karen Gerach
Regional mgr ... Kelly Connelyse
Legal mgr ... John McKinnon
Special Sections mgr ... Nom Blow
Production mgr ... Rachel Gilliland
Marketing director ... Cary Breestle
Public Relations dir ... Angela Adamson
Public relations director ... Ed Kansasla
Classics director ... Stacy Moore
Internship/oop mgr ... T.J. Clark
ATHLETIC DEPT.
WE JUST DON'T HAVE THE MONEY FOR YOUR SILLY GIRL SPORTS--
NOW SCRAM!
MEBEE KU DOES HAVE SUM CLASS AN' TRADITION AFTER ALL! YEE-HAW!
BUT, THAT MEANS THE MONEY WILL HAVE TO COME FROM OUR STUDENT FEES!
IT'S NOT NOW YOU NEED OR LOOS-ITS IF YOU PLAY THE GAME.
©1996 TRIMBLE
One of the most difficult acts for African Americans is to give themselves permission to make money. I don't mean chump change. I mean serious money. White people's money. Instead of honoring African Americans whose enterprises have taken them somewhere within shouting distance of white people's money, we belittle them for even daring to think they could improve their condition, as if the
The second of three essays on race and identity
SURVIVOR'S GUILT
imperatives of Black solidarity precluded any of them from making an honest buck. Few were more torn by this conflict
than my first wife, Leanita McClain, an African-American, ghetto-to-Gold-Coast success story. Her upward climb was stopped by the torment of her inner conflicts, made worse by clinical, and ultimately fatal, depression. She eventually gave up. She killed herself on Memorial Day in 1984. Had we still been married, it would have been our 10th wedding anniversary.
"I was born on Wednesday," she would say. "Wednesday's child is full of woe."
A product of the South Side Chicago public-housing ghetto, she became the first Black woman columnist and Black editorial board member at the Chicago Tribune, one of the nation's oldest and largest newspapers. She won awards, made speeches and was beginning to appear as a guest on local and national TV chat shows.
Privately, she was a portrait of a walking wounded.
She was also full of grace and fair of face. Her light, freckled complexion, her naturally strawberry-blond hair and her bright, green eyes caused some people to wonder whether she was biracial. Of course, like most African Americans, she was. Somewhere in her early family background, tributaries of Caucasian and Seminole blood flowed into the stream of African blood.
African-American
History Month
CLARENCE PAGE
SYNCHRONIZED COLUMNIST
She went on to describe the personal conflicts of coping with a Caucasian world that often seemed too reluctant or too ignorant to accept her as an equal. And her Black world was dividing rapidly right before her eyes between haves and have-nots, with many of her old friends and relatives slipping down the losing end. A boy she had a crush on as
"I have a foot in each world," she wrote in an anguished essay, The Black Middle-Class Burden, for Newsweek.
"I am a member of the Black middle class who has had it with being patted on the head by white hands
and slapped in the face by Black hands for my success," she wrote.
child in the projects was serving a life sentence for murder. A childhood girlfriend, once bright and lovely, is now a single
"Some of my 'liberal' white acquaintances pat me on the head, hinting that I am a freak, that my success is less a matter of talent than of luck and affirmative action. I may live among them, but it is difficult to live with them. How can they be sincere about respecting me, yet hold my fellows in contempt? And if I am silent when they attempt to sever me from my own, how can I live with myself?"
Her loyalty to the "hood" tugged at her: "As for the envy of my own people, am I to give up my career, my standard of living. to
pacify them and set my conscience at ease? No. I have worked for these amenities and deserve them, though I can never enjoy them without feeling guilty."
"I am burdened daily with showing whites that Blacks are people. I am, in the old vernacular, a credit to my race. My brothers' keeper and my sisters', though many of them have abandoned me because they think that I have abandoned them. I assuage white guilt. I disprove Black inadequacy and prove to my parent's generation that their patience was indeed a virtue
On some cerebral level, she had accepted the unreal and conflicting stereotypical roles into which she was cast by a needy, but misguided, public. Some wanted her to be the militant. Some wanted her to be the good little colored girl. Some wanted her to be the fey feminist. Others wanted her to be a self-centered bourgeois toady to white power. She chose to believe that these unreal characterizations were real and that they could not be transcended. In fact, her greatest tragedy is that she gave up the fight.
"I'll never live to see my people free anyway," she said in her suicide note. None are so blind, my hometown minister used to say, as those who refuse to see. The contradictions in her life terrorized her. Her struggle with triple victimization as one who was poor, Black and female exposed her wounds and her susceptibility to being wounded again.
I believe that we in the Black community who have made it have an obligation to reach back, not with condescension, but with genuine concern, to help those who have not. Lea enjoyed working with young people, but it was not enough. This leads me to conclude that her problems ran far deeper than such mundane issues as politics of economics. They were psychological, which struck an important nerve in the Black community. Our problems are as much a matter of our psychological self-doubts as they are a matter of politics or economics. This psychological aspect of our problem seldom is addressed, partly because it is so mysterious, and partly because, no matter how much of it can be blamed on Caucasians, it cannot be solved by them. Looking back, I see with greater clarity the freedom Leanita had at her disposal, whether she was willing to realize it or not. All she had to do was something that for many of us has been infinitely more difficult: to accept it. I am sorry she couldn't bring herself to do that, and I'm sorry that she decided to let the white guys and gals have all the fun.
Clarence Page is a columnist at the Chicago Tribune
While boarding the bus in the morning with brigades of mostly Caucasian briefcase-toting yuppies, and after returning from a trip to Paris, she ran into an aunt who was arriving to clean the condominium of our white neighbor. One of her sisters, wearing her designer everything, nevertheless is taken to the back door of the lakefront high rise where she lives by a taxi driver who just assumes, because of her skin color, that she is an employee.
mother resigned to a lifetime in the projects on welfare. "Jive hustlers" from the old neighborhood still tried to put the moves on her for money.
Although this may serve as a belated warning to the many unsuspecting young men already victimized by their actions, first-year females at the University of Kansas are of a different breed.
Nevertheless, through various experiences, both first-hand and vicarious, I have compiled a checklist of symptoms that your life is in harm.
STAFF COLUMNIST
life is being in-
Early detection prevents bad influence of freshman girls
She plans her study habits based upon the specials at the "Tennessee Triangle" bars.
MIKE
WALDEN
She spends more time contemplating the outgoing message on her answering machine than her coming Psych 104 exam.
She consistently tries to sneak you into Gertrude Sellard Pearson-Corbin Hall after hours - then has her friends walk you out in the morning.
he is being influenced by a freshman female.
`Her dating habits revolve around coming fraternity parties.`
`She constantly surrounds herself with a gigantic group of people and giggles excessively.`
Episodes of 90210 and Melrose Place take precedence over all other activities in her life.
She admires you solely because you wear Game Bar-style baseball caps and Abercrombie plaid.
Her bulletin board closely resembles a Wall of Fame consisting of the numerous guys with whom she has attended fraternity parties.
You overhear stories of her dancing on tables at local drinking establishments.
Her heart rate fluctuates when her phone gives that special off-campus ring.
Upon being introduced to you, she initiates conversation by asking, "Are you in a house?"
If these symptoms seem all too familiar, you are not alone. Furthermore, if you need help, the KU Psychological Clinic can be reached at 864-4121.
This simple phone call could be quite beneficial to your wellbeing in the coming months.
So, until next time, I hpe all your dates are good ones. On behalf of Chuck Woolery, so long.
Guest columns: Should be double-spaced, typed and fewer than 700 words. The writer must be willing to be photographed for the column to run.
Mike Walden is a sophomore majoring in political science
Letters: Should be double-spaced, typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
How to submit letters and guest columns
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Paul Todd, editorial page editor, or Craig Lang, associate editorial editor, at 864-4810.
I
OUT FROM THE CRACKS
KU
JAY WILKINS
NOW, LET'S SEE IF YOU CAN FIND THE DISH WASHER...
Wow, Good Boy,
GOOOOD
BOY!!!!
By Jeremy Patnoi
WHEN TRAINING THE MALE AN OPERANT CONDITIONING PROCEDURE THAT INVOLVES POSITIVE REINFORCEMENT MAY BE USED.
NEXT WEEK
WE'LL WORK ON
WHERE TO PUT
THE DISHES WHEN
THEY'RE CLEAN!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 8, 1996
5A
Inflation hinders KU budget
By John Collar
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Chancellor Robert Hemenway said yesterday that his two priorities for University of Kansas' budget during this legislative session were increasing the University's salaries and its operating budget.
Hemenway's remarks came after he discussed the University's budget during a Senate subcommittee meeting.
For fiscal year 1997, which begins July 1, the Board of Regents had requested a 2 percent increase in the operating budget, which pays for the day-to-day expenses of the University. The Regents also had requested an 8 percent increase for libraries. However, Gov. Bill Graves recommended that next year's operating budget
remain the same as this year's.
Robert Hemenway
PETER B.
Hemenway said that when the current inflation rate of about 3 percent was figured in, the governor's recommendation was not good for KU.
"Because there is no increase, in effect our budget has been cut 3 percent," Hemenway said. "The increase in library acquisition costs is frequently double digits."
On the subject of salaries, Hemenway told the committee that the classified employees were concerned about the lack of a cost-of-living adjustment.
The governor's budget includes a 2.5 percent salary increase for faculty and administrators, but defers this increase for six months. Other University staff members would receive an increase on the step system, which is the state pay scale.
Hemenway said that even though the governor's budget was austere, the small amount of growth had been distributed equitably to all state agencies.
State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, said that the governor's budget was lean.
"A strict budget sometimes means that you don't always get to do what you really want to do," Ballard said. "We do need to live within our means."
Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said the University's budget should survive without any additional cuts.
CAMP
OZARK
SUMMER STAFF POSITIONS
Come to our Video Presentation:
Thursday, February 8th
9:00 p.m.
Kansas Union, Jayhawk Room
A Christian sports and adventure camp for boys and girls ages 8-16, located in the heart of the Ouachita Lake and Mountain Region in Arkansas, is now accepting applications for summer staff positions.
CAMP
OZARK
For More Info:
Camp Ozark • HC 64 Box 190 • Mt. Ida, AR 71957 • (501) 867-4131
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Department of
Music and Dance
Those are the goals of a satellite video conference that the School of Social Welfare is sponsoring this week at the University of Kansas. The conference will explore the problem of violence and examine measures communities are taking to stop it, said Sadye Logan, associate professor of social welfare and organizer of the event. The conference also will work to get people to see violence on a more global scale, she said.
"People need to see violence in terms not only of the individual," Logan said.
Stop violence. Promote development.
The University is one of two dozen locations for the video conference, Social Workers and the Challenge of Violence Worldwide, held this week as part of a national teach-in on the causes and solutions to violence. Broadcast journalist Charles Kuralt will host the conference
Conference to attack violence
By David Teska
Kansan staff writer
"The motivation to stop violence must come from the grassroots level," Logan said.
One participant in the teach-in is the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. Rachel Lee, Lawrence graduate student and coordinator of the sexual assault and preventative education program at the center, said the center had a community focus centered around education and the prevention of situations that could lead to violence.
"We help people see it not only as an issue that affects them but one that affects their friends and families," she said.
Stop the violence
When: tomorrow at 1:30 p.m.
Where: KU, Computer Center auditorium; Regents Center, Room 210
Headquarters Counseling Center, 1419 Massachusetts St., also is participating. Marcia Epstein, director of the center, said she could see the benefits people got from sharing their experiences in dealing with violence.
"There are lots of similarities despite cultural differences," Epstein said.
On the Lawrence campus, people can participate in the conference's second video discussion at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Computer Center auditorium. Students at the Regents Center can view it in Room 210.
Logan said participants would discuss action people are taking to stop violence in their own communities.
KU Symphonic Band Robert E. Foster, conductor
featuring guest soloist
featuring guest soloist Paul Garner Dallas Symphony Orchestra clarinet soloist
It's Your PARTY
1601 W.23rd 749-3455
from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
"It's a much broader phenomenon," she said.
Logan said the conference would explore violence globally, exploring issues such as genocide, war, police brutality and hunger.
7:30 p.m.
Monday, February 12, 1996
Lied Center
General admission tickets are on sale in the KU box offices:
Murphy Hall, 864-3982;
Lied Center, 864-ARTS;
SUA Office, 864-3477;
public $5, students and senior citizens $3; both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders.
SHOWOFFS
Body Piercing Studio
Leather • Jewelry • Lingerie
12 E. 8th 12-8 p.m. 838-3368
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Grimpman Old Men™ 1:40 4:30 7:10
Black Draper® 2:00 4:19 7:00
Dark Desk Man™ 2:00 4:19 7:00
$3.50 Adult Bottles
6:00 P.M.
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Thursday, Friday, & Saturday $2.00 Cheeseburger & Fries All Cans $1.50
The Wheel
507 W.14th
STUDENT SENATE IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE FOLLOWING SENATOR SEATS:
JUMP RIGHT INTO STUDENT SENATE
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
3 Graduate
1 Business
1 Architecture
1 Social Welfare
1 Journalism
1 Nunemaker
1 Liberal Arts and Sciences candidate must have 60 or more hours
APPLICATION DEADLINE: Friday February 9th at 5PM Check out the Senate Homepage on the WWW @ : http://ukanaix.cc.ukans.udu/~senate/senate.html
Like you need another excuse to get ofF campus.
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middle of nowhere. And your discount is good for travel on almost every Amtrak train.
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TICKETS $25.00 DINIGHTS $1.00
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BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00
(UNITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
From Dusk Till Dawn $ ^{R} $ 5:30,7:30,9:30
HILLCREST 825 JOWA
The Juro®ᵣ
Bed of Roses®ᵣ
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 8. 1996
5A
Inflation hinders KU budget
By John Collar Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Chancellor Robert Hemenway said yesterday that his two priorities for University of Kansas' budget during this legislative session were increasing the University's salaries and its operating budget.
Hemenway's remarks came after he discussed the University's budget during a Senate subcommittee meeting.
For fiscal year 1997, which begins July 1, the Board of Regents had requested a 2 percent increase in the operating budget, which pays for the day-to-day expenses of the University. The Regents also had requested an 8 percent increase for libraries. However, Gov. Bill Graves recommended that next year's operating budget
Robert Hemenway
remain the same as this year's.
Hemenway said that when the current inflation rate of about 3 percent was figured in, the governor's recommendation was not good for KU.
"Because there is no increase, in effect our budget has been cut 3 percent," Hemenway said. "The increase in library acquisition costs is frequently double digits."
On the subject of salaries, Hemenway told the committee that the classified employees were concerned about the lack of a cost-of-living adjustment.
The governor's budget includes a 2.5 percent salary increase for faculty and administrators, but defends this increase for six months. Other University staff members would receive an increase on the step system, which is the state pay scale.
Hemenway said that even though the governor's budget was austere, the small amount of growth had been distributed equitably to all state agencies.
State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, said that the governor's budget was lean.
"A strict budget sometimes means that you don't always get to do what you really want to do," Ballard said. "We do need to live within our means."
Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said the University's budget should survive without any additional cuts.
CAMP
OZARK
SUMMER STAFF POSITIONS
Come to our Video Presentation:
Thursday, February 8th
9:00 p.m.
Kansas Union, Jayhawk Room
A Christian sports and adventure camp for boys and girls ages 8-16, located in the heart of the Ouachita Lake and Mountain Region in Arkansas, is now accepting applications for summer staff positions.
CAMP
OZ/RK
For More Info:
Camp.Ozark • HC 64 Box 190 • Mt. Ida, AR 71957 • (501) 867-4131
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Department of Music and Dance
"People need to see violence in terms not only of the individual," Logan said.
Those are the goals of a satellite video conference that the School of Social Welfare is sponsoring this week at the University of Kansas. The conference will explore the problem of violence and examine measures communities are taking to stop it, said Sadye Logan, associate professor of social welfare and organizer of the event. The conference also will work to get people to see violence on a more global scale, she said.
The University is one of two dozen locations for the video conference, Social Workers and the Challenge of Violence Worldwide, held this week as part of a national teach-in on the causes and solutions to violence. Broadcast journalist Charles Kurait will host the conference
Stop violence. Promote development.
Conference to attack violence
One participant in the teach-in is the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. Rachel Lee, Lawrence graduate student and coordinator of the sexual assault and preventative education program at the center, said the center had a community focus centered around education and the prevention of situations that could lead to violence.
"We help people see it not only as an issue that affects them but one that affects their friends and families," she said.
By David Teska
Kansan staff writer
Where: KU, Computer Center auditorium; Regents Center, Room 210
When: tomorrow at 1:30 p.m.
Headquarters Counseling Center, 1419 Massachusetts St., also is participating. Marcia Epstein, director of the center, said she could see the benefits people got from sharing their experiences in dealing with violence.
"The motivation to stop violence must come from the grassroots level," Logan said.
"There are lots of similarities despite cultural differences," Epstein said.
Stop the violence
It's Your PARTY:
1601 W.23rd 749-3455
On the Lawrence campus, people can participate in the conference's second video discussion at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Computer Center auditorium. Students at the Regents Center can view it in Room 210.
KU Symphonic Band Robert E. Foster conductor
featuring guest soloist Paul Garner Dallas Symphony Orchestra clarinet soloist
from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
7:30 p.m.
Monday, February 12, 1996
Lied Center
Logan said the conference would explore violence globally, exploring issues such as genocide, war, police brutality and hunger.
Logan said participants would discuss action people are taking to stop violence in their own communities.
"It's a much broader phenomenon." she said.
General admission tickets are on sale in the KU box offices: Murphy Hall, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; SUA Office, 864-3477; public $5, students and senior citizens $3; both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders.
SHOWOFFS
Body Piercing Studio
Leather • Jewelry • Lingerie
12 E. 8th 12-8 p.m. 838-3366
Sneakers
841-6966
Red Lyon Tavern
Universal since 1993
944 Mass.832-8228
* 1489 HISTORICAL EDITION BY W. H. BURKE
DICKINSON
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Dickinson 6
DICKINSON
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Sat-Sun Fri-Mon-Thur
An Eyes for an Eye® $40 4:20 9:50
Jumem $10 1:40 7:30
Bleenem $10 1:40 7:30
Bleenem $10 1:40 7:30
Grumpier Old Men$10 1:50 4:15 7:10 8:40
White Shoes $10 1:50 4:15 7:10 8:40
Black Shoes $10 2:00 4:25 7:20 8:40
Dead Man Walking $10 2:00 4:25 7:20 8:40
$350 Adults Before 6:00 P.M. Hearing Impaired Delay Stereo
Thursday, Friday, & Saturday
$2.00 Cheeseburger
& Fries
All Cans $1.50
The
Whooo
The Whose
507 W.14th
STUDENT SENATE IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE FOLLOWING SENATOR SEATS:
JUMPRIGHTINTOSTUDENTSENATE
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
3 Graduate
1 Business
1 Architecture
1 Social Welfare
1 Journalism
1 Nunemaker
1 Liberal Arts and Sciences candidate must have 60 or more hours
APPLICATION DEADLINE: Friday February 9th at 5PM Check out the Senate Homepage on the WWW @ : http://ukanaix.cc.ukans.udu/~senate/senate.html
Like you need another eXcuse to get ofF campus.
GET A STUDENT ADVANTAGE CARD AND GET 15%* OFF AMTRAK FARES.
Hang out with your old friends. Take your laundry home, and eat some real food. Whatever the reason, when you get a Student Advantage Card, you can get away on Amtrak for 15% less. You won't be crammed into a car with five other people. Or stuck on a bus out in the
AMTRAK
To get a Student Advantage Card call 1-800-96-AMTRAK. And to make reservations, call your travel agent or Amtrak at 1-800-USA-RAIL. Now stop making excuses.
middle of nowhere. And your discount is good for travel on almost every Amtrak train.
- Fifteen percent discount good on all air fares except peak hour weekday Metroline™ Service, multivride and government fares. On Auto Tint™, fifteen percent discount is good on auto fare only. Other methods — more info.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
FRIDAY-SUNDAY FEB. 9-11
ACEVENTURA2:
WHEN NATURE CALLS
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
7:00 & 9:30, & SUNDAY 2:00
ACEVENTURA:
PET DETECTIVE
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
MIDNIGHT
ALL SHOWS IN WOODROOM AUD
TICKETS $2.50 MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD
CALL 864-1 SHOW FOR MORE
Crown Cinema
VARSITY
BEFORE 8 PM ADULTS $3.00
( LIMITED TO SEATING )
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
(1015) ATASSA HULETS 341 5191
From Dusk Till Dawn $ ^{R} $ 5:30,7:30,9:30
HILLCREST
825 IOWA
The Juro$^{R}$
Bed of Roses$^{G}$
12 Monkeys$^{R}$
Sense & Sensibility$^{G}$
Mr. Holland's Opus$^{G}$
CINEMA TWIN
3110/OWA 841 5191
$1.25
Powder⁶,¹³ 9:15
Babe⁶ 1:5,7;15
Sudden Death⁸ 5:00, 7:20, 9:35
SHOWKINES FOR JOBLA ONLY
SUA FILMS
POPULAR UNION ACTIVITIES
Thursday, Feb 8
STEPPING
RAZOR
RED X
THURSDAY 10:00 PM
MO'
BETTER
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AT THE MADISON CENTER
WEDGESTONE MOTHERFAMILY
LIGHTS 5 KANSAS UPNOM
FRULE AWAY SU A MORE LABEL
CALL 864 SHOW 664 MORE INFO
MO' BETTER BLUES
---
6A
Thursday, February 8, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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PINE IS FOR RABBIT HUTCHES, NOT BEDS!!
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YOU DON'T HAVE TO SETTLE FOR A PINE FUTON WHEN ABDIANA OFFERS FINISHED HARDWOOD FRAMES FROM:
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Others Sell Pine For $159
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Frontier, a Fortune 500 telecommunications leader is the country's fifth largest long-distance company. We are seeking entry level, outside sales representatives for our Kansas City office.
The ideal candidate will possess; a four year college degree; excellent interpersonal skills; strong work ethic and proven desire to succeed. Successful candidate should be motivated and seek long term career path with opportunity for advancement.
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It's a symbol of our childhood. It's our slinky. Our parents wouldn't try it. It's now in a different form, but at least we can say we were
there when it first came out.
Alternative Flash Back
1988 and before (Thursdays 9P.M.-11P.M.)
Brownback asks students to evaluate their beliefs
By Teresa Veazey
Kansan staff writer
Moses wandered the wilderness for 40 years, and that's how long it took Republicans to get control of Congress.
U. S. Rep. Sam Brownback, a first-year Republican representative, told KU students that he wasn't even 40 years old. Brownback, who visited the University yesterday, talked with two political science classes and with the department's faculty about his experiences in his first year in Congress.
"The American political landscape has changed," he said. "Part of the Republican shift in Congress is the emerging of fiscal and social conservatives."
He asked students to stand up if they were born in 1969, the last time the country had a balanced budget. Only three out of about 300 stood up.
the other side he wrote "conservative." He asked students to raise their hands as he moved from one side of the chalkboard to the other.
On one side of the chalkboard, Brownbown wrote "liberal" and on
Sam Brownback
"I want each of you to think about your
own political philosophy," Brown-back said. "Ask yourselves 'where am I on this continuum?'
Brownback, who represents the east quarter of Kansas, excluding the Kansas City area, said no two constituents were alike. He found that representing everyone's opinion was tough to do.
"I thought, 'you can figure out a middle ground on these issues,'" he said. "The problem is, how do you get middle ground on abortion or the death penalty?"
Ken Collier, assistant professor of political science, whose class Brownback visited, said he wanted to bring his students closer to an elected official. Collier said he thought that students would connect better with the congressman if they could see him in person.
Burdett Loomis, professor of political science, said he wanted to show his students, who were visited by Brownback, that they should communicate their interests to their representatives. Unfortunately, Loomis said, most students don't care about politics.
"Nationally, incoming freshman have less interest in government than students from 20 to 30 years ago," he said. "It's an easy cynicism. They know very little, and they assume the worst."
Brownback said that he was disappointed that most college students felt the best years of their lives were ahead, but that the country's best years were behind it.
Screening can help students understand eating disorders
This is the second story in a series about National Eating Disorders Awareness Week
By Teresa Veazey Kansan staff writer
It can rob the best years of life.
For students with eating disorders, college can be a difficult time because of the overwhelming control of the obsession, said Ann Gabrick, program manager of the eating disorders unit at Baptist Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo.
Counseling and Psychological Services and Watkins Memorial Health Center will provide an information program and anonymous screening today, in conjunction with National Eating Disorders Awareness Week.
More than 500 universities are participating in the national eating disorders screening, including Oklahoma State University and the University of Nebraska.
"There's a reason college students are targeted," said Ann Chapman, Watkins student health services dietitian. "This is where the problem is at its greatest." Chapman said going to college was the first time many students were away from home and didn't have anyone to tell them when or what to eat. Eating disorders
which usually begin in high school, may intensify in college because of stress and because students were responsible for their own eating habits.
The program, which includes a lecture, video and free screening, was not designed to tell people if they had an eating disorder but would give an idea if their eating patterns and behavior were harmful.
"This will not provide a diagnosis," Chapman said. "This will help pinpoint individuals who may be at risk for developing an eating disorder."
By providing a free and anonymous screening, students can have a better picture about whether their eating habits could lead to serious health problems.
"This is very important because eating disorders or problems that lead up to them have very serious mental and physical health consequences," said Jennifer Kennedy, director of the eating disorders program at the Menninger Clinic in Topeka. "The screening becomes important because eating disorders and medical complications that can go with them are very treatable."
Kennedy said that treatment begins with questions about what the problems are and how they started. But this first step can be the most difficult.
For students who believe they have a friend with an eating disorder, Kennedy said the program also will help them learn about the problems, the risks and the help that is available, including tips on how to be supportive of a friend who has an eating disorder.
Law strikes sour note with musician
By Sarah Morrison Kansan staff writer
A Lawrence man is hoping to get the city to change its tune on street musicians in downtown Lawrence.
Tom Miller, Lawrence resident and musician, wrote a letter to the city manager's office Tuesday asking the city to legalize playing music for money on Massachusetts street.
The city now makes no distinction between street musicians and beggars. The penalty for begging is a fine of up to $500 and six months in jail.
and someone who is providing music for the public's enjoyment.
Miller proposed in his letter that the ordinance for licensing street vendors be amended to include open-air musicians and lecturers. Miller said a distinction should be made between someone who is begging for money
"I have been around and around on the issue of panhandling with the city. So, I decided we need to change the ordinance," he said.
"The license would allow anyone to use the public right of way to play music as long as they don't cause trouble," Miller said. "The ordinance change would cause additional cultural activity as well as letting me earn a little bread."
Assistant city manager Rod Bremby said the request would be sent to the legal offices for studying and a report would than be sent to the commission, who would decide whether to place it on the city commission agenda.
Commissioner Jo Andersen said
she already had received a call from a concerned citizen about problems street musicians might pose on downtown atmosphere and accessibility.
"People care a whole lot about what we do with downtown," she said. "We will listen to the constituents and listen to downtown Lawrence. We wouldn't want to do anything that would harm the area."
Joel Ashmore, an employee at Whitey's Music's, 1007 Massachusetts St., and musician in a local band, open air musicians would only enhance downtown Lawrence.
"I would love to see people playing downtown and kids could come, instead of having to pay $5 to go to a bar where it is smoky and you can't take your kids inside."
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 8, 1996
7A
No survivors found in wreckage of charter plane in Caribbean Sea
The Associated Press
PUERTO FLATA, Dominican Republic — Working among sharks and floating debris, rescuers in inflatable rafts pulled more than 100 bodies from the deep blue waters of the Atlantic yesterday after a chartered jet loaded with German tourists crashed with 189 people aboard.
There were no signs of survivors and the cause of the crash was unknown.
The Boeing 757 was carrying the tourists home from the Caribbean on Tuesday night when it crashed about 12 miles northeast of this oceanside resort.
An air and sea search by the U.S. Coast Guard and Dominican military yesterday turned up only empty life rafts and debris from the aircraft.
Knight-Ridder Tribune
At least 105 bodies were recovered, Coast Guard officials said.
"There's a lot of debris. ... You can see at least 50 bodies floating. It doesn't look like anybody would have survived that," said Coast Guard helicopter pilot Scott Matthews.
Boeing representative Dick Kenny said the plane — the second Boeing 757 to crash — was built in 1985. An American Airlines Boeing 757 crashed Dec. 20 as it approached Call, Colombia, killing 160 people.
Boeing 757 crash
Dominique Alain Nationaliste
Airlift ALW 803 on route to
Frankfurt via Berlin crashed
shorty travel takeoff:
Atlantic Ocean
Crash site
Puerto Plata
Haiti
Dominican Republic
Santo Domingo
Postau-Punta
Caribbean Sea
0 Miles
300 Miles
Knight Disney Tickets
Flight 301, operated by a Dominican airline, took off from the Puerto Plata International Airport about 11:45 p.m. (9:45 p.m. CST) Tuesday in a light rain. It reached an altitude of 7,000 feet and appeared on radar screens to veer right, as if turning back, before going down, Dominican officials said.
Gen. Hector Roman, director of the Dominican Republic's civil aviation agency, said the pilot radiocded that he was returning to Puerto Plata, and the last message from the crew was, "Stand by."
Roman's account, however, was disputed by an air traffic controller on duty in the tower yesterday, and by Maj. Alan Arias Batlle, part of a committee assigned by the country's Civil Aeronautics Office to investigate the crash.
"He just called in to air traffic controllers his position and then the aircraft disappeared from the screen," said the controller, who refused to give his name.
"All the communication was normal," Arias Battle said. "In no moment did they speak of an emergency."
Bound for Frankfurt and Berlin, the plane was owned by a Turkish company, Birgenair, and leased to the Dominican airline.
Tour operator Vural Oeger of Hamburg-based Oeger Tours said the airline switched from a planned Boeing 767 to a Boeing 757 shortly before takeoff because the 767's hydraulic system was not functioning properly. He said Alas had only those two aircraft in service.
Rosamarie Meichsner, a representative for Schoenefeld airport in Berlin, gave a conflicting account.
She said the planes had been switched because the flight was underbooked for a 767, which holds about 300 people. The 757 holds 224 passengers.
The plane carried 176 passengers, including four children and 13 crew members. Most of the passengers were German tourists, although 11 crew members were Turkish and two were Dominican.
Aircraft from the U.S. Coast Guard and Navy and the Dominican military flew toow over the crash site yesterday, directing rescue workers in inflatable boats to bodies. Volunteer boaters from Puerto Plata and nearby towns joined the search for survivors as rain squalls in the morning gave way to calm seas.
The bodies were taken to a makeshift morgue at Puerto Plata, protected by heavily armed Dominican guards.
Sharks in the crash area prevented divers from entering the water, said Coast Guard Petty Officer Timothy Lavier in San Juan, Puerto Rico. In addition, the water's depth — about 4,300 feet — makes scuba diving almost impossible, he said.
The U.S. Navy has offered a dive team to try to retrieve the aircraft's flight data and cockpit voice recorders, he said.
Dominican Air Force Col. Manuel Mendez Segura said Dominican investigators speculated that the plane struck the water nose down.
"It's a relatively new aircraft, and I believe it did not have prior mechanical problems." Mendez Senura said.
The German Transportation Ministry said it might start an investigation into the airline Alas.
The plane didn't have a permit to land in Germany because Alas never asked for one, the ministry said. Tour operator Oeger said that no landing permit was needed when a plane was substituted at short notice.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Senate uproots subsidies
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Senate voted yesterday to scrap the decades-old link between farm prices and government subsidies, instead giving farmers a series of fixed but declining payments. The action could lead to an eventual end of farm payments.
The 64-32 vote came despite a last-ditch fight by Democrats who wanted to save at least some connection between prices and payments. But that effort failed, 63-33. Democrats charged that Republicans were offering welfare to farmers while cutting money for education, school lunches and health care for the poor.
In exchange for less government support, controls on most planting decisions would end, along with requirements that acres be idled.
"Today we have a very good opportunity to finally break out of that mold of government restriction," said Sen. Dick Lugar, R-Ind., chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee and a GOP presidential contender.
The overhaul of how the government supports corn, cotton, rice and wheat won't be debated in the House for several weeks.
It was unclear whether the bill in its final form would stop President Clinton from carrying out an earlier
veto threat.
Some changes sought by the administration, including a $300 million, three-year mandatory fund for rural water and sewer projects and other rural development, were made in the Senate.
Consumers may feel little impact, because raw ingredients make up a small share of supermarket costs.
retained protections that make consumers pay more for sugar and peanuts.
Despite those attacks, Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole successfully led a 59-36 vote to block an
"Today we have a...good opportunity to finally break out of...government restriction." Sen.Dick Luga Agriculture Committee chairman
Backers said the bill would help farmers earn more by prodding them to plant for a growing world market. However, critics said despite some reforms, the bill
amendment by freshman Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., that would further cut the government-guaranteed price for peanuts and ease limits on who can grow them. Dole faces primary contests next month in Georgia and other peanut-growing states.
Another GOP presidential contender. Sen
Phil Gramm, R-Texas, was campaigning in Iowa and did not vote.
An effort led by Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., to let the sugar program end after two years failed by 59-36.
Low fat won't stop breast cancer
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Adopting a low-fat diet at midlife or later probably won't reduce a woman's risk of breast cancer, a study suggests.
Pooling and analyzing the results of seven previous studies involving a total of 337,819 women, mostly middle-aged or older, scientists found that the amount of fat in the participants' diets had no effect on their risk of breast cancer.
The researchers in the earlier studies didn't find out how long the women had been on their diets, so the results don't rule out the possibility that women who have avoided fat for most of their lives run a lower breast cancer risk.
Indeed, other studies suggest that a low-fat diet has to be adopted in childhood or adolescence to influence the decades-long processes that lead to cancer.
"There are other, very good reasons to stick to a diet, which is relatively low in red meat, and low in high-fat dairy products, and high in fruits and vegetables," said David Hunter, a doctor, citing evidence of reduced risk for heart disease and colorectal cancer. "Unfortunately, it doesn't appear that breast cancer protection, at least in midlife, is one of those good reasons."
Hunter is executive director of the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention at the Harvard School of Public Health. He and other scientists reported the work in today's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
The idea that lowering fat intake during middle age could help protect against breast cancer had
appeared to be promising, but it shows less promise all the time, said Robert Smith, senior director for detection and treatment at the American Cancer Society.
The report comes as the federal government is conducting a major study of whether a low-fat diet can reduce breast cancer. It aims to enroll 48,000 women and follow them for an average of nine years. More than 16,000 women ages 50 to 79 already have signed up for the study, which will assign some participants to follow a diet in which 20 percent of calories come from fat.
The new analysis found no evidence of protection in women getting smaller percentages of calories from fat. The results actually suggested an increase in risk for diets of less than 15 percent, but Hunter dismissed that as probably a chance finding.
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Colorado and Missouri both win in tight Big Eight Conference action last night. Complete box scores on Page 2.
SPORTS
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1996
SECTION B
Loyalty, business don't mix
MEN'S BASKETBALL
On a blustery cold November morning, I remember my father picking me up outside of Sunday School. As I sat in the car, I was bundled up with long underwear, two pairs of socks, warm gloves, a jacket and three sweatshirts ... but something was still missing.
So dad whipped the car around, and we headed home to get my Philadelphia Eagles hat. Going to an Eagles-Browns game wouldn't seem complete without some kind of team
cially when your seats are in a Browns section that, as I had seen on TV, was called "The Dawg Pound."
Boy, was that a mistake.
ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR
BILL
PETULLA
Wearing
an opposing team's
apparel to "The
Dawg Pound" is
like wearing a
steak suit into
the lion's den. Need-
less to sav. I was
snovered with milkbones from the opening kickoff to the waning seconds of the game. During the second quarter, when the Eagles scored, I stood up to cheer and was promptly smacked square in the head with a doggy biscuit. Talk about nasty — I was only 12 years old at the time.
On the field, the Eagles got bombarded. The Browns gave Randall Cunningham a chilling precursor of days to come as he spent most of his afternoon on the run.
But it wasn't the game or the "The Dawg Pound," but the other 80,000 fans dressed in brown and orange, cheering every down as if it were third and three with the score tied, late in the game.
Tomorrow the owners will vote to make the Brown's move to Baltimore official. Four owners are expected to vote against the Brown's move, only half of the eight needed. And as tomorrow's doomday nears, my heart goes out to the fans who spent their lifetimes cheering at the "Mistake by the Lake."
These are the victims of Art Model's traveling Browns squad. Unfortunately, loyalty and sports too often do not go hand in hand.
What kills me is Model's tear-jerkling tale on a Baltimore (of course) radio station about how he was losing money in Cleveland and how mean old Mr. Mayor wouldn't build a new stadium. My compassion for multimillionaire Art goes only paper cut deep. The day I sympathize with fat cat owners of the sporting world, who exploit a city for decades and leave town once the well runs dry, is the same day that Mark Fuhrman and Louis Farrakhan stage a "Give Peace A Chance" rally.
Fact is, the Cleveland Browns have more fan clubs, called Brown's Backers, than any other professional sports team in the world. If professional sports are businesses, the business move Model made is the equivalent to laying off more than a million employees, who have spent a lifetime with the company, because of a slow year.
Although in the Midwest, coverage of the Browns' move may not even land near the want ads, the long-range ramifications of the Browns' move to Baltimore could hit close to home. The move serves as a precedent to pro sports owners around the nation — down on money, situation looking bleak, there's a Baltimore or Nashville right around the corner. Let's face it, as much support as they have, Kansas City is a small market. How do the Sacramento Chiefs sound?
Note: Some information was contributed by Sam Amendola, member of Browns Backers.
As my woozy body filed out of Cleveland's Municipal Stadium that day, I came to one conclusion. Quite simply, the Cleveland Browns — although at times their actions may be a bit twisted — have the most diehard fans in football and maybe in all of American sports. It's inconceivable for me to think that there are more dedicated, loyal or better milkbone-throwing fans in America. Fans who, come Friday, may not have a team to cheer.
'Hawks knock Cyclones back to earth
Pollard's points surprise himself and Iowa State
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
After scoring six first-half points, Scot Pollard surprised Iowa State in the second half.
The junior center hit all five of his field goal attempts as the No. 3 Kansas men's basketball team defeated Iowa State 89-70 last night in Allen Field House. But Pollard didn't only shock the Cyclones with his 20-point performance.
"Wow," Pollard exclaimed. "That's a lot of points."
Pollard had some other impressive numbers beside his season-high point total. He grabbed a team-high 11 rebounds and had four blocked shots, which died sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz.
The Jayhawks combined to block 14 shots, breaking the Kansas record. They had 13 blocks against Montana in 1976.
"Without Greg Ostertag, you don't think of this team as being able to block a lot of shots," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "We were good tonight; I don't care how you slice it or chon it up."
However, the second-place Cyclones played the Jayhawks close throughout the first half. Kansas held its biggest lead 31-24, after freshman forward Paul Pierce hit a three-point shot.
The victory pushes Kansas' record to 19-1 overall and 7-0 in the Big Eight Conference. With No. 21 Iowa State falling to 5-2 in the conference and 16-5 overall, the Jayhawks have a two-game lead in the Big Eight.
Iowa State pulled to within four, 40-36, after junior center Kelvin Cato had a follow
"Coach talks about respecting everyone and fearing no one," Pollard said. "I kind of got that switched around in the first half."
Cato had 12 points in the first 20 minutes but none in the last 20 minutes. He was Pollard's defensive responsibility for most of the game.
One Jayhawk that wasn't confused in the slightest during the first half was LaFrentz. He had 13 points, hitting four of five from the floor and converting all four of his free throw attempts.
"He went on a scoring rampage," Pollard said. "I said, 'Raef, you are going to start sharing?' I didn't mean it literally. But maybe I'll start saving it a little sooner."
With Pollard scoring the first two baskets in the second half, Kansas opened with an 11-4 run. The Jayhawks scored 10 consecutive points later in the half, starting with sophomore forward Billy Thomas's three-pointer. Kansas led by 19 points, 67-48, before Iowa State scored again.
"We just keep pushing it," Thomas said. "Hopefully, teams won't have enough to compete with us at the end."
Thomas said the Jayhawks prided themselves in having enough depth to wear other teams down and then make big runs.
The Cyclones didn't. They cut the Jayhawks' 19-point lead to 11, 73-62, after junior forward Kenny. Pratt hit two free throws. But Kansas extended the lead back to 17 points after field goals from LaFrentz and Pierce and a pair of free throws from junior forward B.J. Williams.
"They have great depth, and the players that come off the bench are just as strong a force," Iowa State coach Tim Floyd said. "That is definitely one of their strengths, but I couldn't tell you what a weakness would be."
4 SAS 45 KU
Richard Devinki/KANGAN
Kansas freshman guard Ryan Robertson attempts a layup as Iowa State junior forward Kenny Pratt blocks. The Jayhawks won last night 89-70 at Allen Field House.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
WEST HILLS
Kansas players enjoy 7-0 start, but wary of overlooking foes
Freshman forward Paul Pierce gets a step on Iowa State junior guard Jacy Holloway.
By Spencer Duncan Kansan sportswriter
One half of a dream is complete for the No. 3 Kansas men's basketball team. The question now is how the dream will end.
That dream is an defeated Big Eight Conference regular season.
"I was hoping for it," junior guard Jacque Vaughn said. "It feels good for the first half of the season to be undefeated. The challenge for us in the second half."
The goal for the team now is to win seven more and make that mark 14-0. While that may sound amazing, the players are trying to take things in
With an 89-70 victory against the Iowa State Cyclones last night, the Jayhawks moved to 7-0 in the Big Eight Conference for the first time since 1974.
stride.
"It's in the back of our heads," sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz said. "But we try not to think about it. We are not overlooking Missouri."
The Jayhawks have played Oklahoma State twice and Missouri remains the only conference foe that Kansas has not played. If Kansas pulls out a victory when the two teams meet on Saturday, then the Jayhawks will have beaten everyone in the conference at least once.
However, Kansas must beat everyone twice to reach their goal, and the players are aware of that fact.
"It won't be over if we beat Missouri," junior forward Scot Pollard said. "Just one win won't do it for us. We have to go in and check it off and then go in and check it off again and go from there."
Since the Big Eight's beginning in
1959, only three teams have gone undefeated in the conference — Kansas State in 1959, Kansas in 1971 and Missouri in 1994. Kansas could become the only team to accomplish the feat twice in Big Eight history and according to the competition, the odds are good on Kansas fulfilling one of its dreams.
"I think it is very possible that they could go 14-0," Iowa Sate head coach Tim Floyd said. "They appear to have it all."
Although how the dream will end remains to be played out, players are doing their best to make sure it has a happy ending.
"Our goal is to win every game no matter what," freshman forward Paul Pierce said. "We don't think about losing. Whatever happens, happens."
Indecisive recruit chooses Jayhawk football
By Evan Blackwell
Kansas sportwriter
Kansan sportswriter
It was decision day for Jason Sykes, and this time he didn't change his mind.
Sykes, a senior defensive back from Washington High School in Kansas City, Kan., was among the 24 football players, who sent letters of intent to Kansas. Kansas signed 13 defensive players and 11 offensive players yesterday, the first official day of the spring signing period.
Sykes had committed to Kansas State verbally, but reconsidered his decision after visiting Lawrence a few weeks ago.
Sykes said his mother had screened the call from K-State on Tuesday night.
Sykes said that at Kansas he was treated more like a person than just an athlete, which was not the case at K-State.
Sykes' teammate from Washington, linebacker Darriss Lomax, also signed with the Jayhawks. The highly-touted Lomax chose Kansas instead of K-State, Michigan, Iowa State and Notre Dame, among others. Lomax was a member of The Kansas City Star All-Metro team.
Running back Arland Bruce and offensive lineman Bob Schmidt from Olathe North High
School in Olathe also signed with Kansas.
Schmidt's older brother Dan, was a former starter at center for the Javahawks.
Olainte North football coach Gene Wier said the improved football programs at Kansas and K-State had changed the dynamics of recruiting for Kansas high school players.
"We always look in-state first," said Kansas football coach Glen Mason. "I'm happy to see most of the top Kansas players staying in- state."
"Five or six years ago going to KU or K-State was kind of ho-hum," Wier said.
"Sometimes it's hard for these kids to get recruited in-state."
Mason said a priority this recruiting period had been to find large offensive and defensive linemen. The Jayhawks signed four interior lineman on both offense and defense.
Tyler Wirken / KAMBAN
Ku
Jason Sykes, at center, and Dariss Lomax, at right, will be playing football at Kansas next fall. Sykes and Lomax were accompanied by their families at Washington High School yesterday.
"We needed to recruit some size, and I feel we did that." Mason said.
They did indeed. The largest Jayhawk recruit, offensive lineman Ishmeal Knight from Tampa, Fla. weighs 330 pounds and is 6-foot-4.
"He doesn't look like a 17- or 18-year-old kid coming out of high school," Mason said. "He's a big man."
Mason said he was satisfied.
"We met our needs. I think we have a very
good class from top to bottom."
A
翰
1
7
---
2B
Thursday, February 8, 1995
SCORES & MORE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Men's Basketball Top 20 Fared
By The Associated Press
How the top 25 teams in The Associated Press' college basketball poll fared Wednesday.
1. Massachusetts (22-0) did not play. Next:
v. Temple, Sunday.
2. Kentucky (19-1) beat Vanderbilt 120-81.
Next vs. Arkansas, Sundav
3. Kansas (19-1) beat No. 21 Iowa State
89-70. Next at Missouri, Saturday.
west virginia, Wednesday, Feb. 14.
5. Cincinnati (18-1) beat Saint Louis 81-49.
4. Connecticut (22-1) did not play. Next: v.
West Virginia, Wednesday, Feb. 14.
5. Cincinnati (18-1) Deal Saint Louis 81-149.
Next, vs. No. 16 Arizona at Veteran's Memorial Coliseum, Phoenix, Sunday.
6. Villanova (19-3) did not play. Next at:
Rutgers, Saturday.
7. Utah (18-3) did not play. Next: at Colorado State, Saturday.
8. Georgetown (19-4) did not play. Next: vs.
9. Wake Forest (15-3) beat Florida State 81-67. Next vs. Duke, Sunday.
no. Porth Path (16-2) did not play. Next vs.
Illinois, Thursday.
11. Virginia Tech (17-2) did not play. Next:
At Xavier, Ohio, Saturday.
12. North Carolina (16-6) did not play. Next:
vs. Georgia Tech. Saturday.
*for Texas A&M (01) *Jeremy Christian
85-70. Next: at Texas A&M, Saturday.
v. Georgia Tech, Saturday,
12:40a Tayne Tech 54584 best Tayne Chin
13. Texas Tech (19-1) beat Texas Chris-
tiano
14. Purdue (18-4) beat Wisconsin 75-42
18-50. Tuex at Texas A&M, Saturday.
14. Purdue (14-8) beat Michigan 75-42
14. Purdue (18-4) beat Wisconsin 75-42.
Next: vs. No. 23 Michigan, Saturday.
15. Memphis (16-4) did not play. Next: at North Carolina Charlotte. Thursday.
6. 16. Arizona (16) at Arizona State. Next:
17. Arizona (17) at Arizona State's Memorial
College, Phoenix.
17. UCLA (15-5) did not play. Next. vs. California at Oakland Coliseum Arena, Thursday.
18. Syracuse (17-6) beat Pittsburgh 73-67
Next to: No. 8 Georgetown, Saturday
19. Iowa (16-6) at Northwestern 88-77.
Next vs. Indiana, Sunday.
Scores
20. Louisville (16-6) did not play. Next: vs
Tulane, Thursday.
MIDWEST
Ala.-Birmingham 69, DePaul 50
Albion 83, Alma 58
Baldwin-Wallace 77, Muskumgain 63
Ball St. 89, Akron 64
Bluffton 97, Bethany, W.Va. 79
Bowling Green 74, Michigan 61
Calvin 76, Kalamazoo 73
Capital 81, Heidelberg 78
Case Western 80, Denison 77
DePauw 62, Wabash 61
Defiance 76, Findlay 62
E. Michigan 89, W. Michigan 83
Hope 97, Oteka 86
Ind.-Pur.-indels 95, Kentucky St. 87
John Carroll 92, Iram Col. 70
Manchester 87, Franklin 80
Missouri 61. Nebraska 46
EAST
Missouri 61, Nebraska 46
Ohio Northern 70, Mount Union 68
Ohio U. 69, Kent 61
Rose-Hulman 85, Anderson. Ind. 54
Siena Heights 77, Aquinas 65
Toledo 76, Miami. Ohio 70
Wittenberg 95, Earthen 74
Adelphi 85, C.W. Post 72
Allegheny 81, Oberlin 60
Bucknell 82, Army 65
Charleston, W.A. 101, W. Va. Westlyn 93
Colby-Sawyer 84, Gordon 65
Fairmont St. 109, Davis & Elkins 96
Green Mountain St. 69
Holy Cross 94, Colgate 69
Kutztenbill 81, West Chester 63
Lebanon Val. 76, Elizabethtown 62
Lycoming 85, Scranton 74
Maine Maritime 68, Maine-Augusta 47
Moravian 67, Widener 64
Mount St. Vincent 93, N.J. Tech 82
N.Y. Maritime 76, Kings Point 73
Navy 61, Lafayette 59
Queens Coll. 85, Dowling 55
St. Joseph's, Maine 94, S. Maine 77
St. Rose 77, Pace 65
Staten Island 69, Lehman 48
SWarthmore 61, Washington, Md. 53
Syrasecue 73, Pittsburgh 67
Trenton St. 75, Kean 61
West Liberty 89, College of West Va. 82
Wilkes 79, Kings, Pa. 65
SOUTHWEST
incarnate Word 72, Texas Wesleyan 66
Texas 79, Rice 64
Texas Lutheran 103, Mary Hardin-Baylor 93
Texas Tech 85, Christian Hardin 70
Big Eight Box Scores
KANSAS 89, IOWA ST. 70
IOWA ST. (16-5)
Bankhake 5-10-3-4-13, Pratt 5-15-4-14, Cato 5-9-2-12-11, Bighty-8-19-3-44, Holloway 0-3-0-0, Modderman 1-3-0-03, Edwards 1-1-0-0, Rampton 0-2-0-00, Walton 0-2-000, Justus 0-0-0-00, Peterson 1-1-0-02. Totals 26-63 12-20-70.
KANSAS (19-1)
Pierce 6-10-10 14, LaFrentz 6-9-4-17, Pollard 8-14-4-20, Haase 2-4-2-37, Vaughn 3-6-0-8, Williams 2-3-2-6, Thomas 7-2-0-6, Pearson 0-1-2-1, Rayford 1-1-0-2, Pugh 1-1-0-2, Robertson 1-1-0-2, McGrath 0-0-2-0, Whattey 0-0-2-2, Ranson 1-1-0-2, Totals 33-57 15-18-89.
TV
Halftime —Kansas 40, Iowa St. 36. 3-Point goat—Iowa St. 61 (Willoughby 5-10, Holloway 0-3, Moderman 1-2), Kansas 8-15 (Pierce 2-3, LaFrentz 2-1, Haase 1-2, Vaughn 2-2, Thomas 2-5, Pearson 0-1), Fouled out—None. Rebounds—Iowa St. 27 (Willoughby 6), Kansas 39 (11 Pollard), Assists—Iowa St. 9 (Holloway 3), Kansas 23 (Haase, Vaughn 8). Total fours—Iowa St. 15, Kansas 15. A—16,300.
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Thursday. (schedule subject to change and-or blackouts):
SPORTS WATCH
(All time Central)
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8
Night
ESPN2 — Auto Racing, pole quality,
for the ARCA Bondo/Mal-Hyde
Supercar 200 and practice for Busch
Clash of '96, at Dayona Beach, Fla.
6:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Illinois at Penn St.
ESPN2 — NHL Hockey, Detroit at Florida
Florida PRIME — NCAA Basketball, St.
RIME — NCAA Basketball, St.
Joseph's at Temple
8:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Tulane
at Louisville
ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball,
Brightigham Year at Colorado St.
PRIME — NCAA Basketball, UCLA
at California.
2 a.m.
PRIME — Women's NCAA Basketball, South Florida at Ala.-Birmingham (delayed tape)
MISSOURI 99, NEBRASKA 98
NEBRASKA (15-8)
Garner 5-8-2-3 12, Boone 7-10-2-4 20, Moore 2-13-6 37, Lue 5-11-4-1 24, Strickland 4-10-0-8, Wald 3-5-4-6 11, Hamilton 3-5-0-6, Markowski 1-1-2-4 2, Badgutt 8-6-1-3 13, Nelson 1-1-1-4 3, Glock 0-0-0-0. Totals 37-62 19-34-98
MISSOURI (14-8)
Winfield 5-6 2-12, 12, Thames 5-11 8-16
Simone Haley 2-4 0-0-4, K. Moore 3-5 7-11
Sutherland 6-10 14-12, 28, Sammey Haley 2-4
0-2,4alluche 3-8 2-2-9, Grimm 2-11 12-15
Walther 0-0-0-0, Ferguson 0-0-0-0, Hardge
0-0-0-0, Totals 28-53 40-47-99
PRO BASKETBALL
COLORADO 64, KANSAS ST. 63, OT
COLORADO (7-12)
Moore 6-14 0-1 0, Jensen 1-4 0-2, Melvin 5-
11 7-10 1, Billups 3-10 2-1 29, Friar 1-2 1-2
Tuck 2-13 4-6, Kritza 0-0 0-0, Griffin 4-2 2-1
Totals 22 611 17-2 64
KANSAS ST. (14-7)
Young 7-11 1-1 7, Davis 7-13 9-11 23, Eaker 12-1 0-0 4, Hatcher 1-8 10-10 12, May 2-4 1-2 5, Rhodes 0-4 3-2, Swartzendriver 0-4 0-1 0, Williams 0-2 0-0 2, Dies 0-1 0-0 0, Hubert 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 19-8 25-30 36.
NBA STANDINGS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L P lot C18 L10 Streak Home Awake Core
Orlando 34 13 723 --- 3-10 Dress 25 0/10 9-13 19/8
New york 29 16 644 4 7-3 Worn 1 17/8 12 8/10 18/10
Washington 22 25 500 1 4-3 Lost 11 7/8 16 11/10
Miami 21 26 447 1 4-6 Worn 1 14 9 7-17 12/15
New Jersey 18 27 400 1 4-6 Lost 1 14 9 7-17 12/15
Boston 19 27 390 1 3-7 Lost 10 10/4 7-15 12/16
Philadelphia 8 37 162 1/4 Lost 1 20/7 11/4 3-23
Central Division
Chicago 14, 5 691...8-2 Lost 2, 10-19 15-23 12-9
Indianapolis 31, 17 614...10-1 9-13 19-2 10-9
Cleveland 28, 20 565...6-4 Won 15, 4-18 11-12 10-14
Atlanta 22, 18 556...15-1 7-3 Won 1, 1-8 16-11 17-11
Detroit 22, 22 500...4-6 Lost 14-8 8-14 12-15
Charlotte 22, 24 468 ...19-4 Lost 3-18 9-14 15-13
Milwaukee 17, 27 386 ...25-5 Won 10-13 7-14 8-16
Toronto 13, 28 283 ...3-7 Lost 1, 10-13 7-14 8-21
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
W L Pdt GB L10 Break Home Away Cont
San Antonio 30 14 18, 682 --5-5 Won 18 15 7 12-9 12-15
Utah 31 15 874 --6-5 Won 1 Bowl 1 15-4 19-11
Houston 30 18 825 --3 7 Lost 1 15-7 15-11 17-8
Denver 19 27 413 12 --3 Lost 1 15-7 15-11 17-8
Minnesota 13 21 895 17 --5 Sow 1 9-11 4-20 10-19
Vancouver 16 38 217 17 --5 Sow 1 9-11 4-20 10-19
Pacific Division
Seattle 34 | 12 | 73 | .198 | 8-2 | Won 2 | 20-2 | 14-10 | 21-5 |
Lakers 17 | 29 | 159 | ... | Won 2 | 2 | 10-12 | 11-12 |
Sacramento 24 | 19 | 558 | 11-5 | Lost 2 | 15-6 | 9-13 | 13-11 |
Portland 23 | 24 | 469 | 11-5 | Lost 2 | 14-8 | 9-13 | 11-14 |
Golden State 21 | 25 | 457 | 13-5 | Lost 2 | 14-9 | 7-18 | 13-15 |
Lakers 16 | 25 | 457 | 13-5 | Lost 2 | 14-9 | 7-18 | 13-15 |
Thursday's Games
Sarasateen at Washington 7:30 p.m.
Washington at Alameda 7:30 a.m.
Los Angeles at West Hollywood
L. C.A. Clippers at Darden, 9:30 a.m.
New Jersey at Pennsaukee, 9:30 a.m.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
KANSAS FOOTBALL 1996 RECRUITS
Arland Bruce RB
Victor Bullock DE
Bilat Cook DB
Greg Davis FB/LB
Termace Floyd DL
David Glover LB
Michael Goree LB
Jason Gulley TE
Name Position
Kevin Harris DT
Ishmal Knight OL
Dariss Lomax LB
Torrent Mitalus OLB
Torrence Norris TE
Marc Owen OL
Eric Patterson WR
Curtesa Poole QB
Derek Potter QB
Quincy Roe DB
Bob Schmidt DB
Jason Sykes DB
Ron Warner DB
John Williams DB
Daniel Wilturner RB
name Position Hometown Stan Brown DL Flint, Mich.
Olathe, Kanale,
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Duquesne, Pa.
Denver, Colo.
Akron, Ohio
Detroit, Mich.
Detroit, Mich.
Denton, Tx.
Homerow
Tivueville, Fla.
Tampa, Fla.
Kansas City, Ks.
Toronto, Ontario
Houston, Tx.
St. Louis, Mo.
Long Beach, Ca.
Columbus, Ohio
Franklin, Ky.
St. Louis, Mo.
Olathe, Kan.
Kansas City, Ks.
Independence, Ks
Oklahoma City, Ok
Houston, Tx.
PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L TPts GF GA
N.Y. Rangers 31 12 10 72 193 148
Florida 32 15 6 70 184 146
Philadelphia 26 14 11 63 179 134
Washington 25 21 5 55 145 134
New Jersey 23 22 6 52 133 126
Tampa Bay 22 21 7 51 151 165
N.Y. Islanders 14 29 8 61 150 196
Pittsburgh 32 17 7 6 7 244 176
Montreal 26 21 6 5 6 188 162
Boston 22 21 7 5 51 180 183
Hartford 20 25 6 46 144 163
Buffalo 20 28 3 43 150 169
Ottawa 9 41 2 11 117 205
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division
W L T Pts GF GA
Detroit 37 9 14 78 108
Chicago 29 15 11 69 189 145
Toronto 22 21 9 53 196 157
St. Louis 21 22 9 51 140 148
Winnipeg 21 26 4 46 178 189
Dallas 15 26 11 41 145 179
Pacific Division
Colorado 29 15 19 67 208 146
Vancouver 19 10 23 11 165
Calgary 20 23 10 105 153
Los Angeles 17 25 12 146 160
NOTES AND QUOTES
"They say this is the house that Ralph built. Well, maybe it can be the house that Wendy remodeled." — Wendy Palmer, Virginia women's center, who along with Ralph Sampson are the only players in Virginia basketball history to get 1,000 points and 1,000 rebounds.
"Personally, I didn't come here to coach in Broward. I came here to coach in Miami." — Heat Coach Pat Riley about the prospect of a move by Miami from downtown to a proposed arena in Broward County.
"Tonight was the most beautiful night of my life. I had some problems sleeping last night, but I was fine today." — New York rookie goalie Eric Fichaud after winning his NHL debut 5-4 in overtime against the Buffalo Sabres.
Edmonton
18 26 6 6 42 135 190
Anheim
18 29 5 41 145 175
San Jose
12 36 5 29 166 237
Tuesday's Games
Pittsburgh 6, Boston 5
N.Y. Rangers 4, N.Y. Islanders 2
Detroit 4, Florida 2
Dallas 5, Louis 2
Calgary 3, Ottawa 1
Chicago 5, Los Angeles 2
Boston at Buffalo. 6:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at New Jersey. 6:30 p.m.
Montreal at Dallas. 6:30 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Colorado. 8 p.m.
Washington at Edmonton. 8:30 p.m.
Hartford at Vancouver. 9:30 p.m.
Toronto at Anahiem. 9:30 p.m.
Thursday's Games
N. Islanders at N.Y. Rangers, 6:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Philadelphia 6:30 p.m.
Detroit at Florida, 6:30 p.m.
Chicago at St. Louis, 7:30 p.m.
Washington at Washington, 7:30 p.m.
Washington at Calgary, 9:30 p.m.
Toronto at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m.
Hartford at Colorado, 8 p.m.
Vancouver at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m.
Compiled from The Associated Press
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7
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 8, 1996
3B
Swimmers don't plan to relive last year's championship loss
Men's team aspires to sweet, elusive title at Valentine's meet
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
Memories of last year's Big Eight Championships are still burned in the minds of the Kansas men's swimming team.
The Jayhawks finished last in the 400-yard medley relay with a time of 3:19.71, more than two minutes behind first place finisher Iowa State.
Kansas finished second overall, just 10 points behind Iowa State. It was a disappointing finish for the Kansas men, who have not won a conference championship since 1979. Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf has yet to win the conference as coach of the men's team.
Kansas gets a chance to redeem itself Feb. 14-17 in Oklahoma City. The chances of both the No. 21 men's team and No. 16 women's team winning are riding on the
work the teams are doing now.
The men will have had 11 days off before the championships begin, while the women haven't been in the pool since a Jan. 20 meet at Georgia.
Kansas has won 12 Big Eight women's championships with Kempf as coach, the latest in 1993.
Kansas sophomore Kristin Nilsen is looking forward to returning to the championships. Last year, she won the 200 and 400 individual medley and had a fifth place finish in the 200 breaststroke.
Nilsen doesn't think the long lay-off will hurt the team.
"The time off won't make a difference," she said. "We've been keeping up our speeds in practice. Our times have been strong."
Nilsen said the long layoff has its pluses and minuses.
"It's nice because it gives us time off from traveling," she said. "It gets exhausting after a while and we can get rested. But it's negative because we don't get the chance to compete and get our competitive edge."
ready to go for the championships.
"Physically, we're ready," he said.
"We're right where we want to be in that regard.
"We've got to find a way to keep our focus on what we're doing. But as the championship meet approaches, we're getting better with that."
Kempf said the team should be
Kansas sophomore Alan Kroll was on last year's last leg of the 400 medley relay at the championships.
He said last year's loss only would make the team more focused and determined this year.
"This team is really prepared," Kroll said. "Our mental attitude, our preparation has been really good."
Kroll said another key to victory was that the team members swim as well in the third session as they did in the first.
Kroll said the swimmers had put last year's disappointing loss behind them.
"At the beginning of the year, we talked about last year a lot," he said. "But now we're only focused on what's ahead of us and that's winning this year's championships."
Conference announces budget
OMAHA, Neb. — The Big 12 Conference offices will begin with a $480,000 budget for 1995-96, including a $200,000 salary for Commissioner Steve Hatchell, according to a copyrighted story in the Omaha World-Herald.
The Associated Press
Hatchell said yesterday that each of the conference's universities would pay $40,000 to fund the temporary, two-person office in Dallas. Hatchell estimated the office budget would increase to between $2.7 million and $3 million when league revenues begin funding it in 1996-97.
The Big 12, formed by the addition of Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Baylor to Big Eight members Kansas, Kansas State, Iowa State, Nebraska, Colorado, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Missouri, officially begins operations in July, although it has scheduled a women's softball tournament in May.
Hatchell was commissioner of the Southwest Conference from 1993 until mid-1995. His work history also includes stops as an assistant sports information director at Colorado, a member services employee and assistant commissioner of the Big Eight Conference, and executive director of the Orange Bowl in Miami and the Cotton Bowl in Dallas.
Chief executive officers of the member schools voted 7-5 last week to place the Big 12's permanent office in Dallas. The Big Eight headquarters had been located in Kansas City, Mo., since the league's inception.
Twenty to 23 people eventually will be employed in the conference
office, Hatchell said. They will oversee rule compliance and interpretation, tournament activities, the operation of specific sports, public relations and other duties.
Income will cover office expenses in 1996-97, he said, so no fees will have to be assessed to the universities.
Hatchell said his office's budget this year would have been higher than it was, but an acquaintance had given the Big 12 temporary office space this year. He said the conference also had access to free telephones and some free office equipment.
The budget for 1995-96 also covers accounting and legal services; meetings of Big 12 administrators, faculty representatives and athletic directors; some travel expenses and other costs.
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Vouchers required for entrance. Vouchers available at the SUA Box Office. Call 864-3477 for more information.
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POTTER LAKE: LOCH NESS MONSTER'S WINTER HOME
Creature has eaten three dogs, already. Officials warn joggers of danger.
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Exclusive photos not available anywhere else!
4B
Thursday, February 8, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Horoscopes
Today's Birthday (Feb. 8). A crazy idea requires decisive action in February. Romance beckons in March, if you're willing to pay the price, which is attention. Buy real estate in May and plan a fun trip for June. Save money for a purchase in September. This is an investment in your future. Finish a team project in December. A private conversation helps you achieve a goal in January.
By Linda C. Black
Arles (March 21-April 19).
Your job may threaten your social life today. Don't plan anything before work; you'll have to cancel.
Don't worry, tomorrow night's better for romance anyway. Help an airhead stay on track at a meeting.
Taurus (April 20-May 20).
This will be a marvelous day,
except for one thing. Your boss or
another authority won't let you do
what you want. Your idea may be
the best, but if you can't explain it,
you may lose your chance. A friend can help.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Expect many changes today.
You'll be hopping from early till late. A person who lives far away can answer one of your questions.
Later, the roommate may be in a bad mood. If you've left dirty dishes in the sink, you'll hear about it!
Cancer (June 22-July 22). A close friend or sibling can help you with a shopping decision today. You know what you want; you just don't know where to find it. A phone call could save you time. Planning a vacation will be good for you and your loved one.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Sort the money today and decide how much is yours. You may feel better if you pay a loan instead of buying a new toy. There's another way to solve your financial problem: Earn more money! More work's available if you're willing to do it.
to it.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You should be lucky in love at lunch time. Arrange a date with somebody you like. An imaginative person is a good match for you. If your match is not practical, you have the common sense!
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). It feels like somebody's leaning over your shoulder, watching your every move. But don't complain. With just a little extra effort, you can do excellent work. Then you won't mind the attention! Meanwhile, a co-worker thinks you're fabulous.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
Call a meeting today to review the details. Don't wait for the others to decide; tell them what to do.
They'll admire your ability to make a decision. If you're not sure, discuss your situation with an older person in private.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Don't get into a fight you can't win with the boss. If you want to set your own rules, you may have start your own business! Before you do that you ought to learn what an older person has to teach you. It could be
valuable.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Your thoughts may drift to far-off shores today. If you're efficient, maybe you can go there too! Discuss the possibilities with a gentle and imaginative friend at dinner tonight. A voyage of a thousand miles begins with commitment.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).You're worried about money. Instead of hassling with a subject you care little about, maybe you could delegate the chore. A person who loves you might be better at handling practical matters than you are.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). If you're feeling overwhelmed, maybe you are trying to do too much. Sure, there are lots of items to do on your list. They don't all have to get done at the same time. Learn to set priorities. A well organized friend can help.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment purposes only.
Dilbert
By Scott Adams
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S A L E R S I N
A man in a suit talking to a man in a cartoon.
Nashville newspaper contests Oilers' privacy
The Nashville Banner claims public has right to information
involved in a $292 million deal under which the AIG
The Associated Press
The Nashville Banner also asked for access to other documents
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A Nashville newspaper sued Metro Nashville and the Houston Oilers Inc. yesterday in an effort to learn who has leased luxury suits in a proposed football stadium.
team would move here.
the newspaper contended in the Davidson County Chancery Court suit that the public has a right to know details of the plan, and that none of the information should be kept secret.
State Attorney General Charles Burson
public record and should be disclosed.
NFL
About 110 luxury suites have been leased as one of the requirements for the team to relocate to Nashville.
in a legal opinion issued Tuesday,
said the information is a matter of
Mike Kopp, a spokesman for the Nashville group spearheading efforts to get the team, said after the suit was filed, "It's a matter between the
"The meetings, negotiations and the contracts were handled by the Oilers and they are the only ones with the list. It's between the Oilers and anyone seeking to challenge them."
Mike McClure, the Oilers' executive vice president, had said Tuesday that the team had promised the lease holders confidentiality.
He said pro sports franchises traditionally kept the details private.
Lease prices range from $50,000 to $125,000.
The Tennessee Press Association's Board of Directors has voted supporting the Banner's efforts to inspect the records.
69
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springbreak旅航网.com/1-800-678-6380.
Attention students! Do you have a great GTA? Nominate him / her for the Outstanding Graduate Teaching Assistant Awards! Information and forms available at the Library, 222 Strong. Nomination Deadline February 20.
Spend Spring Break baking the Sierra Madres of Mexico's Copper Canyon March 23-31. This low impact, cultural immersion trip will rock your world. $490 includes all meals at (800) 762-7532 for Call/School Expositions at (800) 762-7532 for information.
Spring Break! Panama City! 8 days, room w/kitchen,
$119.00 walk to best bays! Tickets in Key West. $250.00
Cocoa Beach Hilton ( great beaches, near Diane), $45.
springbreakravel.com
Women's Transitional Care Services (WTCS), the interment women's shelter, is having two information sessions for individuals interested in volunteer training. Feb. 8 at 7:00 p.m. and Feb. 10 at 10:00 a.m. Both will be held at Plymouth Congregation Church, 925 Vermont, Lawrence. For more info, call WTCS at (914) 383-3331.
ASK YOURSELF THIS:
who pay for AT&T, Spinn, and MUTs multi-billion dollar advertising and marketing telecommunications? YOU DO! The 6th largest telecommunications company in the U.S. doesn't advertise or bother you with calls; it just saves you money on long distance in Kansas, the U.S., and world-wide! Free information: (800) 705-7723.
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND - SPRING BREAK
Why settle for a cramped hotel room? Sushie Van has spaciosa 1,2 & 8 bedrooms condominio at affordable rates. Deal directly with on-site management, not third party promoters. Great location, on the beach, and excellent amenities. Special Rates: 1 bbm $850 (4 people) / 2 bbm $850 (6 people) / 3 bbm $1350 (5 people) / bdm (800) +944-6818-8
Internet: http://www.hiline.net/fecs
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 8, 1996
5B
120 Announcements
Graduation in May Or looking for a job? Or both? Then you should be signing up now for interviews at the University Placement Center. Visit with rsum from summer schools, sales etc., etc. Find out how to get started by calling the UPC at 864-3634, or visit us at the Burge Union Level, Onee Dam. Done! Delaying are approaching. Oh, by the internet. Do you have an online schedule on the internet at http://kubt.cc.ukan.edu/cellvcu/lac/actpface/OCL.html
NEED A RIDE/ RIDER? Use the Self Serve Car Poor
Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
Mazatlan $419
Cancun $429
Spring Break
Trip includes: 7 nights hotel, Round trip air fare from Kansas City, Daily parties, free covers and discounts. For more info call Tiger Tours 1-800-Leave-99
(532-8399)
SPRING
IN STATION CBS NEWS 12 HOURS
BREAK
COMPLETE $ & 7 MIGHTY TOO
ATTENDANCE
$69
PARTY
15th
Sellout
Year!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
KEY WEST
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
1-800-SUNCHASE
VOL. 2 FOREIGN INFORMATION & PRESERVATIONS
http://www.munchase.com
130 Entertainment
Spring Break 1996
TRAVEL FREE II
Free party room for 29-200 at Johnny's 842-2377
MICRATE VIDEO CLEARANCE
All adult lessons on sale starting at $9.98 and up.
1910 Haskell 841-7604
** Great low, low prices
** Free Trip on only 15 sales
电话
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-426-7710
200s Employment
男 女
205 Help Wanted
Part Time Help Wanted in busy Doctor's Office. MWP 8-10m, 3-pm. T/3-Bp 6-19p. Phone: 749-0130.
Century School, a nonprofit private school in hire part-time students. Plexible hours. Call Don
Downstream theatre needs PT concessions.
Call or stop by Varity Theatre for application.
1015 Mass. 843-1083
Seeing high energy individual for branch office.
Positive attitude required, flexible schedule
841-0882
Lawrence resident wants to employ a person from his university. He will be responsible in Spanish two hours a week. Call Margie at 843-4913. Long-term, part-time, multi-task crieded aid for care. Experience and/or enthusiasm required. Mostly English.
Now hiring morning and evening wait. staff and morning
moons. No experience nec. Will train. Apply in person. Sibiria
Stockade, 1015 Iowa.
Overweight makes between 18 and 40 y.o. are needed.
620 will be included for participation.
750 must be completed.
Student with natural ability with children need to baby swim a natural old girl, 8 (hr), plus $6 per child. (CAIL). Call Swimming Instructor (CAIL). Swimming Lessons.
Weekend news report for KLWR NLZR2. Prior experience required, test and response to QB Quizine, P.O. Box 16405, Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33301.
Needed Mon, Wed, and Fri. morning!
Needed Mon, Wed, and Fri; morning
Teaching Asl. needed part-time at early initiation
Program (008-2022)
008-2022
Part time Cedar Hill Gun Club employee needed for
Tuesday afternoons and occasional Sundays.
Call 843-6213
**WARD WANTED:** Delivery drivers needed for Wed. Feb.
14th. Must be able to start at 8AM sam. Must have your
own transportation. Apply in person. Englewood
Park, 699 Massachusetts.
205 Help Wanted
Responsible person needed to work with my 7 year old, who with autism. Must have knowledge in applied behaviour and/or special education. If interested call Gina at 085-6656
SPRING BREAK WOES?
NO FUNDS - NO FUN!
MarketingTrainingCo. SeahA 8 ind. needing some extra cash. Flexible hours. 841-525-525
Int'1 Marketing Co. seeks ambition, $mitted motivation, ind. with professional appeal. Tailor aval.
University Photography is nothing part-time photographers. Individuals must be onboarding. Weekend work a definite. No experience necessary. Contact Tom between 11 and 4, Friday at 843-5279
*Flexible Schedule* *Extra Income* *Training*
*Rapid Advancement opportunity*
*Flexibility*
FRUSTRATED?
Position open. Great jobs for students, telephone funder for SADD (Students At Driving Drunk). We work early evening and Sat. mornings; 8pm plus planned commission. Call 843-5109 to apply to 610 Mans. St.
I receive 2 degrees after 5 1/2 years of college and when I hit the "real world" I make 4.48 hours. Now I'm being trained to earn $R a month. If you're ready for a change call 913-843-4410.
Graduation Senior - John Hancock Financial Services is looking for professional individuals for their market-make-up training program, which is specifically designed for students in higher education. College Blvd #100, Overland Park SK, 65213. Attn: Patricia Blvd #100, Overland Park SK, 65213.
Student Driver Positions available for the Spring Semester to drive physical disabled students to class. Must have a valid U.S. driver license and good driving record. Six to twelve hrs per week, 5.50/hr. Application deadline February 9. Apply at Facilities Operation office. 684-5596
CAMP GORKA Christian Sports and Adventure Camp — Seeking qualified counselors to work with boys and girls ages 8-16. Employment terms for all or part of the summer. If俏然邀请,come to our KU information center, 9 p.m., Thursday, February 23rd at 10 a.m., Bloomington Room. Mount Idaho Art (601) 871-4531.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys (girl summer camp). Teach, swimming, canoeing, swimming, gymnastics, riffery, archeery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping, crafts, dramas, or Ride. Also kitchen, maintenance Salary $1250 II, $650 III, $375 IV, $198 V, 1789 Male, ILM 60003, 847-446-2444
CAMP COUNSELORS Join the adventure and
discovery of camp.
Top ranked campuses in Incopenom of PA need experienced instructors for water and land sports, WShl Life Guards, Tennis, Climbing, Arts and more 2 hours from NYC. Call 212-877-4070 or write 101 Washington Lane.
write 151 Washington Lane Jenkintown, PA 19027.
Photo intern wanted—Work with high profile creative jobs, in a state of the art environment, doing mental tasks. Enjoy flexible hours with little or no pay. Be disgusted with the career advancement of all those around you, while learning more about commercial photography. Mail resume to Career Advancement School. Maize skills plus. Kansas City, KS) 815-664-1237.
**STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN. DECIMBER 2019:** *19.99 Sale* 4.50 hour per M/F, 5 - 10 days! Students perform hearing and recording functions of computer output and interfere mail using the keyboard. Students also perform inventory display, shipment and installation managing and inventory figures; library databases, and other warehouse functions; or occupies will operate facility for performing maintenance functions in conjunction with wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of their job duties; provides training at the Computer Center in room 202. RD DEPLOYER
NEW ENGLAND
500 SUMMER CAMP. OPPORTUNITIES IN NY, PA.
WANTED: Free-lance Artists and Jewelry Makers
Choose from 30 campers. Instructors need: Tennis,
Baseball, Rocky Rollerblading, Soccer, Lacrosse, Soft
ball, Volleyball, Basketball, PE Majors, Gymnastics,
Lifeguard, WS- water skiing, Swimming, Windsurf,
Fitness, Mountain Biking, Pioneering, Rocky
Gymnasium, Skiing, Jewelry, Crimson Ceramics, Stained Glass, Jewelry, Wood, Working, Photography, Radio, Nature, RN's, Chef, Food Service Call, 516-433-8033
Sampler Stores, Inc. is seeking talented artists to design both serious and humorous full chest and left pocket designs for T- shirts, polo shirts and sweatshirts using a KU Jayhawk, "Kansas", Wizard of Oz, sunflower, or similar theme. Emblended with silk screen designs, these apparel will feature silky charms and molds featuring these motifs. If interested, call 913-432-3555 10 AM to 5 PM or leave message on our vmail code, 913-881-0851.
**STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT:** Deadline: 09/26/19. $925; Salary: $4.50 + $6.50 / hour. Duties include assisting with managing the computer Center team, working with a staff member at the Telecom Office; making daily deposits; record microcomputer workshop registrations/performing receptionist training; performing office duties. Must be enrolled in 6 hours at the University of Kansas. To apply, complete job application available in Room 202 of the Computer Center. GE / AA
PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN
MASSACHUSETTS
Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Hockey, Soccer, Volleyball; 30 Teams openings; also performing Drills, Games, Ropes and Rock Climbing, Weighting Arts, Fine Art, Figure Skating, Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, BookStation, Cooking, SEWING, and Rockyry; All Waterforton/Pool Activities (Swimming, Sailing, Windsurfing, Surfing), Gymnasiums, room, board, and travel. June 18th-August 17th.
iquire.
MAH-KEE-NAC (Boys): 1-800-753-9118
DANBEE (Girls): 1-800-392-3752
AMERICA'S PREMIERE SPORTS CAMPS
WINADU FOR BOYS DANEE FOR GIRLS
(Western Massachusetts)
Juicers Shunyangks
No Prevence Experience Required
To obtain pre-employment acceptance,
visit ONCAMPUS INFO AND INTERVIEWS
website.
All Land and Water Sports, Arts and Crafts,
Hiking and Wilderness Diving, Woodsmith,
ice and Ice Fishing, Mountain Biking,
and Ice and Ice Fishing.
Whv work
225 Professional Service
Call 841-4122 or 1-800-323-6117
Ask for Pat
PACE & REACHING BOUNDARIES
FEB 28: INFO TABLE & READ AND REGION-
AL AFTERBOOK
Men Call: Women Call:
1-800-494-6238 1-800-362-3752
CAMP WNADU CAMP DANBEE
EARN CASH
ON THE SPOT
Apply in person after 7:30 Tues-Sat
DUI/TRAFFIC/CIMINAL
OVERLAND PARK, KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY, AT LAW
ATTORNEY-AL-LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964
Ask for Pat
Carol Brown Electrolysis Safe, effective, and permanent removal of hair
Safe, effective,and permanent removal of hair conveniently located at 10 E. Ninth St. 865-4255
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Need Help With Your Research Project ? Kelley Data Analysis and Consulting specialties in: Complete statistical analysis of results, SPSS graphs and tables, regression models and text area design. Lowest rates in Advocacy, Tenure, pay.
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
X
(913) 887-4307 (local call)
E-mail red4usg@aol.com
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
WALK-INS WELCOME!
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-1133
235 Typing Services
Call Jacki at 855-2885 for applications, term paper,
theses, dissertations, transcriptions, etc. Satisfaction
requests may be sent by fax to 855-2885.
**158 American Racing Wheels type AR33. Under 200
and over 400. Lease from Toyota or Ford at**
*4400. Locate lease on Toyota 4400 at*
*www.ford.com.*
300s Merchandise
King size mattresses set. New. Retail price $999.00, will sell for $175.00, 379.00 $888.00
AA Pall size matrress set. New, never used, still in plastic.
Batale价 $240, sold will for $160. Brass head-
less mold.
Fondent Strat w/ Sydney McQuinn bumbucket,
bundenstur, w/stand, WD Crane VC2121A8, new pre-
amps, great tone, $175 w/sh-walped $25, everything for
$450. Brent Brom 884-463
Power book 180 480
With internal modem & stylewriter
$120 or best offer, call 749-9388
110% LONGUEUR PEAU
AA Queen size matrice set, new. never used. SSIll in plains.
Tortoise set, 800 mm², with $100 for 100.00 cm².
Tortoise set, 900 mm², with $125 for 125.00 cm².
360 Miscellaneous
First Fundraiser : Raise $800 in 5 Days Groups, Groups
Fundraiser (800) 692-1089 Ext 37
No Financial Obligation (800) 692-1089 Ext 37
Wanted 100 Students to Lose 8-100 lb. New Metabolism
Breakthrough, Guaranteed Bills $295. 1-800-400-7777
SPRING BREAK IN
DOOR 1234567890
SPRING BREAK IN CANCUN MEXICO
HOW JUST $299
Not known
370 Want to Buy
Looking to buy Eve's painting on veneer. Existing or will commission. Art major start on today' career today!
405 For Rent
Bedroom Subsuite Bc. Fee Rent. Paid Water, Calle,
Carpets & Closet Laundry Facilities Call Any Am-
gain@749-9766.
400s Real Estate
2 bedroom room for non-laundry. $430/month. Cable
Piping. Airline/airbag hallway. On KU bus rent.
10% discount on any other room.
2 /block from campus, studio apartment. $ 310.00
north, all utilities included. B487-7644.
405 For Rent
Sharun Plaza Aptimates & Townhouses 2 & 3 bedroom townhouses available immediately Abok ask for details
Spring Break Beach Condo Hot Location, South Patre
11,000+ ft² plus pool. Deposit required.
11,000+ ft² plus pool.
Available immediately. 3 Bedrooms, unfurnished apartment. L2床房从 KU700 刀免。Oredale Bedroom. L1床房从 KU750 刀免。
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400 Tower, a student housing alternative. Open & diverse member, non-profit operation, democratic control. Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30am-5:30pm. Closeable Cloe to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 814-8434.
AVAILABLE HIMEDIATELY
2 bedroom apartment, 18th & 8th
Microwave, dishwasher, diaposal, widok wob.
6 month lease. Call 841-8408
Mackenzie Place. 1183 Kentucky, now leasing for 1A, age 1, yr old appliances, a close aptage. All 3 BMC, microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appliance, 2 AVA, well insulated, energy efficient. Cell 749-166
Washer/Dryer
Dishwasher
Trash Compactor
Connector
Ceiling Fans in
AVAILABLE IMEDIATELY
1 bedroom apartment at Oread
(1&1/2 blocks from Union). Water was gas paid
6 months, month & month.
811. 430. 7911
Lorimar Townhomes
Now Leasing For June & August
1,2.& 3 Bedrooms
Across the street from the Glass Onion 8736/hua-
water. paid Card at Damon at 858-3648. February payment.
paid Card at Damon at 858-3648.
Microwave
Gas Fireplace
Cable Paid
Back Patio
Bedrooms
For More Info : 841-7849
Located at 4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Now Leasing for June & August
4 Bedrooms/3 Bath
Featuring:
Washer and Dryer Units for Rent!
Large 3 bedroom apt. and studio apt.
in remodeled house near KU.
Call 841-6254
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Includes:
To The Spin
Washer/Dryer Fireplace
Dishwash Cable Paid
Microwave Back Patio
Call Now! 766-8177
- 1&2 Bedrooms
*Normally $50.00, for a short time are $45.00 a month per set.
Fall Leases
- On KU Bus Route
- Exercise Room
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
GET A JUMP ON NEXT YEAR!
- 3 Hot Tubs
[1301 W.24th & Naismith • 842-5111]
- Full-size washer/dryer or Laundry Facilities
Colony Woods
Hirely available to a team that are $44.90 a month per set.
*NEW Whirlpool Large Capacity washer and dryer sets.
Studios, 2, & 8 Bedroom Apts
Carson Place, Stadium View, Oread,
Chamberlin Court, Knobb Corner,
1425 Kentucky, Bradford Square
*Renting now and for the fall of 1996.
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Private Ratios or Deals
- Within 2 blks of campus or on KU bus route
Cats welcome at Bradford Square only
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT TODAY FOR $ 50.00
MON - FRI 9 am-5 pm, 1820 West 6th
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
405 For Rent
841-8468
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES WANTED to share new units. BBD inc site营养 room. Fully furnished in unit beds. Kitchen dishwasher & microwave. No Perio/ No kitchen appliances 250-ppl ccu Mahl, Mary 843-1016 229-833. Above 100 square feet.
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
FOUR BEDROOM-
ASKABOUT
Our Three Person Special
$690 and Up
Pool and Clubhouse
7TH & FLORIDA
NOW LEASING FOR SPRING
E.H.O.
841-5255
MASTERCRAFT
Offers
Completely Furnished
Studio,1,2,3,& 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
MASTERCRAFT
24th and Eddingham Dr.
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
- Exercise weight room
- Laundry room
- Swimming pool
ATANAFFORDABLEPRICE
- Laundry facility
- Swimming pool
- Fireplace
808 W.24th
841-6080
841-5444
- Close to campus
- Energy Efficient
- Daily 3:30-5:00
405 For Rent
Professionally managed by
- Spacious 2 bedroom
* Leisure facility
female roommate wanted a share of 2 bff furnished apartement at the Amli. Feb. (through April). Call back at amli@theamli.com.
--apartments
VILLAGE SQUARE
Full size washer/dryer, fully equipped kitchen, fireplace, in-walk in closets, fully monitored alarm system, and much more, NO PETS, Harper Square Apartments, Call Today 013-848-8688
KVM
- On site management
NEWLY CONSTRUCTED
Easy Access to 10
1-2-3-D Bathroom Apts
Available March 1, 1996
Mon - Fri 9-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
430 Roommate Wanted
Female roommate should share 2 bedroom apartment. On bus route, $200.00
+1/2 utilities. Water and gas paid.
Call 817-930-8498
9th & Avalon 842-3040
- Swimming pool
- On Bus Route
Male/Female Roommate Wanted to shareown bathroom. Diswash, wipe/daypegs and dishware at 383-9552.
Female grade student to share two 2-BR app, $200-unit.
Call Carolina $359. Must like car and be a non-
married student.
Two rooms available for sublease. Cheap rent. 740-7633.
Females only.
is what you want your new home awaits...
2&3 bedroom
Female roommate needed. New almost home west of campus. Roomy, WDY, AC, WD, Garage, Deck. Near bus route. Short or long term lease available March 1st. $275.00/month. Call 838-4546.
ROOMMAIT WANTED. Roommate got married, needed sublease. Person needed to share n-9BR, 2-bath townhouse w/ W/D, fireplace, $225/mo + $130 usl. Feb rent free. No pets. Call 841-6570
Available immediately 1 bedroom in 4 bedroom duplex.
815.90 per room plus utilities. Upper class male room.
Lower class female room.
meadowbrook If BIG
Male roommate to share College Hill Condo. Large master bdrm, private bath, WD. available immediately. $280. Call-1-931-652-838 or beeper 1-800-307-3240. ext. 845 and leave phone number.
15th & Crestline 842-4200
2nd apartment for sublease. Close to amps and on bus route. Full-furnished. Swimming pool & club house. Washer & dryer on sight. $250 per month & 1/2 utilities Call Heather 805-5056
MEADOWBROOK
2 & 3 bedroom townhomes are available now. Walk or ride the bus to KU. Enjoy the quiet feel of the country with the convenience of the city.
Wanted ABAP - N/S/M roommate to share spaces 2
8dpm at, in 13th and Ohio. Walk to campus and down-
town, off street parking $250 + 1/2 unit. Call Wade B38 -
402. Leave message.
ROOMMATE WANTED. Huge bedroom. $178/mo.
floor beds. Guest bedrooms. Big 3 bed
room. Bathroom or Jenny or Jemmy?
NON-SMOKING BOOMMAE WANTED-Male or Female to share 38R B28 bathroom. W/D, microwave, close to bus route. $250/mo + share utilities Boommae needed: gay friendly, M/T, share 28R house, W/D, DW, AC, peptide acceptable, must like my dog. $265/mo + L2 utilities. Amy 841 - 6736.
NO-SMOKING ROOMMATE WANTED-Male or Female to share $28 B3轧房犀 W/D; W/P: 176 810-499-1333
Non-smoking male roommate will share 2 BF
apartment closet space $2500 + wait. CJ Refr
mailer.
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
- Dy Mail: 119 Stuffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60445
may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
print your classified order on the form before and mail it with payment to the Kenmore
to have it billed to your MasterCard orVisa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard quan-
uned days when cancelled before their expiration date.
College Referral
Classified Information and order form
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused funds. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of opaque lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Drive out mammals:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
| Cost per mile per day | 1-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30+X |
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| 2.00 | 1.15 | 0.80 | 0.70 | 0.65 | 0.45 |
| 1.90 | 1.00 | 0.70 | 0.65 | 0.60 | 0.40 |
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days= $17.00 (4 lines X 85 per line X 5 days).
140 lost & found
180 insured
80 help needed
232 professional services
292 milacanneau
232 lybian services
370 want to buy
495 for rent
498 recommend wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KAMSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
Please print your ad one word per box:
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper.
Phone: ___
Account number:
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Signature:
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Staaffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66645
6B
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 8. 1996
Spicy Red Wine Sauce!!!
Almost the Weekend
Thursday Special!!
Large Pizza
2 toppings
2 drinks
ONLY
$9.99
plus tax
LUDY'S
PIZZELIA
719 0055
Open 7 days a week
ALL YOU CAN EAT
DINNER BUFFET
怡園飲店
CATHAY
RESTAURANT
Chinese Cuisine
Holiday Plaza
2104D
West 25th Street
(913)842-4976
Lunch $4.25 (11:30-2:00)
Dinner $6.25 (5:30-9:00)
MC/VISA/Local Checks
SPORTS RAP
From the Heart
For Your Valentine
FTD
Send the FTD
Celebration of
Love Bouquet
Owens
FLOWER SHOP
9th & Indiana • 843-6111
Uncut, unfiltered and uncensored. All letters from actual sports section readers.
Free agency isn't key to Cowboys' success
OK. Enough is enough. Now that bashing the Cowboys has suddenly become more fashionable than wearing North Face jackets in Kansas, how about hearing another side of the story. A fellow student recently wrote that the Cowboys are the best team that money can buy, which echoes the sentiment of seemingly the entire nation. Do you people really believe that Dallas has bettered itself through free agency?
The sad truth is that many of you do. Let's take a look at the best team of all time, the 1992-1993 Dallas team. Now take that team and subtract 1995 All-Pro linebacker Ken Norton; wide receivers Alvin Harper and Kelvin Martin, who also lead the league in kicks returned for touchdowns; All-Pro linemen Stepnoski and Gogan; defensive back James Washington, who had an interception and fumble recovery for a touchdown in the Super Bowl; Kenneth Gant and Horton. Add Deion, who was signed only because of the fact that the team's other starting defensive back, Kevin Smith, was out for the season, and what do you get? A team that barely won its third Super Bowlin four years.
The fact of the matter is that other teams, such as the Chiefs, need free agents because they can't develop players on their own. Instead they try to recycle once-great players. And the organization isn't bright enough to manage a team, although deft organizations, such as Dallas and San Francisco, develop players until they can no longer afford those players, so poorly run organizations can pick them up without any effort. A prime example is Larry Brown, Super Bowl XXX MVP. Dallas drafted him in the 12th round, and now he is a free agent whose future in Dallas looks bleak.
I am sorry that Kansas City
drafted Todd Blackledge, Percy Snow, Paul Palmer, Christian Okoye, Matt Blundin and the like. I am also equally sorry that the Chiefs tried to resurrect the careers of Dave Krieg, Steve DeBerg, Joe Montana, Marcus Allen and Mark Collins instead of building a future. But don't blame the Cowboys for trying to keep what is their. Hey, you guys can have their trash. Oh wait, you already have Lin Elliot.
I am sure that Matt Irwin will continue to write with his beloved Redskins in mind and Bill Petulla with his Eagles and Steelers. (Oh yeah, Erickson can write another worthless article on "camping") but at least the voice of America's Team has been heard.
Justin Willett Leawood Senior
Pure fact: Cowboys are the best
As the battle lines were formed and sides were chosen for Super Bowl XXX, I noticed Cowboy rooters were outnumbered. For you, who are Steelers fans because you hate "America's team," let me clear some misconceptions, if the Steeler-friendly staff (i.e. Pennsylvania native Bill Petula) will print them.
1) Fact: Dallas is cocky. If you had won three of the last four Super Bowls, you would be cocky too.
2) Fact: Dallas has flashy players. Whether anything is wrong with being flashy is debatable. Guys like Nate Newton, Jay Novachek and Daryl Johnson are as blue collar as any Steeler. For the Chief's fans who jumped on the "America's Hated Team" bandwagon because of flashy
Cowboys: I don't see Charles Haley showboating like Neil Smith when he gets a sack.
3) Fact: Delon Sanders is a prime time player. He may have given up a fiveyard slant, an almost impossible route to defend for a touchdown, but Barry Switzer credits him for the two big interceptions because his coverage allowed Dallas to overload the opposite side.
4) Fact: Emmitt Smith celebrated after scoring a touchdown with five minutes left in Super Bowl XXX. What could he be thinking?
5) Fact: The Dallas Cowboys are one of the greatest football teams, and as Michael Irvin said, it ain't over yet. So, as my Cowboy pride wells up at another Super Bowl crown, I can say one thing (this one's for you Bill): 'How' 'bout them Cowboys!'
Chris Waters Lawrence Junior
Students not given 'leftover' seating
In the Feb. 2, 1996, edition of the Kansan, associate sports editor Bill Petulla suggested that we KU students get only the "leoftower" seats in Allen Field House. This might come as a shock to Mr. Petulla, but compared with other big-time men's basketball programs, including Duke, Jayhawk students like myself have the best opportunity to see a game in the "only" place to watch college basketball — Allen Field House.
It is true that our seats are not at mid-court, in constant camera range, as student seating is at Duke. However, it is equally true that we Jayhawk students get about 40 percent, or 6,300 seats, of the total seating at Allen Field House, as opposed to Duke where students get 14 percent, or 1,200 seats. That is a lot of leftovers! In other words, 22 percent of the KU student body is permitted to purchase tickets, whereas only 13 percent of Duke students can attend games. I'm sure the Athletic Department would move us into camera range if we would give up 4,000 student seats. (Fourteen percent of
16,300 seats is only 2,300 student seats.)
In fact, KU leads the way in terms of allotment of student seating among big-time programs as well. Michigan only provides students with 22 percent of student seating. Kentucky only 29 percent, North Carolina just 33 percent. The average student allotment in the Atlantic Coast Conference is only 27 percent of capacity. Also, at most of these schools students must pick up their tickets one game at a time — and then camp out!
Any astute person (thereby eliminating Billy Packer) who was in Allen Field House for the UCLA game (or any Kansas State or Missouri game) would know that "You can't find fans like this anywhere." So, Mr. Petulla, before you start demanding change in student seating in Allen Field House maybe you better do your homework. It sounds to me like we've all got it pretty good in Allen.
Kristel Thalmann Barnes senior
P. S. Mr. Petulla, if you want to see the best of college basketball from "mid-court" in Allen Field House I'll look for you this Friday at 7 p.m. as the KU women's basketball team takes on Iowa State.
Letters can be mailed or hand delivered to room 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For any additional information stop by the newsroom or contact sports editor Tom Erickson or associate sports editor Bill Petulla at 864-4810.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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February 9-March 16.
Fri.-Sat. February, 9-10: Fast Johnny
Fri.-Sat. February, 16-17: Baby Jason and the Spankers
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1
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.102.NO.93
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
M
Meet Ryan Robertson
The Kansas freshman guard believes there is much more to life than the game he loves. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Flat tax fever
Economists discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the flat tax proposals. Page 5A
FEATURES
Affirmative Action
Students and universities debate the merit of equality programs. Page 8A
NATION
Telecom bill signed
Clinton says this bill will catch our laws up with our future. Page 7A
WEATHER
MOSTLY SUNNY
High 71° Low 41°
Z
Weather: Page 2A.
INDEX
Opinion ... 4A
National News ... 7A
Features ... 8A
Sports ... 1B
Scoreboard ... 2B
Horoscopes ... 4B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is free. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Hail to the Chie
Robert Hemenway will be the 16th chancellor inducted into the KU tradition at his inauguration Sunday
A after more than seven months on the job, Robert Hemenway will be in inaugurated Sunday as
-
KU's 16th chancellor. But if Hemenway had not changed his mind last semester, the 2 p.m. inauguration at the Lied Center might not have happened.
Hemenway said he was reluctant to have an inauguration when he first became chancellor on July 1 in light of the budget reductions the University was facing.
"It seemed to me that maybe having an inauguration at that time wasn't the thing to do," Hemenway said. "But I became convinced during the fall that there was an important academic and ceremonial tradition that we should
Inauguration activities
At 2 p.m. on Sunday, Robert Hemenway will be inaugurated as KUJ's 36th chancellor. The inauguration, which is at the Uled Center, is only one of several events scheduled for the inaugural weekend. Other events include
ef
2 p.m. Friday at the Fine Room in the Kansas Union, symposium with Sonys Mire, a filmmaker from Somalia.
2 p.m. Friday at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union, symposium with author Neft Irvin Painter of Princeton University
4 p.m. Friday at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union, symposium with author ChenYf A, Wall of Rutgers University
4 p.m. at the Contenental Room in the Kansas Union, symposium with author Katie G., Cannon of Temple University.
2 p.m. Saturday at the Kansas Union Ballroom, symposium on issues relating to Black women's studies; Gancellor Robert Hemerway and the speakers from Friday's symposiums will make remarks
7:30 p.m. Friday at the Led Center
1121 Wingborne Orchestra concert
7:30 p.m. Sunday at Swarthout
Recital Hall in Murphy Hall, Cloud
Frank concert
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Lind Center
Symphonic Band concert
honor. The only along with the money was used,
KU's inaugurations have varied from galas to simple addresses. Hemenway said he hoped his inauguration was remembered as dignified and true to the tradition of the University.
"I also hope that people think that it was a lot of fun," he said.
Sunday's ceremony will cost $27,000, but the money will be the Kansas University Ence Association and private sources.
"I'm very excited," Hemenway said. "This is my first and only inauguration."
Hemenway, 54, served as chancellor of the University of Kentucky's Lexington campus for six years before coming to the University. But he did not have an inauguration at Kentucky.
The University has not had an inauguration since Gene Budig became chancellor in 1981.
Del Shankel served as chancellor during the 1994-95 school year but was not inaugurated. Shankel, who also served
as acting chancellor for the year prior to Budig's arrival, said Budig's inauguration
being a meaningful event that gave Budig the opportunity to outline his goals for the University and to look to the future.
"It gave the people of Kansas a chance to know Budig as a person and to know what his goals and ideas were," Shankel said. "It's a great part of the KU tradition that hopefully only happens every 10 years or so."
Jeannette Johnson, assistant to the executive vice chancellor, said yesterday that about 1,800 of the 2,000 tickets had been reserved. Tickets are free and are available to the public at the Student Union Activities office in the Kansas Union, at the service desk in the Burge Union, at the Regents Center and at the chancellor's office, 230 Strong Hall.
The inauguration will include comments by Hemenway, Gov. Bill Graves and Sen. Nancy Kassbeam. An original composition, *Fanfare Celebration for a New Era*, by Robert Foster, director of KU bands, and an inaugural poem by Luci Tapahonso, associate professor of English, also will be featured.
Past inaugurations have shown tradition, variety
Inaugurating the University's chancellor is a long-standing tradition, but few other traditions dictate the details of the event. Each chancellor's inauguration has been different from the last — ranging from three-day celebrations to brief speeches.
When Robert Henemway is inaugurated as KU's 16th chancellor on Sunday, the event will reflect Hemenway's personality and wishes. The inauguration will feature speeches by Henemay, Gov. Bill Graves and Sen. Nancy Kassebaum — an impressive event but a far cry from some of the inaugural fetes of the past.
No chancellor likely will match Frank Strong's inaugural ceremonies. The events lasted three daws. Oct. 16, 1802.
ies by Colleen McCain
According to The Kansas University Weekly, "The official inauguration of Dr. Frank Strong as chancellor of the University will go down as the most
imposing and the most impressive event in KU history."
The final day of ceremonies and speeches began at 9:30 a.m. and lasted until after 1 a.m. A feast of oysters, ham and turkey was served to 1,155 people at 7 p.m. Twenty-six speakers were scheduled after the meal, but one reporter wrote that "some speakers were forced to leave from weariness before their turn arrived."
In contrast, Deane Malott's inauguration on Sept. 22, 1939, was little more than an address at convocation. In compliance with Malott's wishes, the inauguration ceremony consisted of Malott's inaugural address during the traditional opening convocation in Hoch Auditorium.
Most recently, the inaugural ceremonies for Gene Budig were held at opening convocation on Aug. 24, 1981, at Allen Field House. A procession of 500 professors and dignitaries marched to the field house, and Budig spoke to a crowd of 3,800. The traditional convocation ceremony followed.
Hemenway has said that his inauguration would be more like the simpler inaugurations of the recent past but would reflect his style and the changing University.
(USPS 650-640)
Sheryl Williams, University archivist and curator of the Kansas Collection, and Carolyn Berneking, University Archives volunteer, have created an exhibit that features information and memorabilia from the inaugurations of Strong, Malott and Ernest Lindley. The exhibit, on the fourth floor of Spencer Research Library, ends Feb. 29.
KU senator plans to sue University
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
"There's only one option, and that is a lawsuit. Sullian said."
Student senator Scott Sullivan said he planned to sue the University of Kansas because the administration denied his request yesterday to access student evaluations.
Sullivan, Leawood junior, had petitioned the University on Monday to release the evaluations under the Kansas Open Records Act.
But Richard Mann, director of University administration, sent Sullivan a letter yesterday stating that the open records act did not require the disclosure of personnel records, performance ratings or individually identifiable records pertaining to employees.
Sullivan said several people were looking for a lawyer to take his case and that he had considered contacting American Civil Liberties Union attorneys. He said he was confident he would find a competent attorney.
"It's an interesting legal issue," Sullivan said. "We have the moral high ground. When you have an issue that is right in its basis, you have a lot of enthusiasm to see that issue resolved in your favor."
Administrators and faculty members have said that releasing the evaluations would increase class-shopping mentality among students. Sullivan said that argument didn't give students enough credit.
"They're going to take a fair look at each instructor, and they're going to take a very fair look at what the evaluations offer them," Sullivan said.
But Lloyd Sponholtz, associate professor of history and Senate Executive Committee member, said he thought Sullivan was expecting the evaluations to be more valuable to students than they actually would be.
"To do what he is asking to do, for task logically," Sponholtz said. "I really don't think the rewards are worth the effort involved."
Sullivan also requested documents explaining how administrators use student evaluations and listing all University officials who review students' evaluation forms.
Administrators granted Sullivan access to those records yesterday
Sullivan said he thought the documents would show that so many people at the University already had access to student evaluations that the evaluations could not reasonably be kept from students.
"The more people that see the evaluations, the less of an ability they have to say that these records are closed." Sullivan said.
Rose Marino, associate general counsel for the University, said she wasn't sure what grounds Sullivan was planning to sue in but that the open records act was clear in
Enquirer editor asks for 'just the facts'
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
Tabloid journalist digs celebrity dirt
Topless photos of Marcia Clark are the only things Brian Williams regrets running.
Williams, who spoke to about 175 people last night at the Kansas Union Ballroom, said the Enquirer avoided blatant sex.
"As Americans, we don't want sex smacking us in the face," said Williams, general editor of the National Enquirer.
It also doesn't do aliens, three-headed babies or sea monsters.
"We check everything, and we're very careful about everything," he said. "We basically do two types of stories: ordinary people doing extraordinary things ... and extraordinary people doing ordinary things."
Williams said the Enquirer just does the facts.
But they do pay sources for stories
williams said the tabloid paid six figures for the story on Lisa Marie and Michael Jackson's wedding.
In a question-and-answer session earlier in the evening, Williams told students of the School of Journalism that paying for sources was a legitimate journalistic practice.
"Just because we pay somebody doesn't mean that we don't check it out and see if it's true or not," Williams said. "They say what they want to say, just like they do in any other situation. If I know I'm paying you money, I know what your agenda is."
Paid sources or not, the National Enquirer has high sales — and an educated readership.
The tabloid sells 3.5 million copies a week, grossing about $250 million a year. They claim 20 million readers, most of whom are women, ages 25 to 50, with high school diplomas and some college education.
Covering everything from the O.J. Simpson trial to deadbeat dads, the Princeton educated, one-time high
school teacher said he had the best job in the world.
Williams said his favorite assignment was covering celebrity weddings. He had tried to break into the tightly secured wedding of Michael J. Fox, and he crashed John Goodman's bachelor party in New Orleans.
But not every story the Enquirer reports is celebrity gossip and human interest. The Enquirer was the first to break the story that the DNA of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman was found in O.J. Simpson's Bronco.
"Suddenly we're becoming an interesting story ourselves," he said.
And Enquirer stories are making their way into mainstream newspapers and television news shows.
Since then, their investigative reporting style has gained the respect of mainstream media, Williams said.
ENQUIRER
O-3 1/2 MILLION
BRIDE TO WITNESS
LISA MARIE S.
OWN
CORE
"Everybody is getting tabloid." Williams said. "Everybody's doing it. It's our area, leave us alone. We're not covering the U.N."
Kathleen Driscoll / KANSAN
Brian Williams, National Enquirer general editor, holds a copy of his controversial tabloid. Williams spoke at the Kansan Union Ballroom last night.
12
2A
Friday, February 9, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ON CAMPUS
KU Office of Study Abroad is sponsoring a program on Scholarship information at 11:30 today at 2085 Wescoe. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
African Studies Center is sponsoring a movie screening of "Fire Eyes" (Somalia) at 4:00 p.m. tomorrow at the Woodruff Auditorium. For more information, call Akin Ajayi at 864-3054. Free.
KU Dance Club is having a dance lesson at 2 p.m. on Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom (or Kansas Room). For more information, call Sonia Ratzlaff at 864-1581.
The Art and Design Gallery is sponsoring a department of art faculty show Feb. 11-16 in the Art and Design Gallery. For more information, call Chris Fasaw at 864-4550
OAKS, Non-traditional Student Organization is sponsoring a brown bag luncheon from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Wescoe Terrace Cafeteria. For more information, call Laura Morgan at 864-4064.
Office of Study Abroad is sponsoring the Great Britain Student Exchange at 1 p.m. on Monday in 4006 Wescoe. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
Linguistic Colloquy is sponsoring Joong-Sun Sohn speaking about "The Resumptive Head in the Korean Relative Clause: Another Type of Relative Clause" at 3:30 p.m. on Monday in 206 Blake Hall.
The Center for East Asian Studies, International Studies, department of East Asian Languages & Cultures, Kansas Small Business Development Center, Kansas International, and the department of political science are sponsoring a panel discussion on China and the World Trade Organization from 3 to 5 p.m. on Monday at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ashley Cheung at 864-3849.
KU Karate Club is having practice at 5:30 p.m. on Monday in 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jon Sides at 832-1771.
International Student Association is having its weekly meeting at 6 p.m. on Monday at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Meditation Club is having group meditation on Monday at the Daisy Hill room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Ravi Hirekatur at 832-8789.
The Center for East Asian Studies, International Studies, department of East Asian Languages & Cultures, Kansas Small Business Development Center, and Kansas International are sponsoring a lecture entitled, "China's Contemporary Approach to it's International Relations" at 7 p.m. on Monday at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ashley Cheung at 864-3849
KU Yoga Club is having yoga class at 7 p.m. on Monday at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Adam Miller at 832-0399 or Paula Duke at 542-1930.
KU Kempo Karate Club is having a club meeting at 7:30 on Monday in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mark Hurt at 842-4713.
KU Women's Rugby is having practice at 8 p.m. on Monday. For more information, call Stacey Stringfellow at 749-3380.
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.
Vegetarians have a beef with meat
KU students choose to abstain from eating products of animals
By R. Adam Ward
Kansan staff writer
College is the place where most people try out different ideas and lifestyles. College students often experiment with different ways of eating than the way they grew up.
Some students are becoming vegetarians; giving up all meat or just some types. Some are even giving up dairy products and eggs and becoming vegans.
But finding out about good nutrition is important before becoming a vegetarian or vegan. This is necessary to avoid possible future health risks, said Ann Chapman, registered dietitian at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
She said as long as students are eating dairy products,it's not hard to maintain a balanced diet.
"The thing I run into most is many people who are afraid that they are not getting enough protein," Chapman said.
She said Americans ate too much protein, in general, and that vegetarians that eat two to three servings a day of seeds, nuts, beans, or meat alternatives, like tofu, have no need to worry about protein, she said.
Vegans should supplement their diets with B-12, calcium and iron, she said. This may prevent future nutrition-related health problems. Children and pregnant or breast-feeding women should avoid vegan diets.
Vegetarian and vegan diets are becoming so common among college students that Ekdahl Dining Commons, the cafeteria that serves the Daisy Hill residence halls, now offers several vegetarian meals every evening.
Barbara Quintero, assistant director of the cafeteria, said that those with a vegan diet had a harder time finding things to eat because meals prepared without dairy products were usually not as popular as meals with meat or dairy products. She estimated 5 percent or less of the residents are vegetarians.
This group of KU students has a diverse number of reasons for becoming vegetarians.
Gbaike Ajayi, Lawrence freshman, said she had never liked the taste of meat. She was also concerned about the health risks of eating red meat, she said.
Rachel Wiese, Overland Park sophomore, had more environmental reasons for making a change in her diet.
"I was reading the book, 'Green Planet' and it was talking about the fact that it took 2,000 pounds of water to produce one pound of cow meat," Wiese said.
ON THE RECORD
A student's KUID with bus pass was stolen between 8:05 a.m. and 12:25 p.m. on Feb. 1 in Haworth Hall. The KUID was valued at $60, KU police reported.
KU police were called to the second floor of Tower D of Jayhawker Towers when an individual room fire alarm automatically activated the alarm system. Reportedly, the resident removed the alarm from the ceiling. KU police are
investigating the incident.
A KU student was arrested on a charge of criminal trespass at 4:30 a.m. yesterday on the 1200 block of Ohio Street. His bond was set at $100, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's compact discs were stolen at 4:10 p.m. yesterday in the 900 block of Kentucky Street. The compact discs were valued at $225, Lawrence police reported.
Weather
HIGH LOW
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta 63 ° • 40 °
Chicago 45 ° • 27 °
Des Moines, Iowa 52 ° • 32 °
Kansas City, Mo. 66 ° • 39 °
Lawrence 71 ° • 41 °
Los Angeles 75 ° • 55 °
New York 44 ° • 30 °
Omaha, Neb. 63 ° • 30 °
St. Louis 65 ° • 38 °
Seattle 47 ° • 37 °
Topeka 72 ° • 40 °
Tulsa, Okla. 74 ° • 38 °
Wichita 75 ° • 40 °
TODAY
Partly cloudy and pleasant.
7141
SATURDAY
Last day of the heat wave!
6340
SUNDAY
Mostly cloudy and returning to winter.
4833
HIGH LOW
Attanta 63 ° • 40 °
Chicago 45 ° • 27 °
Des Moines, Iowa 52 ° • 32 °
Kansas City, Mo. 66 ° • 39 °
Lawrence 71 ° • 41 °
Los Angeles 75 ° • 55 °
New York 44 ° • 30 °
Omaha, Neb. 63 ° • 30 °
St. Louis 65 ° • 38 °
Seattle 47 ° • 37 °
Topeka 72 ° • 40 °
Tulsa, Okla. 74 ° • 38 °
Wichita 75 ° • 40 °
TODAY
Partly cloudy and pleasant.
7141
SATURDAY
Last day of the heat wave!
6340
SUNDAY
Mostly cloudy and returning to winter.
4833
Source: Ryan Jewell, KU Weather Service
Alarms meet standards housing official says
Jayhawker Towers test decibel level of alarms Kansan staff report
Housing workers tested the decibel level of fire alarms in Jayhawker Towers at 2 p.m. yesterday after several residents had complained of sleeping through an alarm on Jan.31.
Residents of Tower A said they didn't hear the alarms during a elevator fire and feared they could be in danger if there was another fire.
Philip Garito, associate director of student housing, said the fire alarms tested 95 decibels in the hallways, 10 decibels above the recommended national level, and 60 decibels in the apartments.
"That's probably a little less than what you'd get from a radio," Garito said. "People should be able to hear it provided their stereo isn't on."
Garito said the noise level wasn't dangerous because tower staff members made sure all residents evacuated the building during a fire alarm.
But Garito said that even though the alarms met safety standards, the towers were considering installing more alarms.
"Maybe the thing to do would be to put horns at each end of the hallway." Garito said. "That should provide enough noise."
The towers spent $57,000 in 1992 installing the alarm system by Simplex Time Recorder Company.
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OFFICERS POSITIONS:
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For an application, stop by the SUA office (4th Floor Kansas Union) or call 864-3477 for details.
Deadline for officer applications: Friday, February 23 5:00pm
Deadline for coordinator applications: Friday, March 8 5:00pm
Interviews for officer applicants: Sunday, March 3 by appointment
First interviews for coordinator applicants: March 12-15 by appointment
SPECIAL REPORT
Entertainment AT KU DAILY
CHICAGO TALK SHOW TOUR
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DAY ON THE HILL
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 9, 1996
3A
African-
American
History Month
Classes offer Black history for more than one month
African studies help students learn about past writers and works
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
For students and faculty in African-American studies classes, it's African-American History month all semester long.
The department of African and African-American studies offers more than 20 classes focusing on African history, literature, drama and culture.
Two classes focusing specifically on literature are Introduction to African Literature and Women in Contemporary African Literature. The courses let students fulfill their English requirements with something that isn't so mainstream.
One way these classes differ from American literature classes, beyond the focus on African literature, is the historical development the classes must pay attention to, said Omfolabo Ajayi, associate professor of theater and film and assistant professor of women's studies.
To understand the author's message, classes must pay specific attention to the historical context and background. Ajayi said.
"It's a different sense than other literature classes, because I have to wade through a lot of the different cultural bulk," she said. "Classes in Western literature don't have to go through that."
Reading, analysis and discussion of contemporary African authors follows the historical development in both classes. As in any literature class, the students analyze the literature to discuss larger social implications.
"I think the important thing we look at in this class is how the literature of these women helps explore the commonities we all have," Feingold said.
Ajayi said that more of her colleagues in the departments of English and theater and film were including African literature and plays in their classes.
Ajayi said her class did nothing special for African-American history month other than have a few speakers whose message pertained to the class. It's a sentiment shared by others in the department, including Chico Herbison, instructor in African-American studies.
"My feeling is every month is African-American history month," Herbison said. "I just try to make students aware of what's going on campus."
Father/son duo to jazz up Lied tomorrow night
Many tickets still are available for Marsalis tour performance
By Heather Kirkwood Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Branford Marsalis, former leader of The Tonight Show Band from 1992 to 1995, and his father, jazz great Ellis Marsalis, will perform at 8 p.m. tomorrow night at the Lied Center.
They are touring to promote their new record, "Loved Ones," which is devoted to the subjects of women, love and the feminine mystique.
The recording, released last week, is a collection of piano and piano/saxophone love ballads including "Maria" from West Side Story, Cole Porter's "Miss Otis Regrets" and the Gershwin's "Bless You Is My Woman."
The recording also features a solo called "Dear Dolores" by Ellis Marsalis, which is a tribute to both his wife and his mother.
This is the first album Marsalis and his son Branford have recorded together.
The concert is sponsored by Student Union Activities and is part of the inauguration celebrations for Chancellor Robert Hemenway.
SUA has guaranteed the Marsalis duo $17,500 and 80 percent of profits made from the event.
Tickets for the performance are available at the SUA box office, and 800 remain. They are $16 with a KUID and $20 for the general public. All tickets will be $20 at the door. Those who purchase discounted tickets should bring their KUID to the performance.
Wescoe trio
一
Enjoying the absence of arctic weather, Tom Bemberger, Lenexa senior, studies in front of Wesco Hall. Kansas students made the most of spring-like temperatures by shedding their coats and gloves and taking their studies outdoors.
Darcy Coles / KANSAN
Brian Flink / KANSAN
COCA
Native Americans encourage heritage
Tribal law is focus of school's program
Robert Porter, associate professor of law, directs the Tribal Law Center at the KU School of Law.
By David Teska Kansan staff writer
Robert Porter came to the University of Kansas last summer with a straightforward goal—to teach Indian law to law students.
"I'm concerned with Indian law that deals with Indians—that's the real issue" Porter said.
Porter directs the Tribal Law Center at the KU School of Law. The center, which opened last semester, concentrates on three programs: the tribal lawyer certificate program, the Haskell Indian Nations University-KU tribal lawyer training program and the Tribal Law and Governance Research Program.
Porter said his ultimate goals were to make the school a focal point for Native-American legal research and become the top institution for the educating lawyers in Native American law.
"This should be the place people look to get the leg up on representing Indian people." Porter said.
"You can't take lawyers who have done other things and put them in the box of
For Porter, the drive is both personal and professional. Growing up in the Seneca tribe in Allegany, N.Y., Porter said he developed a desire to represent the Seneca people.
After graduating from Harvard Law School in 1989, Porter said he wanted practice law before focusing on tribal law. In 1991, he moved to the Seneca nation and helped develop its Department of Justice, ultimately rising to Attorney General.
When he left in 1995, his view had reversed on lawyers first getting grounded in the law before tackling tribal law.
Indian law." he said.
Porter said he became concerned with the trend towards overlaying the federal legal code on top of a tribal system and this led him to the idea of a center for legal research and education. Porter said.
"We want more Native Americans coming to this school," he said.
One project Porter said he is working on is raising funds for student scholarships and summer internships. Ideally, the students should get a stipend for the summer so not to burden the tribes financially, Porter said.
Edwin Hecker, professor of law, assists with the center. Even though he is the tenured professor, Hecker said Porter was the driving force behind the center's existence.
"He had such a fire in his belly about this issue." Hecker said.
Students enrolled in the certificate program have seen the need for Native-American lawyers trained in the laws that affect Native Americans at the tribal, state and federal level.
"It's like a giant puzzle you have to put together," said Lori Learned, Lawrence second-year law student.
Learned said because of the historical relationship between the federal government and tribal government, it was important that Native-American lawyers get trained to serve on behalf of their people.
"There's a lot of mistrust among Indians about white law," Learned said.
Cherokee chief stresses economic independence
By Susanna Löfő
Kansan staff writer
Native Americans should become more economically independent from the federal government.
That was one of the messages Joe Byrd, chief principal of the Cherokee Nation, delivered in a speech at the Spencer Museum of Art last night.
"Now the federal government has us addicted to its programs. We trust that you will change that," Byrd told an audience of about 70 students.
But Native Americans should not become totally independent of federal money, Byrd emphasized.
They should keep 20 percent of the money because of the land that was stolen and the people who died, he said.
Byrd used other parts of his 30-minute speech to encourage the students in the audience, especially those Native American.
"Your family back home has high expectations on you," he said. "They expect you to deliver. And I know you will."
Another message in Byrd's speech was that the University of Kansas would benefit from creating a Native-American studies program. Such a program could attract new students and more research money to the University, he said.
A group of faculty has been working to create such a program since fall, said Rita Napier, one of the leaders of the Native-American Studies Task Force.
"We expect to have a program to send to the Regents by next January," said Napier, associate professor of history.
Several audience members waited to meet Byrd after the speech, including Dorothy Stites, Lawrence senior. She said she was inspired by the speech.
"It was motivational," said Sites, a Cherokee and Kiowa Native American. "It made me stronger in what I intend to do in life, and that is help my people."
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4A
Friday, February 9, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
What if a few stipulations, such as requiring students to attain a minimum grade point average of 2.0, a composite ACT score of 23, or rank in the top one-third of their high school class, were added to the fine print of the KU admissions application? Would this nudge lazy students to take part in the preparation process? If so, it could cushion the blow for a freshman adjusting to college.
Proposed admissions policy might motivate students
The in-state high school graduates who viewed their diplomas as surfboards on which to ride the open-admissions wave may not have been prepared for life beyond Wescoe Beach. A few obstacles, such as English 101, give these students more than they had bargained for.
Apathetic students get pulled under during their freshman year because they are not motivated or prepared in high school. They didn't have to be; their diplomas doubled as open invitations.
THE ISSUE:
Qualified admissions
A proposal to establish qualified admissions at the University is under considerable debate. Brad Tate, principal of Lawrence High School, said he believed the proposed bill might be an incentive to motivate certain students. Some faculty members of Lawrence High suspect the bill could change the carefree mentality of these surfers. But others oppose the idea of making education inaccessible to some students.
The University welcomes all in-state high school graduates with open arms. Unless qualified admissions are established, the invitations still stand. What these students need to realize is that their diplomas will only get them in the door. The next four or more years won't always resemble a day at the beach.
ERIN KRIST FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Buffers not necessary if state increases highway speed limits
There's been a debate in Kansas about whether to raise the four-lane highway speed limits from 65 mph to 70 mph and two-lane highway limits from 55 mph to 65 mph. A bill has been proposed in the Kansas Legislature to raise these limits, and it also allows the state transportation department power to set lower limits when a road potentially is unsafe. But why isn't there a place in the bill for a buffer amendment?
What exactly is a buffer? If a car is going 10 miles faster than the speed limit on a two-lane highway or 5 miles faster on a 4-lane and the driver gets pulled over, the officer would give the driver what insurance agents call an "sp-6" — or what we commonly call a buffer.
An sp-6 does not count as a moving violation. A driver can get as many sp-6s as he wants in a year, but once he gets three moving violations, his license is suspended.
the speed limit. It's just that the buffer ticket will not affect insurance rates.
The notion of a buffer gives people the idea that they have the right to drive faster. But people still are breaking the law even if they drive one mile above
THE ISSUE:
Speed limits
When Nixon was president in 1974, he passed a bill to set the speed limit to conserve energy by saving gas. Like many other state governments, Kansas legislators didn't like the federal government messing with their territory and altered the bill to allow buffers.
If the Kansas Legislature doesn't act before the March 8 deadline, the limits will revert to the ones placed before 1974 which were 75 mph on four-lane highways and 70 mph on two-lane highways during the day.
Our question to the Kansas state government is: "Would buffers increase as well?" Buffers don't provide a needed role in our government today. If the state government sets the speed limit at 65 mph, let the speed limit be 65 mph. The state government shouldn't contradict itself by raising the buffer along with the speed limit.
DOGU WEINSTEIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
DOGU WEINSTEIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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Family break-up problem lies in marriage, not divorce
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President Clinton says "the era of big government is over," but plenty of other voices are determined to expand government through any means necessary, including the heavy hand of the divorce court.
No-fault divorce has been available in some form in all 50 states since the 1970's, but legislators in Iowa, Michigan, Illinois, Idaho, Pennsylvania and Georgia, among others, would like to make it harder to get, especially in marriages that involve children. Various bills would restore the requirements that one partner be found at fault and that both partners must agree to the divorce.
NINETY SIX!
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Proponents of the change say easy divorce harms children, cheapens marriage and more often than not leaves women bearing the bigger financial burden.
Guess what? Maybe she's right. If marriage was made that easy, it might encourage even more folks to think twice about it before entering into such a relationship. Americans have grown remarkably libertarian since the '60s about who shacks up with whom, except when that relationship produces children. In too many cases, raising the child then ceases to be a private problem and becomes everyone's problem.
Opponents also argue that putting fault back into divorce will hurt children. It could force many to live in hostile home environments, they say, and it could set back the problems that led to no-fault in the first place: bitter feelings, overcrowded courtrooms and excessive lawyer fees.
How true. All marriages do not end in divorce, but all divorces begin with marriage. The better job we do with one, the less work we'll have with the other.
"I do custody cases with people who never were married to each other, Neudal, said. "They still fight. It's just in a different court."
Contrary to popular misconception, there is nothing easier about common-law marriages once the petals fall off the romantic rose.
Common-law marriage occurs in certain states when two people of the opposite sex have been living together for a certain length of time as man and wife, whether they have gone through a ceremony or purchased a license or not.
"After a certain length of time having kids, we should say, 'guess what guys, you're married.'" Neudal said.
In some states, if you tell even a hotel clerk that you're married, you're married in the eyes of the law. This raises a host of messy legal issues, which helps explain why instead of wading through all of them, most states simply have eliminated common-law marriages in recent decades.
Who's right? Both are. Fault or no fault, divorce is no fun.
Maybe the time has come to rethink all that, suggests Neudal, for the sake of the children produced by out-of-wedlock unions.
Clarence Page is a columnist at the Chicago Tribune
But the solution to the problem is not to be found at the back end of the problem, which is bad marriages. Let's look at the other end. Instead of making it harder to get divorced, I think we ought to make it harder to get married.
Worse than the no-fault divorce is the no-sweat wedding. If easy divorce cheapens the institution of marriage, so does easy marriage. We have waiting periods for gun purchases, mandatory training for driver's licenses but nothing at all for two people who want to do the most important thing human beings can do, which is create other human beings and raise a family.
CLARENCE
PAGE
Some churches are way ahead of the state on this matter. Catholics, for example, are required to undergo intensive education, counseling and soul searching before the church will help them tie the knot. It is no guarantee of marital success, but it couldn't hurt.
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
Among those who agree with me is Marian Henriquez Neudel, who has been a divorce lawyer in Chicago for the past 17 years. In a recent letter to the Chicago Tribune, she wrote, "Trying to discourage family breakup by making divorce more difficult makes about as much sense as trying to prevent murder by making burial more difficult."
She would bring back common-law marriages.
She makes a good point. Some wise man once described human beings as the most complex mechanisms to be created entirely through unskilled labor. If the state has an interest in keeping unhappy people married, it should have an even bigger interest in discouraging them from getting married in the first place.
I asked Neudel these questions by telephone. Her response may raise even more eyebrows than the idea of making it harder to get married.
Of course there is a glitch to making it harder to get married. If the one-parent child is such a big problem, don't we need more marriages not fewer? Won't making it harder to get married discourage couples from doing the right thing?
That may sound like the opposite of common sense, but it's not quite.
It only makes sense to delay fee reviews
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Chris Vine's Feb. 7 editorial, Discussion of campus fees too important to delay, reflects the type of narrowmindedness and obvious lack of understanding of Student Senate governance that has no place on an editorial board.
As a member of the Finance Committee elected to serve on Campus Fee Review Subcommittee, I know firsthand the daunting task the committee faced. With three distinct and complex fees to review and no precedent from which to work in determining their effectiveness, it only makes sense to build up the committee before knocking down student fees.
Developing a list of questions regarding the fees and a system by which to evaluate their efficiency and justification is a logical step.
Accomplishing that task alone will be no small accomplishing task the committee faced. With three distinct and complex fees to review and no precedent from which to work in determining their effectiveness, it only makes sense to build up the committee before knocking down student fees.
Vine's description of Student Senate president Kim Cocks' actions as shirking her responsibilities is not only ignorant and unenlightened, but also reprehensible muckraking.
To call this foresightful leadership and astute, mature judgement is much more on target.
ments, and it will serve to make this a better committee to serve students in the future.
Andy Obermueller
Liberal sophomore
Once is too often in any case of domestic abuse
the door to intervene, but I was too late. Another man came out of the house across the street, prompting a pause in the beating. The woman, taking advantage of the break, scrambled to her feet and ran — right back inside the house. Not a word was spoken as the two men turned and followed her.
The police came and went. I assume they asked a few questions, but apparently nothing came of it. They drove away without anyone in custody, leaving an uncomfortable silence in their wake. Eventually I went to bed, but sleep was a long time coming.
Late one night last week, I was torn away from the soul-clutching addiction of Internet trivia by the cries of what I thought was a dog outside.
I have seen domestic violence before, but something about this night especially bothered me: When the woman could escape, she ran back inside. When she could have left with the police, she stayed and risked another beating. Thanks to Psych 101, I can put a name on it: learned helplessness. But labeling is as far from understanding as multiple choice is from an essay test.
Upon looking out,
I was horrified to see a man across the street brutally kicking the dog in the head and back. Then a sudden chill overcame me. It was not a dog he was beating but a woman, crumpled on the ground and sobbing uncontrollably.
When I used to tend bar, I heard innumerable stories of domestic abuse. And there always was an excuse attached. "You don't know him like I do," or "You haven't seen the side of him I have," or my favorite, "He said he was sorry. He's not a bad person."
After calling 911. I headed out
STAFF
COLUMNIST
TODD
HIATT
A recent study has shown that most men prone to violence suffer from an inflated sense of self-worth, and several studies during many years have shown that women in abusive relationships usually suffer low self-worth. While I am all for humiliating, denigrating and generally tearing down the ego of an abusive man, I would much rather see a woman learn to believe that she is worth something with or without Monkey-boy hitting her. No one deserves to be abused. That is not love, no matter what Monkey-boy might say.
This is not to say, however, that goodness never can be achieved. Character is not immutable. It isn't Silly Putty, either. True repentance does not occur over please-kill-my-hangover coffee. It occurs after serious, protracted self-reflection and involves a committed effort to enact change.
Frankly, I don't want to know him. And the only side of him I want to see is his jumpsuited, shackled backside being led into an anger-control therapy group in the state penitentiary. And finally, yes, he is a bad person.
This last statement needs to be used more often. People are defined by their actions. Some people purposely do bad things. And although there may be reasons, there are no excuses. Please, label these people as bad.
In cases where the man can't or won't change, the person who must change is the woman. Helplessness learned can be unlearned.
If you or anyone you know is in an abusive relationship, please get help. The number for the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center is 864-3552. Call now.
Todd Hlatt is a Lawrence senior in social welfare
THE COMPLETELY POINTLESS ADVENTURES OF BRIGG AND FRO
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 9, 1996
5A
Young voters get involved
Student Democrats gear up for Clinton-Gore campaign
By Lindsey Henry Kansan correspondent
Bruce Kent, administrative member of Kansans for Clinton/Gore '98, posted a warning for the middle class last night to a group of 40 listeners in Alderson Auditorium.
Brian Hott / KANSAN
"The proposed changes from the current Republican Congress will take away the safety net of the middle class. They are in danger of creating a two-class society with one permanent underclass." Kent said.
Kent's comments came in a University of Kansas Young Democrats meeting titled "Working for a Winning Team: Kansas Democrats in '96." The event focused on the importance of volunteer and internship opportunities for student supporters of Clinton.
Brett Cott, associate director of the Kansas Democratic Party, said there was no excuse for concerned young Democrats not to take part in the 1966 election.
"No matter where you live, there is going to be an election in your neighborhood," Cott said. "Our generation got the wrong idea watching Family Ties, thinking it was cool to be a Reagan Republican like Michael J. Fox. It's not cool. It's actually dangerous for the country."
Bruce Kent, member of Kansan for Clinton/Gore '96,
addresses KU Young Democrats last night in Alderson
Auditorium. Kent spoke on volunteer positions available.
Katie Bagby, Springfield, Mo., junior, agreed.
"I came tonight because I agree that the Democratic platform is better for the economy. These radical Republicans are scaring me with their religious views.
Chris Gentry, KU Young Democrats treasurer and Alma sophomore, said he thought the evening presentation went extremely well, despite the smaller crowd.
"It is hard to compete with NBC's Thursday night lineup," Gentry said. "But it turned out really well and touched on a lot of different opportunities to keep Democrats and to get Democrats in office."
Economists criticize flat tax
Experts say tax plan could increase deficit
By Scott MacWilliams Kansan staff writer
As the presidential campaigns heat up, candidates are trying to get ahead of each other. Some are promoting a flat tax as a way to distinguish their campaigns.
Presidential candidate and multi-millionaire Steve Forbes has made news and political hay with his flat tax plan, but it might not be as wonderful as he would like voters to believe.
Some critics have termed it deja voodoo economics.
Someone making $15,000 under 1995 tax laws would receive a $2,355 refund, assuming no investment income, standard deduction, and $2,355 earned-income tax credit.
Under the flat tax plan, there would be no refund.
David Burress, research economist with the Institute for Public Policy and Business Research, said there were good economic reasons for having a flax tax, but it would not guarantee simplicity.
Forbes' proposal calls for removal of exemptions for home mortgage interest, standard and itemized deductions, and property and state income tax.
Burress said local governments would likely have to raise tax rates to recover revenues lost because of lower property values.
The National Association of Realtors, in a statement released Jan. 31, cited a DRI/McGraw-Hill study that found that under a pure flat tax, home values would lose an average of 15 percent of their value, for a total loss of $1 7 trillion dollars.
Presidential candidate Phil Gramm's flat tax plan would retain the mortgage interest and charitable contribution deductions.
Critics of the various flat tax proposals contend that a flat tax plan would increase the federal deficit.
and estimates run as high as $200 billion per year.
Burress agreed that a flat tax plan would increase the deficit, but was not willing to estimate how much the deficit would be increased.
Other areas of concern include the potential for more cheating on income tax returns by businesses and the loss of health-care deductions for business that might force cuts in benefits.
IRS auditors would have a hard time catching cheaters because less information would be supplied with each return.
Forbes also has been criticized for the unfairness of his plan for the middle class.
"The exemption for investment income would be huge for those with higher incomes," Burress said.
"The majority of income by the top executives would be untouched, since they could exercise stock options."
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General admission tickets are on sale in the Murphy Hall Office Box; public $6, all students $3, senior students $5; for reservations, call 913/864-3982, both Visa and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders; the box office is open from 1 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, and will open at 1:30 and 6:00 on Saturday, February 17.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents
Percussion Master Class February 14, 1996, 5 p.m.
Performance for Students Grades 5-12
Carter School
February 16, 1994 10 a.m.
New Directions Series Event
Led Center
February 15, 1996. 8 p.m.
Gripped by the Drum. Drawn by the Dance
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ENSEMBLE
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STUDENT
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Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS): Murphy Hall Box Office (864-ARTS): Box Office (864-3477) and all Ticketmaster.com tickets to Ticketmaster at (913) 234 6465.
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Oregonians flee from floods
The Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore. — A mountain-side gave way in a rush of mud. Highways vanished beneath caramel-colored floodwaters swirling with uuprated trees and raw sewage. One girl was killed, one woman was reported missing, and thousands of Oregonians were driven from their homes.
And the rain kept falling. As the state's worst flooding in more than three decades threatened to swamp downtown Portland, sandbags and concrete highway dividers formed a thin defense yesterday against the wide Willamette River.
"Water's going everywhere," said Trase Myers, as he and others hurried to stack 40-pound sandbags against a downtown building. "I can't believe the destruction the water has caused."
In the nation's latest extreme weather in a winter of extremes, hundreds of roads — including both of Oregon's cross-state freeways, Interstates 5 and 84 — were closed by high water or mudslides. Amtrak trains were halted. Gov. John Kitzhaber declared 14 counties disas-
terareas.
Amid the deluge, there were water shortages. Muddy floodwaters contaminated drinking-water supplies throughout the valley. Small towns shut down their water plants completely and told residents to buy bottled water.
The flooding is the result of a series of storms that marched in from the Pacific beginning two weeks ago. The first were cold, piling up snow in the mountains that form a scenic backdrop to Portland — the Cascades to the east, the rolling Coast Range to the west.
On Monday, a warmer storm stalled over the state, and the snow started melting, adding to the record levels of rain — more than five inches a day in some areas.
Sparkling mountain streams, narrow enough to jump across two weeks ago, turned monstrous, tearing through the forest, ripping small bridges apart.
As the swollen streams converged in the Willamette River Valley, evergreen trees were ripped out by their roots, bobbing and lunging downstream.
An estimated 1,500 people were
forced from their homes in Eugene, and 12,000 in the Salem area, where a parade of U-Hauls, horse trailers and pickup trucks streamed through the rain.
A 9-year-old girl drowned in a culvert Wednesday when she went out to get the mail near the small Willamette Valley town of Scio.
On the Columbia River east of Portland, a tugboat rescued Harold Jank, 70, from a house that was breaking apart late Wednesday as it raced down the waterway. The tugboat couldn't rescue Jank's wife, Jacqueline, 62; she was reported missing.
In Portland, the Willamette River was expected to breach the city's seawall overnight and crest this morning at 30 feet, 1.2 feet above the seawall's lowest point.
That would equal the level of Portland's last big flood, during the Christmas of 1964, which killed 47 people and left 17,000 people homeless throughout the Northwest.
City workers and volunteers banged nails and lifted plywood sheets into place to erect a barrier extending 2.5 feet over the seawall, but officials expected it would only slow the water down.
Girl receives liver transplant after eating lethal mushrooms
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — A 13-year-old girl who fell ill along with her family after eating lethal "death cap" mushrooms in spaghetti sauce received a liver transplant yc. yesterday.
The family, whose identity was not released, had picked the wild mushrooms Saturday near a reservoir. They sliced up the fungi, which have a strong odor akin to smelly sneakers, combined them with less toxic mushrooms they also had picked, and put them in spaghetti sauce.
Doctors said it was too soon to tell whether the girl's mother and her brothers, ages 11 and 14, also would need new livers. They were in serious condition, and doctors watched for signs of liver breakdown.
By the next morning, four of them
had stomach pains and went to the hospital.
The girl became sickest because her portion contained more of the deadly mushrooms, said William Freedman, an expert with the San Francisco Mycological Society who consulted with the family's doctors.
After an eight-hour operation, the girl was in critical but stable condition, which is normal after a major transplant, said Bill Gordon, a representative at the University of California Medical Center.
"Generally, these are very successful," he said. "They'll watch her over the next couple of hours to see how she does."
Freedman said there was little chance the poison would cause additional harm, because her old liver absorbed most of the toxins.
Rose Ann Soloway of the American Association of Poison Control Centers in Washington said the group received 40 to 50 reports a year of mushroom poisonings, including two deaths since 1993.
Asians are disproportionately victims, especially in California, Freedman said. Several years ago, 12 Laotians were poisoned.
"They must eat a similar mushroom in their country, but we don't know what it is that they think they are eating," Freedman said.
It is often characterized by a metallic green, shiny top, with white or pale gills underneath.
Recent rains in Northern California have provided an ideal, moist environment for the mushroom, the most dangerous in the world, Freedman said.
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6
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 9, 1996
7A
Clinton signs telecommunications bill
The telecommunications bill
Congress and the White House have agreed on a bill that will make sweeping changes in U.S. telecommunications laws. A summary:
CABLE TV
Immediately deregulates rates for customers of cable services with longer lines BOQO subscribers
Immediately deregulate rates for customers on cable systems with less than 50,000 subscribers
Makes it harder for cable customers to contest rates at FCC
Deregulates all others by March 1999 or sooner if a cable company competes against a telephone company for cable customers.
Makes it harder for cable customers to contest rates at FCC
Lets local phone companies others deliver video to homes, businesses
LOCAL PHONE SERVICE
- Long-distance, cable, other companies – including public utilities like electric companies – can offer local phone service
Consumers keep their phone number even if they change their local phone provider.
Companies not allowed to sell local and long-distance service as a package until the Bell company in that area is allowed into long-distance
BROADCASTERS
TV stations get new chunk of airwaves to deliver digital TV signals
UNIVERSAL SERVICE
- Low-income, rural consumers entitled to services at reduced rates, paid for equally by all service providers
- Schools, libraries, rural health care facilities entitled to preferential rates for services
COMPUTER PORN, TV VIOLENCE, SEX
- Outsails transmission of sexually explicit and other indecent materials to minors on computer networks
- Requires TV manufacturers to equip new sets with a computer chip so parents can electronically block shows labeled as offensive
LONG DISTANCE
Local companies must comply with checklist to ensure competition
to ensure competition
FCC can bar the local Bell's entry into long-distance market if it does not serve the public interest
Forbids local Bell companies from providing long-distance service until competition provides local phone service to some customers
Prohibits companies from changing consumers' provider without permission
MEDIA OWNERSHIP
TV company could own stations that reach up to 35% of TV viewers
Companies could own more radio stations locally than they can now
Lifts law that bans one company from owning a TV station and cable system in one market
WASHINGTON President Clinton signed legislation yesterday that he said would bring the future to our doorstep by opening new forms of communication through telephones, TV sets and computers.
The Associated Press
Surrounded by books, some more than 200 years old, at the Library of Congress, Clinton signed the bill both the old-fashioned way and the high-tech way — first using a regular pen and then an electronic one.
"Today, with a stroke of a pen, our laws will catch up with our future," the president said.
The law is already under legal attack by groups opposing an antindecency provision.
Opponents, mostly consumer groups, also say more jobs will be lost than gained through consolidation and that cable and telephone rates will rise because the level of competition envisioned by supporters will not emerge.
The bill will let local and long-distance phone companies and cable companies into each others' businesses, deregulate cable rates and allow media companies to expand their holdings more easily.
SOURCE: Knight-Ridder Tribune
Supporters say the measure will boost jobs, expand consumer choices and potentially lower prices for cable, telephone and other communications services.
"This new law is truly revolutionary legislation that will bring the future to our doorstep," Clinton said.
Just hours after the signing, AT&T Corp. Chairman Robert Allen described plans to expand into the local telephone market as early as this summer. Allen said he thought the company could win at least one third of the $90 billion local phone market in five to 10 years.
The law, for the first time, outlaws transmission of indecent and other sexually explicit materials to minors through computer networks. It also would require new TV sets to be equipped with a special computer chip to allow parents to electronically block programs electronically rated for violent and other objectionable content.
"With freedom, comes responsibility," said Clinton, who is to meet with members of the TV industry Feb. 29 in part to persuade them to rate their programs. If they don't, the chin is useless.
The American Civil Liberties Union and other groups are challenging the anti-indecency provision. They say it is too broad and would outlaw electronic transmissions of legal speech, including literature such as Catcher in the Rye, some rap lyrics, and some contend, discussions of abortion.
With the signing, portions of the Internet went into virtual mourning to protest the provision, with some changing the background color of their World Wide Web pages to black.
Supporters, including the Christian Coalition, say the provision legally regulates indecent speech to protect children.
The ceremony took on a humorous note, as Vice President Al Gore bantered on the telephone with comedian Lily Tomlin, playing her familiar role as telephone operator Ernestine.
"A gracious hello," Ernestine said, her digitized face glowing from a TV monitor on stage. "Have I reached the party to whom I am speaking?" To Clinton, she said, "I can just see the headlines: Bill signs bill."
The new law, Clinton said, "clearly enables the age of possibility in America to expand to include more Americans. It will create many, many high-wage jobs. It will provide for more information and more entertainment to virtually every American home."
But the Consumer Federation of America and Consumers Union claim the law will consolidate the $700 billion telecommunication industry so that four or five companies eventually will control Americans' access to communications, news and entertainment.
"There will be some consolidation," Gore told The Associated Press. "But there also will be new entries into the competition." He said provisions in the bill would protect against undue concentration.
"The truth shall make you free." John 8:32 Come to hear a speaker who is famous for telling the truth Dr. Joycelyn Elders Former U.S. Surgeon General
"American Health Care Crisis: My Cure"
Tuesday, February 13th 9:00 a.m. Lied Center West Campus, University of Kansas (access off 19th & Iowa)
Don't miss it!
Admission free
Reception follows
Pol. Adv.
This event co-sponsored by: University of Kansas Office of Minority Affairs,
Multicultural Resource Center at K.U., and Citizens for Dialogue.
For additional information call: 864-4351 or 843-7107
BACON ON THE DOUBLE.
The University of Kansas
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Music and Dance
7:30 p.m.
Monday, February 12, 1996
Lied Center
Paul Garner.
Dallas Symphony Orchestra
clarinet soloist
KU Symphonic Band Robert E. Foster, conductor
At Participating locations. ©1996 Taco Bell Corp
General admission tickets are on sale in the KU box offices: Murphy Hall, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; SUA Office, 864-3477; public $5, students and senior citizens $3; both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders.
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Survival
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If you want to get
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then come to this meeting. Your
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Tuesday, February 13
8:00 pm. Rm. 150
Robinson Gymnasium
For more information: KV Recreation Services, 984-35-46
February 9th at the Holiday Inn from 9:00 p.m. til 2:00 a.m.
$4.00 cover charge
Valentine's Party
International Students Association
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1020 MASS • LAWRENCE • KANSAS
V
4)
The Shape of Affirmative Action
The policy aimed at equality has become the target of debate. Other universities have denied its usefulness. But U persues its concepts of diversity.
Picasso
Story by Susanna Lööf
Illustration by Ross Sit
o Chris Howard, affirmative action is a stack of cash that helps him catch up with the other players in a game of Monopoly. It is a me that began years ago, a
Malone, it is an obstacle preventing the best people from getting jobs.
The sensitive topic of affirmative action was debated Tuesday night at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. About 40 people
attended the debate, called "Affirmative Action — Does It Heal Or Hurt?," which
was part of African-American History Month. Most
an history Month. Most of the people thought that the policy healed more than it hurt.
Howard, Lawrence junior, presented his Monopoly theory during a group discussion that followed the debate.
meant to make the playing field equal."
"All affirmative action does is let me have a chance," he said. "Affirmative action is
Malone to make the playing field equal.
Malone, Linwood senior, did not attend the debate, but she said she thought affirmative action did more harm than good.
"When they first put it into effect, it was really good because it opened a lot of doors to women and minorities," she said. "But now those doors are open, and we need to rely on our abilities." Affirmative action is harmful because it could prevent employers form hiring the best person for the
job, she said.
"Personally, I would not want to be hired simply because I was a woman," she said. "I would want to be hired on my merit."
Maggle Wilson, Lawrence freshman, shares that opinion.
lege campuses across the nation since the University of California abolished its affirmative
Affirmative action has been a hot topic on col-
tive action policy in July. Students at University of California's nine camp pu es s responded with
rallies and walks out to protest the decision. Four students at the University of California at Irvine went on hunger strikes. After 15 days, the students ended their protest, but the decision to abolish the policy stood firm. In a November 1995 interview in The Los Angeles Times, Richard Atkinson president of the University of California, said that California still was committed to reaching out
jin
to the state's minor-
ties, even though the affirmative action policy had been abolished.
The University of Kansas won't follow the University of California's example, said Maurice Bryan, assistant executive vice chancellor and director c Office of Affirmative Action.
Shaping a Definition:
Affirmative action was created in 1965 when President Lyndon Johnson issued an executive order that required anyone receiving federal money to develop a program that promoted equality.
KU's affirmative action program includes:
■ aggressive recruitment of minorities.
■ education about policies such as sexual harassment rules.
■ retention programs encouraging women and minorities to stay at KU.
■ nondiscriminating policies.
"California's problems aren't relevant to
of
Kansas," he said. "California was challenged because of the large number of minorities. Our real challenge is to get more minorities to come here."
Before affirmative action was abolished in California, minority students had an advantage that stu-
minorities didn't have.
But that doesn't happen here, said Deborah Boulware, director of admissions.
Source: Office of Affirmative Action
"Students are all treated the same, regardless of race," she said. "We apply the same standard to all students."
However, she said that the Office of Admissions was trying to attract more minority students by informing them about
the University
Bryan said affirmative action made the University a better institution, though he said he should be done to recruit minority faculty.
Many KU students have never encountered affirmative action personally. Malone said she expected it to be more of an issue when she entered the real world and applied for jobs.
But an increasing number of the internships available through the University Placement Center are geared toward minorities and women specifically, said Kim Scarbrough, internship coordinator.
"It is happening more frequently, but it is still the option to the rule," she said.
Companies such as Hallmark Cards, State Farm Insurance and the Dow Jones Newspaper Fund have internship programs geared towards minority students, she said.
Scarbrough said she thought minority internship programs might open new possibilities to minorities and might help compa-
had become more diverse. But she said she thought companies that
had internship programs available for all students also were important
were important.
"I want to be able to offer all students internships," she said. Despite the recent attacks on affirmative action, Bryan said the University would remain committed to the concept.
"It enriches the conversation that occurs in the classroom," he said. "I believe it will help us be a better educational institution."
ents
ents
nt
ve
ne
dhe
ver-
'I
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PRESIDENTIAL BUILDING
Hill topics
36 40 52
Hill topics
Tonight
The Deal with Purple Schoolbus, 10 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $4-$5.
Craig Akin House Band, 10 p.m. at Full Moon Cafe, 803 Massachusetts St.Free.
Redeye Rotgut, blues, 9 p.m. at Boomer's Smokehouse and Saloon, 601 Kasold Drive, Free.
Hit-it and Quit with Doctor Spit, 10
p.m. at The Jazzhouses of Lawrence, 926
1/2 Massachusetts St. Cost: $3.
Menthol with Triple Fast Action, 9
p.m. at Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St. Cost: $3.
Fast Johnny, 9 p.m. at Johnnie's Tavern,
401 N. Second St. Cost: $2.
SDI, 9:30 p.m. at Grand Emporium, 3832 Main, Kansas City, Mo. Cover charge.
Nightlife topics
Tomorrow
Citizen King with Bastard Squad, 10
p.m. at the Bottleneck. Cost: $4-$5.
Turquoise Sol, 10 p.m. at Full Moon Cafe. Free.
Justin Case, 10 p.m. at The Jazzhaus of Lawrence. Cost: $3.
Interurban Express, jazz, 9 p.m. at Boomer's Smokehouse and Saloon Free.
Fast Johnny, 9 p.m. at Johnnie's Tavern.
Cost: $2.
Carolyn Wonderland and the Imperial Monkeys with Blue Museum, 8:30 p.m. at Grand Emporium. Cover charge.
Tim Nelson Benefit featuring Shallow, The What Gives, Danger Bob and Dorothy. 8 p.m. at The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. St.Cost. $5-$6.
Sunday
Sherry Jackson with Acoustic Juice,
10 p.m. at The Bottleneck. Cost: $3-$4
Too Slim and the Taildraggers, 9 p.m. at Grand Emporium. Cover charge.
Monday
Open Mic-Night, 9 p.m at The Bottle neck. Free.
Billy Goat with Good Puss and Pornhuskers, 9:30 p.m. at Grand Emporium. Cover charge.
Tuesday
Edwin McCain Band with Jewel, 10 p.m. at The Bottleneck. Advance tickets: $8.
Poetry Jam with Matt Fowler, 8 p.m.
at Full Moon Cafe. Free.
( )
4
4
COLLEGE BASKETBALL Dayton center Chris Daniels is dead after suffering a heart attack early yesterday morning. Page 2.
SPORTS
U N I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1996
Wanted: women's support
As a member of the Kansas women's basketball team, I have decided that some things never cease to amaze me.
Here we are, tied for first place in the final year of the Big Eight Conference, and although we have the ability, determination and desire to be the 1996 Big Eight champions, we still lack one very important factor
GUEST COLUMNIST
TAMECKA
DIVON
Not just fans that sit and watch the game with a passing interest, but fans who cheer, yell and intimidate the opponent. Fans who complain when the officials make bad calls and read newspapers when the opponent is introduced. Fans that storm their feet
My teammates and I know that the University of Kansas breeds this type of fan. We see them every time we attend a men's game. We know you are basketball crazy. We know you understand the game.
We wish you would give us a chance.
So far this season, the women basketball team has played five Big Eight teams on the road. And each time the situation was the same. More than 3,000 people showed up to encourage and support their home team.
I won't make excuses about why we lost to Missouri last weekend. But I will say that the Tigers should give part of the credit to their fans. I can't stress enough how much it helps to hear "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk" echoing through Allen Field House and how much we look to fans to keep us focused in the close games.
We need you. We want you to be there. We want you to be a part of the final season of Big Eight women's basketball.
This is the last chance we have to be Big Eight champions. We have defeated two nationally-ranked teams, one of them — Oklahoma State — right here at home. Yet we had only 1,278 supporters. That's not enough.
We are a part of your everyday life,
and we want you to be a part of ours.
Most of those people live in the Lawrence community. My teammates and I would love to see our fellow classmates in the stands. We pass you as we walk through campus. We see you in class. We study with you for exams.
We run out on the court everyday wearing "Kansas" on our backs, representing you to the best of our ability. Sometimes we win, sometimes wlose.
I speak on behalf of all my teammates when I ask each and every one of you to give us a chance. We have only three home games left. Please don't miss an opportunity to help us defeat our Big Eight rivals.
At this point I would like to challenge every student at KU to come watch us play. I know we won't disappoint you.
You may even want to come back. But don't disregard us until you have seen what we can do.
And based on what I have seen so far, with your help, we can do a lot.
Editor's note: Tamecka Dixon is a Linden, N.J., junior majoring in child psychology.
ine Kansas women's basketball team will play Iowa State at 7 p.m. tonight and Nebraska at 2 p.m. on Sunday. Both games are in Allen Field House.
SECTION B
Admission is free for all students with a valid KUID.
INSIDE:
MICHAEL EVERS: The junior decathlete is determined to have a better year in 1996 after an injury last season. Page 4.
JAYNAWKS MEET MISSOUR:
The No. 3 Kansas men's basketball team will put its 7-0 Big Eight Conference to the test against Missouri tomorrow in Columbia, Mo. Page 3.
4
K STATE
21
K STATE
41
K STATE
5
K STATE
37
K STATE
12
K STATE
35
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
After being a starter for his entire basketball career, Kansas freshman guard Ryan Robertson has been getting used to spending more time on the bench as a first-year Jayhawk. "I've accepted the fact that this year we're so good," he said. "It's best for me to sit back and use practice to get better"
Finding time for everything
Life is much more than basketball for Robertson
By Jenni Carlson
Kansas sportswriter
Ryan Robertson's reaction is a reflex.
The Jayhawks are up by nine points against Kansas State when Jacque Vaughn picks up his fourth foul. All eyes on the bench turn to Rov Williams.
Williams points, and Robertson twitches toward the scorer's table. But the call isn't for him.
Senior guard Calvin Rayford peels off his warm-up and shuffles toward midcourt.
Sitting on the bench is not something Robertson, a freshman guard from St. Charles, Mo., is accustomed to.
A McDonald's All-American in high school, he has been the star since his father taught him, at age three, how to dribble with both hands in their garage.
Now Robertson is the Jayhawks' 11th man, backing up the first- and second-string point and shooting guards.
"I've accepted the fact that this year we're so good," Robertson said. "It's best for me to sit back and use practice to get better."
However, it's not an easy role to accept. Robertson is sometimes disheartened about his lack of playing time, said Brandon Jett, his close friend.
Robertson grew up in a Christian environment. His parents, Angie and Johnny, made sure of that.
"He understands but still gets discouraged about it," said Jett, who attends St. Louis Community College at Meramec in Kirkwood, Mo. "But his faith is so strong. Everything he does, he thinks about God first."
Angie Robertson, a high school French teacher, said she and her husband, a home builder. never emphasized winning.
"Of course we get disappointed about losing," she said. "We just try to remember that the Lord is in control."
"No matter what happens in those fields, I can always turn to Him and say, "This is it. I'm at the bottom. I'm not going to make it," Robertson said. "I can't say enough about how much His relationship has meant to me. I just don't understand how other people can make it through."
That kind of trust hasn't changed on the court or in the classroom since Robertson came to Kansas in August.
But before last semester, Robertson had wondered about making it through. Like many first-year college students, he had worried about being away from home.
Three months before he came, he told his mother, "I'm not going to be able to do this. I'm going to miss you guys too bad."
Robertson, who hasn't been in St. Charles
See ROBERTSON, Page 3.
It's home sweet home for women's team
Kansan sportswriter
By Evan Blackwell
There's no place like home.
The Jayhawks, who enter the weekend in a first place tie with Colorado and Oklahoma State, hope some of the comforts of home will help them hang on to the lead.
That has been the feeling with the Kansas women's basketball team as they return to Allen Field House this weekend. The Jayhawks last home game was Jan. 21 against Oklahoma State.
Kansas, 13-8 overall and 6-3 in the Big Eight Conference, will play Iowa State tonight and Nebraska Sunday afternoon.
4
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Iowa State sophomore center Jayme Olson has been the main weapon for the Cyclones, averaging
"We're always glad to come home," Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said.
Iowa State comes to Lawrence with an overall record of 15-6, but the Cyclones have struggled in the Big Eight at 3-6. Kansas ripped Iowa State 75-51 on Jan. 14 in Ames, Iowa, but Washington said the Cyclones have improved since that meeting.
"I really think they're playing a lot better," Washington said. "Their post people have become much more involved."
16. 1 points and 8.2 rebounds a game.
Fennelly said the Cyclones would try to play the spoiler role to perfection.
Iowa State women's basketball coach Bill Fennelly said his team will enter tonight's game with something to prove to themselves.
The Jayhawks have won ten consecutive games against Iowa State, leading the all-time series 29-7. The last Cyclone victory against Kansas was five years ago.
"On the road, sometimes you just try and hand on as long as you can,
"Kansas has never had trouble with Iowa State," Fennelly said. "We need to prove that we can play with them.
Kansas will try for the season sweep of the Cornhuskers on Sunday. The Jayhawks beat Nebraska 74-71 on Jan. 12 in Lincoln, Neb. The Cornhuskers remain one game behind the conference leaders at 15-6 overall and 5-4 in the Big Eight.
and hope the ball bounces your way, "Fennelly said.
Kansas junior guard Tamecka Dixon said she remembered how tough the win in Lincoln was.
"They've turned some heads this season," she said. "They've played some tough teams. Very tough."
Dixon said that her team would have to take advantage of the home court and take out the Cornhuskers early.
"We have to take away their confidence early in the game," Dixon said.
Washington said Nebraska presented many problems to its opponents.
"They've got great quickness, and they've got a very experienced player inside in Pyra Aarden," Washington said.
Aarden, a senior players averaging 13.7 points and 5.9 rebounds a game, teams up with junior forward Tina McClain to form a powerful front-court. McClain leads Nebraska with 14.1 points and 6.6 rebounds a game.
"They're playing extremely well," Washington said. "We're going to have our hands full."
Play ball! Jayhawks swing into season opener
By Dan Geiston Kansan sportswriter
By definition, a duel is a struggle for domination between two persons or groups.
"It's just one more team we have a chance of beating," Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall said.
However, there are three baseball teams playing in this weekend's Duel in the Desert in Grand Canyon, Ariz.
Baseball is back as Kansas begins its 1996 season against New Mexico State at 3 p.m. today.
Baseball
It's the first of three games Kansas will play in Arizona. The Jayhawks face Grand Canyon tomorrow and New Mexico State again on Sunday.
Opening weekend will have a special significance for at least two Jayhawks.
Bobby Randall will make his debut as Kansas coach. He comes from Iowa State, where he compiled a 309-311-1 record in 11 seasons.
Randall said he was excited about getting back on the field.
"There will be butterflies of excitement," he said. "I can't wait to get out on that field. Not because it's my first game, but because these kids are ready to go out and play."
One Jayhawk who has been more than ready
to go out and play is tomorrow's starting pitcher, Kansas junior Aric Peters.
Peters suffered a season-ending elbow injury after pitching just five innings in 1995.
This year, he says he's healthy and ready to show Kansas what he can do.
He's been tapped as the No.1 pitcher by Randall, but that doesn't seem to faze him.
Grand Canyon (2-4) beat San Diego State for
"I'm not worried about being a No. 1," Peters said. "The only pressure I really feel is for me to do the best that I know I'm capable of."
New Mexico State and Grand Canyon have started their seasons, while Kansas, 24-33 last year, has yet to play a game.
New Mexico State (1-2) got its first taste of Big Eight Conference play last weekend in a three-game series with Nebraska.
happen in the next week, but Randall won't use that as an excuse.
both its victories.
But more than the lack of practice time, Kansas will hope to overcome the road woes that plagued them last year. They were an abysmal 5-20 away from Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
"I'd like to have an extra week, actually," he said. "It's a test for us physically. But there are no excuses. There never in this game."
Kansas just started practicing outside this week, but Randall won't use that as an excuse.
"I can't really point to a reason why we were so bad," Kansas senior second baseman Josh Kliner said. "I think if we're a good team, and play like we can, that will take care of our road problems."
Randall had another solution.
---
"Don't travel, he said, laughing.
2B
Friday, February 9, 1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Big Eight Conference Men's Standings
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
| | W | L | Pct. | W | L | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 7 | 0 | 1.000 | 19 | 1 | .950 |
| Iowa St. | 5 | 2 | .714 | 16 | 5 | .762 |
| Kansas St. | 5 | 4 | .556 | 14 | 7 | .667 |
| Missouri | 4 | 4 | .500 | 14 | 8 | .636 |
| Oklahoma | 4 | 4 | .500 | 13 | 8 | .619 |
| Nebraska | 4 | 3 | .375 | 13 | 8 | .652 |
| Colorado | 2 | 6 | .250 | 7 | 12 | .386 |
| Oklah. St. | 2 | 6 | .143 | 11 | 3 | .679 |
Tomorrow's Games
TOMORROW KATHES
Nebraska at Iowa State, 12:47 p.m.
Kansas State at Oklahoma State, 12:47 p.m.
Mississippi State at Oklahoma, 3 p.m.
Kansas at Missouri, 3 p.m.
Missouri-Kansas City at Colorado, 3 p.m.
No.3 Kansas at Missouri
Hearnes Center — Columbia, Mo.
TV: Channels 4, 13
Radio: 80.7 105.0 FM
RADIO: 90.7, 105.
leyhauke (10.1.7.0)
Rainey Hawkins (19-1, 50)
34 Paul Pierce F 6-6 Fr.
35 Raaf LaFrentz F 6-11 So.
36 Scot Pollar C 6-10 Jr.
37 Jacque Vaughn G 6-1 Jr.
38 Jerod Haase G 6-3 Jr.
Missouri Tigers (14-8, 4-4)
39 Kelly Thames F F-6-8 So.
42 Derek Grimm F-6-10 Jr.
45 Simone Haley C-7-0 Jr.
5 Jason Sutherland G-6-1 Jr.
13 Julian Winfield G-6-4 Jr.
Big Eight Conference Women's Standings
Conference Altitudes W L Pct. W L Pct. Okla. St. 6 3 .667 19 5 .762 Colorado 6 3 .667 16 5 .760 Kansas 6 3 .667 13 8 .619 Nebraska 5 4 .556 13 8 .614 Missouri 4 5 .444 13 8 .619 Iowa St. 5 3 .333 15 8 .614 Oklahoma 3 6 .333 11 10 .524 Kansas St. 3 6 .333 11 10 .478
Tonight's Games
Iowa State at Kansas, 7 p.m.
Nebraska at Kansas State, 7 p.m.
Tomorrow's Game
Missouri at Colorado, 7 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Iowa State at Kansas State, 2 p.m.
Nebraska at Kansas, 2 p.m.
Oklahoma at Oklahoma State, 2 p.m.
Allen Field House — Lawrence
Iowa State at Kansas
33 Tamecka Dixon G G 5-9 Jr.
34 Charisse Sampson G G 5-10 Sr.
30 Angie Halbleb G G 5-10 Sr.
51 Jennifer Trapp F C 6-1 Jr.
43 Nakia Sanford C C 6-3 Fr.
Iowa State Cyclones (15-6, 3-6)
22 Tara Gunderson G 5-8 Jr.
10 Kim Martin G 5-8 Jr.
24 Julie Hand F 5-10 Jr.
25 Janel Grimm F C 6-1 So.
29 Jayme Oelson C 6-1 So.
Nebraska at Kansas
Allen Field House - Lawrence
Allen Field House
Kansas City, KS 713-629-8000
33 Tamecka Dixon G G-5-9 Jr.
3 Charisse Sampson G G-5-10 Sr.
30 Angle Halbleib G G-5-10 Jr.
51 Jennifer Trapp F G-6-1 Jr.
53 Nikla Sandon F C-6-3 Fr.
Nebraska Cornhuskers (15-6, 5-4)
**Nebraska & Co. Commissions (10-6, 5-4)**
**11** Liz Brendan G 5-6 Sr.
**12** Kate Galligan G 5-8 Sr.
**13** Anna DeForge G/F 5-11 Sr.
**14** Tina McClain F 5-10 Jr.
**15** Pyra Aarden C 6-4 Sr.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Kansas Baseball
Probable Starters for the Duel in the Desert in Grand Canyon, AZ
Friday 3 p.m. Kansas (Josh Belovsky, 1-0,
5.56 with Texas Tech '95) vs. New Mexico
State (Jeremy Stewart, 0-1, 12.16)
Saturday 11 a.m. Kansas (Aric Peters, 0-0,
14.80 '95) vs. Grand Canyon (Tim Huff, 0-0,
3.60)
Sunday 10 a.m. Kansas (Clay Baird, 3-7, 8.27 '95) vs. New Mexico State (Anthony Pratt, 1-0,00)
PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L T Pts GF GA
N.Y. Rangers 32 12 10 74 199 150
Florida 33 15 6 72 187 147
Philadelphia 26 15 11 63 187 136
Washington 26 21 5 57 147 135
New Jersey 23 22 7 53 134 127
Tampa Bay 22 21 8 85 152 169
N.Y. Islands 14 30 8 36 152 202
Pittsburgh 32 17 4 6 8 245 177
Montreal 27 21 6 6 8 145 174
Boston 22 22 7 5 51 181 185
Hartford 21 25 6 6 48 149 166
Buffalo 22 28 3 47 154 171
Ottawa 9 42 2 20 119 211
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L P Teps GF GA
Detroit 37 10 4 78 189 111
Chicago 30 15 11 71 195 146
Central Division
TV
SPORTS WATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Friday. (schedule subject to change and-or blackout)
(All times Central)
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9
Noon
**ESPN2** - Auto racing, qualifying for the ARCA Bondo/Mat-Hyde Supercar 200, practice for the Winton 120. **RACE** at Daytona Beach, FL.
■ ESPN — Senior PGA Golf,
Greater Naples Challenge, first round,
at Naples, Fla.
ESPN — PGA Golf. Buck Invitational of California, second round, at La Jolla, Calif.
PRIME — NCAA Hockey, Vermont at Colgate
ESPN — PBA Bowling, Reno
Open @ PBA
Louisiana Tech at W. Kentucky
■ ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball,
Louisiana Tech at W. Kentucky
HBO — Boxing, Junior Weller-
weights at Las Vegas, Julio Cesar
Chavez (96-1-1) vs. Scott Walker (21-
3-1); Oscar De La Hoya (20-0-0) or
Darryl Tyson (47-8-1).
ESPN2 — Women's NCAA Basketball, Southern Miss. at DePaul
ESPN — Tennis, Davis Cup, first round, best singles match A or B, Mexico vs. U.S., at Carlsbad, Calif. (delayed tape)
Toronto 23 21 9 55 158 158
St. Louis 21 21 9 51 141 154
Winnipeg 22 26 4 48 184 181
Dallas 15 27 11 41 181 183
Pacific Division
Colorado 29 15 10 68 212 150
Vancouver 19 21 13 51 192 180
Calgary 20 23 10 50 153 160
Los Angeles 17 25 12 46 180 192
Edmonton 18 27 6 42 136 192
Anaeheim 18 30 5 41 146 177
San Jose 18 35 5 29 166 237
N.Y. Rangers 6, N.Y. Islanders 2
Buffalo 2, Philadelphia 1
Florida 3, Detroit 1
Chicago 6, St. Louis 1
Yesterday's Games
Rated Games Not Included
Late Games Not Included
angers 6, N.Y. Islanders
Winnipeg 6, Ottawa 2
Whimpey, O. Chalwa
Washington at Calgary, (n)
Toronto at Los Angeles, (n)
Tomorrow's Games
Hartford at Colorado, 8 p.m.
Vancouver at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m.
Tonight's Games
Anaheim at N. Y. Islanders, noon
Philadelphia at Boston, 2 p.m.
Chicago at Pittsburgh, 2 p.m.
N. Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 2 p.m.
Detroit at Tampa Bay, 2 p.m.
Detroit at Los Angeles, 2 p.m.
St Louis at St. Louis, 6:30 p.m.
Ottawa at Montreal, 6:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Toronto, 6:30 p.m.
Winnipipe at Calgary, 7 p.m.
Washington at Vancouver, 9:30 p.m.
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
| | W | L | Pct GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Orlando | 34 | 14 | .708 — |
| New York | 30 | 16 | .652 3 |
| Washington | 22 | 24 | .476 11 |
| Miami | 22 | 26 | .458 12 |
| New Jersey | 18 | 29 | .383 15½ |
| Boston | 17 | 30 | .362 16½ |
| Philadelphia | 9 | 36 | .200 23½ |
Chicago 42 5 894 —
Indiana 31 16 160
Cleveland 26 20 565 15/8
Atlanta 26 21 553 16
Detroit 23 22 511 18
Charlotte 22 24 478 19/8
Milwaukee 18 27 400 23
Toronto 13 34 277 29
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
| | W | L | Pct GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| San Antonio | 31 | 14 | 14.88 |
| Utah | 32 | 16 | .667 ½ |
| Houston | 31 | 18 | .633 2 |
| Denver | 20 | 27 | .426 12 |
| Dallas | 16 | 30 | .348 15½ |
| Minnesota | 13 | 32 | .289 18 |
| Vancouver | 13 | 30 | .213 22 |
Seattle 34 12 739 —
L.A. Lakers 38 12 739 —
Sacramento 24 24 545 9
Portland 24 24 500 11
Portland 24 24 500 11
Golden State 21 16 447 13½
L.A. Clippers 21 16 333 13½
Charlotte 115, Sacramento 105
Atlanta 98, Washington 92
Boston 96, Clippers 95
Denver 136, Utah 124
New York 119
New Jersey 102
No games scheduled
Tomorrow's Games
No games scheduled
Sunday's Game
Sunday's Game
All-Star Game at San Antonio, 5 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS
Thursday's Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON RED SOX—Signed Wili Cordero,
inlet to a contract for the 1997 season with
CALIFORNIA ANGELS—Agreed to terms with Eduardo Perez, Intelliger, and Ken Eden.
CLEVELAND INDIANS—Agreed to terms with Dave Gallagher, outfielder, on a minor-league contract and invited him to spring training.
SEATTLE MARINER—Agreed to terms with Dean Crow, Tim Hilinkahk, Derek Lowe and Paul Merhart, pitchers, and Glomar Guvara. And Andy Sheils, infielders on one-year contracts.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Agreed to terms with Mike Gordon, Ken Robinson, Mark Selvert, and Joe Silva, pilchers; D.J. Boston, Tilson Birto, and Carlos Delgado, infielders; Angel Ramirez and Shannon Stewart, outfielders; and Julio Mosquera, catcher.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES—Agreed to terms with Jermaine Dye and Lee Daniels, outfielders, and Terrell Wade, pitcher, on one-year contracts. HOUSTON ASTROS—Named Leslie Leary assistant to the director of player development. NEW YORK METS—Signed John Carter, Pete Walker, Wallace, pitchers, and Terrell Lowery, outfielder, on one-year contracts.
SAN FRANCISCO IGCI Signed Mei
half, outfielder, and Malcolm Ogea,
first baseman.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
NEWYORK KNICKS—Traded Charles Smith and Monty Williams, forwards, to the San Antonio Spurs for Brad Lohaus, center, J.R. Reid, forward, and a 1996 first-round draft pick.
USA BASKETBALL—Named Eric Neubatl
counsel and assistant executive direc-
tor of the American Soccer League.
National Football League
PITTSBURGH STEELEERS—Named Mike Mularek tights coach.
National Hockey League
BUFFALO SABRES—Sent Brian Holzinger, center to Rochester of the AHI.
COLORADO AVALANCHE—Reassigné
Aaron Elles, goaltender, from Cornwall of the AHL to Brantford of the Colonial Hockey League, and Brent Brekke, defenseman, from Cornwall of the AHL to Dayton of the ECHL.
EDMONTON OILERS—Recalled Ralph Intranuvo, left wing, and Greg DeVries, defensman, from Cape Breton of the AHL.
DALLAS STARS - Sent Robert Petrovicky,
forward, to Michigan of the IHL.
NOTES & QUOTES
Kansas men's tennis player Enrique Abaroa defeated Fredrik Giers of Fresno State 6-1, 6-2 yesterday at the 1996 National Intercollegiate Indoor Tennis Champiohips in Dallas.
Giers is the No. 3 singles player in the country, Abaroa is No. 13. Abaroa will meet either Steven Baldas of Georgia or Boris Kodjoe of Virginia Commonwealth today.
Kansas junior Kylie Hunt also won yesterday, defeating Sophie Woorons of Clemson, 6-2, 6-4. Hunt and Jenny Atkerson also won their doubles match with Colleen Lucey and Melissa Zimpher of Wisconsin, 6-4, 7-5.
DAYTON, Ohio — He practiced with the team Wednesday and later said he felt fine. Hours later, University of Dayton center Chris Daniels was dead.
Daniels, 22, was pronounced dead at Miami Valley Hospital at 5:31 a.m. He had arrived in "full cardiac arrest" after being rushed from his campus-area home in an ambulance and could not be resuscitated, said hospital spokeswoman Julie Weber.
Montgomery County Coroner James Davis said cause of death could not be determined from preliminary autopsy results. He said no drugs or alcohol were in Daniels' system.
Sent Ryan Smith, left wing, to Cape Breton for conditioning.
HARTFORD WHALERS—Recalled Manny
george, goaltender, from Springfield of the
NHL.
PITTUSHBURG PENGUINS—Sent Len Barie, center, to Cleveland of the IHL.
SAN JOSE SHARKS—Recalled Alexei Yegorov, center, from Kansas City of the IHL. Sent Larry Dyck, goale, to Kansas City.
WINNIPEG JETS—Placed Igor Korolev, left wing, on the injured list.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 9, 1996
3B
ROBERTSON: Faith comes first
Continued from Page 1.
for five months, stared at the wall across the room.
"I can honestly say there's never been one day that I've been home-sick or cried at night," he said.
He hasn't had much time to be homebesick. Playing basketball for the nation's No. 3 team involves five or six hours of practice, lifting weights and watching videotape every day. Although Robertson said everything revolved around basketball, he can still take time out for ESPN's SportsCenter.
"In the morning when it's on, I watch it four times in a row. Every time I'll just laugh at the same jokes," Robertson said. "And I am the biggest ER fan on campus."
Being able to balance basketball and school has always been second nature. St. Charles West High School boys' basketball coach Terry Hollander said Robertson maintained a 4.0 grade point average, participated in clubs such as Drug Abuse Rehabilitation Education and Fellowship of Christian Athletes and then began acting in school plays during his junior year.
Robertson wasn't afraid to try any
thing. Even if it meant wearing red tights when he played the Knave of Hearts in "Alice in Wonderland."
Kansas and Williams first noticed Robertson at summer camp and built a relationship with him from that time on.
"I knew in my heart the whole time KU was for me," Robertson said. "The last three weeks before I signed, Missouri just flooded me. My judgment may have gotten a little clouded at the end because they were recruiting so hard."
In addition to sending two or three Federal Express packages each day, Missouri coach Norm Stewart went so far as to visit Robertson's mother at work.
"Then he came and ate lunch with me one day — sat with my friends at the lunch table." Robertson said.
But Stewart's lunchtime recruiting didn't cut the mustard. Robertson signed with the Jayhawks during the early fall signing period.
Angie Robertson said that immediately after her son's decision to leave Missouri, callers on sports talk shows started on in Ryan.
In time, those sentiments have died down. Part of that could have been because St. Charles West was in the middle of a 30-2 season — a
run that would take the Warriors to the Missouri state championship.
"The fact that we won was great," Robertson said. "But the fact that I was able to make other people so happy was fantastic. I had grown men coming up to me, crying."
More than one Robertson was a part of that championship. Robertson's younger brother, Troy, was a junior on the team. Now he leads the Warriors and is headed to St. Louis University next year.
"He's a little bit bulker than I am where I'm a little bit quicker than he is," Robertson said. "We've had some brawls on the court before. But Troy makes me laugh more than anybody in the world."
Laughing may not have always been easy for him this year, but Robertson remains positive and has kept everything in perspective.
"I'm really protective about being humble," Robertson said. "There was a time in high school that I was perceived as kind of cocky or arrogant. That really hurt."
But it doesn't hurt to plan for the future a little.
"I may be the 11th man this year, but next season, I may be sixth," Robertson said. "It's a dream of mine to be able to start."
Robertson returns to home state
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
Ryan Robertson's return to Missouri has a new twist.
The freshman guard may back up starting point guard Jacque Vaughn during the third-ranked Jayhawks' game tomorrow, which tips off at 3:05 p.m. at the Hearnes Center in Columbia, Mo. That is due to an injury sustained by senior guard Calvin Rayford.
"Whether I get to back up Jacque or whether Calvin can play, I'll be ready to play," said Robertson, who sustained an injury of his own Wednesday. Junior forward Scot Pollard's elbow cut Robertson on the left temple, requiring four stitches.
Rayford hyperextended several
toes during Wednesday's 89-70 victory against Iowa State, which improved Kansas' record to 19-1 and 7-0 in the Big Eight Conference. The injury occurred when Rayford slid into the visitors' bench late in the game.
He spent much of yesterday on crutches. No decision on Rayford's availability will be made until today, said Kansas coach Roy Williams.
But even before Rayford's injury, Robertson had circled tomorrow's game on his calendar, he said.
After Missouri lost Robertson to Kansas, Missouri coach norm Stempart retaliated. Stewart told Robertson's father to go put on his blue jacket when the two met at a speech last year.
Robertson said. "But I have a feeling my reaction at Mizzou is going to be very, very violent."
If Robertson erupts during tomorrow's game it could be reminiscent of junior center Scot Pollard during last year's game at Missouri. Pollard scored a career-high 22 points.
To repeat that kind of performance, Pollard will have to go through 7-foot Simeon Haley and his twin brother, 7-1 Sanmie.
"I like playing against guys who are big," Pollard said. "I don't change the way I play, but it's definitely easier to get excited for the game."
LINEUPS: Starters for tomorrow's Kansas-Missouri men's basketball game. Scores & More, Page 2.
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4B
Friday, February 9.1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Horoscopes
Today's Birthday (Feb. 9). Make imaginative plans for this year, beginning right now. Invest in something old in March. Romance is excellent in April, but you may want to wait until October to enter into a legal agreement. Choose a partner in August to build what you design. In October, send your manuscript to the publisher and/or travel to exotic lands. Give special special away in December. A scheme set in motion now could pay off next January.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You should be strong, eloquent and particularly good-looking today. Others will be awed by your wit, vocabulary and clarity of insight. So make sure you have all of your facts straight. Be kind to a studious person tonight. You may need that person's knowledge.
mation at home tonight.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). The opposition could be gaining strength, and even your own advisers could be suggesting major concessions. There might be a way you can give up something you don't need anymore in order to get something better. Soak up infor-
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
There'll be a lot of wild talk banded about today. Your humorous insights can keep things in prospective. Don't let a domestic disagreement impair your objectivity. A group outing should go well, especially if it involves education.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
You may need to learn a few things so that you can adjust to a change that's underway. Trust your experience, too. If you're considering a major purchase, do a little more research first. A friend may be able to get you a better deal.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.18). Today, gather a bundle of other people's ideas and work them into your own plans. By the way, that includes the competitions, too. Build on the framework that's already in place. A drive would also be relaxing. Do something fun with a friend.
Pisses (Feb. 19-March 20).
You'll be plenty busy today.
There's a lot of stuff that has to be done before quitting time. Unfor-
tunely, a lot of it may be paperwork. Finish up your taxes tonight. You'll benefit emotionally and financially from having them out of the way.
Arles (March 21-April 19). A friend could come up with an excellent idea this morning. To get involved, you'll have to be willing to learn a new skill. If you can keep the peace with an authority figure, you may be able to achieve another goal. Don't get too riled up.
Taurus (April 20-May 20).
You may have to cover for a ditz today, so keep your eyes open. You don't want to get blamed for somebody else's mistake. Today should be good for working out a compromise between stubborn individuals. It's worth the effort, so give it a try. Do something with your colleagues this weekend.
Gemini (May 21-June 21). You and your friends may come up with a very imaginative solution to a tough problem today. Something that used to seem impossible has only become difficult. This evening's fabulous for love, stimulating conversations, and brilliant insights!
Cancer (June 22-July 22).
Check to make sure you're not spending more than necessary on a domestic item today. You want the finest, of course, but not at retail! Plan a soothing dinner, especially if you're entertaining guests. This will help if an argument breaks out.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22).
Although you should be fairly effective today, there are still problems to look for. Your worst critic could actually contribute to your cause. Romance should go well tonight. Stick with the truth and the whole truth. You'll get the same in return.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You are one of the few who can tell fantasy from reality. Mention it when you see it. Financial problems could stem from wanting something that's not practical. Be careful or you'll buy it anyway. Don't let a family member do that, either.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and are for entertainment use only.
DILBERT® By Scott Adams
WALLY, I'VE DECIDED TO MOVE YOUR PROJECT DUE DATE UP A MONTH.
E. HARRIS E-net: 8C0T
EVERY TIME, IT LOOKS
LICE, ILL REACH AN
OBJECTIVE, YOU MOVE IT!
WHAT DOES THIS PROVE
ABOUT MY PERFORMANCE?
IT PROVES I'M BETTER AT SETTING OBJECTIVES THAN YOU ARE AT ACHIEVING THEM.
I'll have to wait for the next image.
Hospital visit not in decathlete's plans
Evers hopes to visit championships as a player,not a fan
By Adam Herschman Kansan sportswriter
Two weeks before the Big Eight Outdoor Conference Championships last year, Kansas junior decathlete Mike Evers competed in one of the most successful meets of his life — on his GameBoy.
In a hospital gown, Evers played a track and field game last April in Lawrence Memorial Hospital after rupturing his spleen when his pole snapped in half on his last pole vault attempt in practice.
In a low point of his collegiate career, Evers had a choice: He could have sulked and felt sorry for himself or he could have looked ahead and focused on the end of this year and his remaining two seasons as a Jayhawk.
"I was going nuts," Evers said about playing track and field on the Gameboy. "On a Friday night I know all my friends are out, and I'm in a hospital bed playing Nintendo and I'm getting excited because I'm breaking my own records on this little thing."
KANSAS RELAYS
"He dealt with it better than most athletes would ever deal with something like that," Hedrick said.
Hedrick said that Evers was favored to win the conference championship and that he already had qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships in the decathlon before his season abruptly ended.
"I'm not going to back away from any competition or anybody."
When Evers found out that he would be unable to compete in the two most important meets of the
Michael Evers Kansas junior decathlete
He chose the latter.
Two weeks later, Evers went to the Big Eight Championships to cheer for his teammates.
Kansas assistant coach Doug Hedrick said Evers kept a great attitude despite having to miss the championship meet.
Tvler Wirken / KANSAN
season that he trained for all year, he had to call his coach.
"The hardest thing I had to do was call Doug up and tell him" it's over," Evers said. "I couldn't even talk."
Evers and Hedrick have developed a close friendship — as well as a good coach-athlete relationship since Evers arrived in Lawrence from Marrionette Park, Ill., in 1992;
The two are very competitive whether it's golf, shooting paper into the garbage can or track and field.
Hedrick was a two-time All-American decathlete in the middle 1980's at Tennessee and his best score of more than 7,600 in the decathlon is a mark that Evers wants to break for himself as well as his coach.
"His word is absolutely gold to me," said Evers, Kansas track and field captain. "He deserves 100 percent of my effort every time that I go on the track."
Despite owning the Kansas pentathlon record and being rated one of the top 25 decathletes in the country, Hedrick said he didn't know what to think of Evers at his first outdoor meet at the College Station Relays.
Twenty minutes before the meet after already sprinting, Evers' leg began to bother him.
Kansas Junior Michael Evers leaps over a hurdle during a recent practice. The Kansas track and field team will compete in Lincoln. Neb, this weekend.
"I said,". Forget it. You're competing, "Hedrick said." I said, "I don't care how fast you go through it, just run; go through this thing." As he went through the meet he started getting better and better.
"Four years later, he's become probably one of the strongest, mentally toughest athletes I've ever seen."
"There's nothing that's going to stop me." Evers said. "This is the only time of my life that I'll be able to train for a decathlon and be really serious about it. I'm not going to back away from any competition or anybody."
This year Evers will be looking at making his return to the Big Eight Outdoor Championship May 20 as a participant instead of a fan, and qualifying to the NCAA Outdoor Championships on May 30.
"There is no limit right now." Hedrick said. "If he has the goal, the desire, and the work ethic, his body is going to take him wherever his mind wants to go."
This weekend Evers and the rest of the Jayhawks will be competing in the Husker Invitational in Lincoln. Neb.
Ray-Ban
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ATTENTION STUDENTS! Open Hearings for Student Health Insurance
Banquet facilities and Catering for rehearsal dinners, departmental meetings or any special occasion. Ample parking.
841-7226
Wednesday, February 14, 7:00-8:00 p.m. Kansas Union, Kansas Room
fifi's Banquet Connection
and
1350 N. 3rd
Thursday, February 15, 7:00-8:00 p.m. Watkins Health Center, 1st Floor Conference Room
Funded by Student Senate
NOW OPEN Orpheum
Drinking & Dancing Fridays & Saturdays
1105 Mass, in Lawrence
(Enter then Tin Pan Allen)
18 & Over
Classified Directory
We are what's hot.
Wednesdays are
Student Nights
$2 admission with
your student ID.
Juicers
Showgirls
913 n. Second
Mia
Mia
1:00am Ski & Sat until 2:00am
842-1771
100s Announcements
Juicers Showgirls 913 n. Second
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
男 女
Y
200s Employment
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
家
X
235 Typing Services
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
100s Announcements
I
105 Personals
http://www.studentadvtrav.com
60589 FREE FOOD & DRINK PACKAGES FOR EARLY DRY SKIN
**SPRING BREAKS** *HOTTEN TRIPS*
CANCUN-SOUTHERN PACIFIC ISLAND - BELIZE
864-9500
Need Cash?
110 Business Personals
Classified Policv
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
We loan cash on almost anything of value. CD's VCR's, TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and, more Lawrence's most liberal loan company JAYHAWK PAWN & JEWELRY 1804 W. 764-8919
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU SERVICES
120 Announcements
All real estate新闻 in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Tax and, therefore, it is not advisable to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on motive, intent or status of national origin, an intention, to make any such preference, limitation
$ . 75 wash ALL DAY EVERY Day. Independent Laun-dronat - 2963 and Iowa. (Across the street from Dairy Queen).
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Mairn
Lobby, Kansas Union.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
SPRING BREAKA PROMINAT CAITY Beach Florida From $99
To $129.99 Inside Hotchub Ice Hotel
Tb Free. Information 1-800-488-8528
NEED A RIDE/ BIDET Use the Selfserve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or institution. Pensioners belong to the Kansan and are subject to sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulations.
The Celestine Prophecy!
A group is now forming to study this timely knowledge. For information call Anuols 841-2691
Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise 7 days $279.00
Includes 15 meals an d5 free partner Great beaches night life Leaves from Pt Lauderdale, http://www.
springbreaktravel.com/1-878-6836-486
Spend Spring Break breaking the Storm姨Madre of Mexico's Copper Canyon March 23-31. This low impact, cultural immersion trip will rock your world. $400 includes all meals and a round-trip airfare to Southern Expeditions (800) 676-7324 for info.
Assistant student: Do you have a great GTA? Nominate him/her for the Outstanding Graduate Teacher Assistant Award! Information and forms available at the college website, 222 Strong. Nomination Deadline February 20.
Spring Reef Paisana City $18. room/window,
$119.10 Ware to best bark '7 nights in Key West, $250.00
Coca Beach Hibiscus ( great beaches, near Disney), $105.00 Daytona, $188.00 http://www.
shwisswedding.com
Women's Transitional Care Services (TICS), the battered women's shelter, is having two WIFC sessions for individual interested in volunteer training Feb. 8 at 7:00 p.m. and Feb. 10 at 10:00 a.m. Both will be held at Plymouth Congregation Church 225, Vermont Lawn. For more info, call WCTS to (913) 643-3333.
120 Announcements
ASK YOURSELF THIS:
Spring break specials, Jamaica and Jamaica!111% lower price guarantee! 7 nights, air and hotel from $429.00
Save $100 on food and drink!
http://www.suntrustbaskin-crest.com 1-800-672-6968
Who pays for AT&T, Sprint, and MCTs multi-billion dollar advertising and telemarketing campaigns? YOU DO! The 9 largest telecommunications company in the U.S. doesn't advertise or bother you with calls, it just saves you money on long distance in Kansas, the U.S., and wide web! Free information: (800) 760-7232.
Internet: http://www.hilline.net/fccs
SOUTHE PADRE IADDLE - SPRING BREAK
We settle for a cramped hotel room! SunChase has IVA approval, free parking and rates. Our rateables rate. Deal directly on on-site management, not third party promoters. Great location, on the beach, & great rates. Rates 1: bbm 4600 (4 people) 2: bbm 7300 (6 people) 2: bbm 8300 (8 people)
Call toll (800) 944-6818.
Graduating in May? Or looking for a job? Or both? Then you should be签 up sign now for interviews at the University Placement Center. Visit with reps from summer camp, retail management, public interest research, marketing, and public relations. UPC at 864-3634, or visit us at the Burge Union Level 1. Don't delay. Deadlines are approaching. Oh, by the way, the complete interview schedule on the Internet: at ukans.edu/cis/writers/satisfactionFactOCI.html
PARTY ON THE BEACH
SPRING BREAK'96
CANCUN MEXICO FROM $ 339
PANAMA CITY BEACH FROM $ 129
INCLUDES DAILY BEACH PARTIES,
EVENING CLUB PARTIES AND
GREAT DISCOUNTS !!!
908-900 TOUR
GET A GROUP OF 14 TOGETHER & YOU TRAVEL FREE!!!
MILITARIA
SHOW & SALE
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
FEBRUARY 11, 1996
AMERICAN LEGION HALL
4TH & SENECA
LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS
ALL TYPES OF MILITARIA
ANCIENT ROME
TO DESERT STORM
COLLECTIBLES/PRINTS/BOOKS
ADMISSION $ 1.00
Spring Break
GUARANTEED
LASTEST Prices
ON GAMMASTER
Spring Break
Local Contact:
Kevin @ 749-1399
Ash @ 836-3247
Kevin @ 838-4359
Classic Travel @ 749-1555
Destination Unlimited
@ 842-7390
GUARANTEED
LOWEST PRICES
ON CAMPUS REMIT
Jamaica Cancun Florida
from $439
from $399
from $119
STC
1344 Ahition Rd, Hamover, MD 21076
Toll free 1-800-648-4849
http://www.traveltravel.com/
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 9, 1996
5B
120 Announcements
Mazatlan $419
Cancun $429
Trip includes: 7 nights hotel, Round trip air fare from Kansas City, Daily parties, free covers and discounts. For more info call
(532-8399)
Tiger Tours
1-800-Leave-99
(532) 742-6667
SPRING IN SUN ON CBS NEWS 12 HOURS BREAK
COMPLETED IN 7 MINUTES
AFFORDABLE
GOAT TURNS
$69
15th
Sellout
Year
DAYTONA BEACH
KEY WEST
STEAINBOAT
VAIL BEAVER CREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
*PERSON DEFENSE ON DISTRIBUTION / MARKET GROUP / LEASE OF
1-800-SUNCHASE*
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & OBSERVATIONS
http://www.zuohahe.com
130 Entertainment
Free party room for 20-30 at Johnny's 842-6377
MIBEC LEDGE CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale starting at $0.98 and up.
1910 Haskell. 841-7504
Enjoy Horse Back Biking on our historic and picturesque 140 acres - Organized Trial Rides any time weather perimeter (above 25 degrees) by appointment. $10 per hour 24-hour notice. Call (913) 694-6810.
Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas Panama City, Daytona, Padre
** Free Trip on only 15 sales Call for a FREE information packet!
Spring Break 1996
TRAVEL FREE!!
140 Lost and Found
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-426-7710
Watch found near Wescow on 02/07/06. Please Call 842-
3063.
200s Employment
Male Female
205 Help Wanted
35. 00 $K,YO. Income potential. Reading books. Toll free (1) 800-1697 Ext. R: 196 for details.
Part Time Help Wanted in heavy doctor. MW 8-10m,
3-7m, T-3p, TB-4p, please call 749-0130.
**Central School, a nonprofit school in hiring**
part-time teachers. Flexible hours. Call Don
Lyons at 412-398-7650.
Downtown theatre needs PT concessions.
Call or stop by Varsity Theatre for application.
1015 Mass. 843-1065
GRAND OPENING
Seeking high energy individual for branch office.
Positive attitude required, flexible schedule. 841-0828
Lawrence resident wants to employ a person from Chile, Argentina, or Excused to engage in conversation in Spanish two hours a week. Call Margie at 842-4013.
Long-term, part-time, multi-task oriented aid for children with nutritional requirements. Measly 12 years of age and older.
Now hiring morning and evening wait; staff and morning cooks. No experience nee. Will train. Apply in person. Storki College, 1015 Avenue.
Overweight males between 18 and 40 y.o. are needed.
$80 will be included for participation.
Student with natural ability with children needed to help with care. Please per week, need to (CAH) Call Vail 641-5201
Wanted: 100 Students. Lown-B L-100 B new material breakfast break! Hold 15 Hrs in Iwat Guide Resume Score
Weekend news reporter for KLW/XLR2. Prior experience required. Tie and resume to romney.P.O. Box 1208. Chicago, IL 60607.
Needed Kw, Wed., and p.m. mornings!
Teaching Aide. needed past-time at early instruction.
Address: 825 Northwest Avenue, #100, 805-0022
time仲长庭 Gun Club employee needed for
Thursday afternoons and occasional Sundays.
Gymnastics instructors needed now for boys and girls classes in AC, gbg, about 40 mins from Lawrence). Parttime in AM and Pm. Call Eagles Gymnastics. (816) 941-9629.
205 Help Wanted
HELP WANTED: Driven drivers needed for Wed Feb.
14th. Must be able to start at 8 AM shop. Must have your own transportation. Apply in person. Englewood
Firist, 890 Massachusetts.
Responsible person needed to work with my 7 year old, son with autism. Must have knowledge in applied behavioral analysis and or special education. If interested call Gai at 865-0655
SPRING BREAK WOES?
NO FUNDS - NO FUN!
MarketingTraining Co. Seeka $ind. needing
some extra cash. Flexible hours. (913) 842-5535
Int'l Marketing Co. seeks ambitious, @matted wanted in, with professional appeal. Tailwail avail-
INSTANT CASH!
*Flexible Schedule* *Extra Income* *Training*
*Rapid Advantage opportunity*
University Photography is seeking part-time photo-
ographers. Individuals must be outgoing. Weekend work
a definite. No experience necessary. Contact Tom
between 11 and 4 p.m. Friday 843-6279.
FRUSTRATED?
Positions open. Great jobs for students. Telephone fundraising for SAUDI (Students Against Drunk Driven). Week early evenings and Sat. mornings; #6hr plus regular commission. Call BA 8491. apply at 019 610 Mans. St.
1 Received 2 degreees after 5/1/2 years of college and when I hit the "real world" model 4.658. Now I'm being trained to earn 3K a month. If you're ready for a change call 919-843-4410.
Graduating Seniors - John Hancock Financial Services is looking for professional individuals for their marketings sales training program, which is designed for recent college graduates. Call or send resume to 6900 College Drive #1000, Overland Park, KS 62511, Attn: Pam Swilburn 813-345-9409
CAMP COUNSELORS Join the adventure and share the memories at SUMMER CAMPI
Top ranked camps in *Pocosus* of PA need experienced instructors for water and land sports. *Wisf Life Guards*, Tennis, Climbing, Arts and more 2 hours from NYC. Call 215-8790-4970 or write 151 Washington Lane
Kitchen staff positions available at the Mast Street Dell and Buffalo Bob Smoke House. Food prep and line cooking. Some daytime hours are helpful. Start at 8 per hour with a $25 raises every 90 days to 46 per hour plus profit sharing plus length of service bonus. Apply at www.buffalobobsmoke.com Mon-Fri. at 719 Press (units above Smoke House).
Photo intern wanted — Work with high profile creative people, in a state of the art environment, doing mental tasks. Enjoy flexible hours with little or no pay. Be disgusted with the career advancement of all those around you, learning more about commercial photography and teaching it to students. Mac skills plus a sales. Kansas City (816) 561-4270
CAMP COUNSELERS WANTed for private Michigan boys' girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, rifley, archelys, hurdles, golf, sports, computers, campers, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary 1250 LMC/WC/GWC/LWC/GWC, $1759 Mage, MD, 00038, 684-464-2444
DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN Delegate: 2/9/06 $ salary 4.50 per hour, W-15, 3pm - designee performing包带装订 and burglarization handling of computer output and interfax use using the burglarization handle; design and maintain inventory figures library; date libraries, shipments and maintaining inventory figures library; date libraries, shipments and maintaining inventory figures library; assist in maintenance assists in Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; perform duties in conjunction with campus wide recycle program; use personal computer or maintenance part of record system in room 202. EOAA EMPLOYER available at the Computer Center in room 202. EOAA EMPLOYER
500 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES IN NY, PA,
NEW YORK,
Choose from over 30 campers. Instructors need: Tennis, Baseball, Hockey, Rollerblading, Soccer, Lacrosse, Volleyball, Basketball, PE Majors, Gymnastics, Riding, Lifesaving, WSI, Water skiing, Sailswing, Fitness, Archery, Mountain Biking, Pioneering, Rock-climbing, Ropes, Dance, Piano Accompaniment, Dramatics, Musical Theatre, Wood, Weeding, Photography, Radio, Nature, RN's, Chef's Food Service. Call Aline: 516-433-8933.
WANTED: Free- lance Artists and Jewelry Makers
Sampler Stores, Inc. is seeking talented artists to design both serious and humorous full chest and left pocket designs for T- shirts, polo shirts and sweatshirts using a KU Jayhawk, "Kansas", Wizard of Oz, sunflower, or similar theme. Embroidered and silk screen designs may be used as well. Custom charms and molds featuring these same motifs. If interested, call 913-432-3355 10 AM to 6 PM or leave message on our voice mail, 913-381-0185.
**STUDENT CERICAL ASSISTANT. Deadline:** 02/09/06. Salary: $4.50 - $1.50 / hour. Duties include assisting in invoicing, giving a thirth of Computer Center accounting information to client accounts; making daily deposits; record microcomputer workshop registrations-performing receptionist duties; performing data entry duties; must be enrolled in 6 hours at the University of Kansas. To apply, complete job application in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EO / AA
PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN
MASSACHUSETTS
Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Hockey, Soccer, Volleyball, 30 Tennis openings; also Dance, Dance Recital, Rock Climbing, Weightless Fitness and Cycling, other openings include Performing Arts, Fine Art, Figure Skating, Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Cooking, SEWING and Rockery; All Waterfront/Pool Activities (Swimming, Skiing, Windsurfing, Canoeing/Kayaking) Top salaryes, room, board, and
**inquire.**
MAH-KEE-NAC (Boys): 1-800-753-9118
DANEEB (Girls): 1-800-392-3752
AMERICA'S PREMIERE SPORTS CAMPS
WINADU FOR BOYS/DANESE FOR GIRLS
(Western Massachusetts)
Top sales Room and Board, and Travel Allowance
ON CAMSUS INFO AND INTERVIEWS
DATE FEBURY 28-29, 1906
PLACE ANGELS SAN JOAO BUILDING
All Land and Water Sports, Arts and Crafts,
Gymnastics, Horseback Riding, Drama, Woodshop,
Music, Arts and Crafts.
205 Help Wanted
No Previous Experience Required
Top salaries Room and Board, and Travel Allowance
FEB 28 INFO TABLE FEB 28 GREAT AND REGION
A JUNTEOS
Men Call:
1-800-494-6238
Women Call:
1-800-392-3782
Camp WADUH
CAMP DANEE
Apply in person after 7:30 Tues-Sat
Call 841-4122 or 1-800-823-6117 Ask for Pat
EARN CASH
ON THE SPOT
waitresses 18+
Student Driver Positions for the Spring Semester to drive physically disabled students to class. Must be at least 18 years old and pass six to twelve hup per week, $5.00 anr. Application deadline February 9, *Apply at Facilities Operation* office.
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
$15 Today $30 This week
WALK-INS WELCOME!
DUI/TRAFFIC/CIMERIAL
OVERLAND PARK - KANASA CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY - AT-LAW
Need Help With Your Research Project ?
Kelley Mathia Analysis and Consulting specialists in Complex Data Analysis, Software Design and charts, Research methods, Survey and test design. Lowest rates in Lawrence, Topena area.
Carol Brown Electrolysis
Safe, effective, and permanent removal of hair conveniently located at 10 E. Ninth St. 865-4255
II
E-maili red4psg@aol.com
OUI/Traffic
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Tennessee 843-4023
For free consultation call
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Ketsey
842-1133
Call Today!
LOWEST PRICES TO CANCUN!
SPRING BREAK
AIRFARE, HOTEL,
TRANSFERS, BAGGAGE HANDLING,
HOSPITALITY DESK, &
FABULOUS PARTIES
MANY OTHER DESTINATIONS AVAILABLE
RAVELLERS
LAWRENCE'S TRAVEL AGENT SINCE 1951
831 Massachusetts
749-0700
$ $ $ MONEY $ $ $
FOR COLLEGE
Hundreds & thousands of grants & scholarships available to all students. Immediate qualification. No repayments EVER.
Call 1-800-585-8243
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
---
360 Miscellaneous
Bureau de Sécurité
Téléphone 1024.768.9132 / Mobile 856.326.2222
Bureau de Sécurité Loisse B-9132 Bonifay
69132-Bonifay - Loisse B-9132 - Bonifay
100 Stendaffens Lane
Louisse B-9132 Bonifay
69132-Bonifay - Loisse B-9132 - Bonifay
300s Merchandise
235 Typing Services
305 For Sale
Call Jack at 865-2858 for application, term papers,
desk presentations, etc. Satisfaction
will be guaranteed.
Looking to b跃 Painting on velvet on璧 or will commission. Art major now that career today? Call
1 Bedroom Suitcase. Feb. Bent Paint. Water, Cable.
Trunk Pad. Bathroom. Laundry Pacilities. Car Arrays
Air Conditioner.
图示为房屋结构示意图
Fender Stent W/seymour Duncan dumbhueb, bumstur, w/mtud, $300 Crate VC121128, new pre-maps, great tone, $176 wah-wah pedal $25, everything for $450. Call Brent B88-4453
400s Real Estate
1 bedroom apartment for rent-limax. $40/month. Cable
paid. Fireplace, dishwasher, balcony. On KU bus route.
$35/month.
405 For Rent
370 Want to Buy
COMPUTER MEMORY: $20-$30 per MEG
leave message at 1(800)511-9965,
Shannon Plaza Apartments & Townhomes. 3 bed 2 bathroom townhouse available. Ask about our location.
King size mattresses set. New. Retail price $990.00, will sell for
$375.00 or 379.986 USD.
spring Break Beach Condo Hot Location. South Padre Island, Texas has a plus people. Deposit required. Attendee only. Valid until 10/30/2016.
AA Queen size mattress set. New, never used. Still plastic.
Retail Price $ 800.00 or $ 160.00. Queen size
bed. Retail Price $ 320.00 or $ 490.00.
Paint Fundraiser - Raised $ 800 in 5 Days Greens, Groups
Chase, Molded Individual, Funds. En力 Financial
Group.
Available immediately. 3 Bedroom, unfurnished apartment. 1/2 block from KU. $700 per room. Oread Heights Apartments, 1410 Ireland, 842-708-698.
Across the river from the Glass Island 837/month.
water paid. Dlamon at Damon @ 826-2984. February rent付
360 Miscellaneous
With internal modem & stylewriter
$1200 or best offer _ call 749-9388
Large 3 bedroom apt. and studio apt.
in remodeled house near KU.
Call 841-6254
828 american Racing wheels type ARB3. Under 20 miles/brand new condition. Purchased for $620, will sell for $420. Looks awesome on Toyota 4X4. 749-6297.
AA pull size mattress set. New, never used, still in plastic.
Retail price $ 690.00 set. $ will for $150.00. Brass head-mount system.
2 bedroom apartment, 1000 sq. ft.
Microwave, dishwasher, disposal, w/d hookup.
6 month lease. Call 841-8469
6 month lease. Call 841-7500
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
1 bedroom apartment at Orwood
(141/2 blocks from Union). Water & gas paid.
6 month lease, $400/month.
Call 841-8468
In the Spin
Mackenzie Place, 1183 Kentucky. Now leasing for Am. 1, 5 gyr. old apts., close to campus. All 3 buildings in the school have parking, 2 decks or porch/patio. Well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1166
Washer and Dryer Units for Rentl
1&2Bedrooms
are $45.00 a month per set.
*NEW Whirlpool Large Capacity
washer and dryer sets.
*Renting now and for the fall of
1996.
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
Call Now! 766-8177
601 W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
OnKU Bus Route
Indoor/OutdoorPool
M-F10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
3Hot Tubs
Exercise Room
Quail Creek
Apartments & Townhouses
2111 Kasold Drive
843-4300
Call for Appt.
Managed & maintained by Professionals
405 For Rent
"In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good, old-fashioned personalized."
meadowbrook
If BIG
---
1/2 block from campus, studio apartment. $310.00
all, includes utilities. B481-76448.
2 & 3 bedroom
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400 Tem. a student housing alternative, Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation, democratic control. Runs on campus. Admission required. Close to campus & Campus. Call or stop by 814-0484-04.
is what you want your new home awaits...
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
MEADOWBROOK
15th & Crestline
842-4200
---
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
townhomes are available now. Walk or ride the bus to KU. Enjoy the quiet feel of the country with the convenience of the city.
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
- Exercise weight room
- Laundry room
- Daily 3:30-5:00
- Energy Efficient
- On site management
KVM
Professionally managed by
808 W. 24th
841-6080
841-5444
MASTERCRAFT
Offers
Studio,1,2,3,& 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
Completely Furnished
Tanglewood
Regents Court Campus Place
19th & Mass. 1145 Louisiana
749-0445 841-1429
10th & Arkansas 749-2415
14th & Mass.
841-1212
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS
DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
MASTERCRAFT
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS 7TH & FLORIDA
NOWLEASING FOR SPRING
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
E.H.O.
841-5255
FOUR BEDROOM-
ASK ABOUT
Our Three Person Special
$690 and Up
Pool and Clubhouse
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bdm furnished
furniture at the Amk. Peb. through August. Call back at
(310) 589-7466.
430 Roommate Wanted
Female for 4 br 2 ba duplex. NW location-
Eldridge Street. On Bus Rt. Feb. Repd. Paid.
8#10 Plus Ma. Phone #1456. Call 8356-3566.
to share house. Dishwasher, washer/dryer and fireplace. Pet allowed. Call Mike at 830-8662.
Female grad student grade nice 2-BR apt. $200-util.
Male grad student. Must like cats and be a non-
monsieur Laundry Facilities.
Non-smoking male roommate wants to share 2 Br.
apartment close to campus. $255/mo + utilities. Call Jeff at
(312) 649-7900.
Roommate needed: gay friendly, MF, to share 2BR house, W/D, WD, AC, pets negotiable, must like my dog. $285/mo + I/2 utilities. Amy 841-6736.
Roommate needs to share 4 bedrooms, 1/2 bath house with W/D and 1 new all-in-one room-14/17 rooms with W/D and 1 new all-in-one room.
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
2BR apartment for enclosure. Close to campus & on bus route. Ful-purified. Swimming pool & club house. Washer & dryer on 7. $250 per month & 1/2 utilities. Call Bearer 865-505-603
Female NS Roommate needed to stay 2 bdpt. apt, Fninched except bldm. WD, Dishwasher, A/C. Rent $430.00 & 1 Utl. Avail. 6/1 or for Fall 96, must like cats. 832-2887
How to schedule an ad:
@ Ray phone: 844-4560
Female roommate must share 2 bedroom apartment. On bus route, $200.00 +
1/2 utilities. Water and gas paid.
Call Tara 832-8428.
Female roommate needed. Almost new home west of campus. Roomy, WD, AC, WD, Garage. Dear Neck bus route. Short or long term lease available starting March 1st. $275.00/month. Month 838-4546.
N/M male roommate to share College Hill Coulo. Large master bdrm, private bath, W/D, available immediately. $280. Call 1-913-858-4386 or beeper 1-600-397-3249. ext. 8436 and leave phone number.
Wanted ASPA - N/S M/P roommate to share pacious 2bdm at apn. 130 and Oak. Walk to campus and downtown, off street parking $250 + 1/2 utility. Call Wade 838-4002. Leave message.
ROOMATE MANTENED. Roommate got married, need sublease. Mantent needed to share 3 i-8R, 2-bath townhouse w/ WD, fireplace, $225/mo + $130 util. Reb rent free. no peta. Bkall 641-8370.
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| :--- | :--- |
| 1X | 2-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 10-23X | 20+X |
| 3 lines | 2.29 | 1.70 | 1.15 | 0.95 | 0.89 | 0.88 |
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| 8+ lines | 1.90 | 1.09 | 0.70 | 0.65 | 0.60 | 0.48 |
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days-$17.90 (4 lines X 85 per line X 5 days)
Classifications
165 personal 160 lab & found 385 for sale 374 must be buy
171 leadership programs 255 safety帮助 354 maintenance 405 for rent
128 measurements 225 professional services 368 miscellaneous 430 roommate issued
195 retail experience 205 furniture sales
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24 oz. Mint, Baking Soda or
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V
MONDAY,FEBRUARY12,1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.102,NO.94
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
1
Its a jungle out there!
The Missouri Tigers handed Kansas its first Big Eight Conference loss of the season. Page 1B
CAMPUS
You must be born again
KU Christians: It's common to grapple with spiritual issues during college. Page 3A
iowa caucuses are here
NATION
(USPS 650-640)
The outcome of today's events in Iowa likely will play a large role in shaping nominations. Page 7A
WORLD
IRA bombers sought
Friday's London business district explosion has injured the peace process. Page 6A
WEATHER
SUNNY
Brian Hott / KANSAN
High 53° Low 18°
Weather: Page 2A.
INDEX
Opinion ... 4A
World News ... 6A
National News ... 7A
Features ... 8A
Sports ... 1B
Scoreboard ... 2B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is free. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Brian Hott / KANSAN
University Marshal Norton Greenberger, left, and Gov. Bill Graves, right, join in giving Chancellor Robert Hemenway, center, a standing ovation after his inauguration. Hemenway is the 16th Chancellor of the University of Kansas.
Inauguration of a new era
Representatives of higher education file into the Chancellor's inauguration wearing traditional caps and gowns. Among them were president of the other Regents schools and professors of the University of Kansas.
With wit and wisdom, Hemenway officially becomes chancellor
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Chancellor Robert Hemenway decided that the best way to convey his goals for the University of Kansas was to tell those who attended his inauguration a story actually, three stories.
Hemenway told the crowd of about 1,700 that he would not inflict upon them his unsuccessful attempt at writing a noble, rhetoric-filled speech. Instead, he conveyed his personal convictions through three simple stories in his inaugural address yesterday at the Lied Center.
A who's who of the University community attended the 2 p.m. ceremony, including Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, Gov. Bill Graves, former chancellors Del Shankel and Clarke Wescoe and representatives from 80 other universities and colleges.
Hemenway, who was installed formally as the University's 16th chancellor, spoke of the importance of the classroom and of maintaining a student-centered university.
"Students, you honor us with your presence," Hemenway said. "If we can discover your desire, challenge you to fulfill your potential and care enough about you as human beings to find the purpose for your learning, we will have a student-centered university."
Hemenway told stories about an 84-year-old woman who learned to read, his 8-year-old son's sometimes-dangerous curiosity and a literary character's high-level thinking.
"Now, I don't have too many of these to spare, but I'm going to take a hair from my head to illustrate this," he said. "Fiber-optic technology has become so sophisticated that a fiber the size of a human hair can deliver every issue ever published by The Wall Street Journal in less than one second."
Hemenway even sacrificed a hair from his balding head to discuss the power of advanced technology.
Graves and Kassebaum pledged to support Hemenway in an era of tighter budgets and cries for accountability in higher education.
"Bob Hemenway will bring new ideas, new energy and a new vision," Graves said. "But he will not be successful without our collective help."
Kassebaum, who graduated from the University in 1964, said Hemenway's first months on the job had been promising.
"Dr. Hemenway, in your brief tenure as chancellor, you have shown both wisdom and understanding," she said.
Kim Cocks, student body president, said after the ceremony that the ideals Hemenway spoke of were in line with the work Hemenway had done during his first seven months as chancellor.
"I think his speech was about what he's been doing so far," Cocks said. "He's shown through his actions that he thinks that the University should be student-centered."
The ceremony included an inaugural poem written by Luci Tapahonso, associate professor of English, and an original composition by Robert Foster, director of KU bands.
to the University in 1964 by former Chancellor Wescoe and his wife.
Hemenway was presented with the silver ceremonial collar, which was given
Wescoe, who served as chancellor from 1960 to 1969, said Hemenway's inauguration was more elaborate than his own, which coincided with convocation in 1960.
"The governor didn't attend my inauguration; the chairman of the Board of Regents didn't attend and no representatives from Washington attended," Wescoe said. "It was a difficult time for the University, but we managed to get through the inauguration."
Hemenway's wife, Leah, said yesterday's inauguration and Robert Hemenway's speech were meaningful to the Hemenway family.
Robert Hemenway, who initially was hesitant to have an inauguration in a time of budget constraints, said he had not expected the ceremony to have such an emotional impact on him.
"I think he expressed what he really believes in and what he's really concerned about." she said.
"I think that in the day-to-day existence of the University, it's easy for us to lose sight of the impact and importance of a traditional ceremony such as this," he said.
Proposed bill could remove Kansas event
Legislators debate pros and cons of presidential preference primary
By John Collar Kansan staff writer
Gov. Bill Graves said on Friday he would sign legislation this week that would eliminate the presidential preference primary in Kansas this year.
The Legislature passed a bill on Friday that would cancel this year's primary but would allow it in future presidential election years. The Kansas primary is scheduled for April 2.
Legislators supporting the bill said holding the primary this year would be a waste of state funds because each party's front runner
had strong support in Kansas.
"The presidential preference primary in Kansas is somewhat of a farce," said State Sen. Janice Hardenburger, R-Haddam, who sponsored the bill.
She argued that the primary should be eliminated because delegates to the national conventions did not have to vote according to the primary results.
She said the primary also occurred after other key primaries, which was too late.
"The presidential preference primary is merely a straw poll, a very expensive straw poll," she said.
"The
Hardenburger said that Sen. Bob Dole's status as
"The presidential preference primary is merely a straw poll, a very expensive straw poll."
very expensive straw poll."
Janico Hardenburger state senator, R-Haddam
the Republican front runner and President Clinton's incumbency assured each candidate's victory in the Kansas primary.
State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, agreed that spending $1.4 million on the primary was not justified during a tight budget year.
"There are so many other places where we could use the money," Ballard said. "I don't know how I could justify having the primary."
Legislators rushed the bill through last week after they found out that the secretary of state's office had ordered the printing of ballots to begin today.
However, other legislators contended that Kansans should have the opportunity to vote and that the primary should not be subject to the whims of the Legislature.
House Speaker Tim Shallenburger, R-Baxter Springs, said the reasons for eliminating the primary were wrong.
Major presidential primaries
Today: Iowa
today: Iowa
Feb. 20: New Hampshire
March 5: Junior Tuesday
11 states: all New Eng-
land states except New
Hampshire; Georgia and
Colorado
He cited Republican candidate Steve Forbes' rapid rise in the polls as an example for unpredictable outcomes for elections.
March 12: Super Tuesday, six states: Oklahoma, Texas, Mississippi, Florida, Tennessee and Oregon
March 26: California
"Who knows what will happen between now and April 1," Shallenburger said.
State Rep. Bill Reardon, D-Kansas City, who supports holding the primary, said primaries encourage greater voter participation than caucuses do.
"The issue is, people should be allowed to vote," he said.
Video tutorials mix homework with humor
New study guides failing sales test
By R. Adam Ward Kansan staff writer
Videos with names such as The Creepy Crawly World of Calculus and The Illustrious Yet Elusive World of Microeconomics are attempting to demystify intimidating academic subjects.
The videos mix jokes with comedy skids, some performed by computer- animated skulls and others with a
Wayne's World-esque duo.
The video tutorials, featuring comedians from the comedy troupe The Standard Deviants are advertised as being like your professors, only funnier.
Local bookstores have bought into the idea of the tapes, but so far the sales have been slow.
"People are willing to pay $30 or $40 for a study guide with a textbook, but maybe they're afraid of this," said Jackie McClenny, clerk at the Mount Oread Bookshop in the Kansas Union.
--people don't know what the tapes are, McClenny said. Because the stores have the option of returning unsold tapes, she had not opened any or played them in the book shop
Sales may be slow because most
"It is such a new idea that people need to see it and get used to it for it to quickly," she said.
Melissa Young, textbook manager at the University Book Shop, 1116 W. 23rd St., said she experienced a similar problem.
But, she added, sales of the tapes have picked up since the company began running advertisements on the radio.
The videos work with any course because they do not follow a specific textbook, she said.
Eric Lattig, director of marketing for the Cerebellum Corporation, which makes the tapes, said the tapes should be attractive to students because of their low price.
KU students, however, had a mixed reaction to the $19.90 price tag.
The biggest selling tape is The High Stakes World of Basic Statistics, Young said.
cation is invaluable," said Anthony Williams, Kansas City, Mo., junior.
Williams said it definitely would be less time consuming to watch a video than go to the library, locate 10 sources and read about a subject.
Other students didn't think that mixing humor with learning was a good idea and that students should rely on traditional methods of learning.
"I think students need someone who can answer all varieties of their questions," said Jeremy Eaton, Kansas City, Kan., junior. "I don't think a video would help me that much."
2A
Monday, February 12, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
New name clarifies degree
Engineering corrects common misconception
By David Teska
Kansan staff writer
Making water safe to drink is just one academic area not normally associated with a degree in civil engineering.
To correct that misconception, in January the department of civil engineering changed its name to the department of civil and environmental engineering.
The department has a long history of study in areas such as water treatment and sewage, said Raymond Moore, professor of civil engineering and interim department chair.
"In the history of this department, it's been involved in the environment since the turn of the century," Moore said.
The need for a name change came from a desire to reflect what the department really does, Moore said. The name change will not affect the department's degree programs or the number of faculty members.
Dennis Lane, distinguished professor of civil engineering, said that early in the department's history.
Enrollment figures
203
65
1991
203 214 198 227 227
65 51 66 74 58
1991 1992 1993 1994 1995
[ ]
---
Total number of Civil Engineering students Environmental Engineering Graduate students
Noah Musser/KANSAN
Source: The school of engineering and
engineering at the University of Kansas
environmental engineering had begun to move from under the umbrella of civil engineering and had emerged as a separate discipline.
"It was something that evolved because we have so much involved in environmental engineering," Lane said.
Lane said that graduate students who study environmental engineering had to take courses such as biology and chemistry that students in civil engineering don't need to take.
engineering is more chemistry-oriented," he said.
The name change codified what has existed in the department for a while and recognized that environmental students are on a slightly different track, Lane said.
"The design focus of environmental
Dale Cieland, Overland Park graduate student, said the name change wouldn't have a major impact on the department, and that the students were glad to see it.
"It's a recognition that the environment of everything is more and more prominent," he said.
Cleland said that the change also was part of a trend at universities with similar programs. When Cleland attended the United States Military Academy, environmental engineering was part of the department of civil engineering.
It since has been moved to the department of geology and environmental engineering, he said.
Although students can enroll in the department at the undergraduate level, Moore said there were no plans to develop an undergraduate program in environmental engineering.
Juniors and seniors who want to pursue graduate work in environmental engineering can take 600- and 700-level courses, Lane said.
The history of the department of civil engineering at KU shows a long association with environmental issues.
A name whose time has come
1871
1871 First courses in Civil and Topographical engineering established
1873 First Bachelor's degree in civil engineering earned by Murray Harris
1891 Department of Civil Engineering established within the School of Engineering
1982 M.S. degree programs established in water resources engineering and in water resources science.
1907 Department of Water and Sewage Control created consisted two KU School of Engineering faculty
1996
1961 M.S. degree programs established in environmental health engineering and in environmental health science
Department of Civil Engineering becomes the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Noah Musser/KANSAN
The Art and Design Gallery is sponsoring an art department faculty show Feb. 11-16 in the Art and Design Building gallery, Call Chris Fasaw at 864-5601 for more information
ON CAMPUS
The International Student Association is having a meeting at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Meditation Club is having a group meditation at 6 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. Call Ravi Hirekatur at 832-8789 for more information.
The Jayhawk Association of Environmental Professionals (JAEP) is having a meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
Call Brant Lamar at 832-9575 for more information.
KU Yoga Club is having yoga
class at 7 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. Call Adam Miller at 832-0399 or Paula Duke at 542-1930 for more information.
- The Mortar Board is sponsoring a discussion, The Effects of Domestic Violence on Children The Lawrence WTCS Children's Program, at 7:15 tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. Call Lindsay Myers at 865-4122 for more information.
The Feminist Collective Force is having a meeting at 7:30 tonight' at the International Room in the Kansas Union. Call Natalie Weiss at 843-5972 for more information.
■ KU Kempo Karate Club is having a meeting at 7:30 tonight at 207 Robinson Center. Call Mark Hurt at 842-4713 for more information.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's car windshield was broken between 8 p.m. Friday and 2:30 a.m. Saturday in the 900 block of Indiana Street. The windshield was valued at $200, Lawrence police reported.
block of New Hampshire Street. The purse and its contents were valued at $82, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's purse was stolen between 12:30 a.m. and 1:30 a.m. Saturday in the 700
A KU employee's floor jack was stolen between 2:45 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. Saturday in the 600 block of Michigan Street. The floor jack was valued at $85, KU police said.
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
"Life survived since 1923
*The symbol of the Order of the Star of David.
- NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
* NATURAL BODY CARE
* 820-822 MASS. * 841-0100
- 820-822 MASS. * 841-0100 *
*
NATURALWAY
SUNY
Weather
102
TODAY
Clear and sunny.
5318
TUESDAY
Sunny and mild
6326
WEDNESDAY
Cooler with increasing clouds.
4329
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta 45 ° • 28 °
Chicago 27 ° • 17 °
Des Moines, Iowa 37 ° • 15 °
Kansas City, Mo. 54 ° • 19 °
Lawrence 53 ° • 18 °
Los Angeles 70 ° • 57 °
New York 32 ° • 27 °
Omaha, Neb. 45 ° • 15 °
St. Louis 65 ° • 37 °
Seattle 40 ° • 23 °
Topeka 53 ° • 17 °
Tulsa, Okla. 55 ° • 22 °
Wichita 57 ° • 17 °
TODAY
Clear and sunny.
5318
TUESDAY
Sunny and mild
6326
WEDNESDAY
Cooler with increasing clouds.
4329
5318
Source: Grant Wimmer,Aaron Johnson,Dave Nadler/KU Weather Service
CAMPUS BRIEF
Kansan staff report
A game of frisbee set off a potentially fatal chain reaction when two KU students and a dog fell through the ice on Potter Lake Friday afternoon.
Brad Lacey and Mike Kidwell, Lawrence seniors, were playing frisbee with Lacey's dog when the frisbee glided onto the partially frozen lake. The dog followed the frisbee and fell through the ice, KU police reported.
When Lacey realized that the dog was trapped in the water, he ran onto the ice and fell in the water.
Kidwell then ran onto the ice to save Lacey and the dog. But Kidwell also fell through the ice.
Three people on shore then held out sticks for the students to grab.
The three on shore were successful and Lacey, Kidwell and the dog were safe on land when the police arrived.
Lacey and Kidwell complained about being cold and had minor lacerations, KU police said.
The Douglas County Ambulance Service transported the two students to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where they were treated and released.
The dog was not injured.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansan, 119 Stuart-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and periods, and Wednesday during the summer session: Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $m0. Students subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stuart-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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Scholarships available to all board members who qualify For an application, stop by the SUA office (4th Floor Kansas Union) or call 864-3477 for details.
Deathline for officer applications: Friday, February 23 5:00pm Interviews for officer applicants: Sunday, March 3 by appointment
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 12, 1996
3A
Meetings focus on black women
Symposium features authors, professors Somalian filmmaker
The Million Man March, female circumcision and Zora Neale Hurston were some of the topics discussed at a symposium on black women's studies Friday and Saturday at the Kansas Union.
By Heather Kirkwood
Kansan staff writer
About 75 professors, graduate students and scholars attended the symposium titled, Black Women's Studies: Retrospect and Prospect. The symposium was held in conjunction with Chancellor Robert Hemenway's inauguration and with African-American History Month.
The symposium, organized by the Hall Center for the Humanities, gave the scholars of Black women's studies a chance to discuss the impact of their work on academe and the general public.
It also discussed future scholarships in this relatively-new field.
Speakers included Black women's studies scholars such as Nell Irvin Painter, a history professor at Princeton University and author of several books including the Exodusators; Soray Mire, a Somalian filmmaker who created a documentary film about female circumcision titled Fire Eyes; Katie Cannon, a professor of religious studies at Temple University and author of several books including Katie's Cannon: Womanism and the Soul of the Black Community;
African American History Month
and Cheryl Wall, professor of English at Rutgers University and author of several books including Women of the Harlem Renaissance.
"I wanted to represent the disciplines that are most influenced by Black women's studies," said Bill Andrews, director of the Hall Center for the Humanities. "I concentrated on English, history, and religion.
"The filmmaker was coming to KU anyway, so we were fortunate enough for her to participate in the symposium."
Organizers said it was appropriate
that a symposium on Black women's studies coincided with Hemenway's inauguration. Hemenway is sometimes viewed as a Black women's studies scholar for his 1978 biography of Zora Neale Hurston, a famous African-American novelist, anthropologist and folklorist.
"It has not just been my intellectual identity that has been influenced by Black women's studies, but my identity as a human being and as an administrator has been influenced by Black women's studies and by Zora Neale Hurston." Hemenway said.
Eunice Exert-Stallworth, an artist with the Kansas Arts Commission, said she enjoyed the symposium.
"If you are a woman, you learn more about yourself," she said. "If you're a man, you learn more about women. You can't go wrong."
Student's play examines racial differences
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
When Raoul Berman, Tonganoxie senior, approached Paul Lim with a play discussing the inability of Blacks, Caucasians and homosexuals to get along, Lim disagreed with it.
"Primarily, these people are like water and oil. They don't mix," said Lim, associate professor of English and director of the English Alternative Theatre.
But after the O.J. Simpson trial, Lim reconsidered.
"When Raoul wrote the play, I fully disagreed with the position it took," he said. "But after O.J., I thought maybe Raoul was on to something."
Berman's play, Grandpa's
Ghost, will be performed by the
English Alternative Theatre at 8
tonight at 100 Smith Hall.
The two-act play deals with the treatment of African Americans and gays in the U.S. military in the 1950s and with the inability of different people to get along. The performance is free.
After the play, William Tuttle.
Jr., professor of American studies and history, will moderate a discussion of issues raised by the play.
Berman said the play was based on his experiences in the military and the faulty relationships between different people.
"I think everyone has good intentions," Berman said. "People just don't understand each other. What I'm trying to get across is there is no evil person in there. Everyone just believes they are right, and they just can't get along."
Gina Thornhurst KANSAN
Lim said he chose the play to perform in conjunction with African-American History Month because he thought it would be good material to generate discussion.
Theater
Lim said that although the Simpson verdict changed his mind about giving the play a chance, he still disagreed with its premise and hoped those who attend the reading would take part in the discussion.
"We like to think, in the KU community, that we live in a good world," Lim said. "I hope that we will have some disagreement, as I did, about Raoul's play."
English Alternative Theatre actors Tony Fuemmeler, Lawrence sophomore, Jerel Taylor, and Arnold Weiss, retired professor, perform in the dress rehearsal of a staged reading of Grandpa's Ghosts, an original script by Raoul Berman, Tonganoxie senior.
Membership of KU Christian groups is on the rise
Kansan staff writer
By R. Adam Ward
Vancouver staff writer
One of the most important things Amy Schmidt, Whitehouse, N.J., freshman, did when she came to the University of Kansas was join Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
"I joined the InterVarsity because God is the most important person in my life, and being with other people who feel the same way is the most important thing for me," she said.
Schmidt said she joined the group to be with people who held views that normally were not heard on campus.
Schmidt is part of a growing number of freshmen who are joining campus Christian groups.
"I think there is a countrywide trend of people who have
not grown up in a religious environment who are seeing a need for religion in their life," said Jim Musser, director of Campus Christians, 1320 Ohio St.
Campus Christians began with 10 members and added 20 students last year. Musser said.
Several other student Christian groups have experienced similar growth in their numbers, too.
The chair, human services and theology groups at St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road, have gained new members this year.
This increase reflects more students continuing their previous church involvement in college, said Vince Krische, chaplain at the center.
He said this trend was a reversal of previous years, when students tended to become indifferent to religion once they moved to college.
The Navigators, another campus Christian group, also have experienced more student involvement, said Chris Carey, Lafayette, Calif., senior, and a member of the group.
Carey said he did not think the interest in campus Christian groups was a fad.
Instead, he said he thought it was a result of people wanting to have a closer relationship with God.
I will never forget the day when I was first introduced to the world of music. It was a very special moment for me, and it was an experience that I will always remember.
Andrea Davis, student president of the Baptist Student Union, said she thought interest in all kinds of spirituality was increasing on campus.
"People think about it and are interested in it," she said.
Parm Dishman/KANSAN
Rick Lowry, a minister from Town and Country Christian Church in Topeka, speaks to a group of about 20 people at a campus Christian organization meeting. This particular group meets every Sunday night at 13:20 Ohio for singing, scripture readings and prayer.
Hey babe...
Here's a collection of pick-up lines offered by KU students:
Aren't you tired? Because you've been running through my mind all day.
Do you believe in love at first sight, or should I walk by again?
Is your daddy a thief? 'Cause he took the stars out of the sky and put them in your eyes.
Screw me if I'm wrong, but haven't we met?
Wanna wgo wrestling?
Wanna go wrestling
What's your sign?
Do you like forward men / women? Good / too bad, because I'm hitting on you.
Pick-up lines often knotty
Is that a Kansan in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me?
By Susanna Lööf
Kansan staff writer
With only two days left until Valentine's Day, students may start to become a bit desperate in their chase for a date. Some may resort to pick-up lines to get the attention of that special someone.
But that is not a good strategy, said Paula Hetherington. Lenexa sophomore.
"People who use pick-up lines have no chance of survival in the relationship world, because they're fake and cheesy, and they are not an expression of their own personality," she said.
Hetherington said pick-up lines did not work on her. Instead, they had the opposite effect, she said. One pick-up line that didn't work on her was the Windex line, which goes like this: "Have you Windexed your pants? Because I can see myself in them."
"Once a guy came up to me and used that one," Hetherington said. "I about killed him. I was really grossed-out."
Not all pick-up lines are nasty, though. Diane Sporeleder, Glen Elder sophomore, heard an unusual pick-up line when she was at the Art Institute in Chicago. She was sitting on a bench waiting for a friend, and next to her sat a guy who also was waiting for somebody.
"People who use pick-up lines have no chance of survival in the relationship world because they're fake and cheesy..."
"After a while, he
Paula Hetherington
Lenexa sophomore
After a white, he turns to me and says I've been sitting here so long that I feel like an exhibition," and then he asked me out," Sporleder said.
Sporleider said she had never used a pick-up line.
Neither has Ben Boarman. Lenexa sonhonore.
Sporeler did not go out with the guy, but they had fun talking, she said.
"It's not something you use," he said. "It's more something you like ground with your friends about." he said.
something you use," he said. "It's more something you joke around with your friends about," he said.
Instead of using pick-up lines, Boarman said he tried to start a conversation when he wanted to meet somebody.
Jason Brown, an employee of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, also said he had never used a pick-up line.
"I suppose I just get to know women through friendship, he said.
Even though Boarman, Brown and other male students said they never had used pick-up lines, Allison Mayes, Junction freshman, and Emily Conway, Fort Collins, Colo., freshman, said they had heard many,
Mayes and Conway said that pick-up lines don't work on them because they know why guys use them. The women said that they usually react to pick-up lines by just laughing.
Quota
Billy Goat
Butterglon
Go Kart
Hellcat Tri
O
Stick Disgruntled Ex-Employee $1088
Stick Disgruntled Ex-Employee
$10.88
Too Low to Quote
Eazy-E
Chely Wright
Tori Amos
Ellis Paul
Alice In Chains
C.I.V.
Edwyn Collins
Everclear
Green Day
Electrafixion
Almee Mann
Joan Osborne
Radiohead
(and many others)
Quotable but Low Prices
Billy Goat 10.80 Marry Me Jane 10.88 Son Volt 12.97 Enya 12.97
Butterglory 4.49 Eric Matthews 10.49 Stick 10.88 Pam Tillis 11.88
Go Kart 10.80 Replicants 10.88 the verve pipe 10.88 Menace Gan 9.88
Helicat Trio 9.99 Self 10.88 Dar Williams 12.97 R. Kelly 11.97
KIEF'S
24th & Iowa•PO Box 2•Lawrence, KS 66046
Tori Amos
Boys for Pele
K
KIEF'S
S
4A
Monday, February 12, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Fire safety is priority, excuses do not matter
University officials and fire personnel seriously should be concerned about the fire alarms in Tower A of the Jayhawker Towers, but nobody seems to be taking responsibility for the problem. Regardless of whose fault it is, officials need to correct the problem immediately before it causes a tragedy.
On the morning of Jan. 31, there was a fire in the elevator of Tower A that many residents were unaware of because they did not hear the alarms. Fortunately, nobody was injured, but next time residents may not be as lucky.
Many students who complained about not hearing the alarms live at the ends of the wing, where it was hard to hear them. It should not matter where residents live or where they are located in the building. It is essential that they are able to hear the alarms at all times.
There are not just one or two students who did not hear the alarm, there are many, so obviously there
THE ISSUE:
Fire alarms
is a major problem. The bottom line is the alarms are not loud enough.
The excuse that the alarms sound so frequently that students become immune to them is not valid. Alarms should be so loud that students are unable to ignore them.
It is frightening that many students were unaware of the fire. Officials are coming up with all kinds of excuses and scenarios as to what may have happened, but it does not matter. Someone needs to repair the alarm system or replace it so everyone is safe at all times.
Fire safety should be of the utmost concern to University officials, and it is the right of the residents to always feel safe. Fires are a real threat, and the necessary precautions should be taken to avoid future mishaps.
TARA FITZPATRICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
New position of poet laureate not a necessity for Kansas
Kansas has everything a person could want, and now it will even have its own poet. In a unanimous vote earlier this month, the Kansas State Senate unanimously voted to create the position of state poet laureate. This governor-appointed position will receive $2,500 a year to hold a two-year term.
Why? Because 12 other states have one, so why shouldn't we? At least, that's the justification from the Statehouse. Kansas has to be seen to have just as much interest in the arts as New York or California, and that's a fine and noble goal.
But why should every state have its own baird?
"The issue here is not honoring a particular poet, but honoring poetry," says Michael Johnson, chairman of the department of English. "We need to raise the level of awareness of poetry in Kansas. Kansans don't read or buy that much poetry."
Johnson proposes that the installment of a poet laureate for the state probably would increase interest in poetry.
THE ISSUE:
State poet laureate
Johnson said poets need to have their egos boosted.
"They need to see that poetry is supported. People need to see that it is supported because it is such an intangible thing," said Johnson, who is a poet himself. "Poets and people who like poetry often feel that it is invisible."
Support for the arts is one thing, yet having every state in the union adopt its own poet is a bit silly. The cost is small, $2,500 a year for a two-year appointment. However, the function of the state government is not to console artists who are not published or who see their art form in decline. In a state and a nation where talk of fiscally-sound policies is en vogue with the political leadership, and cuts in education and the environment are popular subjects of discussion, why has poetry suddenly become a priority?
TOM MOORE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Editore
HEATHER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Campus ... Joann Birk
... Phillip Brownlee
Editorial ... Paul Todd
Associate editorial ... Craig Lang
Anneune ... Tom Brickson
Sports ... Tom Brickson
Associate sports ... Bill Potella
Photo ... Andy Ruelletter
Matt Flokner
Graphics ... Moeh Miccos
Special sessions ... Nerva Sommer
Ambushy
Wire ... Tara Trenny
Illustration ... Moih Leaker
Marko Fields / KANSAN
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Karen Gerch
Regional mgr ... Katie Conleyen
National mgr ... Mark Oxdmek
Special Section mgrs ... Norm Blow
Production mgrs ... Rachel Cahill
Marketing director ... Cary Bresoff
Bioinnovator in BioArt America
Creative director ... E.Kawauk
Classified mgr ... Stacey Weygarton
Internship/oop mgr ... T.J. Clark
©'96 Marbo Yields
UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
WOW, LOOK
AT THOSE KIDS!
THOSE AREN't KIDS.
THEYRE POLITICAL
CANDIDATES...
Personally, I do not believe in 100 percent of the ideas that this type of feminism upholds, but then again, I rarely believe 100 percent of anything I hear. However, it is not the only type of feminism that exists in today's world. To assume it is, is ignorant.
It is a shame that many people feel too intimidated by the structure to follow their beliefs. But it is amazing that enough people are willing to fight against a patriarchy that has been in existence for thousands of years and that we have made as many strides as we have. Keep up the good work.
Women have come a long way in the fight for equality. We have progressed far beyond where we were when Wollstonecraft, or even de Beauvoir, wrote. But we still have a long way to go.
Many people in my group, including at least half of the women, believed that feminism is the idea that women are better then men. Even the women who didn't believe this saw that it is the mainstream view of feminism, and consequently refused to call themselves feminists.
I am a feminist
Sure, this is one view of feminism. It is the type that happens to have taken center stage for the time. And it is also a productive form of working for equality, or even a reverse in the present male dominated structure.
Stacy Nagy is a Topeka sophomore in English
Class discussion brings up feminism, exposes ignorance
Okay, I feel better now that I have that off of my chest. I have listened to feminism take a lot of heat in the past week. I have watched it get a bad rap, and for everyone who has been offended because of this cause, I have gotten offended. And for some reason, I have felt like a minority.
Maybe I am. In high school, I was most certainly a minority, lost in a hallway among students who thought that "feminism" was a dirty word and that Gloria Steinem was the incarnation of the devil himself. But I always thought that when I arrived at a college as large as the University of Kansas, the stigma of being a feminist would go away. I was surprised and disappointed to find out last week that it hasn't.
In my Western Civilization class, we were studying two famous women — Mary Wollstonecraft and Simone de Beauvoir. Both are noted feminists; the former wrote in the late 18th century, and the latter in the mid-20th century. However, the two of them have been lumped together as one for the purpose of learning about feminism in a class where almost every week is devoted to a single author. This alone should have told me that it was going to be a long week.
Nonetheless, there I sat in discussion, prepared to discuss with 10 intelligent people the merits, as well as the weaknesses, of these two strong women. And although the
Chaplain did his duty addressing ethical issues
STAFF COLUMNIST
STACY
NAGY
John Wilson's Feb. 1 editorial condemning guest chaplain Joe Wright's session-opening prayer to the Kansas House misses the point.
discussion began that way, it moved into areas that are much more sensitive. All of a sudden, I found myself on the defensive.
required to look good to be hired at jobs where appearance should not have any relation to her ability to do the job. We also agreed that the same standard does not necessarily exist for men. However, many people in our group did not see a problem with this type of attitude. Needless to say, I did.
Two ideas emerged that bothered me. The first concerned the discussion of physical appearance. The group agreed that sometimes, women are
Feminism is many things, and can have radically different definitions depending on the source.
I do not presume to speak for all the feminists out there, but personally, as a feminist, I strive to make the world a better place through equality between the sexes. Rather idealistic of me, but many people I know would agree that this definition does describe how they feel. They just don't all consider themselves feminists. This was the other idea that emerged from our discussion.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Rather than a political address as Wilson alleges, Rev. Wright's words are in the grand American tradition of religious leaders speaking out on what they perceive to be the state of faith and morality in the nation.
The issues Wilson calls political I would say are ethical issues entirely appropriate for a man of the cloth to address.
Just as the abolitionist ministers prior to the Civil War waved the "bloody shirt" to outrage and
energize congregations and political leaders against slavery, Wright appears to be addressing some of the hot button issues of today.
In expressing his concerns, is Wright any different from the Berrigan brothers in their campaign against the Vietnam War and nuclear weapons?
The one big difference is that Wright hasn't broken the law in expressing his ideals.
ial, Wilson wrote: "Wright overstepped the bounds of prayer, blasting many of the evils of the state."
If Wilson is acknowledging the fact that the subjects addressed were evil, then Wright fulfilled his duties as a minister in speaking against them.
In the conclusion of his editor:
Incidentally, regulations restricting a guest chaplain's words in the House session opening prayer, as Wilson calls for in his closing sentence, would be unconstitutional.
Glen E. Sharp II Lawrence second year law student
Name of Dole Center needs to be changed
Some students call it the Death Star.
To them, it lingers menacingly on the south side of campus. But the Death Star isn't considered evil because of it's contents, its more of a symbolic evil—the name of the building.
The Dole Center for Human Development bears the name of GOP leader Bob Dole, one who may profess to be supporter of students, but who is actually an opponent to overall education.
STAFF COLUMNIST
The Dole Center was named in 1988. Dole didn't make it to the ground-breaking ceremony.
"He has been a tireless champion of individuals with physical, mental and developmental disabilities and is recognized as their most forceful public spokesman." said former chancellor Gene A. Budig, explaining why the building was named after Dole.
IAN RITTER
Maybe that's true. But how many politicians don't publicly support those issues?
I'm not really a betting person, but I'd say that the building was named after Dole because of financing.
Of the $12 million with which the Dole Center was built, $9 million of it came from federal sources — I wonder if Dole had anything to do with that?
Besides, most buildings on campus are named after former chancellors or other University-related educators: Strong, Wescoe, Fraser, Malot. But that's not really the point.
And what about Danny Manning? He's probably brought more money to the University than any given individual. Even the John Brown Center for Human Development would be better. At least the guy seemed to have an interesting personality.
Not only is the Dole Center not named after an educator from the University, it can be argued that the Center is named after an opponent of education.
But Bob Dole — I don't think so. Money is one thing, but a respect for education should be a prerequisite for getting your name on a building at the University.
First of all, Dole is in favor of cutting general education.
The Republican Congress' 1996 budget called for cutting general education by about $10 billion, including various federal grants and aid for college students.
Ted Miller, member of KU Young Democrats, made an interesting observation referring to Dole cutting student aid.
"I think he could have been a little more observant of the fact that if there weren't veterans programs, he couldn't have finished his education," he said, referring to Dole's degree from Washburn University in Topeka.
So the University should consider giving the Dole Center a different name—a name that would seem to promote education, not discourage it.
And isn't it ironic that the Dole Center houses broadcast journalism? Dole was highly in favor of the telecommunications bill that passed last week, which promotes the mysterious chip that would be installed to block certain programming.
Langston Hughes lived in Lawrence. Sure, he may not have gone to the University of Kansas or given any money to the Dole Center, but he probably wouldn't support cuts in education instead of cuts in defense.
Plus, Darth Vader was never the good guy.
HUBIE
ian Ritter is an Overland Park senior in journalism
Sigh
YES,
UNFORTUNATELY.
By Greg Hardin
I'VE ALWAYS WONDERED WHAT THAT FEELS LIKE.
!!
AND YOU
WONDER WHY YOU
NEVER HAVE ANY
GIRLFRIENDS??!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday. February 12. 1996
5A
Student encourages voting
KU senior delivers speech on C-SPAN to round up voters
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
When David Stevens went to Washington last week, he had planned to attend a political conference.
What he hadn't planned on was giving a speech on C-SPAN.
"I didn't expect it, but I was honored that they asked me," said Stevens, Wichita senior. "I knew I was going to do the press conference, but I didn't know how much time I was being given or what the format was until the day before, so I just wrote the speech that morning."
Stevens, Student Legislative Awareness Board coordinator, was asked to present a speech to the National Press Club on Wednesday. His speech was part of a national effort by the Youth Vote '96 Coalition to register young people to vote and encourage politicians to speak to young voters about campaign issues.
"I think if we can get young people involved...and force candidates to address the concerns that I and my peers have, then great things will happen," Stevens said. "Hopefully
our elected officials and candidates for office will not overlook the needs of young people or future generations."
Youth Vote '96 Coalition is a group of political action organizations
David Stevens
working to en-courage people between the ages of 18 and 24 to vote in the coming presidential election.
Thehere Heliczer, a representative of the coalition, also spoke during the conference.
"We believe '96 will be a record
year for young voter turnout," she said.
As part of the coalitions' effort, the polling group Global Strategy Group Inc. surveyed young people about their political opinions.
Stevens said most believed that young people were apathetic about politics.
"The poll is very important because it explodes the knee-jerk reactions people have when dealing with young people and politics," he said.
Of the 800 people surveyed, 91 percent said that they thought it was their duty to vote, and 89 percent said that they most likely would vote in the coming presidential election.
Alexander Jutkowitz, a representative of the polling group, said the poll indicated that young people wanted to be politically active.
"This generation is concerned about the issues," Jutkwitz said. "Young people want to have a dialogue."
With the help of other board members, Stevens is trying to bring the National Student Primary to the University next month.
Search revolves around Ferris wheel
St. Louis archaeologist looks for ride missing since the 1904 World's Fair
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — An archaeologist hopes to put an end to a long-standing St. Louis mystery — the case of the missing Ferris wheel.
What happened after that is unclear.
Local legend says the Ferris wheel, or what was left, was buried with the rest of the fair's rubble in makeshift landfills at Forest Park.
"The thing I want to emphasize is, this is not Geraldo Rivera looking for Al Capone's vault," Diaz-Granados said.
Carol Diaz-Granados hopes to solve that mystery this summer by using ground-penetrating radar to find the resting place of the wheel's 45-foot-long axle.
Diaz-Granados is not a treasure hunter. She teaches at Washington University and Maryville University and was president of the Missouri Association of Professional Archaeologists.
She has a contract with the city to excavate the World's Fair landfills in Forest Park. She has directed students at the digs for 12 summers.
So far, they have uncovered 7,000 objects, all of which belong to the city. Some of the best finds will go on display in a World's Fair exhibit, which opens June 22 at the history museum in the park.
To the average eye, most of the objects recovered at
the digs are bits and pieces, worthless in the active market of World's Fair memorabilia and souvenirs.
But to Diaz-Granados, they offer an insight to a time that is still regarded as St. Louis's finest hour.
In a storage area of the history museum annex, Diaz-Granados displayed some of the larger pieces. Many are fragments — legs, heads and torsos — of the 1,500 statues at the fair.
Diaz-Granados said the Chicago Wrecking Co. was the low bidder — $400,000 — for dismantling the fair. The company's workers salvaged what they could and demolished the rest, burying the debris in at least three landfills.
While the large statue fragments are most impressive, Diaz-Granados said, she learned more about the fair, and the 20 million people who attended during its seven-month duration, from the odds and ends uncovered in the landfills.
From a tray of rusted iron pieces, Diaz-Granados pointed out a wire puzzle, bolts, a copper ornament from a horse's bridle and a bottle opener.
"There was a lot of beer drunk at the fair," she said.
Diaz-Granados feels her job is not complete while the fair's largest display, the Ferris wheel, remains missing. Originally built for Chicago's Columbian Exposition in 1893, the wheel was hauled to St. Louis in 175 flatbed rail cars.
Instead of seats, the wheel had 36 observation cars, each the size of a bus. The cars held 60 passengers each, giving the wheel a capacity of 2,160 people, who paid 50 cents a ride.
"With the high-tech equipment we have now, we'll find it if it's there," Diaz-Granados said. "We'll be able to close that chapter."
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"The truth shall make you free." John 8:32 Come to hear a speaker who is famous for telling the truth Dr. Joycelyn Elders Former U.S. Surgeon General
Tuesday, February 13th 9:00 a.m. Lied Center
"American Health Care Crisis: My Cure"
Don't miss it!
West Campus, University of Kansas (access off 19th & Iowa)
Admission free Reception follows
Pol. Adv.
This event co-sponsored by: University of Kanaas Office of Minority Affairs, Multicultural Resource Center at K.U., and Citizens for Dialogue. For additional information call: 864-4351 or 843-7107
SAMUINORI
DRUMMING AND DANCING ENSEMBLE SamulNorl
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents
Performance for Students Grades 5-12:
February 15, 1996, 10 a.m.
New Directions Series Event
Lied Center
February 15, 1996. 8 p.m.
Percussion Master Class February 14, 1996, 5 p.m.
Gripped by the Drum, Drawn by the Dance
Tradition meets The Present
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (804-ARTS): Murphy Hall Box Office (804-3982); SUA Box Office (804-3477) and all ticketmaster Centers or call
STUDENT
T. J. H. M.
Music and Dance
Robert E. Foster, conductor
featuring guest soloist
Paul Garner
Dallas Symphony Orchestra
clarinet soloist
7:30 p.m.
Monday, February 12, 1996
Lied Center
General admission tickets are on sale in the KU box offices: Murphy Hall, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; SUA Office, 864-3477; public $5, students and senior citizens $3; both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders.
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Monday, February 12, 1996
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IRAbomb shatters peace
The Associated Press
LONDON — Police searched yesterday for clues to the identities of Irish Republican Army bombers who attacked a London business district, and the top British official on Northern Ireland vowed that the peace process "will never die."
But while both Britain and Ireland scrambled to get the search for peace back on track, both sides were sticking to oid positions that previously had led nowhere.
The explosion Friday in a parking garage killed two people and injured dozens. Five people remained hospitalized yesterday.
The explosion came one hour after the IRA, complaining of the slow pace of the peace process, announced it was calling off the 17-month-old cease-fire it had declared in its 24-year struggle for a united Ireland. The IRA claimed responsibility for the bombing on Saturday.
Northern Ireland Secretary Sir Patrick Mayhew said the bombing left the peace process seriously damaged, then added, "But it is not terminally injured, and we are
If they made the decision to start the violence, they can equally make the decision to stop it.
John Bruton Irish Prime Minister
going to keep it going."
Even so, no proposals that might revive the process appeared imminent.
British officials promoted their plan for an elected peace assembly in Northern Ireland to pave the way for talks. The IRA-allied Sinn Fein party, the Irish government and Irish nationalist parties oppose that.
Irish Prime Minister John Bruton
called again for loosely-structured talks based on the successful Bosnian peace talks in Dayton, Ohio — a proposal rejected by Britain and Northern Ireland's pro-British Protestant parties.
Bruton said he would not meet with Sinn Fein until the IRA restored its cease-fire.
"If they made the decision to start the violence, they can equally make the decision to stop it." he said.
However, Bruton said that Irish officials were still in contact with Sinn Fein.
Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams, who said he did not have prior knowledge of the bombing, asked Bruton to reconsider.
"Let's put it together again," Adams said. "Don't give up the ghost."
John Hume, the moderate Catholic politician whose 1993 meetings with Adams helped bring about the IRA cease-fire, warned against freezing out Sinn Fein.
Pro-British Protestant paramilitaries, who called their own ceasefire in October 1994, have said they would not to retaliate for the bombing.
3 hurt in Bahrain blast
MANAMA, Bahrain — A bomb exploded outside a luxury seafront hotel in Bahrain yesterday, and an Islamic organization claimed responsibility.
The Associated Press
Three people reportedly were injured.
The blast occurred after weeks of anti-government unrest in the Persian Gulf island-state, a financial hub in the region and a key U.S. naval base.
He said three people were wounded and taken to hospitals after the 9 p.m. (11 a.m. CST) explosion.
A government source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said a bomb was placed near one of the entrances to the 15-story downtown Diplomat Hotel, which overlooks the Gulf.
Witnesses said several employees of the Diplomat Hotel were rushed to hospitals.
A Pentagon spokesman said he had no reports of American casualties.
A man claiming to speak for the Islamic Front for the Liberation of Bahrain, the most militant of the groups opposing the government, claimed responsibility for the blast in a telephone call to The Associated Press.
"We put a bomb in the Diplomat Hotel 20 minutes ago," the man said, speaking in English. "Tell the government, which has arrested 2,000 people, that after the feast we will destroy every place."
He was referring to the three-day feast ending the current Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan. The feast begins around Feb. 21.
A Dutch guest at the Diplomat,
Simon Paul, said the explosion
occurred in the street outside the
hotel lobby.
He said he leaped under the table when the bomb exploded.
A 42-year-old Indian businessman who was in the hotel restaurant, just off the lobby, said the explosion was close to where he had been sitting.
"If I hadn't moved to the salad
bar, I'd have had it," he said.
He declined to give his name.
Guests streamed out of the hotel, crying and hugging each other.
Carol Mason, an American guest,
said she and her husband just
grabbed their luggage and ran as
the lobby filled with smoke.
Police have arrested hundreds of people in the current wave of unrest that flared in January. On Jan. 17, a small bomb exploded in a ground-floor toilet at the plush Royal Meridian Hotel, but there were no casualties.
Opposition leaders say the protesters want the restoration of parliament, which was suspended in 1975 for criticizing the government.
Other demands are freedom of speech, more job opportunities and the release of all political prisoners.
Bahraini authorities accuse Iran of inciting the violence, which has involved the emirate's Shilite Muslim majority. Iran denies the allegation.
Blast fails to dislodge boulder as hope for survivors fades
The Associated Press
FURUBIRA, Japan — Rescuers blasted the side of a mountain with dynamite yesterday in an attempt to reach about 20 people trapped in a collapsed highway tunnel, but the explosion failed to dislodge the boulder, which is nearly the size of a 20-story office building.
Hope was fading late yesterday, more than 36 hours after the accident, that anyone would be found alive. Residents of this small, northern Japanese fishing village could only wait as rescuers prepared for a second blast attempt.
More than half of those aboard the bus were from this village, about 550 miles north of Tokyo on the northern island of Hokkaido. With a population of less than 5,000, most residents here know one another.
The giant slab of rock peeled off the mountain and crashed through the tunnel roof early Saturday, apparently crushing a bus carrying 19 people, including teen-agers on their way to nearby Sapporo for an annual snow festival.
The attempt to topple the boulder into the sea with a blast of 550 pounds of dynamite only crumbled the lower portion of the rock into
Officials believe a car carrying one person also was trapped in the collapse.
dust, leaving the rest of the rock intact and upright.
Rescuers were planning another blast today that they hoped would allow them to dig through the rubble.
Military specialists had gotten far enough into the tunnel to spot the bus' mangled bumper and a battered license plate piled over with rock. They found the driver's cap and gloves, but did not hear any voices or receive any other indications that anyone was alive.
Officials believe the boulder, about 70 yards tall and 40 yards wide, weighs about 50,000 tons. The rock appeared to be directly on top of the bus.
Takako Watanabe gradually has lost hope that there would be any survivors.
"The past few days I've cried and cried while watching this unfold, until I just don't have any more tears," Watanabe said.
Her lifelong friend, Nobuko Hattori, was on the bus accompanying her grandmother to the next town for a visit to the doctor.
Anguished family members kept a vigil as snow swirled around the opening of the tunnel and the temperature dropped to a bone-chilling 23 degrees.
"They haven't told us anything," said Tetsuo Honma, whose son, 17, was among the teens in the bus. Honma, who was waiting for news near the mouth of the tunnel, spent the night at the spot.
Fearing that any survivors would have frozen to death in the hours since the collapse, several family members grew angry at the pace of rescue efforts and yelled at police to hurry up.
Rescuers had milled around the site for almost 11 hours after the accident while officials discussed how to get through the rubble without setting off another collapse.
The failure of the initial blast to dislodge the rock was further discouragement for some 60 people who gathered at a one-room town hall about eight miles from the site to monitor rescue operations on live television.
"It sure doesn't look good from here," 51-year-old farmer Yasuhiro Iwamoto said. "It looks like they were crushed all over again."
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It's no coincidence that Valentine's Day and National Condom Day take place during Protect-A-Sweetheart Week-a great week to learn more about healthy relationships and other topics of interest including: HIV and other STDs, safer sex and abstinence, date rape, the effects of alcohol/drug use in relationships, and more effective communication skills. To get a display packet on sexual health issues or to arrange a free presentation from the Center for Peer Health Promotion for your group-call Health Promotion and Education at 864-9570.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 12, 1996
7A
Dole appears strong in Iowa
By John King The Associated Press
DES MOINES, Iowa — For a presidential campaign with a fragile front-runner and a cluttered pack of challengers, today's Iowa caucuses are the threshold to credibility. The results could bring clarity to a contentious Republican race.
This had been Iowa's role since Jimmy Carter made the state's
precinct caucuses a major event 20 years ago. But given this year's compressed primary calendar — 70 percent of GOP convention delegates will be picked in the next five weeks — Iowa
Bob Dole
TIMI
gets an even bigger say in shaping the nomination chase.
It wasn't supposed to be this way. Six months ago, Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole was the overwhelming favorite here, and New Hampshire loomed as the first competitive battle. But when Dole stumbled into a tie in an Iowa straw poll in August, his rivals sensed an opening. Iowa suddenly became a make-or-break battleground.
The stakes are highest for the
front-runner. Dole barely has that distinction. His Iowa lead has stabilized, but polls suggest support below the 37 percent he won here in 1988. Dole is in a neck-and-neck race in New Hampshire with the phenomenon of the 1996 contest — multimillionaire publisher Steve Forbes.
Dole rejects 37 percent as his credibility threshold. Even though he got that number against a sitting vice
"I think just being able to hold our lead in the face of that shows strength," Dole said.
Steve Forbes
Rivals disagree. Former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander predicted that Iowa would show a weakened Dole. Charles Black, chief strategist for Texas Sen. Phil Gramm's campaign, said that Dole was a weak front-runner.
Second place is a coveted trophy if Dole wins
A week ago, Forbes looked destined for second, but he has slipped and now is clumped in an unpredictable race for second or third with commentator Pat Buchanan, Alexander and Gramm.
Forbes is paying the price of success. His rise made him as much a target as Dole. Other candidates labeled his flat tax plan bad for the middle class and suggested Forbes was more liberal on social policy than he seemed. Polls also suggest a voter backlash against negative advertising.
This has put Forbes to the test be-fore the voting. He has complained that Dole and others used negative tactics against him, evoking disbelief from those on the receiving end of Forbes' attack ads.
R. B. K.
Phil Gramm
Alexander has benefited from Forbes's slip. But he is short of campaign cash and will be hard-pressed to raise more, if he doesn't come in as a second or a strong third. He vowed to go on regardless.
Gramm talked of quitting if things went sour in Iowa. He has lost economic conservative support to Forbes and social conservative backing to Buchanan, who stunned Gramm last week in Louisiana caucuses.
Gramm now vows to go to New Hampshire regardless of Iowa results but, like Alexander, will find the going tough if he is fourth or worse.
He predicted that his Iowa organization would spring a Monday surprise.
Buchanan wasn't expecting much from Iowa, but now he has growing support among Christian conservatives.
"There is only one conservative left in this race who can beat Bob Dole." Buchanan said.
The Iowa outcome will shape the sprint to New Hampshire. The anti-tax electorate in New Hampshire is a lot different from Iowa, where social conservatives dominate the GOP.
A Dole-Forbes race would pit the veteran politician with experience and leadership against the newcomer who rails against Washington insiders. A Buchanan surge, however, could provoke a debate about who is most committed to cultural conservatism and a fight about his protectionist trade views.
The late polling suggests that a Dole victory, with everyone else bunched together behind him is possible. but Dole doesn't expect that.
"Somebody will come in second," he said. "And the people of New Hampshire are going to have to make an important decision."
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Decency Decreed and Decried
A new law, designed to clean up the Internet, could Story by
Story by Scott MacWilliams
Dan
Dan's biology lab didn't go well — broken glass and a bonehead teaching assistant. Needing to vent, he unloaded with an e-mail note to his girlfriend, Tina, back home in Chicago.
Dan used strong language, and his communication was intended only for Tina. Unfortunately for Dan, Tina is 17 years old and shares her e-mail with her 14-year-old sister.
Because of the new Communications Decency Act, Dan could spend two years in jail and be fined $100,000. The new law is aimed at those who "knowingly make, or make available, obscene, lewd, lascivious or indecent material" to minors on electronic networks. And Dan's e-mail letter, laced with profanity, counts.
send online users to jail for little more than using profanity in an e-mail message.
The Decency Act was part of the Telecommunications Competition and Deregulation Act of 1996. It sailed through Congress on Feb. 1 and was signed into law on Thursday.
What Law?
The act is intended to protect children from pornography on the internet, but critics said that the bill is so vague that it could be unenforceable. The American Civil Liberties Union believes the act is unconstitutional and already has filed a lawsuit.
The Computer Center is one campus site that could be affected by the new law. Students using e-mail accounts could be in legal jeopardy by the law.
Bryant, who edits KUFacts and the Jayhacker Newsletter, said that parents have obligations for what their children are exposed to. She said it is not the government's role to limit adult discussion for the protection of children. Bryant considers almost any censorship to be wrong.
"I would like to see our First Amendment rights protected," said Martha Bryant, managing editor of publications at Academic Computing Services. "We were talking about that the other day, and one of the parents who works here compared it to turning your children loose in downtown Chicago."
How is KU affected?
"As I understand the law, the responsibility lies with the person sending the message," said Wes Hubert, assistant director of Academic Computing Services. "But the part of the law that includes indecency is not defined legally, and I am waiting to hear from the University Counsel."
Victoria Thomas of KU General Counsel said on Friday that she still was waiting to see the final language of the bill.
9.
"I'm sure it will be challenged," Thomas said. "The vague language makes it very difficult for service providers in the mean-
1. What is the purpose of this image?
2. How does the artist use color and shading to convey the feeling of being underwater?
3. What kind of bubbles are present in the image? Are they realistic or stylized?
4. How do the fish appear in relation to the water?
5. What do you notice about the background of the image?
6. What is the subject of the artwork?
7. How do you interpret the overall mood of the image?
8. What are the potential uses of this artwork in different contexts?
Q W E R T Y U I O N M P L A S D F G H J K L Z
Q W E R T V U A S D F G H J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
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Computing Services' Statement:
Illustration by Melissa Dehner
This statement was released on KUFacts on Friday by Wes Hubert, assistant director of Academic Computing Services. KUFacts did not participate in the blackout of Web pages on Frid- day. In his release, Hubert explains why and KU's reaction to the new law.
k-
"At least for now, our use of the Internet has not changed. Many, even among
that some provisions of the law are unconstitutional. If so, judicial review will address those problems. In the meantime, the law affects the Net only to the extent that it changes our use of the Net. The University of Kansas has not made any change to Our Internet services or policies as a result of the new law.
"Current policies already prohibit using e-mail, Web pages or other electronic communications to harass or threaten anyone, either at KU or elsewhere on the Internet. They also prohibit using University systems for any activity prohibited by state or federal law. However, free exchange of information is still encouraged."
time."
C
---
"I don't want anyone reading my e-mail."
KU students who use campus e-mail accounts also are upset about the new bill.
Moon
"I'm totally against it," said Kristin Zvirgzdins, St. Louis junior. "So many people use e-mail, especially college students. When I e-mail my boyfriend back home, I might swear if I'm mad.
Protests and precautions
Hundreds of World Wide Web locations on the Internet faded to black on Thursday and Friday in protest of President Clinton's signing of the new law.
"I think it is crazy what the government is trying to do," said Juan Cuadra-Sola, systems engineer at the Center of Excellence in Computer Aided Systems Engineering and vice president of Fast Lane Communications
"There are no borders on the Net."
To enforce the vaguely defined laws, critics contend, the government would be forced to take drastic measures. However, there are alternatives in the form of user controls. Software has been developed that will allow parents to block their children's access to Internet locations that contain sexually explicit materials.
Until test cases define the law, Internet users are at risk if they use simple profanity in what may be considered private e-mail.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hill
Sports
( )
COIN
topics
O
February 12,1996
Page 8A
ó
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KANSAS TENNIS Kansas junior Kylie Hunt secures her second national title at Rolex National Indoor, Page 3.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1996
MEN'S BASKETBALL
SECTION B
Tigers claw their way past the Jayhawks
Poor defense hurts 'Hawks at Missouri
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Jerod Haase had only one turnover Saturday.
But in the 77-73 loss to Missouri at the Hearnes Center, Haase's turnover with three seconds remaining in the game, may be one thing people remember.
"It was a poor decision," said Hasse, sneaking quietly.
The loss is the Jayhawks' first in the Big Eight Conference. They remain in first place with a one game lead on Iowa State.
Kansas is 7-1 in the Big Eight and 19-2 overall. Missouri is now 5-4 in the Big Eight and 15-8 overall.
Although the Tigers shot 54.2 percent from the floor, which was the best this season for a Kansas opponent, the Jayhawks had an opportunity to tie the game or take the lead with 12.2 seconds remaining.
With his team trailing 75-73, Kansas coach Roy Williams designed a play with several options: Haase in the corner, sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz posting up on the near side and freshman forward Paul Pierce
"We just gave them too many
easy shots. "
Paul Pierce Kansas freshman forward
trailing the play. Haase didn't take the shot. He said he had Missouri junior guard Jason Sutherland, who scored a game-high 18 points, on his hip.
However, Kansas junior center Scot Pollard thought Haase was shooting and got into rebounding position.
Instead, Haase, thinking Pollard would cut through the paint, passed the ball inside.
The only player there to catch the ball was Missouri senior center Simeon Halev.
Pollard said that sometimes miscommunication happened in basketball. It just happened to be in the last few seconds of the game, and Haase took it to heart.
"Jerod's really hard on himself," Pollard said. "I have no reservations about Jerod coming back and
Haase wasn't the only one to be disappointed after the loss. Kansas defense troubled Williams.
playing better."
"Missouri just exposed us and made us look like we're not a very good defensive team at all," Williams said.
"I'm always proud of what we do on the defensive end, but in the last week or so, I've been disappointed."
The Jayhawks did not execute their defensive principles. Pierce said the team was neither getting into the passing lanes nor denying the Tigers the ball.
"We gave them too many easy buckets," Pierce said.
"They were just able to run through their offense."
At the same time, Kansas sputtered on offense, hitting 40.7 percent of its shots from the floor. That 24 of 59 performance included seven of 21 three-point shooting.
The Jayhawks' inside game wasn't any better. Pollard and LaFrentz hit four of 14 shots combined due to Simeon and Sammie Haley's defense.
"It seemed like every time we got the ball inside, there were two or three guys right on us," Pollard said.
"That made us want to kick it back out and not go to the basket."
MISSOURI
11
KANSAS
12
Kansas sophomore guard Billy Thomas reaches to block the shot of Missouri's Dann y Allouche in Saturday's 77-73 loss at Columbia. The Tigers handed the Jayhawks their first conference loss of the season.
Matt Flickner /KANSAN
Missouri spoils trip home for Kansas' Robertson
Missouri's Jason Sutherland runs into Kansas freshman center T.J. Pugh. Sutherland had a game high 18 points Saturday.
Matt Flickner/KANSAN
N S A S
35
Freshman guard not welcomed by Tiger crowd
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Crouching at the scorer's table late in the first half, Ryan Robertson was ready to pounce.
"I was just waiting my turn and trying to be as patient as possible," Robertson said. "Finally, when Coach Williams gave me the nod, I was really excited."
He had good reason to be. The freshman guard from St. Charles, Mo., returned to his home state Saturday. Robertson said he enjoyed seeing family and friends before and after No. 3 Kansas' 77-73 loss to Missouri.
But the Tiger fans, who thought Robertson should have stayed in Missouri, weren't so enthusiastic about his return. Robertson heard a chorus of boos every time he checked into the game or touched the ball.
the chant of "traitor" even went through
the Hearnes Center crowd at times.
"I've heard it before," Robertson said. "It was exactly what I figured."
Nonetheless, Robertson admitted he was nervous when he first entered the game. After running up and down the court a couple times
"I've heard it before. It was exactly what I figured."
Ryan Robertson Kansas,freshman guard, speaking about the showering of boo he received during the Missouri game.
though, it was just another basketball game, he said.
He also got some advice from Missouri senior guard Julian Winfield.
"Julian patted me on the butt and said, 'Ryan, just play your game. Don't listen to the crowd.'" Robertson said.
"It was one of those mutual respect kind of things."
Robertson might have gained more respect after hitting both of his three-point
attempts in the second half, ending the game with six points.
His first three-pointer came with 6:33 remaining in the game and pulled Kansas within one, 65-64.
Robertson hit his second three-point shot about three minutes later, cutting Missouri's lead to 71-67.
Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams said crunch-time performances such as Robertson's should be common for him and the other two Jayhawk freshman, Paul Pierce and T.J. Pugh.
"In our 21st game, I don't think they should be considered as freshmen any longer." Williams said.
In spite of the pressure of playing back in his home state, Robertson said he felt confident.
"I felt if I was going to get the ball, I was going to knock it down." he said.
"But it wasn't so much Ryan Robertson versus Missouri. It was Kansas versus Missouri. I am upset that we lost."
Women's basketball wins put Kansas No.1 in Big Eight
Kansas sets record from free-throw line; 31 shots,31 points
Fans who made it to Allen Field House for this weekend's Kansas women's basketball games saw plenty of record-breaking action.
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
The Jayhawks outlasted Nebraska in a 94-85 shootout yesterday. Kansas set a new NCAA record with 31 for 31 from the free-throw line against the Cornhuskers.
Kansas moved to first place in the Big Eight Conference with 8-3
and is 15-8 overall
Colorado and Oklahoma State had one game each this weekend and are tied for second place with 7-3.
Kansas trailed Nebraska 48-47 after a fast-paced first half in which the Cornhuskers shot a blittering 61.3 percent from the field.
"These were two outstanding ball games," Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said. "Both of these opponents played really hard."
The Cornhuskers were led by senior guard Kate Galligan, who scored 22 points in the first half, and 38 for the game.
"Coach told me just to follow her wherever she went," Sampson said. "I just tried to always keep a hand in her face."
Kansas senior guard Charisse Sampson said trying to slow down Galligan was a priority at halftime.
ing, Kansas also
got a record-
breaking perform-
formance from
junior guard
T am e c k a
Dixon, who
nearly matched
Galligan with a
career-high 35
points.
Along with the free-throw shoot-
"I came ready to play," Dixon said. "I came in early and shot around, and I felt well all day."
"I just tried to step up and shoot it quick. I've never won a game like that."
After a back-
Guzl Rayment Kansas freshman guard, talking about her buzzer-bearer shot to defeat Iowa State on Friday night.
and-forth battle for most of the second half, Kansas took the lead, 75-74, on a three-pointer by junior guard Angle Halbleib with about four and a half minutes to play.
Jayhawks kept the lead with good-fire throw shooting.
Sampson said that free throws
the weekend began for Kansas with the defensive struggle against Iowa State.
could make or break a team.
The Jay-
haw k w
trailed 58-56
after Sampson
missed two
free throws with
13 seconds
left
Kansas immediately fouled Cyclone junior guard Tara Gunderson, sending her to the line with nine seconds remaining.
After Gunderson missed, Dixon drove the length of the court but missed the shot. Iowa State sophomore forward Janel Grotg got the
"Everything happened so quick," Rayman said.
rebound but was stripped of the ball by Raymant, who shot the tying basket and was fouled.
Amidst a wild celebration by the Jayhawk bench, neither team immediately knew a foul had been called on the shot, giving Raymant a free throw.
"I was preparing for overtime when the referee told my assistant coaches that we had a free throw," Washington said.
Raymant, a native of Melbourne, Australia, said she had experienced pressure situations playing in her homeland, but never to win a game.
"I just tried to step up and shoot it quick," Raymant said. "I've never won a game before like that."
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
CAROLINA
3
Charisse Sampson pulls down a rebound yesterday for Kansas.
---
2B
Monday, February 12, 1995
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
USA TODAY-CNN Top 25
The USA TODAY-CNN basketball coaches' poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Feb. 11 and previous rankings, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th place vote:
| | Record | Pts | Pvi |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Massachusetts (29) | 23-0 79 | 1 | 1 |
| 2. Kentucky (2) | 20-1 767 | 2 | 4 |
| 3. Connecticut (1) | 22-1 727 | 4 | 4 |
| 4. Cincinnati | 18-2 657 | 5 | 3 |
| 5. Kanaas | 19-2 642 | 5 | 3 |
| 6. Villanova | 20-3 611 | 6 | 7 |
| 7. Utah | 19-3 577 | 7 | 7 |
| 8. Penn State | 18-2 550 | 10 | 9 |
| 9. Wake Forest | 18-3 548 | 9 | 9 |
| 10. Virginia Tech | 18-2 452 | 12 | 13 |
| 11. Purdue | 19-4 421 | 13 | 13 |
| 12. Texas Tech | 20-1 407 | 14 | 14 |
| 13. Georgetown | 19-5 391 | 8 | 8 |
| 14. Memphis | 17-4 341 | 16 | 15 |
| 15. Arizona | 17-4 319 | 16 | 15 |
| 16. Syracuse | 18-6 317 | 18 | 11 |
| 17. North Carolina | 16-7 300 | 18 | 11 |
| 18. UCLA | 16-6 225 | 17 | 20 |
| 19. Iowa | 17-6 190 | 17 | 20 |
| 20. Stanford | 15-5 169 | 24 | 21 |
| 21. Boston College | 15-5 124 | 21 | 21 |
| 22. Eastern Michigan | 18-2 106 | 23 | 25 |
| 23. Louisville | 17-7 93 | 25 | 24 |
| 24. Iowa St. | 17-5 89 | — | 25 |
| 25. Michigan | 15-8 78 | 19 | — |
Others receiving votes: Georgia Tech 46,
Auburn 37, Mississippi St. 34, Wisconsin-
Green Bay 23, Arkansas-Little Rock 21, Clemens
16, George Washington 12, Davidson 10,
Maryland 10, California 9, New Mexico 8,
Georgia 7, Marquee 7, Missouli 7, College of
Charleston 6, Duke 5, Long Beach 7, St. 5,
New Orleans 5, Jacksonville 4, South Carolina 4,
Washington 4, Arkansas 2, Bradley 2, Texas 2
Tulane 2, Drexel 1, Providence 1, Santa Clar
1, Virginia Commonwealth 1.
KANSAS (19-2)
MISSOURI 77, KANSAS 73
Pierce 15-2 1-4 1, LaFrentz 3-10-7 8-13, Potlard 1-4 1-3 4, Vaughn 6-10-4 6-14, Haase 1-8 0-3, Williams 0-2 1-2 1, Thomas 3-5 0-8 0, Pugh 2-1 2-1 5, Pearson 1-3-1 2-4, Rayford 0-0 0, Robertson 2-3-0 2-6, Totale 24-59 18-30 7
MISSOURI (15-8)
Winfield 6-7-4-14, 16, Thames 4-10-6-18, 5
Simeon Hale 5-6-3-14, 13, Moore 1-5-1-23,
Sutherland 7-11-2-18, 2 Sammie Hale 0-1-3-
Grimm 0-1-4-4, Ferguson 0-0-0-0, Allouche 4-2-2-27, Wather 0-0-0-0, Hardge
1-3-0-0. Talleres 28-42-29-77.
Haltinee—Kansas 38, Missouri 36, 3-Point
goals—Kansas 7-21 (Ribbons 2-0, 7-2)
Pierce 0-3), Missouri 3-5 (Sutherland 2-4),
Alachie 1-6), Fouled out - None, Rebounds -
Kansas 7 (LaFrentz 10), Missouri 31 (Simone
Haley 7), Assists - Kansas 10 (Vaughn 6), Misi-
ner 5
Missouit 22. A—13,300.Last Week's
OKLAHOMA STATE 62, OKLAHOMA 58
OKLAHOMA (11-11)
Anderson 0-3 1-2 1, Mayburt 6-17 0-15 7,
Jones 9-20 1-1 19, Long 1-3 0-1 2, Pennon 6-10 0-15, Schenk 0-0 0-0 0, Hajek 1-3 0-0 2,
Corcaron 1-4 2-2 4, Workman 0-1 0-0. Tottas
24-64 4-558
OKLAHOMA STATE (17-5)
Harmon 0-6-0-0, Coffey 7-12-2-18, Shaterk
3-13-1-12, Chronister 0-2-18, Roberts
6-13-1-10, Bower 0-0-0-0, Boyd 2-4-0-6,
Wenner 0-1-0-0, Scales 4-5-6-11, Edwards
0-0-0-0, Jackson 0-0-0-0, Totals 22-56 12-
20 62
Women's Basketball
Women's Top 25 Fared
By The Associated Press
How the top 25 teams in The Associated Presst women college basketball poll fared
No. 1 Georgia (20-2) beat No. 17 Mississippi
90-85; beat South Carolina 79-61.
No. 2 Louisiana Tech (21-1) beat Texas
Arlington 75-6; beat Western Kentucky 72-52.
No. 3 Connecticut (22-3) beat St. John's 85-
41; beat Seat Hall 73-40.
No. 4. Stanford (18-2) beat Southern California
77-54; beat UCLA 61-59.
No. 5 Iowa (20-2) beat Michigan State 71-65;
lost to No. 23 Purdue 62-42.
No. 6 Tennessee (19-4) beat No. 8 Wisconsin
72-61; beat Mississippi State 92-76.
No. 7 Texas Tech (19-2) beat Texas Christian
90-71; beat Texas A&M 60-51.
No. 8 Wisconsin (18-4) lost to No. 6
Tennessee (7-2) lost in Michigan State 78-65
No. 9 Virginia (17-5) beat No. 15 North Carolina State 72-60; lost to No. 14 Tide 72-69.
No. 10 Old Dominion (19-2) beat East Carrillna 94-45; beat George Mason 86-64; beat American 87-50.
No. 11 Vanderbilt (17-5) lost to No. 22 Auburn
71-66; beat LSU 78-56.
No. 12 Penn State (19-5) beat Michigan 83-
63; beat Northwestern 78-62.
No. 13 Alabama (18-4) did not play
No. 14 Duke (20-5) lost to Maryland 63-52; beat Wake Forest 85-66; beat No. 9 Virginia 72-69.
No. 15 North Carolina State (16-6) lost to
9 Virginia 72-60; beat Florida State 78-64
No. 18 Oregon State (16-4) beat Washington
State 87-50; beat Washington 78-72
*Virginia 2 box bait* - #6/State 8/4-04.
No. 16 Oregon State (16-4) beat Washington
No. 17 Mississippi (15-7) lost to No. 1 Georgia
90-85;负 No. 20 Florida 69-48.
No. 18 Clemson (17-4) beat South Carolina 75-57; beat Maryland 70-53; lost to Maryland 74-72.
No. 19 Colorado (20-6) beat Missouri 67-56.
No. 20 Florida (17-5) beat No. 17 Mississippi
69-48.
No. 21 Oklahoma State (17-5) lost to Arkansas 62-8; beat Oklahoma 62-58.
No. 22 Auburn (17-5) beat No. 11 Vanderbilt
71-66; beat Kentucky 88-46.
No. 23 Purdue (15-9) beat Indiana 67-66; beat
No. 5 Iowa 62-42
No 24 Notre Dame (16-5) beat Pittsburgh 90-51.
beat Georgetown 81-62.
No. 25 Stephen F. Austin (18-2) beat north Texas 109-63; beat Arizona-Arlington 81-59.
TV
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Monday. (schedule subject to change and or blackout);
SPORTS WATCH
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12
10 a.m.
ESPN2 — NASCAR Auto Racing, practice for Daytona 500, at Daytona Beach. Fla.
ESPN — NASCAR Auto Racing,
qualifying for Daytona 500, at Daytona Beach. Fla.
ESP2N — NASCAR Auto Racing, qualifying for NASCAR Dash Series Busch Dash and IROC practice, at Davenport B竞赛.
PRIME — NCAA Basketball, St.
Augustine at N.C.-Central
6:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — NHL Hockey, Pittsburgh et Toronto
ESPN2 — NCAA Hockey, Great College Rivalries Beanpot Hockey Tournament, championship game, at Boston (same-day tape)
USA — Dog show, Westminster
Kennel Club, judging for Working,
Terrier, Non-Sporting and Toy
groups, at New York
9:30 p.m.
PRIME — Boxing, Luis Campos (63-1-0) vs. Ray Collins (16-7-1) for NABO wettterweight championship; feathertwists, Juan Marquez (13-1-0) vs. Ricardo Rivera (12-3-2), at inglewood, Calif.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Utah at Wyoming
Wyoming
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
Expanded Glance
All Times CST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L W PCT GB L1 Streak Away Conti
Orlando 34 14 148 708 — 6-1 Walked 25.0 19.4 19.9
Tampa 34 14 148 708 — 6-1 Walked 25.0 19.4 19.9
Washington 22 24 478 152 — 4-6 Walked 16.7 6-17 11.18
Miami 22 24 478 152 — 4-6 Walked 16.7 6-17 11.18
New, January 18 29, 2001 15:15 3-7 Level 3 13-15 5-21 15-15
New, January 18 29, 2001 15:15 3-7 Level 4 13-15 5-21 15-15
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
Chicago 42, 5 | 894, 11 -- 8 | 2-2 Bowl 12, 0 | 20-5 10-3 2-3
Indianapolis 31, 6 | 860, 11 -- 8 | Lost 1 Bowl 12, 0 | 20-5 10-3 2-3
Cleveland 20, 6 | 565, 15 | 6-4 Won 4 Bowl 15, 1-8 11-12 16-14
Atlanta 26, 7 | 563, 15 | 6-4 Won 4 Bowl 15, 1-8 11-12 16-14
Detroit 23, 22 | 521, 18 | 4-6 Won 15, 1-8 8-14 13-15
Charlotte 22, 24 | 518, 18 | 5-5 Won 15, 1-8 8-14 13-15
Milwaukee 28, 40 | 270, 5 | 5-5 Won 10,13 8-14 9-16
Toronto 13, 0 | 277, 29 | 7-9 Lost 2 | 10,13 8-14 9-16
W L W Pt GB C8
San Antonio 31 14 699 - 6—90 LG洗 2 Home 1-9 Away 3-9
Utah 32 16 667 % 7-3 Load 1 16 14 14-12 20-12
Houston 31 16 663 % 7-3 Load 1 18 57 16-11 20-12
Denver 20 27 426 12 4-6 Load 1 12-10 8-17 12-10
Denver 20 27 348 14-8 4-6 Load 1 10-13 8-17 12-14
Minnesota 32 289 12 4-6 Load 1 9-12 4-20 10-20
Vancouver 10 27 123 21 4-7 Load 1 7-16 3-21 10-23
Seattle 14 32 739 - 8-2 Won 2 20 6 14-10 21-5
L.A. Lakers 18 32 190 56/6 1 Won 2 18 2 14-10 21-5
Sacramento 24 20 545 9-7 Lost 3 15 9 14-14 12-11
Philadelphia 24 45 489 1-7 Lost 3 15 12 13-11
Phoenix 22 44 172 1-8 Lost 3 15 12 13-11
Golden State 21 26 4473 1/5 Lost 1 14-10 7-16 9-15
LA Clippers 18 32 190 56/6 1 Won 2 18 2 14-10 21-5
No games scheduled
No games scheduled.
Sunday's Game
All-Star Game at San Antonio, 6 p.m.
All-Star Game at San Antonio, 9 p.m.
Monday's Games
Tucker's Grammer
Denver at Orlando, 6:30 p.m.
Toronto at Miami, 6:30 p.m.
Charlotte at Cleveland, 6:30 p.m.
Miami at Cleveland, 6:30 p.m.
Dallas at Houston, 7 p.m.
Washington at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at Waukee, 7:30 p.m.
Utah at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m.
Seattle at Phoenix, 8 p.m.
Boston at LA Clippers, 9:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Sacramento, 9:30 p.m.
All-Star Box Score
EAST (129)
Pippen 4-7-0-0, Hill 6-10-2-1-2, O'Neal 10-16
5-11-25, Jordan 8-11-4-1-2, Hardaway 6-4-4,
18, Ewing 3-7-2-8-2, Miller 4-8-0-6, Baker 2-
5-2-2, Brickard 4-10-2-1, Rice 1-5-4-7,
Howard 1-5-0-2, Mourning 1-6-0-2, Totals
90-58-25-31 129.
WEST (118)
Barkley 4-6-0-0, Kemp 12-1-2-13, Oaljuwan
2-8-0-4 Dreher, 5-7-0-10, Kidd 3-4-0-0
Robinson 8-13-2-2-1, Payton 6-10-6-18,
Elliott 5-12-1-13, Malone 2-6-7-11, Richmond 3-10-1-27, Mutombe 2-4-0-4, Stockion
2-9-0-4 Totals 48-12-21-118
West
33 28 41 27—129
20 26 22 28-118
32 26 22 35 -18
3-Point goals: East-4-15 (Hardaway 2-4, Rice
1-2, Brandon 1-4, Brampton 1-4,
4-25 (Elliot 2-6, Kidd 1-2, Drexler 1-4,
Koop 1-6, Richmond 0-3, Stockton 0-7),
Fouled out—None. Rebounds—East-51
(O'Neal 10), West 60 (Robinson 11). Assists—
East 29 (Hardway 7), West 31 (Kidd 10).
Total fouls—East 21, West 23 A—36.037.
PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League
Extended Glance
By The Association Press
All Times CBS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L W T Pts OF GA Home Away 1-51 Div 4
N.Y. Rangers 32 13 10 W 7 T Pts OF GA 19 6-15 Div 8-24
Florida 33 15 6 W 72 187 147 19-2 16-14 Div 13-41
Philadelphia 35 15 6 W 72 187 147 19-2 14-10 Div 5-91
Washington 26 21 7 7 F 59 155 143 15-8-1 11-134 Div 8-92
New Jersey 26 21 7 7 F 59 155 143 15-8-1 11-134 Div 8-92
Tampa Bay 22 22 8 7 F 52 157 172 13-9 19-124 Div 4-91
NY, Islanders 15 30 8 8 F 52 157 172 13-9 9-183 Div 5-141
Pittsburgh 31.17 4 7 60,251 180 22-6 11-11-4 13-3 2-0
Montreal 27.12 4 7 60,251 180 12-6 11-14-1 13-5 2-0
Boston 22.23 7 6 51,183 168 16-9 16-14-3 8-6 1-0
Hartford 22.23 7 6 51,183 168 16-9 16-14-3 8-6 1-0
Buffalo 22.28 4 4 85,165 173 14-13 8-71-7 8-6 1-1
Oakland 10.42 4 4 128,214 214 13-1-2 7-13-0 8-1-1
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L L P GTF GP GA Houses Away Diy D-3
Delbac 38 10 4 60 192 112 21-8 17-2 8-9 5-2
Chicago 30 14 1 80 192 112 17-2 18-7 11-4 7-5
Toronto 22 22 10 56 163 164 12-9 11-13 11-5 7-5
St. Louis 22 23 10 56 163 164 12-9 11-13 11-5 7-5
Winnipeg 23 26 1 50 187 193 14-10 9-16 6-14 8-2
Dallas 15 28 11 41 150 190 14-13 9-14 6-14 8-2
Colorado 29 16 10 18 64 214 153 15-7 14-13 10-4 9-4
VanCOunsel 20 12 11 64 199 186 187 15-7 11-9 3-8 10-4
Collegiate 20 24 11 51 159 167 12-15 8-12 5-17 9-3
Los Angeles 18 26 12 18 64 205 201 12-15 8-12 5-17 9-3
San Diego 18 31 12 51 149 181 11-14 7-13 5-17 7-01
Anaheim 18 31 5 51 149 181 11-14 7-13 5-17 7-01
San Jose 13 36 5 51 172 238 18-63 7-02 3-81
Hartford 3, Colorado 2, OT
Vancouver 3, Edmonton 2, OT
R. Islanders 4, A Washington 3
Pittsburgh 6, Boston 2
Pittsburgh 6, Chicago 3
New York 18, N.Y. Rangers 0
San Jose 19, Los Angeles 1
Santa Claus 1, Dallas 3
Ottawa 5, Montreal 3
Baltimore 2, Toronto 2, Toronto 2
Wilmington 3, Calgary 2
Washington 4, Vancouver 4
N.Y. Rangers at 6, Tampa Bay 2
Hartford 5, Dilas 3
St. Louis 2, Davis 3
Louisville 1, New Orleans 2
Colorado 4, Philadelphia 3
Edmonton 4, Calgary 2
Monday's Games
Sain Jose at Montreal. 6:30 p.m.
Ottawa at N.Y. Islands. 6:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Toronto. 6:30 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL American League
BOSTON RED SOX—Signed Wilt Cordero,
inflated, to a contract for the 1997 season with
field, pitcher.
CALIFORNIA ANGELS—Agreed to terms with Eduardo Perez, Infante, and Ken Eden.
CLEVELAND INDIANS—Agreed to terms with Dave Gallagher, outfielder, on a minnemonicle contract and invited him to spring training.
SEATTLE MARINERS—Agreed to terms with Dean Crow, Tim Haitkai, Derek Lowe and Paul Menhart, pitchers, and Glomer Guevara, Desi Relaford and Andy Sheets, infolders, on one-year contracts.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Agreed to teams with Mike Gordon, Ken Robinson, Mark Selvert, and Jose Silva, pitcher; D.J. Boston, Tilson Brito, and Brian Wood, infielder, Angel Ramirez and Shannon Stewart, outfielder; and Julio Mosquera, catcher.
National League
HOUSTON ASTROS - Named Leslie
assistant to the director of player
leagues.
ATLANTA BRAVES—Agreed to terms with Wermaine Dye and Lee Daniels, outfielders, and Terrell Wade, pitcher, on one-year contracts.
NEW YORK METS—Signed John Carter, Pete Wake, Derek Wallace, pitcher, and Terrell Lowery, outfielder, to one-year contracts.
SAN FRANCISCO CIANTS—Signed Mei Lel, outfielder, and Malcolm Cepeda, first baseman, to minor-league contracts.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
NEW YORK KNICKS—Traded Charles Smith and Monty Williams, forwards, to the San Antonio Spurs for Brad Hauer, center. J.R. Reid, forward, and a 1996 first-round draft pick.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
COLORADO AVALANCHE --Reassigned Aaron Ellis, goaltender, from Cornwall of the AHL to Brantford of the Colonial Hockey League, and Brent Brekke, defenseman, from Cornwall of the AHL to Dayton of the ECHL
DALLAS STARS>-Sent Robert Petrovich, forward, to Michigan of the IHL.
EDMONTON OILERS—Recalled Ralph Intrauno, left wing, and Greg DVettes, defensman, from Cape Breton of the AHL. Sent Brian Smith, left wing, to Cape Breton
HARTFORD WHALERS—Recalled Ben Glassner, goaltender, from Springfield of the AHL
PITTSBURGH PENGUINI -Sent LAN
Barrie center to Cleveland of the ILN
SAN JOSE SHARKS—Recalled Alexei Yegorov, center, from Kansas City of the IHL. Seni Larry Dyck, goalie, to Kansas City. WINNIPIG JETS—Placed Igor Korolev, left wing, on the injured list.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 12, 1996
3B
KANSAS BASEBALL
Baseball wins one in debut
Third time's charm for 'Hawks who lose their first two games but defeat New Mexico State
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
The Duel in the Desert was nearly the Debacle in the Desert for the Kansas baseball team this weekend.
But after losing its first two games, Kansas rebounded to defeat New Mexico State 5-1 yesterday afternoon in Phoenix.
Kansas senior starting pitcher Clay Baird and freshman Nick Frank allowed no earned runs in combining on a three-hitter.
Baird allowed three hits, one unearned run and no walks in five innings pitched.
"It felt good today," Baird said. "Everybody came out here prepared to play. The coaches gave us a good motivational talk before the game."
Baird was staked to a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the first inning.
Kansas junior shortstop Joe DeMarco opened the inning with a single to center field. Senior second baseman Josh Kliner walked, and that was followed by a double steal. DeMarco scored on an errant throw into the outfield, and after an out, Kliner scored on a sacrifice fly by junior first baseman Justin Headleay.
Frank, who was competing for the starting thirdbase position, was called on to pitch by Kansas coach Bobbv Randall.
Frank pitched a scoreless, walkless and hitless four innings of relief to ensure the win.
He said that he wasn't expecting to pitch, but was pleased with his effort.
Kansas scored insurance runs once in the second and twice in the seventh.
"I felt like I could go in and be effective if I could throw strikes," he said.
The victory was Randall's first as a Jayhawk. After the two losses, he was glad Kansas could salvage the weekend.
"It's sure fun to be part of the winning team," Randall said. "We pitched great after not pitching well the first two games, but we can still get better."
Kansas was pounded 19-9 by Grand Canyon on Saturday.
The Antelopes knocked out Kansas senior starting pitcher Josh Belovsky (0-1) after two and one-third innings. He allowed nine runs, six earned, on nine hits.
Kansas was behind 14-1 before scoring seven runs in the top of the seventh, including five with two outs.
Kansas junior centerfielder Isaac Byrd was three-for-five with two RBI while DeMarco and Kliner each had two hits for Kansas.
Randall's debut was not one to remember as Kansas lost to New Mexico State on Friday. 9-3.
Kansas junior starting pitcher Eric Peters (0-1) first start for Kansas in nearly one year was not a successful one, as he allowed three runs, all earned, in three innings.
New Mexico State pitcher Jeremy Stewart pitched a complete game, scattering eight hits.
Both Grand Canyon and New Mexico State had already played this season, while Kansas was playing its first games. The Jayhawks had only been outside to practice twice, and that rustiness showed as they committed nine errors in three games.
"It's still early. We haven't been outside on the field that much," DeMarco said. "That will be there for a while. Hopefully, we can work the kinks out soon."
Wildcats women's coach suspended
Former men's coach Jack Hartman fills in during investigation
Kansan staff report
Kansas State women's basketball coach Brian Agler was temporarily
suspended Friday pending an investigation of possible NCAA rules violations in the program.
Former Kansas State men's basketball coach Jack Hartman assumed the role of interim women's coach
Friday night in the Wildcats 81-75 victory against Nebraska in Manhattan
Hartman, who guided the Wildcats to three Big Eight Conference titles and seven 20-win seasons, is the winningest coach in Kansas State history with 295 wins in 16 seasons. He retired after the 1985-86 season.
Tennis star takes the crown
The Wildcats lost yesterday to Iowa State 58-47.
Kansas junior Hunt wins indoor Grand Slam title in Dallas
The Kansas women's tennis team now has a national champion.
At the Rolex Indoor National Championships yesterday in Dallas, Kansas junior Kyle Hunt defeated Vicky Males of Arizona 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, capturing the Indoor National Championship title.
"Kylie set high goals for herself in this tournament. She held tough and grinded through the entire time," Kansas head coach Chuck Merzbacher said.
The tournament consisted of men's and women's divisions. There were 32 players in singles competition and 16 teams in doubles competition. The tournament was also a collegiate Grand Slam event.
Hunt was a fifth seed in the tournament and is ranked No. 7 in the nation. The win marked Hunt's second Grand Slam title.
Her first came with doubles partner Jenny Atkerson at the T. Rowe Price Clay Courts last fall.
In other championship action for Kansas, sophomore Enrique Abaroa, ranked 13th nationally, advanced to the quarterfinals by defeating No. 34 Boris Kodjoc of Virginia Commonwealth 6-2, 6-1. However, Abaroa lost to eighth-seeded Cecil Mammitt of Southern California 4-6, 6-4, 6-2 in the semifinals.
It's Your PARTY
1601 W.23rd 749-3455
In the doubles competition, Hunt and Atkerson were No. 1 seeds in the tournament but were upset in the second round by No. 11 Julie Scott and Kim Shasby of Stanford 6-4, 2-6, 6-2.
Kansan staff report
SHOWOFFS
Body Piercing Studio
Leather • Jewelry • Lingerie
12 E.8th 12-8 p.m. 838-3366
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts
WE'RE OUTTA HERE!
1
Join International Student Services on a fabulous Spring Break 9 day adventure in the American West. We will see, hike and visit Colorado Springs, Durango, Mesa Verde National Park, Bryce Canyon, Zion National Park, 2 days in Las Vegas, Death Valley, the Grand Canyon, Sedona, Santa Fe, and Taos. Experienced Guides.
SIGN UP SOON! SPACE IS LIMITED TO 42.
Cost for this first class motor coach trip is $379/person,which includes transportation, hotels, and entrance to all National Parks.
$1001 is due Feb. 15 to save your space. The remainder is due by March 1.
Contact Girish Ballolla or Sheila Immel at International Student Services
864-3617. (2 Strong Hall)
WE CAN HELP YOU ENHANCE
WHATEVER YOUR IMAGE,
WE CAN HELP YOU ENHANCE IT!
(Left to Right) Gina Pattin, Christi Mochamer, Adrienne KlinKnett,
Angela Blanchard, Rockie Browning, Cyndi Hudnett
FULL SERVICE SALON
HAIR • NAILS • WAXING
FOR AN APPOINTMENT CALL:
843-2138 • 611 W. 9TH
IMAGES
HAIRSTYLING
(Formerly CO Hairstyling)
FULL SERVICE SALON
HAIR·NAILS·WAXING
FOR AN APPOINTMENT CALL:
843-2138·611 W. 9TH
IMAGES
HAIRSTYLING
Some things are tough to tell your Mom.
Our services are designed to meet the special circumstances of the college student. With expertise and compassion—we're here to serve your gynecological needs
Sometimes things happen at college that you'd rather not phone home about, although your Mom and Dad might be much more understanding than you can imagine — even regarding sexual matters such as STDs.
Appointments
864-9507
Kathy Guth Nurse Practitioner Gynecology
864-9500
HEALTH
Since 1906
Caring For KU Watkins CENTER
UNI SAN ANTONIO
PINE IS FOR RABBIT HUTCHES, NOT BEDS!!
Others Sell Pine For $159
We Have This And Other Inferior,
Soft Woods For Only $99
YOU DON'T HAVE TO SETTLER FOR A PINE FUTON WHEN ABDIANA OFFERS FINISHED HARDWOOD FRAMES FROM:
TWIN FUTON & FRAME ...*139
QUEEN FUTON & FRAME ...*189
$239
FUTON SALE
FUTONS by Abdiana
843-8222 1023 Mass. Lawrence, KS
FREE PIZZA
Any Monday buy any pizza & get the second one of equal value FREE! From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area)
MONDAY
MANIA!
PYRAMID
PIZZA
14th & OHIO 843-3232
(UNDER THE WHEEL)
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842-3232
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TO GA
TONIGHT
NO MATTER
WHAT'S HAPPENING
TONIGHT, WE'LL
HAVE YOUR LOAN
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TO GA
TONIGHT
1-800-344-3227
24 Hour Student Loan Appr
WILL BE USED GLOBALLY
First Bank Kansas
PATTERN JUDENTS
FIRST
© 1999 F265
Member FD4C
A
FINE MOUSE LENDER
4B
Monday, February 12. 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
It's Spring...
It's Spring...
船
Nobody Does Break Better! LAST CHANCE! AS SEEN ON CBS NEWS BREAK
Mobody Does Break Better!
SPRING
AS SEEN ON CBS NEWS
BREAK
COMPLETE 5 & 7 NIGHT TRIPS
AFFORDABLE
ROAD TRIIP!
$69
as low as
PARTY
15th
Sellout
Year!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
KEY WEST
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
* PER PERSON DEPENDING ON DESTINATION / BREAK DATES / LENGTH OF STAY.
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
OR SURF OVER TO OUR WEB SITE AT:
http://www.sunchase.com
AFFORDABLE
shares a location to and break free!
ROAD TRIP!
$69
as low as
PARTY
15th
Sellout
Year!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
KEY WEST
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
* PER PERSON DEPENDING ON DESTINATION / BREAK DATES / LENGTH OF STAY.
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
OR SURF OVER TO OUR WEB SITE AT:
http://www.sunchase.com
The Sun. The Sand. South Padre.
You and an amigo can share a week in a two bedroom condo on South Padre Island at prices starting at $69 per person
Call Today: 1 (800) 926-6926
rate is per person and based on Island Reservation Service
six people sharing one bedroom P.O. Box 3465
tax and refundable cleaning S. Padre Island, Texas
damage is extra 78597
SPRING BREAK
PANAMA CITY BEACH, FLORIDA
$99 PER PERSON PER WEEK
2 OUTDOOR POOLS • 1 INDOOR HEATED POOL
HUGE BEACHSIDE HOT TUB • RESTAURANT •
SUITES UP TO 10 PEOPLE • KITCHENS WITH MICROWAVES
TIKI BAR • BEACH PARTIES • ENTERTAINMENT
VOLLEYBALL • SAILBOATS • JETSKIS • PARASAILS
DISCOUNTS TO AREA CLUBS, RESTAURANTS & ATTRACTIONS
SANDPIPER BEACON BEACH RESORT 650 FEET OF GULF BEACH FRONTAGE
17403 FRONT BEACH RD. PANAMA CITY BEACH. FL 32413 INFORMATION 1-800-488-8828
Spring Break '96
Spring Break '96
JAMAICA
$522
BEACHFRONT
MAZATLAN
$449
DAYS INN ACROSS
FROM THE BEACH
CANCUN
$539
BEACHFRONT
All prices include round trip airfare from KCI & 7 nights hotel. Tax is an additional $45.
Call us to book Sun-
choose, College Tours,
Holiday Express, or STB
(scarce price)
DESTINATIONS UNLIMITED
All press include round trip airfare from KCI & 7 nights hotel Tax is an additional $45.
DESTINATIONS UNLIMITED
CALL TODAY!
SPRING BREAK
LOWEST PRICES
TO CANCUN
AIRFARE, HOTEL, TRANSFERS,
BAGGAGE HANDLING, HOSPITALITY
DESK & FABULOUS PARTIES
MANY OTHER DESTINATIONS
AVAILABLE
• Jamaica • Belize
• Cruises • Mexico
MANY OTHER DESTINATIONS AVAILABLE
• Jamaica • Boating
Cruises • Mexico
Lawrence's Travel Agent Since 1874
831 Massachusetts 749-0700
RAVELLERS
GET OUTTA TOWN!
The Official
Spring Break Airline!
$104
$57
LOS ANGELES
COLORADO SPRINGS
GATEWAY TO GREAT WINTER RESORTS
$104 LOS ANGELES
BEAT THE SYSTEM
WP
Western Pacific
AIRLINES
Whether it's for Fun in the California Sun, or some extreme Colorado skiing/snowboarding, let Western Pacific be your ticket to a well-deserved Spring Break - at a Super Low fare.
Las Vegas ($99), Phoenix ($99), San Francisco ($107)
FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 800-930-3030 OR YOUR TRAVEL AGENT
These are off-call any way you need. THIS IS ALL YOU NEED TO DRAW. Saath may be sold out on some flights that operate daily but have limited dates. Pick travel dates from 7:45 a.m. to 11:49 a.m., Monday, 2:58 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., Thursday, 7:49 a.m. to 7:49 p.m., Friday, 2:58 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. All other dates include booking of all departures listed below before departure. You do not need to pay for holiday charges. All payments may be made only via suburban department time, for an ATA charge plus any increase in fee. Follow to verify "National Public University of California changes please indicate time will result in indication of change." All fees and charges added are not included.
Vacation Packs
Turtlefly Car Rental
800-722-5775
THE BROADMOOR
OUR OFFICIAL RENTAL CAR
800-679-3707
COLORADO SPRINGS
CONVENTION & VESTORS BUREAU
800-DO-VISIT
4
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 12, 1996
Take a Break!
Suit Up With Christie's
WE HAVE BATCHING SUITE FOR
SPRING BREAK BEAUTIES!
From the beach to the bedroom, Christie's has something for you.
LINGERIE • GAGS • ADULT GIFTS
CHRISTIE'S TOY BOX
America's #1 Adult Gift and Joke Store
AMERICA'S
CARISTIES
Mint Piece & Gift Store
TOY BOX
jamaica package
concan package
phone 4519 7700 6311
jamaica package
concun package
phone 5219 p/pub1
Padre & Florida packages also available
Each Package Includes
• Round trip airfare
• Airport/hotel transfer
• 7 nights hotel accommodation
• All hotel taxes & Gratuities
• On-location resort staff
• All handling and delivery fees
HOLIDAY TRAVEL INCORPORATED
Celebrity destination for travel and discoverment tours
Pap
HOLIDAY TRAVEL INCORPORATED
Start on your tan today!
Don’t Wait for the sun to come out
Introductory Offer
2 Tans-$200*
*First time customers only. Expires Feb 19
Lose 5-20 lbs
by Spring Break
Guaranteed!
w/nutritional products
10 Tans S29
15 Tans S39
+2 Tans FREE!!
First time customers only.
23rd & Ousdahl
(Behind Perkins)
841-6232
EUROPEAN
TAN HEALTH & HAIR SALON
Cancun
SPRING BREAK '96 IN
Cancun
mexico
FROM JUST
$329
YOUR SPRING BREAK
BARRIER WEEK INCLUDES:
• Round trip flight from Kansas City.
• Round trip transfers from airport to hotel.
• Regular hotel room.
• FREE welcome parties & club admissions.
• FREE parties, contests and activities at all of
the hotels, brass hotels and dance club.
• Professional staff on location.
• All service charges, gratuities and hotel taxes
(except government departure taxes and fees).
FROM JUST $329
YOUR SPRING BREAK
PARITY WEEK INCLUDES
FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS, CALL
1-800-328-SAVE
SUNRISING CHURCH MOVIE
NOBERT BACK TICKET BOOK
LAKE PARK PREMIUM 10% OFF
ESCROW
We are proud to offer you a great experience. We are not only a resort but also an amazing place for your trip!
We give you the best vacation!
AMERICA'S BEST STUDENT VACATIONS!
Flights to Cameron are Public Carrier. The charter operator is Take A Break Student Travel. The fastest air carrier are
TRAVEL CENTER
B
Steamboat
$186
*5 nights hotel
*4 day lift ticket
March 1996
Break for the Beach
Daytona Beach $89
South Padre Island $129
Panama City Beach $124
includes 7 nights lodging
CANCUN from $399
TAMAICA from $439
*Includes round trip air from KC
*7 nights hotel accommodations
March 23-30, 1996
Cruise
4-Day Carribean
5716
Includes Air from KC
Other packages available call for details 841-7117
SEAL CENTER
Southampton Mill Center
1601 W. 23rd
M-F 9-5:30 Sat 9:30-2pm
Located in Perkins
Don't get burned this spring break!
ULTIMATE
start tanning today!
2499 Iowa St. Suite O
842-4949
SUN DECK
THE SUN DECK 701 W.9th 842-7866
Spring Break '96
Hey, University of Kansas, why not head to the tropics for break this year, where the weather is fine and the party never stops!
Cancun
Trips starting at:
* 449 00
- Round Trip Air & 7 Nights
Mazatlan
Trips starting at:
* 459 00
Hotel Accomodations *V.I.P. On-site Party Program
M
COLLEGE
Call for details
1-800-244-4463
TOURS
March 23-30,1996
Panama City Beach Spring Break 1996
)
$230 w/KUID
$255 non-student
Includes:
- 7 nights deluxe condo on the beach (sleeps six)
- free/discounted admission to part-
parties, clubs, and events
- ties, clubs, and events
- Volleyball tournament, SUA t-shirt,
and more!
DENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAS
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
$100 deposit due ASAP to save spot (only 40 remain)
Full payment due Wed. Feb. 21
Sign up at SUA Box Office or call 864-3477
Carcun
CARPENTER
INCLUDES:
- Carpentry & Carpentry
- Air Conditioning
- Oil & Gas Painting
- All Carpenters
South Padre
INCLUDES:
1 Tail & Transfers
2 Noon Shopping
Serving Breakfast Sand
3 Three Breakfasts
4 Main Street Pizza
4-800-724-9532
10 Mini Wine Socks River
Shopping Stubs and more!
$39.00
$39.00
CALL NOW
1 800 953 7302
Cancun
INCLUDES:
1 Tail & Transfers
2 Maths Home
UP Arts Center
All Classes
and elements
are more
April showers bring Mia flowers.
Wednesdays are student nights! $2 admission with your student ID.
Juicers
Showgirls
913 n. Second
Open Tues-Thurs 7:30pm through Saturday is open 1:00am
SHARK'S SURF SHOP
813 MASS YOUR 841-8289
SPRINGBREAK HEADQUARTERS
NO NEW ITEMS DAILY
NO NEW BOOKS ON SITE
LIKWALR
VENTURES
VANS
Dr. Martinez
Harpers
OAKLEY
SHARK'S SURF SHOP LESS BUSY GUMBOUSE SHOP LESS BUSY CUSTOMWEAR SHOP LESS BUSY CRYPTON SHOP
Save the Pales
es
Don't be caught without your tan this Spring Break!
Save $3.00 on a tanning package
9th & Miss.
841-5921
the total look!
61
6B
Monday, February 12. 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Women set school record in relay
Distance team takes first place at Nebraska meet
By Adam Herschman Kansan sportswriter
Members of the Kansas distance medley team are the newest Jayhawks to break a school record.
Kansas seniors Kristi Kloster, Melissa Swartz, Kerri Woolheater and junior Carleen Roberts provisionally qualified for the NCAA Indoor Championships with a time of 11:36.67 at the Husker Invitational in Lincoln, Neb., during the weekend.
"The girls' distance medley qualified for a school record. That was probably-definitely the highlight of the meet," Kansas junior Michael
Evers said.
The school record is Kloster's fifth.
Two years ago, Kloster and Swartz finished second in the same relay at the Husker Invitational, so this was a special victory for the two fifth-year seniors.
Kloster said that the team's main goal was to qualify for nationals, but also she and Swartz wanted to win the meet to receive the first-place prize international
about the sweatshirt. "Last night we were pretty excited. We've always wanted to win at the Husker."
"
"We finally got it... We've always wanted to win at the Husker."
Kristi Kloster
first-place prize — a Husker Invitational sweatshirt
Kristi Klotor Kansas track senior and member of the Jayhawk distance medley team
"We finally got it," Kloster said
Kansas junior sprinter Pierre Lisk also had an outstanding meet. Lisk finished third in both the 55-meter and 200-meter dash in a very talented field in the Devaney Center.
UNLV, " Kansas track and field coach Gary Schwartz said.
"It's kind of a mini-nationals because you got schools from all over the country: UCLA. BYU.
"The idea and the reason peo
come to it are because it's an opportunity to run against good people and get great performances."
Kansas received other standout performances from a jumper, sprinter and a pole vaulter.
Kansas freshman high jumper Jason Archibald finished third in the high jump at six feet, 11 inches and Kansas senior sprinter Dawn Steele-Slavens finished sixth in the 200 meter.
Despite some strong individual performances, Schwartz said the team will have to make some improvements before the last Big Eight Indoor Championship on Feb. 23.
Kansas freshman Jon Colby Miller set a collegiate personal record with a pole vault of 16 feet, five inches.
"I think in general we didn't have a very good meet," Schwartz said. "We got to make some things happen."
Horoscopes
★★★
By Linda C. Black
Today's Birthday (Feb. 12).
Make a decision, and take action now. In March, an investment may be required to secure your future.
In April, you could find romance in an educational setting. Go some place together in June. Stay busy in July, and instigate legal proceedings in August. Schedule your vacation for October, and complete career obligations in November. You may get a surprise from friends in December. A secret tip brings benefits in January.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You had better get that check into the mail this morning! If you hold off much longer, you'll have penalties. Tonight would be a good time to learn a new game. There are probably several people who would like to teach you. Pick the one with the best sense of humor.
even stronger.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
You may notice you're even more powerful than usual this morning.
Unfortunately, it won't last. Better make your move early. Tonight,
talk to an older relative. If you learn how your ancestors got through hard times, you'll become
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). Keep your head down this morning. You need to finish some stuff that should have gone out last week. Use new skills to speed up your production. Confess an old mistake to your sweetheart this evening, and fall in love all over again.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Consult a friend in private this morning. You may get the answer you need to make a big decision.
Do it early or not at all. Plans made later may fall to materialize.
Stay home and discuss a private matter with your sweetheart tonight.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
You may run into massive resistance this morning. It's because you want to change something that works for somebody else.
Show the benefit for doing things your way, and you'll get further.
You'll have a receptive audience tonight.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Make travel plans early this morning. If you can leave, so much the
better. Get away before, the boss thinks of anything else for you to do. Your mate will have even more chores for you tonight. Authorize a little reward for yourself!
Aries (March 21-April 19).
This morning, pay bills, and gather money you are owed. Get all the business taken care of early, just in case you get a good offer this afternoon. It would be a nice evening to take a drive with a friend.
Talk about things you don't usually have time for.
Taurus (April 20-May 20). To advance in your career, try something that has never been done before — at least not by you. Rely on an old partner for moral, if not financial, support. Go through your budget again this evening. You may find a place where you can whittle waste even further.
Gemini (May 21-June 21). Be nice to a quiet coworker this morning. That one may have more going on than you realize. You may be thwarted from taking action until this afternoon. If you work with a partner, you should be able to get what you want.
Trade something you have.
Cancer (June 22-July 22).
Don't get involved in a messy situation today, even for a good friend. You may only make matters worse. It's time to accept responsibility. If you get into a bind, call a wise person who lives out of town for inspiration.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). You may be able to work out a compromise this morning. Hopefully, you'll end up with something that's better than either of you had. For relaxation, hide away with a good book tonight. A long conversation with an interesting friend is also highly recommended.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
Learn from an expert this morning. That will be easier than reading the manual. Also, make a secret pact with a friend. Support each other in achieving your separate objectives. Then, complete something at home that's been dragging on for way too long.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and are for entertainment use only.
By Scott Adams
Dilbert
CATBERT THE EVIL HUMAN RESOURCES DIRECTOR
THE EMPLOYEES HAVE TOO MUCH TIME OFF. IT MUST BE STOPPED.
computer thought
Sneakers
I SUMMON THE DEMONS OF DARKNESS TO ASSIST ME!!!
841-6966
CCTV
... ELIMINATE SICK DAYS.
MAKE THEM USE VACATION
DAYS WHEN THEYRE ILL.
CALL IT A "TIME DANK."
914 Mass.
IT'S PLAYFUL...
IT'S CRUEL... I
LIKE IT.
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign
USED & New Sports Equipment
Roller Skate
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
841-PLAY
1029 Massachusetts
REFOUND SOUND
1-913-842-2555
0101010101
BUY-SELL TRADE
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KS
2858 Four Wheel Dr.
842-8665
LAWRENCE
Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care
DIAGNOSTICS
Get her something you like this Valentine's Day...
UNDERCOVER
21 W. 9th Street
AUTOMOTIVE
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
AIM HIGH
COLD WEATHER
then come to this meeting. Your
warm body will thank you!
A high school diploma and the desire to learn are all you need. You'll receive:
If you want to get
where you are going warriylv
Your Future Is Waiting
Survival
Tuesday, February 13
6:00 pm, Rm. 150
Robinson Gymnasium
For more information: EY Recreation Services 804-35-46
- Tuition assistance for college
- High-tech training
Winter isn't over yet!
- Medical and dental care
- Excellent salary
Classified Directory
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
120 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Y
100s Announcements
For more information call 1-800-423-USAF or contact your local Air Force recruiter.
200s Employment
- Fenton assistance for care
- Medical and dental care
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Servi-
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
男 女
300s Merchandise
235 Typing Services
AIR FORCE
Need Cank?
Hours Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
We loan cash on almost anything of value. CDs, VCRs, TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence L'More liberal company. JAYHAWK PAWN & JEWELRY 1804 W. 649-719-100
400s Real Estate
Y
Graduating in May *Or* Looking for a Job? Or beck?
Then you should be sign up now for interviews at the University Placement Center. Visit wts from examples on your resume, research sales, etc. Find out how to get started by calling 864-8548, or visit us at the Burge Union Level. Do not. Don't delay. Areas are approaching. Oh, by the complete interview schedule on the internet at http://http://cee.edu/cvits/uid/scripts/adductaXc10ml
A
110 Business Personals
SOUTHER PADREE岛 - SPRING BREAK
We will be at a cramped hotel room? SANSEHane IV has
a large capacity, and we can handle stable rates. Deal directly on on-site management, not third party promoters. Great location, on the beach, & near the city pool. 1 bbmf 806 (4 people) 2 bmnf 796 (6 people) 1 bmnf 1386 (6 people)
Call toll free (800) 944-6818
Who pays for AT&T, Sprint, and MCTs multi-billion-dollar advertising and telemarketing campaign? YOU DO! The 9 largest telecommunications company in the U.S. doesn't advertise or bother you with calls, it just saves you money on long distance in Kansas, the U.S., and world-wide! Free information: (800) 765-7232.
Internet: http://www.hiline.net/fccs
864-9500
Spring Break Panama City $3 days, room w/schlen.
$119.00 Walk to best bays 'Tightly in Bed' $250.00
Cocain Beach Hilton (great beaches, near Disney) $4
Daytona, $188.00 http://www.
daytona.com/buy-a-break-and-cheer-specials/
HEALTHY Watkins Since 1906 Caring For KU SERVICES
CANCUN MEXICO FROM $ 339
PANAMA CITY BEACH FROM $ 129
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
INCLUDES DAILY BEACH PARTIES
EVENING CLEAR PARTIES AND
GREAT DISCOUNTS !!!
(800) 999-TOUR
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
Hours
120 Announcements
Announcements
GET A GROUP OF 14 TOGETHER & YOU TRAVEL FREE!!!
兵
ASK YOURSELF THIS:
PARTY ON THE BEACH
SPRING BREAK'96
NEED A RIDE/ RDEE? Use The Self Serv Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
Spend Spring Break hiking the Sierra Madre of Mexico's Copper Canyon March 23-31. This low impact, cultural immersion trip will travel your world. $480 includes all meals at (900) 767-732 for calls. Call Southern Expeditions at (900) 767-732 for calls.
7. 95 wash ALL DAY EVERY DAY INDEPENDENT Laundromat 200s, 400s, and A/cs (Across the street from Dairy Barn)
COMMUTERS: Self serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
SPRING BEAKE PRAKAT City Beach. Florida from 49 Peron Forrow Time. TBM Beach Bar. HI Beachside Hote SPIRIT BREAKAWAY CITY Beach. Florida from 49 Peron Forrow Time. TBM Beach Bar. HI Beachside Hote
Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise 7 days *$279.00*
Includes 15 meals and 6 parties Great beach
night life Leave from Ft. Lauderdale; http://www.
springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386.
A group is now forming to study this timely knowledge. For information call Anniola 841-3981.
The Celestine Prophesy!
HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
841-2345 $ \cdot $ 1419 Mass.
Kansan Ads Work for YOU
24 hrs.
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, color, religion, nationality, sexual orientation, disability or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulations.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1980 which makes it adversary for any "advertise only" permission, or discrimination on base, color, religion, sex, handicap, family or occupation, or in association, to make any such advertising, limitation or discrimination.
120 Announcements
GUARANTED
LOWEST PRICES
ON CAMERA MIRROR
Spring break specials, Cascade and 11% lower
price guarantee! 7 nights, air and hotel from $429.00
Save $100 on food and drink!
http://www.springframeworktravel.com - 1-800-673-6294
Jamaica Cancun Florida
Spring Break
from $439
from $399
from $119
Local Contacts:
Kevin @ 749-1399
Ash @ 838-3247
Bain @ 838-4349
Claire @ 555-5555
Destination Unlimited
@ 842-7447
1344 Ashton Rd., Hanover, MD 21076
Toll free 1-800-648-4849
http://www.travelman.org/
SYS PRODUCT REVIEWS
http://www.stetravel.com/
Spring Break
Mazatlan $419
Cancun $429
Trip includes: 7 nights hotel, Round trip air fare from Kansas City, Daily parties, free covers and discounts.
For more info call Tiger Tours
1-800-Leave-99
(532-8399)
SPRING IN SHOW ON CBS NEWS 12 HOURS BREAK
AFFORDABLE
PAYMENT
$69
PARTY
15th
Sellout
Year!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
BATTONA BEACH
KEY WEST
STEAMBOAT
VAIL BEAVER CREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
1-800-SUNCHASE
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
ON NEW DEVICE OR ON WEB SITE
www.bahrain.gov.np to 800 261 3477
http://www.bahrain.gov.np
130 Entertainment
Free party room for 20-200 at Johnny's. 842-0377
MIRACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale at $9.80 and up.
1910 Haskell, 841-7504
Spring Break 1996
Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas Panama City, Daytona, Padre
** Great low, low prices
** Free Trip on only 15 sales
Call for a FREE information packet!
电话
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-426-7710
140 Lost and Found
Watch found near Wescoe on 02/07/96. Please Call 842
3083.
Found: Used Paint Watch by Malcolm Wilkins found at www.paintwatch.com. Call 664-8234 for pick up on the international Student Center.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, February 12, 1996
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
NEEDED 42 people to low weight guard. Guaranteed
100% Natural 1-800-329-627 cert. t223.
Part Time Help Wanted in bursary Doctor's Office. MWF b-20
10.m.-3.p. m. TR 3p-p. m. TA 740-0310.
Century School, a nonprofit private school is hiring past-time assistants. Flexible hours. Call Don
Downtown theatre needs PT concessions.
Call or stop by Varsity Theatre for application.
1015 Mass. 843-1065
GRAND OPENING
Seeking high energy individual for branch office.
Positive attitude required, flexible schedule. 841-0882
Overweight makes between 18 and up weighed for a walking study. 800 will be included for a little more than one hour of participation. If interested, 913-848-1118.
Lawrence resident wants to employ a person, from Iowa, in his job. He will work in Spanish two hours a week, call B43 at 849-2132.
Now hiring morning and evening wait. staff and morning
work. Twice as well. Apply. Incident. person. Strook Brookes. 1015 826 7392.
Student with natural ability with children needed 5 per hour (CAH), with 8 per hour (CAH) Call @ 844-323-7151
Wanted: 100 Students; Low 8-100 lb. new metabolism
through HL 15 lb. i wt. warrant Results
through HL 15 lb. i wt. warrant Results
Needed Mon, Wed., not Fri mornings!
Teaching Asist. needed part-time at early intervention program. Call Brookcreek Learning Center 865-0023.
Adams Alumn CenterThe Learned Club has imme-
derable opening for dessert prep. person, 3 days a week,
flexible schedule. 3-10PM. Apply in person at 1266
Odre Avenue.
**WILD WANTED:** Delivery driven needed for Wed, Feb.
14th. Must be able to start at 8 AM shift. Must have your
own transportation. Apply in person. Englewood
Floor, 699 Massachusetts.
Responsible person needed to work with my 7 year old son with autism. Must have knowledge in applied behavioral analysis and/or special education. If interested call Gina at 865-0665
SPRING BREAK WOES?
NO FUNDS - NO FUN!
**Making Training Co. Seen a need, involving**
some extra cash. Flexible hours. (91) 842-8255
Int'l Marketing Co. needs ambiguous, #8 motivated
individual, with professional background and
great skills. EOE #8-345-888-9111
Adams Alumni Center>The Learned Club has imminent opening for fine dining pasta cook. Prefer experience, but will train, aggressive厨. 5 day full-time support with benefits. 8-4PM shift.
experience, but will训 wk. aggressive worker.
App in person or 1350 Broad Ave.
Apply in person to 1350 Broad Ave.
INSTANT CASH!
*Flexible Schedule *Extra Income *Training
*Bright Advantage opportunity
*Advanced Career Pathways
Positions open, great job for students; Telephone fund-
mental for SADD (Students At Driving Drunk). We
work early evenings and Sat. mornings, 4th plus,岗
provides Call 843-5181 or apply at 619 Mass. St.
Suit B.
Part-time now, full time in summer. General office work & shopping apartments. Must be a Kruzna resident, be enrolled kL at wkst in 12 hours, have GPA of 2.0 or better, and be a business major or in related field
841-6003
FRUSTRATED?
I receive 2 degrees after 5 1/2 years of college and when it hit the "real world" I made 46.48. Now I'm being trained to earn 3K a month. If you're ready for a change call 918-843-4410.
Week-long, part-time positions for Assistant Instructors in summer Workshops for Young People. KU Natural History Museum, June Aug: 8-14 & 8-25. 100./100 week. Contact Ruth Gernuth, Public Education Director, 602 Dyce Hall (913) 804-4173. Closing 2/16. An equal opportunity employer.
887-9700 or write 151 Washingto Jenkintown, PA 19027
CAMP COUNSELORS Join the adventure and share the memories at SUMMER CAMP!
Thursday in record of 7 a need experienced
instructors for water and land sports. WSIS Life
Guards, Tennis, Climbing, Arts and more 2 hours from
NCi call 215-879-6070 or write 151 Washington Lane
Kitchen staff positions available at the Mass Street Destil and Buffalo Bob Smoke House. Food prep and line cooking. Some dawntime hours are helpful. At 8 per hour with a 8.25 males rate of 90 to 140 per hour plus dinner service. Apply at Schaum Food Co. business office 301-Fm-61, at 719 Mass (upon above Smoke House).
CAMP COUNSELERS WANTed for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach: swiming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, crafts, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping, crafts, drama, or music. Learn to maintain, maintenance, Yacht 1250 or more plus R.B.A. B camp. JWC/WCV/G7, Kings Mage, NMl. 80003, 846-444-244
500 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES IN NY, PA,
NEW YORK, NY
Program assistant, New Student Orientation. Application deadline Feb 18, 1996. Start Mar 18, 1996. Six month appointment. Duties include planning and implementation of Hawk week programs and publicity, and other orientation programs. Salary $75/hr. Requirements current position. For complete job description and application procedure contact Kathryn Nemeth Turtle, Office of New Student Orientation 864-4270.
Choose from 03 camp. Instructors needed: Tennis,
Baseball, Hockey, Rollerblading, Lacrosse, Softball,
Volleyball, Basketball, PE Majors, Gymnastics, Rif-
lifeguard, WSL water-skiing, Sailing, Windsurfing,
Mountain biking, Pioneering, Rockclimb, roping,
Ceramics, Stained glass, Jewelry, Wood-Working.
Photography, Radio, Nature, RN's, Chef, Food Service Call:
816-343-4033.
EDUCATION PROGRAM ASSISTANT
The Lawrence Arts Center is meeting a Program Assistant to begin the Spring. This person will serve an assistant to our professional staff assisting with clerical and administrative duties. Applicants must be able to work in an office environment on a weekly schedule. Program Assistants also work with artis (teachers) primarily working with the children's materials and maintain compatible for equipment, materials and studio maintenance. Applicants must be Kansas Career Work Study qualified. To apply, please pick up an application and return with a
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER, 200 W.9TH
LAWRENCE, KS 66044 844-ARTS
PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN MASSACHUSETTS
Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Skate, Gymnastics, Field Hockey, Volleyball, Softball openings, golf, Archery, Battleship, Fencing, Ropes and Rock Climbing, Weight Fitness and Cycling, other openings include Performing Art, Fine Art, Figure Skating, Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Cooking, SEwing, and Rockety; All Waterfront Pool Activities (Swimming, Sailing, Windsurfing, Diving), Room Games, room, board, travel June 18th-August 17th.
MAH-KEE-NAC (Boys): 1-800-753-9118
DANBEE (Girls): 1-800-392-3752
AMERICA'S PREMIERE SPORTS CAMP
WADI FOR BONS/DANSEE FOR GIRLS
(Western Massachusetts)
ALIST ROOMS
SUMMER JOBS!!!
205 Help Wanted
NORTHAM JOHNSON
Men Call:
1-800-494-6238
Women Call:
1-800-392-3732
CAMP WINADU
CAMP DANBEE
CITY OF LAWRENCE SEASONAL POSITIONS
BALLY DIAMOND MAINTENANCE 20-hr w/ wk March
BALLY March 40-hr w/ wk until mid-August. 4,800-5,600-
hr.
LANDSCAPE WORKER - March through November, 32
LANDCRP w/ hak = 18 jrs of age & have valid drivers
CUSTODIAN. Year round, 18-22 hr / wk, primarily
thru Sunday. Requires justification/customal
conditions & valid driver license. $ 6.00 / hr. Deadline:
2/1/16.
Complete application at Admin. Services, 2nd floor, Bloor,
G. 5th, G. 6th, Lawrence, KS 60404. EOE MPDT
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
For donation only. No opening hours allowed.
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
Carol Brown Electrolysis Safe, effective, and permanent removal of hair conveniently located in N. 18th St. B65-4265
DUI/TRAFFIC/CIMINAL
OVERLAND PARK - KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
CALL for a visit (855) 839-0600
Call for a visit (AM) 855-839-0600
Need Help With Your Research Project 7
Kelley Data Analysis and Consulting specializes in:
Complete statistical analysis of results, SPSB graphs and
computerized data interpretation for test design. Low-
est rates in Lawrence, Topeka area.
(913) 887-6307 (local call)
E-mail red4peg@nct.com
OUI/Traffic
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Rock Frydman, Attorney
701 Tennessee 843-4023
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th
842-1133
$$ $ MONEY $$ $
FOR COLLEGE
Hundreds & thousands of grants & scholarships available to all students. immediate qualification. No repayments EVER.
Call 1-800-585-8243
For Quick Results... Use The Kansan Classifieds
235 Typing Services
Call Jacka at 855-2885 for applications, term papers,
theses, dissertations, transcriptions, etc. Satisfaction
will be guaranteed.
305 For Sale
X
300s Merchandise
Canon AP-300 electronic typewriter, one line keyboard
Four-type keyboards 445, 842-4844
15x8 American Racing wheels type AR63. Under 200 miles brand new condition. Purchased for $600, will pay for $400. Looks on sale on Toyota XA45. 794-929-879.
Violin, appraised at $1,600. Yours for $1200. Try it for yourself at $424-448.
COMPUTER MEMORY: $20-430 per MEG
leave message at 1(800)511-0965,
AAA Pall size matrice set. New, never used, still in plastic.
Retail price $120 for $1.00 or $1.000. Brane head-
ware $350 for $3.00 or $3.000.
Bender Strat w/Symmetry Duncan humbucker,
sumid, sunburst, and 340 Crate CA1218ARP, new preamps, great one, 475 xwb-walpedal $2, everything for $450. Call Brent 388-443
King size mattress set. New. Retail price $899.00, will sell for $1299.00, 379-6988
FOR SALE 1992 white Acura Integra GB 3 door, 5 space,
fully loaded, bra, sunroof, with vizer, and spoller.
Excellent condition 72,000. $10,500. Serious inquiries only.
749-8498
Power book 150 x 90
With internal modem & stylewriter
$1200 or best offer call 749-9388
AQ Queen size mattress set, new. Never used. Bill in plain-
ice. Retail Price $80.00 or less. For $105.00 use.
AQ Queen size mattress set, new. Never used. Bill in plain-
ice. Retail Price $80.00 or less. For $105.00 use.
340 Auto Sales
AM / FM Preview (10:00 - 6:00pm). Get Approx.
80 MP, Great Car. Very Good Condition. Phone 913-
274-4150.
360 Miscellaneous
Wanted: 100 Students to Lose 8-100 lbs. New Metabolism
Breakthrough. Guaranteed Remalut $ 29.05, 1-800-600-
7398
Fleet Fundraiser - Raises $500 in 5 Days Gretea Group,
Fleet Multidisciplinary Team, Foley,易。No Financial
Requirement.
CLASS LIST URL ONLINE:
http://www.takeovermusic.com
1-800-95-BREAK
TAKE A BREAK. STUDENT TRANSL.
Florida to Canada, Japan and Mexico on Public Classes The class
will take place on Tuesday, April 26 at 10am. All fees are inclusive of all
class materials.
370 Want to Buy
110%
SPRING BREAK IN
CANCUN MEXICO
We buy, sell and trade clothing every day
110% $299
Net incl tax
arizona trading co.
734 Massachusetts 749-2377
1/2 block from campus, studio apartment. $ 310.00 / month, all utilities included. Uphail 842-7644.
405 For Rent
1 & 2 BK townhouses at 1313 Valley Lane. Walk to
large bedrooms. Very nice living room with opener,
large bedrooms. Very nice 840-BK room.
400s Real Estate
1 Bedroom Sublease. Fee, Rent Paid. Water, Cable, Trash Paid. Bathroom. Laundry Facilities. Call Amy Anytime @ 749-2766.
Shannon Plaza Apartments & Townhouses. 2 & 3 bed room townhouse available immediately.Ask about our room rates.
Spring Break Beach Combo *Not Location*. South Padre Island. Needs 8 plus people. Deposit required. (30) 555-6151. www.southpadreisland.org
Available immediately. 3 Bedrooms, unfurnished apartment. 1/2床房 KUF $700. Organic Bedroom. 1/2床房 KUF $700. Organic Bedroom.
BR townhouse with c & carports. Walk to campus.
Nice bedrooms with large closeups. $800/mo.
Large 3 bedroom apt. and studio apt.
in remodeled house near KU.
Call 841-6254
1 bedroom apartment at Oread
(1&1/2 blocks from Union). Water & gas paid
6 month lease, $300/month.
C8414_6408
Mackenzie机房 1138 Kentucky. Now leasing for Amg. 1, Ang. 7, old luxuryAppears, close to campus. All A3 B2, microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appl. 2, refrigerator, well insulated, energy efficient. Call 749-1168
NEWLY CONSTRUCTED
Easy Access to 10
1-2-3-DRAFT Ages
Available March 1, 1966
Full size washer/dryer, fully equipped kitchen, fireplace,
Walk-in closets, fully monitored alarm system, and much more. NO PETS, Harper Square Apartments, Call Today! 913-841-8468
Jo
To
Spin
*Normally $50.00, for a short time
Washer and Dryer Units for Rent!
are $43.00 a month per set.
*NEW Whirlpool Large Capacity
washers and dryer sets.
*Renting now and for the fall of
405 For Rent
Call Now! 766-8177
*Free maintenance.
Washer/Dryer Microwave
Dishwasher Gas Fireplace
Trash Compactor Cable Paid
Walk-in Closet Back Faxio
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Now Leasing for June & August 4 Bedrooms/3 Bath Featuring:
For Appointment: 841-7849 Located at 3801 Clinton Pkwy
Washer/Dryer Fireplace
Dishwash Cabid Paled
Microwave Back Patio
For More Info: 841-7849 Located at 4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Lorimar Townhomes
New Leasing For June & August
1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
105 For Rent
OnKU Bus Route
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3HotTubs
Exercise Room
M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
GET A JUMP ON NEXT YEAR!
Studios, 2, & 8 Bedroom Apts
Carson Place, Stadium View, Oread,
Chamberlin Belfast, Abbots Corner,
1425 Kentucky, Bradford Square
- Full-size washer/dryer or Laundry Facilities
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Primate Dieties on Decks
- Private Patios or Decks
- Within 2 blks of campus or on KU bus route
Cats welcome at Bradford Square only RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT TODAY FOR $ 50.00
MON-FRI 9 am-5 pm,1820 West 6th 841-8463
841-8468
South Point
ATLANTA
2166 W. 26th
166 W. 26th
843-6446
- Swimming Pool
- Sand volleyball court
- water & trash paid
- 1,2,3 & 4 bedroom
apts. available
*Restrictions Apply
3 bedroom villas
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY 2 BDRM APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
- Exercise weight room
- Fireplace
- Energy Efficient
- On site management
- Daily 3:30-5:00
Professionally managed by
KVM
808 W. 24th
841-6080
841-5444
--eat Location!
Sunny Hollow School
Sunrise Apartments
Signing now for fall
- Garages [Village]
- Garages (Village)
- Tennis Courts. Pool
- **Free Cable TV (Place)**
9th & Michigan Sunrise Village 6th & Gateway Open House Daily
- On Bus Route
- Luxurious Town Homes
Mon-Fri 1-5
--eat Location!
105 For Rent
SOUTHPOINTE ParkVillas
Now Leasing for Spring and Fall 1996
- Three bedrooms - Two full baths
- Washer/dryer included
Newsletters
Spotlight on
3rd birthdays
Call For Appt.
405 For Rent
843-8446
AVAILABLE IMEDIATELY
2 bedroom apartment, 18th Oath
Microwave, dwiflairman, diapason, wd hooking
6 month lease. Call 841-1468
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7TH & FLORIDA
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
FOUR BEDROOM ASKABOUT Our Three Person Special $690 and Up Pool and Clubhouse
E.H.O.
841-5255
WASTERCRAFT
Completely Furnished
Studio,1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Hanover Place 14th& Mass. 841-1212
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Orchard Corners
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
405 For Rent
SUNFLOWER COOPERATIVE 1400 Tenn. a student housing alternative. Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation, democratic control. Rent $375/month. Attend classes at Clove College Campus & Mamn. Call or stop by 81-494-0444.
15th & Kasold
749-4226
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm
On call 24 hrs for emergencies
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company 941-2415
Equal Housing Opportunity
meadowbrook IfBIG
is what you want your new home awaits...
2&3 bedroom
2 & 3 bedroom townhomes are available now. Walk or ride the bus to KU. Enjoy the quiet feel of the country with the convenience of the city.
MEADOWBROOK
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Female for 4 br 2 ba duplex. NW location-
Eldridge Rail. On Bus Rt. Feb. Rent Paid.
$12.00 Mr. 1/4 Ucl. Call $42.3566.
430 Roommate Wanted
Mon - Fri 9-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
Male/Female Roommate Wanted
Female roommate wanted to share 2 ibad furnished
apartment at the April, Feb. through August, Call back at
1-800-555-4233.
Female graduate to share three 2-BR apt. $200 until Cardina College 858-3765. Most like coat and jeans. $195-$295.
to share township. Dishwasher, washer/dryer and fireplace. Pet allows. Call Mike at 838-952-06
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAIIX KANSAN
Non-smoking roommate wants to wanted 2 Br
apartment close to campus. $255/mo + mail. Call Jeff at
212-634-3078.
Female N/S Roommate needed to share 2 bdmrp. Furnished except bdmr. D/W. Dishwash. A/C. Rent $300/mo. & 1/U Toll. Avail. 6/1 or for Fall 96, must like cats. 832-287-
Roammate is designed to share 4 bedrooms, 2 baths housed with W7 and 3 all new in-wall units; 14/18 wi-fi access points; IP address: 192.168.1.45
932-1495
Female roommate needed to share 2
bedroom apartment. On bus route, $200.00
+ 1/2 utilities. Water and gas paid.
Call Tarns 832-8428.
Female roommate needed. Almost new home west of campus, Room, WDY, AC, DWG, Garage, Deck near bus route. Short or long term lease available starting March 17. $275.00/month. Call 838-4546.
Boorman wanted for 3 bedroom apartment close to campus (12th and Ohio) Washer and drier, rent is negotiable and one third utilities. Call Mike Terry or Carl ASAP at 843-4207.
ROOMATE WANTED Roommate got married, needed sublease. Person needed to share a room $2.8 bain-town room w/ W/D, fireplace, $250/mo + $130 util. Feb rent free. No peta. Call 841-7570.
Ads shown in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment made.
Stop by the Kenyan offices between a. b.m. and 5.p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check,
charged on MasterCard or Visa.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa Account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Calculation Rates:
Classified rules are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run. **Buffalo:**
When cancelling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the charge, not for payment by card or check with or without cash are not available. No responsibility is assumed for more than one day after the ad is cancelled.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a ten of $4.00.
Bidmaster:
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Cost per pair per day
Num. of insertions:
1X 1.28 2-3X 4-7X 9-14X 15-20X 30+X
3 Noses 2.20 1.70 1.15 0.95 0.80 0.85
4 Noses 2.05 1.30 0.85 0.75 0.70 0.80
5-7 Noses 2.00 1.15 0.80 0.70 0.60 0.48
6+ Noses 1.90 1.90 0.70 0.60 0.60 0.49
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$17.00 (4 lines X 85 per line X 5 days).
165 personal
180 business persons
129 head wanted
184 amenities
128 entertainment
140 host & found
219 busy wanted
225 professional services
235 entertaining services
308 microcinemas
230 entertainments
308 entertaining services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
Please print your ad one word per box:
Name:
Date ad begins:
Address:
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dell Kansan)
Farmill the following if you are charging your ad:
Account number:
Signature:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Expiration Date:
The University Dalty Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68645
1
8B
Monday, February 12, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lisa
$19.99
Satin Chemises For Her
Treat her to a luxurious satin charmeuse chemise in red, teal, white emerald, ivory or black. Reg. $25
1.
First year players shine in rookie All-Star game
The Associated Press
Brent Barry wins dunk title, dazzling crowd with foul line dunk in All-Star Saturday
SAN ANTONIO — OI' dad never did anything like this.
$14.99
Silk Boxers For Him
Choose from a great selection of
100% silk boxers in traditional
or fun Valentine designs. Reg. $20
Brent Barry, one of four basketball-playing sons of Hall of Famer Rick Barry, put on a sizzling show on All-Star Saturday, winning the slam dunk competition with a soaring performance that was more reminiscent of Dr. J than his earth-bound father.
Barry, a rookie guard for the Los Angeles Clippers, won the slam dunk competition with a dunk that Julius Erving originated in the first such contest at the 1976 ABA All-Star game.
From a running start, Barry jumped from the foul line, bounding through the air to a straight-on dunk.
It drew 49 out of a possible 50 points from a panel of judges that included Erving.
"I think Julius was the one who stiffed me," Barry said.
Yesterday's all-star roster may have been top-heavy with 30-something players in the twilight of their careers, but Saturday belonged to the NBA's next generation.
Besides Barry's victory in the slam dunk contest, the Schick Rookde Game ended on a thrilling note when officials disallowed an almost-buzzer-beating three-pointer by Golden State's Joe Smith, giving the Eastern Conference team a 94-92 victory.
Gift Wrapped Free
WeaverS 9th & Massachusetts
In between, the three-point shooting contest was won by Washington's Tim Legler, a player who has
The 17-year-old Floridian had a chance to win $1 million from Foot Locker by sinking the long shot, but it fell short. As a consolation prize, Houston received $10,000.
Teen-age Demetrius Houston missed the biggest three-point shot of the night.
Barry, who also made a couple of dazzling plays in the rookie game, capped off the evening in exciting fashion, impressing even Ewing.
"I'm glad I went through it and just got it out of the way," Houston said. "I was nervous a little.
spent time in just about every professional league.
But when I stepped on the court, I blocked everything out of my mind."
"I thought his dunk was awesome," Erving said. "It shows you what 22-year-old legs can do."
Barry, actually 24. is a 6-feet-6
In the finals, Barry didn't know what to do for his final dunk, but Clyde Drexler and Grant Hill urged him to fly again.
As Barry walked beyond the half court line, the crowd began cheering, and he beckoned for more.
standing ovation from what he called the $1,000-suit section, the group of well-dressed all-stars sitting on the sidelines.
Is he the best dunker in his family that includes Drew, a senior at Georgia Tech and Golden State's Jon?
What Brent did was the kind of dunk you don't see in every contest."
"It certainly wasn't mv father.
W
bean pole, nicknamed Bones. Erving was 26 when he did the dunk in 1976 and 34 when he did it again in the inaugural NBA dunk contest in 1984. Michael Jordan did the same dunk to win in 1987.
"What Brent did was the kind of dunk you don't see in every contest," said finalist Michael Finley of Phoenix.
"I've never tried it, but I think I could do it."
Michael Finley
Phoenix Suns forward
Barry unveiled his free-throw dunk in the first round, getting screams from the crowd and a
Before the dunking contest, Barry scored eight points, had five steals and dished out four assists in the rookie game.
His boss, Raptors president Isiah Thomas, soon changed Stoudamire's mind.
c'mon," he said. "Everybody can throw it down a little." Barry acknowledged that his performance disproved certain ethnic myths about leaping ability. "I was going to wear a shirt that said, 'White Men Can,' but I didn't want to burst anyone's bubble."
"I got down here, the adrenaline started flowing and Isiah started calling my room," he said.
"I think the biggest thing about it is it put a cap on a great first half of the season."
Since Smith's shot didn't count, Toronto's tiny Damon Stoudamire was the star of the rookie game, winning the MVP award.
He had 19 points on 8-of-16 shooting, 11 assists, four steals and two turnovers.
Stoudamire, who scored five of the East's final nine points, leads the expansion Raptors in points and assists and has played more minutes than any other rookde. This game was no different.
said.
"He was hogging it," Barry said. "Point guards love all-star games because they've got the ball all the time."
The game featured both a 19-year-old rookie, Minnesota's Kevin Garnett and a 31-year-old rookie, Portland's Arrydas Sabonius.
Stoudamire was bothered by a sore shoulder and thought about skipping the game.
"I find it funny that Schick sponsors this game, and Kevin can't even shave," Barry said.
Legler, who has played for six NBA teams, set a blistering pace in the AT&T three-point contest that no one could match.
Legler also has played for Phoenix, Denver, Utah, Dallas and Golden State.
He scored 23 points in the first round, continued with 22 points and posted 20 in a final shootout with Dennis Scott of the Orlando Magic.
Legler won $20,000 for his victory,
and Scott won $10,000 with rounds of
19, 19 and 14.
Charlotte's Glen Rice, the defending champion, didn't pass the first round.
"This makes up for a lot of things that have happened to me," he said. "Several teams in the NBA just gave up on me without giving me a chance."
Then Come and Visit
Science Major?
Are You Interested in Environmental Issues?
JAEP
Jayhawk Association of Environmental Professionals Presents:
Michael Heuring Assistant Director at the University Placement Center
Join Us at JAEP on Monday, February 12
6:00 Walnut Room, Kansas Union
Any Questions Contact: Bryant Lamer at 832-9575
STUDENT
SENATE
LOVE LETTERS
CLEANLY
Sterling Silver
$4.00 per Letter
Palace
Carla & Gina
Open Until 7:00 Tues. Bth & Mass.
STUDENTS WITH KU BOOKSTORE RECEIPTS SEEKING THESE MEN
WANTED
KU Bookstore receipts (designated Period No. 98) in your custody should be taken to the Customer Service counter at the KU Books stores in the Kansas or Burge Unions until June 21, 1996. Student I.D. is required to claim reward.
JOHN HENRY KENT
BENEDICT CARTER
REWARD
7% rebate on cash and check purchases from the Fall 1995 semester.
Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KUI students
KU
KU Bookstores
See the store for more details or on the web at: www.rock-chalk.com / kubook stores / kbskintore.html
Look Like
A Million Bucks.
Pay Just $4.99.
HAIRCUT & BLOWDRY
$4.99
OFFER EXPIRES 2-23-96
Not valid with other offers. Limit one coupon per customer. Good at gift and Minnesota.
Great Clips for hair
HAIRCUT & BLOWDRY $4.99
1530 W 6th
6th & Minnesota
832-2424
OFFER EXPIRES 2-23-96
Not valid with other offers. Limit one coupon per customer. Go at 6th and Minnesota.
Great Clips for hair
---
Hours M-F 9-9 Sat.9-6, Sun.12-5
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL. 102.NO.95
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
Crunch time
The Kansas women's basketball team still sits atop the Big Eight. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Students steaming hot
Both men's and women's saunas at Robinson need to be replaced,some say. Page 5A
NATION
Speed limit bill endorsed
A bill that would raise speed limits in Kansas goes to the Senate for debate. Page 9A
WORLD
Survivor search continues
After three days, rescuers lose hope for survivors in Japan's crushed tunnel. Page 10A
WEATHER PARTLY CLOUDY
High 55° Low 23°
Rainy day.
Weather: Page 2A.
INDEX
Opinion . . . . . 4A
National News . . . 9A
World News . . . 10A
Scoreboard. . . 2B
Horoscopes . . . 4B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Speeches cover health care, film
Joycelyn Elders, Ken Burns to visit Lied Center stage
Former U.S. Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders and documentary filmmaker Ken Burns don't have much in common — but both will speak today at the Lied Center.
By Susanna Lööf
Kansan staff writer
Elders will open the center's day with a free lecture called American Health Care Crisis- My Cure at 9 a.m. Burns will give a free lecture called Sharing the American Experience at 8 p.m.
No vouchers are needed to attend Elders' speech, but vouchers are needed for the Burns speech. As of yesterday morning, the Student Union Box Office had between 50 and 100 vouchers left, said Susan Cary, box office manager.
But students who don't have vouchers will be allowed to use any seats that are empty at 7:45 p.m., she said.
Elders will speak for 55 minutes, and a question-and-answer session will follow the speech. The lecture is a part of African-American History Month.
"We wanted her to come and speak because she is one of the most dynamic and influential current national speakers," said Sherwood Thompson, director of Office of Minority Affairs.
Thompson said Elders' speech had to be scheduled in the morning because that was the only time Elders could make it. But Thompson said he expected interest for the speech to be high despite the time.
"If you want to hear this type of stuff, you have to be flexible," he said.
Thompson said that many professors had been cooperative and allowed their students to attend the speech even if it interfered with class.
"The value of attending this program is extremely important," Thompson said.
In the evening, Burns will take center stage.
Burns' speech is sponsored by the Hall Center for the Humanities and is a part of the center's celebration of the centennial of American film, said Bill Andrews, director of the center.
Burns, who is the creator of public television documentaries The Civil War and Baseball, is doing a 10-stop national lecture tour. He requested the University of Kansas to be one of the stops.
Andrews said Burns wanted to come to the University to speak about his work documenting American history on film.
Worthy KU GTAs may get awards
By coming to the area, Burns also will have the opportunity to research jazz in the Kansas City area, Andrews said. Burns is working on a film about the history of American jazz.
Students can nominate assistants
By Amanda Traughber Kansan staff writer
Teaching can be a thankless job, but students wanting to express gratitude to their graduate teaching assistants can nominate them for awards.
GTAs are eligible for three awards: the Diana Bartelli Carlin and John Carlin Award, the Outstanding Graduate Teaching Assistant Award, and a finalist award.
Sara Martin, assistant graduate school dean, said the school takes in about 50 nominations from students each year. But she would like the school to receive more.
"We know that there's outstanding teaching going on by GTAs," Martin said, "and we know that undergraduate students appreciate that. So we'd like to hear from those students."
Each award recipient receives a cash prize ranging from $100 to $1,000, Martin said.
Nominating a GTA
The honor carrying the highest monetary prize is the Carlin award, which two GTAs receive each year. Money for the prize comes from a private endowment fund established by the Carlins. Diana Bartelli Carlin is an associate professor of communications studies, and her husband, John, was Kansas governor from 1979 to 1987.
Students who wish to nominate a GTA for a teaching award can pick up forms at the graduate school, 222 Strong Hall, or in the GTA's academic department. Forms must be returned to either 222 Strong Hall or the GTA's department by Feb. 23.
The other two awards — the Outstanding GTA award and the award for finalists — are financed by the Chancellor's office and the Graduate and Professional Association, a graduate student organization. Five GTAs receive the Outstanding GTA award, and five are recognized as finalists.
Tracy Russo, assistant professor of communication studies, won a Carlin award as a GTA last year. She said the awards helped recognize GTAs who cared about students and their educations.
"They acknowledge the efforts
of a whole lot of individuals to make learning active and to make it a good experience for a lot of students on this campus," she said.
GTAs either must be nominated by their academic departments, or receive five student nominations to be considered.
To be eligible for the awards, GTAs must have completed at least one semester of teaching and must have taught during this academic year. GTAs must also be in good standing and cannot be affiliated with the awards selection process.
However, Martin said, if a GTA who served on the selection committee was nominated for an award, the GTA would be asked to step down from the committee.
The selection committee sifts through the nominations and selects 20 GTAs as finalists. These GTAs are then asked to submit a statement of their teaching philosophy, Martin said. The selection committee uses the statements in determining award winners.
The awards are presented as part of activities the week before commencement. The winners of the Carlin and Outstanding GTA awards will be invited to march in the commencement procession, Martin said.
No, really! They're free!
UNK UNK
Ayshe Charity, Lawrence senior; Jason Holland, Overland Park junior; and Kent O'Connor, Topeka junior, pass out candy and balloons to a passer-by for an improvisation class project.
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
Students help Dole claim victory in Iowa
By Nicole Kennedy
Kansan staff writer
"We've got a room full of about 500 Dole supporters and more media than I've ever seen," Obermüller said. "It's really a night of losers to tell who's not in the race. We're just really glad it turned on the way it did.
It was barely 3 p.m. yesterday, but with all the fervor of a student politician working his first caucus, KU student Andy Obermeller was already sure Sen. Bob Dole was going to win in Iowa.
"It's really just a great night.
The Senator is favored," Obermeller, Liberal sophomore, said. "I think Bob Dole is to win."
Obermueller was one of seven KU students who worked for the Dole campaign in Iowa yesterday. And when the results came in, he was one of hundreds partying with the Senator.
CAUCUS: Dole's first place finish
shaky. Page 9A
We're sticking stickers on anybody that's breathing."
Dole finished first in the Iowa caucus last night, capturing 26 percent of the vote with 90 percent of the precincts reporting. He was trailed by Pat Buchanan, who finished second with 23 percent.
"it's kind of an electric atmosphere," Obermueller said. "Everybody you see is carrying a laptop or a cell phone."
Brad Burke, Topeka sophomore and regional director of the Young Americans for Dole, said the KU students worked all weekend.
"We pulled in about midnight Friday and we've been working hard all the time," Burke said. "When we're not making phone calls, we're back at the hotel convincing the staff to vote for Dole."
Bosnian student flees fighting,wants to attend KU
Bombing of Sarajevo University prompts decision to leave home
By Adam Darby Special to the Kansan
When Emir Mesanovic fled Bosnia in the winter of 1994, the University of Sarajevo was all but destroyed.
Faced with no hope of completing his college education in Sarajevo, Mesanovic came to the United States, where he wants to pursue a master's degree in aerospace engineering at the University of Kangas.
Almost 80 percent of the university had been bombed and torched by Serb extremists since the start of the war in Bosnia in 1992. Almost half of the instructors had also fled.
"The best deal I have is KU," he said. "They have the sixth best engineering program in the country."
But Mesanovic is waiting in Dodge City as William March, assistant professor of Slavic languages and literature, tries to clear the way for Mesanovic's admittance to the University.
March is acting as a liaison between Mesanovic and the University, sending him financial-aid forms and other information. March is also trying to open a channel through the International Students Committee for more Bosnian students like Mesanovic to come to the University.
"I think the University of Kansas could at least offer an opportunity for the students to come and study," he said.
March said an adequate education was impossible at the devastated universities of the former Yugoslavia. On a visit to Croatia last summer, March saw firsthand how bad the situation really was.
"A lot of the university staff fleed the siege in the beginning, when they could still get out," he said.
Mesanovic grew up in downtown Sarajevo. By the time he was 17, in the winter of 1994, Mesanovic's neighborhood had endured more than two years of unrelenting bombardment by the Serbs. Unable to finish high school in Sarajevo, Mesanovic moved to Croatia, where he finished 12th grade. But with no hope of getting a college education, he decided to leave the country.
In the fall of 1995, Mesanovic arrived at the home of George Laughhead, Jr., in Dodge City.
Mesanovic is attending community college in Dodge City while waiting for the University to decide if he can receive in-state tuition.
Laugheed hopes to see Mesanovic get a chance to prove himself at the University.
"These kids study more than anybody I've ever seen." Laughhed said.
.
Laughhead said he has enjoyed seeing Mesanovic regain his health.
"It's nice to see him worrying about grades and girls, and all that stuff we take for granted," he said.
Flight from the Fighting
AUSTRIA
HUNGARY
SLOVENIA
CROATIA
ROMANIA
BOSNIA
Sarajevo
SERBIA
Adriatic Sea
MONTENEGRO
BULGARIA
Early Karadzic, a student
from Sarajevo, is seeking
accession to the University of
Karada. Sarajevo has been at
the entrance of the battle in the
former Yugoslavia.
X
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
Tuesday, February 13, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ON THE RECORD
A KU student was robbed and sexually assaulted around 10 p.m. Friday while working at Super 8 Motel, 515 McDonald Drive. Reportedly, a man walked into the motel, asked for a room and then pointed a gun at her and told her to give him the money out of the cash register. When she gave the man the money he told her to take off her shirt. The man fondled her breasts and left the motel. Police have no suspects. The man was described as a 5-foot-8 to 5-foot-10, 20-year-old African-American male, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's backpack and contents, statistical analysis textbook and notebooks were stolen sometime between 1:30 and 2:15 p.m. Wednesday in Robinson Center. The items were valued at $604, KU police reported.
A KU student was the victim of phone harassment between 9 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. on Feb. 6 in Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall, KU police reported.
A KU student's backpack and contents were stolen sometime between 1:30 and 2:15 p.m. Wednesday in Robinson Center. The backpack and contents were valued at $368, KU police reported.
A KU student's parking pass was stolen sometime between 12 p.m. last Monday and 11 a.m. Thursday in the parking
lot east of Memorial Stadium. The permit was valued at $53, KU police reported.
A door and lock was damaged in Tower B of Jayhawker Towers at 1:50 p.m. Friday. The damage was valued at $75, KU police reported.
A KU student's wallet and contents were stolen sometime between 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. Sunday in Robinson Center. The wallet and contents were valued at $64, KU police reported.
At 6:02 p.m. Saturday KU police and the Douglas County Ambulance Service responded to Robinson Center in reference to a man who was experiencing chest pains after lifting weights. He was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, KU police reported.
At 1:30 a.m. Sunday KU police responded to a call from Oliver Hall in reference to an intoxicated KU student who had hit her head. Reportedly, the student had struck her head on the bathroom sink when she was vomiting. KU police left when she refused medical treatment, but at 3 a.m. they were called back to her room, because she was experiencing nausea and a headache. The Douglas County Ambulance Service checked the bump on the student and advised her to go to the hospital, but again she refused medical treatment, KU police reported.
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 of $1.86 per semester are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KC. 66045.
ON CAMPUS
Learn to Fly 842-0000 Lawrence Air Services Instruction·Charter Service·Rental
842-0000
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor KU Study Abroad Japan Scholarship Information meeting at 11:30 a.m. today at 2085 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor Great Britain Direct Exchange Program at 2:30 p.m. today at 4048 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting on studying in Golfite, Costa Rica for the summer at 2:30 today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ellen Strubert at 864-3742.
Multicultural Resource Center will sponsor Korean Culture: A program in conjunction with the three-day KU residency of Samul Nori, the world-renowned Korean percussion group today at 3:30 p.m. at the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call Evan Heimlich at 664-4351 or 842-4963.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor KU Study Abroad in French Speaking Countries at 3:30 p.m. today at 4046 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Ted Noravong at 864-3742.
The Lied Center will sponsor a reception for Samul Nori, Korean percussion group at 5 p.m. today at Bowerhill Guest House, 1717 West Seventh St. For more information, call Jeannie Mellinger at 864-3526.
Recovery Medicine Wheel Support Group will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call Samantha at 842-4797.
Amnesty International will sponsor an organizational meeting at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Darin Worthington at 832-2488.
Circle K International, a community service
organization, will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erin Rooney at 841-4180.
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Michelle Santoyo at 841-7890.
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor "Sexism & Sexual Harassment: How Much is Too Much?" at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center at 864-3552.
African Studies Center will sponsor a screening of "Finzan" at 7 tonight at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Akin Ajayi at 864-3054.
KU Bahal Club will sponsor Nancy Slicler on "What are Angels?" at 7 tonight at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Crista at 865-1642.
Student Assistance Center will sponsor Reading for Comprehension and Speed Workshop, a three-part workshop series, at 7 tonight, room announced at registration. Registration and payment of $18 materials fee required in advance at the Student Assistance Center at 22 Strong Hall. For more information, contact the center's staff at 864-4064.
AIESEC will meet at 7:15 tonight at 2023 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Brian Buckley at 841-7675.
KCBT Student Ministries will sponsor a Bible study at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Adam Decatur at 841-1683.
Philosophy Club will sponsor a video and discussion of "The Panama Perception" at 7:30 tonight at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nathan Welch at 842-0049.
Weather
NIGH LOW
Atlanta 53 ° • 28 °
Chicago 35 ° • 18 °
Des Moines, Iowa 45 ° • 18 °
Kansas City, Mo. 53 ° • 22 °
Lawrence 55 ° • 23 °
Los Angeles 78 ° • 59 °
New York 25 ° • 12 °
Omaha, Neb. 55 ° • 25 °
St. Louis 58 ° • 26 °
Seattle 62 ° • 37 °
Topska 50 ° • 25 °
Tulsa, Okla. 67 ° • 30 °
Wichita 60 ° • 30 °
TODAY
Partly cloudy and pleasant.
5523
WEDNESDAY
Mostly cloudy and cooler.
4827
THURSDAY
Mostly cloudy.
5024
TODAY
Partly cloudy and pleasant.
5523
WEDNESDAY
Mostly cloudy and cooler.
4827
THURSDAY
Mostly cloudy.
5024
WEDNESDAY
Mostly cloudy and cooler.
4827
THURSDAY
Mostly cloudy.
5024
Source: Jeff House, KU Weather Service
SENATE BILLS
Student Senate will consider several bills and one resolution at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union:
A bill giving $2,375 to the Malaysia Student Association to finance a Malaysian Cultural Night.
A bill giving $200 to the American Studies Graduate Student Organization to finance a speech by Rickie Solinger, a visiting scholar in Women's Studies.
A bill to send the proposed campus fee to build a new recreation center to a student referendum.
A bill giving $8,000 to finance Spike Lee as the speaker for a KU student-lecture series.
A bill giving $457 to the Advertising Club for office supply, postage, advertising and duplicating costs.
A bill giving $8,500 to Legal Services for Students to hire a temporary attorney and a student hourly assistant, and to buy a computer.
A bill to revise the code of Student Rights and Responsibilities. The bill would add a second article to the current code. The article would read, "the right of student to be free from harassment based on sex, race color, national origin, religion, ancestry, sexual orientation, disability, or, as specified by law, age, or veteran status shall not be abridged."
A bill giving $392 to the Senate's Student Communications Board to finance Student Senate Awareness Week.
A resolution to declare Feb. 26 to March 1, Student Senate Awareness Week.
SPONSORED BY:
KU
Valentine's Day Open House At The Kansas
THE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Activities & Giveaways:
as & Burge Unions Open H
Win a Spring Break Trip for Two To Panama City Beach, Fla.
Special Discounts: 15% off at the KU Bookstores!
Decorate a Special Card or Cookie for your Valentine!
Win a Romantic Dinner for Two, or a Gift Certificate to the Prairie Room!
Win a Teddy Bear or a Valentine Cookbook!
Have your fortune told, take your picture with the Jayhawk, or enjoy live music!
Sweetheart Salad Bar at the Kansas or Burge Union!
Special Discounts: at the Wescoe Terrace Snack Bar!
Hawk of my Heart
Wednesday Feb. 14, 10 AM to 2 PM
Win a
a Teddy Bear or
a Valentine
Cookbook!
Special Discounts:
at the Wescoe Terrace
Snack Bar!
Feb. 14, 10 AM
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 13, 1996
3A
Hammering out a tune
The image shows two individuals playing a set of metal percussion instruments. The person on the left is holding a string and appears to be playing a vibraphone, while the person on the right is playing a xylophone or similar instrument. Both musicians are focused on their performance, suggesting they are deeply engaged in their music.
Tyler Wirken/KANSAN
Britt Haney, Topeka senior, plays the xylophone, while George Boberg, professor of percussion, coaches. Haney was practicing in Murphy Hall yesterday for a recital at the end of the semester.
Board plans tune-up for KU on Wheels
Kansan staff report
The transportation board met at 4:30 p.m. yesterday to discuss improving the efficiency of the KU on Wheels bus system.
The board received a $140,000 loan and a $2 campus fee increase from Student Senate in early February to keep the buses running this semester.
Now the board is trying to create a monitoring system to test for inefficient routes, in preparation for March 4 route hearings.
The board has already cut hours from the Meadowbrook Apartment route, but Eric Medill, transportation board chairman, said the cuts didn't affect ridership.
"Given our current fiscal situation, it is unlikely that we will be adding routes for next year," said Ken Martin, Student Senate Executive Committee chairman.
The board also discussed adding a new park-and-ride bus system next fall.
Martin said the group had been working closely with an
ad hoc committee of trans portation and parking board members.
Under the proposed system, students would could park on West Campus lots and ride buses to the main campus.
But Bob Grunzinger, financial adviser to the board, said routes would probably have to be cut for the pilot program.
KU police pleased with new cruisers
POLICE
Department eager to patrol campus in $15,000 squad cars
By Amy McVey
Kansan staff writer
Darcy Coles / KANSAN
KU police may be too happy today to give speeding tickets. But then again, they may be in the mood for a good chase.
The police department has purchased four new Ford Crown Victoria patrol cars to replace its four Chevrolet Caprice Classics that have cruised more than 100,000 miles of campus turf.
And Lt. Vic Strnad said KU police officers couldn't be happier.
"The officers look forward to getting new cars just like anyone else does," he said. "The car is their office."
KU police placed bids on the new cars last July and have received two out of the four $15,000 cars. The other two cars are still at a dealership in Overland Park but are expected anytime. Strnad said.
The police wanted to order the new cars last year. But Lt. Strnad said that because of budget problems, the department had to postpone the purchase until now.
"We try to get new cars every two years, because the cars that we have run 24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week," Strnad said. "But we did not get them last year because of budget constraints."
KU police Sergeant Troy Mailen said that he was excited to drive one of the new patrol cars.
Mailen said the new patrol cars still would be white with red and blue stripes.
"The cars we are currently driving have high miles and are starting to break down." he said.
Paul Christensen, production coordinator at Art
&Sign Inc., 619 Vermont, applies decals to one of four new Ford Crown Victoria KU police car.
He said the police officers liked the professional look of their cars.
"It boosts morale and gives us a more professional image," he said.
KU police decided what specifications they wanted in a car and sent a threepage form to the state of Kansas.
"We don't specify the brand," Strand said. "The top specification is that they have to be a full-size, rear-wheel drive cars. The departments that have tried the front-wheel drive, smaller, mid-size cars had no luck with them. They just fell apart."
When the State received the form, it sent the specifications to car dealers. The dealers made bids, and the police department chose the lowest bidder.
Although Lt. Strandn won't be driving one of the 1996 Crown Victorias, he will get to drive one of the old patrol cars, after the stickers and sirens are taken off. And he is happy about it, because he is getting rid of the twice-hailed on
And he is happy about it, because he will be getting rid of the twice-hailed on unmarked patrol car he drives now.
"It's going to be nice driving an unmarked car that's not beat up," he said.
Kansas House to debate qualified admissions bill
Proposal for minimum standards approved by committee yesterday
By John Collar Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Qualified admissions survived a bruising battle yesterday in the House Education Committee.
After a series of amendments to the bill was proposed and defeated, the committee voted 11-10 to advance the bill to the House floor.
The bill, sponsored by State Rep. Ralph Tanner, R-Baldwin City, would establish minimum admissions standards at Regents universities. Under the bill, incoming freshmen would be required to have a 2.0 grade point average, a score of 21 on the ACT or graduate in the top one-third of their high school class. Kansas is the only state not to have an open admissions policy at state universities.
Much of the debate yesterday centered on an amendment by State Rep. Pat Pettey, D-Kansas City, that would have allowed one Regents school to establish qualified admissions. Petney proposed that students be required to have a 3.0 grade point average to gain admission to the school, which would be chosen by the Board of Regents.
"A 3.0 gives students something to shoot
for." Pettev said.
She argued that one school with admissions standards would provide a pilot test to see if qualified admissions improves the caliber of students.
Petterey's amendment was defeated by a vote of 11-9.
State Rep. Bill Reardon, D-Kansas City, introduced an amendment that would have made athletes on scholarship subject to the admission standards in the bill and not be admitted through the "window." This part of the bill would allow universities to admit up to 10 percent of the freshman class who do not meet the standards.
State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence,
said this amendment was discriminatory.
"Why would we single out athletes as if they don't have a brain, when they do?" Ballard said.
After several more amendments had been introduced and defeated, State Rep. Clifford Franklin, R-Merriam, said the amendments were a well-orchestrated attempt to kill the bill.
"Don't get sucked in if you are in favor of qualified admissions," Franklin said. "Don't vote for a poison pill."
Reardon said the bill had been poorly designed because it did not have a comprehensive plan to improve the caliber of Kansas high school students. He said the bill's sponsors wanted to keep disadvantaged students out of the Regents system.
"Right now, I think the intent is to get poor kids out of their hair." Reardon said.
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Tuesday, February 13. 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ANALYSIS
Chancellor's inaugural lessons feel good, lack usual goals and plans
Chancellor Robert Hemenway brought a little of his classroom prouwess to the Lied Center on Sunday.
Instead of an inaugural speech crammed with "noble rhetoric," as he put it, Hemenway taught a class about the University of Kansas. Not about its history or traditions, but about the reason for the University and about connecting students with all the possibilities created by the bare facts. He used a story about his son to illustrate the connection between fact and knowledge. He used a piece of his own hair to explain the
EDITORIAL EDITOR
PAUL
TODD
speed of fiber-optic lines.
Time for a change
In a dignified, low-key ceremony, Hemenway officially took office as the University's 16th chancellor, but he seemed more like a first-time teacher at a new job.
He was giddy and always smiling, and he spoke of potential, possibility and life more than budget cuts, administrative restructuring and National Merit Scholars.
This was quite a change for such a goal-oriented chancellor, but it was time. Hemenway has changed the structure of the administration, has increased the accountability of administrators and has involved students in administrative decision-making.
But his inaugural address contained little of substance when it came to the concrete goals for the University. No numbers, no future academic rankings or basketball picks. He told the University why it was here and why he wanted to lead it.
It was a human lecture about the human connection between a student and the University.
A higher level of thinking
Hemenway said thinking on secondary and tertiary levels was becoming more important in a time when information travels faster and easier electronically rather than by a professor and a podium. Even the inauguration itself was being
televised.
Students can feel like numbers at universities as large as this one, and with the telecommunications revolution, the distance between students, teachers and the University only will increase. Hemenway recognized this, but said that the key to maintaining the student-teacher relationship was a sense of community, both in Kansas and at the University. Again, no goals or plans, but Hemenway was optimistic that the relationship could be kept. That says more than a plan.
"A chancellor's actions make a statement about beliefs," he said. "I believe in the classroom."
Troubled waters?
Unfortunately for Hemenway, the classroom is where the University seems to be having the most trouble. Gov. Bill Graves said in his speech that he was committed to rebuilding crumbling classrooms. Hemenway did not mention it. Nor did he mention goals for faculty salaries, qualified admissions or the University's financial struggles with the state.
He did say that students brought desire, purpose, potential and joy to the classrooms, and that a university should use these raw materials to extend students' horizons.
"We must respect these human gifts," he said.
Avoiding news and, especially, bad news, the chancellor instead told stories and laughed, and he pointed out that student potential and curiosity made a university, not dollars or technology.
Perhaps he should have addressed more concrete issues, but it felt better that he didn't.
It is somewhat reassuring to have an idealist at the helm.
When a leader comes to his people and tells them exactly what he wants to do, what plans he has, what goals he has set, the people think, quite logically, "Sounds good. Go do it."
Hemenway did not do this in his inaugural speech. He did, however, express a fresh confidence in the students here and in his own ability to make this a student-centered university. KU students can think, less logically and more emotionally, "Feels good. Let's try it."
Paul Todd is a Littleton, Colo., senior in journalism and environmental studies
How to submit letters and guest columns
Letters: Should be double-spaced, typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's 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 and 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 Stuart Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Paul Todd, editorial page editor, or Craig Lang, associate editorial editor, at 864-4810.
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"We find our students' potential when we extend their horizons."
The following are excerpts from Chancellor Robert Hemenway's inaugural address, delivered Sunday at the Lied Center.
I know, because I have read the inaugural speeches of all my predecessors. Since the installation of Dr. John Fraser, KU's second chancellor, in 1868, there has always been an inauguration ceremony, and the chancellor has usually given a formal speech, noble in purpose, high in rhetoric.
For example, almost a century ago, during an inauguration that lasted four days, and included a five-hour formal dinner for 1,000 people, Chancellor Frank Strong issued a clairion call to KU supporters: 'Men and women of Kansas, do you love this state? Do you love its broad prairies, where in the springtime the wandering breath of God stirs the perfume of a million flowers? Do you love the memory of its pioneers, their struggles, their hardships, their tears? Do you love your children? Then do not allow the University of Kansas to miss its destiny.'
$ \textcircled{6} $The formality and seriousness of this ceremony create its own set of expectations.
These are noble sentiments, nobly expressed,
and I admit to you today that I tried to write such a speech.
I must be honest. It was terrible. I will not inflict it upon you. You don't know how glad you should be. You will thank me for years to come.
Fortunately, 35 years ago, Clarke Wescoe stood on the stage of Hoch Auditorium and in plain and simple words identified the purpose of this occasion. Leadership of the University.
occasion. Leadership of the University is responsible to the university.
city is responsible to the society within which and for which it exists. You are entitled, therefore, to hear from me my personal convictions.' I agree with Chancellor Wescoe. I am going to share my personal convictions...
"I want to begin with the true story of Ruby Williams of Warner Robins, Ga. I know about her because a reporter named Kevin Sack, working for the New York Times, has written about her."
Ruby Williams is 84 years old, and she has lived a hard-scrabble life. From an early age she worked in the Georgia sun, chopping cotton and cutting asparagus.
very long ago this curio- ity took him to the basement, screw-driver in hand, where he proceeded to remove the wall plates covering the basement electrical outlets so he could see the wires inside. I cor- curic gerou him to cate
She didn't go to school often as a young woman, some 70 years ago, and when she did it was only for a month at a time. It was a segregated school, poor and inadequate, three miles from her home. By the age of 14 she had dropped out. She married at 18 and spent a lifetime of sharecropping and domestic work. She was poor and illiterate, unable to read beyond the most simple words.
What is remarkable about Ruby Williams? Ruby Williams, in the year 1995, at the age of 84, learned to read.
Williams' story illustrates a basic truth about learning that can serve the University of Kansas well. Even at the age of 84, she has not yet reached her potential as an educated human being. There is more for her to learn, unused capacity in her brain, and she has the will to reach a little higher, push a little harder to understand her world. She acquired a skill she needed to interpret that world, and it has brought her great joy.
Not only does she have the desire to learn and a potential to learn, she also has a purpose in learning. She wants to experience personally the word of God. Desire, potential, purpose and joy—the are the raw ingredients of learning that every KU student brings to the classroom. We must respect these human gifts!
The effect of the Word on Ruby Williams cannot be overemphasized. As she puts it, 'I can read, I can read. Sometimes I pick up the Bible and read and read and read, I sure do. Glory, halleluiah!'
'I want to read my Bible,' she said, and she learned to do so, working every night with a tutor in a literacy project. She reads slowly, methodically and phonetically, with her right index finger sliding across the lines of the large-print Bible.
Most students who enter here will have the potential to learn enough to graduate from the University of Kansas. A few will not.
side. But until we are confi dent that every single individual student is being challenged, helped to reach their individual capacity, respected for what they bring here, cared about, we cannot say that we are graduating enough of our students or that we have fulfilled our mission.
The classroom is a graduate student in pharmacy finishing an experiment that may lead to a cure for cancer. It is a pianist in a master class in a studio. It is a group of civil engineering students in the field in Topeka, finding a way to save the city a million dollars in storm sewer design. The classroom is a social work practicum in the Juniper Gardens project in Wyandotte County, and it is a seminar for a screen writer in the Hall Center for the Humanities in Lawrence.
ration, 15 years ago: 'The faculty are a priceless asset for the State of Kansas.' My own personal belief is that faculty recreate the University of Kansas every time they enter the classroom. When you believe in the classroom, you recognize its many different forms. The classroom is a group of medical students on grand rounds in Kansas City. It is a fourth-year family practice student seeing a patient in Wichita.
In all these classrooms, the common element must be a high standard. Students will strive to meet the standards set. We find our students' potential when we extend their horizons...
"So I want to tell a second story about learning, about my 8-year-old son, Arna.
You have named me chancellor, but I also teach. I teach
He is a very curious boy. He loves to explore the large house that he lives in, and he is always trying to understand what
celeron, but I also teach. I teach American literature at 7:30 a.m. to
American literature at 7:50 a.m. to a class of 40 freshmen and sophomores. I do so because I love to do it but also because I believe the chancellor's actions make a statement about his beliefs.
I believe in the classroom. It changed me, and it changed Ruby Williams, and it will change your son or daughter, grandson or granddaughter. Every one of us sitting here can think back to a teacher who made a difference in our lives. Chancellor Gene Budg, who has been so helpful to me in this transition, said it well on his inaugu-
idea. I explained that he could be shocked or electrocuted.
'What is electrocuted?' he asked.
THE MEMBER OF THE ROYAL FEDERAL CONGRESS
I tried to explain electricity and how he could be badly injured if he played with electrical outlets. Searching for a dramatic example, I said, 'When really bad murders are executed, they are strapped in a chair and electricity goes through their bodies and they die.'
Arna thought a moment.
Then he looked up; 'Wouldn't it just be easier to give them a screwdriver and tell him to unscrew the outlet plate?'
Human beings are driven to dis-
way
onfl-
e
versi
tion
the
p
Human beings are driven to d cover what is behind the protective wall plate, what causes things to work. What is electricity and how does it happen? Like most research scholars, Arna was willing to take risks to find out. At a research university, this quest to learn how things work, why things happen, is carried out at its most sophisticated level. Faculty at a research university are willing to go to extraordinary lengths to satisfy their curiosity.
"KU is a research university because every day faculty and students are driven by the need for original intellectual inquiry. The Harvard mathematician and philosopher, Sir Alfred North Whitehead, has described this research process with great eloquence.
In his essay, Universities and Their Function, Whitehead argues that universities are both schools of education and schools of research, but the primary reason for the university's existence is not to be found either in the mere knowledge conveyed to the students or in the mere opportunities for research afforded to members of the faculty.
He says that so far as the mere imparting of
versity has had any justifica-
dis-
tive
on for existence since the popularization of printing in the 15th century. He means that so long as there are books, we can always acquire information by ourselves.
What is the justification for a university then?
The justification for a university, said Whitehead, is that
it preserves the connection between knowledge and 'zest for life' by uniting young and old in 'the imaginative consideration of learning.' What does this mean? Is this some empty rhetorical flourish? I don't think so. It means, says Whitehead, that the 'atmosphere of excitement arising from imaginative consideration transforms knowledge. A fact is no longer a bare fact. It is invested with all its possibilities.'
In Arna's story, the bare fact of the wall plug and the nature of electricity are invested with possibility as soon as he understands the danger. He
sees
possibilities in the wall plug that his father never imagined...
"I believe we are entering an era in which second- and third-order thinking will become increasingly important to the future of the University.
One phenomenon, in particular, will challenge our abilities: the telecommunications revolution. In 1972, there were only 150,000 computers in the world.
Today, Intel ships 100 million personal computers a year. Let me illustrate how fast information can be sent to and from these computers. Fiber-optic technology has become so sophisticated that a fiber the size of a human hair can deliver in less than one second every issue ever published by the Wall Street Journal.
The combination of the personal computer and the Internet will have a profound impact on the way we teach and do research. Students now have at their personal disposal an entire world of information and interaction, only a keystroke away. If not now, then soon, we will all be able to shop, bank, worship, conduct a courtship or rid ourselves of aggression by the simple act of accessing the Net.
The economies of scale in bringing large numbers of students together to hear one professorial voice will be reversed. The economies of the future will be in distributing information electronically, with the professor available on line as coach and resource, while the student, in the isolation and convenience of personal space and
time, interacts with the computer. Curi-
function of space, may be less important than the faculty response speed, a function of time. Our challenge will be in figuring out how to maintain the human contact between professor and student, the tissue connecting our academic community.
I believe Kansas and its University will more than meet the need for second- and third-order thinking. I believe Kansas can be a leader nationally.
ment, private industry and public higher education created a new partnership for this new century.
The key to this partnership will be the sense of community special to this place, meaning both this University and this state of Kansas.
Leah and I have been overwhelmed by the kindness of the people of Kansas. We have learned there is something special about the human community in this state and this University.
So let me end today with the only part of my earlier, high-flow speech that I felt was worth keeping, because it addressed the human community gathered here today.
Gov. Graves, Sen. Kassebaum, members of the Board of Regents, members of the Kansas Legislature, I thank you for being here. Your presence emphasizes the importance of this University to the Commonwealth of Kansas. I pledge to you that I will strive to serve Kansas with the integrity demanded by your trust.
Chancellors Wescoe, Shankel and Nichols, members of the faculty, staff members, students, alumni, members of the Endowment Association, your presence emphasizes the academic community created here in the past and the community to be sustained in the future if KU fulfills its destiny. I pledge to you that I will respect this community's values and prize its individuals.
Delegates from other colleges and universities, representatives of learned societies, my colleagues from other Kansas institutions, friends of KU generally, your presence emphasizes the Kansas belief that an educated citizenry will best perpetuate a democratic way of life.
I pledge to you that I share that belief and will act upon it, as we continue to construct a great University, working together, building on the excellence of our past.
But the past is not enough. Let us join together now to invest with possibility the fact of our future.
Photos by Brian Hott
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday. February 13, 1996
5A
Dance to benefit AIDS project
Valentine's Day event features R&B singer
By Heather Kirkwood
Kansan staff writer
Valentine's Day isn't just a time for flowers and candy. It's also time for the sixth annual Douglas County AIDS Project Dance.
The dance, which begins at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., will feature Kelly Hunt, an R&B singer and piano player. Proceeds will go to the Douglas County AIDS Project, which serves about 30 clients infected with the HIV virus.
The project helps HIV patients and their families find medical and emotional resources in the area, such as support groups and doctors participating in drug trials. It also educates the general public about HIV and AIDS prevention and discrimination.
AIDS live longer and take more medication.
But support and education are getting more expensive as people with HIV or
Although the Douglas County AIDS Project receives donations and grants from several organizations, including Student Senate, the project needs ongoing public support to continue its work.
"We are hoping to raise about $3,200 at the dance," said Pam Casagrande, administrator and volunteer coordinator for the project.
Hunt, a Lawrence native, has performed at the dance since its beginning six years ago.
Although Hunt is receiving national recognition for the release of her CD Kelly Hunt and for appearances on the House of Blues Radio Network, she has not forgotten the commitment she made to the Douglas County AIDS Project.
"This is her home community," said Al Berman, Hunt's manager. "She is committed to doing this with the Douglas County AIDS Project until there is no longer a problem."
Berman said there would be a few surprises for fans who attend the dance.
Douglas County AIDS Project dance
"She has been working on some new
Where: Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
When: Doors open at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, and dance begins at 8:30 o.m.
How much: Tickets are $8 and can be purchased at Liberty Hall, SUA, Terra Nova Bookstore, Mass Street Music, and Do's Deluxe.
material, getting things prepared for the intense touring season," he said. "But there are some things that she chooses to do that have special meaning to people who are concerned with this issue."
The doors will open at Liberty Hall at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. Tickets for the dance are $8 and can be purchased at the Student Union Activities box office, the Liberty Hall box office, Do's Deluxe, 801 1/2 Massachusetts St.; Mass Street Music, 1347 Massachusetts St.; and the Terra Nova Bookstore, 920 Massachusetts St.
Sometimes Nothing catches their attention
Diet pill ingredient questioned
Use white space to your advantage when designing your ad, it's an attention getter.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Over the counter drug gives many side effects along with weight loss
By Per Joergensen
Special to the Kansan
It may help you lose weight, but it may also make you dizzy and jittery, increase your blood pressure, upset your heart rhythm, or alter your behavior.
Ephedrine, or Ma Huang, is sold over the counter as an ingredient in weight control products. It is also under investigation by the Food and Drug Administration for harmful side effects.
Adrienne Baxter, a registered dietitian at Foodtalk, the University of Kansas Medical Center's nutrition information center, said the drug can be very dangerous.
"It stimulates the nervous system, but that doesn't necessarily mean it increases your metabolic rate," Baxter said. "It has been linked to manic behavior."
Baxter does not recommend using ephedre in any form to lose weight. The essential ingredients to a weight-loss program are exercise and a balanced diet, she said.
"It's one of those things you want to be very, very careful with," he said.
Steve Wilson, general manager at the Wild Oats Community Market, 1040 Vermont St.. cautioned potential users.
Although Wild Oats sells products that contain ephedrine, Wilson said he would recommend products that don't.
Beverages that contain caffeine may compound the problem, said Judith Foulke, a press officer for the FDA.
"Caffeine accelerates the effects of ephedrine." Foulke said.
The FDA has issued a warning against one product — Nature's Formula One — that contained ephedrine and kola nut, a source of caffeine. The manufacturer has since changed its formula.
Since the warning applied to one specific product, other supplements containing the same ingredients are still sold over the counter. Pep Products, a company based in Castle Rock, Colo., markets Diet Pep, a weight control product. Among the ingredients are ephedrine and Kola nut.
Since ephedrine is currently classified as a dietary supplement, the FDA has to prove actual harm before it can impose regulation, Foulke said.
Women steamed with frustration at rusted sauna in Robinson Center
By R. Adam Ward
Kansan staff writer
The women's sauna at Robinson Center is deteriorating, and if nothing is done, it may run out of steam.
Bob Lockwood, facilities director at Robinson, said the women's sauna was in the same condition as the men's sauna was a few years ago.
And now the men's sauna does not work because the bottom of the heating unit has rusted through.
"I have received complaints about the cleanliness and rust in the women's sauna, but the cleaning staff is working to correct those problems," Lockwood said.
Charlotte Armentrout, Topeka senior, said the door of the women's sauna didn't shut all the way, and looked splintered on the outside.
But sauna users are hopeful and supportive of getting the sauna fixed, Lockwood said. However, they are upset because most universities the size of the University of Kansas have adequate saunas in their fitness centers, he said
The major problem with the saunas is the fact that they are old, Lockwood said. Both of the saunas were installed in the 1970s.
Lockwood said the Robinson staff tried to act like any homeowner would when they had a 20-year-old heating system. First, they replaced whatever parts they could. But when the price of repairs exceeded the price of a new unit, they decided it would be more economical to buy a new one.
But the decision whether to spend the $6,200 needed to replace each of the saumas is not Lockwood's.
The decision will be left to the upper administration to decide whether to replace one sauna or both, Lockwood said.
Wayne Osness, chairman of the health, physical education and recreation department, plans to make his proposal for a new men's sauna to Karen Gallagher, dean of education.
But if the School of Education does not have the funds available to replace the sauna, the dean will suggest other places where Robinson might be able to get funds for a new men's sauna, Osness said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Sat. - $3 large premium bottles
$3 jam jars of premium beer
Sun. - live music
the
Harbour Lights
1031 Mass
841-1960
Wednesday, February 14th
Johnny's Lonely Hearts Club Pub Crawl.
The only 3 bar inside 1 bar pub crawl in Lawrence.
Featuring great drink specials all night long.
JOHNNY'S
BAR & BREW
401 N. 2nd Lawrence, 842-0377
--with our Valentine's tanning special:
Bear your feelings to someone on Valentine's Day.
· Balloon bouquets
· Candy
· Roses
· Mixed arrangements
· Delivery available
826 Iowa 843-5115 THE FLOWER MARKET
--with our Valentine's tanning special:
Deliver a little Romance!
• Hugs 'N Kisses
• Cupids Surprise
• Red Hot Lover
• Wild at Heart
• Roses are Red
it's your PARTY 749-3455
1601 W. 23rd We Deliver!
EXPRESS YOURSELF.
Good Breast on the
Vibrator night
Love is just around the corner-at Hallmark. Whether you're in love, in like, or in maybe, Hallmark has the perfect valentine for you.
ROD'S Hallmark SHOP
23rd & Louisiana – The Malls • Open 'til 9 M-F • 841-2100
Bring in this ad and receive a plush bear w/ any purchase
(a $220 value while supplies last)
Standing Ovation Full Service Hair & Nail Care $5 off Haircut & Style 20% Off Perms & Chemical Services
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701 W.9th St. 842-7866
bronze your sweetheart
6 tans for $18 good for one whole year!
*gift certificates available
Johnson Liquor
Prices good thru month of February
❤
Bubbly For Your Beauty all 750 mL
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Freixenet Brut or Extra Dry ... $5.99
Cooks Brut or Extra Dry ... $3.99
Ballatore Spumante ... $4.99
Mumms Cordon Rouge ... $19.99
Domalne Chandon Brut
or Blanc de Noir ... $10.99
or Blanc de Noir...$10.99
Sweets For Your Sweet
all 750 mL
P
Balley's ... $16.99
Kahlua Royale Cream Liqueur ... $16.99
Amaretto di Saronne ... $16.99
Godiva Chocolate Liqueur ... $19.99
Godet Belgium White Choc. Liqueur ... $19.99
P
15th & Kasold (next to Mr. Goodcents) 749-0558
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 13, 1996
7A
Will you be my Valentine?
❤️
IMPRESS YOUR VALENTINE
Impress your Valentine with a bouquet of balloons from Balloon Expressions.
• Balloon Wraps
• Scented Bouquets
• Stuffed Roses
(as seen in picture)
Call
Balloon Expressions
Today For
Best Selection
749-4473
--at the top of Naismith Hill!
1420 Crescent Road 843-3826
Score big with us.. Buy your special sweetheart a Jayhawker yearbook
Preserve memories of 1996 Only $30 (cash/check)
Mail check or money order to 428 KansasUnion, Lawrence, KS 66044 (Include KUID # with check)
Questions? Call 864-3728
April/May delivery on campus
P
UNIVERSITY FLORAL
2103 W. 28th St. Terrace·Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Make Them Smile
We have the most beautiful flowers in town!
Flowers - For That Special
Someone In Your Life
843-6990
All major credit cards accepted
❤
Get Your Teddies Here
FUN AND GAMES
816 Massachusetts
Spice up your Valentine's Day at
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815 New Hampshire 841-7286
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I have one thing to say
this Valentine's Day...
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图
Jayhawk Bookstore
Say It with Balloons
$1
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Reg. 82
Dozens to Choose From I
Sales ends 2/14/96
PAPER
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1441 W. 23rd St.
865-3803
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1441 W.23rd St.
865-3803
BE MINE
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Mon-Sat 9:30-6:00
Thurs. SI 8:30
Sun 12-5
843-1099
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Open Until
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8th & Mass.
DON'T LEAVE YOUR SWEETHEART HANGING THIS VALENTINE'S DAY
Use THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Balloons
Cards
Teddy Bears
Frames
Gantles
Jewelry
Orchids
& Lovin'
Candy
Palace
Carlsbad & Gilroy
Open late Feb. 13th 'Til 7:00 p.m.
Hey Mr. Romantic, on Valentine's Day give your wallet a break! Buffet Specials Everyday!
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entrees, and dessert
2907 W.$th Street 841-1698
---
8A
Tuesday, February 13, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ad prices effective February 11-13, 1956.
Limit Rights Reserved.
Ad prices may vary by town.
Certain items not stocked by all stores. Ad not good in Pittsburgh, Kansas.
Dillons FOOD STORES Sweetheart of a Deal
One Dozen Arranged ROSES $3999
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Half Dozen Arranged ROSES $2499
Ribbons & Roses $1999
Papel "Bee My Honey" Mug Arra $19
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Mug Arrangement $1999
10 Stem Cut Tulips with bulb $799
10" Anthurium Plant $1999
Calla Lily
Assorted Colors
$1299
FTD Celebration Of Love Arrangement
6" Assorted Bulb Plants $899
FTD Beary Happy Valentine Arrangement
Balloons ♥♥ Balloons & More
Single 18" Mylar Balloon
$199
Balloons with Gifts
$499 - $2299
FTD Romance Arrangement
6" Azaleas $1699
Spray Rose Bouquet $699
18" Valentine Bow Tie Bear $999
Valentine Heart Cake
$5.49
Dillons Valentine Cupcakes 12 Pack $4.99
For That Special Dinner!
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Sweetheart Steaks Cut From Dillons Select, Boneless Rib Eye Steaks
$399 Lb.
Cold Water Lobster Tails 3.4 oz.
$399 Each
NATION/WORLD
Tuesday, February 13, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9A
Bill would rev speed limits
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Kansas motorists would be able to increase their speeds by 5 miles an hour on interstates and by 10 mph on most two-lane state highways under a bill endorsed yesterday by a legislative panel.
The Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee sent to the Senate for debate a bill that would raise the top speed on four-lane highways from 65 to 70 mph.
The measure also would raise speed limits on better two-lane highways from 55 to 65 mph.
It gives the secretary of transportation authority to designate a lower speed limit on two-lanes if there are safety concerns because of condition or engineering design of the highway. Curves on some older highways are not banked to handle the higher speed.
The Senate is expected to debate the bill later this week, perhaps tomorrow.
It was amended by the Senate committee, which means it will have to return to the House for concurrence in the amendment. If the House refuses to concur, the bill will go to a joint conference committee to try to reach a compromise.
The Senate committee amended the bill to provide a 10 mph buffer. That means insurance companies would not be able to increase motorists' rates if they are ticketed for traveling less than 10 miles an hour above the posted speed limit. The House had a 5 mph buffer in its version.
The new speed limits would not include county or township roads in rural areas. The speed limits on those roads would remain the same, which is 55 mph if not posted. Some of those roads, many of which are not paved but are covered with gravel, already are posted with slower speeds.
Sen, Mike Harris, R-Wichita, attempted to amend the bill to increase the speed limit on interstates to 75 mph. He said the interstate was designed to handle traffic at that speed.
Sen. Barbara Lawrence, R-Wichita, agreed, saying it makes no sense to raise the speed limit on interstates by 5 mph and on two-lane highways by 10 mph. She said the interstates are much safer than two-lane highways.
But Sen. Lillian Papay, R-Great Bend, said a 75 mph speed limit with a 10 mile buffer meant that
people would travel at 85 mph. She said that is too fast.
"Everyone is going to drive where the buffer is, she said.
Harris doesn't agree
"The purpose of the buffer is not to encourage people to speed," Harris said. The buffer is intended to keep insurance companies from raising rates unnecessarily, he added.
"Commercial drivers will use the buffer," replied Sen. Bill Brady, D-Parsons. "That really concerns me."
Sen. Richard Rock, D-Arkansas City, a member of the Kansas Turnpike Authority, said the speed limit on the toll highway would be 70. not 75.
The present speed limit is 65 on four-lane interstates in rural areas and 55 mph on two-lane highways.
The Legislature needs to send a bill to Gov. Bill Graves' desk by March 8, or the state's speed limits go back to the pre-1974 limits. Those limits were 75 mph on interstates during the daytime and 70 mph at night. On two-lane highways, the limit was 70 during the daytime and 60 after nightfall.
Dole wins close Iowa caucus race
The Associated Press
DES MOINES, Iowa — Sen. Bob Dole scored a shaky victory in Iowa's Republican presidential caucuses yesterday as Pat Buchanan emerged from the GOP field to ready a conservative challenge in next week's pivotal New Hampshire primary.
Former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander ran third and hoped that
would be enough to give his cash-poor campaign a fresh start in a five-week blitz of primaries likely to settle the nomination fight.
Bob Dole
All the candidates vowed to press on, but
iowa's results were sure to dampen the hopes of publishing heir Steve Forbes, who was a distant fourth, and were perhaps a blow to Texas Sen. Phil Gramm, who ran fifth.
President Clinton was unopposed in the state's Democratic caucuses, and the bruising nature of the Republican race was a vivid reminder of his luxury.
With 90 percent of the vote counted, Dole had 26 percent, to 23 percent for Buchanan. Alexander had 18 percent, Forbes 10 percent and Gramm nine percent. Buchanan closed the Iowa campaign imploring supporters of anti-abortion longshot Alan Keyes to rally to his side and will head to New Hampshire wishing that it didn't happen —
Keyes got 7 percent, a remarkable showing given his shoestring campaign budget.
New Hampshire is a Buchanan stronghold, the state where he got 37 percent to spark his 1992 primary run against President Bush. But Dole vowed not to stumble this time as he did after Iowa got him off to a winning start in 1988.
"I am deeply gratified with the strong support of Iowa voters," Dole told The Associated Press. "Now it is on to New Hampshire on the road to conservative change in the White House."
Alexander said the results proved Dole a fragile front-runner and while congratulating Buchanan, said the former White House adviser's protectionist trade views were dead wrong. He said Iowa had winnowed the GOP contest to a three-man battle, as if Forbes did not exist.
"I look forward to a race in New Hampshire with Senator Dole and Pat Buchanan," Alexander said.
Just two weeks ago, Forbes was threatening Dole for the lead, riding the crest of a $4 million television advertising budget that shattered all records in the state.
The Iowa voting took place in 2,142 precinct caucuses and closed a nearly year-long campaign in the state. It appeared that turnout would fall short of 100,000, below the 1988 total and way below the record 130,000 predicted by state Republican leaders.
Among caucus-goers, Buchan was the clear choice of those who described themselves as very conservative or members of the religi-
Results
iowa caucus results, exit poll
How Republican candidates fared in the Iowa caucuses
Lion 27%
Buchanan 23%
Alexander 18%
Forbes 10%
Gramm 9%
Keyes 7%
Lugar 4%
Taylor 1%
Exit poll highlights
What mattered most in determining your vote?
Experience in Washington 15%
Best represents conservative values 35%
Supported Iowa as first caucus 1%
His tax plan 6%
Can beat Clinton 16%
Position on abortion 8%
Not a career politician 7%
In serving as president, would Bob Dole's age:
Help him 5%
Hurt him 33%
Make no difference 59%
Knight-Ridder Tribune
ious right.
In an entrance poll, one fifth of the caucus-goers said they settled on their choice in the last three days; of those, Alexander and Buchanan were the clear beneficiaries.
Dole was the overwhelming choice of Iowa's elderly voters, and caucus-goers said Dole' age - 72-
would make no difference in his ability to be president. iowans were split on the flat tax, Forbes' premiere issue, over the existing system — and even the flat-taxers preferred Dole and Buchanan to the millionaire publisher.
After New Hampshire comes a five-week march through 30 states, with 70 percent of the GOP convention delegates to be chosen by the time California holds its March 26 primary. While Buchanan and Alexander could claim Iowa gave them the former, both needed to scramble to refill their campaign accounts.
For Buchanan, Iowa was a sweet surprise. Just a week ago he had modest goals here, but used his upset of Gramm in last week's Louisiana caucuses to make the case to social conservatives that he was a stronger candidate than Gramm — against both Dole and Clinton.
In advance, Dole rejected the notion that he should be judged by his 1988 showing, noting the field was smaller then and that for a month he has been the main target of Forbes' relentless attack ads.
Faring poorly were three others on the ballot, Indiana Sen. Dick Lugar, Illinois businessman Morry Taylor and California Rep. Bob Dornan.
Officially, the delegate hunt began last week in Louisiana, where Buchanan stunned Gramm and captured 13 of 21 delegates. Dole, Forbes and most other GOP hopefuls boycotted, preserving Iowa's traditional role as the first full-scale contest.
The University of Kansas
Theatre for Young People
Presents
Story Theatre
Directed by
Brad Shaw
2:30 and 7:00 pm.
Saturday, February 17, 1996
Crafton ~ Preyer Theatre / Murphy Hall
Co-sponsored by
WILKINS CINEMAS
THE UNAVERSITY
TREATRE
General admission tickets are on sale in theaters
General admission tickets are on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office; public $6, all students $3, senior citizens $5; for reservations, call 913/864-3828; both VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders; the box office is open from 1 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, and will open at 1:30 and 6:00 on Saturday, February 17.
Learn to Fly 842-0000
Recommended for families with children ages five and older.
WANTED
STUDENTS WITH KU BOOKSTORE RECEIPTS SEEKING THESE MEN
KU Bookstore receipts (designated Period No. 98) in your custody should be taken to the Customer Service counter at the KU Bookstores in the Kansas or Burge Unions until June 21, 1996. Student I.D. is required to claim reward.
JOHN M. HENRY
CHARLES W. BURTON
7% rebate on cash and check purchases from the Fall 1995 semester.
REWARD
KU Bookstores
Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students
KU
KU
Bianchi
Mountain Road/Cross
FINEST QUALITY BICYCLES STARTING AT $235
TERRAPLANE
BICYCLES & GOODS
EST. 1988
916 MASSACHUSETTS ST. 841-6642
See the store for more details or on the web at: www.rock-chalk.com/kuhookstores/bkistinfo.html
---
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Sun. 12 p.m. - 4 p.m
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10A
Tuesday, February 13, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Boulder hinders rescue
The Associated Press
FURUBIRA, Japan — They ruled out tunneling. They tried blasting twice. After three days, rescusers still could not dislodge a building-sized boulder and reach people trapped inside a crushed tunnel below.
Longest tunnels
The 10 longest highway tunnels in the world, in miles.
1 St. Gotthard Switzerland 10.4
2 Arlberg Austria 8.6
3 Fréjus France / Italy 7.9
4 Mont Blanc France / Italy 7.2
5 Seelisberg Switzerland 5.7
6 Kyushu Japan 4.9
7 San Bernardino Switzerland 4.1
8 St. Bernhard Switzerland / Italy 3.6
9 Felbertauern Austria 3.48
10 Viella Spain 3.46
And, as today approached, they grew less sure by the hour that anyone remained alive to rescue inside the snowy mountain at the edge of the sea.
Meanwhile, disheartened relatives watched, waited and looked plaintively into the darkness beyond the floodlit tunnel entrance. Inside, crews could see part of the crushed bus. But they could not approach it safely.
3
3
Knight-Ridder Tribune
"It's regrettable that the expected outcome has not been achieved. I apologize to the families," said Makoto Niyama of the Hokkaido Development Agency, which is heading rescue efforts.
Through the night, national television showed live video of the scene, and the satellite trucks of news crews outnumbered emergency vehicles clustered outside the tunnel.
The drama has dominated national news coverage and traumatized this tightly knit fishing village in northern Japan, where many of the 5,000 residents knew at least one of the 19 people on the bus.
Another person was believed trapped in a car in the tunnel, located at the base of a jagged mountain that rears up out of the sea.
Officials said they would decide this morning whether to attempt a third blast, NHK Television reported. Even setting up explosives threatened to cause further collapse, rescuers said.
After the second blast yesterday, the boulder appeared dangerously precarious, with a hole at its base.
The rock, 210 feet tall and 120 feet wide, is believed to weigh 50,000 tons.
The setback left rescue workers at a loss and deepened the anguish of family members, whose hopes of finding loved ones alive have ebbed since the accident early Saturday.
Work crews already have tried digging in from the ends of the tunnel but feared they would cause what was left of the roof to cave in. And the explosions budged the rock only slightly.
"Looks like they failed again," said Masahiko Watanabe, watching yesterday's blast on television at home. He and other residents are growing irritated at what they consider slow rescue efforts.
"They've wasted so much time it's disgusting. Watanabe said.
Watanabe was referring to delays between the blasts Sunday and yesterday and an 11-hour period after the accident during which rescuers
deliberated about how to proceed.
The accident happened on the rugged, windswept coastline of Hokkaido, Japan's northernmost main island, about 550 miles north of Tokyo. A huge boulder slipped the mountainside and pierced the roof of the highway tunnel, trapping the bus in a shower of rubble.
After nearly three days of subfreezing temperatures, few retain much hope that survivors will be found. People are referring to those with loved ones inside the tunnel as "bereaved."
What caused the accident is not clear. Some officials speculated the slab of rock broke free because of a fissure in the mountainside which developed over the years by water seeping into cracks and freezing, forcing the cracks to widen.
A committee of police, municipal officials, the military and firefighters met yesterday evening to plan their next moves.
Russian wealthy, elite suffer from Red scare
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — A glossy magazine for Russian businessmen is about to hit newsstands with an article, only half tongue-in-cheek, on "how to flee."
A banker with ties to the Kremlin and savings in Switzerland talks, only half-jokingly, about liquidating his Russian holdings in case he has to make a quick getaway abroad.
And a Western diplomat hears the same semi-serious question posed by more and more of Russia's liberal elite: "If things go bad, will you get us out of here?"
Four months before presidential elections, a distinct queasiness is settling over the wealthy and the intellectual circles of Moscow and St. Petersburg. Communists are riding a wave of popular support, while the pro-reform camp is divided.
Most Russians, including wealthy ones, are waiting to see what happens before they get seriously worried. Many say the Communists — if they could win the presidency in June — wouldn't really be able to turn back the clock on democratic and free-market reforms.
But would they try? Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov gives disturbing signals.
Zyuganov, who polls would be a strong candidate for president, tells Western businessmen that he backs limited private enterprise and would make Russia a more stable, profitable place for their money.
is anti-Western and anti-free market, favoring a return to state subsidies and state control. At rallies he stands alongside virulent anti-Semites, Stalinists and extreme nationalists.
A gathering last week of communist factions, including Zyuganov's, issued a statement promising the return of property to the people, and the restoration of workers' power ... socialism and the USSR.
Statements like that led Dengi ("Money") magazine to advise readers, in a story to be published this week, how to apply for residence abroad in case of emergency.
But to other audiences, Zyuganov
"If you have much money, you'd better turn it into diamonds," advises the reporter, Olga Kamenenea.
Many rich Russians have long stashed their fortunes, even their families, abroad for fear of crime and general instability.
Western investors have been even warier, and investment advisers, real-estate agents, hoteliers and others say foreigners have been hanging back since Communists and ultranationalists did well in parliamentary elections in December.
"As far as I know, it's only the big bankers who are packing their bags," said losif Bakaleinik, the 42-year-old, Harvard-educated director of the huge, ailing Vladimir Tractor Factory. "The bulk of businessmen have assets they just can't
But Russia has always been a risky investment, and many Russians and Westerners aren't intimidated now.
pack up."
Many argue that the Communists simply want their piece of the capitalist pie. But at least one top Russian banker — who spoke on condition of anonymity — said he is thinking about emigrating because of the Communists' growing influence.
And a Western embassy official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, said he is getting more questions about visa procedures.
"The attitude of Russian businessmen is very easy to measure—capital flight has increased sharply," said Economics Minister Yevgeny Yasin. "There are clear signs they are trying to close things up here and move out."
Yasin gave no figures, and some accused him of exaggerating the Communist threat.
Certainly, the stakes are high for the Yeltsin administration. The government stands accused by the Communists and by rival reformist groups of widespread corruption.
And the history of the Communists — who monopolized power for decades and killed millions of people — casts doubt on how their successors would deal with political opponents.
"Russians in the government, who have profited from their position, want to sell (property) as quickly as possible because they know it might be their last chance," said Tatya Zhuravlyova, a property consultant in the Moscow office of the international firm DTZ.
"They don't know if it will be nationalized in August," she said.
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UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Tuesday, February 13, 1996
11A
Fog in Italy results in car pile-up on highway
The Associated Press
ROME — Notoriously fast drivers and sudden fog: It's a recipe for disaster on Italian highways.
In the latest epic pile-up, at least 11 people were killed yesterday when 300 cars smashed in a chain-reaction that left twisted metal and gasoline-flames across a main highway in northern Italy. Hundreds of people were hurt, some seriously.
fog banks roll in thick and quickly.
The rush-hour carnage was one of the bloodiest episodes in Italy's history of fog-related highway disaster
— most occurring in winter when
"Italians tend to drive fast and should be aware of the extreme danger of fog," said Roberto Miceli, a representative for the Automobile Club of Italy in Rome. "it's one of our worst killers."
Signs warning of fog danger are common and special reflectors line roads in many fog-prone areas. But they mean nothing unless drivers heed recommendations to slow down when fog is likely, said Miceli.
The speed limit of 80 mph is widely ignored and sporadically enforced.
The site of yesterday's crash — the
A-4 highway — was a graveyard of manged metal, charred hulks and shattered glass. Some vehicles were crushed like accordions. Jack-knifed tractor trailers were wedged together and cars were perched on guardrails.
The highway, the main route between Milan and Trieste, cuts through rolling hills near Soave, a wine producing area 12 miles east of Verona where the crash occurred.
Some vehicles went up in flames, blistering off paint and coloring the fog with an orange glow. Rescuers used metal cutters and blow torches
The fog started to roll in at 8 a.m. — a peak travel time. Fog often forces cancellations of plane trips in winter, adding even more cars to roadways between major cities.
to reach victims.
Traffic was snarled up to nine miles in both directions yesterday. The highway was not expected to be fully open until some time today.
Low visibility caused problems for pilots of rescue helicopters. At least 50 ambulances carried victims to hospitals.
The death toll could surpass the worst for-related highway disaster in
Italy; Feb. 20, 1989, when 13 people died in a series of crashes in Emilia Romagna in northeastern Italy.
At least one politician said the accident points out the need for more safety measures.
"Fog is a meteorological phenomenon that is predictable and not sporadic along Italian highways," said Pallo Galletti of the Greens party.
Other nations in Europe face similar fog hazards.
Ten people were killed in the Paris suburb of Melun in November in a series of crashes during a foggy night.
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12A
Tuesday, February 13, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
New hair available without prescription
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FDA approves Rogaine for sale over the counter as soon as April
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Balding Americans will be able to buy the hairgrowth drug Rogaine by spring without stopping to see a doctor first.
The Food and Drug Administration decided yesterday that Rogaine could be sold in drugstores alongside the shampoos and hair colorings, making it the only medically proven drug to fight baldness available without a prescription.
Some 40 million men and 20 million women suffer hair loss, most the hereditary form commonly known as male pattern balding. This is the only hair loss helped by Rogaine, which has been sold by prescription since 1988.
"We recommend people try it for four
Even for those people, however, Rogaine doesn't always work, said FDA representative Ivy Kupec. It helps about 25 percent of men and 20 percent of women to very gradually grow back moderate amounts of hair, mostly on the very top of the head, Kupec said.
"People should try Rogaine only if hair loss runs in their family and isn't a sudden or patchy type...”
Some experts warned the FDA in
They must keep using Rogaine
definitely to keep the new hair.
But while the move means people can buy a little hope against hair loss for about $30 a month, the FDA warned that not everybody should.
November that an over-the-counter Rogaine would be overused by desperate consumers who refused to admit it was not helping their particular hair loss. So how long should people use Rogaine before determining if it is effective for them?
months, but we actually had people in clinical studies who took longer than that," said Joann Data, a doctor
Joann Data
Pharmacia & Upjohn
for Rogaine manufacturer Pharmacia & Upholn.
If people use Rogaine for the wrong type of hair loss, it won't aggravate the balding. But if the hair
People should try Rogaine only if hair loss runs in their family and isn't a sudden or patchy type that might come from an endocrine imbalance, infection, pregnancy or even such hairstyles as tight braids, Data said.
loss is caused by fungal infection, using Rogaine would prolong the time to diagnosis and appropriate treatment, Data said.
Pharmacia & Upjohn said it will sell nonprescription Rogaine for about half the price of the identical prescription version, $29.50 for a month's supply.
Sales will begin in April, with packages formulated as Rogaine for Men and Rogaine for Women to provide gender-based instructions and illustrations that show whether using Rogaine is appropriate and how to apply it to the scalp.
The FDA's decision comes at a vital time for Pharmacia and Upjohn. The patent on Rogaine, with annual U.S. sales totaling $96 million, expires today. A generic manufacturer was poised to begin selling a competitor product. Pharmacia asked the FDA
yesterday for three extra years of marketing exclusivity, under a little-known law that gives such a bonus when companies do extra research to prove a prescription product is safe to use over the counter. The FDA hasn't made a decision.
Rogaine, known chemically as minoxidil, is not for use by anyone under age 18, the FDA and manufacturer emphasized. Some doctors told the FDA in November that they feared child use of the over-the-counter drug because parents have sought Rogaine prescriptions when they didn't think their children's hair grew fast or thick enough.
Side effects are mainly skin irritation and itching. But people should see a doctor if they develop chest pain, rapid heart beat, faintness, weight gain or swollen hands or feet, Kupec said.
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The GRE is on April 13, 1996.
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737 New Hampshire • Lawrence, KS • (913) 841-LIVE
Tues. Feb. 13
Edwin McCain Band
Iodine
Wed. Feb. 14
Hellcat Trio
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Thurs. Feb. 15
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Fri. Feb. 16
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Sat. Feb.17
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The GRE is on April 13, 1996.
Are You Prepared?
We Are.
• Limit of 10 Students per Class
• Free Extra Help
• The Best Instructors
• Satisfaction Guaranteed
THE PRINCETON REVIEW
Classes start February 17th!
Call Today!
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The Princeton Review is not affiliated with Princeton University or the Educational Testing Service.
Bottleneck
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Boxer Tommy Morrison reveals he is HIV positive, Page 4. NFL Tornie Frazier prepares for the draft, Page 3.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1996
Kansas women can shoot
SECTION B
The No. 5 Kansas men's basketball team could learn a few things from its women's counterparts, who are now alone atop the Big Eight Conference women's standings.
Women's college basketball uses a
30-second shot clock, five seconds less than that used by the men. It's amazing how much of a difference five seconds can make. It takes a strong and well-disciplined athlete to run up and down the court in this game.
The 2,000 or so fans who attended Sunday's Kansas-Nebraska women's game in Allen Field House saw an outstanding battle.
SPORTS EDITOR
But there was one particular thing about Sum.
SPORTS EDITOR
TOM
ERICKSON
It was the fact that the Jayhawks attempted 31 free throws and made 31 free throws — good for an NCAA record for a women's team with more than 30 attempts. The old record, held by Wisconsin, was 32 of 33.
day's game that impressed me more than junior guard Tamecka Dixon's career-high 35 points or junior guard Angie Holible's season-high 24.
I didn't realize that Kansas had been perfect from the line until Kansan reporter Evan Blackwell returned to the newsroom and told me. Immediately, my mind shifted to the day before, when the men's team missed several chances to score from the free-throw line late in the game.
The image of Kansas freshmen Paul Pierce and Ryan Robertson missing four consecutive foul shots in the final minutes spoke loudest. It was no coincidence that the Jayhawks lost to the Tigers by four points, 77-73.
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Just like the Kansas-Nebraska women's game, Saturday's men's matchup was close. One team went down for a quick score, and the other came back with an answer. But the Jayhawk men lost the game partly because an inability to make clutch free-throws.
Here's hoping that Kansas men's coach Roy Williams and women's coach Marian Washington are planning a joint practice sometime soon. A sweep of the men's and women's championships in the final year of the Big Eight Conference would be something to treasure for years to come.
That is, if one of the teams doesn't get left at the line.
Many of you already know of my fervent dislike for the NBA, but I must vent again.
Just before the start of the NBA All-Star Game on Sunday, I decided that no matter how many players had a better game, Michael Jordan would be the Most Valuable Player.
But I still choked on my toast when I opened the newspaper yesterday morning to find that, in fact, Jordan was named the game's MVP. But Mike only scored 20 points in the game. Teammate Shaquille O'Neal had 25.
It just goes to show that the NBA, which stands for Not Basketball Anymore, still hasn't done enough to thank Mike for helping to bring the league out of financial trouble 11 years ago by signing a Nike contract and becoming a household name.
Granted, the league has little to do with who gets on television, but I can't respect any sport that isn't competitive and fair. Expansion and free agency have turned the NBA into a three ring circus, with Jordan as the ringmaster.
It's no coincidence that Jordan and the Chicago Bulls have a 42-5 record and are on pace to win yet another championship. The officials seem to let many questionable calls involving Jordan go his way. Every time an NBA game is broadcast on national television, it is the Bulls versus somebody else.
Close games are a rarity in the NBA, especially when Mike and the Bulls get to play doormats like the 76ers, Clippers, Timberwolves and Grizzlies. The money must be nice, but I don't understand why more NBA players are crying foul.
Everyone's having free throw woes
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
Oklahoma State men's basketball coach Eddie Sutton is ready to take serious action.
"Recently, I heard about a guy in California who hit 87 straight free throws blindfolded," said Sutton, whose team is hitting a Big Eight Conference-worth 58.2 percent of its free throw attempts. "I want to fly him in and have him work with our squad."
Few other Big Eight coaches have found any humor when it comes to free throw shooting. Conference teams have combined to hit just 66.2 percent.
Missouri tops the league, converting 70.6 percent of its free throws. The next four teams hover just above 68 percent. No. 5 Kansas' 63.6 percentage ranks sixth just ahead of Kansas State at 63.4.
K-State coach Tom Asbury said ineptness from the free throw line could be traced to off-season training. With the demands placed on players during the season to prepare for games, they must work on their skills during the offseason. That means lifting weights, running and shooting jumpers.
"But they don't shoot free throws," Asbury said. "Kids don't go to the gym and practice free
And practicing them during the season is difficult, Missouri coach Norm Stewart said. Stewart tries to create different game-type circumstances during the Tigers' practices. That includes early- and late-game free throws as well as pressure situations.
throws."
Stewart said.
"But we try to get something simple as far as form goes."
"It is one of the game situations that's most difficult to recruit,"
Stewart's philosophy is working quite well for two Missouri players. Junior guard Jason Sutherland and junior forward Derek Grimm are tied for the Big Eight's highest free-
record of 48, which was established by K-State's Steve Henson in 1988.
While Sutherland and his teammates hit 22 of 29 free-throw attempts Saturday, the Jayhawks were 18 of 30 for 60 percent. That included six consecutive misses during the second half.
That and the Jayhawks' defensive struggles were the first things
"Kids don't go to the gym and practice free throws." Tom Asbury Kansas State men's basketball coach
throw percentage. Both have hit 89.4 percent from the line.
Sutherland has made 34 consecutive free throws, which is a Missouri record. After hitting two during Missouri's 77-73 victory against Kansas on Saturday, Sutherland is closing in on the conference
Kansas coach Roy Williams pointed to after the loss.
three-point shots, and by making shots as difficult as possible.
Most players pick up bad free-throw shooting habits early on, Oklahoma coach Kelvin Sampson said. As player's develop, they are influenced by the NBA's style, which emphasizes dunks and
"Players don't become poor free throw shooters in college," Sampson said. "They were probably poor free throw shooters in high school and poor free throw shooters in junior high."
34 SAS
Jayhawks, like freshman forward Paul Pierce, have struggled from the free-throw line this season. Kansas converted 18 of 30 on Saturday.
Matt Flickner / KAMRAN
NCAA tournament dangles in many's reach
JAYRIDDY 51
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Kansas junior guard Tamecka Dixon drives the ball as teammate junior center Jennifer Trapp avoids her.
Kansas' victories secure position as prime contender
By Evan Blackwell
Kansan sportswriter
The Big Eight Conference women's basketball season has come down to crunch time.
With only two weeks remaining in the regular season, things remain cloudy in the Big Eight. Several teams are still vying for a shot at the 64-team NCAA tournament next month.
Kansas moved into sole possession of first place with victories against Iowa State and Nebraska last weekend. At 15-8 overall and 8-3 in the Big Eight, Kansas remains in prime position for the Big Eight title and a NCAA tournament berth.
"We're trying not to think about that too much right now," Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said. "We've got to stay focused on the upcoming road trip."
The Jayhawks have one more
road swing through Oklahoma and then finish up at home against Kansas State.
Iowa State coach Bill Fennelly,
whose team was defeated by the
Jayhawks, said Kansas has posited
itself as the team to beat.
"They're in the drivers seat," Fennelly said. "The schedule the rest of the way favors them more than anyone."
No. 19 Colorado and No. 21 Oklahoma State, both 7-3 in the Big Eight, remain hot on the Jayhawks heels in second place. Both the Buffaloes and Cowgirls appear to be locks for the NCAA tournament, giving the Big Eight at least three sure bets to be playing in March.
"We're pretty confident right now," Oklahoma State coach Dick Halterman said. "We've got 17 wins, and we got into the tournament with 17 wins last year."
Colorado has been no stranger to postseason play. The Buffaloes have been to the NCAA tournament six of the last eight seasons. Last season Colorado fell one step short of the Final Four, losing to Georgia in the Midwest Regional Finals.
Nebraska, Iowa State and Missouri still have NCAA hopes. AIP
three teams have been plagued by inconsistency this season.
The Cornhuskers, 15-8 overall and 5-6 in the Big Eight, took a serious hit this weekend, dropping road games at Kansas State and Kansas. However, Nebraska faithful still have hope because the Cornhuskers have their last three games at home.
One team who has benefited from the home court advantage is Missouri. The Tigers, 13-8 and 4-6, have been a different team away from home. Missouri has beaten both Colorado and Kansas in Columbia this year.
"We just haven't played well on the road," Missouri coach Joann Rutherford said. "We've got a couple of road games left, and we need to win them if we want to get in (to the NCAA tournament)."
Rutherford said the fact that the Big Eight race had been so tightly packed should help the teams on the bubble during selection time.
"We've seen this season how competitive the conference has been," Rutherford said. "I think we've got great teams. I think we should send four or five teams to the NCAs."
Smooth pitching assists Javhawk win
Kansas doesn't allow any earned runs or walks against Aggies
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
The winning numbers for the Kansas baseball team this weekend were: 9-0-3-0.
After two losses in which the Kansas pitching staff gave up 28 runs in last weekend's Duel in the Desert, the Jayhawks got a gem from Kansas senior pitcher Clay Baldr and freshmen Nick Frank and Mario Oiipari.
The numbers didn't win Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall any money, but he must have felt as if he hit the pitching lackpot.
Their combined effort in Sunday's 5-1 win against New Mexico State was Kansas' (1-2) only win of the weekend.
The three Jayhawks pitched a three-hitter, allowing no earned runs and more importantly, walking none.
Baird went five innings, allowing the Aggies only three hits and yielding the one unearned run.
"Clay Baird was phenomenal," Randall said. "He couldn't have pitched any better on the last day of the season. He gave us a big lift."
Baird's success this year will depend largely on his control.
"Clav Baird
In his sophomore year he
But Baird said his rediscovered confidence should result in a productive season.
went south. He walked 46 in 57 2/3
innings and was 3-7.
"I just lost all confidence in myself," he said of last year. "Right
"...I'm working hard,throwing pretty well and I feel great about this year."
Clay Baird Kansas senior pitcher
walked just 17 in 56 2/3 innings pitched and had a 4-2 record. Last year, he was wild and his numbers
after the
games, and that was it for me.
after
Arkansas
series, I had
some
bad
games, and that
"But I'm working hard, throwing pretty well, and I feel great about this year."
to pitch for Kansas.
Frank's performance came as a surprise because he was not expecting
But Kansas' lack of pitching depth and experience changed that.
Frank, a natural infielder, was expecting to compete for the starting third base position.
Frank started at third in Friday's opener against New Mexico State and was 0-for-4.
But he followed Baird on Sunday and pitched three perfect innings, striking out two.
Frank said Randall told him before Saturday's game that he would pitch.
"I was confident that I could go in and throw strikes," he said.
"I enjoy both," he said, "(but) I'd probably enjoy playing third base a little more."
"I could try and throw all types of great pitches, and they could hit it all over the park. So I just tried to throw strikes."
AP Top 25
Frank, who pitched at Canyon Del Oro High School in Tuscon, Ariz., said he didn't have a strong preference between the infield and pitching.
After losing to Missouri on Saturday, Kansas dropped two spots to fifth in the poll. Iowa State also dropped one spot to 22nd.
rank team reco pts. pr
1. Massachusetts(59) 20-0 1,619 1
2. Kentucky (5) 20-1 1,583 2
3. Connecticut(1) 22-1 1,495 4
4. Villanova 22-3 1,383 6
5. Kansas 19-2 1,335 3
6. Cincinnati 19-2 1,283 5
7. Utah 19-3 1,246 7
8. Wake Forest 19-3 1,147 9
9. Penn St. 19-2 1,065 10
10. Virginia Tech 18-2 1,026 11
11. Florida 18-2 900 14
12. Texas Tech 20-1 871 13
13. Arizona 18-4 847 16
14. Georgetown 19-5 778 8
15. Memphis 17-4 742 15
16. Syracuse 18-6 643 16
17. North Carolina 16-7 477 12
18. UCLA 18-6 455 17
19. Iowa 17-8 407 19
20. Stanford 18-5 341 25
21. Boston College 18-5 309 22
22. Iowa St. 17-5 303 21
23.E Michigan 18-2 203 24
24. Louisville 17-7 152 20
25. Mississippi St. 18-5 118 —
The Associated Press KANBAN
5. ___
2B
Monday, February 13, 1995
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
at
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Monday's College Basketball Scores By The Associated Press
Aldeberde/Broadford 83, Charleston, W.Va.
Alvernia 95, Beaver 76
American Intl. 76, Springfield 70
Bentley 86, Stonehill 63
Calowell 85, Dominican, N.Y. 63
Calthold U., York, Pa. 63
Columbia Union 53, Kutztown 50
Drew 75, Swarthmore 50
Dresel 93, Lehigh 73
Eastern 82, Gwynedd Mercy 64
Fron堡St. 83, Wesley 61
Green Mountain 68, Johnson St. 38
Hunter 88, Medgar Evers 77
Jersey City St. 84, Rutgers-Newark 68
Manhattanville 68, Mount St. Vincent 63
Mass. - Lovell 83, Quinnipiac 64
Mount St. Mary, N.Y. 88, John Jay 82
N.Y. Maritime 100, Bard 48
Nicholf 88, Salve Regina 72
River 90, Colby/Sawyer 78
Shepherd 83, West Liberty 62
Staten Island 68, Kings Point 64
Stevens Tech 98, Pratt 51
Syrusacle 63, Rutgers 54
Telko-Post 81, Nyack 73
Villainova 80, La Salle 50
W. Virginie Tech 103, Bluefield St. 101
Washington, Md. 77, Gallaudet 75
West Chester 87, Pitt-Johnstown 75
Wilkes 85, Tacony 82
York N.Y. 111, Brooklyn Col. 77
SOUTH
Alabama A&M B3, Morehouse 76
Alabama St. 80, Alcorn St. 77
Abbyton, Ga. 93, Clark Atlanta 74
Arnetting St. 83, Georgia Coll. 77
Austin Pryse 93, Tennessee Tech 74
Belmont 106, Lambumb 85
Bettel, Tenn. 97, Martin Methodist 74
Bethune-Cookan St. 78, Morgan St. 70
Bowle St. 84, Virginia St. 71
Chaffeeson Southern 74, Coastal Carolina 6
Cladet St. 87, Georgia Superior 63, OT
Coppin St. 78, Florida A&M 68
Cumberland, Ky. 193, Pikeville 78
Delaware St. 65, Howard U. 63
E. Minionforta 68, Wesleyan 62
Elon 73, Lenoir-Rhyne 56
Eraskins St. 84, Barton 83
Fayetteville St. 91, Shaw 88, OT
Ferrum 75, Greensboro 70
Fort Valley St. 86, Kentucky St. 75
Ga. Southwestern 96, Piedmont 64
Goucher St. 88, Marymount, Va. 93
Grandfork St. 96, Prairie View 92
Hampden-Sydney 87, Lynchburg 49
Jackson St. 85, Southern U. 84
Kennesaw 74, S.C.-Alken 60
Lander 68, Newberry 66
Lipacopoff 95, Freed-Hardman 79
Marylill 92, Lee-McRae 85
Marshall 111, Jacksonville St. 90
McNeese St. 90, Nichols St. 71
Milligan 86, Tusculum 83
Miss. Valley St. 79, Texas Southern 59
Miss. valley St 79, Tenn. 60
Mobile 85, Belahavens 86
Montevale 88, Lincoln Memorial 60
Mount Olive 88, Longwood 72
Murray St. 8, E. Kentucky 62
N.C. Central 85, St. Augustine's 82
N.C. Wesleyan 88, Methodist 63
N.C. Asohevely 85, N.C. Greensboro 56
North Georgia 71, Shorter 69
Pfeiffer 79, Belminton Abbe 69
Presbyterian 74, Anderson, S.C. 44
Roanoke 76, Guilford 72
S.C.-Spartanburg 25, Francis Marion 34
South Alabama 60, Lamar 58
South Mims 67, Ala.-Birmingham 64
South Tech 68, Berry 54
St. Paul's 70, Winston-Salem 67
Talladega 103, Faulkner 92
Tenn.-Marlin 77, Morehead St. 67
Union, Tenn. 88, Cumberland, Tenn. 70
VMI 83, Furham 74
Valdez St. 72, Ala.-Huntsville 66
W. Carolina 81, Tn.-Chattanooga 76
West Georgia 81, West Alabama 66
Wintropth 87, Mid-Baltimore County 63
Xavier, NO 83, Spring Hill 72
SOUTHWEST
Ark.-Montello 07, Mississippi Col. 88
Cent. Arkansas 02, S. Arkansas 04
Dal St. 100, Henderson St. 89
Harding 87, William Baptista 76
PRO BASEBALL
Major League Baseball calendar Feb. 1-20 — Salary arbitration hearings held.
Feb. 14 - Pitchers, catchers and injured players may report to spring training voluntarily.
Feb 20 — All other players may report to spring training voluntarily.
March 1 — Mandatory reporting date.
March 1-11 — Period for teams to unilaterally renew the contracts of unsigned players.
March 19-21 - Owners meetings, Phoenix
March 26 -- Last day to place a player on unconditional release waivers without having to pay his entire 1996 salary.
March 31 - Opening day, active rosters must be reduced to 25 players.
July 9 — All-Star game, Philadelphia.
Aug. 31 — Deadline for postseason rosters.
Sept. 1 — Active rosters increased to 40 players.
Oct. 19 — World Series begins, city of AL champion.
TV
OFF
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Tuesday. (schedule subject to change and- or blackouts):
SPORTS WATCH
(All times Central)
TUESDAY,FEBRUARY 13
12 noon
ESPN2 — NASCAR Auto Racing, qualifying for Winston Twin 125 and
NASCAR Dash Series Busch Dash, at
8:20 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Iowa at Michigan
TNT — NBA Basketball, Dallas at Houston
ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball,
Georgetown at Boston Coll.
USA — Dog show, Westminster Kennel Club, judging for Sporting, Hound and Herding groups plus 'Best-in-Show' award, at New York
8:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Florida at Vanderbilt
PRO BASKETBALL
ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball,
George Washington at Fordham
National Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
| | W | L | Pct GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Orlando | 34 | 14 | 7.1 |
| New York | 30 | 16 | 6.52 | 3 |
| Washington | 22 | 24 | 4.78 | 11 |
| Miami | 22 | 26 | 4.58 | 12 |
| New Jersey | 18 | 29 | 3.83 | 15½ |
| Boston | 17 | 30 | 3.62 | 16½ |
| Philadelphia | 9 | 36 | 2.00 | 23½ |
Chicago 42 5 8.94 —
Indiana 31 16 660 11
Cleveland 26 20 565 15½
Atlanta 26 21 553 16
Detroit 23 22 511 18
Charlotte 22 24 478 19½
Milwaukee 18 27 400 23
Toronto 13 34 277 29
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct GB
San Antonio 31 14 .699
Utah 32 16 .667
Houston 31 18 .633 2
Denver 20 27 .426 12
Dallas 16 30 .348 15½
Minnesota 13 32 .289 18
Vancouver 10 37 .213 22
810274914. 1001
Pacific Division
Seattle 34 12 .739 —
LA. Lakers 28 19 .796 16½
Sacramento 24 20 .545 9
Portland 24 24 .500 11
Phoenix 22 24 .478 12
Golden State 21 26 .447 13½
LA. Clippers 16 32 .333 19
Fridav's Games
No games scheduled Saturday's Games
Friday's Games
No games scheduled
Saturday's Games No games scheduled
lecured Sunday's Game
East129,West118
East 129, West 118
Wanda's Grocery
Monday's Games No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Denver at Orlando 6:30 p.m.
Toronto at Miami 6:30 p.m.
Charlotte at Cleveland 6:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Indiana 6:30 p.
Dallas at Houston 7 p.m.
Washington at Chicago 7:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at Milwaukee 7:30 p.
Ukah at San Antonio 7:30 p.
Seattle at Phoenix 8 p.m.
Golden State at Portland 9 p.m.
Boston at L.A. Clippers 9:30 p.
Minnesota at Sacramento 9:30 p.
Wednesday's Games
Indiana at New Jersey, 8:30 p.m.
Detroit at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m.
New York at Charlotte, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at Seattle, 9 p.m.
Sacramento at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
Atlanta at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.
Boston at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.
PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times CST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
| | W L | T Pts | GF GA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| N.Y. Rangers | 33 13 10 | 160 25 155 |
| Florida | 33 15 7 | 7 63 189 49 |
| Philadelphia | 27 16 11 | 7 63 189 49 |
| Washington | 26 21 7 | 7 59 155 43 |
| New Jersey | 24 23 7 | 7 55 139 131 |
| Tampa Bay | 22 23 8 | 8 52 159 178 |
| N.Y. Islanders | 15 30 8 | 8 38 156 205 |
W L T Pts GF GA
Detroit 38 10 4 80 192 113
Chicago 30 16 11 71 198 152
Toronto 23 22 10 56 163 164
St. Louis 22 23 10 54 149 159
Winnipeg 23 26 4 50 187 193
Dallas 15 29 11 41 193 194
Pittsburgh 33 17 4 70 251 180
Montreal 17 27 6 0 175 169
Hartford 23 25 6 52 157 171
Boston 22 23 7 51 183 191
Buffalo 22 28 4 48 156 173
Ottawa 10 42 2 22 124 214
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division
Pacific Division
Colorado 30 16 10 70 219 156
Vancouver 20 21 14 54 198
Calgary 20 25 11 51 161 171
Los Angeles 18 26 12 48 185 201
Edmonton 19 28 6 48 142 197
Anaheim 19 31 5 43 153 183
San Jose 13 36 5 31 172 238
Sunday's Games
N.Y, Islanders 4, Anahaim 3
Philadelphia 6, Boston 2
Pittsburgh 6, Chicago 3
New Jersey 6, N.Y. Rangers 0
Detroit 3, Tampa Bay 2, OT
San Jose 6, Los Angeles 1
St Louis 6, Dallas 3
Ottawa 5, Monreal 3
Buffalo 2, Toronto 2, tie
Winnipipe 3, Calgary 2
Washington 4, Vancouver 4, tie
N.Y. Rangers 6, Tampa Bay 2
Hartford 5, Dallas 3
St Louis 2, Florida 2, tie
Anaheim 4, New Jersey 2
Colorado 5, Philadelphia 3
Edmonton 4, Calgary 2
San Jose at Montreal, 6:30 p.m.
Ottawa at N.Y. Islanders, 6:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Toronto, 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday's Games
Calgary at Washington; 6:30 p.m.
St. Louis at Tampa Bay; 6:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at Detroit; 6:30 p.m.
Winnipesaukee at Vancouver; 9:30 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Boston at Hartford, 6 p.m.
Los Angeles at Buffalo, 8 p.m.
Chicago at Detroit, 8 p.m.
San Jose at Toronto, 8 p.m.
Anaheim at Edmonton, 8 p.m.
NHL Scorina Leaders
NEW YORK (AP) — NHL scoring leaders
through Feb. 15
Player,Team GP G G A PTS PM
Leemiu, Liemu 46 47 69 116 40
Jagr, Pit 54 45 58 103 54
Francis, Pit 52 23 63 104 28
Sakic, Col 56 37 44 81 36
Messier, NYR 56 37 42 79 95
Forsberg, Col 56 21 58 79 37
Gretzky, LA 56 14 63 77 30
Lindros, Phi 47 36 40 76 94
Selanne, WPG-ANA 53 26 49 75 18
Mogility, Van 52 44 30 74 10
Verbeek, NYR 56 37 35 72 104
Weight, Edm 53 17 44 75 10
Sandstrom, Pit 54 35 33 68 65
Kariya, Ana 55 30 36 66 8
Fleury, Cal 50 26 36 64 96
TRANSACTIONS
Weekend Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American League
American League
National League
Northern League
BOSTON RED SOX—Agreed to terms with Luis Alicea, infielder, on a one-year contract.
BALTIMORE ORILOLES—Agreed to terms with Kent Mercker, pitcher, on a one-year contract.
SAN DIEGO PADRES—Agreed to terms with Andy Ashby, pitcher, on a two-year contract.
DULUTH-SUPERIOR DUKES—Acquired Beau Champoux, shortstop, a first-round pick in the second tryout camp, future considerations and cash from Sioux Falls for Brian McRoberts, pitcher.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ARIZONA CARDINALS—Named Jim Fassel offensive coordinator.
HOCKEY
(2017-2018)
NHL—Suspended Brian Skruid, Florida Panthers center, pending a Feb. 13 hearing for high-sticking Viktor Kozlov, Detroit Red Wings left wing, in game on Feb. 8.
National Hockey League
DALLAS STARS—Placed Craig Ludwig, defenseman, on the injured list, retroactive to Feb. 6. Activated Shane Churla, right wing, from injured reserve.
LOS ANGELES KINGS—Traded Pat Conacher, forward, to the Calgary Flames for Craig Ferguson, right wing.
East Coast Rockey League TOLEDO STORM—Added Bruce MacDonald, forward, to the roster. Loaned Rock Judson, forward, to Michigan of the IHL.
COLLEGE
INDIANA—Named Kit Cartwright quarterbacks coach; Frank Kurth running backs coach; and Buck Suhr football administrative assistant
MICHIGAN—Agreed to terms with Lloyd Carr, football coach, on a four-year contract.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS
15. (1) A rectangle with side lengths of 6 and 8 units has an area of 40 square units. The length of the diagonal is
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday. February 13. 1996
3B
Frazier getting ready for NFL
Former Cornhusker wants to be drafted only as a quarterback
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Tommie Frazier's message to NFL coaches at the league's scouting combine is a simple one: He wants to play quarterback in the NFL.
The runner-up to Ohio State's Eddie George in votes for the Heisman Trophy and the winner of the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award isn't interested in being considered as a defensive back. And he also has no desire to be used in multiple roles on offense like Kordell Stewart was for the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1905
Frazier holds the Nebraska record for career wins by a quarterback, total offensive yards and touchdowns, despite missing eight games in 1994 with blood clots.
However, Frazier operated in a run-oriented offense and he isn't considered highly in what is believed to be a weak group of quarterback prospects. This despite the fact that he accounted for 31 of Nebraska's 77 touchdowns last season as the Cornhuskers won their second consecutive national championship.
play quarterback," he said this weekend during a break from the three-day routine of the combine.
"I feel like I can go out there and get the job done. I've proved in college that I can
Frazier said he thinks the NFL is just another chance to prove himself.
"I'm ready to step up to the challenge," he said
He said some teams discussed using him like Stewart, who helped the Steelers
reach the Super Bowl while being utilized at quarterback, wide receiver and running back.
Tommie Frazier
"There were a couple that have, but the topic really changed and they started talking about quarterback," Frazier said. "My main goal is to be a quarterback. If that doesn't work."
10872693425
then that's something I'll have to think about."
He said no team had talked to him about playing as a defensive back. But, he said if they did, he knows what he'd say.
"Don't draft me! I'm not a defensive player. I'm a quarterback. That's where I've been playing all my life. I don't see why I have to change." he said.
Frazier is not worrying about when or which team might select him in the April 20-21 draft.
"I don't know anything. All I can do is go out there and perform," he said. "I'm not worried about it. It's too early for players to worry about where their position is in the draft."
Frazier anticipates that changing from an option offense to the pro-style dropback game will be an adjustment he can handle.
"I know the transition will be hard. It was hard for me coming out of high school. It's going to be a transition for everyone," Frazier said. "I just want the opportunity to go out there and prove to teams that I can play quarterback. The biggest question mark is I can throw the ball 40 times a game? All the teams know I can throw the ball."
The combine ends today and then the 30 NFL teams will begin intensive review of the material gathered in interviews and physical, agility and psychological tests conducted on more than 330 participants who are hopeful of hearing their names called during the draft.
Like several players, Frazier declined to run the 40-yard dash on the turf of the RCA Dome.
"I don't feel it's necessary right now," he said, adding that his best time in the spirt was 4.5 seconds. "Most of the guys are going to do it in atmosphere where they feel comfortable, where they know they'll get the most out of their abilities."
Seahawks might not be flying south
NFL's Tagliabue claims Kingdome contract ties team to Pacific Northwest The Associated Press
LONDON — NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue reiterated his objection yesterday to the Seattle Seahawks' proposed move to Los Angeles and said he believed it could be stopped.
"We told the Seattle people last week that we thought they should be operating exclusively in the Pacific Northwest,
which is where they are franchised to operate and that it was inappropriate for them even to be practicing in Southern California," Tagliabue said yesterday during a promotional stop.
When Behring initially announced his intentions earlier this month, he said the Seattle King-
used by the Rams before they moved from Anaheim Stadium to St. Louis last year.
Seahawks owner Ken Behring responded by reaffirming his intention to move his franchise to Southern California.
In Los Angeles, Behring expressed surprise at Taglabue's comments.
"We have not heard any such statements directly from Commissioner Tagliabue or any other league official," he said. "In fact, the press reports this morning (from London) are directly at odds with supportive statements previously made to us by commissioner Tagliabue regarding the move of our franchise to Southern California.
"We have had meetings with Commissioner Taglalabe and his staff in recent weeks to discuss the fundamental structural problems with the Seattle Kidgome.
"They have a lease for the next 10 years with their stadium in Seattle."
dome, where the team has played its home games. was seismically unsafe.
Paul Tagliabue NFLcommissioner
We cannot believe that the NFL would want our fans and players, or the fans and players of other NFL teams, to be forced to play and attend games in a seismically unsafe stadium."
The Seahawks are expected to reach an agreement with Anaheim, Calif., in the near future to rent the practice facility
Tagllabue said that owners, including Behring, passed a resolution last year giving the NFL control over the team that moves into the Los Angeles market
He also stressed that the Seahawks' lease with the Kidstone expires in 2005.
Asked whether the the Seahawks' move could be blocked, Tagliabue said: "I think it's possible to stop them. We had a specific resolution that the membership adopted, and Seattle voted for it, relative to Los Angeles.
MUSLIMS
"They have a lease for the next 10 years with their stadium in Seattle. And if they have a legitimate safety issue which the courts unhold, then the
Paul Taglilabue
lease is a different question. Until that court case is decided, they are under a lease obligation to operate in Seattle. They're under an obligation with their franchise agreement with the league to operate in Seattle."
Behring said he believed the courts would decide that the franchise was no longer under obligation to play in the Kingdome due to what he called King County's breach of contract for use of the Kindome.
The Seahawks could become the fifth NFL franchise to change cities in the last year. The Raiders and the Rams left Los Angeles last year, the NFL last week approved the move of Art Modell's team from Cleveland to Baltimore, and the Houston Oilers plan to play next season in Tennessee.
Tagilabue spoke during and after a lunch of the American Chamber of Commerce in London. He is visiting Europe to promote the World League, a six-team developmental league backed by the NFL and the Fox television network.
Major league owners will vote on businessman's buyout of Pittsburgh Pirates baseball franchise
The Associated Press
PITTSBURGH — Major league owners are expected to end the Pittsburgh Pirates' 18-month search for a new buyer when they vote today on Kevin McClatchv's $50 million buvout.
McClatchay, a 38-year-old Sacramento, Calif., businessman who would become the majors' youngest owner, and NL president Len Coleman are expected to attend a news conference in Pittsburgh following the vote.
The 109-year-old Pirates franchise was put up for sale by its current 10-member consortium of corporations and private businessmen in August 1994. McClatchy, who now owns a minor league team, did not emerge as the front-runner until baseball rejected cable TV franchise owner John Rigas' offer last June.
Ten of the 14 NL owners and eight of the 14 AL owners must ratify the sale. The approval became almost certain when the ownership committee, whose representative is Chicago White Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf, unanimously recommended ratification.
McClatchy overcame a tight timetable — he was given only two weeks to assemble an ownership group and make his first offer — and an early lack of name recognition to raise $69 million in cash from more than a dozen investors.
McClatchy, who did not finalize the group until a week ago, will be the new ownership group's managing general partner and will be in charge of a five-member board of directors.
Vikings' Moon to face spousal abuse charge
Former Houston Oiler quarterback will not enter a guilty plea
The Associated Press
RICHMOND, Texas — Warren Moon heads to court today to face a spousal abuse charge pursued by prosecutors despite pleas from the quarterback's wife to drop the case.
The misdemeanor domestic violence case has taken several different turns in the seven months since Moon's panicked 7-
year-old son Jeffrey placed a 911 call.
With trial set to begin before Fort Bend County Court-At-Law Judge Larry Wagenbach, it has become a test of wills between Moon, who has refused to enter a guilty plea, and prosecutors who have threatened to put his wife, Felicia, and son on the witness stand.
"I'm very confident that it's going to work out OK," Moon said Sunday while attending the NBA All-Star game in San Antonio.
Felicia Moon repeatedlv
Healey refused to divulge how many times he has gone ahead with a domestic violence case despite a victim's refusal to press charges.
"I am not in the habit of going through our records and computers to answer general questions," Healey said.
has pleaded with Fort Bend County prosecutor John Healey to drop the misdemeanor assault charge, saying Healey is using his authority to take a private family matter public.
Moon has admitted that he "lost control" during an argument with Felicia Moon last July 18, but his lawyer says the Minnesota Vikings star he has rejected several plea offers.
"They want a trial. We're going to have a trial," lawyer Rust Hardin said.
The Moons and their four children have kept their primary residence in Missouri City in Fort Bend County, just south of Houston, ever since his days as a quarterback with the Houston Oilers.
"I just cannot live with somebody walking in and pleading guilty to something he's not guilty of."
The county, which boasts several high-income housing developments, is a favorite among sports celebrities.
Hakeem Olajuwon and several other members of the Houston Rockets live in it.
"I'm very confident that it's going to work out okay."
On the day of the attack, Felicia Moon
Warren Moon
Minnesota Vikings quarterback
a former board member for a Fort Bend County women's shelter told police her husband struck her on the head with an open hand and choked her to the point of losing consciousness.
She broke free and fled in her car. Moon pursued in a chase that reportedly reached speeds of 100 mph. Felicia Moore said
In the seven months of back-and-forth court filings, Felicia Moon has asked that the matter be dropped. She has said, in court papers, that she plans to invoke her Fifth Amendment rights if called to testify.
she eluded her husband and returned to their home, where police were waiting.
Prosecutors have said they intend to grant Felicia Moon immunity from prosecution, forcing her to testify.
If she refuses, she could be jailed on a contempt charge.
Prosecutors also have threatened to force Jeffrey Moon, now 8, to testify. He and the couple's housekeeper, Elena Marie Morales, were the only witnesses to the incident.
The Associated Press
3. 0.6 m
Friends mourn wrestler's loss
"There's my daddy. He's still here," she shouted. "I can see him."
PHILADELPHIA — Shortly before the memorial service honoring slain Olympic wrestler David Schultz began, his 6-year-old daughter Danielle was pointing animatedly to a picture of her father.
Danielle was joined by other family members and hundreds of friends, fans and fellow athletes who gathered to pay tribute to Schultz, 36, who was fatally shot on the estate of millionaire John du Pont.
They remembered Schultz not as a much-publicized murder victim, but as devoted husband, father, friend and hero — a smiling, bearded and brilliant technician who had few equals in this ancient sport.
And by sharing their anecdotes and songs, as well as their tears, they celebrated his life and a career that included an Olympic gold medal, NCAA title, two world championships and numerous national titles.
Philip Schultz said his son was a gentle family man off the mat, but a fierce competitor when he put on a singlet, laced up his shoes and stepped into the circle as the Michelangelo of wrestling.
"Dave was my best friend. He taught me how to be a man, and I love him with a passion," he said, his massive shoulders trembling. "I just
"I am going to miss David Schultz for the rest of my life," he said. "I can't believe that such sweetness could be taken so swiftly out of our lives."
Mark Schultz, David's brother and a fellow 1984 Olympic gold medalist, sobbed uncontrollably when he spoke.
He also enjoyed bungee-jumping, rock climbing, sky diving, hunting and scuba diving. He was a religious man who didn't drink, sang country music, studied Tai Chi and taught himself to speak Russian.
Roger Reina, wrestling coach at the University of Pennsylvania, called Schultz a paradoxical folk hero. He was tough and sensitive as well as childish and wise. Reina said.
Not blessed with an exceptionally athletic physique, Schultz was known as "Pudge" in wrestling circles. He was later called "The Master," due to his unmatched knowledge of the sport.
Du Pont, 57, in Delaware County Prison without ball, was ordered held for trial on Friday. Nancy Schultz has testified that she was a witness to her husband's murder.
can't think of any tragedy that could exceed this, except that if justice is not served in this case."
Larry Sciachetano, president of USA Wrestling, said "Schultze" was the kind of guy who had 10,000 best friends. Schultz was the ambassador of wrestling — "A man who was cheered by the Russians and the Iranians as if he was one of their own," Sciacchetano said.
At the memorial, she sat with their children,
Alexander, 9, and Danielle. On Valentine's Day,
the couple would have celebrated their 15th
wedding anniversary.
"My best friend is gone forever," said Valentin Jordanov, a wrestler and coach at Foxcatcher, a wrestling club that du Pont founded. "My time with Dave were the six best years of my life. I miss you."
Schultz was reportedly planning to retire after the Atlanta Games, for which he was a top contender.
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Tuesday, February 13, 1996
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HIV-positive status bars Morrison
Test results learned one night before planned Vegas fight
Associated Press
HUDSA, Okla. — Heavyweight Tommy Morrison, who hoped to be fighting for a multimillion dollar purse against Mike Tyson by year's end, trusted positive for the virus that causes AIDS, his promoter confirmed yesterday.
Tony Holden said Morrison had learned of the positive test results Friday night, one night before his scheduled bout against Arthur Weatherbs in Las Vegas.
Nevada suspended Morrison hours before the fight, but boxing officials would not say why he had been suspended.
- Hidden said Morrison underwent further tests yesterday to confirm the results.
"I understand that there are several people concerned about me. I am fine," Morrison said in a statement read by Holden. "I feel it would be selfish to ask you to say a prayer for me."
Morrison had cited religious reasons when he initially refused to take a test for the virus in the days before his fight. He left a doctor's office but returned the next day to submit a blood sample.
Holden said the results of the latest tests were expected within 48 hours.
The promoter said that only one test was given in Las Vegas and that it showed Morrison was positive. The test was checked twice.
He said no previous signs had appeared to indicate that the 27-year-old boxer was ill.
Holden spoke at a news conference in a Tulsa hotel. Morrison was at his home in Jay, Okla., about 50 miles away.
Morrison's trainer, Tom Virgets, said he had told the fighter the news of his suspension about 4 p.m. Saturday in the crowded casino at the MGM Grand hotel.
Morrison was to have received $50,000 to fight Weathers, the first step in a package of fights promoted by Don King that was to have led to a possible $4 million payday against Tyson later this year.
Morrison, who beat George Foreman in 1993 in his last fight in Nevada, last fought Oct. 7 when he was bloodied and stopped in the seventh round by former WBC champion Lennox Lewis.
A British promoter for Lewis, Panos Ellades, said the former WBC heavyweight champion was in Jamaica and hadn't heard about Morrison's suspension.
"We'd better get our man in there (for testing)," Eliades said. "There was a lot of blood in that fight."
"We were well on our way up the ladder, looking to get where we wanted to be," Virgets said. "We were going to get either a Tyson fight or a fight for one of the titles."
Virgents said he had looked for Morrison on Saturday afternoon after the Nevada commission informed him of the medical suspension. He found the boxer in the casino of the MGM Grand and told him the news.
"It's a shocking thing to hear when you're told you've been medically
disqualified," Virgets said. "He wanted to know if there was anything we could do about it."
"So, in essence, we would check it three times," Homansky said.
Although state boxing officials declined to comment on Morrison's case, the commission's chief physician, Flip Homansky, said that if a boxer had tested positive for HIV, the test would be repeated. If it still comes up positive, a more sophisticated test is administered. That analysis takes 24 hours.
Morrison was paid $2.1 million for his seventh-round loss to Lewis, a fight that could have led to his first title shot since he lost the WBO heavyweight crown to Michael Bentt in October 1993. He is 45-3-1 in a seven-year career with 39 knockouts, including a 12-round decision against Foreman in 1993 for the WBO title.
In addition to his boxing career, Morrison was an actor who was featured as a boxer trained by Sylvester Stallone in *Rocky V*. He had a guest role last month on the *Cybill* show, in which he also played a boxer.
Horoscopes
云岳湖山林
Today's Birthday (Feb. 13).
Hold action could be required in February. Try something really different. Pay debts in March, and play with your sweetheart in April.
May's a good time for a marriage.
and June's not bad, either. Work in July, form a partnership in August and invest your money in Septem-
and a family reunion would be great in November. Confidential " good news should come around January.
Aries (March 21-April 19).
This is a good day to hold meetings. People will be decisive and ready to take action. A foreigner
ready to take action. A foreigner could give you a valuable insight, from a slightly different perspective. Don't even try to get anything serious accomplished tonight.
let off. Help provide a safety valve by listening. Later, it'll be your turn:
Gemini (May 21-June 21).A
problem you've been trying to figure out may become obviously simple today—maybe even ludicrous. Romance will be good with a person who always pushes you to try something different. Since your curiosity knows no bounds, it's a good match.
Taurus (April 20-May 20). It might feel like the boss has it in for you. Just do your best, even if it means going over something you thought was finished. Somebody You know well has a little steam to
By Linda C. Black
Cancer (June 22-July 22).
This should be a busy day for you.
Finish up an assignment that's been hanging around for ages. You might look through financial papers this evening, but don't make any big decisions yet. If you need a loan, your best bet's Friday afternoon.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Your love life should be going very well right now. You may not want to do anything else. Maybe you can delegate some of your workload to a partner and get away early tonight. It's not a very good day for making serious decisions, anyway.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). This could be a rather annoying day for you. Somebody might want to disrupt your neat little routine. Cool down and maybe you'll find the new way has some advantages. By
sharing costs with a loved one, you may be able to get something you need tonight.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).
You're about to solve a major problem. Get together with a few good friends and decide what to do next. Athletics will be good for you. Your jump shot will go release, rotation, splash! And your putts will hit nothing but the bottom of the cup.
**Scorpio** (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Be alert to changes in the game board. The strategy you had figured out may need to be modified. Think of what's best for the group. Your weakness today is a tendency to gamble. Stick with a sure thing in love, too. Don't fall for a risky proposition.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).
If you're looking for a better job, go back to school. If that's too much trouble, try reading tonight instead of watching TV. After the game, of course. If you've got a brother or sister, call that one and get some excellent advice.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
A new gadget or computer program could make your life a lot
easier. Check out your options.
Meanwhile, a domestic quarrel could be keeping you awake at nights. If so, give up. The other person won't see that you're right until you admit you're wrong!
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
This might turn out to be one of your finest hours. You'd better get busy, though, because your window of opportunity is going to slam shut pretty soon. Listen to your advisors, especially the ones who tell you not to take yourself so seriously.
Plaes (Feb. 19-March 20). If the boss insists on trying to teach you something, do your best to learn. It might be easier than you thought. If somebody tells you the complete truth, you have permission to do the same back. In romance, it's payback time. Do what you promised.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
BRIEF
The Associated Press
KSU Hatcher goes to hospital with chest pain
"Here going to get him a little more thoroughly evaluated this afternoon," Wildcats coach Tom Asbury said yesterday.
MANHATTAN — Further tests were scheduled yesterday for Kansas State point guard Elliot Hutchner, who was hospitalized briefly in Stillwater, Okla., Sunday after complaining of chest pains.
- Military, who used to coach at Pepperdine, was present when Loyola-Marymount player Hank Gathers died of a heart attack during the West Coast Conference tournament in 1990.
- Hunter had boarded the team plane to fly home
- after a game against Oklahoma State when he
- began complaining of chest pains. Asbury said.
- So when Hatcher began complaining of pain,
- Asbury immediately called paramedics.
- They determined that Hatcher should be taken to the hospital. Asbury stayed with Hatcher while the rest of the team returned to Manhattan.
- Hatcher was diagnosed as having an inflammation of the chest wall.
- Asbury said it could have been caused by the flu, a virus or maybe by a blow he suffered during the game*
*
Dilbert By Scott Adams
I KNOW I SHOULD BE OFF TORMENTING PEOPLE...
IT'S PROBABLY BECAUSE OF THE HYPE, BUT I'M THINKING THIS WOULD BE EVEN BETTER WITH "WINDOWS 95."
BUT I CAN'T PRY MYSELF AWAY FROM THIS MOST EXCELLENT BUTT-WARMING DEVICE.
The Graduate & Professional Association and the Graduate School invite nominations for the Outstanding Graduate Teaching Assistant Awards. Information and nomination forms available in 222 Strong Hall Deadline for student nominations: February 23.
The Graduate & Professional Association
The Taxman Cometh
Sooner or later you're going to have to do your taxes. The good thing is, if you take care of them early, you can usually get your refund by Spring Break. Even better, Legal Services for Students can help you with all the paperwork. Best of all, it's free. So don't just sit there and dread the inevitable.
Legal Services for Students
Jo Hardesty
Director
148 Burge • 864-5665
No Coupon Necessary
STUDENT
SENATE
PYRAMID PIZZA
@
14th & Ohio
"Under The Wheel"
842-3232
"We Pile It On!"
Minimum Delivery
Cash & Checks Acepted .25 Check Charge)
Limited Delivery Area
Everyday Low Prices
WEDNESDAY
1 TOPPING
2 Small...$8.00
2 Med...$12.00
2 Large...$15.00
TUESDAY
Large 1 Topping
2 Cans of Pepsi
$8.50
Tax Included
THURSDAY Small 1 Toning
$4.00 Carryon Only
Order 2 or More
For Delivery
NOW OPEN CLUB Orpheum
1105 Mass. in Lawrence (Enter thru Tin Pan Alley)
Drinking & Dancing Fridays & Saturdays
18 & Over
fifi's
Banquet
Connection
Banquet facilities and Catering for rehearsal dinners, departmental meetings or any special occasion. Ample parking.
1350 N. 3rd
841-7226
Keep It Clean
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAN
PRICES ON 95 BIKES ARE BEDROCK LOW.
ONLY A FEW LEFT. So... Hurry!
TERRAPLANE
BICYCLES & GOODS
EST. 1995
916 Mass. St. 841-6642
A LOCK FREE
www.bedrockbicycles.com
Open Hearings for Student Health Insurance
ATTENTION STUDENTS!
↑
and
Thursday, February 15, 7:00-8:00 p.m. Watkins Health Center, 1st Floor Conference Room
Funded by Student Senate
---
Wednesday, February 14, 7:00-8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union, Kansas Room
Y
100s Announcements
Classified Directory
---
1.05 Personals
1.10 Business Personals
1.12 Announcements
1.13 Entertainment
1.14 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Servi-
ces
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
235 Typing Services
400s Real Estate
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
864-4358
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Y
100s
Announcements
110 Business Personals
Need Cash?
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
We loan cash on almost anything of value, CDs, VCRS,
TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain blues, and
more. Lawrence's most liberal loan company, JAHAWK
PAWN & JEWELRY W 8th, Wd 749-1019
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1985 which makes it liable to advertisement any limitation,优惠 or discrimination basis on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, an intention, status or discrimination, limitation or discrimination.
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
SERVICES
Classified Policv
120 Announcements
Hours Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
The Kansem will not knowly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against women. The person bases both on sex, age, sex, race, national sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansem will not knowly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
864-9500
- .75 wash ALL DAY EVERY Day. Independent Laundromat - 20th and Iowa. ( Across the street from Dairy Queen. )
120 Announcements.
$SPRING BREAK PAMANIA City Beach Florida from $69
Per Person Week. Thi Shi Hotel, Bus Hotel, Huey Bay
Houston
The Celestine Prophesy!
A group is now forming to study this timely knowledge.
Fatima Palmieri - 2891
Spring Break **Park Walk**
CANT BEAT THERE! SO Pacific Island
Beachfront from $14.50 with Party Package!
1800-Hi-Paize (1-800-472373)
1800-Hi-Paize (1-800-472373)
Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise! 7 days, $279.00.
Includes 15 meals at dn6 free parties! Great beaches/night life Leaves from Pt Lauderdale; http://www.springbreaktravel.com/pt-870-68386.
Attendance students: Do you have a great GTA? Nontain her / him for the Outstanding Graduate Teaching Assistant Awards ! Information and forms are at the Student School, 228 Strong. Nonation Deadline February 23
Spend Spring Break hiking the Sierra Madre of Mexico's Copper Canyon March 23-31. This low impact, cultural immersion trip will rock your land. $480 includes all meals at 900 (876) 7252 for information. Call Southern Expeditions at (800) 675-7242 for info.
Spring Break Panama City $ 8, room/wkht.
$119.10 Walmart to best bark seven in keyes in Night $250.00
Cocoa Beach Hilton ( great beaches, near Disney) $ 168.00 Daytona. $ 188.00 http://www
shuttle.com/daytona.html
SPRING BREAK '96
With only 1 week to live...DON'T BLOW IT!
BOOK NOW!
Florida & Patre $ 100 Bahamas $ 300 Jamaica/Cancun
Organize a group - TRAVEL FREEL!
SunSplash Tours 1-800-426-7710
ASK YOURSELF THIS:
Who paps for AT&T, Spirt, and MCI's mult-billion-dollar advertising and telemarketing campaign? YOU DO! U.S. doesn't advertise or bother you with calls, it just offers money on long distance in Kansas, the
1
Kansan Ads Pay
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 13, 1996
5B
120 Announcements
Spread bread spikes sided. Cucumber and Zucchini! 119 lunch menu.
$10 per person. Hosted and food at $425.00
Save $10 on food
SOUTH PADRE ISLE - SPRING BREAK
Why settle for a cramped hotel room? $jumbo IVA has spacious 1,2 & 8' bedroom furnished condos at affordable rates. Deal directly with on-site management, not third party promoters. Great location, on the beach, and excellent amenities. Special Rates: 1 bdmr $1300 (4 people) Special Rates: 3 bdmr $1300 (8 people). Call toll free (800) 944-6188 or http://www.bmh.net/Internet: http://www.bmh.net/nfc
Internet http://www.hiline.net/fccs
HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center
24 hrs.
841-2345 • 1419 Mass.
Spring Break
Mazatlan $419
Cancun $428
Trip includes: 7 nights hotel, Round trip air fare from Kansas City, Daily parties, free covers and discounts.
For more info call Tiger Tours
1-800-Leave-99
(532) 8200
(532-8399)
COMPLETED 8.7 WEEK 30
SPRING IS SHOW ON CHIC NEWS 24 HOURS BREAK
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
ATTORDABLE
JEAN TODD
$69
15th
Sellout
Year
PARTY
1-800-SUNCHASE
YOUR LINE:
ON WEB TO 191.600.0321 AT:
http://www.sunchase.com
130 Entertainment
Free party room for 20-290 at Johnsburg. 842-0377
MICROEVIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult taps on sale starting at $0.98 and up.
1019 Haskell, 841-7504
Spring Break 1996
TRAVEL FREE!!
Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas
Panama City, Davtona, Padre
** Great low, low prices
** Free Trip on only 15 sales
Call for a FREE
information packet!
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-426-7710
电话
140 Lost and Found
Watch found near Wescoe on 02/07/06. Please Call 842
9003
Found. Used Plant Washing by Malcolm Wilkens found on Memorial Day, Call 617-280-9547 or pick up the in-its at Memorial Park, Brooklyn, NY 11201.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
HELP WANTED: Help needed in licensed day care, Call 618-254-3100
205 Help Wanted
**Apartment Management:** Great job for graduate student or spouse. Work in home, Averring 30 hours per week. Email: management@neek.edu
Looking for someone to do yardwork and farm clean-up.
Please call 745-0019
10m. m, 3.7p M, 3B.4p M, please call 769-0130.
Century School. a nonprofit private school in hiring part-time assistant teachers. Flexible hours. Call Don Dorsey. 832-0110.
Part Time Help Wanted in busy doctor's Office. MWF 8-10 m., 3-7 p.m. TR 3-8 p.m. 749-0130.
Downtown theatre needs PT concessions.
Call or stop by Varyity Theatre for application.
1015 Mann. 643-1085
Now hiring morning and evening walk. staff and nursing cookies. Now age-restriction will train. Apply to person,婆.
Job #309, 486-254-6500.
Overweight males between 18 and up are needed for a walky study. Wills will include for a little more than half of the population that is overweight.
Student with natural ability with children needed to absorb a 3-year-old girl, gifted 8 per week, per 50 hours of work.
United Child Development Center is accepting applications for child care hours. Hours are 12/23-6/25 from 9:00am to 7pm on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Wanted: 100 Students. Loss 8-9 100 lbs. New metabolism breakthrough! Host 15 lbs in 3 wks! Guaranteed Results
$831 - 8-900-664-683
Needed Mon, Wed, and mfr nights!
Teaching Amt. needed part-time at early intervention program. Call Brookcreek Learning Center 860-8223.
Adam Alumni CenterThe Learned Club has time-date opening for dessert prep. prep. 3 days on a week schedule. 3 IUPA) apply to person in 1260 Oread Avenue
WELP WANTED. Delivery driven needed for Wed. Fec.
14th. Must be able to start at 8AM shap. Must have your
own transportation. Apply in person. Englewood
Florist, 689 Massachusetts.
Adams Alumun CenterThe Learned Club has immediate opening for fine dishiny pasta cook. Prefer hot pots, steaks or burgers.
6 day, full-time position with benefits 8AM-4PM shift
apply in person on 186 Broad Avenue
Fortune 500 Companies utilize our firm for hiring. Now interviewing. Salaries range from $21,000 to $42,700.00 base. Call; Bill or Kyle @ (816) 825-9232
1904 & 1985 college grads encouraged.
Part-time now, full time in summer. General office work & showing apartments. Must be a Kansas resident, be enrolled in KU with at least 12 hours, have a GPA of 2.0 or better, and be a business major or in related field.
Positions open. Great jobs for students. Telephone fundraising for SARP (Students At Driving Drunk). We early evening and Sat, mornings, 4$hr, plus a formal commission. Call 844-5103 apply to 618 Main St., Seattle, WA 98125.
Week-long part-time positions for Assistant Instructors in Summer Workshops for Young People KU National Library Service, Brussels, Belgium Contact Burst Gerichen, Public Education Center, 0023 Halle (Duis) 861-447-1158, Cloning 0.18. An equal opportunity employer.
CAMP COUNSELORS Join the adventure and share the memories at SUMMER CAMP!
Top marked营地在 Piccones in PA need experienced instructors for water and land sports, WSLa Life Guards, Tennis, Climbing, Arts and more 2 hours from NYC Call 212-630-5478, Hoboken University Lamborne Lane Jefferson, PA 19977
Kitchen staff positions available at the Food Market Street, Burlafold Bob Stobbs House. The food prep and line cooking. Some daytime hours are helpful. At $6 per hour with a $25 raises every 90 days to $46 per hour plus profit sharing plus length of service bonus. Apply at www.bobstobbs.com or Mon-Fri at 719 Mussel (upstairs above Smoke House).
CAMP COUNSELORS WANT for private Michigan girls/boy summer schools. Teach: swimming, canoeing, waterskiing, gymnastics, rifley, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, camping, crafts, dramatic, or more. Course offered by MHS. For more or plus R & B. Camp IWL/GWC, 1755 Maple, NMA, L6003, 8684-44-2444
Program assistant, New Student Orientation. Application deadline Feb. 16, 1996. Start Mar. 18, 1996. Six month appointment. Duties include planning and implementation of Hawk week programs and publicity, and other orientation programs. Salary: $77/hr. Requirements for Hawk week programs: Master's degree. For complete job description and application procedure contact Kathryn Nemeth Turtle, Office of New Student Orientation 804-4270.
500 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES IN NY, PA,
NEW ENGLAND
CITY OF LAWRENCE SEASONAL POSITIONS
Choose from over 30 campaels. Instructors need, Tennis,
Baseball, Hockey, Rollerblading, Soccer, Lacrosse,
softball, Volleyball, Basketball, PE Majors, Gymnastics, Riding,
Lifeguard, WSA, Water-skiing, Windsurfing, Fitness,攀岩, Mountain Biking, Pioneering, Rock Climbing, Water Polo, Ceramics, Stained Glass, Jewelry, Wood-Working, Photography, Nature, RN's, Chef, Food Service. Call Arlene: 516-453-8083
LANDSCAPE WORKER - March through November 32.
INCOME: $750.00 per year. Valid driver license
$6.75/hr. Deadline $29.00.
**CAREFIXED:**
BALL DIAMOND MANTENANCE: 20 wr h/kw
During May, 40 wr h/kw until mid-August. $4,50-$60
Sale ends on 10/31/2022
CUSTOFLAN. Year-round, 18-22 w/ hr, wk primarily
traditionally through Sunday. Requires juxtaural/custodiaal
& valid drivers license. $ 6.00 / hr. Deadline:
221.96
Complete application at Admin. Services, 2nd floor, City Hall, 6 E. 0th, Lawrence, KS 80403. BOMP E/M
EDUCATION PROGRAM ASSISTANT
The Lawrence Arts Center is seeking a Program Assistant to work with the students beginning of this Spring. This person would serve as an assistant to our professional staff assisting with clinical and administrative duties. Applicants must be able to participate in all school-related activities on the weekly schedule. Program Assistants also work with artist / teachers (primarily working with the children's classes and for preschool) and are responsible for equipment preparation, storage and maintenance. Applicants must be Karen Career Work Study qualified. To apply, please pick up an application and return with a
PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER, 200 W.9TH
LAWRENCE, KS 66404483.ARTS.
Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Hockey, Soccer, Volleyball; 30 Teams opening, also Camp Programs; Rock Climbing, Weight Fitness and Cycling, other openings including Performing Arts, Fine Art, Figure Skating, Newpaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Cooking, SEwing, and Rockyet; All Waterfront/Pool Activities (S swimming, Sailing, Windingurf, Swimming, Diving, Water sports, roon, board and travel, June 18th-August 17th.
AMERICA'S PREMIERE SPORTS CAMP
WINADU FOR BOB/DANEE FOR GIRLS
(Western Maanhaarinsta)
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
PLACEKAKAŠKATANO/ROJDAG
FEB-12B FILEBOOK TAB 02 OREAD AND REGION
OVER 100 POSITIONS AVAILABLE
All Land and Water Sports, Arts and Crafts.
10 F. Revenues & Experience Required
Top salaries Room and Board, and Travel Allowance
ON CAMPUS INFO AND INTERVIEWS
DATE: DATE 28-29-1966
All Land and Water Sports, Arts and Craft,
Gymnastics, Horseback Riding, Dining, Woodshock,
Diving, Surfing, Swimming, Yoga, Dance.
MAH-KEE-NAC (Boys): 1-800-753-9118
DANBEE (Girls): 1-800-392-3752
205 Help Wanted
SUMMER SCHOOL
Map Call:
Women Call:
1-800-494-6238
1-800-392-3752
CAMP WNADU
CAMP DANBEE
ALIST ROOMS
SUMMER JOBS!!!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
WALK-INS WELCOME!
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life serving blood plasma
WALKING WED FOUNCE!
Child Care
Menninger Child Care Service is accepting applications for full-time, part-time and call-in Teachers. High school diploma or GED required. Six months experience teaching children
TEACHERS
a licensed center or family child care home required.
in
225 Professional Services
For more information contact Diane Purcell, Director, Menninger Child Care Services/SBA at (913) 295-5170
EO/AA Drug-free and smoke-free environment
DUI TRAFFIC/CIMMUNAL
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Carol Brown Electrolysis Safe, effective, and permanent removal of hair conveniently located at 10.E. Ninth St. 805-4255
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Need Help With Your Research Project ?
Kiley Data Analysis and Consulting specializes in:
Complete statistical analysis of results, SPSR graphs and
complex data analysis for text design. Low-rates in
Lawrence, Topa area.
( 913 ) 887-6307 ( local call )
E. maili roddnar@aol.com
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID' and alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal and civil matters
Free Consultation
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Saly G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Call Today!
SPRING BREAK
AIRFARE, HOTEL,
TRANSFERS, BAGGAGE HANDLING,
HOSPITALITY DESK, &
FABULOUS PARTIES
LOWEST PRICES TO CANCUN!
MANY OTHER DESTINATIONS AVAILABLE
RAVELLERS
LAWRENCY'S TRAVEL AGENT SINCE 1851
821 Massachusetts
749-0700
X
Call Jacks at 865-2885 for applications, term papers,
thesis, documentations, etc. *Satisfaction*
are guaranteed.
235 Typing Services
300s Merchandise
360 Miscellaneous
AU Full size matte set. New, never used; still in plastic;
BRA Maximum fill for $100. Brace headband.
BRA 970-270-0855
BRA 970-270-0856
305 For Sale
1588 American Bucket wheeled type A3R0. Under 30 milkwear new condition. Purchased for $620, will sell for $549, or $500.
Volin, appraised at $1,600. Yours for $1200. Try it for yourself. B42-4484.
Large kink size mattress. New. Retail price $900.00, will sell for
$275.00, 379.9886
AQ Queen size mattress set, new, never used. Still plastic-like. Retail Price $800.00 or less for $150.00.
COMPUTER MEMORY: $20-$30 per MEG leave message at 1(800)511-9965,
Canon AP-300 electronic typewriter, one line memory
Four type wheels. #45, 812-4844
Power book 180/4/90
With internal modern & stylewriter
$1200 or best offer call 749-9388
Create VC2121Rm2 amp.2 month old, new pre-ampa, great tone, 815 Call Receiver 885-4658
Bankrolled 100 Students to Lose $8,100 per Day. New Market Bank
405 For Rent
FOR SALE 1692 when Aux Acura GS 3 door, 5ape,
fully loaded, brace, sunroof, with spotlight, and speaker.
Excellent condition 72,000, $10,500. Serious Inquiries only.
749-8060
Paint Fundraiser - Raised $50 in 5 Days, Greens Group,
Chub, Motivated Individuals, No Financial
Requirements.
NEEDED 36 PEOPLE TO LOSSE WEIGHT NOW!
Guaranteed! 100% natural. 1-400-298-2ext. 235.8x.
400s Real Estate
340 Auto Sales
1/2 block from campus, studio apartment. $110.00,
mult allitions included. Call 847-784-64.
AM/FM/MISO Receiver Speed(8ppm) Get APP
6M AM/FM/MISO Great Car. Very Good Condition. Phone 913-
250-7400.
1 @ 8 BR townhouses at 1813 Valley Lane. Walk to
campus, walk to store with dispenser,
visit library, vary comforts. Very large 450-800 sq.
ft. townhouse.
1 Bedroom Sublease, PkR. rent Paid, Water, Cable
Bathroom, Laundry, Landfill Facility Call Any Amy
or John 518-624-3900
4 BR townhouse with 4 carport. Walk to campu.
Nice bedroom with bathroom. 860/mo.
Bathroom with toilet. 880/mo.
Kitchen with sink. 880/mo.
Shannon Plaza Apartments & Townehouses 2 & 3 bedroom townhouse available. Ask about us!
Available immediately. 3 Bedrooms. Overtime apartment. 1/2床房从 KU $700 per room. Great Hewlett-Packard office.
Spring Break Beach Condo. Hot Location, South Panther Island. Needs 8 plus people. Deposit required.
Mackenzie room. 1188 Kentucky, near leasing for Aig. 1, yr. old lixury aptn., close to campus. All 8 B microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appli. 2, B microwave, Wet heat, Well浸渍, energy ecf client. C478-1469 8
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
1 bedroom apartment at Oread
(1&1/2 blocks from Union). Water was gas paid
6 months. Barefoot. Room.
841-7648
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1403 Teen, a student housing house. Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation, democratic control. Rn, Admin, Equip, Wkshs, Facilities, Cable Close to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 814-6448.
Jo
the Spin
Washer and Dryer Units for Rent!
*Normally $30.00, for a short time are $4.50 per month set. per room Capacity waver and dryer sets. *Resting now and for the fall of
*Renting now and for the fall of 1996.
Call Now! 766-8177
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Featuring:
Now Leasing for June & August 4 Bedrooms/3 Bath Featuring
Washer/Dryer Microwave Dishwasher Gas Fireplace Trash Can Machine Cabinet Glass Door Ceiling Fans in all Bedrooms
For More Info : 841-7849
Located at 4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Lorimar Townhomes
New Leasing For June & August
1.2. & 3 Bedrooms
Includes:
Washer/Dryer Fireplace
Dishwash Cable Paid
Microwave Back Patio
For Appointment: 841-7849
Located at 3801 Clinton Pkwy
Fall Leases
- 1&2 Bedrooms
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Exercise Room
405 For Rent
- 3 Hot Tubs
1301 W.24th & Naismith • 842-5111
Colony Woods
FOUR BEDROOM-
ASK ABOUT
Our Three Person Special
$690 and Up
Pool and Clubhouse
Offers
EDDINGHAM PLACE
MASTERCRAFT
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
24th and Eddingham Dr1
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7TH & FLORIDA
E.H.O.
841-5255
Completely Furnished
- Fireplace
Studio,1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
AVAILABLE HEMIDIMETALLY
2 bedroom apartment, 18th Aicho.
Microwave, dishwasher, dispenser, wd hookup.
6 month leave. Call 841-8468
Hanover Place 14th&Mass. 841-1212
- Laundry room
- Exercise weight room
- Energy Efficient
NOW LEASING FOR SPRING
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- On site management
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
- Daily 3:30-5:00
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
KVM
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasol
749-4226
808 W. 24th
841-6080
841-5444
Professionally managed by
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
MASTERCRAFT
405 For Rent
842-4455
Equal Housing Opportunity
Large 3 bedroom apt. and studio apt.
in remodeled house near KU.
Call 841-6254
meadowbrook If BIG
is what you want
your new home awaits...
2 & 3 bedroom
2 & 3 bedroom townhomes are available now. Walk or ride the bus to KU. Enjoy the quiet feel of the country with the convenience of the city.
430 Roommate Wanted
MEADOWBROOK
15th &Crestline
842-4200
Female roommate will have to share 3 dbrms. 2 baths apart. Female roommate. Must be a stay at home. Minimum age of 18 or older. 1/4 bathrooms. 1/4 toilet. 84-89 lbs.
Mon - Fri 9-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
Female grade student to share three 3-BR appt. $200=util.
Call Caroline B87-5905. Must like can be used for
families with children. Appt. Fax: 617-845-2501
Female roommate wanted to share 2 berm furnished apartment at the Ank. Fb. through August. Call back at: ank@ank.com
Non-smoking male roommate will share 2 share
apartment close rooms. $450/mo - call Jc Bell at
1-800-396-9700.
Roomatee need to share 4 bedroom, 12 bath room with W/D and all new interior, 14/16 rooms
832-1406
Nestor F/S Roommate needed to take 2 bdrm. appt.
Fulman accepted bidm. BD, D, Wishwater; A/C. Rent $355mo. & 1 U/ail. 0/1 or for Fall 99, must like cats $3,267
ROOMMATE WANTED MONEY needed, married needs,
sublease. Person needed to share rice 3 BREA, 2 bath-to-wall w/D, W/flame, $225/m + 1/3 meal. Feb rent free.
no pets. Call 841-6370.
Female roommate needed to share 2
bedroom apartment. On bus route. $200.00
+ 1/2 utilities. Water and gas paid.
Call Turns 893.8438
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX KANSAN
Female roommate needed. Almost new home west of campus, Broomy, WD, AC, DW, Garage, Deck. Near bus route. Short or long term lease available starting March 17, $275.00/month. Call 838-4546.
Wanted ASAP - N5M MVF membership to share spaces 2 bdm atl, apt 13 and Albany. To campus and downstreet, off street parking $250 + 1/2 util. Call Wade 88-4082. Leave message.
Roommate wants for 3 bedroom apartment close to campau (12F and Ohio) and Ohiu,赁衣和 rent,贴单 and one three utilities. Call Mike Terry or Carl ASAP at 843-4297.
- in person: 119 Stauffer Flint
Classified Information and order form
As soon as in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Stop by the Kansas Office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
You may print your classified order on the form before and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa Account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insections and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per-day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunda on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
His responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Class per unit per day
Num. of insertions:
1X 1.2 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 20×X
3 Hose 2.20 1.70 1.15 0.95 0.60 0.55
4 Guex 2.05 1.30 0.85 0.75 0.70 0.59
5-7 Hose 2.00 1.15 0.80 0.70 0.65 0.45
8× Hose 1.90 1.60 0.70 0.65 0.60 0.49
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days= $17.00 (4 lines X 8$e per line X 5 days).
108 personal
118 liaisones personales
128 annoncecommons
138 eurafuturaient
140 land & found 300 for sale
185 high usdgt 300 auto sales
225 professional services 300 microcomputers
285 typing services
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
Please print your ad one word per box:
Date ad begins;
Name
Address:
VISA
Account number:
Phone:
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dalkean Mall)
Furnish the following if you are charging your nf:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
The University Dalby Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
6B
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, February 13, 1996
Ship This
NATURALWAY
Natural Fiber Clothing Natural Body Care
GLOBAL COOPERATION FOR THE CHILDREN'S WORLD
10% Off
Regular Priced Clothing
Expires Feb.12,1996 820-822 Mass.Downtown Lawrence
2 Cream Cheese Doughnuts for $1.25 or 10% offAny Purchase
Munchers Bakery
I
Hillcrest Shopping Center-Across from Royal Crest Lanes one coupon per visit * open 24hrs a day * exp. 3/12/96
Yello Sub
Yello Sub for Lunch?
Monday-Friday Lunch Special!
15th & Kasold (Orchards Corners)
841-8444
N. Iowa & Riverridge
(Across from Quaker Oats)
841-2442
*Coming Soon to...*
33rd & Iowa
(Just N. of Wal-Mart)
WE DELIVER!
1814 W. 23rd
12th and Indiana
With this coupon, I am on 2pm only. Not valid with other offers.
I buy 1/coupon/month. Coupons expire in 2/27/96
I buy 1/coupon/month. Coupons expire in 2/27/96
Any 6" sub only $249 with purchase of drink (Up to 96 value)
MR. GOODCENTS SUBS & PASTAS 13
Extra Large Chocolate Chip Cookie!
Limit 1 cookie Per coupon (with Sub or Pasta Purchase)
Not valid with other offers
Mr. Cockburn Lawrence location only
Expires 3/11/96
Expires 3/31/96
Kansan Classifieds Work!
BE A WELCOME MAN
DIVAS
MR. GOODCENTS
All students bring this coupon in for 20%off a classified ad.
$1.00 OFF ANY PURCHASE (over $4)
- Albums
- CD's
- Posters
U
RECYCLEDMUSICCENTER
All the used CDs you can carry for $6.99 each
Buy 2 Tapes Get 2 Free 20% Off Video Games 924 1/2 Massachusetts 841-1762 exp May 9, 1996
ALLEY CAT RECORDS
717 Massachusetts 865-0122
Carryout Special
One Large
One Topping
15'
excellent
PAPA JOHN'S
One Large One Topping free pepperoncini and garlic sauce $6.99
Better Ingredients * Better Pizza*
865-5775
865-0122 coupon exp. 02/23/96
2233 Louisiana (23rd & Louisiana)
Sun
12pm-1am
Mon-Fri
11am-11pm
11am-11pm
Fri-Sat
11am-2am
add a second pizza of equal or lesser value for$5.00
$1 OFF
PANCHERO'D
OFFERS A
BETTER
BURRITO AT
AN EVEN
BETTER
PRICE...
Get $1 off any regular or El Gordo Burrito at Panchoero's.
You'll watch our chefs fill each burrito with fresh, authentic ingredients right before your eyes in our display cooking area. Experience Panchoero's Better Burrito at an even better price - today!
$1 OFF
Offer ends Feb. 28, 1996
- 3 days. Not valid with any other offers. Valid only at participating locations
before closing time and at any time after opening time.
LO
LOW RIDER MEXICAN CAFE
$1 OFF
$1 OFF
BUY4 ITEM, GET 2ND FOR 1/2 PRICE!
2 X 1 MARGARITAS
943 MASS. 802-1018
Bike America
2223 C Louisiana 842-8744
TUNE UP
$19.95(Reg.$29.95)
Expires February 26,1996
*Brake Adjusted*
*Gears Adjusted*
*Mirror true on wheels*
*Adjust Brake Pads*
Black O onion
Clean and lube drive train
Discounted labor on other repairs and parts
Adjust Bottom Bracket
Adjust Headset
Adjust Hubs
PLANET pinball
12th & Oread (above Yello Sub)
Pasta Dinner only $249
---
2 Free Games
pasta, homemade marinara sauce, garlic toast
With coupon only. Not valid withother offers
1 offer/coupon/customer. Coupon exp 02/27/96
Open 11-11
865-0809
23rd & Louisiana
with the purchase of a pop featuring:
Fighting Vipers
Virtua Cop 2 Daytona
Coming Soon: Killer Instinct 2
WILD OATS COMMUNITY MARKET
- A 5% STUDENT DISCOUNT EVERY DAY!
·FREE CONSULTATIONS WITH STAFF
NUTRITIONIST KELLA HALL...JUST CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT.
·THE BEST SELECTION OF NATURAL FOOD,
VITAMINS & CRUELTY FREE BODY CARE!
$5 off Coupon 16 Gallon KEG of Beer
Buy any super item and a medium drink and receive the second item
TACO JOHN'S
9TH AND IOWA
Good 2/13/96 thru
2/26/96
FREE!
1626 W. 23rd 2309 Haskell 1101 W. 6th
MexPress 3300 W. 6th in Miller Mart
Limit one per person. Not valid with other offers.
THIS WILD COUPON IS GOOD FOR $1.00 OFF ANY COFFEE OR JUICE DRINK
FROM THE WILD CAFE.
1040 VERMONT
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
(913) 865-3737
OFFER EXPIRES 2/26/96
ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER
WILD OATS
OMER COMMUNITY MARKET
11
february Sale
february Sale Buy one item get another 1/2 priceckstage
Buy one item get another 1/2 price ckstage
15th & Kasold 865-2904
6:00(Mon.- Fri.) 10:00 to 5:00(Sat.)
The BATTLEZONE
Head-to-head Computer Gaming 1000 Massachusetts Suite F 749-3889
Carol Brown Electrolysis
What is electrolysis? The convenient, safe, and effective removal of hair. Why electrolysis? It's a way to be permanently rid of that unwanted hair you've been plucking for hours at a time. If you're not sure, give it a try!
With this coupon, two people play for an hour for the price of one!
One coupon per visit. Expires 3-1-96
$5 off a single visit. Limit one coupon per customer
Conveniently located at 10 E. Ninth St. 865-4255
L
Jerusalem Cafe
La FAMILIA Restaurant
Buy 1 get second 1/2 price any menu item (Lawrence Location Only) Expires 5/15/96 701 West 23rd Hours: Mon.-Sat. 11:00-9:00pm
10% Off Any Meal
(Not valid with any other offer)
Now accepting M/C, VISA
733 New Hampshire
Expires: 2/29/96
1234567890
Hair Experts Design Team
Discover Our Difference
Holiday Plaza·25th & Iowa 841-6886
$5 Off
Hair Design
Not valid with any other offer
EXPIRES 13/13/96
Miracle Video
1910 Haskell 841-7504 910 N.2nd St. 841-8903
2 MOVIES FOR THE PRICE OF 1
BORDER BANDIDO
COUPON
910 N. 2nd St. 841-8903
AL You Can Eat TACO BAR
NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER.
$2.99
A great place for lovers on Valentine's Day. $1.00 off
HERBIVORES
LIMIT ONE PER PERSON.
EXPIRES 3/13/96
1528 W. 23rd exp. 2/13/96 842-8861
VCR + 2 TAPES.
FOR $1.99
Over 900 titles in stock LASER BROAD
Any Menu Item
Exp 2/19/98
Bike
East 8th Street-Downtown Lawrence-749-2477 For Delivery 865-0888-Call in orders Welcome Monday-Saturday 11am to 9 pm*sunday 12pm to 7 pm.
2 MONTH $69
UNLIMITED TANS!
MONTH-$99
- FREE VACATION
- BACKHAMS
ROPEAK POUNDS Guaranteed
POUNDS
Spring Break!
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SECTION A VOL.102,NO.96
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
'Hawks ready to bounce back
The No.5 men's basketball team hopes to get back to winning tonight. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Lights, camera action!
Filmmaker Ken Burns spoke at the Lied Center about baseball and politics. Page 9A
World Cup threatened
WORLD
Sri Lanka's bombing may pose safety threats to the cricket world series. Page 10A
NATION
A Valentine pre-nuptial
What is expected from love and marriage may be in the form of a contract. Page 11A
WEATHER CLOUDY
High 50° Low 33°
Weather: Page 2A
INDEX
World News...10A
National News...11A
Features...12A
Scoreboard...2B
Horoscopes...8B
rne University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Using condoms decreases the risk of pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases. Sponsors of National Condom Day, which is today, hope to raise awareness of the importance of safe sex.
LifeStyles
TROJAN
Reducing the risk of sex
Condom use stressed today
By Teresa Veazey Kansan staff writer
Even the Tommy Morrisons of the world have to use condoms.
In the wake of reports that the heavyweight boxer reportedly tested positive for HIV, safe sex is being stressed even more than before. Having unprotected sex can be deadly, said Tamara Morris, vice president of marketing for Planned Parenthood of Mid-Missouri and Eastern Kansas.
Morris said that because today was National Condom Day, as well as Valentine's Day, educating people about the dangers of unprotected sex was crucial.
"The fact that this was announced during this time may help young people to pay closer attention to protecting themselves," said Candyce Waitley, nurse health educator at Watkins Memorial Health Center. "This may not have had as much of an impact two weeks from now."
Some people will put themselves at risk rather than talk about sexual issues, said Peggy Clarke, president of the American Social Health Association.
The Association has sponsored National Condom Day in conjunction with Valentine's Day for more than a decade.
"At a time when people are talking about love and romance, it's important for
people to love carefully and safely," she said. "The message is that loving responsibly means using condoms."
About 60 percent of all new cases of sexually transmitted diseases occur among people younger than 25, Clarke said. People tend to ignore the risk in the excitement of the moment, which is why couples who have sex should talk about protection beforehand.
"If couples are going to be sexually active, they need to use a condom." Waitley said.
National Condom Day isn't just about getting a picture taken with Condom Man or
getting free condoms, Waitley said. Couples should focus on communication and talking with each other about issues such as sex.
At the information tables at the Kansas and Burge unions and Wescoe Terrace, Watkins staff will be giving away Hershey's Hugs and Kisses candy with pamphlets about relationships.
With every free condom, the staff will give out a brochure on safer sex. Waitley said.
"We recognize that the majority of college students are sexually active," she said. "Given that fact, it's our goal to
educate them. We are providing them with a method to protect themselves."
Morris said Planned Parenthood wanted to take a slightly lighter approach when educating people about safer sex, which is why Condom Man will be visiting the campus today. Though he makes for a good photo opportunity, the facts are important.
"Condom Man is really there as an attention-getter to get people to talk about condom use," she said. "If you are going to be sexually active, condoms are the next surest thing to protect you."
Latex irritation could be alleviated
By Teresa Veazey Kansan staff writer
Call it "condom" sense.
Free condoms are being given out on campus today as part of National Condom Day and Valentine's Day, but some people won't be able to use them because of irritation and latex allergies, said Henry Buck, gynecologist at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Men usually get more irritation than women because of spermicides on the inside of the condom, Buck said. To avoid this, he recommended that women use a vaginal spermicide and that men use a non-spermicidal condom.
While it is uncommon, some people develop allergies to latex from condom use, said Janna Tuck, pediatric allergy fellow at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The most common latex allergy is contact dermatitis, caused by the chemicals used to process latex. Some women have the same allergic reaction when they wear earrings made of nickel and their ears get red or sore, Tuck said. Another latex irritation is anaphylaxis, a general term for a severe allergy.
Buck said that people who had irritation when using a latex condom had another option for contraception called "Skins," a condom made from sheep intestines.
Buck said another option was a new condom, Avanti, which was made of polyurethane instead of latex. Avanti condoms are available at Osco Drug, 1900 W. 23rd St., six for $10.29, and at Walgreens Drug Store, 3421 W. Sixth St., six for $10.99.
"They are better in the sense that there's more feeling to them," he said. "They hold sperm, but viruses can still penetrate them. They're not a good STD-prevention cond."
Alex Martinez, allergy fellow at the Med
"Definitely the ones that have flavors or color scents can be irritating to the skin," he said. "If you change products, then you shouldn't see the same kind of reaction."
Center, said a rash or itching resulting from using a condom could be alleviated
Condom Man to the Rescue
Condom Man will visit the University from 12:30 to 2 p.m. today at the Kansas Union.
- Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor information tables today at the following locations: Kansas Union, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Wesco Terrace, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Burge Union, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Respect expected in classes
By Colleen McCain
Kansan staff writer
Students want just a little respect. But they don't always get it from faculty members, according to a report from the University Senate Human Relations Committee.
The report, which details instances in which students thought that they had been respected or disrespected by their instructors, was presented to the Senate Executive Committee yesterday.
reports of disrespect ranged from the minor—such as being short with a student —to the illegal—such as asking a student for a date.
"He asked me to stay after class," one student said. "He then proceeded to close the door and ask me for a date. Although the class had ended, my grade was not final."
Other instructors were less subtle in their frustration
Many students said they felt disrespected when instructors made them feel stupid, such as when instructors rolled their eyes when students asked questions.
One student wrote: "The teacher would hand blonde girls a brick in class if they asked a dumb question. He said since they were airheads, the brick would hold them down."
The respect students expected from their instructors was generally basic. Taking the time to learn students' names and having the patience to listen to students' views were cited examples of respect.
"The professor is very attentive to all opinions in the classroom," one student wrote. "He also gives all thoughts and opinions validity."
Another student said that a teacher who was willing to stay after class and answer questions when the student was having difficulty made a positive impression.
Paul Friedman, chairman of the Human Relations Committee, told SenEx members that faculty members needed to be made aware of the report and its findings to help improve human relations on campus.
"It's good for faculty to know that respect is important to people," he said. "Students are people."
Friedman said that while the most severe instances of disrespect were not widespread, even a few such reports were cause for concern. He also said that many students felt helpless when they were treated poorly.
Students can report instances of disrespect on an instructor's evaluation, but that was little comfort to the student who wrote, "The teacher told us to fill out evaluation forms but said it wouldn't do any good because he is assistant head of the department and has tenure."
The report recommended eight actions be taken. SenEx voted to act on two of the recommendations now: distributing the report to the Freshman/ Sophomore Academic Experience Committee and circulating the report to deans and department chairmen.
But SenEx members agreed the report gave a one-sided impression of KU and voted to conduct a faculty survey asking for examples of student respect and disrespect.
The Human Relations Committee now will begin work on the faculty survey, and SenEx will consider action on the other recommendations after responses to the report from academic departments have been collected.
"We need to begin communicating about this issue, and we need to hear from both sides to do that," said Robert Minor. SenEx member.
Friedman said that he supported conducting a faculty survey but that he wanted to make sure that consideration of the student survey was not delayed indefinitely while another survey was conducted.
"You can't legislate or mandate respect, but all that we ask is that this report and these concerns just not get buried," he said.
Kansas considers tattoo regulations
By John Collar Kansan staff writer
Proposal requires license, inspection to encourage safety
Students who get a tattoo of their Valentine's name could be jeopardizing their health, several Kansas legislators said yesterday.
Eight state representatives are hoping to remedy the situation by sponsoring a bill that would require licensing and inspections for each of the estimated 45 tattoo and body-piercing shops in Kansas. These shops are not regulated, said State Rep. William Mason, R-El Dorado, one of the bill's sponsors.
"We just feel that someone should be overseeing them and being sure that they are using sterile methods," Mason said. HIV is only one of many blood diseases that customers could contract if correct sterilization procedures are not followed. Mason said.
He initially became interested in the legislation when a constituent's underage son received a tattoo. The upset father did some
quick research and discovered the shops were not regulated.
"I really believe that most of the businesses are good businesses that use the right kind of sterile methods and good practices overall," he said. "I do believe there are some that don't meet this criteria."
The legislation probably will not encounter much opposition, Mason said.
The regulations would require only one or two staff members and about $25,000 for administration, Mason said. An additional member who is an expert in tattooing and body piercing would be appointed to the board.
The bill would require the state board of cosmetology to license the shops.
The bill requires that anyone younger than 18 have a notarized letter of permission from a parent or guardian. The parent also is required to be present at the time of the procedure.
The shops would be charged an inspection fee of $60 to $70 and a yearly fee of $150, said State Rep. John Ballou, R-Gardner. Oregon and Colorado recently adopted a similar law, and Oldahoma has outlawed tattooing, Ballou said.
Robert Miller, tattoo artist at Led Bodine's Bad Tat Graphics, 1826 Massachusetts St., said the regulations were not needed because
Miller said that the tattoo equipment in the shop was sterilized in an autoclave. In this procedure, the needles are heated to about 280 degrees Fahrenheit and 30 pounds per square inch pressure. The process takes about 30 to 45 minutes, he said.
Many people don't realize that tattoo artists are more at risk than customers because employees are exposed to needles every day, he said.
"If we weren't running a clean shop, we would be increasing our chances of getting sick," Miller said. "We handle everything like it's supposed to be handled."
People who receive a tattoo are required to sign a standard release form in which they agree not to hold the shop responsible if problems develop. The shop requires anyone receiving a tattoo to be 18 or older.
most shops were safe. Unsanitary methods are the exception rather than the rule, he said.
"We've accumulated a lot of knowledge over the years," Miller said. "We pretty much know what you need to do to make a tattoo heal properly. If you don't follow them, it's your own problem."
The House Health and Human Services Committee has scheduled a hearing on the bill today at the Statehouse.
Gina Thombunt / KANSAN
Robert Miller, tattoo artist at Led Bodine's Bad Tat Graphics, 1826 Massachusetts St., says tattoo shops already are safe.
.
4
2A
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ON CAMPUS
The Department of Anthropology is sponsoring the Brown Bag Lecture Series talk entitled "Performance Anxiety: Normative Gender Roles and Lesbian Relationships" at 11:30 today at 633 Fraser Hall. Call Susan McEntire at 838-4069 for more information.
Oaks Nontraditional student organization is sponsoring a brown bag luncheon from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. Call Laura Morgan at 864-4064 for more information.
KU Office of Study Abroad is having a Japan Scholarship meeting at 2:30 p.m. today at 2085 Wesco Hall. Call Nancy Mitchell at 864-1249 for more information.
- The Lied Center is sponsoring a Percussion Workshop and Demonstration by Samul Nori at 5:00 p.m. today at the Lied Center. Call Jeannette Mellinger at 864-3526 for more information.
■ KU Karate Club is having a meeting at 5:30 p.m. today at room 215 in Robinson Center. Call Jon Sides at 832-1771 for
more information
Kansas University Gamers and Role-Players is having a meeting at 6 p.m. today at Parors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. Call Isaac Bell at 843-9176 for more information.
Amnesty International is having an organizational meeting at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
InterVarsity Fellowship is having a manuscript study at 7 tonight at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. Call Jason Brown at 749-2408 for more information.
Douglas County Amateur Radio Club is having a meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center in Lawrence. Call James Canaday at 841-1903 for more information.
KU Libertarians is having a meeting at 8 tonight at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. Call Ena Wheeler at 842-4225 for more information.
ON THE RECORD
KU Women's Rugby is having practice at 8 tonight. Call Stacey Stringfellow at 749-3380 for more information.
A KU employee's bracelet was reported stolen Saturday in the 1000 block of Wellington Road. The bracelet was valued at $4,500, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student was the victim of phone harassment between 9:30 p.m. Thursday and 12:05 a.m. Friday in the 1800 block of Engel Road, KU police reported.
A KU employee's purse and contents were stolen between 2:50 and 3:00 p.m. Friday. The value has not yet been determined, KU police reported.
- KU police were called to remove a man from Oliver Hall at 6:30 p.m. Monday. Reportedly, the man had been seen in the residence hall on several occasions and had given the residents "the creeps." The police questioned the man and asked him to leave the building. The man told police that he was looking for a friend, KU police reported
KU police responded to a complaint about an employee at 7:29 p.m. Monday in the Lied Center. Reportedly, another employee had heard the 41-year-old employee talking on the portable radio and said that he sounded intoxicated. She said that he wasn't scheduled to work and that she feared he would disrupt the concert. When police arrived, they found the employee intoxicated and in the loading dock area of the Lied Center. They took his keys and portable radio and called his girlfriend to drive him home, KU police reported.
Senate continues rec center debate
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
Students soon may get to vote about the proposed $21 million recreation center.
Student Senate continued debate last night on whether to hold a student referendum Feb. 27 and 28 to vote on the center. A decision had not been reached at 11:30 p.m.
If the center proposal is approved in a referendum, student fees would increase by $30 a semester beginning next fall and would increase by $77 a semester by Fall 1999 to pay for the center.
For the referendum decision to stand, 10 percent of the student body would have to vote in the referendum. For approval, a majority of those who vote would have to vote in favor of the fee increase.
Some senators expressed concern that 10 percent of the student body would not turn out to vote.
"I'm concerned because typically in a Student Senate election, you barely get above 10 percent," said Julie Harris. Cooleal senior.
Senate would have to pay $3,500 from its unallocated account to hold the referendum.
Harris said some senators had favored holding the referendum in April, in conjunction with the Senate elections, to save the $3.500.
However, Ami Hizer, Lawrence senior, said that if the Senate held the referendum in April, the proposal could not go to the Board of Regents
"If they miss the deadlines, then it could cost significantly more to wait a year," Hizer said.
for approval until the next fiscal year, which would increase the center's building costs.
Dan Hare, student body vice president, also said there was a need for immediate action on the bill.
"I wanted to emphasize the importance of taking action on this legislation," Hare said in a presentation before Senate. "This legislation does not ask you to endorse the recreation center."
Despite his appeal, discussion during the meeting centered on the viability of the center and how the referendum would be publicized.
If a referendum is approved, the recreation center advisory board would hand out 10,000 brochures outlining plans for the center and asking students to vote in favor of the fee increase.
The department would campaign for the recreation center, and the campaign would be financed by the recreation board.
The Senate Elections Commission would encourage students to vote. However, the commission would promote voting only, not voting for or against the recreation center.
Still, some senators were unsure how those opposed to the recreation center would campaign against it.
Mike Oneill, Shawnee sophomore, said, "There's no effort being made that I can see to get what the downside of this will be."
Weather
HIGH LOW
Atlanta 59 ° • 42 °
Chicago 36 ° • 23 °
Des Moines, Iowa 40 ° • 20 °
Kansas City, Mo. 53 ° • 32 °
Lawrence 50 ° • 33 °
Los Angeles 72 ° • 55 °
New York 34 ° • 32 °
Omaha, Neb. 45 ° • 21 °
St. Louis 62 ° • 40 °
Seattle 47 ° • 30 °
Topeka 57 ° • 30 °
Tulsa, Okla. 66 ° • 36 °
Wichita 62 ° • 34 °
TODAY
Mostly cloudy
5033
THURSDAY
Mostly sunny
4221
FRIDAY
Turning colder
3525
TODAY
Mostly cloudy
5033
THURSDAY
Mostly sunny
4221
FRIDAY
Turning colder
3525
Source: Chian-Wei Chang, Mike Rohihed/KU Weather Service
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA. 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, KA. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KAn. 66045.
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1
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
3A
Most KU offices remain open for lunch
Chancellor wants students served
By Kansan Correspondents
Chancellor Robert Hemenway worries about lunchtime — not what he eats, but whether University of Kansas offices will be open to help students during the noon hour.
Since the beginning of his administration, Hemenway has said that University offices should remain open during lunch.
"We need to be a student-centered university," Hemenway said. "I think we have to be open during the times our students need help, and the only time they have may be over the noon hour."
Many University offices seem to be heeding the chancellor's mandate. In a survey of 30 campus offices, 26 had their doors open between noon and 1 p.m.
Four offices were closed, including a darkened, locked dean's office in the department of mathematics, 405 Snow Hall.
"We close the office from noon until 1 p.m." said Gloria Prothe, office supervisor for the department. "We interpreted the chancellor's statement as pertaining to the administrative offices only."
But Hemenway maintains that any office serving students should
be open during lunch.
"I perceive those offices to be departmental offices as well as administrative offices," Hemenway said. "However, I do understand that some only have two or three people to juggle."
Staff shortage was the reason that the doors of the School of Pharmacy, 2056 Malot Hall, were locked during the noon hour, said Diane Massey, office specialist for the school.
"We lock the doors for security reasons," Massey said. "Only one person is left to watch the entire office over noon, but we do answer the phones."
Massey said that the pharmacy students know the office hours and that the office never had received any complaints.
The department of history was closed during lunch, as a sign on the door of 3001 Wescoe Hall indicated. Charles Stansifer, chairman of history, said that he would like to see the office remain open but that the department was low on staff.
Although many University offices suffer from a shortage of personnel, some have solved the problem by staggering shifts. Rob Macrae, student assistant for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences administrative offices, 200 Strong Hall,
He said he planned to shift funds this spring so he could hire students for hourly positions.
said three secretaries and two student assistants rotated shifts in order to cover the lunch hour.
"This office is always open during lunchtime," Macrae said. "Some of the secretaries get a lunch break, but we always know where everyone is in case we need to contact them."
Other offices, such as the department of health, physical education and recreation, 104 Robinson, opted to hire employees specifically for the noon hour. Heidi Coleman, Lawrence graduate student, works for the department on weekdays from 12 to 4 p.m.
"When I started the job in January, the department especially wanted me to work over lunch time," she said. "Few people come in, but the phone is usually busy."
Although some offices have had to make staffing adjustments, several offices have found it simple to comply with the chancellor's lunchtime policy.
The college graduate division, 209 Strong Hall, has stayed open during lunch for the past five years, said Beryl Johnson, office clerk. She said that unless the computers went down she and her fellow office workers would be at their desks for lunch.
"It's our job to be here," said Helen Sheu, who also works in the office.
At the college advising support center, 401 Wescoe, closing during the lunch hour is not an option,
said secretary Sue Schumock.
"We're too busy to ever close the office over lunch break," Schumock said. "A steady flow of students, phone calls and computer work is normal over the lunch hour."
A busy noon hour was not always the case for the department of chemistry, 2010 Malott Hall. Before Hemenway began his administration, the office was closed during lunch.
"Since we've opened, the number of students who come in has been increasing," said Carol Bray, program assistant for the department of chemistry. "It's convenient for the students."
In addition to easing students' schedules, an open lunch hour also benefits the staff.
"We have five people in the office, and each day one person stays over lunch," Bray said. "The one who stays for lunch gets to leave an hour earlier at the end of the day."
Compiled by Kansan Correspondents Lindsey Henry and Eric Westlander. Correspondents Bradley Brooks, Nicholas Charalambous, Adam Darby, Stephanie Fite, Stefan Hartmann, Cameron Egghe, Bessie James, Harumi Kogarimati, Stephanie McDuff, Dave Morantz and Rachel Thompson did research for this story.
ALEXANDRA AUGUSTIN
Sylvia Stone, administrative assistant for women's studies, and Jamie Scheilbach, student assistant in American Studies, work during lunchtime. Chancellor Robert Hemenway wants KU offices open during the noon hour.
Brian Hott / KANSAN
Elders addresses health-care ills
Kansan staff writer
By R. Adam Ward
Kenyon staff writer
Joycelyn Elders, former U.S. surgeon general, spoke yesterday about the roles of race and education in the American health-care crisis and about some of the controversy that has surrounded her.
Elders spoke to a crowd at the Lied Center as part of African-American History Month. The crowd of about 800 gave Elders a standing ovation as she took the podium.
Most of Elders' remarks dealt with health-care system ill. Elders described the system as opulent splendor, side by side with misery and evil.
Elders said she was honored to be part of the month-long celebration, which has the theme "African-American Women: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow."
One of the evils of the system is the widening gap between Caucasians' and African Americans' health in this country, she said.
"If you take the infant mortality of white babies and multiply it by two, you will have the Black infant mortality," she said.
Elders said chronic high blood pressure, diabetes and mortality from cancer and HIV were higher in African-Americans than in Caucasians.
She proposed educating about healthier lifestyles at a younger age to solve these and other problems in the country's health-care system.
But lawmakers prefer to legislate morals instead of providing education for young people, she said.
She illustrated the lack of health education with statistics: The average young person watches 15,000 hours of television.
son but only receives 43 hours of health education.
"Forty-five percent of sixth graders think there is more fat in watermelon than whole milk," she said.
Along with health education, sex education needs improvement, she said. It should focus on the ABCDs: abstinence, being faithful, using a latex condom and doing other things, she said.
"I was fired for teaching about those other things," she said. "Nobody wants to teach young people about masturbation."
People should tell children the truth about masturbation, Elders said. Instead, children are told that masturbation will make them go blind or grow hair on their palms.
Teaching children about masturbation and recommending that the country reconsider its drug policy were part of her vision, but that differed from the administration's vision, she said.
Elders said those differences made it necessary for President Clinton to fire her. But she doesn't hold a grudge, she said.
Lynley Budinas, Junction City sophomore, said she thought the most important message students got from the sneech was the importance of voting.
Politicians will be more willing to change the health-care system if students express their desire for more preventative health care, she said.
Lola Loeb, Los Angeles graduate student, said she was disappointed that the crowd was mostly older people.
V
"I think it's too bad that more college students didn't come to the speech, because they could teach others about her message," she said.
Former U.S. Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders speaks at the Lied Center.In her speech yesterday, Elders emphasized the importance of education in improving health care.
Man escapes after seeking more exposure
By Amy McVey
Kansan staff writer
A man whipped out more than just money when paying for his purchases at a local convenience store early Monday morning.
"After I rung up his purchases, I asked him if he needed a sack," said the 25-year-old clerk at E Z Shop, 1000 W. 23rd St. "He said yes, and that's when I noticed his manhood."
The clerk said the man's penis was sticking out of the zipper of his pants. She said that she had not seen it until he came up to the counter but that she had noticed that he was acting strangely when he first walked in the store.
"He looked suspicious," she said. "I thought he was going to shoilift, so I watched him."
"He was taking a long time, and he kept looking at me," she said. "And the whole time he looked at me, he would pick things up and put things down.
The clerk said the man had lingered in the store for more than 20 minutes, opening and closing the coolers that line the wall and sifting through the candy section.
"I had three customers come in while he was wander-ing around," she said.
It wasn't until the man purchased a soft drink, a candy bar, a cigar and two pornographic magazines that the clerk noticed his penis protruding from his unzipped pants.
"When I noticed, I told him to get out," she said. "He kind of hesitated."
The man left the store but stood outside in front of the window and masturbated as the clerk called the police.
"He stood there and watched me," she said.
He stood there and watched it, site said.
But the time the police arrived, the man had left
By the time the police arrived, the man had left. Police have no suspects.
Police have no suspects.
The clerk described the man as a 5-foot-10-inch, 160-pound, 25-year-old Caucasian male with shoulder-length light hair and a mustache.
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1
位
4A
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
KU student groups encourage responsible drinking behavior
Lawrence has become a town obsessed with the consumption of alcohol. The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce has given 56 establishments the right to sell liquor.
So what life preservers does the University of Kansas provide for a community submerged in beer?
The University offers a lot. There are many different organizations which promote alcohol responsibility and some even venture into partying without alcohol. All of them should be recognized and commended for their efforts.
Two groups, PARTY, Promote Alcohol Responsibility Through You, and GAMMA, Greeks Advocating the Mature Management of Alcohol, have sponsored many diverse speakers and programs in the past. Both groups will be involved in the upcoming "Safe Break," which is the week before spring break. "Safe Break" promotes good decision making and risk management during spring break. Look for it.
Considering that the greek community has a
THE ISSUE:
Alcohol consumption
total membership of more than 4,000 undergraduate members, this particular group needs to take a step toward good alcohol management. The University has created a position for a greek programs alcohol and risk management educator. Matthew Tessier, who was hired for this position last semester, works as an advisor for GAMMA and also works with PARTY officials.
The University is the first university to create a position specifically for this cause. It is reassuring to know the University has taken an interest in students who want to do more than drink on the weekends.
As a mature college adult, one has the right to decide whether to drink. But at times the overabundance of liquor available can be overwhelming. If a student is interested, look for the resources that the University has to offer to make drinking fun and safe. You, however, must take the first sober step forward.
DOUG WEINSTEIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Kansas primary wastes money which could help education
The presidential primary in Kansas will cost $1.4 million. For the state, this waste of money is not necessary because the winners are known already.
President Bill Clinton will win the Democrat party since he has no opposition. Senator Bob Dole will win the Republican party easily in his home state.
With the winners already clear, is it necessary to spend more than $1 million when this money could go to programs that need it? Whenever the state is in a budget crunch, one of the first cuts made by Legislature is in education.
It makes sense that the state could put some of the money saved by not having a primary into education. One million dollars can go a long way.
Conditions at the University of Kansas are evidence enough that $1 million could be better-spent if a primary were not held.
THE ISSUE:
State primary
For example, some of the money could go toward the raise for graduate teaching assistants, which they have not yet received. Another area where some of the money could go is to the libraries.
The libraries have had to cut back because of increases in subscription rates, and some of the money could be used to make up the loss. Some money, although a lot more is needed, also could go toward fixing up the crumbling classrooms.
The money could be used for research, specifically undergraduate research. For undergraduates who are interested in graduate school, this could be a good experience.
Having a presidential primary in Kansas is not necessary this year, and the money saved could go to help education.
SARBPAH HUNDAL FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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TRIMBLE
Shawn Trimble/ KANSAN
Wal-Mart looks like Garden of Eden to college students
I was on a mission.
Armed with a short shopping list, and flanked by supportive friends, I marched into Wal-Mart determined not to spend an excessive amount. My battle plan was simple — walk into the store, pick up a few necessities and leave.
My mission was not accomplished. Once again, I was taken in by the seductive displays and enticed by the array of items. I went way above my spending limit. I had planned to spend maybe $30 at the most.
As my shopping cart began to overflow with things I just couldn't resist, I realized I might be spending a bit more. When the cashier rang up my purchases and announced that I owed $132.65, my heart sank. I had gone just a little too far.
But, I reasoned with myself as I wrote out the check, I needed that stuff. Really, I did. Well, may not needed. Okay, so I could have done without almost everything I bought. It's so easy, though.
Everywhere you look, there's something that would make your day brighter, like the rag rugs that would add a splash of color to my floor, and the cute work-out outfit I could wear to aerobics and the bean-bag chair that would be so comfortable to study in.
Being a college student in Wal-Mart is like being Eve in paradise. You know you shouldn't spend the money, but it's almost irresistible.
could use a little of her common sense.
If only I wasn't so good at justifying my purchases! The bean bag chair became something I could later use as furniture in an apartment. The heat -repair hair spray would make life easier in the morning. The aerobics outfit — well, that was just a little treat for myself.
Unfortunately, I already had bought a lot of "little treats" the previous weekend and had vowed not to spend a cent all week. Too bad I'm not better at keeping my promises.
Although I'm most likely an extreme example, I'm sure I not the only student who leaves the Wal-Mart with more than they bargained for. My advice to the afflicted:
Go to the ATM before you go to the store and withdraw the approximate amount you will need for the items on your list. Then leave your ATM card, check book and credit cards at home so you can't overspend even if you're dying to.
Going to Wal-Mart never used to be such a trial for me, nor was it this expensive, probably because I usually was accompanied by my mother. Not wishing to shell out big bucks for my frivolities, she would tell me to let my hair air dry instead of indulging my desire for a bi-colored styling that would restore the luster to my fried locks. While living at home, I was annoyed at my mother's practicality, but now that I'm writing my own checks, I think I
it's almost as hard to tell the cashier that you've decided you really don't want two-thirds of the items in your teeming shopping cart. For a brief, shining moment you will revel in your incredible self-restraint, but a look at the checker's bound-to-beglaring face soon will burst your bubble.
Ignore the little voice in your head that tells you it's all right to indulge yourself now and then. It is one thing to treat yourself occasionally, but don't go too far.
After all, look what happened to Adam and Eve.
Steph Brower is a *Macungle*, Pa., freshman in pre-journalism
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
It's not fair for column to target freshmen
STEPH BREWER
But when you face the consequence of having to pay for your irresponsibility, you realize maybe the generic band-aids would've sufficed instead of the more pricey Mickey Mouse variety.
We would like to ask Mike Walden what the point of his column Early detection prevents bad influence of freshman girls was supposed to be.
STAFF
COLUMNIST
First, most of the freshman women are here to get an education, not pick up men. Second, not all of us are in sororities, and just because some are, it does not meant that the sororites run their lives.
By then it's too late Just as it was impossible for Eve to replace the fruit on the tree.
So what if they have "an I.D. holder with their sorority letters blatantly emblazoned across the front?" What is wrong with being
proud of one's own organization?
Why choose freshman women as the target for this column when it could and does apply to both women and men of all ages? It sounds to us as though Walden is somewhat bitter.Could it be that he wrote this particular column to make himself feel better because he was not one "of the numerous guys with whom she has attended fraternity parties?" Get over it and let someone with a useful column use the space wasted by your pointless article.
Sarah Elizabeth Spence Columbus, Neb. freshman
Tracy C. Stephenson Independence sophomore
How to submit letters
The Direct Marketing Association denies that junk mail is a problem and claims that people can write to the organization and have their names removed from the lists. Avrahami, as well as thousands of others, attempted this approach, yet to no avail.
If death of the blood-thirsty irritants is our sacrifice for the restoration of dignity and control of our names, it seems impossible to mourn the loss.
Letters: Should be double-spaced, typed and fewer than 200 words. Letters must include the author's signature, name, address and telephone number plus class and hometown if a University student. Faculty or staff must identify their positions.
All letters should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length or reject all submissions.
For any questions, call Paul Todd, editorial page editor, or Craig Lang, associate editorial editor, at 864-4810.
Avraham obviously has the enemy shaking. In an article by The Associated Press last week, direct-mail consultant Ed Burnett said that the labor-intensive need for marketers to get the permission from every targeted consumer would kill the industry.
The percentage of junk mail actually making it to the recycling bin is probably tiny, and chances are the direct mail demons would probably refuse to allow a neighborhood dump to be put in their backyards. This alone makes the direct-marketing mail approach more than the individual's problem; it becomes a weight that society, with ever-shrinking land access, must bear.
Even in your darkest hour, standing amidst the burnt embers of what was your home, watching the repo man drive your truck away, and (according to country-western wallings) mourning the loss of your dog, there is one thing you always can find comfort in — at least you own your name.
Leslie Bowyer is an Ottawa senior in art history
Such is the crusade of new Every-
STAFF COLUMNIST
LESLIE BOWYER
Avrahami. According to Avrahami, a person's name is his property, and no organization has the right to sell it to mailing lists without permission from the owner.
Avrahami is suing U.S. News & World Report for selling his name and address and leaving Avrahami adrlf*
in a sea of glossy paper junk mail.
The commercial intrusion of junk mail is many faceted. On the surface, it can be infuriating to come home to a mailbox full of sticky hands pawing at your wallet. But beyond that is the environmental guilt junk mail forces upon you.
With celebrities constantly whoring their names to stimulate sales of shoes or beauty creams, it is understandable why big business sees no importance, no dignity, in a name. To the direct marketers, your name, the one thing you possess totally, is nothing more than a target sign with possible dollars behind it.
Increasing the valor of Avrahami's fight is the monetary payment he is seeking: $1,100. Rather than milking the plight to gain a substantial settlement, Avrahami merely is asking for the estimated 8 cent profit that U.S. News & World Report received in the initial sale plus enough money to make it sting a bit. Avrahami already has spent more than the sought-after amount on legal fees, and the suit has yet to go to trial.
Many cases already have challenged the rights of the direct-marketing business, most of which have claimed that the inundation of junk mail is a violation of privacy. So far, the marketers, a swarm of irritating gnats constantly buzzing in the minds of every American with a magazine subscription, have prevailed.
Avrahami's lawsuit is the first to challenge the rights of the name seller, rather than the buyer.
Lawsuit could end burden of annoying junkmail distributors
KANSAN STAFF
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Editors
Campus ... Joann Birk
Phillip Brownlee
Paul Todd
Associate editorial
Craig Lang
Matt Hood
Sports
Tom Erickson
Associate sports
Bill Petula
Photo
Andy Rulestad
Matt Flickner
Ross Minuser
Special sections
Novela Bommers
Jen Humphrey
Wire
Tara Trenary
Illustration
Milosh Laaker
HEATHER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Karen Gersch
Regional mgr ... Kelly Connely
National mgr ... Mark Ozmek
Special Sections mgr ... Norm Blow
Production mgr ... Flasher Caldil
Heather Veller
Marketing director ... Cary Breisloff
Public Relations dir ... Angle Adamson
Creative director ... Ed Kowalski
Classified mgr ... Stacey Weingarten
Internship/co-op mgr ... T.J. Clark
OUT FROM THE CRACKS
I CAN'T STOP THINKING ABOUT HER AND HER BEAUTIFUL RED HAIR!
HAVE YOU BEEN TALKING TO HER?
I TRY CALLING HER I STOP BY HER CLASSES... I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO!
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MAY ALL YOUR VALENTINE DREAMS COME TRUE!
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I CAN'T STOP THINKING ABOUT HER AND HER BEAUTIFUL RED HAIR!
HAVE YOU BEEN TALKING TO HER?
I TRY CALLING HER I STOP BY HER CLASSES... I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO?
I CAN'T STOP THINKING ABOUT HER AND HER BEAUTIFUL RED HAIR!
HAVE YOU BEEN TALKING TO HER?
I TRY CALLING HER, I STOP BY HER CLASSES... I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO!
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Field goal attempts 16, at Nebraska (2-14-95)
Three-point attempts 2, two times
CAREER HIGHS
Field goals
9, vs. Florida (1-11-96)
Points
24 vs. Kansas State (2-4-96)
Rebounds 16 at Missouri (1-9-95)
Blocked shots 4 vs. Iowa State (2-7-96)
Minutes played
36 vs. Temple (12-22-95)*
*overtime game
Assists
2, five times
1996 John R. Wooden Award Candidate
1995 Big Eight Conference
Freshman of the Year
1995 Honorable Mention All-Big Eight
1995 1st Team Academic All-Big Eight
1995 Big Eight All-Freshmen Team
1995 2nd Team All-Big Eight
(Basketball Weekly)
1995 2nd Team Freshman All-American
(Basketball Weekly)
Free throws 10 vs. Kansas St. (2-4-96)
Steals
3, two times
Free-throw attempts 13 vs. Kansas St. (2-4-96)
HONORS
No. 5 Kansas vs. Colorado
All-time series: Kansas leads 89-38 Big Eight Conference games: 55-23 All games in Lawrence: 48-7 In Allen Field House: 36-5
Biggest scores
By Kansas
In Lawrence: 111 in 1988-89 (111-83)
In Boulder: 103 in 1989-90 (103-71)
In Kansas City: 84 in 1991-92 (84-66)
By Colorado
In Lawrence: 83 in 1988-89 (83-111 loss)
In Boulder: 89 in 1981-82 (89-80)
In Kansas City: 76 in 1990-91 (76-82 loss)
Roy Williams vs. Colorado:17-1
Buffalo Players to Watch
4 Chauncey Billups Freshman guard
32 Mack Tuck Junior guard
Look for the next poster in this year's series in the Feb.19 edition of the Kansan.
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Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
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6-11220ForwardSophomore Monona, Iowa
As the only Kansas starter not to hail from California, LaFrentz may sometimes feel like an outsider. But he certainly has made his presence known under the basket and at the three point line, where he is a perfect 2-for-2 this season. The 1995-96 season has been a special one for LaFrentz because his parents, Ron and Ellen, have moved to Lawrence for the winter.
His decision to attend Kansas was much publicized in Iowa, where the press conference announcement was broadcast on the radio. Jayhawk fans have been thankful ever since, while the 6-11 sophomore expects to be booed heavily when he returns to his home state on Saturday to face the Iowa State Cyclones.
Design by Tom Erickson — Photos by Matt Flickner
Celebrate Valentine's Day With Us! 15% Off Storewide Discount at the KU Bookstores! (except on computers, sale items & special orders) Drawings for giveaways including a Spring Break trip for two, computer software, dinner for two, gift certificates and much nu Register for various prizes at the Kansas Union, Burge Union, Wescoe Terrace, Murphy Hall & Visual Arts Snack Bars.
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Purchase a 1996 Jayhawker yearbook
For only $30 you can support the tradition of the yearbook.
The Jayhawker wishes the best for the men's and women's basketball teams on their 1995-96 seasons.
Jayhawker yearbook
428 Kansas Union
864-3728
The Jayhawker wishes the best for the men's and women's basketball teams on their 1995-96 seasons.
Jayhawker yearbook
428 Kansas Union
864-3728
★
ROCK CHALK
IN VIRGE OF KANSAS
R E V U E
ROCK CHALK
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
R-E-V-U-E
ROCK CHALK
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
R E V U E
"Behind Closed Doors"
A variety show benefitting the United Way.
February 22, 23, and 24
at 7:30 p.m.
at the Lied Center.
Tickets are available at Dillons, SUA,
and by calling the Rock Chalk Office
at 864-4033.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
9A
Martial arts provide culture
By Susanna Löof
Kansan staff writer
图
Brian Fink / KANSKAN Trevor Swanson, Sharon Springs senior, is thrown on the floor during a Kuk Sool Wong demonstration by Paul Richter, St. Louis senior. The two demonstrated Kuk Sool Wong, a form of Korean martial arts, at the Multicultural Resource Center yesterday.
Prime Flink / MANBAN
Trevor Swanson grabs Paul Richter's head and flips Ripper around in a wide half-circle in the air.
A couple of seconds later, Richter, St. Louis senior, is laying on the mat while Swanson, Sharon Springs senior, aims his fist violently towards Richter's head.
The demonstration was part of yesterday's Korean culture program at the Multicultural Resource Center.
But the fist never touches Richter's head, because the two KU students aren't really fighting. They are only demonstrating Kuk Sool Wong, a form of Korean martial art.
The program included a presentation of Korean classical music.
Walter Dimmick, assistant professor or systematics and ecology and Kuk Sool Wong teacher, said that one difference between Tae Kwon Do, which is the most common Korean martial art in the United States, and Kuk Sool Wong is that the latter is dominated by circular movements, while the former is more linear.
Edward Canda, associate professor of social welfare, performed a dance called O bang Jin, which is performed by Korean farmers to bring fortune.
"The dance is a very versatile and fundamental aspect of Korean culture," said Canda.
"The performance of it is a body-mind integration," Canda said about the the style of dancing and drumming. "It's like the whole space gets connected through the sound and the movement."
Only 14 people attended the program, but Evan Heimlich, minority affairs program assistant, said he was pleased with the attendance.
"Ive done programs at KU where I only have had four people show up," he said. Hehliml said that
the wide variety of KU programs provided made it hard to attract students to these programs.
The program was useful in creating an understanding between different cultures, said Hwan Kim, Pusan, South Korea graduate student and president of the Korean Students' Association.
States. Kim said
"It makes Asian people shrink." Kim said. "They become passive in the community."
He said that a better understanding between cultures could change that.
SamulNori, a Korean percussion group, will perform a demonstration and workshop at the Lied Center at 5 p.m. today and at 8 tomorrow night.
Unions hold Valentines' Day open house
By Heather Kirkwood Kansan staff writer
The Kansas and Burge Unions and Student Union Activities are sponsoring a variety of events to help students celebrate Valentine's Day and to show them what both unions have to offer.
Make a sweetheart a valentine, get your picture taken with the Jayhawk, or just sit back and relax with a little music at the Kansas and Burge Unions open house.
"We still get calls from people who don't realize that we have bookstores at both Unions," said Katrina Widholm Warren, marketing and promotions coordinator for the Kansas and Burge Union. She said many students didn't realize that the Kansas Union had a post office, banking facilities and a bowling alley.
Students, faculty and staff will be able to :
n Find out what is in store by seeking the advice of an astrologer at the Kansas Union from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
n Make a valentine with materials provided in the lobby of the Kansas Union.
n Get your picture taken with the Jayhawk from noon to 1 p.m.
n Register to win a variety of prizes including teddy bears and books at the Kansas and Burge Union lobbies and bookstores, Wescoe Terrace, Murphy Hall snack bar, and the Art and Design snack bar.
n Register to win deluxe condominium accommodations for spring break in Panama City, Fla. (transportation is not included).
n Listen to Rob Hildretch sing and play country and folk music at the Burge Union from 11:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Lou's Revenue Band will play in front of the Kansas Union from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., and the Scott and Rob Duo will play from 1 to 2 p.m.
n Enter SUA's pick up line contest.
Jason Fizell, SUA promotions coordinator, said SUA would not make money on the open house. "It's a service to students, more of just something to do. We're selling the flowers at cost and providing the materials for the valentines for free." Fizell said.
Burns speaks at KU
Director uses filmmaking to interpret U.S. history
By Jason Strait Kansan staff writer
Curt Flood. Henry Aaron.
"These are the men that fought for the proclamation, 'All men are created equal.'"
This is our story, not that of Black History Month, but our story," said filmmaker Ken Burns in his speech "Sharing the American Experience" last night.
Burns spoke to a near-capacity crowd at the 2,020-seat Lied Center, using the histories of the Civil War and baseball as metaphors for the history of the United States.
Burns is known for his PBS documentaries The Civil War and Baseball.
P. A.
Ken Burns
Burns, who said his work was best described as emotional archaeology, said he had no background in history, having taken
only one course in Russian History in college.
Burns said that speaking to college students was important because they were largely the group that does not watch television, especially public television.
"By speaking to them face-to-face, I hope not only to share my knowledge of historical filmmaking but to inspire them to make their mark as well," he said.
The message was not lost on Lisa Poe, Plattsburg, Mo., senior.
"He was brilliant, insightful and completely interesting throughout," Poe said. "He told us to lead our lives by what we know of our history. Not to ignore it, but to learn from what we are from."
Burns moved from story to story, marking each with the word "listen" to grab the audience's attention.
Using the examples of Yogi Berra and Solomon Ballou, Burns described his documentaries as a continuing thread that helped explain the complex history of the nation.
"I'm interested in listening to a true, honest and complicated past. I think history holds the answer," Burns said. "We must remember that the proclamation, 'All men are created equal,' did not include blacks, or women, or the poor."
Commission OKs commercial sites
Kansan staff report
The Lawrence city commission unanimously approved a preliminary development plan for a Crown Cinema theater movie complex, J.C. Penney department store and three commercial pad sites located at 34th and Iowa streets last night.
The proposed theater would be 35,000 sq. ft. and the department store would be 80,000 sq. ft.
The commission also voted 4-0 to require the construction of a synchronized traffic light at 34th and Iowa streets with no participation of the city in its financing.
Commissioner Jo Andersen abstained from the vote, citing a conflict of interest because of her involvement with Payless Cashways, 3434 Iowa St.
The store would be affected by the increased traffic the development would bring to the area.
In other business, the commission voted 4-1 to amend regulations concerning the licensing of merchant security services.
The amendment removes the requirement that the Lawrence Police Department run background checks on security guards seeking a city license and removes the police department as the only certification for firearm use by merchant security guards.
The amendment also clarifies the requirement that private security services can not have badges, vehicles, or uniforms similar to the Lawrence or KU police departments.
The changes stem from police department complaints of unnecessary administrative burden in carrying out the requirements.
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Women of Color; The Importance of Mentors and Friends
Bring your Friends!
This promises to be a fun discussion.
A
Facilitator:
Wednesday, February 21, 1996
Pine Room, Kansas Union
7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Facilitator:
Barbara W. Ballard, Associate Dean of Student Life and Director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115强 Hall, The University of Kansas. For more information contact Mellissa Barr at 864-3524.
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
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DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
GW2K COLLEGE INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
GW2K INFO SESSION
That's right, Gateway 2000 is coming to the University of Kansas, and we request the honor of your presence.
Our company was created with the belief that honesty and teamwork could accomplish just about anything. Apparently, we were right. Because in just 11 years, we've become the leading PC direct marketer in the nation with $3.7 billion in annual sales.
And even though we're a high-tech company, we're not just looking for computer people. We have openings for everyone from Engineers to Market Researchers, and from Sales to Human Resources. So, if you share our attitude, maybe you can share in our success.
A representative will be available to tell you about our GW2K Internship Program and answer any questions you may have regarding Gateway 2000. Such as, why a cow for a high-tech computer company? Come to the Info Session and find out.
Thursday, February 15th 6:00
Kansas Union-Centennial Room (6th Level)
Setting the pace at a slightly different pace
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For more information on Gateway 2000 job opportunities,
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Gateway 2000 is an equal opportunity employer.
Town Hall Meeting
- Are You Interested In Deciding What Happens To KU Students?
- Are You Interested In Deciding W
* Here Is Your Chance To Discuss:
- New Recreation Center Proposal
- Transportation System
- Additional Concerns
KOREAN
- When:
\* When:
- 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 15, 1996
\* Where:
- Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
STUDENT UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
*Linda Byr*
- Kim Cockos, Student Body President
- Dan Hare, Student Body Vice President
"Questions & Comments.
- Student Senate 864-3710
UMMING AND DANCING
SamulNorr
SamuiNori
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents
Percussion Master Class February 14, 1996, 5 p.m.
Performance for Students Grades 5-12:
February 15, 1996, 10 a.m.
Gripped by the Drum,
Drawn by the Dance
Tradition meets The Present
MAAAA
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-AB183; Murphy Hall Box Office (864-AB177) and all ticketmaster Centers or all Ticketmaster at (913) 234 6485.
STUDENT
1
10A
Wednesday, February 14. 1996
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
4.6
It
Aussies skip cricket tourney
The Associated Press
CALCUTTA, India — The message to U.N. headquarters in New York was most extraordinary: Could some observers scoot down to war-scarred Sri Lanka, review security and decide whether it was safe to play cricket there?
International cricket administrators were facing what they considered a serious threat — a bitter dispute that was threatening the upcoming World Cup and the very gentlymanly demeanor of cricket itself.
Twelve national teams from four continents have assembled to compete for the World Cup, cricket's World Series. Sri Lanka, India and Pakistan are hosts of the tournament, which begins today.
But after a Jan. 31 bomb attack killed 83 people and wounded 1,400 in the worst terrorist attack of Sri Lanka's civil war, the Australian team refused to play in the country's capital of Colombo because it feared similar attacks. The West Indies followed suit.
Many Sri Lankans and Indians were dumbfounded at the promise of boycott from two teams widely considered the best in the sport.
"What a pity," wrote M.J. Akbar, editor of Asian Age, an Indian newspaper. "Australia was known for the quality of its courage, its determination to fight. It is now becoming more famous for the color of their liver."
Never before has the tournament, in its sixth year, been embroiled in disputes that have sparked such name-calling, dirty politics and mud-slinging.
"This has become a very sensitive issue, a very serious one," said David Richards, secretary of the International Cricket
Pakistan and Sri Lanka, children use makeshift equipment, hitting a leather ball with a wooden bat.
Like baseball in America, cricket is big business, with international corporations such as Coca-Cola spons
"This has become a very sensitive issue, a very serious one." David Richarde International Cricket Council secretary
Council, the game's governing body. "One loose word can spoil everything."
Criet is a passion of people on the Indian subcontinent and in former British colonies elsewhere. In lanes and back alleys across India,
soring many tournaments.
When the Australian and West Indian teams arrived in Calcutta for the inauguration of the tournament last week, the issue hit the top of the agenda for the International Cricket Committee, cricket's governing body.
Australia is using the bombing in Colombo as an excuse to stay away
Many cricket fans and some officials believe
Sri Lanka's recent tour of Australia generated acrimony — including charges and counter-charges of cheating — and Australia would have faced a hostile crowd in
To reduce Australian anger, the Sri Lankan government offered to give the team security befitting heads of state.
Colombo.
The organizing committee also asked the United Nations to send observers to Sri Lanka.
But the committee never received a response from the U.N.
"We thought that if the U.N. certifies that it is safe to play in Colombo, the Australians would change their position," said Jagmohan Dalma, top administrator of the Sixth World Cup.
Unable to persuade the Australians to reconsider, the International Cricket Committee met in Calcutta on Saturday. But five hours of discussions that produced a couple of proposed concessions proved futile.
One pleasant side effect, though, has been a burst of solidarity between India and Pakistan, tense regional rivals.
Yesterday, for the first time ever, they put players on the same team so they could challenge Sri Lanka in a one-day exhibition match to show the world that it is safe to play in Colombo.
Dentists discover new facial muscle
BALTIMORE — Science has been studying human anatomy for hundreds of years, but two Baltimore dentists said they had found a previously undescribed muscle that runs from behind the eye socket to the inside of the jaw bone.
The Associated Press
Gary Hack and Gwendolyn Dunn of the dental school at the University of Maryland said that they had found the 1 1/2 inch muscle in 25 cadavers and that a survey of anatomical literature suggested it had not been described before.
Hack said that the muscle helped chewing and that it might be the source of some difficult-to-treat headaches.
The dentists presented their findings yesterday at the national meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
The human body was dissected, studied, sketched and analyzed by medical researchers,
artists and students through the ages, but the muscle Hack and Dunn called sphenomandibularis had not been described, they said.
Anatomists identify human tissue as a muscle if it meets five tests: origin and insertion, the two ends that attach to bone; innervation, the nerves that send signals to the muscle; blood supply, the veins and arteries that support it; and function.
These tests were met in the sphenomandibular, Hack said.
Experts in the field were skeptical about the dentists' claim but said it was possible that their discovery was real.
"Anatomical dissection has been done since Michelangelo, and it would be unusual that that muscle was missed," said Steven Ashman, a professor of oral and facial surgery at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. "We'll need to have verification from other centers. If it is confirmed,
Hack said the muscle was identified because he and his team conducted a dissection of a head from an angle usually not used.
then they have a discovery."
They found that the new muscle and a previously known muscle nearby actually were attached to different parts of the skull and had an independent blood supply.
"We've done 25 cadavers now, and it was present in all and absent in none," Hack said. It also has been found in living patients, he added.
"When we showed them that it was a separate muscle, they were amazed," Hack said.
Patients often experience pain behind the eye that is associated with chewing. Such headaches often are difficult to treat, he said.
"We now have a muscle that is behind the eye," he said. "If it has a relationship with the pain, then a new treatment may be developed."
GOP candidates push to primary
The Associated Press
"We are going to have to look at where we are," Gramm said. "I think people need to look at where they are; they owe that to their supporters."
CONCORD, N.H. — Bob Dole kicked off a do-or-die week in New Hampshire yesterday by offering himself as a candidate of tested values. With energized rivals Pat Buchanan and Lamar Alexander snapping at his heels, Dole left the return fire to nervous aides.
Texas Sen. Phil Gramm, after a dismal fifth-place showing in Iowa's caucuses Monday night, canceled his afternoon events in New Hampshire to consult with top advisers in Washington about his campaign's future.
In his own series of campaign stops, Alexander missed no opportunity to tell Dole that it was time to move on.
The former Tennessee governor, who finished a solid third in Iowa, held court on a hill overlooking the gold-domed state Capitol where Dole was speaking to the state Legislature.
"He's of one generation; I'm of another," said the 55-year-old Alexander, trying to drive home his contrast with the 72-year-old Dole.
Buchanan promised to give Bob Dole difficulty in New Hampshire, which holds the leadoff presidential primary Tuesday.
The conservative commentator, who finished just 3 percentage points behind Dole in Iowa, said Republicans were tired of the politics of yesterday and offered his candidacy as a vision of the future.
"Only men and women of character can make government work." Dole said.
Dole tried to stay above the fray, delivering a presidential-style address to state lawmakers in which he stressed his legislative experience and tested values.
Some raised the stakes in the New Hampshire contest at a later stop in Goffstown.
"Whoever wins next Tuesday in New Hampshire will probably be the Republican nominee to run against President Clinton," he said.
Dole all but ignored the narrow margin of his defeat of Buchanan in Iowa.
"We're going to win," he recited repeatedly, flashing a thumbs-up.
Createdly, flashing a thumbs-up. Dole spokesman Nelson Warfield was more pointed.
"You have to take Buchanan seriously because he has a certain following," he said.
But in the same breath, Warfield dismissed Buchanan as a hell-raiser and a bomb-thruser.
It was the first time the Dole camp directly took on Buchanan, increasingly seen as a threat after his upset victory in Louisiana and 23 percent showing in Iowa.
Steve Forbes, regrouping after a disappointing fourth-place Iowa finish, stuck to his message of economic opportunity in a round of morning TV appearances but canceled his only New Hampshire campaign appearance of the day.
Gramm told New Hampshire voters he was looking forward to a strong showing there, but he then headed for Washington to consult with aides.
His national chairman, Arizona Sen. John McCain, said Gramm would decide in the coming days whether to fold his languishing campaign.
President Clinton refused to handicap the Republican field.
"Ask me in a month or two.
Clinton said. "It's just step one."
Aides privately noted with caution that Alexander fared well. Many officials believe the former Tennessee governor would be the toughest GOP rival in a head-to-head matchup with Clinton.
喜迎新春
FEATURING CHINESE WEDDING
Date: February 17 (Sat)
Time: 6:30 pm-10:00 pm
Place: ECM Church
Ticket in Advance
$7.00 member
$8.50 non-member
STUDENT SENATE
Door Ticket
$8.00 member
$9.00 non-member
Limited non-member tickets are available at SUA Box Office
PIZZA
PAPA JOHN'S
Better Ingredients • Better Pizza
Carryout Special
One Large
One Topping
$5.99
carryout only
865-5775
2233 Louisiana
(23rd & Louisiana)
HOURS:
Sun 12pm-1am
Mon-Thurn 11am-1am
Fri-Sat 11am-2am
One Large
One Topping
$6.98
Add a Second
Pizza of Equal
or Lesser
Value for
$5.00
Free Pepperoncini & Special Garlic Sauce
Papa’s Choice™
One Large
Up to Five Toppings
$9.95
Free Pepperoncini & Special Garlic Sauce
Two Tens for Ten™
Two Small
Two Toppings
$10.00
Free Pepperoncini & Special Garlic Sauce
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offers.
Valid only at participating locations.
Customer pays all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra.
Two Tens for Ten™
Two Small
Two Toppings
$10.00
Free Pepperoncini & Special Garlic Sauce
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offers.
Valid only at participating locations.
Customer pays all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra.
THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAM
U.S.A.
MISSISSippi State University
STUDENT
SENATE
LUNAR NEW YEAR DINNER PARTY
FEATURING CHINESE WEDDING
Date: February 17 (Sat)
Time: 6:30 pm-10:00 pm
Place: ECM Church
Ticket in Advance
$7.00 member
$8.50 non-member
STUDENT SENATE
Door Ticket
$8.00 member
$9.00 non-member
Limited non-member tickets are available at SUA Box Office
PIZZA
PAPA JOHN'S
Better Ingredients • Better Pizza
865-5775
2233 Louisiana
(23rd & Louisiana)
HOURS:
Sun 12pm-1am
Mon-Thurs 11am-1am
Fri-Sat 11am-2am
One Large One Topping $6.98
Add a Second Pizza of Equal or Lesser Value for Free Pepperoncini & Special Garlic Sauce
Papa’s Choice™ One Large Up to Five Toppings $9.95
Free Pepperoncini & Special Garlic Sauce
Two Tens for Ten™ Two Small Two Toppings $10.00
Free Pepperoncini & Special Garlic Sauce
$99 Eyeglasses
Any frame
Any prescription with scratch-resistant plastic lenses
Choose any frame—including designer names like Jordache® Headhugger®, Dana Kaye®, Crayola® and more. Pair it with any prescription—including single-vision, lined bifocals or trifocals.
Now through March 2.
Eye exams available from the independent Doctor of Optometry located next door.
ACUVUE® Disposable Contact Lenses $19.99 per box
Ask us for details.
SuperTARGET OPTICAL
3201 S. Iowa Street
Lawrence
832-9370
Valid prescription required. Offer may not be combined with any other discount, coupon, vision care plan or prior orders. Lens treatments such as no-line bifocals available at additional cost.
Available at Lawrence, KS location only.
Offer expires March 2, 1998.
EXPECT MORE. PAY LESS.
PIZZA
PAPA JOHN'S
Better Ingredients • Better Pizza
865-5775
Carryout Special
One Large
One Topping
$5.99
carryout only
HOURS:
Sun 12pm-1am
Mon-Thurn 11am-1am
Fri-Sat 11am-2am
2233 Louisiana
(23rd & Louisiana)
PIZZA
PAPA JOHN'S
Better Ingredients • Better Pizza
865-5775
2233 Louisiana
(23rd & Louisiana)
HOURS:
Sun 12pm-1am
Mon-Thur 11am-1am
Fri-Sat 11am-2am
One Large One Topping $6.98
Add a Second Pizza of Equal or Lesser Value for $5.00
Free Pepperoncinis & Special Garlic Sauce
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offers.
Valid only at participating locations.
Customer pays all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra.
Papa’s Choice™
One Large Up to Five Toppings $9.95
Free Pepperoncinis & Special Garlic Sauce
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offers.
Valid only at participating locations.
Customer pays all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra.
Two Tens for Ten™
Two Small Two Toppings $10.00
Free Pepperoncinis & Special Garlic Sauce
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offers.
Valid only at participating locations.
Customer pays all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra.
$99 Eyeglasses
Any frame
Any prescription
with scratch-resistant plastic lenses
KU Students & Faculty-
10% Off
Any Purchase
Choose any frame — including designer names like Jordache®, Headhugger®, Dana Kaye®, Crayola® and more. Pair it with any prescription — including single-vision, lined bifocals or trifocals.
Now through March 2.
Eye exams available from the independent Doctor of Optometry located next door.
ACUVUE® $19.99 per box
Disposable Contact Lenses Ask us for details.
SuperTARGET OPTICAL
3201 S. Iowa Street
Lawrence
832-9370
Valid prescription required. Offer may not be combined with any other discount, coupon, vision care plan or prior orders. Lens treatments such as no-line bifocals available at additional cost.
Available at Lawrence, KS location only.
Offer expires March 2, 1998.
EXPECT MORE. PAY LESS.
SuperTARGET OPTICAL
O
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesdav, February 14. 1996
11A
Couple spells out details for marriage success
The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Rex and Teresa LeGalley know what to expect from love and marriage — it's all there in the fine print.
Their 16-page prenuptial agreement spells out the rules of their life together in excruciating detail, including how often they will have sex (three to five times a week), which gasoline to buy (Chevron supreme unleaded) and who does the laundry (Teresa).
money, sex, children or some pet peeve the other one just can't stand." Rex LeGalley said. "We went into this knowing it's a leap of faith when you get married. This gives us a list we can live with."
"When you look at why people get divorced, the biggest reasons are
On a recent trip to New York City, the LeGalleys — married for seven months — bought diamond-studded gold bracelets for each other. Rex LeGalley called them Valentine's.
"It was spontaneous, but it was something we had thought about for a long time," Teresa LeGalley said. "Any kind of big purchase we make is planned. It's just a question of when we'll do the buying."
Day, birthday and anniversary gifts all rolled into one.
The LeGalleys say their past marriages and their love of detail made the prenuptial agreement a natural.
Rex LeGalley, 39, a communications specialist at Sandia National Laboratories, is on his third marriage. Teresa LeGalley, 31, a civilian computer engineer for the Air Force,
She said that she talked with her first husband about issues but that they didn't agree on important matters.
is on her second.
A few months after she and Rex LeGalley met at a bar two years ago, they started making lists and realized just how compatible they were.
Eventually, they put together a preemptual agreement. The final 4 1/2 pages of single-spaced type covering just about everything, including:
■ "Nothing will be left on the floor overnight — unless packing for a trip."
"Lights out by 11:30 p.m. wake up
6:30 a.m., Monday through Friday."
The LeGalleys said they had been criticized by some who thought their prenuptial agreement was taking the fun of spontaneous gestures out of their romance.
But the LeGalleys said they saw it as a realistic way of handling issues that inevitably came up.
"A lot of people say a prenuptial is something you do in case you get divorced," Teresa said. "But we take it differently. This is the plan that we think will keep us married for 50 or 60 years."
KNOW THE CODE™
dial 1 8 0 0
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overcharging broke college students.
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Live off campus? Dial 1 800 CALL ATT for AI&T Calling Card calls. Always get AI&T. Never get overcharged.
Know the Code. 1 800 CALL ATT. That's Your True Choice.[54]
---
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KAMA-SUTRA THE ART OF MAKING LOVE
HONEY DUST
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Shop
BATHING GELS
OHSOLOVE
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Cupid the
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Story by Jason Stra
Art by Matt
Top 10
Top 10 things for single people to do by themselves on Valentine's Day:
Top10
7. Sleep, dreaming about lonely, bitter life.
10. Stand outside the homes of your friends who have dates and shine a flashlight in their darkened windows.
9. Make bail.
6. Surf the Internet for other lonely, bitter lovers.
4. Play love records backwards and listen for Guitar music.
8. Sit at home reflecting on lonely, bitter life.
5. Rent movies (Lonely Guy, Say Anything and Earth Girls Are Easy) are a few recommended titles.
3. Attend the "I Hate Valentine's Day Dance" at Hashinger Hall.
Some say love smells like a rose. Others say love stinks. For those people who have rejected romance, Valentine's Day reeks of revenge, remorse and an occasional rending of rubber products.
1. One word: sounds like "Missed your date?"
2. Watch the Kansas men's basketball game against Colorado.
And the No. 1 thing for single people to do by themselves on Valentine's Day:
t's Valentine's Day, and couples everywhere are preparing to give each other red roses, cute Snoopy valentines, heart-shaped boxes of cardy and big, wet kisses — all expressing the universal sentence, "I love you."
But while windows fog in a couple's car, a jilted ex-lover slices their tires. And while a radiant sweetheart reads a love note, a rejected psycho packs a pine bomb.
Little in the world is eternal, especially love, and for those who have heard the words, "I love you," few have escaped. "I hate you."
But worse than the words are the obsessed, stalking, lawbreaking, vengeful ex-lovers that sometimes accompany them.
Just ask Tamara Salaty
Salaty, Lawrence senior, said she was shopping at Weaver's five years ago when she was approached by a man slightly more intense than your average, annoying salesman.
It was her ex-bovfriend.
Obsessed, unwilling to let go of their love and desperate to share his anger, he waded through the racks of clothing to reach her.
"I guess he followed me from my house to the store," she said. "All of the sudden he was standing there yelling at me, in the middle of the store, in front of everyone." Salaty found the nearest exit and tried to flee her former boyfriend, but she made it only as far as the curb.
"I left Weaver's completely humiliated, with everyone starring at me," she said. "And when I came out, two of my tires were slashed. I tried to press charges, but the police couldn't do anything about it because I didn't see him do it."
Displaced anger for misplaced love. People everywhere seem to be telling former lovers, "I hate you," in various, sometimes illegal ways. And they often get away with it.
KU police Sergeant Chris Keary said that the police often dealt with stalking situations but that sometimes it was hard to do much about them.
"Just like any crime, you're going to have to show probable cause," he said. "With things like tire-slashing, it's unfortunate, but there is nothing you can do unless you catch them."
Francis DesSalvo Jr., director of counseling and psychological services at Watldns, said such behavior usually was the product of an unhealthy relationship.
"Usually that behavior indicates they were in a deep relationship where the relationship and their identity become the same thing." DeSalvo said.
Thus for some, it isn't just the relationship being taken away; it's their identity. That's why some obsessive people are unwilling to accept rejection, DeSalvo said.
"Some folks fight real hard and threaten their partner to get them back," he said. "Prevention is the key in those situations. The first thing to do is let them know once the relationship is over, there is
back," he said. "Prevention is the key in those situations. The first thing to do is let them know once the relationship is over, there is nothing that person can do about it. And then be consistent with it." DeSalvo said attempts at softening the break up with phrases like "maybe we can talk about it in a couple weeks" might result in obsessive behavior.
"Try real hard to maintain elements of uniqueness," he said. "Have certain groups of friends or activities and maintain them. People think they have to give up everything for someone.
心形图案
The best way to avoid an obsessive situation is to maintain your indi lity, he said.
"If you try to do these things and your partner doesn't allow it, I'd take a real hard look at the relationship."
Hill topics
Page 104
Page 12A
February 14,1996
The Serious Side:
Places to call for help:
Counseling and Psychological Services 2200 Watkins Memorial Health Center 864-2277
Headquarters — personal crisis counseling 841-2345
KU Police
864-5572
Overly emotional hearts can cause physical harm
A KU student was the victim of a relationship gone wrong last Thursday in Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall
Kansan staff report
The 18-year-old Kansas City, Mo., freshman was in the process of breaking up with her 33-year-old boyfriend when her boyfriend threatened her, pushed her on the bed and pointed a straight-edge
folding razor at her.
He became upset when he discovered that she was romantically involved with a man waiting for her in another room down the hall, KU police reported.
Reportedly, the 33-year-old Kansas City, Mo., man ran down the hall looking for the other man and found him behind a locked door.
After failing to provoke the man to fight, the 33
She begged him to get off her and screamed for someone to call security.
year old went back into his ex-girlfriend's room, pushed her on her bed and pointed the razor at her.
The man then unplugged her phone, grabbed a t-shirt and a silver box and ran out of the room.
KU police are looking for the suspect and have notified the police in surrounding areas.
4
---
1
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY,FEBRUARY 14,1996
SECTION B
Colorado knows it won't be easy
Jayhawks look to bounce back from recent loss
Winning in Allen Field House is not easy. At least not for visiting teams.
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
The last 26 opponents to play the Kansas men's basketball team there have found that out. All have lost.
When Colorado takes the floor tonight for a 7:05 tipoff, the Buffaloes won't only be faced with becoming the 27th consecutive opponent to fall in the field house. They'll also be up against a team that lost its big Eight Conference game this season on Saturday.
"We're ready to get back on that court." Kansas freshman forward
Paul Pierce said. "We can't wait to get to the next game."
The No. 5 Jayhawks, 19-2 overall and 7-1 in the conference, might have some extra motivation to win tonight. But regardless of that motivation, they are
KANSAS 34
KANSAS
BASKETBALL
final seconds, but sophomore guard Matt Daniel's attempt from the lane was off the mark.
"Nobody believes we can win. We have nothing to lose." David Moore Colorado assistant basketball coach
The Jayhawks came away with a 80-78 victory.
But the Buffaloes, 8-12 overall and 2-6 in the conference, have gotten scoring from more unlikely sources lately. During their 64-63 victory against Kansas State on
Three Buffaloes are particularly lethal, Williams said. Freshman guard Chauncey Billups and junior forwards Mack Tuck and Martice Moore are combining to average 51.2 points a game. That is 65.2 percent of Colorado's scoring.
"We blew them out by two. They're pretty dangerous," Kansas coach Roy Williams said.
said Colorado men's basketball assistant coach David Moe.
"Maybe they are upset and will play as well as they can play," said Moe, a former Kansas graduate assistant. "That's good. We want to play Kansas when they're at their best to see how far we come and how far we have to go."
If Colorado used Kansas as a gauge the first time they played on Jan. 20 in Boulder, Colo., the Buffaloes had to feel they'd come a long way. They had the opportunity to tie or win the game in the
Wednesday,
sophomore center
Charlie
Melvin scored a
team-high 17
points.
Junior center Dennis Griffin added 10. Both players are averaging less than five points.
"Their enthusiasm for the game is still something that's at a high level," Williams said.
Patton has put his team through several 6 a.m. practices since then.
He attributes that to interim coach Ricardo Patton, who took over after Joe Harrington resigned in mid-January.
"He's preached that regardless of what time it is, we need to be ready to play," Moe said. "We did a good job with it. Everybody was there at 5:30 or 5:45 to go."
And Moe is sure that the Buffaloes will be just as ready tonight.
"Nobody believes we can win,
he said. "We have nothing to lose."
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
Kansas freshman forward Paul Pierce drives past a Missouri defender in Saturday's game, The No. 5 Jayhawks return to action against Colorado at 7:05 tonight in Allen Field House.
Coaches name Sampson an All-Star finalist
Kansas senior may finally get chance to face national team
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
Kansas senior guard Charisse Sampson needed a little good news.
She was chosen as a semifinalist to play for a Senior College All-Star team. The team is selected by the Women's Basketball Coaches Association.
While struggling through what was one of the toughest seasons of her career because of two severe knee injuries, Sampson got that good news this week.
Sampson was one of 50 semifinalists for the team, which will play an exhibition game against the USA women's national team April 6 in Atlanta. The field comprised 74 nominations, which have been narrowed to the 50 semifinalists.
"It's great for me because I felt like I might miss out on some of these opportunities because of all my
surgeries." Sampson said.
Sampson did miss the chance to play against the national team when it came to Lawrence for an exhibition game Nov. 30.
"That's a big reason why I'd like to play for this team: Because I missed that opportunity before," Sampson said.
Pat Summitt, women's basketball coach at Tennessee, and Geno Auriemma of Connecticut will coach the team. Both coaches will work with the four members of the association's board of directors to select the final 10-player team in the last week of this month.
The possibility of being selected as an All-Star has been gratifying for Sampson as she deals with constant knee pain.
Sampson has started in the back-court for Kansas this season despite two surgeries for a partial meniscus tear in her left knee earlier this season.
Not only has Sampson played, but she also continues to lead the team in rebounds, averaging 6.5 a game. While Sampson's scoring is down from her average of 15.8 points last season, she is third on the team with 12.3 points a game.
Carol Jarosky, who has organized Sampson's rehabilitation program, said she never had been associated with an athlete who had battled back from two major knee surgeries in the same season.
Kansas women's basketball trainer
"Coach Washington gave her the option to redshirt," Jarosky said. "It's only through her own fight and determination that she has played this year."
24
“It’s nice to know people are looking at more than just scoring,” Sampson said. “I think I've done a lot of other things well this year.”
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Regret doesn't enter into Sampson's vocabulary when it comes to her decision to play this season instead of redshirting.
Kansas tennis player wants to conquer the NCAA
Kansas senior guard Charisse Sampson is a semi-finalist for a spot on the College All-Star team, which will play the USA women's national team.
"It's the decision I made, and the decision I'll live with," she said.
By Spencer Duncan Kansan sportswriter
When Kylie Hunt bumped into Kansas basketball senior forward Sean Pearson as she prepared for an interview yesterday, she experienced firsthand the exposure that winning a national championship can bring an athlete.
"What's your name?" Pearson asked Hunt.
"Katie Hunt."
"That's right. Congratulations on that national championship," Pearson said.
"Who are you?" Hunt said to Pearson.
"I'm Sean," Pearson said in return. "Nice to meet you." Hunt said.
The national championship Pearson referred to was the Rolex National Indoor Intercollegiate Tennis Championship, which Hunt, a Kansas junior tennis player, won last Sunday in Dallas. With a 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 victory against Vicky Maes of Arizona, Hunt positioned herself as a premier player in college tennis.
"Kyle was tough," Arizona women's coach and Maes' coach Becky Bell said. "She is mentally tough, which is dangerous in a tennis
player."
The tournament was a 32-player field of the best women players in college tennis, with the goal of finding which of them was the best. Hunt went 5-0 in the tournament and captured the championship when, at match point in the finals, Maes hit a shot into the net.
"I knew it was over," Hunt said. "I didn't have to play anymore."
The victory moved Hunt's record to 23-2 and was her second International Tennis Association Grand Slam victory. Her first occurred last fall in doubles with Kansas junior Jenny
Atkerson. This victory may elevate her current No. 7 national ranking even higher, and her coach feels she deserves anything she gets.
"It makes the school look great, but I am more proud for Kyle," Kansas head women's coach Chuck Merzbacher said. "She worked extremely hard for this victory."
The victory already is giving Hunt exposure outside Kansas. ESPN will televise highlights of the Championships and Hunt's success at 1
See HUNT. Page 3.
The first occurred when a small guard named Lou Petulla (my dad) held Ted in chook
— the Colts gave him the ax. This makes the second time that Marchibroda has been shut out.
No love in world of sports
Love is in the air today. Well, not so much in the sporting world.
ASSOCIATE
SPORTS
EDITOR
BILL PEHULLA
at the 1952 Oil City-Franklin (Pa) game.
Take the relationship between Ted Marchibroda and the Indianapolis Colts' front office. After Ted took a bunch of jokers to the AFC championship game — and nearly farther
So on this Valentines Day,
National Random
Acts of Kindness
Week, National
Boost Your Self
Esteem Month
and National
Condom Week,
I'll try to give you a variety of reading.
Tommy Morrison — a heavyweight boxer and.
at times, heavyweight punching bag recently added yet another brick in the wall of prominent figures who seem to feel that fame protects them from all viruses.
Although the jury is still out on how Morrison contracted the HIV virus, it doesn't take a intellectual giant to come to the conclusion that the "love 'em and leave 'em" reputation with which Tommy had become known finally caught up with him.
Although my heart goes out for Tommy, his reckless lifestyle teaches us again the timeless saying: if you play with fire you'll get burnt.
Unlike my colleague Tom Erickson, I'm not a basketball purist. Not by a longshot.
But why did "Mr. Creativity" Brent Barry do the same foul-line jam twice?
I loved watching the gimmick Rookie Game, three-point shootout, and, especially, the slam-dunk contest.
Sure, it was impressive. But if Brent has the hops to hang in the air for 15 feet and stuff it home, I have a feeling he can do other things. Like a triple-clutch reverse, kiss the rim — something other than the long-jump slam.
Speaking of All-Star Saturday, I'll certainly shed no tears for 17-year-old Demetrius Houston.
For those of you who don't recognize the name, he's the teenager who missed the three-point shot that would have put $1 million in his pocket.
What kills me is his reaction after missing it. After being given 20 minutes on prime-time television and receiving a check for $10,000, Houston hugged family members and acted as if he had just watched his dog get hit by a car.
What's even more ironic about the Foot Locker-sponsored $1 million dollar shot is that the NBA — whose slogan is "Stay in School" — seems to have no problem with the contest.
If Houston, or anyone else, were to drain the million-dollar three-pointer, his or her personal slogan most likely would change to "Why Stay in School?"
However, instead of sending out another heart-felt plea for you to go see the best free throw-shooting team in Lawrence, I just say you're missing out on some good basketball.
noticed — and judging by the attendance you haven't — the Kansas women's basketball team sits alone atop the Big Eight Conference and is beating
This team is playing at the top of its game, and barring any breakdowns in the last two weeks of the Big Eight regular season, the sky's the limit.
So maybe it's about time you boost their self esteem, sent them a few valentines, practice a random act of kindness and watch these promising players.
INSIDE: The boxing world reacts to HIV-positive test results for Tommy Morrison. Page 4.
---
2B
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Big Eight Conference Men's Standings
Conference All Games W L Pct. W L Pct. Kansas 7 1 .875 19 2 .905 Iowa St. 6 2 .750 17 5 .773 Missouri 6 4 .600 16 8 .667 Kansas St. 6 5 .500 14 8 .636 Oklahoma 4 4 .500 13 9 .591 Nebraska 3 6 .333 15 9 .625 Colorado 2 6 .250 8 12 .400 Okla. St. 2 7 .222 12 9 .577
Yesterday's Game Missouri 63, Oklahoma State 59
Tonight's Games
Iowa State at Oklahoma, 7 p.m.
Colorado at Kansas, 7:05 p.m.
Missouri 63, Oklahoma St. 59
Missouri (16-8)
Winfield 2-5 1-2 1, Thames 4-8 3-1 1, Simone
Haley 2-3 1-0 4, Moore 5-6 1-0 10, Sutherland
5-10 2-1 25, Allouche 3-5 0-0 6, Grimm 0-1 4-4
, Sammy Haley 4-7 0-0 8, Hardge 0-0 0-0 0.
Total 25 45 10 15 63.
Roberts 4-8,5-13,1 Skar 0-4-2-0, Lamberts 15-1-17,1 Petersen 6-12-11, Owen's T 3-7-10, Jenkins 0-0-0-0, Dorsey 2-5-12, 6-12, Hand 0-1-0-0, Robinson 3-6-20, Totals 23-15-24, 12-9-1
Oklahoma St. (12-9)
*Name* - Oklahoma St. 33, Missouri 29, 3-point goals - Missouri 3-8 (Sutherland 3-6, Allouche 0-1, Grimm 0-1), Oklahoma St. 1-5 (Kaer 2-1, Peterson 0-1, Dory 1-2). Fouled out - Simeon Haley, Roberts, Owens. Rebounds - Missouri 33 (Winfield 10), Oklahoma St. 33 (Kaer, Peterson 6) - Missouri 16 (Thames, Allouche 4), Oklahoma St. 14 (Owens 5) Total fouls - Missouri 23, Oklahoma St. 20 A, 6,000
How Men's Top 25 Fared
Top the 25 teams in The Associated Press college basketball poll fleared Tuesday.
1. Massachusetts (23-0) did not play. Next: vs.
La Salle, Thursday.
Rockport
Press college basketball poll forced Tuesday.
Messi scores 139, the No. 2 in league.
2. Kentucky (20-1) did not play. Next: vs.
Georgia, Wednesday.
3. Connecticut (22-1) did not play. Next: vs.
West Virginia, Wednesday.
5. Kansas (19-2) did not play. Next: vs. Colorado.
Wednesday
Seton Hall, Wednesday.
6. Cincinnati (18-2) did not play. Next: at DePaul, Saturday.
8. Wake Forest (16-3) did not play. Next: a Maryland, Thursday.
7. Utah (19-4) did not play. Next: vs. Hawaii,
Thursday.
9. Penn State (18-2) did not play. Next: at Indiana, Wednesday.
10. Virginia Tech (19-2) beat liberty 56-53.
Next: vs. No. 1 Massachusetts, Saturday.
11. Purdue (19-4) did not play. Next: at Ohio State, Thursday.
12. Texas Tech (20-1) did not play. Next: vs.
Baylor, Wednesday.
13. Arizona (18-4) did not play. Next: al 10. 18 UCLA, Thursday.
14. Georgetown (20-5) beat No. 21 Boston College 66-63. Next: vs. No. 15 Memphis; Saturday.
15. Memphis (17-4) did not play. Next: at No.
14 Georgetown, Saturday.
16. Syracuse (19-6) did not play. Next: at Seton Hall, Tuesday, Feb. 20.
17. North Carolina (16-7) did not play. Next at Clemson, Wednesday.
u. UCLA (16-6) did not play. Next: vs. No. 13
Arizona, Thursday.
[低] Iowa (10-6) Best Michigan 20-6, Next. 51.
Michigan State, Wednesday, Feb. 21.
20. Stanford (15-5) did not play. Next at Oregon State, Thursday.
21. Boston College (15-6) lost to No. 14
Georgetown 68-63. Next: at Providence, 14-
Saturday.
22. Iowa State (17-5) did not play. Next: at Oklahoma, Wednesday.
23. Eatton Michigan (18-2) did not play. Next:
At Bowling Green, Wednesday.
24. Louisville (17-7) did not play. Next; at North Carolina Charlotte. Thursday
25. Mississippi State (16-5) did not play. Next:
at Mississippi, Saturday.
Women's Standings Conference All
Big Eight Conference Women's Standings
Conference AllGames W L Pct. W L Pct. Kansas 8 3 .727 15 8 .652 Okla. St. 7 3 .700 17 5 .723 Colorado 7 3 .700 20 6 .769 Nebraska 5 6 .455 15 6 .762 Missouri 4 6 .400 13 5 .991 Iowa St. 4 7 .364 13 7 .696 Kansas St. 4 7 .364 12 13 .600 Oklahoma 3 7 .300 11 11 .500
Tonight's Game Colorado at Nebraska. 7 p.m.
Friday's Game
Colorado at Nebraska, 7 p.m.
Friday's Games
Missouri at Iowa State. 7 p.m.
Kansas State at Oklahoma. 7 p.m.
Kansas at Oklahoma State. 7 p.m.
How Women's Top 25 Fared
Associated Prass' women's college basketball poll farred Tuesday.
No. 1. Georgia (21-2) beat Kentucky 75-55.
Next at 13. Vanderbilt, Friad.
No. 2. Louisiana Tech (21-1) did not play. Next: vs. South Alabama, Saturday.
3. North Connecticut (23-3) beat West Virginia
82-37. Neck at Rutgers, Sunday.
No. 4 Stanford (18-2) did not play. Next: vs.
No. 15 Oregon St. Thursday.
No. 5 Tennessee (19-4) did not play. Next: at South Carolina, Thursday.
No. 6. Texas Tech (19-2) did not play. Next: at
3avior. Wednesday
No. 7 Iowa (20-2) did not play. Next: vs. No. 9 Penn St., Friday.
No. 8 Old Dominion (19-2) did not play. Next:
No. 9 Penn State (19-5) did not play. Next: at No. 7 Iowa, Friday.
No. 10 Virginia (18-5) did not play. Next: at
SPORTS WATCH
(All times Central)
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Wednesday (schedule subject to change and or blackouts)
noon
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14
ESPN2 — NASCAR Auto Racing,
qualifying for NASCAR Dash Series
Busch Dash and Winston Busch practice,
at Daytona Beach, Fla.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, North
Cleveland
PRIME NCAA Basketball.
Tulane at St. Louis
TBS — NBA Basketball, New
NBA Basketball, New York at Charlotte
KSMO, WIBW — NCAA Basketball, Colorado at Kansas
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Miami
Providence
ESPN2 ~ NCAA Basketball, Virginia at Duke
No. 11 Wisconsin (18-4) did not play. Next: vs.
Ohio St. Friday.
Florida St. Friday.
No. 12 Alabama (18-5) lost to No. 20 Abun
75-58. Next vs. No. 17 Florida. Saturday.
No. 13 Vanderbilt (17-5) did not play. Next vs.
No. 1 Georgia, Friday.
No. 14. Duke (20-5) do not play. Next: at Georgia Tech. Sat, noon.
No. 15. Oregon State (16-4) did not play. Next:
at No. 4. Stanford. Thursday
Wednesday.
No. 17 Florida (17-8) did not play. Next at No.
12 Athens (17-6).
at No. 4 Stanford, Thursday.
at No. 16 North Carolina State (16-6) did not
No. 18 Colorado (20-6) not play. Next:
At Nebraska, Wednesday.
No. 19 Gleison (17-4) did not play. Next: vs.
North Carolina, Thursday.
*Amount*
75-68. Next: vs. 5. Tennessee. Survive
_02. 11. Miscellaneous. vs. 47. ducking.
Survive
No. 21 Mississippi (15-7) did not play. Next:
vs. Southern Mississippi, Wednesday.
No. 22 Purdue (15-9) did not play. Next: at Minnesota, Friday.
No. 23 Stephen F. Austin (18-3) lost to Arkansas 80-61. Next: vs. Sam Houston, Friday.
No. 25 Notre Dame (16-5) did not play. Next:
v. Villanova, Wednesday.
No. 24 Oklahoma State (17-5) did not play.
Next: vs. Kansas, Friday.
PRO HOCKEY
W L T Pts GF GA
N.Y. Rangers 33 13 10 76 155
Florida 33 15 7 73 189 149
Philadelphia 27 16 11 73 189 143
Washington 27 21 7 61 158 145
New Jersey 27 21 7 61 158 131
Tampa Bay 22 24 8 52 161 181
N.Y. Islands 15 31 8 38 161 209
National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
Pittsburgh 33 18 4 70 252 184
Montreal 28 12 2 62 184
Hartford 23 25 6 52 157 171
Boston 22 25 7 51 183
Buffalo 22 28 4 48 156 173
Ottawa 11 42 2 24 128 125
WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division
W L 1 T Pts GF GA
Detroit 30 10 4 17 201 117
Chicago 30 16 11 17 152
Toronto 24 22 10 18 167
St. Louis 24 22 10 16 162
Winnipeg 23 26 4 50 187 193
Dallas 15 29 11 41 194
Colorado 30 16 10 70 219 156
Vancouver 20 21 14 54 199 186
Calgary 20 26 11 51 163 174
Los Angeles 18 27 12 48 189 210
Edmonton 19 28 6 48 142 197
Anaheim 19 31 5 43 153 183
San Jose 13 37 5 43 153 241
Yesterday's Games
Late Game Not Included
Washington 3, Calgary 2
St. Louis 3, Tampa Bay 2
Detroit 9, Los Angeles 4
Winnipeg at Vancouver, (n)
Tonight's Games
Boston at Harford, 6 p.m.
Los Angeles at Buffalo, 6:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at Florida, 6:30 p.m.
San Jose at Toronto, 6:30 p.m.
Anaheim at Edmonton, 6:30 p.
Tomorrow's Games
San Jose at Ottawa. 6:30 p.m.
Calgary at N.Y. Islanders. 6:30 p.m.
Montebelle at N.Y. Rangers. 6:30 p.m.
Washington at Detroit. 6:30 p.m.
Boston at Chicago. 7:30 p.m.
Anaheim at Vancouver. 9:30 p.m.
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W 1 L Pct GB
Orlando 35 14 714
New York 30 16 652 3½
Washington 25 22 468 12
Chicago 43 5 17 896 —
Indiana 31 17 646 —
Cleveland 27 20 574 15 %
Atlanta 26 21 553 16 %
Detroit 23 22 511 16 %
Charlotte 22 22 468 10 %
Milwaukee 18 28 391 24 %
Toronto 14 34 292 29 %
Miami 22 27 449 13
New Jersey 19 29 396 15%
Boston 17 30 362 17
Philadelphia 10 36 217 23%
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division
W L Pct GB
San Antonio 31 15 14
Uahs 33 16 673 —
Houston 32 18 640 1 %
Denver 20 18 417 12 %
Dallas 28 11 340 16
Minnesota 13 12 289 18
Vancouver 10 32 213 22
Seattle 35 12 745
L.A. Lakers 28 19 596 7
Sacramento 24 20 545 9
Portland 24 24 500 11
Phoenix 22 25 468 13
Golden State 21 16 447 14
L.A. Clippers 16 32 333 14
Late Games Not Included
Orlando 121; Denver 93
Toronto 88; Miami 87
Cleveland 110; Charlotte 100
New Jersey 101; Indiana 94
Houston 121; Dallas 106
Chicago 111; Washington 98
Philadelphia 104; Missouri 101
Ulma 114; San Antonio 111; OT
Seattle 102; Phoenix 98
Golden State at Portland. (n)
Boston at L.A. Clippers. (n)
Minnesota at Saratoga. (n)
Tonight's Games
Malaysia or New Jersey 6:30 p.m.
Detroit at Philadelphia 6:30 p.m.
Denver at Chicago 7:12 p.m.
Minnesota at St. Louis 9:30 p.m.
Sacramento at Vancouver, 9:30 p.m.
Atlanta at L.A. Lakers 9:30 p.m.
Boston at Golden State 9:30 p.m.
Cleveland at Toronto at Hamilton, Ontario. 6
Deliver at Miami, 6.30 p.m.
Chicago at Detroit, 6.30 p.m.
Washington at Milwaukee, 7.30 p.m.
San Antonio at Houston, 7.30 p.m.
Dallas at Utah, 8 p.m.
Phoenix at Portland, 9 p.m.
Tuesday's Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
TRANSACTIONS
Major League Baseball
MLB—Announced the resignation of Jim
Small, public relations manager
BALTIMORE ORIoles - Named Roy Cells
American League
GRAND TIME BEING HISTORIC
CALIFORNIA ALIENAGE - Agreed to inquire
with George Alane, infielder and Todd Luske,
catcher, on one year contracts.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Agreed to train with Patrick Lennon outfitter, be a training contract. Invited Hoben, Form,饼食, sofa training
MINNESE TOWNS *Signed Gag Hike* In
Lal Haytinky, Durham, NC. 302 Wgw 1297
NEW YORK YANKERS - Signed job with
land, pitcher, to a one year contract, and
Steve Howe, pitcher, to a minor league out-
tract.
DAKLAND ATHLETICS Coached by PETE
Ecketer, pitcher to the SI Lions Gameday 542
*BOSTON * ASTROS - Signed. Salm
Bankhead pitcher to a minor league仑
agreed to terms with Bob Abriel and Rohde
Hudak fielders and Ryan Creek, Mike
Grzinnich, Dean Henuizue, Chris Holt Hog,
Loiselle and Doug Mille pitchers on salary
contracts.
MONTREAL EXPOS—Signed Dier Jacobs,
outfielder and Joe Grahe, pitcher dujmons
league contracts
PITTSBURGH PIRATES - Signet Demon
Neagle pirate - conflict resistance (!)
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS. Agreed to play with Todd Sizzler; picks on plyer, contract plus a club option for a third year. Signed David Bell, intterdear, and Matt Petekovsk and Onovan Obrien; picks one-year contracts.
SAN DIEGO PAUDES - Agreed to terms with Doug Bochner, Dustin Hermanson, Brad Kaeffler, Marc Kroon and Jory Long, players at Valerian Velasquez, in one area.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
GAMBIA MEMBERATION Association
CELEVALAND VOLUNTERS - Named New
Sifflin Foundation Award
HOUSTON ROCKETS - Signed Samarco
guard-to-ward in a daily contract
ATAR JAZZ - Activated China Worlds,
for ward from the injured list
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ARIZONA CARDINALS—Named California offensive line coach and George Clementi tight ends and quality control coach
CHICAGO BEARS—Named Karl Paul Tyson tight ends coach
MINNESOTA VIKINGS—Released Jock D. Ric linebacker
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES—Signed Michael Zordich safety to a three-year contract
PITTSBURGH STEELERS—Named Jay Cuffey receivers coach and Ron Zorn zone coach teams coach
ST LOUIS RAMS—Signed Alcorn White
defensive end.
Compiled from the Association Press.
Adam Sandler
He doesn't play golf... He destroys it.
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OPENS FEBRUARY 16TH
Are you a racist? The answer might surprise you!
KA
Lecture by
Jane Elliott
The Creator of the Blue-Eye/Brown-Eye Discrimination Experiment will discuss the racism Inherent to our educational system.
February 25,1996/3 p.m. Lied Center
Admission is Free Vouchers available at SUA Box Office
KUID vouchers available now General public vouchers available Feb.20
Sponsored by
Co-sponsored by KU Departments of Sociology and Psychology
SIDEN UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 14. 1996
3B
Long title drought motivates swim team
Jayhawks confident about championships
By Dan Geiston
Kansas sportswriter
Kansas men's and women's swimming coach Gary Kemp doesn't think much these days about what he has accomplished as a coach.
all he can think about is what he hasn't accomplished.
And that starts, and ends, with his unsuccessful quest to win the Big Eight Conference men's championship after 14 years.
Kempf will get another chance today at the final Big Eight swimming and diving championships at Oklahoma City's Aquatic Center.
Kansas last won the men's championship, its 10th overall, in 1979. The team won four conference titles when Kempf swam for the Jayhawks and coach Dick Reamon from 1972-1975.
"Ever since I competed here, I felt the conference championships
"Eversince I competed here,I felt the conference championships belonged to Kansas."
Gary Kempf Kansas swimming coach
belonged at Kansas," Kemp said. "Dick Reamon instilled that in me."
The men have been close, placing second in each of the last nine years. But close doesn't count for Kempf.
"There is no such thing as a gratifying second place," he said. "Something like that sticks in your craw for a long time."
The Jayhawks finished last on the final event, the 400 medley relay, last year, putting them 10 points behind eventual champion Iowa State.
Kempf said the No. 21 Kansas men's team felt that last year's disappointing finish, as well as winning the final Big Eight championship, will make it want to win even more this year.
"It would be nice to say we won the last one," he said. "It been a goal to close down with a conference championship."
Kempf has had more success on the women's side. Kansas has won 13 of the last 19 championships, though it hasn't finished first since 1993.
This year, the No.16 women's team will have experience on its side. They return four champions from last year's meet, which saw Nebraska win.
Kansas junior Rebecca Andrew said the team was ready.
"Everybody's pretty pumped," she said. "The coaches have been confident and very encouraging. We have little pep talks so they make sure we're focused."
This year, Andrew has posted Kansas' best time in the 50 meter freestyle, 23.71, and 100 freestyle, 51.48.
In the Big Eight coaches' poll, the Kansas men were picked to win, while the women were picked second.
"We're confident, but we know it's going to be a close meet."
The Kansas divers have won three of the four meets in the past two years. Last year, Junior Kris Hoffman won the men's one-and three-meter boards, while senior Michelle Roijohn placed first in the women's one-meter.
Kansas diving coach Don Fearon expects much of the same this year.
"We've done everything we need to do," he said. "The last week, we've been focusing a lot more on performance as opposed to practicing."
"An overall team title is what we want. We're very hopeful, and we expect it."
USA
US
THE GUYS
SPORT
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
Kansas junior tennis player Kyli Hunt won a national title at the Rolex Indoor Championships last week, but she has her sights set on more loftier goals. "I want to win the NCAA's," she said,
HUNT: Winning a national title isn't all she wants to do
p. m on February 23. However, Hunt may not be watching.
Continued from Page 1.
"I don't think I will watch. I don't like watching myself," Hunt said. "I may tape it."
As Hunt receives attention for her championship, she already has put it behind her and focused her attention elsewhere.
Everything did not go perfectly for Hunt at the Championships.
She and Atkerson, the No.2 doubles team in the nation, were upset by No.11 Julie Scott and Kim Shasby of Stanford, 6-4, 2-6, 6-2, in the second round.
Hunt and Atkerson were disappointed.
"We were outplayed," Hunt said
We were outplayed, Hunt sad.
Hunt has no desire to be outplayed again, and according to others, that should not be a problem.
"She is solid and smart," Bell said. "She has proven herself and she is for real."
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The University of Kansas Chancellor's Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the following:
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Nominations must be returned to OAC by 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, March 13, 1996.
Nomination forms for these awards are available at the Organizations and Activities Center, 400 Kansas Union, Lawrence, KS 66045.
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4B
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BOXING
Morrison's situation brings concern to the area
Boxers,promoters consider making tests mandatory
By Tracl Carl The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — As a teenage boxer living part-time with his coach, Tommy Morrison used to worry about cars and women.
But a day after officials confirmed that Morrison had tested positive for HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, young boxers following in Morrison's footsteps have some new worries.
Lois Smith, whose husband George, used to coach Morrison, said yesterday that the news had been a hard lesson in AIDS education for the boxers at their Kansas City, Kan., club.
The Smiths took Morrison into their home in Paola, Kan., about 35 miles south of the Kansas City area, when he joined their boxing club in the mid-1890s.
"You know how 19-year-olds are," she said.
She described Morrison as quiet and said he was always really worried about his cars and women.
Boxing promoter Tony Holden confirmed on Monday that Morrison was suspended before a weekend fight in Las Vegas because he had
tested positive for the HIV virus. That same day, Smith said, Derrick Roddy, a boxing pro who worked with the Smiths, was tested for the HIV virus because he had sparred with Morrison a few months ago.
Roddy tested negative. But Smith said Morrison's situation was affecting all of the club's boxers, even the ones that didn't fight with him.
"It's making them all think," she said.
But she was reluctant to endorse mandatory AIDS testing, because boxers would have to cover the cost.
Gordon Neal, tournament director for the greater Kansas City Golden Gloves Association Inc., was not.
After learning of Morrison's condition, Neal said, he was shocked and
concerned about the health threat of blood spilled during fights.
Morrison fought in several regional Golden Glove boxing tournaments in the 1980s, and Neal said he had known the boxer since he was 10.
Neal said protective head gear worn by the Golden Gloves fighters reduces the threat to them, because they suffer fewer cuts than professional boxers, who wear no head gear.
"it's fairly rare that an amateur boxer would have a cut eye or cheek," he said, adding that officials stop amateur fights if both boxers become bloody.
The Missouri Office of Athletics, which oversees professional boxing
in the state, tests boxers for drugs but not the AIDS virus.
Administrator Tim Lueckenhoff predicted yesterday that the state would begin AIDS testing within the year if the federal government didn't do it first.
Lueckenhoff said requiring AIDS tests probably would have a larger effect on smaller, professional shows at hotels and local bars.
"If we would test boxers for club shows, it would be, in my opinion, that we would find quite a few with the HIV virus," he said.
Lueckenhoff, who was attending a Toughman Contest in St. Louis yesterday, said the news of Morrison's illness had not hurt enthusiasm to participate in or watch the sport.
But he said requiring an AIDS test, which the boxer would have to pay for, could.
"If we start doing that kind of testing, we are going to cut out so many small boxes that it's going to die," he said, referring to small tournaments.
Morrison last fought in Missouri when he knocked out Donovan "Razor" Ruddick in June in Kansas City.
Smith said she remembered going to Kemper Arena to see Mike Tyson box.
Her husband had said to a young Morrison, "Just think, bud, one day we'll be here watching you."
States begin push to make HIV testing the law for boxers
A couple years later, they were.
Tommy Morrison's test provokes others to follow and cities to think twice
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — A day after Tommy Morrison admitted testing positive for the AIDS virus, the referee of Morrison's bloody fight with Lennox Lewis sought to calm his mind by taking an AIDS test of his own.
In the wake of Morrison's test results, which shook the boxing world, boxing officials across the country renewed calls for all states with boxing to test for HIV.
"I hope we can get a bill passed in California before something major happens in this state, before some documented transmission occurs in a boxing ring," said Richard DeCuir, head of the California Athletic Commission.
Monday's confirmation of Morrison's positive test prompted referee Mills Lane to go to his doctor in Reno, Nev., and have blood drawn to make sure he didn't get the virus.
Lane was the third man in the ring in Morrison's Oct. 7 loss to Lewis in Atlantic City, N.J., in which he was cut around both eyes in the second round and bled much of the
way before the fight was finally stopped in the seventh round.
"I had blood all over me," Lane said. "He bled all over me and everyone else."
Lane, a state judge in Reno who has referred 78 title fights, said he was unaware at the time that New Jersey was one of the many states that didn't require boxes to take tests for the AIDS virus.
It is not known whether Morrison had the virus at the time he fought Lewis.
Lane said he was told by his doctor that there was only a slight chance he could have gotten the virus in the ring but that he wanted him to take the test just to make sure.
"I've got a family. I've got a wife and two children," he said. "I'm not really worried, but it will make me feel better to know for sure."
While Lane went in for an AIDS test, Lewis remained at his remote mountain retreat in Jamaica, where promoter Dino Duva said it was very difficult to reach him.
Diva said Lewis was scheduled to be tested for AIDS next month in Britain as part of their requirements for his annual boxing license.
"I assume that's what he will do," Duva said. "I don't think he'll rush it. The risk is very small, from what I understand."
Morrison, meanwhile, remained in seclu
sion in Oklahoma, waiting for results of a second set of tests taken Monday that will confirm the Las Vegas test. The results of the latest tests were expected today.
Tony Holden, Morrison's promoter, said agents for Morrison and Magic Johnson were arranging a telephone call between the two.
Holden said it likely would be a personal discussion of how to deal with the illness and the media attention.
"Magic is probably the best person to talk to him right now," Holden said.
Former heavyweight champion Ridick Bowe said basketball and boxing were far apart when it came to an HIV-infected athlete being allowed to compete.
"I think it's great for people like Magic Johnson to have the opportunity to come back and play basketball, doing what he does best," Bowe said. "But as far as boxing is concerned, unlike other sports, it's bloody and violent and the risk is far too great for fighters to contract the virus through physical contact.
"I would not fight someone who is HIV positive. It would just be too great a risk for me, my wife and children."
the aftermath of Morrison's admission affected not only his former opponents and referees but also much of the boxing world. An outcry grew for mandatory AIDS testing
of all boxers.
Nevada's top boxing official said he would push to have other states begin testing like Nevada, which has tested some 2,100 boxers since beginning its AIDS program in 1988.
Nevada is one of only a handful of states that require AIDS testing.
"We test about 200 to 300 boxers a year, but there's another couple of thousand that aren't tested and are fighting in a blood sport in other states," said Marc Ratner, president of the Association of Boxing Commissions. "It doesn't make sense. But sometimes it takes something like this to shock the world.
"Maybe this will be a catalyst for the rest of the states."
Ratner said he would push for mandatory testing at the association's annual meeting in June.
Larry Hazzard, New Jersey's boxing commissioner, said that he tested the outcry would lead to his state testing fighters and that he was pushing a testing plan with the New Jersey attorney general's office.
"I would love to announce within a week or so that New Jersey is testing." Hazzard said. "I'm totally in favor of it. What happened before when we tried is we ran into these laws on civil rights and disabilities and rights to privacy."
In Louisiana, that state's boxing commis
sion had been planning to implement AIDS testing even before the Morrison story broke.
"I will have a policy in place for the commission to vote on by April 1," said Jerry Rosenberg, Louisiana Boxing Commission physician. "By May 1, it should be required."
DeCuir said that he had been trying to get legislation passed for three years to require testing in California, which held 89 fight cards last year, but that no legislators were willing to sponsor a bill because the issue was politically charged among AIDS activist groups.
"We are hoping that the Tommy Morrison situation will persuade somebody in the legislature to carry the commission's bill." DeCuir said. "To date, the legislators we have contacted have not been interested in carrying this issue because, in this state, it is very volatile."
Lane said he supported mandatory testing for fighters and praised Nevada for standing firm last week when Morrison refused to take the test.
"My belief is that it goes beyond referees and boxers and into any part of life," Lane said. "If a person is carrying a disease or a virus that impacts other people, then that person owes it to those people to cough it up."
Teen-age swimmer's suspension raises questions about drug testing
The Associated Press
ORLANDO, Fla. — American swimming's governing board yesterday punished a promising teen-ager for steroid use, but the decision opened debate about how international anti-doping rules should be interpreted.
The United States Swimming Federation banned 15-year-old freestyle swimmer Jessica Foschi from national and international competition for two years after a urine test last August turned up positive for steroids.
"We are deeply disappointed and offended at the decision of the board of directors of U.S. Swimming," said Jessica's father, Robert Fosehi, who will appeal the ban and fight it in court.
Jessica was composed as she and her
father checked out of a hotel to return to their home in Old Brookville, N.Y. Her only comment was, "It's a real shame."
In its finding — issued in the early hours of yesterday morning after two days of testimony and about seven hours of deliberation
— the board adhered to international swimming rules, but there was considerable debate about their interpretation.
The Swiss-based group known as FINA governs the sport worldwide for national affiliates such as U.S. Swimming and the U.S. Olympic Committee. FINA regulations say a positive drug test mandates a two-year suspension, regardless of circumstances surrounding the test result.
In her testimony before the board, Foschi didn't dispute the positive test but said she had no knowledge of how banned drugs
could have gotten into her system.
The board's decision allowed for modification of FINA-mandated penalties in certain cases, but the 14 directors of the 23-member U.S. Swimming board who considered the Foschi case determined that the evidence presented wasn't sufficient to do that.
The board members did not respond to reporters' questions and left Orlando shortly after the decision was handed down after 3 a.m. The vote tally was not made public, but several directors reported they were deadlocked for some time during their long deliberations.
The board's decision is significant because the United States was at the forefront of a move to strengthen international rules in the wake of positive drug tests for seven Chinese Olympic swimmers in 1994.
Last November, a swimming review panel found Foschi was either given the steroids without her knowledge or sabotaged by another swimmer or coach. She was placed on two years probation, which would have allowed her to continue competing.
But U.S. Swimming president Carol Zaleski appealed the ruling, saying the board must follow FINA regulations and ban Foschi.
Zaleski brought the appeal, she said, because, "I thought it would be very embarrassing to the United States to have FINA force U.S. Swimming to apply the sanctions."
Foschi said some of the board members viewed the situation objectively, "And then there were those who couldn't separate themselves from their political ties to the
On Monday, Foschi sobbed when she testified she was "bewildered and shocked" by the drug test that ultimately crushed her hopes for next month's Olympic trials and interrupted her budding career.
Jessica and her parents contend that her food or drink were tampered with or that the urine testing was improperly performed or incorrectly handled.
Foschi's father said the family's overriding concern had been to have his daughter's urine sample retested, for her to continue swimming and to repair her reputation.
The Foschis have filed a lawsuit in New York State Supreme Court trying to force the UCLA testing lab to turn over the unused urine sample for testing by an independent lab.
Omicron Delta Kappa
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The National Leadership Honor Society
The Arts* Scholarship
Athletics* Journalism
Public service* Top 35%
60 hours by Fall
Applications are available at the OAC in the Kansas Union.
DUE 2/23/96
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
5B
Penn State player resurrects program
The Associated Press
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Matt Gaudio is the perfect player to symbolize Penn State's emergence from 30 years of basketball mediocrity to national prominence.
He's a hard-nosed player who doesn't have flashy skills, speed or great leaping ability. Despite winning high-school player-of-the-year honors in West Virginia, the Mountaineers did not recruit him heavily, and many schools ignored him.
For four years, Gaudio watched as football players were treated like superstars on Penn State's campus.
while hoopsters had trouble drawing fans to 7,000-seat Rec Hall. Gaudio even gave up basketball for a year after back surgery.
He came back for his final year of eligibility and now is playing as well as any power forward in the Big Ten. Last week, he led No. 9 Penn State (18-2, 9-2 Big Ten) in scoring in victories over Illinois and Michigan State and made crucial baskets late in both games.
Penn State, ranked for the first time in 30 years, is off to its best start ever and is tied with Purdue for first place in the Big Ten. All of a sudden Penn State basketball players are
"It's totally different now," said Gaudio, who was named Big Ten Player of the Week. "We're treated more like the football players. It's exciting for us to see that everyone is excited about us."
big men on campus, and fans are flocking to the new 15,000-seat Bryce Jordan Center.
After undergoing back surgery in May 1994, Gaudio decided his career was over. Basketball wasn't worth the constant pain and the risk of permanent injury.
He watched from the bench as a student assistant coach as the Nittany Lions went 21-11 and finished
third in the NIT. During the season, Gaudio began to think about returning to the team.
Gaudio is averaging 14 points and nearly 7 rebounds a game and is Penn State's best low-post scorer. "I never really analyzed the game before," Gaudio said. "I just went out and played."
Gaudio knows what he wants after his playing days are over, although Parkhill, his former coach, has tried to talk him out of it.
"My career is going to be in coaching," he said. "I just know it's what I want to do."
K-State player OK after tests
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN — Medical tests on Kansas State point guard Elliot Hatcher showed nothing wrong with the senior, who was hospitalized briefly during the weekend.
University officials said the results of Monday's tests were normal, but doctors planned more tests yesterday.
Hatcher felt sick during Saturday's game at Oklahoma State. He was taken to a hospital in Stillwater, Okla., following the game.
He returned to Manhattan on Sat
urday evening.
"Elliot had some blood work done Monday by one of the team doctors, and all the results were fine," said basketball trainer Brant Berkstresser. "Right now, it's the same diagnosis — an inflammation of the chest wall, maybe associated with the flu."
Assistant coach Mark Fox said Hatcher could return to practice as early as tomorrow, depending on the results of Tuesday's tests.
The team is not scheduled to practice today.
Tigers defeat Cowboys, 63-59
The Associated Press
STILLWATER, Okla. — Derek Grimm made four free throws in the final five seconds and Missouri took advantage of horrendous foul shooting by Oklahoma State to beat the Cowboys 63-59 last night.
Missouri (16-8, 6-4 Big Eight) won its third straight game and won a conference road game for the first time in five tries this season.
The Cowboys (12-9, 2-7) made just 12 of 34 free throws and missed 10 in a row during the second half before Marlon Dorsey finally made a meaningless free throw with 2.2 seconds
remaining.
Jason Skær had a chance to give the Cowboys the lead when he went to the line for two shots with 6.6 seconds left and Oklahoma State trailing 59-58.
But he missed both tries, then Grimm swished two at the other end for a 61-58 Missouri lead.
The Tigers then fouled Dorsely before he was able to reach half-court, and after missing the first try he sank the second. Missouri got the inbounds pass to Grimm and he made two more from the line to seal the victory.
AMAZING
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1
27
6B
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ARRRGH!
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UNDERSTUDY AND
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STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
EAGLE
Applications for WORKSTATION SPACE in the Kansas Union OAC Office for 1996-1997 are now available
Registered Student Organizations may pick up an application in the Kansas Union at the OAC Office or the SUA Office on Level 4.
DEADLINE
DEADLINE Return Applications to Union Administration Office by 5:00 pm on Wednesday, FEBRUARY21.
RICHMOND, Texas — Felicia Moon showed up in court more than 90 minutes late yesterday after prosecutors said she fled with her 8-year-old son Jeffrey, defying a subpoena as the misdemeanor assault trial began against her husband, Minnesota Vikings quarterback Warren Moon.
The Associated Press
Moon's wife arrives late for trial
"Mrs. Moon has fled with Jeffrey and left a note and said she would not come back and had no intention of coming to this court," Fort Bend County assistant district attorney Mike Elliott told Court-At-Law Judge Larry Wagenbach.
"We have no assurance she will be here at a later date," he said.
Warren Moon, 39, is accused of beating his wife during an argument at their suburban Houston home last summer. Felicia Moon, also 39, repeatedly has asked that the charges be dropped. Moon said that she has forgiven her husband.
Felicia Moon walked into the courthouse about 2:40 p.m. CST.
Prosecutors had attempted to halt the start of jury selection and asked for a court order demanding her presence in court, but the judge refused after Warren Moon's ator
ney, Rusty Hardin, said Felicia Moon had been in touch with her husband and would appear.
"We will revisit this issue in the morning," the judge said. Testimony was expected to begin today.
There was no immediate word from prosecutors where she went. She was at the couple's home Monday, according to Hardin.
"She will be here," Hardin said. "This has been an incredibly destructive event to this family. I ask for a little compassion."
Some 200 prospective jurors were called for the case.
Warren Moon was arraigned again yesterday on the charge and again pleaded innocent.
Conviction on the misdemeanor assault charge could get Warren Moon up to a $4,000 fine and a year in jail. He is scheduled to make $3.25 million next season for the Vikings.
The charge arose from a 911 call made July 18 by their son, then 7, when an argument between his parents turned violent at their home in nearby Missouri City.
On the day of the attack, Felicia Moon told police her husband struck her in the head with an open hand and choked her to the point of losing consciousness.
She broke free and fled in her car. Warren Moon pursued in a chase that reportedly reached speeds of 100 mph.
Felicia Moon said she evaded her husband and returned to their home southwest of Houston, where police were waiting.
Hardin told the judge today that Felicia Moon's statements to police that day were incomplete.
Warren Moon, who played 10 years for the Houston Oilers, has admitted he "lost control" but has spurned plea bargain offers from prosecutors.
Among seven months of court filings leading to the trial, Felicia Moon said she planned to invoke her Fifth Amendment right if called to testify.
Prosecutors have said they intend to grant Felicia Moon full immunity from any future prosecution, meaning she cannot invoke the Fifth Amendment. If she refuses to take the stand, she could be jailed on a contempt of court charge.
Prosecutors also have threatened to force Jeffrey Moon to testify. He and the couple's housekeeper, Elena Marie Morales, were the only witnesses to the incident.
Colts assistant may get promotion
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Speculation is strong that Lindy Infante will be named head coach of the Indianapolis Colts within a few days.
"I think what's been said is the truth at this point," Infante said Monday, confirming that he plans to meet with director of football operations Bill Tobin to discuss the position later this week.
"We've had two or three meetings," said Infante, who like Tobin has been busy at the NFL scouting combine, which ended Monday. It was announced Friday that Ted Marchibroda would not be re-hired.
Tobin did not respond to phone messages left at the team's headquarters.
"We're waiting until the combine is completed and hopefully we can get together later this week," Infante said.
Several players who were contacted by phone declined to comment on the firing of Marchibroda or the hiring of his replacement. Whoever is hired, the team will be in need of some quick public relations efforts.
Reaction to the unloading of Marchibroda, who helped bring the Colts to within one play of reaching the Super Bowl last season, showed strong disapproval. A telephone poll conducted by Indianapolis Newspapers drew more than 4,700 participants, of whom 4,346 callers responded that Marchibroda was not treated fairly.
Infante and Tobin met twice during the weekend and planned to meet later this week for further discussions, they said Sunday.
"At this time, I don't think there is a need to talk with anyone else," Tobin said. "There are no hangups. We're both busy with the combine
and we'll get together when it is over for more talks. Imagine we'll have a public announcement to make within a few days."
"I'm interested in the job," Infante said. "I didn't sense any problems in my talks with Bill. I hope he didn't see any."
If Infante is hired, he would be the fifth person to open a season as the head coach of the Colts since the franchise arrived in 1984. There have also been two interim coaches
— Hal Hunter for one game in 1894 after Frank Kush resigned and Rick Venturi for 11 games after Ron Meyer was fired in 1991.
Infante, 55, was out of coaching for three years before he was hired last season as the Colts' offensive coordinator. He began coaching as an assistant on the staff of Miami High School in 1965, and the Colts are the fifth NFL team he has worked for.
B.O.C.O.
B.O.C.O.
ATTN: SENIORS
If you are interested in designing the 1996 Senior Class Banner for graduation... Come to the Art and Design Building at 4:00 p.m., Thursday, February 15th. (Look for flyers in the Art and Design Building) $100 Scholarship for the Winner
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, February 14. 1996
7B
Sandberg at spring training is a welcome sight for Cubs
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Ryne Sandberg doesn't see problems in the bullpen. A potential power shortage? Don't bother him with such a trivial matter.
It's time for spring training and all the positive thoughts that accompany baseball's annual rite of renewal.
And for Sandberg, the past and present second baseman for the Chicago Cubs, there never has been a renewal quite like this.
"Offensively, defensively and with the young pitchers we have coming back, I think all the pieces are in place," said Sandberg, who is set to join Chicago pitcher and catchers in Mesa, Ariz, today.
"I like what I've seen this winter."
The Cubs were scheduled to officially open their camp to pitchers and catchers tomorrow, along with Houston, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis and San Francisco.
On Friday, pitchers and catchers are scheduled to report for Colorado and Pittsburgh, with Atlanta.
In the American League, Thursday was the first official day of pitchers and catchers for Seattle, while Baltimore and Texas were one day later.
Cincinnati and Florida a day later,
San Diego batterymates report Sunday,
with Montreal and coming in last on Feb. 22.
On Saturday, Cleveland pitchers and catchers were set to report, followed on Sunday by by California, Detroit, Minnesota and Oakland.
On Monday, it was Boston, Kansas City and Milwaukee.
Most teams have asked their full squads to report several days later, with the final full reporting date of Feb. 24, belonging to the Montreal Expos.
The main thing Cubs management did in the offseason was sit back and watch Sandberg — a 10-time All-Star and nine-time Gold Glove winner — sign on the dotted line.
"I'm not going to make any predictions," general manager Ed Lynch said. "But I do think the return of Ryne Sandberg makes us a better team."
The 36-year-old Sandberg, who retired two months into the 1994
season because he was unhappy with the direction of both the team and his personal life, un-retired Oct. 31.
Recently remarried and still possessing the physique of a professional athlete, Sandberg has been working out for more than two months with trainer John Fierro and former Cubs infielder Chris Speier at the team's spring training complex.
He said he had been inspired by an even more celebrated Chicago sports comeback — that of Michael Jordan, who has led the Bulls to pro basketball's best record.
"Obviously, this hasn't been a normal offseason for me," Sandberg said. "I want to get off to a fast start, in spring training and in the season."
"He wished me luck and told me to just have fun and enjoy the game. He's really shown his enjoyment by the way he's playing," Sandberg said. "Like Michael, it was good for me to sit out a while and get a different perspective. Now I can go back, be a part of it and appreciate it more."
Cardinals close deal for Eckersley
ST. LOUIS — The St. Louis Cardinals filled the last hole on their roster yesterday, acquiring closer Dennis Eckersley from the Oakland Athletics in a long-discussed deal.
"Just as an outsider looking in, I said this has got to be the team to beat," Eckersley said. "It's exciting, it's real exciting."
Since finishing 62-81, the second-worst record in the National League, the Cardinals have changed ownership and added pitchers Andy Benes and Todd Stottlemyre, left fielder Ron Gant, third baseman Gary Gaetti, shortstop Royce Clayton, reliever Gregg Olson and reserve outfielder Willie McGee.
Now, Eckersley. As a player with five years on the same team and 10 years in the major leagues, Eckersley could have vetoed any deal. He said the only place he wanted to go was St. Louis.
The Associated Press
Eckersley requested a trade from the Athletics, who are also under new ownership but rebuilding. The deal
was in the works for about three months. One of the sticking points in ongoing negotiations was that the Cardinals wanted the Athletics to pay part of Eckersley's $2.25 million salary.
"I wish it hadn't come to this, but that's the nature of the business," Eckersley said. "Now that it's over it's no big deal, but I was kind of grinding for a while."
The Athletics get minor-league reliever Steve Montgomery, who led the Double-A Texas League with 36 saves last year for Arkansas. Eckersley gets another chance at postseason glory.
He said it will be comforting to again be answering to manager Tony La Russa and pitching coach Dave Duncan.
"If you've never worked for somebody, you've got something to prove," Eckersley said. "For me at my age, I don't need to show somebody this 95 mph burner, because I don't have one."
Eckersley, 41, replaces Tom Henke, who said last month that he would not return for the beginning of the season and likely will retire. Because Henke refused an arbitration offer from St. Louis, he could not play for the Cardinals until May 1.
Eckersley is fourth on the career saves list with 323, including 29 last year to lead the Athletics for the ninth consecutive season.
From 1988-93, Eckersley had four 40-plus save seasons, and he had a career high 51 saves in 1992.
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The deadline for applications for MORTAR BOARD a senior honor society is now Friday, February 16, 1996.
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8B
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Horoscopes
Today's Birthday (Feb. 14) If you want to work or study overseas, apply now. In March, shop carefully for a good investment. June's excellent for love. Review an agreement in August. Make a change in December that you can live with for a while. You should see your dreams materialize then without much further effort on your part. Stay on course through January or you may louse it up! Stick with what works, even if it is unusual.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You've had some major problems to deal with lately. You've probably been so busy you don't have time to keep score. Well, you won. Actually, with your attitude, you can't lose! Set up a private meeting with your favorite guru for very late tonight.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You might be happiest curled up with a good book today, or going fishing. Or maybe you can find somebody cuddly to take with you on the fishing trip, and leave the book at home. There's no need to rehash an old issue a thousand times.
Start over.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). This evening, you need to have an extensive intellectual dialogue, in which you discover 18 new ways to describe the meaning of life. Plan ahead so you can do this with somebody who excites you both physically and mentally.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You have a great sense of humor, but you're subtle. Tonight, take action. You've held back your true feelings long enough. Your own home is the best place for an intimate conversation. You may have to cook dinner, too. Include something sinfully delicious.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). This is a great day for a party. To add spice, invite people who don't agree. Feed your need for new ideas by including some who don't fit any known category! Your luck in love is excellent right now, but don't make any major commitments after dark.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). You always have an interesting opinion. Sometimes, however, you prefer to keep it to yourself. If
that's the mood you're in today,
you don't have to get together
with the whole gang. If you want
company, call a person who
brings out your cuddly side.
Aries (March 21-April 19). Make time for playing and getting a little exercise today. Later tonight, you could give your brain cells a workout, too. And you might as well include a little romance while you're at it. Don't forget to take along the chocolates.
Taurus (April 20-May 20). On one hand, you need to be responsible in order to make it in the world. On the other hand, you have to stay light about it or you'll get an ulcer, and they're expensive! Relax, and ask your best friend for a foot rub. That will dissolve your worries in a flash.
Gemini (May 21-June 21). Fill your home today with brilliant conversationalists like yourself. Discuss the latest news and the myriads of possibilities it evokes. Focus on a cutie you'd like to convince to your way of thinking. Your chances of success are excellent.
Cancer (June 22-July 22). Since you'll get so much done next week, be frivolous today. For example, take a two-hour bath and read a romance novel. Or find a way to trade the novel for the real thing! You have permission to get wild and crazy in the privacy of your own home.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today, hold your responsibilities lightly. If you're looking for a workable plan, trust the advice of an honest friend. And if you're looking for true love, go where athletes congregate. You'll get along really well with another good sport like yourself.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). If you transcend your nervousness and learn to enjoy that tickly feeling, you'll be able to do just about anything. Or you could turn down all invitations in favor of peace and quiet. Ask a gentle friend to share it, and don't forget the carob kisses.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and are for entertainment purposes only.
DILBERT® By Scott Adams
AS A CO-OP EMPLOYEE,
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A man in a suit is speaking to the police.
%y% © 1900 United Feature Syndicate
I HEARD
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HE DIDN'T FIT IN.
A man is sitting on a couch reading a book. A man is standing in front of him, wearing a hat and talking to him.
Nicklaus may end championship run
The Associated Press
Unless Nicklaus plays extremely well in the Open and in the Masters in April, he'll skip the British Open, making it the first time since 1961 he has missed one of the four major championships.
NEW YORK — When Jack Nicklaus holes his final putt at the U.S. Open in June, it likely will end one of the greatest streaks in sports.
Nicklaus played in his first U.S. Open in 1957 as a 17-year-old high school kid. He got into his 40th consecutive Open at Oakland Hills in Michigan this year on a special exemption from the United States Golf Association.
That run of 138 consecutive majors started with the 1962 Masters — four years before John Daly was born. It is a truly remarkable record that likely never will be approached.
He said this year's Open probably will end his streak of consecutive major championships.
"A lot has changed since then," Nicklaus, 56, said Monday about that first Open.
Nicklaus is entered in the British Open at Royal Lytham & St. Annes in
"I still consider myself a golfer. But I think I can do this better than I play golf."
Jack Nicklaus
Speaking about his golf equipment and design company
England this July, but he said he'd go only if he were playing competitively.
"I if play well in the Masters and in the U.S. Open, you're wondering if I will play in the British Open?" Nicklaus asked. "Yeah, probably will."
Nicklaus, speaking in a conference call from his North Palm Beach, Fla., office, wasn't specific about what playing well meant, but it's a safe guess he would need a Top 20 finish in both the Masters and the Open to convince himself to go to England.
And he hasn't finished better than
27th in a major championship since the 1900 Masters — 24 majors ago—and has missed the cut in a major 10 times since then.
By skipping the British Open this year, Nicklaus will end an incredible streak in the four professional major championships. He has 136 straight going into the Masters in April, and it will reach 138 with the U.S. Open.
Nicklaus has played in the four professional major championships — the U.S. Open, British Open, Masters and PGA Championship — 143 times, beginning with the 1957 U.S. Open. He has won a record 18 major championships, taking the Masters six times, the PGA five, four U.S. Opens and the British Open three times. He also won the U.S. Amateur twice.
Nicklaus won his last major championship at the Masters in 1986 and last made the cut in all four majors in the same year in 1991.
Nicklaus called his victory in the 1986 Masters his greatest moment in golf.
"It was my last win on the tour and my first win in two years," he said. "It was at a point in my career when nobody expected me to win, including myself. It was very special."
Nicklaus, who will play in the PGA Championship this year, said he probably would play in another PGA Championship along the way.
But he indicated that he likely would not return to the U.S. Open unless he played his way into the tournament.
"The USGA has been very kind in granting me an exemption," Nicklaus said. "I certainly don't expect them to offer me another. I would honor it, but I'd rather play my way in," he said, indicating he'd rather not be offered another special exemption.
"I still consider myself a golfer," Nicklaus said. "But I think I can do this (run his equipment and design company, Jack Nicklaus/Golden Bear International) better than I play golf. That's probably why I haven't played as much golf."
Nicklaus has said he will return to the British Open in the year 2000 when it is played once again at St. Andrews.
"My appearance will be like Arnold Palmer's visit was this time, more ceremonial than golf," Nicklaus said after finishing the Open at St. Andrews last July.
Learn to Fly 842-0000
一
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General Civil and Criminal Law Dept.
LAW
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1029 Massachusetts
- Drug and Alcohol Offenses
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Jon Thornbrugh Bradly Johnson Free Initial Phone Consultation
Johnson, Thornbruch, Halleran & Davidson, LLC
Licensed in Missouri & Kansas
Licensed in Missouri & Kansas Jon Thornbrugh Bradly Johnson
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Broadcast Journalism Magazine Publishing Newspaper Management Reporting and Writing
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The Graduate & Professional Association and the Graduate School invite nominations for the Outstanding Graduate Teaching Assistant Awards. Information and nomination forms available in 222 Strong Hall Deadline for student nominations: February 23.
SANDBAR
17 E. 8TH
75¢
DRINKS
WEDNESDAYS
TIN PAN ALLEY
Over 40 Toppings to choose from!!!
357 Special
Wednesday carry out only $3 small 1 topping
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
P
$3 small 1 topping
FATS
HANDCRAFTED
$5 medium 1 topping
$7 large 1 topping
749-0055
Open 7 days a week
---
C
I
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
---
men women
X
1.05 Personals
1.10 Business Personals
1.20 Announcements
1.30 Entertainment
1.40 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
100s Announcements
卫
110 Business Personals
Need Cash?
We loan cash on almost anything of value. CDA WRS, TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence's most liberal bank company. JYAWHACK & BEIWERY 1W 6th 740 1919
864-9500
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
HEALTH
Watkins
Since 1906
Caring For KU
CENTER
120. Announcements
Spring break specials. Cancun and Januaya! 111% lowest price guaranteed! 7 nights, air and hotel from $420.00 Save 100% on food and drinks!
http://www.springbreatravel.com 1 800 678 6386
7 wash ALL DAY EVERY DAY INDEPENDENT Launcher
dunked 300) and lowns (Away from the Data from
Dunked)
**SPRING BREAK'96**
With only 1 week to live...DONT BLOW IT!
BOOK NOW!
**spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise** days $ 7,290
includes 15 meals an 6 d free piered Great Beach
life leaves from Pt Lauderdale http://www.
rightbreaktravel.com 878-688-6388
**Spring Break - Price War!**
CANT BEAT TRISH! South Pacific Island Beachfront from $14.14. Include Party Package! (www.staybroken.com)
http://www.staybroken.com
Florida & Padre $ 109 Bahamas $ 359 Jamaica/Cancun
Spring Break! Panama City! $ 8 days, room w/kitchen,
$119.00 walk to best bays! Keystones in Key West, $259.00
Cocoa Beach Hilton ( great benches, near Disney), $45.
bordertravel.com/breakout/187.087.686
PARTY ON THE BEACH
SPRING BREAK'96
Organize a group - TRAVEL FREEL!
SunSplash Tours 1-800-426-7710
INCLUDES DAILY BEACH PARTIES
EVENING CITY PARTIES AND
GREAT DISCOUNTS !!!
(800) 998-TOUR
CANCUN MEXICO FROM $ 339
PANAMA CITY BEACH FROM $ 129
GET A GROUP OF 14 TOGETHER
& YOU TRAVEL FREE!!!
Spring Break
GUARANTEED
LOW PRICE
ON CAMPARKING
Local Contacts:
Kevin @ 749-1399
Ash @ 838-3247
Bash @ 838-4439
Dominic @ 855-1651
Distinations Unlimited
@ 843-7447
All real estate newsletters in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1986 which makes it eligible to advertise any "affirmation" limitation or discrimination on face, color, sex, handicap, family status or orientation, to make any such permission, limitation or discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Jamaica Cancun Florida
1344 Aston Rd, Hanover, MD 21076
Toll free 1-800-648-4849
http://www.stetravel.com/
GUNS BREWMENT
BREWING SERVICES
42 Ahton Rd, Hanover, MD 2107
Toll Free 1-800-648-4849
from $439
from $399
from $119
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against women in housing on race, sex, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of U.S. law. Unlawful Kansan regulation or law.
Classified Policy
120 Announcements
ASK YOURSELF THIS:
Who pays for AT&T, SPART, and MCTs multi-billion dollar advertising and telemarketing campaigns? YOU DO the 8th largest telecommunications company in the US, doesn't advertise or bother you with calls, it just amuses you money on long distance in Kansas, the U.S. and world wide! Free information: [800] 765-7723
SPRING BREAK PANCAKE City Beach Florida from $14 for Pet Renter Time. TMI Beach Bar. Hurricane Hade Beach Florida.
Spring Break
Mazatlan $419
Cancun $429
Trip includes: 7 nights hotel, Round trip air fare from Kansas City, Daily parties, free covers and discounts. For more info call
Tiger Tours 1-800-Leave-99
(532-8399)
SPRING
US SITE ON CBS NEWS 12 HOURS
BREAK
COMPLETE B. 2 HIGH TEXT
AFFORDABLE
THURSDAY
$69
15th
Sellout
Year!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
KEY WEST
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
FOR PERSONS EXPEDITION OR CONSTRUCTION / MARKETING FLOW OF EU
1-800-SUNCHAKE
FOLLOW INFORMATION & RESERVATION.
OR SHOW OUR TOUR NET WEB AT:
http://www.sunchease.com
130 Entertainment
MIRACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale starting at $9.88 and up.
1910 Haskell, 841-7504
Spring Break 1996
TRAVEL FREE!!
Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas Panama City, Daytona, Padre
** Great low, low prices
** Free Trip on only 15 sales
Call for a FREE information packet!
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-426-7710
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Wednesday, February 14, 1996
130 Entertainment
DS SLICE
D. J. Service & Private Recordings
Seoul R&R Hip-Hop
(310) 841 2301
Lever Message
140 Lost and Found
Bilford Street, 275-279 A Jackson, 144-606-608; Call
000-356-356
Wanted to visit Liam Wonging for May 1st with three people.
Would you please call the office or pick up at his home?
National Insurance Number: 21154374018699
Additional information: www.liamwonging.com
男 女
Find what you need in the classifieds.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
$ 35.00 MO. IRC Income potential Reading Books Tell
1 (986) 427-0977 E-719 E-718 for details
HELP WANTED: Help needed to increase their care will be held.
Three Time Lines Wanted in theater Director OFFICE, MWP 5
Drama & Music, The Theatre. Phone #312-740-9100.
*Culture school.* to represent cultural education in school
part-time job (work only 10 hours a week). Full time job.
Available to apply.
FLEX HOURS BUILD $ POTENTIAL!
YouTube THEN... Your MOVEMOUH
How much you could build?
www.flexhourshuge.com 8627503879
Oversized makeup tattoos 10 inches wide needed for a makeup study. Gold will be provided for a little bit more than a hour of engagement. (Instagram: @926454112A) **United Guild Assessment Center**
- United Gulf Development Center receives
* Limited Guard Company position
* Applying for temporary, equal opportunity employer
Wanted: 100 Students. Loss: 8,000 lb. New medical equipment brought through time to the Iowa State University Hospital.
Adams Annette CenterThe Learned Club immin-
ent opening for desgn group $3, 500
weekly health schedule 10/19th Aug in person at Liceo
Oread Avens
Adam Aueral Center. The Guest Club has innumerable sponsors for dining parties, cook parties and more.
6% case, full-time position with IBM's SAP-4PM all
applies upon 180w brand avail.
*Manager - The Best Night, Center Four, one full-time position working with a team with 40% M.D. Bachellera a degree and experience required. Send resume to Cover Letter (mrd@hotmail.com). *Open until 12:00 EDT
Fortune 500 Company utilizes our firm
Prescott 600 Companies utilize our firm's
librarian. New Information Science Needs:
$25,702.80 $40,000.00. Call Bill:
(212) 381-9900. Calls #161012.
MSP & 1000 endoge grids - www.msp.com
431. 2017, Q1, D1, F1, I1, J1, K1, L1, M1, N1, O1, P1, R1, S1, T1, U1, V1, W1, X1, Y1, Z1.
432. 2018, Q1, D1, F1, I1, J1, K1, L1, M1, N1, O1, P1, R1, S1, T1, U1, V1, W1, X1, Y1, Z1.
433. 2019, Q1, D1, F1, I1, J1, K1, L1, M1, N1, O1, P1, R1, S1, T1, U1, V1, W1, X1, Y1, Z1.
- wrestling
- gym training
- general fitness
- weight training
- physical therapy
- chiropractic treatment
- sports training
- basketball training
- tennis training
- golf training
- dance training
- yoga training
- music training
- cooking training
- travel training
- other fitness activities
Most position applicants in the June 21, 2018 Welcome
Basket are 677 or less available. Availability may
be limited for positions in Summer or Fall届会. Please
contact us at (212) 515-7495 or visit www.job.com.
May 23 - July 21 11am (Tu/Tue/Wed) Guest
Room
welcome to our position as southwestern Arizona *Recruiting*
in management technology for Young People's National
History Museum, June 18. B. Scott B. G. 65. $10,000 a week.
*Contact* Gina Bennett, General Counsel, Missionary Jamaica
Dryden Hall (919) 454-734. Click on 215. An email should
employees.
*meetings for women and older adults, with WELKY Life
Garden, Georgetown, Clairmont, Atlantic and more.*
www.welkygardens.org
NC12 CD14 B57 90009400 www.113WashingtonLane
Garden.com EZ1 80077
GAM20070428 Join the database and
CREATE TABLE GAM20070428.
Klicken Sie sich möglicherweise an die Home Street Dell
and Pacific Bridge Storm Rescue. Funds and jobs are
increasing, so please help us build our lives in Alaska.
Profit will be used to purchase homes at the highest
profit rate for the health of our community by 2050. May 30th &
60th to December 30th. Apply to Securities (managed)
by Barrick Resources. Maximum fee is $100 per person (Storm Rescue).
Storm Rescue
GRADUATE STUDENT VOIDING
Summer students! Tender is teaching graduate student applications for a bootcamp in developing student-teacher relationships as a bootcamp early undergraduate program, training students, assisting in classroom activities and offspring start meetings. Apple and its high school K-12 graduate students excel at all levels of the job market. All day classes are offered. Please fill out an application in Room 140 Haworth.
600 SUMMER AIRPORT OFFICIAL INTERFACE INNY PA
Chester Dunnery NCAT training institution needed Tennis
Hockey, Heeler Rockers, Basketball, Sport Centers with ball Woollyfoot basketball, PSI Maracas, Riding,
Diligent Wing, WSL Water-skiing, Sailing Windsurfing Fileneer Archway Mountain Biking, Rocking Horses,
Skiing, Snowboarding, Scuba diving, Snorkeling, Stained Glue, Jewelry, Wood Working, Piano Playing, Nature, Rica, Chef, Food Service Call
Adress: 810-433-2638
Part Time Marketing Support
Great opportunities for the special person wanting to gain business experience in marketing. Position requires excellent communication skills and yelling of 60 wpm. Position involves data entry & specifying development research, trade show presentations.
BOD MURDEN
OR call +51 326 334-8246 Fax 2198
CITY OF LANDFORD
LANDISP APTEK WORKER | March through November 31.
40 hr. male; be 16 in age of age & have valid driver's license.
BALL: DIAMOND MAINTENANCE (10) w/ March
May, 2019; May, 2018; August, 2018; $4,500 - $6,000
B. 10269451
A. 10269451
C. $6,000 / week for 10-15 days per month.
D. $10,000 / month through January. Registration required.
E. Categorical taxpense & valid driver's license. $ 6,000 / day. Deductible on
Complete application of Artist Services, 2nd Seat, Clyde
Hall. #8, 501 Lawrence, KC 63404 - (616) 654-9488
EDUCATION PROGRAM ASSISTANT
The Assistant would work approximately 20 hours per week beginning this licensing. This person would serve as an assistant to custoress and staff assisting with clinical and administrative duties on the practice and be able to take work on a weekly schedule. Program Assistants also work with earlier 'students' (primarily working with the children) in their early years and are required to have moderate muscular, metabolic and maintenance (not job-related). Applicants must be designated Career Work-Study instituted by Temple, please contact us for application and return resumes.
MINEBROOK ARTIST CENTER, 204 N. BTH
LA 75123-868, 38 60544 947-ART8
GAME COUNSELLORS sought for private Michigan
business to teach, teach, teach, teach,
cooling watering, gumming, irrigation, arthery tenni-
s, willtips, gardening,栽植营训,浇水, OIL.
Also able to hire, consult, communicate Delaware 56000
Rockledge, WI, CLEVELAND, WI, LINCOLN, WI
GAMES COUNSELLORS sought for private Michigan
business to teach, teach, teach, teach,
cooling watering, gumming, irrigation, arthery tenni-
s, willtips, gardening,栽植营训,浇水, OIL.
Also able to hire, consult, communicate Delaware 56000
Rockledge, WI, CLEVELAND, WI, LINCOLN, WI
205 Help Wanted
PREMIERE BROTHER SISTER CAMPS IN
MASSACHUSETTS
Commercial photographer for individual and corporate students at Program Specialists in all Sport teams, especially Baseball, Rugby, Golf, Hockey联赛, Field Hockey, Volleyball, Soccer, Ice hockey, Cricket, Softball, Archery, Basketball, Cross-Country Camping, Backpacking Camping, Wilderness Walking and Canyoning. Other openings include Cartoon Art, The Art, Graphic Reading, Wine Tasting, Photography, Workshops, Radio Broadcasting, Cycling, swimming and boardwalks. AFL from June 1 to November 30, 2016; Canopy Creations, Kowaii, New Zealand; Travel tours, hometown, and travel dates (July 16th through August 17th).
MAD KLE-NAC (Former) 1,500-755-9128
DANBEE (Club) 400-692-982
STUDENT STOCKBROOM ASSISTANT, 825-hour block. Business desk, January 12, 2020, 10:00 am-6:00 pm. Duties include supervision including storing, shipping reservation, preparing stock for technique job training, and handling deliveries of required Qualifications Value Kit and allowed skill and driver licenses. Benefits include an advanced and loyal career and benefits and international opportunity to work in industry-depth and quickly attaining in designation available to work M.P.E. Preferred Qualifications. Position requires timely and annual compliance exp. Responsible for administrative services, acceptance deals, Address NR, Office address of Hammons, Ellsworth Avenue, 730 East Franklin Street, KY 40214, Fax 612-646-9000.
AMERICA'S PREMIERE SPORTS CAME
WINNOW FOR BOB NANCE
Mem.Call:
1-500-494-238
CAMP WISAD
CAMP DANDEE
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
DUI/TRAFFIC /CRIMINAL
OVERLAND PARK, KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R GREEN
ATTENDSY AT LAW
QUA/Traffic
Criminal Defense
For your convenience call
J
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Tennessee 343-4025
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
The University of
The University of Kansas
Psychological Clinic
Psychological Clinic
315 Fraser Hall
university staff students
Confidential
864. 4121
RESUMES
Hundreds & thousands of grants & scholarships available to all students Immediate qualification No repayments EVER.
Linda Morton, Certified Professional Resume Writer
Professional Writing
Cover Letters
Consultation
$$ $ MONEY $$ $
FOR COLLEGE
225 Professional Services
PA RW Professional Association of Renewal Writers
For Quick Results... Use The Kansan Classifieds
Call 1-800-585-8243
Care. Brown Electrolysis
Safe, effective and permanent removal of hair
commonly located at 1022, North 960-4356
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
drugs, criminals & civil matters
235 Typing Services
The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 Eatl (13h)
842-1133
X
Call Cell Axx: 860-8357 for appellation; brief case
Assessment; thread analysis; handwritten
documentation.
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
Block 10.49 Ave. Dr. Murton, Burlington size: 460 x 720, Coll. Courtyard 8404 666
Air AF00 400 electron juggernet, one line mammograph
For type wheellets, wedge #482, 454
FOR SALE $28,000.00 Avail. Auction date 04/17/2006 offered
fully furnished, landscaped, with office and guest
room located at 22,000 811-7300. Selling price fee:
495,495.
COMPUTER MEMORY $ak$80 per MBK
Issues committed at 17/02/11 01:55:56
Colin appointed at $1,500. Years for $1,500. For 12 years.
Offer #34148
340 Auto Sales
Code W101 W120 arm 2 piece old non pream groms, green
tires. #405 Cell Armor 589-4400
360 Miscellaneous
ASWPMF: Numerical Simulation Speed
ASWPMF: Numerical Simulation Speed
MFGILP: Large Tree Geoid Coefficient
MFGILP: Large Tree Geoid Coefficient
Plane 3D
Plane 3D
NEEDED 36 PEOPLE TO LOSTLY WWW.NEXT
Guaranteed ! 100% natural! 1-800-925-4225
Wanted: 100 Students to Leave $1,500 Box, New Mexico State
Broadway. Guaranteed Rewards! $29,000 (1,800,000)
1750
First Fundraiser. Rates up $80 to $1,500 Group or
Gross Markup individual. Plans Tiny. Financial
Markup individual.
---
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
L 2 BR loftsures at 1817 Yule Lane, Waltham (please
compile, Phyllis W. Hunt and others)
503-642-3700 ext. 1220
1. Designer Solutions (Muskegon, MI): Build, Test, Maintain Software,
Network, and Telecom Systems; Develop User Interfaces; Develop
Applications; Design Database Templates; Collaborate with Agile
Programmers; Manage Project Timelines; Contribute to Team Efficiency.
405 For Rent
1R townhouse with 4 carpets. Walk to campu-
Nice bedrooms with large cloets. $660/mo.
Shannon Tissue Anatomy & Travels P.R. S.
Schenectady, New York; availibility at innervations
mailbox 1639483270.
Aesthetic Intermediate 7th - 10th grade ungraded app
10th Grade Advanced English G+ Compound
10th Grade Advanced Math G+ Compound
300 block from campus, studio apartment. $310.00 per month included. Call 842-764-7544
Spring Break Beach Condo 3rd Location. South Pacific
distance to be given in plan points. Deposit required.
(See website)
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
Mackenzie Place. 1138 Kentucky. *new leasing for* Aug. 1, 5-year ago *advance prices*, close to **合购** 3 AU. **BR**, supermarket designer & disher, all kitchen appliances, **BR**. **WELL WATERLUSTED**, well installed, energy effi- cency. Call 740 119 686
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
NLOWE HOUSE COOPERATIVE 400 Exem. a student housing alternative. Open & diverse member shop staff service operation; democratic control. Rows close to entrance. Wide sidewalk. Close to store & Male. Call or stop at 811-648-9444.
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
1 bedroom apartment at 1broad
(12)&(12)houses from $790. Water & gas paid
6 month lease, $1000/month
Studios. 2. & 3 Bedroom Ap-
carson Place, Stadium View, Oread
Chamberlin Court, Abbotts Corner.
1425 Kentucky, Bradford Square
Winter Special
2 BR $ 399
3 BR $ 499
1&2Bedroom2
Short time Only!
Large. Medroom apt., and studio apt.
in remodeled house near KU.
Call 841.0254
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3 HotTubs
On KU Bus Route.
- Full-size washer/dryer or Laundry Facilities
M-FIOS
SAT10-4 SUN12-4
MON-FRI 9 am. 5 pm. 1620 West 8th
- Within 2 bikes of campus or on KU bus route
EDDINGHAM PLACE
GET A-JUMP ON NEXT YEAR!
Exercise Room
Pets Welcome*
- Pool
* Quiet Location
* Bedroom (1 & 1/2 baths)
843-4754
South Point
ALAMBERTI
2166 W. 26th
2166 W. 26th
843-6446
Cats welcome at Bradford Square only
apts. available
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Private Bath or Deck
- 24 hr. Emergency maintenance
- Swimming Pool
24th and Eddingham Dr.
- Ask about our
8 bedroom villas
Water & trash paid
1, 2, 3 and 4 bedroom
*Restrictions Apply
(call for appt.)
- Exercise weight room
- Quit Location
* 2 bedroom (1 & 1/2 baths)
* 3 Bedroom (2 baths)
- On KU Bus Route
* Sand volleyball队
* Water & trash paid
- Swimming pool
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
- Private Patios or Decks
* Within 3 miles of campus
841-8468
- Energy Efficient
- On site management
- Daily 3:30-5:00
- Laundry room
Professionally managed by
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT
TODAY FOR $ 50.00
808 W 24th
841-6080
841-5444
KVM
405 For Rent
7TH & FLORIDA
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
2 bedroom apartment, 18th & 8th Chicago.
Microwave, dishwasher, disposal, wok hook.
6 month lease. Call 841-8468
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
NOW LEASING FOR SPRING
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom Sublease.
Walking distance to campus
Fitness center
Daytime - Manager @ 824-5040-
Evenings - Robert @ 421-6519.
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.
Full size washer/dryer, fully equipped kitchen, fireplace,
walk-in closets, fully monitored alarm system, and much
NO PETS, Harper Square Apartments, Call Today!
918-414-1406
FOUR BEDROOM
ASK ABOUT
NEWLY CONSTRUCTED
Easy Access to K10
1-3-2-4 Bedroom Apts
Available March 1, 1966
Our Three Person Special
$690 and Up
Pool and Clubhouse
MASTERCRAFT
Completely Furnished
Studio, 1, 2, 3, & 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
E.H.O.
841-5255
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
meadowbrook If BIG
is what you want
your new home awaits...
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
2 & 3 bedroom
Regents Court
19th& Mass.
749-0445
2 & 3 bedroom townhomes are available now. Walk or ride the bus to KU. Enjoy the quiet feel of the country with the convenience of the city.
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Sundance Orchard Corner
7th & Florida 157 and Kasoid
841-6255 749-4226
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
MEADOWBROOK
15th & Crestline
842 4200
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
Mon Fri 9-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT
Equal Housing Opportunity
405 For Rent
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE
apartments
- Closetocampus
- Spacious bedro
- Laundry facility
405 For Rent
- Spacious2 bedroom
- Laundry facility
- Swimming pool
- Swimming pool
- On Bus Route
- OnBus Route
9th & Avalon 842-3040
430 Roommate Wanted
Female for 4 br 2 ba duplex. NW location
Eldridge Street. On Bus Rt. Feb. Revised
4210.Mo. Plus I/4 Upl. Call 842-3556
Private roommate wanted to share 2 bldm furnished
garage at the Amd. Fols. through August. Call back at:
(415) 763-1088.
female roommate would to share 3 bdms, 2 bathroom at Wednesdays. Must be a must and an smoker at Monday.
Premate grade student to share three 2-BRJet, 800-unit cell
cells with the lab. Must like cars that are
laundry facility衣物.
832-1406
Female wanted for 5 Bedroom, luxury home plus all amenities, W/D, A/C, L2 mile to $250/month, large bedroom available now. 885-5425
Non-smoking male roommate to share 2 Br
apartment close邻 $850/month . call us
(817) 436-2961
Recommode need to share a bedroom, 14/6 room box with W/D and new interior, 14/6 room bag with W/D.
Female NS Roommate to share 2 abbrm. Ap.
Furnished except bdrm. WD, Dishwashers, A/C Renr
$39000 & 1 YU. Avail. 61 or for Fall 96, must like
cars $23,987
Female roommate must share 2 bedroom apartment. On bus route B, $290.00
+ 1/2Utilities. Water and gas paid.
To phone 832-8428
Female roommate needed. Almost new home west of campus, Rwomy, WD, AC, WD, Garage, Deck. Near bus stop. Short or long time available starting March 1st, $275.00/month. Call 838-4546.
Roommate wanted for 5 bedroom apartment close to campus (12th and Ohio) Washer and drier, rest is vegetable and three utilities. Call Mike Terry or Carl ASAP at 843-4297
Wanted ASAP. MS MF mission to share space? 2
bapm at alp, 30th Albany and Ohio to campus and
downstreet, off street parking 8250 + 1/2 util. Call Wade 88-
4062. Leave message.
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Call For Annu. 843-6446
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAIDX KANSAN
Official off-call manager.
*Dy Mail.* 119 Staffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68001
Classified Information and order form
Stop by the Kasaa offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa
Ad phone number may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Excluding classifications. Classified roles are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rule that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per-day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified class that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by cash or with cash are not available.
Drive but mammals?
The advertisement may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Rates
Cost nor limit nor dow
Num. of insertions: Cost per line per day 1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30-X 3 lines 2.20 1.70 1.15 0.96 0.80 0.85 4 lines 2.65 1.30 0.85 0.75 0.70 0.50 5-7 lines 2.00 1.15 0.80 0.70 0.65 0.45 8+ lines 1.90 1.00 0.70 0.65 0.60 0.40
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days = $17.08 (4 lines X 85 per line X 5 days).
Classifications
105 personal
118 business persons
120 anecdote/comments
130 entertainment
140 foot & found 265 for sale
265 help wanted 340 auto sales
225 professional services 380 miscellaneous
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print
1
2
3
4
5
Please print your ad one word per box:
Date ad begins
Total ad cost
Name
Address:
Total days in paper
1.
VISA Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dalksan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your sd:
Account number:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
The University of Dallas Kauai, 119 Stauffer Fllr Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60845
**T**he University Dalry Kauai, 119 StauFFER Fllr Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60845
10B
Wednesday, February 14. 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
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• Depo Provera & Norplant • Tubal Ligation
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- Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff · Modern State Licensed Facility PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974
COMPREHENSIVE 345-1400
health for women OUTSIDE#C AREA
4401 W. 109th (I-435 & Roe) 1-800-227-1918
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1-800-227-1918
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Insurance plans accepted.
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A touch of Irish
in downtown Lawrence
944 Massachusetts
832-8228
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PARIS — Jennifer Capriati pulled out of the Paris Open yesterday, just before she was scheduled to play her first competitive match in 15 months.
Capriati's return to the court is cut short by muscle injury
The Associated Press
Capriati said she had strained a muscle near her right hip and lower back while practicing earlier in the day.
"I didn't want to push anything and make it worse," she said. "I was really looking forward to playing here. It's very unfortunate. I came all this way and I felt like I was ready. There was nothing I could do. Something like this had to happen."
"I just pulled it," she said. "When you haven't been playing for awhile, your muscles are very tight. I was going for a ball and I just wen too far."
The injury occurred while Capriati was practicing in the morning with Magdalena Maleeva of Bulgaria at a private club near the Stade Coubertin.
Capriati said she planned to return
"She has a strained muscle in the hip region on her right side," Martin said. "I taped her up, and she tried to practice, but it was too painful to continue."
to the tour again as soon as she was 100 percent fit.
Capriati, who accepted a wild-card entry into the tournament last week, had been scheduled to face Sabine Appelmans of Belgium.
It would have been Capriati's first match since a first-round loss in Philadelphia in November 1994. That was the only match she had played since dropping off the tour following a first-round loss at the U.S. Open in September 1993.
Since then, Capriati had been in the news for her troubled personal life, including a police citation for shoplifting, an arrest on marijuana possession charges and two stints in drug rehabilitation.
Capriati held the promise of becoming the sport's top star when
But burnout and injuries eventually took their tolls. Capriati quit the tour and moved away from her family after losing in the first round of the 1993 U.S. Open.
Then came troubles with the police. She was arrested on suspicion of shoplifting cheap jewelry in December of that year, and she was arrested for marijuana possession in May 1994. The police photo of a nose-ringed Capriati was published in newspapers worldwide.
At 14, she became the youngest Grand Sham semifinalist in history at the French Open in 1909. She also reached the semis at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open in 1991, won the Olympic gold medal in 1992 and rose to No. 6 in the world rankings.
Capriati made an aborted comeback attempt at a tournament in Philadelphia in November 1994. She suffered a first-round, three-set loss to Anke Huber, dropped out of sight and had not played since.
CPR can save a life in a heartbeat.
CPR
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February 27 & 28
March 13 & 14
March 18 & 19
April 6
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5:30-8:00 p.m.
5:30-8:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
she turned pro just before the age of 14.
To sign up: 864-9570
Training classes cover adult/child/infant CPR using American Heart Association materials. $10 fee. Saturday class includes a 30-minute lunch break.
HEALTH
Since 1906
Watkins
Caring For KU
CENTER
864-9500
Players question tennis' new No.1
The Associated Press
MONTE CARLO, Monaco — The king of clay is now No. 1 in tennis.
Thomas Muster displaced Andre Agassi as the top-ranked player in men's tennis yesterday, and neither Agassi nor Pete Sampras is much impressed about the way the ATP Tour computer goes about selecting its rankings.
"It certainly reflects the fact that you can dominate on one surface and play enough tennis to mislead a lot of people," Agassi said after beating Sampras in an exhibition last week in Atlanta.
Sampras, who won Wimbledon and the U.S. Open last year, is now the No. 2 player, with Agassi dropping to No.3.
("Muster's) by far the best clay-court player we have," Sampras said. "As far as being the best player in the world on other surfaces, I can't accept that as much as his ability on clay.
"He reminds me a little bit of Guillermo Vilas — a grinder who played a lot of clay, managed to dominate that one surface and that's why he was ranked so high."
Muster won 12 tournaments last year, 11 on clay, including the French Open. The 29-year-old Austrian took exception to the criticism, saying he was the oldest
player since John Newcombe to ascend to No. 1.
"I've won one Grand Slam out of 12 tournaments," he said. "I've won the biggest indoor events. I think I've proved that I am the No. 1. If it's one hour or one week or one year, it's a big achievement."
Muster spoke yesterday from South Africa, where he won a singles match on grass against Wayne Ferreira, although Austria lost the series 3-2. Muster also won his other Davis Cup singles match on grass, against Marcos Ondruska.
Muster is the 13th player to be in first place since the rankings began in 1973. However, his No. 1 standing may not last long.
The top ranking will be up for grabs again this week when Muster plays in Dubai while Agassi and Sampras play in San Jose, Calif.
The San Jose tournament is being played a week later this year because first-round Davis Cup matches were played last week.
As a result, Agassi lost the 204 computer points he picked up for winning in San Jose last year. Muster had no points to defend.
Valentine's Day Open House At The Kansas & Burge Unions
Activities & Giveaways:
KU
THE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS
Candy / Info Counter
GIVEAWAYS:
- Candy Heart Count Contest
- SPECIALS:
- Candy Sale
- Cinnamon Hearts --- $3.00 per pound
- Heartbreakers ------ $3.00 per pound
- Cherry Bites ---------------- $1.80 per pound
Win a Spring Break Trip for Two To Panama City Beach, Fla!
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
GIVEAWAYS:
- Trip for Two SPECIALS
Decorate a Special Card or Cookie for your Valentine!
- Have your fortune told
Special Discounts:
15% off on
The
KU Booksstore!
KU
- Take your picture with the Jayhawk
- Make your own Valentine Card
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
- Decorate your own special Valentine Cookie
- Sweetheart Roses, Carnations & Balloon Sales
*15% Storewide Discount (except on computers, sale items, special orders)
- Live Music
GIVEAWAYS:
vending
BUCCLE
CENTER
KU CHICAGOS
TREE BURNING & WATER DAMAGE NOT REQUIRED
- Sweetheart Roses, Carnations & Balloon Sales
SPECIALS:
Who a Romantic
Dinner for Two,
A Coot of Pop,
A Tadly Beer or
Candy!
- Two Valentine Cookbooks
GIVEAWAYS:
- Five Teddy Bears
Register at Wescoe Terrace Murphy Hall or the Visual Arts Snack Bar Win a Case of Pop
SPECIALS
union technology center Academic Computer Supplies & Equipment
- Software Program Bodyworks 3.0 for the Mac
GIVEAWAYS:
At Wescoe Terrace
Jaybowl
- Candy Heart Count Contest
GIVEAWAYS:
- Bowling Party for Two
& FREE SUA Movie
- Valentine Treat with purchase of a Deli Sandwich
SPECIALS.
- 2 for 1 bowling from
4:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m.
Burge Unions Open
Kansas & Bengal Open House
10 AM to 2 PM
Hawk
of my
Heart
Wednesday Feb. 14, 1996
- Hugs & Kisses (from Hershey) 50¢
GIVEAWAYS
Union
FOOD SERVICE
- Romantic Dinner for Two
- Romantic Dinner for Two
(Specially prepared by Chef Rob)
- $10 Gift Certificates Prairie Room
- Mugs filled with Candy
- SPECIALS:
- Sweetheart Salad Bar 79¢ per 1/4 pound
- Decorated Cookies & Cupcakes
Wednesday Feb.14, 10 AM to 2 PM
1
THURSDAY,FEBRUARY15,1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
SECTION A VOL.102.NO.97
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY
in the
KANSAN
SPORTS
AS
45
Bearing down
No.5 Kansas held off Colorado to win its 27th consecutive home game. Page4B
CAMPUS
Two astrologers told some KU students what to expect in their relationships. Page 3A
What's your sign?
NATION
Police officer wakes up
After a shot to the head, Gary Dockery awakens from an almost eightyear coma. Page 6A
WORLD
Yeltsin goes home
Expected to seek a second term, he may have lost touch with local problems. Page 7A
WEATHER MOSTLY CLOUDY
High 37° Low 25°
A bird running
Weather: Page 2A.
INDEX
Opinion ... 4A
National News ... 6A
World News... 7A
Scoreboard... 2B
Horoscopes... 4B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Donated department funds missing
Endowment account short by $39,000
By Amy McVey
Kansan staff writer
KU police are investigating the embezzlement of about $39,000 from the department of pharmacology and toxicology endowment account.
and cashed fraudulent checks from the account during a period of three years.
Police suspect that a former employee of the department wrote
The department chairman noticed two weeks ago that money used to finance undergraduate and graduate scholarships was missing from its account.
Elias Michaelis discovered that the money was missing when he reviewed the department's endowment accounts after an employee who had access to the accounts quit.
"I initiated a search for the accounts to see what the status was — not necessarily suspecting that there was a maleficent," Michaelis said. "The more we dug, the more
The missing money had been donated to the department by private donors through the Kansas university Endowment Association, Michaelis said.
we found."
"We are not talking about an account that represents state accounts or research accounts — this was an endowment account," he said. "The donor makes the donation for the good of the department."
Michaelis said the money was not only used to award scholarships, but also to help the department be more flexible and be able to finance things that it normally couldn't afford.
funds we used very sparingly," he said. "For example, the department gives an undergraduate award every year. That doesn't mean we don't have the money, but it cuts down on flexibility."
"These funds were the kind of
"Thefts of this type can be pretty complicated," Keary said. "Records need to be examined, and numerous people need to be talked to. That is what we are doing at this time."
Sergeant Chris Keary of KU police said the police had interviewed the former employee but had not made any arrests.
The $39,000 theft is the biggest embezzlement at the University since 1982, when Steve McMurry,
former coordinator of the KU bus system, was imprisoned for embezzling more than $250,000. McMurry embezzled the money while working as a nonsalaried volunteer for the campus bus system. He was charged with five counts of felony theft of property and spent 17 months in the Kansas State Penitentiary.
Michaelis said that this would be the last time someone would have the chance to embezzle money from the department because he planned to do things differently.
"I will ask the Endowment Association to deal directly with me," he said. "There will be no more interceptions."
What's this thing for?
C
Gina Thornburg / KANSAN
Condom Man, Mike Enenbach, Prairie Village senior, hands condoms to Baby Jay during the Kansas Union's Valentine's Day Open House. Condom Man from Kansas City Planed Parenthood was at the Union in honor of National Condom Day.
Preference colors label decisions
African-American History Month
---
By David Teska
Kansan staff writer
The question remains — Black or African American?
In a survey published in U.S. News & World Report, the Department of Labor polled 60,000 households on how they preferred to be identified. Forty-four percent said they preferred Black and 28.1 percent preferred African American. Others replied they preferred either Afro-American, Negro, colored or some other term. Only 9.1 percent said they had no preference.
Some students at the University of Kansas have definite ideas on how the issue of labeling people should be addressed. Patience Grayer, Peoria, Ill., junior, said when most people think of the color black,
they don't have in mind the color of her skin.
"How can you call me Black when I'm no that color?" she said.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has no official stand on either usage, said Linda Hursey, a public affairs official with the association.
The NAACP, which hasn't taken the word colored out of its title, can't change usage every time common-useage changes, Hursey said.
"The NAACP is going along with societal changes," she said.
The Policy, Style and Design Guide of the University Daily Kansan is ambiguous. It states that if Black is used to describe people of African ancestry, it should be capitalized. The guide then encourages the use of African American whenever possible. The Associated Press mandates that Black is the preferred usage. The AP makes no reference to African American.
Confusion about which term to use also exists in the news media.
What's in a name?
A recent U.S. News & World Report study showed what term people prefer:
Black 44.2%
African American 28.1%
Colored 1.1%
Some other term 2.2%
Some other term 2.2
No preference 9.1%
No preference 9.1%
Source: U.S. News & World Report (Nov.
20, 1995)
Tom Eblen, general manager of the Kansan, said newspapers have changed through time as the usage has.
"In the 1950s, it was Negro. Black was considered derogatory and not used," Eblen said.
In the end, Eblen said, most newspapers today believe that people have the right to have themselves called what they wish.
Rec center referendum on the way
Senate decides to put proposal to student vote
By Nicole Kennedy
Kansan staff writer
After a heated three-hour debate, Student Senate voted early yesterday morning to hold a student referendum Feb. 27 and 28 on the proposed $21 million recreation center.
In a roll call vote, 42 senators voted for the referendum, three senators voted against it and two senators abstained from voting. Nineteen senators were absent from the meeting.
The referendum gives students the chance to vote for or against increasing campus fees to finance a new recreation center. Students now pay $208 in campus fees in addition to tuition each semester, $13 of which goes toward a recreation fee.
Several senators disagreed about whether to put the recreation proposal to a student vote. Although the meeting started Tuesday evening, a decision wasn't reached until 12:30 a.m. Wednesday.
If the referendum passes, the recreation fee would increase in time, starting with a $30 hike next semester. By 1999, the recreation fee would be $90, making it the largest campus fee ever passed.
Alan Pierce, finance committee chairman, said students should have direct input on an issue of this magnitude.
"I think it's bad that a few misguided senators with political aspirations see fit to take away the privilege of the student body in regards to voting on an issue this close to the students 'pocketbooks'," he said.
Jeff Livingston, liberal arts and sciences senator, adamantly disagreed.
"We aren't here to just push off this difficult decision and put it on people who aren't going to have enough information to vote," he said. "That's why we operate a representative democracy, not a participatory one."
Ami Hizer, holdover senator, said voting against the referendum would be an unwise decision for senators.
"It would make Senate look stupid," she said. "worse thing you could do is not allow students to vote on this campus. You're talking a political nightmare. At KU, it should be no taxation without participation."
Jason Fizell, an Olathe junior attending the meeting, said he didn't think the referendum would accurately portray student opinion.
For the referendum to be valid, 10 percent of the student body must participate. Based on Fall 1995 enrollment figures, at least 2,328 students would have to vote for the referendum to stand. For the recreation center to be approved, at least 1,165 students would have to vote for increasing the campus fees.
Hit the slopes, not your savings account
---
By Sarah Morrison Kansan staff writer
For many students, the high cost of lodging, ski equipment rentals and lift tickets keeps them off the ski slopes during spring break.
But contrary to popular belief, taking a ski trip does not have to be prohibitively expensive. Even budget travelers can enjoy a skiing
vacation.
One way to make skiing more affordable is to rent skiing equipment before arriving at the slopes.
If you plan on renting your skis at the shop at the base of the mountain, be prepared to shell out big bucks, said Todd May, of Kansas Rental in Topeka.
"it's best to get the rental aspect taken care of, here," he said. "That way, when you get there you can just get up and go skiing."
Renting skis at resorts costs about $22 a day. Renting from agencies in Denver, Kansas City or Topeka costs about $8 to $10 a day. Some area stores only charge for the days
Discount lift tickets also can be purchased before arriving at the resort. Stitzmark Sports in Overland Park offers lift tickets $10 to $12 cheaper than at many Colorado ski resorts.
the skis will be used, not for every day the equipment is out of the store.
Another way to make a trip financially feasible is to stay in youth hostels. The price of staying at a hostel in Colorado is about $10 to $25 a person each night, compared to about $90 to $500 a night for a hotel or condominium. There are six youth hostels located near the major ski slopes in Colorado. Dave Colson.
Cheap lodging
Hostel Nearest ski area Phone Off season In Season
Firstide Inn Breckenridge (970) 453-6456 $15.00 $27.00
Gimmood Springs Aspen/Vall (970) 945-8545 $9.50 same
Grand Junction Powderhorn (800) 430-4555 $10.00 same
Pitkin Hostel Crested Butte/ Monarch (970) 641-2757 $10.00 same
Alpen Hiltté Vail/Copper Mountain (970) 468-6336 $11.00 $25.00
Winter Park Winter Park/ (970) 726-5356 $8.50 $13.50
Source: "Hostelling U.S.A. 1998"
owner of the Alpens Hütte in Silverthorn, Colo., said lodging in a youth hostel was the cheapest in the area.
Noah Musser/KANSAN
X
"You're not going to find a less expensive place to stay in the county," Colson said.
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
2A
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Thursday, February 15, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CAMPUS BRIEFS
A slick soapbox racer with fireed wheels, a crisp rectangular box with a door set tessingly ajar and a heap of paper boats that float from a red sea of canvas onto a glistening black floor are among the items on display at the Fine Arts Faculty Arts exhibit.
The exhibit opened Sunday in the Art and Design Gallery at the School of Fine Arts and will remain on display until tomorrow. The works of 22 faculty members are on display.
---
"Each piece is a recent work by the members of the faculty that represents their commitment to their work and to the department," said Judith McCrea, associate professor of art and chairwoman of the department.
The University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology is beginning a new exhibit, "Bennett and Benedictine," on Saturday. The exhibit will display several Native-American artifacts the museum has obtained.
Students interested in lobbying for Democratic causes can join the KU Young Democrats in Topeka Feb. 23 for Washington Days. The group will join other Democrat groups for the Young Democrats Lobby and Rally Day.
---
The rally is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. at the State Capitol. For more information or a pool to Topeka, call Ted Miller, president of KU Young Democrats, at 842-0766.
---
International students interested in the wonders of the Wild West can go on a nine-day, sleeper-motorcoach trip leaving March 21.
The spring break adventure, sponsored by International Student Services, will visit Colorado, Utah, Nevada, California, Arizona and New Mexico.
The $379 cost includes transportation, eight nights' lodging and entrance to all national parks. Because space is limited, students should sign up as soon as possible. For more information, call Girish Ballolla or Sheila Immol at 864-3617.
---
Spring Break Alternative participants completed a weekend of community service in Kansas City on Friday and Saturday, volunteering at the Child World School and the Ozanam Home for Boys.
The weekend trip was a preview of four spring break service trips that will take students to Paso, Texas; Washington, D.C.; Denver and Fort Collins, Colo.; and Cape Charles, Va.
Spring Break Alternative originated last year, when eight students traveled to Texas to participate in Project Vida, or Project Life.
---
Students seeking teaching jobs should sign up to participate in the University Placement Center's 15th annual Teacher Interview Day April 11. School administrators from about 90 school districts, both local and out-of-state, will visit with teacher candidates about job opportunities. Registration, which began this week, is required for interviews. For more information, call the center at 864-3624.
---
Looking up information in the encyclopedia no longer has to involve lugging around huge books. The 32-volume Encyclopedia Britannica is available in Watson Library's Reference Department and the Government Documents Library through the local area computer network.
Students can access topics with greater speed, and the system allows searchers to locate and even combine topics, which is a cumbersome task for those using the printed editions. For more information, call the University of Kansas Libraries, 864-3956.
图
Fans of vintage '80s music can tune in to the all-'80s show "Eight by Zero" on KHK. This semester the station at 90.7 FM broadcasts the show on Fridays from 7 to 9 p.m. The show was created last spring by Correy Honza, Columbia, Md., senior and Tim Joyce, 1995 graduate.
ON CAMPUS
To request an '80s tune to be played on the show, call the KJHK line request at 864-4747.
OAKS, Non-Traditional Students Organization, will sponsor a brown bag luncheon at 11:30 a.m. today at Wescoe Terrace. For more information, call Laura Morgan at 864-4064.
The Office of International Studies and Phi Beta Delta will sponsor World View Lecture by Garth Myers at noon today at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Hodgie Bricke at 864-4141.
Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting on studying in a Spanish-speaking country at 3:30 p.m. today in 4046 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Ellen Strubert at 864-3742.
KU Kempo Karate Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mark Hurt at 842-4713.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 215 Robinson Center. For more information, call John Hendrix at 864-1529.
Andrew Tsuibai will sponsor KU Ki-Alikido Club at 6 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Matt Stumpe at 864-6592.
KU Meditation Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ravi Hirekatur at 832-8798.
KU Vietnamese-American Student Association, VASA, will meet at 6 p.m. at 2023 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Samantha Ho at 749-3007.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the
Parlors in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
Native-American Student Association, NASA, will meet at 7 tonight at the auditorium in the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call Lori Hauxwell at 864-1799.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Scott Nissen at 838-9719.
Golden Key National Honor Society will sponsor "Promoting Diversity" with Nicholas Shump and officer selection at 8 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Teng Chang at 864-1741.
Recovery Medicine Wheel Support Group will meet at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call Samantha at 842-4797.
Le Cercle Francais will sponsor a "Valentine's Day Fete" at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at chez Sarah Pethan. For more information, call Sarah Pethan at 865-0696 or the department of French at 864-4056.
■ KU German Club will sponsor a Fasching Party, a traditional German costume ball. at 8 p.m. tomorrow at "The Sac," 935 Michigan. For more information, call John Cougher at 838-4775.
On Campus is a free service of the Kansan. To publicize your group's events, complete a form available at the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items are placed on availability of space.
The University Daily Kansan (UPSP 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 of $1.86 per semester are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Weather
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta
Chicago
Des Moines, Iowa
Kansas City, Mo.
Lawrence
Los Angeles
New York
Omaha, Neb.
St. Louis
Seattle
Topeka
Tulsa, Okla.
Wichita
N I G H L O W
54 ° • 34 °
28 ° • 15 °
32 ° • 12 °
39 ° • 21 °
37 ° • 25 °
69 ° • 58 °
36 ° • 25 °
34 ° • 15 °
58 ° • 40 °
37 ° • 24 °
43 ° • 21 °
53 ° • 27 °
47 ° • 25 °
TODAY
Mostly cloudy
3725
FRIDAY
Mostly cloudy and colder
3216
SATURDAY
Dry and warmer
4520
Source: Chian-Wei Chang/KU Weather Service
ON THE RECORD
KU police removed a panhandler in the fourth floor of the Kansas Union at 5:08 p.m. Tuesday. The man said he was from Oklahoma City and had no local address, KU police reported.
A KU student's compact discs were stolen between 2 and 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall. The compact discs were valued at $185, KU police reported.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Thursday, February 15, 1996
Starry-eyed students look to heavens
3A
Romantics seek advice from astrologers about love and relationships
By R. Adam Ward
Kansan staff writer
Some KU students could relate yesterday to the state motto, "Ad Astra per Aspera," which means, "To the stars through difficulties."
The students lined up 10 to 12 people deep outside the Mt. Oread Bookshop in the Kansas Union and waited more than an hour to have an astrologer predict their futures.
Lee Yelenics, professional member of the American Federation of Astrology, and astrologer Jan Holmes read the fortunes of
about 50 students from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m as part of the Union's Valentine's Day celebration.
Yelenics said there was considerable interest in astrology at the University of Kansas, judging by the long lines she attracted yesterday and when she came to the University at Halloween.
Students mostly are interested in career advice, she said. But for Valentine's day she tried to focus on relationships and love.
Yelenics said few students asked her for advice about sex, but she tried to help those that did ask to understand their urges.
Jason Fitzell, promotions coordinator for Student Union Activities, said the astrologers were paid $25 an hour.
"We've brought Lee Yelenics to the Union for years, and the response was so great we added a second one who she recommended," he said.
The astrologers did try to limit the wait for students by keeping each readings to about 10 minutes.
Jonna Bredemeier, Seneca freshman, said curiosity and a desire for encouragement about relationships were the reasons she waited in line to see an astrologer.
"I don't really believe in it," she said. "I'm just doing it for the heck of it."
But Yelenics did have some repeat customers who had a little more faith.
Fitri Prabanningrum, Indonesia sophomore, said an astrologer at the Union told her fortune last year, and most of it was accurate. She didn't believe in astrology completely, but she was intrigued by it, she said.
Julia Lu, Wichita sophomore, said everything Yelenics told her was true. Yelenics knew about Lu's interest in business and the dual sides to her personality, Lu said.
THE DEATH OF GABRIELLE HANDEL
Pam Dishman / KANSAN
Angel Gail, Olathe junior, gets his "Love Forecast" in an astrology reading given by Lee Yelenics, a trained astrologer. This was one of the activities taking place in the Kansas Union yesterday.
Special night offered for women
Hideaway sets Thursdays aside
By Susanna Lööf
Kansan staff writer
Lesbians in Lawrence have not had a place of their own to meet in a long time. Tonight, they will change.
The Hideaway, 106 North Park St.,
has designated Thursdays as
women's night. And Sara Collas,
Cleveland graduate student. hopes
the special nights create a community among lesbians in Lawrence.
"Hopefully there will be a majority of women," said Collas, who will be the disc jockey for the women's nights. "Hideaway is the only gay bar in Lawrence, but when you go there, it's still predominantly men, and
Men are still welcome at the Hideaway on women's nights, Sorbergear said. But the music will be slightly different from the bar's regular nights.
"I know there's more lesbians in Lawrence than there are gay men," he said. "I want both groups to feel welcome, but somehow it seems like it is always boys' night."
"On Fridays and Saturdays, we play strictly dance music," he said. "On Thursdays, we can afford to be a bit more loose and play music for the atmosphere."
"I want both groups to feel welcome, but somehow it seems like it is always boys'night." Jamie Sornberger Hideaway bar manager
women are in minority."
Jamie Sornberger, Hideaway manager, said women deserved a night to themselves.
There are several lesbian groups in Lawrence, but the members usually socialize within the groups, Collas said.
Sornberger said a reason for designating Thursday nights as women's night was that women were often discriminated against in bars. Usually, bartenders tend to serve the men before women, he said.
The Hideaway has previously experimented with other special events on Thursdays. But
while most of those activities were one-time events, women's nights will be weekly, Sornberger said.
Christine Robinson, Lawrence doctoral student, said she might go to the Hideaway more often.
"The fact that the nights are called women's nights will help," she said.
Sara Collas, Cleveland graduate student, and Jamie Sornberger, manager of the Hideaway, anticipate the bar's Women's Night on Thursdays. The night is aimed for woman to enjoy themselves, as well as meet other women.
Happy birthday, Susan B. Anthony
Special to the Kansan
But less than 100 years ago, voting was a privilege not extended to everyone. Until 1920, women in the United States could not vote.
As campaign signs start littering yards and political advertisements start filling commercial breaks, the nation is reminded that another election year is here.
By Liz Musser
Susan Brownell Anthony helped change that.
To celebrate, the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center is holding a party in honor of Susan B. Anthony's birthday from 2 to 4 p.m. today in the rotunda of Strong Hall. Cake and punch will be served.
Born Feb. 15, 1820. Anthony was one of the leaders in the women's suffrage movement. Her efforts in encouraging women to fight for equality spanned almost 50
years.
Anthony's first public crusade was in the name of temperance, the abolition of alcohol. After attending a temperance convention where a member of the clergy told her she was defying the will of God by participating in a public meeting, Anthony started The Women's State Temperance Society of New York.
Wil Linkugel, professor of communication studies teaches a class titled Rhetoric of Women's Rights. He said Anthony's political sense made her an effective part of the women's rights movement.
Anthony also crusaded for equality for women with the help of fellow activist, Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Together, they campaigned for the rights of women—including the right to vote.
In 1869, Anthony and Stanton started the National Woman Suffrage Association. The group advocated
women's suffrage through an amendment to the Constitution.
Anthony died 14 years before the "Anthony Amendment" became the 19th Amendment to the Constitution. But that didn't stop her from voting while she was still alive.
In 1872 Anthony registered and voted in Rochester, N.Y. She was arrested, tried and fined for violating the law. She refused to pay the fine.
Anthony also furthered the women's rights movement by motivating women to speak publicly, said Renee Speicher, graduate assistant at the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
"Traditionally, public speaking was male dominated," Speicher said. "Women did not speak. Susan B. Anthony helped change that."
KU actors bring fairy tales to life for area children.
Student theater creates live show to help make storytelling popular
By David Teska Kansan staff writer
It made Matthew Hostetter nervous to perform in front of a theater full of children.
Using the storytelling method, Hostelier, Glennwood Springs, Colo., junior, and seven other KU students, staged several short plays for area elementary school children as part of the University Theatre for Young People's presentation of fables and tales, Story Theatre.
"You don't need an expensive Nintendo to have a night of fun," Shaw said.
Brad Shaw, a Kansas City based actor, director and designer, guest-directed the actors for the performances. He said the show's goal was to popularize storytelling and help the children learn to use their imaginations.
Story Theatre
When: All this week at 1 p.m.
Where: Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall
Public performances are at 2:30 and 7 p.m. on Saturday.
Call Murphy Hall Box Office at 864-3982 for tickets.
In the storytelling method, actors talk directly to the audience as the story unfolds.
Shaw said the format allowed the audience to see what the actors went through during a show. The stories, taken from the Grimm brothers' collection and Aesop's Fables, included the Bremen Town Musicians, Henry Penny, Is He Fat?, Venus and the Cat, the Fisherman and His Wife. Two Crowds and The Golden Goose.
Hostetler said the actors began rehearsing late last semester. This semester, he said, they had been rehearsing three hours a night.
"We're ready for an audience." he said.
Dressed in his costume of gray sweats and matching sneakers, Hostetler said that the show's impromptu design hid the fact that each performance was a huge drain on the actors.
"It's amazing how exhausted you get after one hour," he said.
One group of students in the audience came from Wellsville and was pretty excited about the show, said Stephanie Dickey, fourth-grade teacher. She said her class had read Aesop's Fables in the fall and also came to the theater last year. Attending the show was a break from typical field trips like museums, she said. It also served to expose the students to other ideas and cultures.
"It's good to get them exposed to the theater," Dickey said.
Performances will continue the rest of this week at 1 p.m. at Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Public performances of the show are at 2:30 and 7 p.m. on Saturday.
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4A
Thursday, February 15, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
With linear tuition, access to evaluations is critical
An important reason why many students are adamant about gaining access to student evaluations of instructors is the new linear tuition system.
Students no longer will be able to add or drop courses with the same flexibility they have had in the past, and they are concerned. Linear tuition will force students to be more careful about class choices, giving them a legitimate right to research instructors if they desire.
Student senator Scott Sullivan plans to sue the University because it has denied his petition to release evaluations of instructors under the Kansas Open Records Act. Although this action perhaps is excessive, Sullivan was driven to it by University administration.
The administration made the decision to switch to linear tuition, but it refuses even to be remotely sympathetic to student concerns about adding and dropping classes. Beginning next year, students
THE ISSUE:
Linear tuition
Because it will be more difficult to drop a class, access to evaluations would be valuable.
may find themselves between a rock and a hard place if they get stuck with a bad class or professor. Under linear tuition, students will be punished economically for dropping a class early in the semester.
The University should work with the student body to come up with a solution. If the administration doesn't compromise with Sullivan, valuable time, energy and money will be wasted.
Linear tuition will force students to be extremely careful about class selection, and they should be allowed access to student evaluations of instructors. The University implemented linear tuition and therefore should allow students to access past evaluations.
TARA FITZPATRICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Higher Internet access charge could help offset growth costs
The University of Kansas, which has struggled to maintain the minimum speed limit on the information superhighway, has announced its willingness to fall further behind and risk getting pulled over for impeding traffic. The growth of offcampus terminal server accounts, almost 100 percent during the past year, has created the need for more phone lines and enhanced Internet access systems.
Unfortunately, this growth has been met with the attitude that we cannot keep up and perhaps should stop providing access. What the University fails to see is the tremendous opportunity for financial gain and academic dispensation that can be attained by continuing to offer the service and charging a higher fee.
The University has two things to gain: money and reputation. The University already receives $30 per terminal server account for which they received nothing last year. The University could raise its ter-
THE ISSUE:
Terminal fees
minimal server charge and still provide Internet access for a fraction of what commercial service providers charge. Students and faculty would benefit from continued access at the University and still pay less than commercial rates.
Students and faculty accepted the $30 price tag for access this past year without so much as the blink of an eye. The necessity for students to understand and work with the Internet, and computers in general, far outweighs the price that the University could charge for this service. A fair price and continued service would benefit students and provide the University with the funds to continue service, and possibly enhance it in the future.
The University cannot afford to fall further behind other academic institutions in the race for computer accessibility.
CYBERSPACE
LET ME KNOW WHEN YOU'RE READY TO MAKE THE JUMP TO LIGHT SPEED, COMMANDER!
GORE
FEDS
CHRIS VINE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
WHAT IS RACE FOR?
The third of three essays on race and identity
Biracial children are quite special people with special needs in a society that is more obsessed with race than its members usually care to admit. They are Caucasian, but not quite. They are Black, but not completely. In some less-enlightened Black circles, they find themselves envied and ostracized.
exalted and defiled, all because of a genetic accident in which they had no say. They live, like their parents, on the edges of tribal life, on the margins of America's historical
African-
American
History Month
CLARENCE PAGE
SANDRICH COLUMNSIST
racial contradictions. By their very existence, they flout both the immutability of the one-drop rule and the purity of Africa-descended Americans as a "race."
"The large majority of Mexico is multiracial. It's almost the official culture. Mexico hasn't asked a race question on its census since 1921. So on the U.S. census, people who put Mexican for race know full well what it means. It's mestizo, and that is a racial designation, not a nationality."
The number of
But times are changing. Interracial marriage and reproduction are on the upswing, and a new generation of post-1960s multiracial children is demanding recognition, not in the margins of society but as a mainstream of their very own.
The future of race in America increasingly will sound out the question a Newsweek cover asked in 1994, "What Color Is Black?" What color is white? What is race? Such questions always have nagged at the rigid underpinnings of America's racial order, but never more urgently than today, on the brink of a new century in which the standards of a new generation pose the greatest challenge yet to the curse of the color line.
The future of race in America is the focus of a political and social movement by mixed-race children and their families. They don't seek much, just recognition. They want the government to create a new "multiracial" category on census and school forms.
"Mexicans, especially, regard themselves as mestizo — part Spanish, part indigenous," Carlos Fernandez, president of the San Francisco-based Association of Multi-Ethnic Americans, told American Demographics in June 1994.
The future of race in America is in Mexico today.
Their organizations and support groups across the country include the Atlanta-based Project RACE, the San Francisco-based Association of Multiethnic Americans, the Chicago-based Biracial Family Network, and the District of Columbia-based Interracial Family Circle, among others.
people who checked the box marked "other race" on census forms increased 45 percent between the 1980 and 1990 censuses, to
9. 8 million people, about 1 in 25 Americans, according to American Demographics. Out of that group, 98 percent claimed Hispanic origin on the ethnicity question, which means more than 40 percent of the nation's 22 million self-identified Hispanics are not willing to identify themselves as black or white.
Even in the 1920s, when Mexico was removing race from its census forms, the U.S. Census Bureau was estimating three-quarters of African Americans could claim at least some white blood.
The future of race in America is in Brazil, where it is said that the first "Coloured" was born nine months after the arrival of the Europeans.
The future of race in America is the Latino-American woman whose great-great-grandmother was Black, but she passes for Caucasian, while she describes her dark-skinned sister to American Demographics magazine as trigua, which she translated as "brown."
Black people, in my experience, seldom have been very sophisticated or tolerant about fellow Blacks who don't want to be Black. As a college roommate of mine used to say, "Black, the whole Black, and nothing else but Black." Few are willing, in the face of what appears to be omnipotent, omnipresent Caucasian racism, to split hairs or chromosomes about the one-drop rule.
Much of the Black backlash against Blacks who want to be identified as mixed or multiracial stems from ancient resentments in the Black community about not just color but complexion and even deeper self-loathing that reaches the boiling point at the suggestion that some other Black person does not want to be Black.
"When I discover who I am, I'll be free," Ralph Ellison once said. If Black Americans of whatever color cannot be freed to be appreciated as
individuals, one wonders, what is freedom worth when it is a freedom limited by the tyranny of small community minds dressed up in the trappings of cultural nationalism?
Perhaps, then, the future of race in America is captured at the end of a handy list of "Coping Tips" for biracial teens published in *Biracial Child magazine*: "Don't try to befriend people who won't accept you for whom you are." It is the easiest advice for parents to give. And the most difficult for teens, still forming a sense of their own individual identity while also yearning to be a part of a crowd, to follow.
Multiracial children bear a special burden. They hear black people instructing them to identify strictly as Black because that is the way society will view them. Whose society? At bottom, it is the society of those very same Black people. Black Americans who have internalized white supremacist attitudes and values become agents of those attitudes and values, enforcing them in others and passing them on to a new generation more effectively than the Ku Klux Klan ever could.
Biracials point out that they are running away from nothing. I believe them. They cannot run away from race any more than any other American can, as long as they remain in America. They still are people of color, still evoking all the responses that people of color evoke. They cannot run away. They can only turn, as W.C. Fields once said, take the bull by the tail, and face the situation.
"I want to be Black," Harvard's Henry Louis Gates, Jr., who happens to have biracial children, once said, "to know Black, to luxuriate in whatever I might be calling blackness at any particular time, but to do so in order to come out on the other side, to experience a humanity that is neither colorless nor reducible to color."
The future of race in America will win a freedom not only to be Black but also to discover and appreciate one's own individual humanity. It will include not only our obligation as Black Americans to the Africa-descended community that culturally nurtured us, whether others accept us or not, but also our obligation to be true to ourselves. Black self-determination is an empty victory if it is not accompanied by one's individual ability to control one's own fate. America will have to go through race to get beyond race.
Boxer's crisis should teach us the threat posed by unsafe sex
Clarence Page is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune
On Monday, professional boxer Tommy Morrison was confirmed to be HIV positive. Morrison's off-and-on boxing career has come to an abrupt end. Friends, family and Morrison's promoter, Tony Holden, are not concerned with his boxing career, though. They are concerned for Morrison. He has taken a second test to reconfirm his diagnosis, and still is hopeful that the first test will
be proven raise. Morrison already has expressed his desire to become active in AIDS awareness to help prevent others from making the same mistakes that he made.
STAFF COLUMNIST
SARAH
PRESTON
Hearing about these stories opens our eyes to the nightmare of AIDS. Unfortunately, people still do not grac-
tice safe sex. It's the least we can do to protect ourselves. We have learned from the time we were young children to look both ways before crossing the street. We know not to run with sharp objects in our hands. And we would never put metal in the microwave. These things could seriously injure or even kill us. So why in the world would we continue to have unprotected sex? Because it feels good at the time, right? Well, hold onto that feeling and hope that it lasts a lifetime, because it could be the last.
In the past decade, more people have gone public with their disease in an effort to inform or scare the public. Celebrities have let us into their personal lives while dealing with and learning to cope with HIV and AIDS. I think that every effort people have made to help society be more aware of this fatal illness has been effective. We now are more knowledgeable than we have ever been about HIV and AIDS. However, the disease still lingers and continues to conquer so many people. Some of us know only about the celebrities, like Morrison and Magic Johnson, who have HIV. But there are many more like them that we never learn about.
Last week Jerry Springer, daytime talk show host, did a follow-up show on two young guests living with HIV. The remarkable thing that sets these two apart from the average HIV infected person is that they both are 10 years old and were born with the disease. These kids are adorable and bright. They are dedicated to informing the public about the virus they acquired from their infected parents.
When a person is infected by the HIV virus, he is not the only one to worry about. Anyone who has been sexually active with that person or has shared needles with him is at risk. This is the worry of many of Morrison's acquaintances who have just heard about his infection. Although Morrison originally is from Oklahoma, he has spent a lot of time in Westport. The boxer is said to have led a promiscuous private life, which wasn't very private after all. A Kansas City. AIDS hotline, (816) 923-AIDS, received an unusually high number of phone calls Monday regarding concerns about the Morrison situation.
The fatal epidemic is growing and becoming the most common killer among sexually active people of all races, religions and sexual preferences. AIDS, the inevitable outcome of the HIV virus, has no prejudices. Anyone can become infected.
Sarah Preston is a Wilmette, ill., senior in English
KANSAN STAFF
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Campus ... Joann Birk
... Phillip Brownies
Editorial ... Paul Todd
Associate editorial ... Craig Lang
Movies ... Michael Moore
Sports ... Tom Erickson
Associate sports ... Bill Petula
Photo ... Andy Rutledge
Matt Flickker
Graphics ... Hosh Musser
Special sessions ... Noveltia Sommers
Motion Graphics ... Melissa McKinnon
Wire ... Tara Trenay
Illustration ... Michel Leaker
HEATIER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Karen Gernch
Regional mgr ... Kelly Connelys
Management mgr ... Claire Hammons
Special Sections mgr ... Norm Blow
Production mgrs ... Rachel Cahill
Heather Walters
Marketing director ... Heather Walters
Public Relations dir ... Angle Adamson
Creative director ... Ed Kowalczyk
Boston manager ... Brandon McKinnon
Internship/oo-pm ... T.J. Clark
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OBOY!!
OH
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday. February 15, 1996
5A
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Student, faculty speak out about instructor evaluations
Critiques would aid education consumers
Many of my colleagues argue that we should reject the Student Senate resolution to publicize individual course ratings. I disagree. In sum, although there are likely abuses from opening the ratings, the value we can add from such openness swamps these concerns. Here are the two key arguments against publicizing, with rejoinders.
No. 1: It would confuse students. If the evaluations tell little about the quality of instruction, students could be misled into equating course popularity with substance.
Response: The numbers undoubtedly are less meaningful about teaching effectiveness than we would all wish. Yet all units of the University now use these numbers to some extent in determining the effectiveness of their faculties. Because we operate administratively on the premise that the evaluations have content, why not permit students to make course choices with the same information that the University uses? To the extent that these evaluations are poor measures, then publicizing them will provide a strong incentive for the University to find a better set of measures.
No. 2: Students become consumers in a course meat market.
Response: That we can make education into a commodity, purchased off the rack, disturbs many faculty members. Me, too. The relationship between student and faculty members demands more of both. Yet the evaluations furnish a sense of the instructor's style, ethics, knowledge and personality. If high evaluations can be bought by giving high grades or just being an easy instructor, propositions that are not widely supported by evidence, then we already have a problem because the integrity of courses is compromised. This is a
matter for ongoing administrative review and action. For example, it may be sensible to enforce grade distribution requirements on each course.
But why shouldn't we, students and faculty alike, accept the premise that the student is the consumer of our offerings, and therefore should exercise careful judgment in selecting courses? The alternative is for someone else to impose his or her will upon the student, a paternalistic proposition at best. Faculty advising remains an important means of mentoring and augmenting the student's knowledge about courses and programs.
Give students a chance to use this information, and I predict that it will affect — for the better — the delivery of courses. The facts of University life are that few sanctions can be applied to faculty members who are performing poorly in the classroom. Exposing evidence of low performance will cause some personal agony, and yes, some individuals will be unfairly judged. But, most importantly, it will prompt expanded efforts to improve teaching.
Douglas Houston Professor of business
Faculty really don't have anything to hide
Jennifer Maenner (2/2/06) assumes that a faculty member opposed to releasing the results of student evaluations has something to hide. That assumption is pernicious. It suggests that consumerism makes adversaries of faculty and students. Classrooms become arenas of buyers and service-providers in relationships of mutual distrust. I don't see how this improves accountability. As a savvy service-provider, my job would be to create a false desire for an unneeded product, charge an inflated price and encourage dependency. I would care not about individual students but about profits. That is not conducive to education. Whether learning is exciting, dynamic and individual depends upon a fully-engaged relationship between faculty and students, which cannot happen in the alienated environment of the marketplace.
As it applies to Robert Minor, professor of religious studies, the above assumption is simply wrong. Minor consistently receives exceptional student evaluations. His faculty peers have attended his lectures, reviewed his portfolio and judged him to be an excellent instructor who provides students the best of current scholarship. Minor's opposition to the release of student evaluations is a matter of conviction and principle. The level of debate would be raised if supporters granted their opponents a motivation of integrity and not of fear.
Sandra L. Zimdars-Swartz
Professor and chairwoman of religious studies
Opening evaluations breeds academic malls
The call from students for the public release of faculty evaluations under the banner of consumer rights comes as no surprise in a culture where everything and everyone is for sale. Under this market mentality, faculty are seen as being hired by students to deliver knowledge, or better yet a degree, which is a commodity that is simply bought with tuition. "paid for it, it's mine. I don't have to actually work for it," is what we will hear. After all, as a consumer it's XVZ, Inc. that has to earn MY business, not the other way around.
Since administrators, the public and now students are increasingly enamored with the idea of turning the University into a downsized, corporate discount mall, I say let's not fool around. Let's go all the way. We can convert KU into a factory outlet
where storefront departments rent space and compete for customers. Former faculty, reclassified as sales associates, can parade around with corporate logos on their name tags, greeting folks at the door with a friendly smile. The timetable of classes could be transformed into a slick mail order catalog, advertising courses that fit that certain dream lifestyle. And when business is slow, departments can offer discounted degree requirements. I can see it now ... a moving promotional sign streaming across the top of the Fraser Hall Warehouse: "End of Year Clearance Sale-Get your degree at 20 percent off."
Bill Staples
Bill Staples Associate professor of sociology
Economic pressure is a more important issue
As a tenured professor who takes teaching very seriously, I have been disturbed by the terms of the debate about publicizing student evaluations. I'm not particularly concerned about publicizing student evaluations — I've been in places where they were publicized and places where they weren't, and didn't see that much of a difference — but rather with what it means to teach and learn, and the role of tenure.
Students are consumers, knowledge isn't a product, and teachers are neither producers nor distributors. Students and teachers are partners in the business of learning. The basic issue is whether a particular policy promotes that partnership or splinters it.
Tenure is not an invitation to do nothing. Nationally, faculty members — a large minority of whom are tenured — work an average of 55- to 60-hour weeks. And in the state of Kansas, where Regents institutions give raises based solely on merit, faculty members whose research and teaching are not both pretty good find their salaries rapidly
falling behind inflation
As Hector Clark's evaluations showed, one student's most wonderful teacher is another student's lousiest. the real issue is the economic pressure that makes it harder for students and teachers to respond to each other — pressure for larger classes, higher teaching loads, and so on. This is a national issue, it is happening everywhere, and that is what we should be talking about.
Judith Roitman Professor of mathematics
Students should know what they're getting
I am writing in response to comments made by Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics, in an editorial by Tom Moore in your February 6 issue.
According to the piece, Banks claims to be against students having access to instructor evaluations on the premise that such access reflects a "consumer mentality" which she feels does not belong on the campuses of America's colleges. According to Banks, this consumer mentality not only has no place in higher education but it is "anti-academic."
As one of many students who value their dollar as much as their education, I strongly disagree with Banks' comments. After all, what is more academic than students using the intelligence and reasoning they have worked and paid for to make an educated decision about what they want in a professor?
Banks' comments seem to reflect a time period, perhaps some thirty years ago, when students were mainly 18 to 22 years of age and were at a university under the economic umbrella of their parent's wallet. She seems to forget that today's student may or may not fit into this traditional category. She should note that many of us are married, hold down part- or full-time
jobs and even have children. How then can a consumer mentality not be held by those of us who have a genuine consumer interest in our education?
One would not invest their money in a car without prior knowledge of its reliability, nor in a house without having some sort of written history. Why then should students be expected to invest their money into a class without first knowing what kind of professor they can expect once they arrive?
As Moore said, "Students deserve value for their money. They have a right to information which pertains to their education." It's just common sense, and it's a way to make sure you're getting what you're paying for.
Chad Snoddy
Lawrence junior
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.
All letter and guest columns should be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staufer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the absolute right edit, cut to length or out-right reject all submissions. For any questions, call Paul Todd, editorial editor, or Craig Lang, associate editorial editor, at 864-4810.
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AT THE CROWN CENTER ICE TERRACE
Every Thursday night Is Student Night at the Ice Terrace for $3
After a long day hitting the books, there's nothing like hitting The Ice Terrace at Crown Center with all your friends. Every Thurs day night after 5 pm, stud ents can skate for just $3 (skate rental is additional).
CROWN CENTER
Call Now! Charge By Phone:(816)471-0400
Christopher Parkening
RAVEL Rapsodie espagnole
VIVALDI/PUJOL Concerto for Guitar and Orchestra
RODRIGO Concierto de Aranjuez for Guitar and Orchestra
Sponsored by the William T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee
RESPIGHI The Pines of Rome
classical guitarist
ALBINONI/McGLAUGHLIN Adagio
FRIDAY 8 P.M. February 16
SATURDAY 8 P.M. February 17
SUNDAY 2 P.M. February 18
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Concert Comments free to ticketholders one hour prior to each performance
LYRIC THEATRE 11th and Central
THE KANSAS CITY SYMPHONY
William McGlaighlin, conductor
Humann Arts
National Kendall Center
$4 Student
(Tickets on sale 2 hours prior to concert)
Express
KANSAS
Symphony
CLAY
Bravo Broadway Twof
March 12
Silvia Marcovici, violinist
March 22-24
Coming Attractions
The Biggest Sound Around.
To hear selections, call STAR TOUCH 889-STAR (889-7827) and enter 5775.
ELEVENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
Thursday, Feb. 15
Thursday 7:00pm
EXOTICA
WILD AT HEART
Thursday 10:00pm
ALL HUMS SCREENED BY
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Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
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Dead Man Walking® 1:30 4:20 7:10 9:40
Juniper **11:10** 1:30 4:20 7:10 9:50
Broken Arrow® 1:00 4:00 7:00 9:50
Black Sheep® 1:00 4:00 7:00 9:40
DICKINSON
THEATER
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Dickinson 6 2339 South Iow St.
7
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Friday, Feb. 16 - Sunday, Feb. 18
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Thursday, February 15, 1996
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Police officer wakes from eight-year coma
The Associated Press
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — They waited almost eight years, sometimes sitting vigil at the bedside of their son, brother and father, a police officer who took a bullet in the forehead and drifted all that time in the shadows of a coma.
They never gave up hope that Gary Dockery would somehow pull through. And this week it seemed all prayers were answered when he woke up, spoke to his sister and cracked Jokes as if no time had passed.
"I looked up at him and he had a look I had never seen before," Lisa Dockery said through a hospital representative yesterday. "He seemed so at ease and his eyes were wide open.
"I'm your sister," she said. "Uh-huh," he responded.
"You're talking!" she exclaimed.
"There's not but one way to describe it," said family friend Tim Thompson. "It's a miracle of God."
But the miracle may prove an ending rather than a beginning: one last chance to say goodbye. Doctors told the family the pneumonia wracking Dockery's lungs would kill him if he did not have surgery, but anesthesia might sedate forever the last working parts of his brain.
"This isn't a success story," said his son Sean, a little dazed from the emotions of the past days and an onslaught of calls from reporters who learned yesterday of Dockery's apparent recovery. "He's very sick."
On Sept. 7, 1988, Patrol Officer Dockery answered a trouble call in Walden, Tenn., a mountain town 15 miles north of Chattanooga. He was
shot pointblank with a.22caliber derringer by a 911 caller as he stood in the caller's driveway.
The shooter,
Samuel Frank
Downey, now
68, told officers
he'd placed the
bogus call to get
back at police for
reprimanding him about
noise after
neighbors comp
laid in.
"My knees started shaking...when I heard my brother say,'Hi, Buddy.'" Dennis Dockery Brother of coma patient
Downey was sentenced to 37 years in prison and will be eligible for parole this May.
When he awoke Monday, Dockery
say,'Hi,
Buddy.'" Dennis Docke
All those years in a coma, Dockery communicated occasionally by blinking "yes" and "no" answers to questions. But he has no way to
remembered neither the shooting nor taking the Walden police job just three months before. He does recall his divorce, working as a security guard for the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, and the eight years he spent with the Lookout Mountain police.
know Ronald Reagan is no longer president. He was spared O.J. Simpson's murder trial. He has no concept of the compact disc player or the Internet. He'd likely be mystified to learn the United States had waged war against Iraq and has thousands of soldiers keeping the peace in a place that was run by Communists and called Yugoslavia when he was shot.
And now is not the time to make him current, say family members.
"That's stuff not as important as us getting to talk to him," Sean said. "It was like we got a last chance."
Never surrendering hope, his family had kept him on life support at a nursing home. Last week, seriously ill with a lung infection that had worsened to pneumonia, he was transferred to a Chattanooga hospital. His family, expecting the worst, posted someone at his bedside
On Monday, Dockery's fever broke. Without warning, he started to mumble. Then he spoke out distinctly to his sister.
around the clock.
Dennis Dockery flew back from a vacation in Nevada when he got the news about his younger brother.
"My knees started shaking and tears came when I heard my brother say, 'Hi, Buddy,'" Dennis Dockery said.
But Dockery spoke less on Tuesday and not at all on yesterday.
His family faces a dreadful choice: Let the pneumonia run its course, which doctors estimate will kill the gravelly ill Dockery within three days, or permit surgeons to operate on his weakened lungs.
Even if Dockery survives surgery, Sean said, his gunshot-damaged brain may never revive from sedation.
Woodlands track loses revenue race to riverboat gambling
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — The Woodlands got bad financial news this week.
The struggling horse and greyhound track has lost 73 percent of its real estate value in the past 12 months. The news came Tuesday from Wyandotte County officials.
Since then, track officials have not returned messages left by The Associated
Press. Susan Longmire, Woodlands representative, said yesterday track president Bruce Rimbo was in Topeka on business, but she declined to say if he was meeting with Kansas Racing Commission officials or state lawmakers.
Track revenue has dropped more than 50 percent, mainly because of competition from riverboat gambling in Missouri. Revenue is a factor in establishing property value.
In 1990, the Woodlands was valued at $70 million by its owners, but now is appraised at $7.5 million. Last year's appraisal was $28 million.
Woodlands officials have forecasted a $6 million loss this year if the track stayed open.
lature last week provides for a constitutional amendment to legalize electronic games of chance, such as slots and video poker, and companion legislation to implement gambling.
A proposal introduced in the Kansas Legis-
Electronic chance games are allowed only at state-licensed tracks in counties where voters approved.
largest taxpayer, forking over more than $2.7 million per year. The track now is delinquent on its 1995 taxes of $1.7 million, said Mary Ladesic, Wyandotte County treasurer.
With the $7.5 million appraisal, the track's property taxes for this year would be less than $500,000.
The Woodlands was Wyandotte County's
Half of that amount would be due in December, said Ladesic.
KU
KU
Sober Hawks Students Helping Students
- Substance Abuse Evaluations
* Confidential Counseling for individuals, Couples, and Groups
KU
Multicultural Resource Center
ask for Chori on Thursdays 10a.m.-4p.m.
call 864-4350 or 843-4283
IN THE BEGINNING THERE WAS GARY
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Walking the THIN line:
How students balance stress, style and food.
Being the perfect student isn't easy. Do you have high standards? For school? Your image? Your body? The pursuit to be perfect has a price. Emotional burnout, declining physical health, eating disorders, and withdrawal from friends and family are some consequences of walking a thin line. Find out how to cope by attending a special forum with people who understand. Sponsored by Menninger, University of Kansas' Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) and Watkins Health Center, and Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, Inc.
The lineup
- Opening remarks
- Jennifer Kennedy, MD, Menninger
The lineup
Panelists
Question and answer session
Panelsists
* Patricia Roach, LSCSW, Bert Nash*
* Community Mental Health Center,
on the family perspective*
* Cathy Mao, RN, BSN, Lawrence Central
Junior High, on coping with school*
* Myra Strother, MD, KU, on physical concerns*
* Ann Chapman, MSEd, RD, KU, on eating to live*
* Linda Keeler, MD, KU, on recognizing
emotional triggers*
* Barbara Ballard, PhD, KU, on liking yourself*
Taking the first step
Taking the first step
Tuesday, February 20
7 to 8:30 pm
Murphy Hall
Swarthout Auditorium
15th and Naismith Drive
University of Kansas
Use parking garage or Lot 54 across the street.
erms
o live
elf
Questions?
For more information, contact
Menninger at 1-800-351-9058,
extension 6100.
ATTENTION JUNIORS
The deadline for applications for MORTAR BOARD, a senior honor society, is now Friday, February 16, 1996.
You may pick up applications at:
mb
MORTAR BOARD
OUTSTANDING EDUCATOR
Nunemaker 50 Strong Hall OAC, Kansas Union
For more information call Lindsy Myers 865-4122
KOREAN
Samui Nori
THE VIEW CENTER
DRUMMING AND DANCING
SamulNori
THE NEW CENTURY
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents
Percussion Master Class February 14, 1996, 5 p.m.
Tradition meets The Present
New Directions Series Event
Led Center
February 15, 1996, 8 p.m.
STUDENT
Performance for Students Grades 5-12:
Lied Center
February 15, 1996, 10 a.m.
Gripped by the Drum,
Drawn by the Dance
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
MAAAA
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARBTS; Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3477) and all tickmaster中心盒柜 (864-3477) Ticketmaster at (913) 234 4545.
Human Sexuality Forum
Explore the Catholic View of Sexuality. A search for truth.A serious look at:
Spirituality
Reality
♂ ♀
Sexuality
Morality
Saturday, February 17,1996
9:30 am to 3:00 pm For More info. call 843-0357
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center 1631 Crescent Road
Forum is free and open to students, faculty and staff.
FREELUNCH!
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday. February 15, 1996
7A
Yeltsin to try for second term
The Associated Press
YEKATERINBURG, Russia President Boris Yeltsin came home yesterday to announce his political plans in a frigid, industrial city that says it knows him well — but
"He did a very good job here, and his wife used to stand right next to us in line for shoes," said Zoya Kartashova, a tiny pensioner in
believes he has lost touch with its troubles.
Boris Yeltsin
fur boots and a thin purple jacket who was walking home on a crisp cold day.
"Now I actually feel sorry for him
He's alone there and doesn't know how life really is for people. I voted for him last time, but that's it."
Yeltsin, 65, is expected to announce today that he will seek a second presidential term. He trails in nationwide opinion polls and appears to fare only slightly better in his own backyard.
"It's a difficult decision," Yeltsin told reporters at Yekaterinburg's airport, referring to the decision whether to run in the June 16 election.
"It would not mean that I will necessarily be elected," he said. "But we must continue with reforms. We don't have any other choice. There is no road back, and we must finish what we have started."
Russia's provinces have been the last to feel benefits of market reforms, and voters there flocked to the Communists and other opposition parties in December's parliamentary elections.
Yeltsin's trip to Yekaterinburg (yeh-kah-teh-REEN-burg), a city of 2 million people, is the first of what his office said would be many visits to Russia's regions.
The Ural Mountains city, formerly known as Sverdlovsk, was at the heart of the Soviet Union's military industrial complex. It is alling now as Russian industry declines and the military shrinks.
At Sreduralstrol, a huge construction company that Yeltsin ran before going into politics, the past seven years have been rough. The number of projects is down by one-third, said deputy director Konstantin Yellsevev.
Yellseey, who worked with Yeltis, said he sympathized with the job the president faced in rebuilding an entire economy for
150 million people.
Parking in the rear
Parking in the rear
Besides the economy, Yeltsin is widely condemned for the bloody war in Chechnya and the 1983 battle at Russia's parliament, when Yeltsin called in tanks to put down an armed opposition rebellion.
The strongest point in Yeltsin's favor seems to be the perceived lack of other viable, moderate or reformist candidates.
"I would vote for him (Yeltsin) so there could be some calm. Otherwise, things will be shaken up all over again," said Yuri Bezrukov, 56, one of a crew clearing a street already lined by waist-high piles of snow.
Kartashova, the pensioner, said she was too fed up to vote at all. She said she had no use for the Communists because her grandmother and uncle were killed in Soviet purges and their property confiscated.
Dead cats, fake bombs sell films
BONN, Germany — After German men in Ku Klux Klan robes burned a cross in a 1994 TV documentary, investigators went hunting for what they thought was a local chapter of the white-robed racists.
After digging further, prosecutors found that Born had concocted and sold at least 22 documentaries to German television from 1991 until his arrest in December.
The Associated Press
Instead, they uncovered a vast hoax. They say Michael Born, one of Germany's most prolific freelance documentary producers, had some pals dress up like Klansmen because he knew the story would sell.
In one, Born paid an actor to stalk and kill a domestic cat. In another, he hired Albanians to pose as Kurdish fighters. Born interviewed friends and said they were Austrian terrorists. He staged an attack on a supposed Somali village.
Investigators say he sold bogus documentaries to at least three cable TV networks and made at least $204,000. He was arrested Dec. 12 for investigation of fraud, a charge that could bring up to 15 years in prison.
Prosecutor Norbert Weise said Born usually had chosen topics that had elements of truth, then had created his own scenarios so the stories would be more compelling.
"He mixed fiction with reality in his films," Weise said.
It's one of the biggest scandals to hit the German media since 1983, when Stern magazine published excerpts of what turned out to be forged diaries of Adolf Hitler.
Born claimed he was encouraged to fake documentaries by an official at one of the networks and suggested that there are many others who are selling doctored news as they compete for ratings.
Guenther Jauck, host of the RTL cable television program that showed many of Born-sien
Jauck's show and other programs that bought Born's work have filed criminal complaints against the producer for fraud.
In a documentary broadcast on April 26, Born graphically illustrated a new quarry for German hunters — stray cats. Viewers saw a man with a rifle stalking a cat in a wooded area, taking aim and shooting it dead.
segments, insisted he did not know that the videotapes had been fabricated.
According to Weise, the rifle belonged to Born, the cat was from an animal shelter, and the hunter was playing to the camera.
Another Born documentary showed a supposed camp in Turkey of the Kurdish Workers' Party, which has been fighting for an independent homeland. Bearded men of the camp were building a bomb.
Prosecuters say the bomb never was built, and the men weren't even Kurds, let alone guerrillas — they were Albanian actors. And the filming was done in Greece, not Turkey.
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown
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CHINESE NEW YEAR DINNER PARTY
FEATURING CHINESE WEDDING
Date: February 17 (Sat)
Time: 6:30 pm-10:00 pm
Place: ECM Church
Ticket in Advance
$7.00 member
$8.50 non-member
STUDENT SENATE
Door Ticket
$8.00 member
$9.00 non-member
Limited non-member tickets are available at SUA Box Office
Just give a gentle nudge:
Save-A-Sweetheart, February 18-24
If somebody you care about smokes—Save-A-Sweetheart Week is the week to encourage them to get help to quit. It's hard to stop smoking. And we'd like to help without bugging anyone about it. The "No-Nag, No-Guilt, Do-It-Your-Own-Way" Quitting Smoking Program uses a positive approach based on what smokers said would help them quit.
Your special smoker can call us for more information about the program: Health Promotion and Education at 864-9570 There is a $6 charge for the accompanying book.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
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---
8A
1.
Thursday, February 15, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
I will provide a detailed description of the image content without any additional elements. However, please note that specific features are not discernible in this blurred and monochrome image. The focus is on the facial structure rather than the details. If there are any questions about the content or context, feel free to ask.
CHEAT
You just kissed a guy. A guy who is not your boyfriend. You feel guilty. And confused. You call your sister for advice.She says four simple words: "No French, no foul." You suddenly feel better.
1-800-COLLECT Save The People You Call Up To 44%.
NFL
Former Cleveland Brown coach Bill Belichick fired. Page 4.
NHL
More trade rumors for Wayne Gretzky. Page 3.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15.1996
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Tight Jayhawks cut loose against Buffaloes, 85-70
Haase relaxes; Kansas extends home win streak
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
Going into last night's game Jerod Haase was sliding.
He had hit 17 of his last 58 shots. Even though the junior guard ended the game three of 10, he put the breaks on the skid.
Haase hit three field goals, which included two three-pointers, in the second half of fifth-ranked Kansas' 85-70 victory against Colorado in Allen Field House.
"He's the hardest worker on the team," Kansas junior center Scot Pollard said. "When he's not successful, that's just wrong."
But it's not that Haase hasn't been trying. He said he had tried everything, including late evening shooting practice on Saturday after the team returned from its loss at Missouri.
"The bottom line now is that I'm trying to relax," said Haase, one of three Jayhawks in double figures with 10 points.
Coming off the Missouri loss, all the Jayhawks needed to relax in the first half, Kansas coach Roy Williams said.
"I turned to my staff when we went out for the jump ball and I said, 'I've
never seen us this tight," he said about last night's game. "The only thing we lost Saturday was a basketball game. We were worried about what might happen instead of losing ourselves in the game."
It showed in the game's first 20 minutes. The Jayhawks hit only 12 of 39 shots and missed 12 within nine feet of the basket.
That led Williams to insert senior guard T.J. Whatley with 2:04 remaining in the half as well as a fiery speech at intermission.
"I was not a very nice person at
Kansas sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz, who scored a team-high 20 points, and Pollard opened the half with baskets in the paint. Haase followed that with a three-pointer.
wasn't very good looking, wasn't very pleasant," Williams said. "It was the most frustrating game I ever coached in Allen Field House at times."
The last four points of the run came after a technical foul on the Buffaloes. Coming out of a 20-second time-out, they had six men on the floor.
"That's kind of an example of where our heads were tonight," Colorado sophomore center Charlie Melvin said.
Kansas freshman guard Ryan
The Jayh a wks outscored
BIG EIGHT CONFERENCE STANDINGS
Conference All Games
W L Pct. W L Pct.
Kansas 8 1 875 19 2 905
Iowa St. 7 2 750 17 5 773
Missouri 6 4 600 16 8 667
Kansas St. 5 5 500 14 8 636
Oklahoma 4 5 500 13 9 591
Nebraska 3 6 333 15 9 625
Colorado 2 7 250 8 13 400
Okla St. 2 7 222 12 9 571
BIG EIGHT CONFERENCE STANDINGS
the Buffaloaes 54-40 in the second half, moving their record to 20-2 overall and 8-1 in the Big Eight Conference. The Buffaloaes fell to 8-13 and 2-7 in the conference.
Kansas' response to Williams locker room chat came quickly. Kansas scored 11 unanswered points to open the second half and extend its 31-30 halftime lead.
Robertson hit one of the two ensuing free throws and Pollard converted a three-point play to end the possession.
pointer. But the Jayhawks hit another run, scoring eight consecutive points, and their lead didn't dip below double figures again.
Colorado cut Kansas' lead to six, 44-38, with 15:16 remaining when senior forward Mack Tuck hit
three-
Still, the way the Jayhawks won worried Pollard.
"Our minds were still on the negative things," Pollard said. "I don't know if we're having as much fun as I think we should be."
KANSAS
45
COLDRAM
45
VINESA
11
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Kansas sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz grabs a rebounds against Colorado's Dennis Griffin. LaFrentz finished the night with a team high 20 points and eight rebounds.
KANSAS 30
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Whatley's play inspires Kansas
Kansas junior guard Jacque Vaughn attempts to block Colorado freshman guard Chancey Billups.
By Adam Herschman Kansan sportswriter
This time the crowd didn't have to ask for him.
With 2:04 remaining in the first half, Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams looked down his bench and called for No. 14, Kansas senior guard T.J. Whatley. Whatley jogged to the scorer's table, and the quiet Allen Field House crowd became rejuvenated, as did the Kansas Jayhawks.
Whatley received a half-court pass from freshman guard Ryan Robertson, hit the driving layup and was fouled.
Down 27-28 to the Colorado Buffaloes, Kansas needed momentum and Williams was not afraid to call on Whatley.
"I knew one thing, he'd try to do
"I've been ready for this for four years."
T. J. Whatley Kansas senior guard
what I asked him to do," Williams said. "That's the easiest way to be successful around here."
Whatley's basket with 1:41 remaining in the first half put the Jayhawks ahead 29-28. Whatley missed the free throw.
"I've been ready for this for four years. It wasn't really like I was just in total shock, but it was a surprise," Whatley said. "I knew I was in there
for just kind of a lift."
About a minute after his basket, Whatley caused a key turnover and got the crowd fired up as well as his teammates.
"It's the greatest feeling in the world." Whatley said. "Just to hear that crowd and know they're all cheering for you. It's a good feeling."
Kansas sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz said he was a little surprised to see Whatley entering the game so early, but when he was out on the floor he did a great job and played tough defense.
"He did give us a lift in the first half, one that we needed." LaFrentz said.
Whatley has only played three minutes in the Jayhawks' eight Big Eight Conference games this year, until this game. So his early entrance into the game also surprised Kansas
junior center Scot Pollard.
"Well my first thought was, 'Uh-Oh somebody messed up,'" Pollard said. "When he came in he gave us a boost emotionally."
Whatley, one of three seniors on the team, played three minutes and 44 seconds and finished with two points.
"It's his presence that provides the senior leadership," Kansas junior point guard Jacque Vaughn said. "He's been out there in practice with us every day, so he knows how to play."
With 28 seconds remaining in the first half, the crowd gave Whatley a standing ovation as he walked to the bench.
"You don't have to be a great athlete to hustle," Whatley said. "That's what I tried to do when I got out there was hustle."
BRIEF
Women divers record season-best results
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas women's senior diver Michelle Rojohn couldn't have picked a better time to set a season-best score on the one-meter board.
Her score of 452.65 was good enough to win yesterday at the Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships in Oklahoma City.
The win helped Kansas take an early lead in the women's competition. The three-meter board competition is today.
Although Rojoin was pleased with the victory, she knows her touchtest event is coming up next.
Kansas diving coach Don Fearon was pleased with the results of his divers.
"I'm very happy for them," he said. "That's what I wanted out of Michelle and Kenzie." Fearon said that Zeller did much better in the preliminaries, and although Rojoh made mistakes in the afternoon, she corrected them in the evening.
Kansas sophomore Kenzie Zeller also recorded her season-best score with 351.95 points, good enough for third place.
"I'm happy to win, but I want to win both events," she said. "So for now, it's one down and one to go. I can't celebrate too much yet. I have to keep focused."
"It's fun to see them get what they deserve." he said.
This was the second-consecutive year that Rojohn won the one-meter. Last year she posted a 461.95 score but was the only Jayhawk to place.
Rojohn finished third in the three-meter board last year.
Kansas baseball is strong up the middle
Byrd holding up well under rigors of playing football and baseball
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
Last weekend's Duel in the Desert didn't do much to answer the questions the Kansas baseball team had surrounding several key areas.
Junior shortstop Joe DeMarco and senior second baseman Josh Kliner form one of the better double play combinations in the Big Eight Conference. Junior center fielder Isaac Byrd has proven himself capable of handling the rigors that go along with playing two sports and senior catcher Ted Meadows is ready to handle the responsibility of an inexperienced pitching staff.
But it did show that the Jayhawks can expect continued success from its position players in the middle of the diamond.
After spending his freshman year as a reserve, DeMarco was thrust into the starting lineup and responded with a team-high 30 stolen bases. Although his speed was known, his offense came as a surprise. He finished third on the
club in hitting at.302.
"We're really strong up the middle and that's a big advantage," he said.
"It's really important that we're all
DeMarco said he understood the importance of having a strong defensive core.
experienced.
"Speed obviously helps on the basepaths, but it's good for us on defense because we can get after some balls that are hard to get and give the pitcher more confidence."
DeMarco has five hits and seven stolen bases this year.
When he looks to his left he will
Kliner relishes his Cal Ripken Jr-type status.
and 55 RBI en route to a second team All-Big Eight selection. More importantly, he made just four errors in 126 chances.
"I just want to be in the lineup
everyday," he said. "I don't ever
"I just want to be in the lineup everyday. I don't ever want to
come out.
see Kliner. As a matter of fact, any Kansas player will always see Kliner on the field.
Josh Kilner
Kansas second baseman
Last year, he was the only Jayhawk to play in and start all 57 games.
It was his first year at Kansas after spending two years at Cypress Junior College in California.
want to come out. If I keep getting better, then hopefully that won't happen."
He hit .298 with seven home runs
team last year, he led Kansas with a 321 batting average.
When Byrd says he likes to play everyday, he means it. He's been on the field since August since he doubles as a wide receiver in football.
As a rookie on the baseball
Like Kilner, Byrd doesn't want to come out of the lineup. But he admits playing two sports takes its
This year there is added responsibility for Byrd because he will captain an outfield that is without a starting left or right fielder.
toll.
"At the end of last year I was very, very tired. I was really worn out," he said. "But I just fight though it. I don't want to take any games
NY
Isaac Byrd
asking for days off. I want to play."
And the Kansas pitching staff just wants a steady defensive presence behind the plate. They have one in Meadows.
"It's important to have somebody like Ted who knows what he's doing behind the plate," Kansas senior pitcher Clair Bajard said.
But Meadows has some life in his bat as well. Though he hit just .262 last year, he hit .389 with runners in scoring position and .375 in the Big Eight Tournament.
Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall appreciates the work ethic these players bring to the field.
"They're good examples for the rest of the team," he said. "Guys who can play lead by example, and these guys can play."
2B
Thursday, February 15, 1995
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
KANSAS 85. COLORADO 70
COLORADO (8-13)
COLORADO (8-13)
Moore 6-15 2-14, Jensen 2-4 2-3-6, Kritza 0-0 3-4, Billips 6-15 5-21, Frier 2-3 0-0 4, Tuck 6-15 0-13, Melvin 3-5 5-3 9, Griffin 2-0 1-0.
Totals 25-60 15-20 70.
KANSAS (20-2)
LaFrentz 10-16 0-10 20, Pierce 0-8 6-10 6, Pollock 3-7 5-11, Haase 3-10 2-10 4, Vaughn 2-7 2-6, Williams 3-3 2-5 8, Thomas 2-7 0-0 5, Pugh 2-4 2-6, Robertson 1-2-1 2-4, Rayford 2-4 0-4, Pearson 1-3 0-2 0, Whatley 1-3 0-1 2, McGrah 0-0 0 0, Doolan 0-1 1-2 1, Totals 30-76 21-78.5
Hafftime—Kansas 31, Colorado 30. 3-Point goals—Colorado 5-17 (Bilips 4-8, Tuck 1-7, Moore 0-2), Kansas 4-23 (Haase 2-7, Robertson 1-2, Thomas 1-4, LaFrentz 0-1, Whalley 0-1, Pearson 0-2, Pierce 0-4). Fouled out—Kritza, Melvin, Rebounds—Colorado 39 (Billips 9), Kansas 54 (LaFrentz 2), Assists—Colorado 11 (Frier 4), Kansas 24 (Vaughn 8).
Total fouls—Colorado 24, Kansas 20, Technical—Colorado bench. A—16,300.
MENS BASKETBALL SCORES
SOUTH
Alabama 75, Auburn 72
Berry 83, LaGrange 82
Carson-Newman 85, Gardner-Webb 79
Catawba 63, Presbyterian 71
Clark Atlanta 81, Tuskegee 71
Clayton St. 90, Thomas Coll. 70
Coker 89, Belmont Abbey 68
Dist of, Columbia Z4, Bowie St. 70
Ultralink V9, Virginia 96, Washington & Lee 77
East Carolina 88, William & Mary 87
Elion 79, Mars Hill 75
Florida St. 79, N. Carolina St. 66
Fort Valley St. 78, Patria 75
Georgia Coll. 86, Kennesaw 77
High Point 79, Queens, N.C. 76, OT
James Madison 59, N.C. Wilmington 58, OT
Kentucky 86, Georgia 73
Lander 57, Francis Marion 55
Lees-McRae 83, St. Andrew's 72
Lenoir-Rhyne 70, Ward 64
Longwood 81, Erskine 61
Marshall 95, Appalachian St. 64
Maryville, Tenn. 85, Emory & Henry 75
Morgan St. 77, N. Carolina A&T 74
N.C. Asheville 76, Wofford 67
North Carolina 53, Clemson 48
Old Dominion 93, George Mason 92, OT
S.C.-Spartanburg 76, Augusta 49
South Carolina 57, Georgia Southern 45
St. Augustine's 87, Norfolk St. 80
Tennessee 73, LSU 65
VMI 90, W. Carolina 73
MIDWEST
Albion 84, Olivet 66
Augsburg 63, St. John's, Minn. 60
Ball St. 82, Cent. Michigan 75
Bowing Green 72, E. Michigan 70
Capital 78, Hiram 61
Carleton 76, Hamline 5
Carroll, Wis. 59, St. Norbert 57
Case Western 93, Oberlin 87
Cent. Missouri 88, Lincoln, Mo. 78
Concordia, ill. 91, Ill. Benedictine 78
DaePaw 79, Frankland 71
Evansville 73, Indiana St. 52
Fort Hayts 71, 104, McPherson 71
Greenville 91, Fontbonne 86
Hanover 59, Anderson, Ind. 54
Hope 92, Adrian 74
Illinois 93, Northwestern 62
Illinois St. 74, Drake 52
Illinois Tech 72, Trinity Christian 67
Ind.-Pur.-Indpls. 88, Indiana Tech 97
Indiana 72, Penn St. 54
John Carroll 75, Baldwin-Wallace 71
Kalamazoo 77, Alma 72
Kansas 85, Colorado 70
Kansas Westyn 88, Ottawa, Kan. 70
Kent 86, Akron 63
Lake Erie 68, Penn St.-Behrend 60
Madonna 98, Concordia, Mich. 78
Malone 87, Tiffin 73
Marquette 63, Crestion 57
Millikin 90, North Park 78
Minn-. Duluth 79, Bemidji St. 60
Morrie .Morris 80, Winona St. 92
Minnesota 64, Michigan St. 63, ZOT
Missouri-Rolla 60, Mo. -Louis St. 59
Mount Western 66, Southern 60
Mount Union 66, Marietta 62
NE Missouri 66, NW Missouri St. 58
Nebraska Weslyn 78, Central 59
North Central 63, Carthage 77
Northern S.T., D.S. 69, SW Minnesota 93, O
Ohio Northern 65, Heidelberg 62
Ohio U. 72, Toledo 60
Otterbein 92, Muskingum 60
Pittsburg St. 81, SW Baptist 76
St. Ambrose 93, Clarke 78
St. Francis, 93, Purdue-Calumet 75
Sterling 88, Bethel, Kan. 83
Telloy Marycrest 48, Viterbar 47
Trinity, Ill. 127, Realph93
Tulane 77, Lestau 51 Louis 51
Tulsa 84, S. Illinois 75, OT
W. Michigan 76, Miami, Ohio 65
Wabash 82, Rose-Hulman 73
Wilmington, Ohio 66, Denison 64
Wis. Lutheren 72, Lakeland 55
Wis.-Green Bay 55, Loyola, III. 39
Wis.-Oskosh 74, Wis.-Stevens Pt. 66
Wis.-Platteville 75, Wis.-Whitewater 62
Wis.-Riv. Falls 71, Wis.-Lacrosse 66
Wittenberg 82, Ohio Westlyn 55
Wooster 48, Kenyon 43
Wright St. 65, Cleveland St. 54
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas 79, Mississippi 73
Houston 86, Texas Christian 82
Incarneate Word 95, Mary Hardin-Baylor 79
Iowa St. 70, Oklahoma 58
Mc Murry 88, Howard Payne 18
Oral Roberts 70, Mo.-Kansas City 59
Rice 71, Southern Meth. 70
Texas 69, Texas A&M 50
Texas Lutheran 106, Concordia, Texas 86
Texas Tech 78, Baylor 72
TV
SPORTS WATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Thursday. (schedule subject to change and-or blackouts);
(All times Central)
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15
6:30 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, Purdue at Ohio AA
PRIME — NCAA Basketball, La Salle at Massachusetts
WGN — NBA Basketball, Chicago at Detroit
8:30 p.m.
ESPN NCAA Basketball.
ESPN2 — NCAA Basketball, Wake Forest at Maryland
9:30 p.m.
PRIME NCAA Basketball, Arlington
10 p.m.
ESPN2 NCAA Basketball,
Wyoming at Texas-El Paso
11 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA Basketball, UNLV at Pacific
NOTES AND QUOTES
Kansas volleyball coach Karen Schonewise announced the signing of two preps to the Jayhawk volleyball team on Monday morning. Mary Beth Albrecht and Kristi LaRosh both have signed national letters of intent to play for Kansas beginning in the fall 1996 season.
Albrecht, a native of St. Charles, Mo., is a four-year letterwinner of Duchesne High School. She was first team all-state selection in 1995 and an honorable mention in 1994.
LaRosh, a native of Tonganoxie,
is a three-letterwinner for Coach
Chris Herron.
Both are members of National Honor Society.
"I don't fault the fans for feeling the way they did. I have a different feeling for the media that fed the frenzy. I have private thoughts about the politicians." — Art Modell.
"I can't believe I'm taking a
■ "I can't believe I'm taking a check from someone like you." — Bill Murray to Bob Allen, chairman of the board at AT&T.
"It's time for me to leave the game I love so much
"It's a hard thing to say. It's an easy thing to say." - Dave Winfield, announcing his retirement from baseball."
PRO BASKETBALL.
National Basketball Association
Atl Times CST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L P Pot GB L1O Streak Home Avery Cow
Orlando 36 58 42 37 81 7 Lowe 2 W 18 6 8 12 8 19-10
New York 30 16/32 6/13 3/7 W 2 Won 18 6 8 12 18-10
Washington 22 25 46 48 12 4-6 Lost 14 6-7 6-18 11-19
Miami 22 27 449 13 5-7 Lost 1 5-10 17-11 13-16
New Jersey 19 29 308 5/13 3-7 Won 1 13 8-21 16-15
Philadelphia 10 36 217 2/3 W-7 Won 2 11 4-8 18-23
Philadelphia 10 36 217 2/3 W-7 Won 2 11 4-8 18-23
Central Division
Chicago 43 5 896 12 - 8-2 Won 23 20 10-5 24-1
Indiana 31 8 766 12 - 8-2 Lost 2 19 4-1 19-1
Cleveland 20 27 574 15½ - 6-4 Won 5 16 11-12 17-14
Atlanta 28 27 574 15½ - 6-4 Won 5 16 11-12 17-14
Detroit 23 22 511 16½ - 4-6 Won 15 15 8-14 13-15
Charlotte 23 22 511 16½ - 4-6 Won 15 15 8-14 13-15
Milwaukee 18 28 391 24½ - 4-6 Lost 10 10-14 8-14 9-17
Toronto 14 32 292 24½ - 4-6 Lost 10 10-14 8-14 9-17
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division
W L Pct GB 81% L4 Streak Home Away Cont
San Antonio 31 16 674 8/14 7-10 Win 1 Home 19 21 6
Uah 33 16 673 7/3 3-3 Win 5 Won 18 4 15 12
Houston 32 16 674 1/4 5-1 Won 1 Win 18 4 15 12
Denver 20 28 417 12 1/4 4-6 Loss 1 12 10 8 12
Denver 16 13 341 12 1/4 4-6 Loss 1 10 10 8 12
Minnesota 14 32 304 17/15 4-7 Loss 1 9 12 5 20 11
Vancouver 10 36 213 17/15 4-7 Loss 1 7 12 5 20 12
Seattle 35 12 745 - 9-1 Won 3 W 20-2 15-10 22-5
Lakeland 28 16 956 - 7-1 Won 3 W 10-2 15-10 12-5
Sacramento 24 21 533 10 8-2 Lost 4 Lost 1 9-14 13-12
Colorado 21 18 956 12 8-3 Lost 4 Lost 1 9-14 13-12
Phillips 22 26 1458 12 7-3 Lost 12-13 12-11 11-17
Golden State 22 26 458 13 6-4 Lost 14-10 8-16 10-13
Clifornia 18 16 956 13-12 6-4 Lost 10-15 10-13
Wednesdav's Games
Thursday's Games
Indiana at New Jersey 7:30 p.m.
Detroit at Philadelphia 8:15 p.m.
New York at Chicago 8:15 p.m.
Sacramento at Vancouver 10:00 p.m.
Atlanta at L.A. Lakers 10:30 p.m.
Galaxy at Golden State 10:30 p.m.
Dearborn to 10-8-04 at Rancho, Ontario, 6 p.m.
Denver to 10-8-04 at Denver, Colorado,
Chicago at Detroit, 8:90 p.m.
Washington at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m.
San Antonio at Houston, 7:30 p.
Dallas at Utah, 8 p.m.
Phoenix at Portland, 9 p.
Friday's Games
Philadelphia at New York, 6:30 p.m.
Indiana vs. Washington at Baltimore, 6:30 p.m.
Milwaukee at Oakland, 6:30 p.m.
Denver at Chickapati, 6 p.m.
Chicago at Minnesota, 7:30 p.m.
Golden State at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m.
Phoenix at Seattle, 9 p.m.
Atlanta at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
Dallas at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.
Boston at Sacramento, 9:30 p.m.
PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League
Expanded Glance
By The Association Press
AT All Times CBS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
N.Y. Rangers 33 13 10 W L 7 P Bpfs GF GA Home 1-9 Away 1-19 Div 9-2
Florida 33 15 17 7 73 89 149 19-5 17-4 14-10 13-4 5-1
Philadelphia 31 16 15 7 73 89 149 19-5 17-4 10-9 14-1- 9-5
Washington 27 21 17 7 61 158 139 16-1 18-3 11-13 8-2 9-2
New Jersey 27 23 17 7 61 158 139 16-1 18-3 11-2 10-9 8-2
Tampa Bay 22 24 18 8 52 161 189 13-11 10-14 9-1-3 4-10-1
N.Y. Islanders 22 31 18 8 52 161 189 13-11 10-14 9-1-3 4-10-1
Pittsburgh 33 18 24 4 70 252 184 22-6 18-5 11-14-1 13-2 13-0
Montreal 31 28 14 6 70 252 184 22-6 18-5 11-14-1 13-2 10-9
Hartford 23 25 6 6 52 157 171 12-9 16-13 11-6-1 4-0-1
Booston 22 23 6 6 52 157 181 19-3 16-13 6-1-4 8-0-1
Buffalo 22 28 4 4 8 45 156 173 14-13 8-17-1 8-6-1
Ottawa 12 48 12 48 12 48 12 18-2 11-3 8-2-0 3-1-1
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
Pacific Division
Colombia 30 16 10 10 72 191 15 15-7 15-11 10-4 9-
Vancouver 21 16 11 70 524 190 19 15-7 15-13 9-4 10-4
Calgary 20 18 11 51 163 174 12-15 8-14 6-18 9-10
Los Angeles 18 27 12 48 189 1210 13-15 8-14 6-18 9-6
Toronto 18 27 12 48 189 1210 13-15 8-14 6-18 9-6
Anaheim 19 31 1 5 43 153 183 11-14 8-17 6-13 7-10
San Jose 13 31 5 43 172 124 11-14 8-17 5-21 4-12
Tuesday's Games
Washington 3, Cajagay 2
St. Louis 3, Tampa Bay 2
Detroit 9, Los Angeles 4
Vancouver 5, Winnipeg 4
BB
Boston at Hatton, 7 p.m.
Los Angeles at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m.
San Diego at Santa Monica, 7:30 p.m.
San Jose at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.
Anaheim at Edmonton, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday's Games
San Jose at Ottawa, 6:30 p.m.
Calgary at N.Y. Islanders, 6:30 p.m.
Montreal at N.Y. Rangers, 6:30 p.m.
INTRAMURALS
INTRAMURAL POLL5
JOCK'S NITCH'S MEN'S TOP 20
| Team | Record | Prvs |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Phi Delt 1 | 7-0 | 1 |
| 2. U Bet | 6-1 | 2 |
| 3. The Aerial Display | 7-1 | 3 |
| 4. Savvy Veterans | 3-1 | 4 |
| 5. Phi Psi | 3-1 | 5 |
| 6. Up Yours | 2-0 | 6 |
| 7. Dream Team | 2-0 | 8 |
| 8. AKL | 3-1 | 13 |
| 9. Drug Dealers | 5-1 | 11 |
| 10. Pike | 4-1 | 7 |
| 11. Phi Delt 2 | 5-1 | 12 |
| 12. Beta | 2-0 | 14 |
| 13. ZBT | 4-1 | 15 |
| 14. Delta Upsilon | 3-1 | 16 |
| 15. Jobby Wooby Lo b | 2-0 | 18 |
| 16. Pimpin' Aint Bad | 2-0 | NR |
| 17. Outside The Arc | 2-1 | 17 |
| 18. Amini Owls | 2-0 | 19 |
| 19. Staff Infection | 1-0 | NR |
| 20. Men Off Missions | 2-0 | NR |
HASTINGS' WOMEN'S TOP FIVE
HASTING WOMEN'S TOP FIVE
1. 4U2NV 3-0 1
2. Alpha Gamma Delta 2-1 2
3. KUVB 1-0 5
4. Kappa Alpha Theta 2-0 NR
5. Dangerous Damseles 2-0 NR
1. Smooth Strokers 3-0 1
2. Diesel and Co. 2-0 2
3. The Big Hurt 2-0 3
Note: Records include the Pre-Holiday tournament. Chad Rader, not the sponsors, compiled the rankings.
HASTINGS' CO-RECTOP THREE
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Colorado at Tampa Bay, 8:30 p.m.
Washington at Detroit, 8:30 p.m.
Boston at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.
Anheuser at Vancouver, 9:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Buffalo, 6:30 a.m.
Colorado at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m.
Toronto at Washington, 7 p.m.
Detroit at Saint Louis, 7 p.m.
Edmonton at Dallas, 7 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Wenning, 9 p.m.
KU Student Recreation Center
●
Feb 27 & 28. Your Vote Counts
It's in your court
If approved your fee will provide...
- The design and construction of the New Rec Center
- A Recreation facility open 18 hrs per day during the week and 141/2hrs on the weekend
- Unlimited student use
- Low cost Family Membership
O
00 11 00
- One year Free alumnus membership to students who pay fees fall '96-'99
- Over 150 new student Jobs
How To Vote ...
- Bring Your Current KU ID to one of the above locations on Feb.27 & 28 from 8 am to 4:30 pm
- Strong Hall
- Wescoe Hall (3 polling sites)
- Robinson Gym
- Where to Vote...
- Kansas Union
↑
- Burge Union
VOTE.
THURSDAZE fresh flavor Ladies Night $1 Pitchers $1 Drinks
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 15, 1996
3B
Women's tennis gets out of town
Team will go against Big East opponents, travel to New York
By Spencer Duncan Kansan sportswriter
The No. 25 Kansas women's tennis team has hit the road for the first time this season.
The Jayhawks are scheduled to compete in two meets this weekend in Syracuse, N.Y., against Syracuse University and Boston College.
"It's a lot easier playing at home," said Maria Abatjoglou, sophomore. "Most of us have traveled before so we are used to it."
On Saturday, the Jayhawks will take on Boston College at 11 a.m. The teams did not play each other last year, and Kansas is looking forward to playing some unknown competition.
"I have never played them," Abatjoglou said. "But everybody we play is tough. It's going to be hard."
On Sunday, the Jayhawks will face Syracuse at 11 a.m. Kansas defeated Syracuse, No. 43, last year. They
"I haven't played them. But everybody we play is tough. It's going to be hard."
Maria Abatjoglou Kansas tennis sophomore
hope to do the same this time.
Last year, sophomore Christie Sim,
now ranked No. 74 nationally,
defeated Syracuse's Nicole Strinadova, then No. 8. The win of an unranked freshman, Sim, against a ranked player was a major upset.
This year, the two just might meet again.
But Sim is not thinking about that.
But Sam is not thinking about that. "It doesn't really matter who I play," Sim said. "I am just trying to win."
Kansas is scheduled to participate in singles and doubles competition
at both meets. Among the players for Kansas will be Sim and No. 7 junior Kylle Hunt. In doubles, the 2. No team of Hunt and junior Jennie Atkerson also will compete.
The Jayhawks have not competed in two weeks, and the players are anxious to play anywhere.
"We kind of wanted to play last weekend," Abatjoglou said. "We were coming off of a big win against Notre Dame, and we wanted to keep our momentum going."
The team will have another week off after this weekend, but then the Jayhawks will play nonstop until after the NCAA tournament in May. The long stretch can get tiring, the players said, but it is also something the teams look forward to.
"It's better for us not to have a weekend off," Sim said. "It keeps us motivated and keeps us going."
The teams' goals now are not to drop a match and to remain nationally ranked.
"We did not look good our first match," Abatjoglou said. "But each match we are improving and learning things about each other. The momentum is going our way."
Gretzky may be headed to Rangers
Rumors fly concerning soon-to-be free agent
The Associated Press
DETROIT — Wayne Gretzky to the New York Rangers? Could be
A new round of trade rumors involving the NHL's career scoring leader surfaced Tuesday night when a Las Vegas radio station reported Gretzky was headed from the Los Angeles Kings to the Rangers.
"If the Kings want to talk trade, we are interested," Rangers general manager Neil Smith told The Canadian Press. "Discussions I have had specifically with the Kings have been that, if and when they are ready to trade Wayne, that we would certainly like to enter into the discussions. That has been the extent of it."
The Rangers have made no secret of their desire to acquire Gretzky and reunite him with former Edmonton teammate and close friend Mark Messier. The pair led the Oilers to
four Stanley Cups between 1984 and 1988.
Kings general manager Sam McMaster said he was listening to all offers.
PETER BURTON
"We are listening to trade offers for everybody, including
Wayne Gretzky
Wayne Gretzky," McMaster said after the Kings' 9-4 loss to the Red Wings Tuesday night.
McMaster said the Rangers wanted him to contact them if the Kings decided to trade Gretzky.
Kings coach Larry Robinson was unaware of a pending deal.
"I know nothing of it," he said. "I spoke to Sam before the game. He didn't say anything. Wayne is a Los Angeles King. As far as I know, he'll remain a Los Angeles King."
But for how long?
Gretzky, who last month said he wanted to be traded if the Kings didn't quickly become a Stanley Cup
contender, sounded as if something would happen soon.
"Well, it's hard for everyone," Gretzky said. "It's gotten to the point where its probably better for everyone if something happens.
"I talked to Rogie," Gretzky said, referring to Kings president Rogie Vachon. "He said they're talking every day. So we'll just wait and see what happens. It's a tough position for them to be in, too. I'm a free agent in two months."
Center Ray Ferraro and left wing Luc Robitaille were the latest names mentioned in a deal for the 35-year-old Gretzky.
The NHL trading deadline is March 20.
The Rangers aren't the only team interested in Gretzky. The St. Louis Blues have publicly stated their interest in him. The Chicago Blackhawks also are reportedly interested.
SportsFan Radio Network in Las Vegas reported Tuesday night that two of its sources, who asked to remain anonymous, said the Gretzky trade to the Rangers would be made by the end of the week.
Don't be misled by people claiming they "studied at EXTREMUS." There's only one place you'll find EXTREMUSTrained piercers and EXTREMUS-quality service.
If you want EXTREMUS quality, you gotta make the trip.
CAR RACING
Voted
KC's Best
PitchWeekly
New Times
1996
Voted KC's Best PitchWeekly New Times 1996
EXTREMUS SM
Body Arts
4037 Broadway KCMO
(816) 756-1142
Cancun
864-9500
YOUR SPRING BREAK PARTY WEEK INCLUDES:
- Round trip flight from Kansas City
- Round trip flight to hotel
- Hotel accommodations
- FREE welcome parties & club admission,
- FREE entrance fee
- the hotest spring break hotels and dance club
- professional staff on location.
(All except government departure taxes and fees.)
Precision Piercings by Mick Noland & Sara Springs
FROM JUST $329
FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS, CALL
1-800-328-SAVE
GUARANTEED CHOICE HOTEL
MONEY BACK FLEEDEL
10% GUARANTEE
ESCROW
All payments for charter flights are directly on the carrier book and we are not accepting you as a guest with your ticket.
AMERICA'S BEST STUDENT VACATIONS!
Flightsto Cancun are Public Charter. The charter operator is Take A Break Student Travel. The direct air carrier are Paradise Airways and Vincenza Air Service. An OpenAire's Option Plan is required.
When you're in pain everything is an emergency. And whether it's a smashed thumb, a bad cut, or sudden sickness —we're here for you until 8 p.m. weekdays and 4:30 p.m. weekends.
PETER KUYTEN
M. D., University of Kansas, 1977 Coordinator of Urgent Care Board Certified in Family Practice Board Certified in Emergency Medicine
William L. Brandenberger
We have personnel specially trained to give you the urgent medical care you need. Sometimes 911 is the best solution, but for the smaller, urgent pains—we won't take your
HEALTH Since 1906 Watkins Caring For KU CENTER
Emergency!
ambulance ride.
LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS
842-8665 2868 Four Wheel Dr.
COKE
The
Wheeo
Thursday, Friday, & Saturday $2.00 Cheeseburger & Fries All Cans $1.50
REFOUND
SOUND
1-913-842-2555
BUY-SELL TRADE
823 MASS.
LAWRENCE, KS
Thursday, Friday, & Saturday
$2.00 Cheeseburger
& Fries
All Cans $1.50
The
Wheel
507 W. 14th
$1.50 Coronas Every Thursday
Every Thursday in February. only at the
Barefoot Iguana
---
s Every Thursday in February. only at the Barefoot Iguana
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For all your repair needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
9th & Iowa • 749-1666 • Hillcrest Shopping Center
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
EAGLE
Applications for WORKSTATION SPACE in the Kansas Union OAC Office for 1996-1997 are now available.
Registered Student Organizations may pick up an application in the Kansas Union at the OAC Office or the SUA Office on Level 4.
DEADLINE
Return Applications to Union Administration Office by 5:00 pm on Wednesday, FEBRUARY 21.
PIZZA PAPA JOHN'S
Carryout Special
One Large
One Topping
$5.99
carryout only
Better Ingredients • Better Pizza
One Large One Topping
865-5775
$6.98
2233 Louisiana (23rd & Louisiana) Free Delivery
NEW HOURS:
Sun 12pm-2am
Mon-Tues 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Add a Second Pizza of Equal or Lesser Value for
$5.00
One Large All the Meats or Garden Special
Free Pepperoncini & Special Garlic Sauce
Two Large All the Meats or Garden Special
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offers.
Valid only at participating locations.
New enlistment sales tax; Additional taxes
$9.96
$19.9%
Free Pepperoncinis & Special Garlic Sauce
AIRWALK FOOTWEAR
Two Tens for Ten
Two Small
Two Toppings
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offers.
Valid only at participating locations.
Nearly all pays applicable tax, additional loopsing
$10.00
Free Pepperoncinis & Special Garlic Sauce
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offers.
Valid only at participating locations.
Only pays all applicable sales tax. Additional tppings
[trust your judgment]
the
jim
shoe
Shark's Surf Shop
813 Mass. 841-8289
A
4B
Thursday, February 15, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Horoscopes
Today's Birthday (Feb. 15). Be practical this year and you'll be able to do more. Start right now by setting career goals. Don't hesitate if you have to get more training; an educational setting could nurture true love. Invest in your future in March and again in July. In August, heed you partner's advice. A reunion could spark new romance with an old friend in December. Use what you've learned to pay a debt and start anew next January.
By Linda C. Black
Aries (March 21-April 19). A social gathering could produce a valuable business tip. Don't form a partnership today but a friendship should turn out fine. You may be attracted to a person who can help your career. That's a challenging but interesting relationship.
Taurus (April 20-May 20). You may be stuck in a stalemate with your partner. To make matters worse, you may be under pressure to learn something you don't even want to know! Talking with a group of good friends will help release your frustrations, and tonight's the time to do it.
Gemini (May 21-June 21). Even the most constructive criticism could backfire. You might create an impression just the opposite from the one you intended. Shrug off an insensitive remark yourself. Better check on money in a joint account. It may be leaking out.
Cancer (June 22-July 22). Even within
strict rules and regulations you might into a way to do something nobody else thought possible. Talk out your goals with a friend who knows more about business than you do. In romance, tell the one thing you've been holding back about money.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). If the problem has never been solved before, it could take a solution that's never been tried. Don't wait too long. Most conditions are in your favor but hard work is also required. If you're looking for a new love, investigate a whole new area.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sep. 22). If you're struggling with a new program, it should start getting easier soon. In romance, this is a good evening to listen. A friend may be having problems. If the situation is financial, don't offer money. Give plenty of free advice!
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). If there's something you've been putting off, do it. It may be easier than you thought. Balance a conflict between home and work by giving domestic chores top priority. Meet a new friend tomorrow night instead, and it will go more smoothly.
*Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). A problem at home is most likely because of stubbornness. Listen to the other person's opinion even if you already know you don't agree. Although a romance with a co-worker might be fun, it probably won't last long. Stick with one who
understands you better.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Be careful with your financial resources. Don't spend money on clothes that could help your career if you need something at home. Send your good idea off in a letter during the next couple of days. After that, other matters may require your attention.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). If you're thinking of buying a new gadget wait until tomorrow or the next day. Right now, finish up something else you're doing. Avoid an explosion in romance tonight. If the relationship is worth keeping, don't attack the other's obvious weakness.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Pay your taxes or other fees this morning. Once they're out of the way you'll be more creative. There are other deadlines that have to be met, too. You may not have much time for your pet projects until after the other stuff is done.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Older people will be a good source of information today. Discuss a problem and you may find out what you're doing wrong. Don't spend all your money on gifts for somebody you love. You may have forgotten expenses that are coming soon.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
Dilbert By Scott Adams
HERE'S THE REVISED STANDARD EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT. SIGN IT OR BE FIRED.
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
"THIS AGREEMENT IS BETWEEN THE COMPANY (HEREAFTER REFERRED TO AS 'THE ONLY COMPANY THAT WOULD EVER HIRE YOU') AND YOU (HERE-AFTER CALLED 'PUDDING HEAD')."
IT SEEMS TO HAVE A BIT OF ATTITUDE
OUR LAWYERS
TURNED ON
US. I SUSPECT
RABIES.
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
A
Spring cleaning visits Baltimore early
"We've had some success with Bill, including an 11-5 playoff team
Modell redecorates Browns' new home; removes Belichick
The Associated Press
BALTIMORE — Art Modell has a new home. Now he needs a new coach.
"The move to Baltimore offers us a new beginning, a fresh start," Modell said in a statement. "And we want to do everything we can to get to a higher level of play as soon as we can.
As expected, the owner of the NFL's Baltimore franchise, formerly the Cleveland Browns, fired coach Bill Belichick yesterday but did not name a replacement.
in 1994. However, I believe to get to the next level, a change at head coach is necessary."
Modell was en route to Baltimore this afternoon and not immediately available for further comment.
Ted Marchibroda, who coached in Baltimore during the 1970s and led the Indianapolis Colts to the AFC
Joe Bugel and San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator Pete Carroll are also possibilities.
"...I believe to get to the next level, a change at head coach is necessary."
championship game in 1995, is considered a candidate to replace Bellichick.
Art Modell
Owner of Baltimore's NFLfranchise
Don Shula, the winningest coach in NFL history, has removed himself from the list of candidates.
The Brown's went 5-11 last season, losing seven of their final eight games after Mode ll announced
intention to take the franchise to Baltimore. It was Cleveland's fourth losing season in five years under Belichick.
NFL
The 43-year-oldBeldelichick was 37-45 with t he Cleveland Browns. He took
over the team in 1911 after 12 seasons with the New York Giants where he rose to defensive coordinator. He went 6-10 in his initial season at Cleveland.
Oakland Raiders assistant coach
The Brown's, a wild-card entry, beat New England before losing to Pittsburgh in the second round.
After two straight 7-9 seasons, the Brownsoared into the playoffs in 1994 behind a defense that surrendered an NFL-low 204 points.
Bianchi
Mountain Road/Cross
FINEST QUALITY BICYCLES STARTING AT $235
TERRAPLANE
BICYCLES & GOODS
EST. 1908
916 MASSACHUSETTS ST. 841-6642
Bucky's
9th & Iowa • 842-2930
Double Cheeseburger
99¢
Ice Cream Cone
49¢
chocolate, vanilla & twist
*Limited Time Offer
Bianchi Mountain Road/Cross
FINEST QUALITY BICYCLES STARTING AT $235
TERRAPLANE
BICYCLES & GOODS
EST. 1958
916 MASSACHUSETTS ST. 841-6642
STATE
TIN PAN ALLEY
Q
BUY A COMPUTER SYSTEM
TIE
FIGHTER
TIN PAN ALLEY
BUY A COMPUTER SYSTEM
GET YOUR CHOICE OF SOFTWARE
FREE
MICROTECH WARRIOR 2 BY COMBAT
TIE FIGHTER
When you buy a complete system from Microtech Computers, choose one free piece of software ($60 value or less) from the 100's we have in stock. Limit one per purchase. Offer not valid with other specials.
QUAKE & MAGIC THE GATHERING
ARE COMING SOON
MICROTECH COMPUTERS
2540 Iowa
842-2667
It's Your PARTY
1601 W.23rd 749-3455
SHOWOFFS
Body Piercing Studio
Leather • Jewelry • Lingerie
12 E. 8th 12-8 p.m. 838-3366
LAWRENCE
AUTOMOTIVE
DIAGNOSTICS
Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care
"We StandBehind Our Work, and WE CARE!"
842-8665
2858 Four Wheel Dr.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
1, Trade &
ED
ts
"THRIFTY THURSDAY!" SAVE BIG BUCKS! From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza
(of course!)
Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area)
火
842-3232
14th & OHIO(UNDER THE WHEEL)
chip me -------
Thrifty Thursday
Special
For a small pizza (add tops only 75¢). Order 2 or more for free delivery.
Only $4.00
(carry out only)
Good Thursday Only
PYRAMID
Y
100s Announcements
Classified Directory
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
男 女
X
300s
Merchandise
200s Employment
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
310 Want to Buy
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
400s Real Estate
235 Typing Services
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
-----
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, sex, handicap, familial status or orientation, sex, handicap, familial status or discrimination.*
100s Announcements
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against person or group of persons based on race, color, religion, sexual orientation, nationality, disability or further. The Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas law or regulation.
P
Need Cash?
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
We loan cash on almost anything of value, CDs, VCRs, TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence's a most liberal loan company. JYAHWAK PAWN & JEWELRY W 8th, W6ch 749-1019
110 Business Personals
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
DELIVERY
864-9500
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
Classified Policy
120 Announcements
7. w/ash ALY DAY EVERY DAY. Intermediate Lea-
mur (80th) and (90th) across the school from Dairy
街.
SPRING BEAKE BRANCA City Beach. Florida from $94 Per Person Rate, Tiki Bar Birth. Biscayne Beach HI $165
Spring break惊喜,Cancun and Jamaica 11.19% lowest price package! 7 nights, air and hotel from $429.00
$80 on food and drinks!
http://www.northwesttravel.com/1-400-753-2600
Spring Break - Price WAR!
CANT BEAT THIRT! South Island Beachfront Beach includes Party Package! (1-800-Hp Patr)
(1-800-Hp Patr) www.studentexas.com
http://studentexas.com
Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise 7 days @ $295.
Includes 15 meals an 6 free party great Beaches/
night life leaves from Ft. Lauderdale://http://www.
springbreaktravel.com/1-800-678-6388.
HOT SPRING BREAK TRIPS
CANCUN! PADDE! BEIZE!
FREE FOOD @ DREAM PACKAGES
http://student.udavtravel.com
120 Announceements
Spring Break Pamania City $ 8 days, room w/kitchen,
$119.00 up to best baskets? * nights in Key West, $250.00
Coconat Beach Hilton ( great beaches, near Disney) $
119.00 up to best baskets? * nights in Key West, $250.00
spiritbreak.pamania.com
**SPRING BREAK'96**
With only 1 week to live - DON'T BLOW IT!
BOOK NOW!
Torida & Patré $ 109 Bahamas $ 359 Jamaica/Cancun
Organize a group - TRAVEL FREE
SunSplash Tours 1-800-426-7710
ASK YOURSELF THIS:
Who pays for AT&T, Sprint, and MTC's multi-billion-dollar advertising and telemarketing campaigns? YOU DO! The 6th largest telecommunications company in the U.S. doesn't advertise or bother you with it, just saves you money on long distance in Kansas, the U.S., and world-wide! Free information: (800) 795-7723.
The Best Way to Earn
FAST CASH
$15 each time you donate plasma! Up to $135 a Month
NABI
816 W24TH
749-5750
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, February 15, 1996
5B
120 Announcements
SPRING IN SUNWINS CRS NEWS WEEDERS BREAK
AFFORDABLE
24H
UNDER
$69
PARTY
15th
Sellout
Year!
SOUTH PADE 1 ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
KEY WEST
STEAMBOAT
VAIL /BEAVER CREEK
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
130 Entertainment
Free party room for 20-390 at Johnny's #842-6377
MIRACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tickets on sale starting at 49.98 and up.
10/10 Hafell, HA-7604
Spring Break 1996
TRAVEL FREE!!
Jamalca, Cancun, Bahamas
Panama City, Daytona, Padre
** Great low, low prices
** Free Trip on only 15 sales
Call for a FREE
information packet!
Sun Splash Tours
1-800-426-7710
140 Lost and Found
Kilton found near 11th & Indiana. 3-4 months old. Call:
865-2801
男 女
200s Employment
Looking for someone to yard work and farm clean-
ment. Please call 758.0019
205 Help Wanted
HELP WANTED: Help needed in licensed day care. Call 843-0626
FLEX HOURS HUE $ POTENTIAL!
You say WHEN... You sayHOW MUCH?
No, you base mistake. Dell 9095.
$24.99
Apartment Management. Great Job for graduate-
student or spouse. Work in home. Average 30 hours per
week. $800 per month plus apartment. Aline 913-383-1022
United Child Development Center is accepting applications for rest aides. 12:30-9:30, M.F.
Overweight males between 18 and up are needed for a walking study. $320 will be included for a little more than one hour of participation. If interested, NU34-831-118
Wanted: 100 Students, Loss 8-100 lb. new metabolism
brought through Ht 165 lb. in 9 weeks. Guarantee Results
Adam Aulani Center*The Learned Club has immed-
ate opening for fine dining dinner cook. Prefer
experience, but will训, aggressive worker.
Alejandro Sanchez, 50, skim-3M-4P shift
Apley in person on 1268 Orcad Ave.
Assistant Mgr. wanted for leading women's retail clothing store in DaKa, Kei. Immediate position with full benchmark package. Send resume to Claudia Spodar at Cato Fashion 2008 A.E Santa Fe, Gaite Ks. 66002
Adams Alumni CenterThe Learned Club has imminent opening for dessert prep. three days a week, flexible schedule: 3-10PM Apply in person at 1266 Oread Avenue.
Fortune 500 companies utilize our firm for hiring. Now interviewing Salaries range from $21,000 to $72,000.00 call Bcill. (814) 695-5310 www.bcill.com/1964 and 1985 college encourages
Part-time now, full time in summer. General office work & shopping appointments. Must be a Kansas resident, be enrolled or kel, with at least 12 hours, have a GPA of 2.0 or better, and be a businessman or in related field
Positions open. Grade 10 jobs for students Telephone fundraising for SADD (Students Against Drunk Drives). We work every evening and Sat. mornings; $40 plus point credit. Call 843-2650 or apply at 843-Miss. Stute B.
CAMP COUNSELORS Join the adventure and share the memories at SUMMER CAMPI!
instructors for water and land sports, WSHA Life
Guards, Tennis, Climbing, Arts and more 2 hours from
NYC. Call 215-887-0470 or write 151 Washington Lane
Bldg. D. 19977
CAMP COUNSELORS WANTed for private Michigan girls/boy summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, water-skiing, gymnastics, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, campring, crafts, drama, Orlando. Also kitchen, office, maintenance $1250 & 1600. Bathroom $1750, 1769. Maple Ridge, IL 81003, 8147-446-2444
Kitchen staff positions available at the Mass Street Deli and Buffalo Bobble Smoke House. Food prep and line cooking. Some daytime hours are helpful. Start at $4 per hour for smoked salmon, brisket or bacon. Affordable profit sharing plus service of lengths is $200 by May 30th and by December 8th. Apply at Scalpion Food Co. Catering on Monday-Mon-Friday at 7:10 Mose (ages above Scalpion House).
Cash Caterers, Bureaue and Burgee Caterers' Catering Department, # 650 per hour, paid in cash on dap follow
Monday, Feb.19-8:45 am 12:00 am
Tuesday, Feb.20-8:45 am 3:00 pm
Thursday, Feb.22-9:30 am 3:30 pm
Friday, Feb.23-9:30 am 3:30 pm
Must follow dress code, able to stand for long periods,
and must lift up 90 pounds. Applicable for舞会 and Burlesque
units.
GRADUATE STUDENT POSITION:
Sunsidey infant/Toddler is seeking graduate student applicants for a toddler classroom supervisor position.
Applicant must be an experienced student in toddler early intervention program, training teachers, assisting in classroom activities, and attending staff meetings.
Applicant must be a KU graduate student enrolled in at least 6 courses and working with children daycare setting preferred. Please fill out application in Room 1140 Haworth.
205 Help Wanted
staff position available at the Moss S. Dell. Must have MPV drip timechug, apply to Ackley Food Company business offices 4pm-6pm Monday to Friday at 7pm (Upon request) smokehouse.
500 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES IN NY,PA.
KINDLE AND MIDDLE SCHOOL
Choose from over 30 camps. Instructors need tennis, Baseball, Hockey, Rollerblading, Soccer, LaCrosse, softball, Volleyball, Basketball, PE Majors, Gymnastics, Riding, Lifesavage, WSA, Water-skiing, Windsurfing, Fitness, Mountain Biking, Pioneering, Rock Climbing, Kayaking, Ceramics, Stained Glass, Jewelry, Wood-Working, Photography, Radio, Nature, RN'a, Chefs, Food Service. Call Arnie: 516-433-8933.
Part Time Marketing Suppor
Great opportunity for that special person wanting to gain business experience in marketing. Position requires knowledge of web design, typesetting and typing of 50 wpm. Position involves data entry & spreadsheet development, research, trade show preparation.
OR call us at 1-800-234-2546 Ext. 1128
CITY OF LAWRENCE
LANDISCA WORKER March through November, 2014 hr/week he is 18 years of age & have driver lessons until 18 years of age.
BALI DIMAM MANTENANCE= 20 hr w/kh week
through MAY 40 hr w/kh until mid-August. 4.60-5.05 h
CUSTOMIAN - Year round, 18:22 hr w/ kprimarily Friday through Sunday. Requires janitorial / custodial experience & valid drivers license. $6.00 / hr. Deadline: 221/06.
Complete application at admin. Services, 2nd floor, City Hall, G. E. 6th, Lawrence, LA 90035. EOE4 MWP
The Lawrence Arts Center is seeking a Program Assistant they would work approximately 20 hours per week beginning this Spring. This person would serve as an assistant to our professional staff assisting with clerical duties and administrative tasks in the workplace with the public and be able to take work on a regular weekly schedule. Program Assistants also work with artist / teachers (primarily working with the children's and/or preschool) and are responsible for equipment and facilities. Applicants must be Kansas Career Work Study qualified. To apply, please pick up an application and return with a
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER, 200 W,9TH LAWRENCE, KS 66044 843-ARTS
PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN MASSACHUSETTS
Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Hockey, Golf, Archery, Rifle, Pioneering Overnight Camping, Ropes and Rock Climbing, Weight Fitness and Cycling, other openings include Performing Arts, Fine Art, Figure Skating, Newpaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Cooking, SEwing, and Rockyberry; All Waterfront/Pool Activities (Swimming, Sailing, Windwindering, Scuba Diving), training room, board, and travel, June 18th-August 17th.
MAH-KEE-NAC (Boys): 1-800-753-9118
DANBEE (Girls): 1-800-392-3752
AMERICA'S PREMIERE SPORTS CAMPS
WINADU FOR BOYS/DANEEN FOR GIRLS
(Western Massachusetts)
OVER 100 POSITIONS AVAILABLE
All Land and Water Sports, Arts and Crafts,
Gymnastics, Horseback Riding, Drama, Woodshop,
Skiing, Snowboarding and more!!!
No Previous Fitness Requirements
salaries Room and Board, and Travel Allowance
ON CAMPUS INPDA AND INTERVIEWS
DATE: FEBRUARY 28, 1995
TEXT: MAYO 14, 1996
PACKEASKANXATON/OBOUNGING
FEB.26 INTO TABLE FEB.19 OREAD AND REGION
Men Call:
1-800-494-6238
CAMP WINADU
Women Call:
1-800-392-3752
CAMP BANEE
EARN CASH
ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
FREE T-SHIRT
+ $1000
Credit card fundraisers for fraternities, sororites, & groups. Any campus organization can raise up to $1000 by eating a whopping $5/VISA
225 Professional Services
DUI1 TRAFFIC/CIMINAL
OVERLAND PARK - KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTORNEY - AT-LAW
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
The University of Kansas
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake D & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
Sally G. Kelsey
642-E13th 842-1133
Psychological Clinic
235 Typing Services
315 Fraser Hall 864-4121
mental health services for university staff, students and community members
Call Center for 86-855-8955 for applications, technical support,
California Tech. info at 86-855-8955.
305 For Sale
X
Black 10-Eye Dr. Martens, British size 7. #65.70. Call Courlery, @84-66565
300s Merchandise
Basketball ticket for sale in student section.
Price negotiable. All remaining games.
Call 838-9674.
Call 838-9674.
Violin, appraised at $1,500. Yours for $1290. Try it for yourself
842-4844.
COMPILER MEMORY. $20-$30 per MEG
leave message at 10:00011.99665
Canon AP-300 electronic typewriter, one line memory,
four typewriters. 845, 942-4844
FOR SALE 1092 white Acura Integral GS 3 door, 5 speed,
full loaded, hb steel, with visor, and spoiler. Excellent condition 72,000, $10,500. Serious Inquiries only.
48-4066
For sale! 1982 Kawasaki 550 Limited. Book price is $1100, asking $890, but price is negotiable. $4,000 miles, garage kept, well maintained. Leaving sate must sell! Call TravisCall 768-7369.
340 Auto Sales
Call 838-9674.
AM/FM stereo, Standard Tank (Speed). Get Approx.
60 MP, Great Car. Very Good Condition. Phone 913-
852-2640.
NEEDED: 36 PEOPLE (Weight NOW 180)
Guarantee! 100% natural! 1800-2652 6237. 0235.
Floor plumbers: Raise 400 in 5 Days Greys, Groups
No. 9200-8620 0822. No. 9200-8620 0822. No. 9200-8620 0822.
Obligation (800) 862 1082 Ext 33
360 Miscellaneous
BrainKatz Education
Bank of America
Bank of America
Bank of America
Bank of America
100 Student Handbook to Loan $ 90,000
New MBA/BMBA/BMFE
600 Graduate Handbook to Loan $ 180,000
New MBA/BMBA/BMFE
600 Graduate Handbook to Loan $ 180,000
A
SPRING BREAK IN
CANCUN
MEXICO
LUNDA JUNI
$299
10% OFF
STUDENT TRAVEL
Not included on this tour
FREE ADDITIONAL CALL
http://www.takebreak.com
1-800-95-BREAK
TAKE A BREAK STUDENT TRAVEL
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1 & 2 BE townhouses at 1317 Valley Lane. Walk to
1 & 2 BR townhouses at 1317 Valley Lane. Walk to
open large windows. Very price: $48,000.
I Bedroom Sublease. Feb. Rent Paid. Water, Cable
1 bedroom. Laundry Facilities. Call Any Amy
at 748-2766.
4 BR townhouse with 4 carports. Walk to campu.
Nice bedroom with large closet. 8600/m².
3 BR kitchen with stainless steel appliances.
Available immediately. 3 Bedroom, unfurnished apartmen-
t. 12bth from RU $190 per roomm. Oral Headhats.
New Room Only.
Shannon Plaza Apartments & Townhouses 2 & 3 bedroom townhouses available immediate Ask about us.
Spring Break Beach Condo. Hot Location. South Padre Island. Needs 8 plus guests. Deposit required. Enjoy the sun and the sea!
Large 3 bedroom apt. and studio apt.
in remodeled house near KU.
Call 841-6254
EMERYPLACE
1/2 block from campus. One bedroom apartment.
$350 + utilities/month. 842-7644
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Studio apartment at Oread
(1&1/2 blocks from Union) Water a gas paid.
6 month lease, $375/month.
Call 841-8408
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.
2 Bedroom Sublease.
Walking distance to campus.
Balcony, laundry facilities.
Kitchen. Bathroom.
Evenings - Eventor # 863-2418.
Leanna Mar Townhomes
Washer/Dryer Microwave
Dishwasher Gas Fireplace
Trash Compactor Cable Paid
Walk-in Closeta Back Fatto
Inside Mat for Cleaning
Lorimar Townhomes
Now Leasing For June & August
1.2, & 3 Bedrooms
For More Info : 841-7849 Located at 4501 Wimbledon Dr.
For Appointment: 841-7849
Located at 3801 Clinton Pkwy
Now Leasing for June & August 4 Bedrooms/3 Bath Featuring:
- 1&2 Bedrooms
Washer/Dryer Fireplace
Dishwash Cable Paid
Microwave Back Patio
- On KU Bus Route
- Exercise
405 For Rent
e Indoor/Outdoor
- 3 Hot Tubs
Pool
Fall Leases
1301 W. 24th & Naismith • 842-5111
Mackenzie place. 1138 Kentucky. Now leasing for 1 Agr. i, 5 yr. life at Place aulta. close to campus. All 3 Bk. microwave, washer & dryer, all kitchen appliance, 2 Bk. microwave, well walled. energy rmb CT. Call 748-169
GET A JUMP ON NEXT YEAR!
NEWLY CONSTRUCTED
Easy Access to K-10
1-3-2-Bedroom Agta
Available March 1, 1986
Studios, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apts Carson Place, Stadium View, Oread, Chamberlain Court, Abbotts Corner, 1425 Kentucky, Bradford Square
Full size wash/dryer, fully equipped kitchen, fireplace, Walk in rooms, fully monitored alarm system, and much NO PETS, Harper Square Apartments, Call Today! 913-841-8468
- Full-size washer/dryer or Laundry Facilities
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Private Business Parks
- Within 2 blks of campus or on KU bus route
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT
TODAY FOR $ 50.00
MON-FRI 9 am-5 pm,1820 West 6th 8418468
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
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- On Bus Route
9th & Avalon 842-3040
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Winter Special
2 BR $ 399
3 BR $ 499
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- On the bus route
* Pool
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* 2 bedroom (1 & 1/2 baths)
* 3 Bedroom (2 baths)
* Laundry facilities
* 24 hr. Emergency maintenance
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--is what you want your new home awaits...
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th and Eddingham Dr.
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
- Exercise weight room
- Swimming pool
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- Energy Efficient
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- Daily 3:30-5:00
- On site management
405 For Rent
KVM
808 W.24th
841-6080
841-5444
--is what you want your new home awaits...
Sunrise Apartments
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400 Tenn. student housing alternative. Open & diverse member non-profit operation, democratic control. Rina Gomez, MSW, BSN. Email: rina.gomez.clopecase.com Cloep to campus & Mass. Call or stop by 814-0484-0436
- Garages (Village)
Signing now for fall
- Tennis Courts, Pools
- 2,3 & 4 Bedrooms
- Free Cable TV (Place)
- Luxurious Town Homes
- Luxurious town homes
- On Bus Route
- Climate Campus
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
Sunrise Village 6th & Gateway
Open House Daily 841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon-Fri 1-5
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
NOWLEASING FOR SPRING
7TH & FLORIDA
FOUR BEDROOM-ASK ABOUT Our Three Person Special $690 and Up Pool and Clubhouse
E.H.O.
841-5255
Offers
MASTERS CRAFT
Completely Furnished
Studio,1,2,3,& 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
Tanglewood
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Tangrove
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS
DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm
On call 24 hrs for emergencies
MASTERCRAFT
405 For Rent
1/2块 from campus, campus apartment. $ 310.00
month, all utilities included. Call 842-7644.
Equal Housing Opportunity
meadowbrook If BIG is what you want
MEADOWBROOK
2 & 3 bedroom townhomes are available now. Walk or ride the bus to KU. Enjoy the quiet feel of the country with the convenience of the city.
430 Roommate Wanted
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
Roommate needs:
Summer Sublease.
May rent paid. W/D: $250 / 1-8 U/hrs.
Brand new apt.
265 sq ft.
Premium reemployees can share 3 bdrms, 2 bath apartments, 4 bedrooms, and 1 living room. They are required to be $800/month or 1/3 leave. Call back at 849-815-155.
Female for a 4 by 2 duplex. NW location-Eldridge Street. On Bus Rt. Feb. Rent Paid. $210.Mm. Plus I/4 Unit. Call 842-3566.
Female graduate student to share twice 2-BR apt. $200-util.
Male graduate student. Must like canteen. Launches University
Laundry facility.
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bimmified apartment at the Ahn. Feb. through August. Call back at [312] 650-3287.
Female wanted for 5 Bedroom, luxury home plus all amenities, W/D. A/C, 1/2 mile to KU. $250/month, large bedroom available now. 865-5452
Non-smoking male roommate wanted to share 2 Br.
apartment close campus. $250.00 - call Uilfar Cail
Roommate needs to share 4 bedrooms, 1/2 bath house with W/D and all new intuitions 160/month, 1/4 utilities.
Female NS Boomnet need to tread 2 bpm app. Insured except bdm. WD, Dishwasher, A/C Rent $350/mo & 1 UT Avail. 6/1 or for Fall 9, must like cats $328-287
Female roommate needed. Almost new home west of campus. Room, W/O, AC, DW, Garage, Deck. Next bus' route. Short or long term lease available starting March '1st. $275.00/month. Call 838-4546.
Female roommate needs to share 2 bedroom apartment. On bus route b, $260.00 + 12 utilities. Water and gas paid.
Call: 892-8438
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
a. Phone 824-4359
Wanted ASAP - NSM MV RECOMMEN to share spacious 2 bennip at alpm, at Albany and Ohio to campus and downtown, off street parking $250 + 1/2 usel. Call Wade 838-4082. Leave message.
Roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apartment close to campus (12th and Ohio) Washer and drier, rent is negotiable and three unit facilities. Call Mike Terry or Carl's ASAP at 843-4297.
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Thursday, February 15, 1996
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From baseball strike to Bulls' winning streak
843-2138·611 W.9th
One year later Jordan's season nearly best ever
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — A year ago, Michael Jordan was packing for spring training.
"Who'd have ever thought I'd be back playing basketball? Who'd have ever thought we'd be 43-5? But I'm very happy with where I am now," Jordan said. "I'm refocused on basketball and steering Chicago toward the championship."
So far, both his focus and his aim have been exemplary.
Jordan is gunning for an unprecedented eighth NBA scoring title and his Bulls are on pace to finish with the best record in league history. They haven't lost a regular-season home game since March 24.
"They have it all," said Washington Bullets coach Jim Lynam, whose team fell 111-98 to Chicago on Tuesday. "They're as good as it gets."
The Bulls can thank baseball's labor strife for their lofty status.
Had baseball players not been striking at this time a year ago — had Chicago White Sox general manager Ron Schueeler not cornered Jordan into quitting that sport — Jordan might again be preparing for spring training. And the Bulls, only an average team when Jordan un-retired last March, might have traded Scottie Pippen and launched a rebuilding program.
"To think of where we were and where we are now," Pippen said, "it's amazing."
Jordan can say the same about his own situation.
He retired from basketball in 1993 after leading the Bulls to their third consecutive NBA title and then he decided to try another sport. Though it looked like he'd never
"To think of where we were and where we are
now,it's amazing."
Scottle Pippen Chicago Bulls forward
become a baseball star, Jordan did well in the last month of his 1994 minor league season and continued to show signs of progress in the Arizona Fall League. He went to 1995 spring training full of hope.
But when Schueeler made Jordan choose between joining replacement players in exhibition games or losing his major league privileges, Jordan left training camp. He said
Schueeler reneged on a promise that Jordan wouldn't be caught in the middle of the labor dispute.
Jordan rarely thinks about baseball now. He's mostly concerned that the Bulls don't become complacent.
If Chicago is to be the first team ever to win 70 regular-season games, the next 10 days could be the key.
Already road weary, the Bulls go back on the road for five of their next six games. After that, though, 17 of their final 28 games are at home — where they are 23-0 this season.
"Mentally, you have to get yourself prepared for every game," he said. "Physically, your body might say one thing. But mentally, you have to push yourself."
Jordan, who turns 33 Saturday, is showing some signs of wear and tear. He has been bothered by a sore back, aching knees and dislocated fingers. He shot 42 percent on the Bulls' recently completed road
trip after making 51 percent of his shots before then.
"I feel good. I don't think I've hit a wall," he said after scoring 23 points on 11-of-23 shooting against the Bullets. "I knew what to expect. I knew that this is probably the toughest part of the season. This is the grind."
Center Luc Longley, expected to return from a knee injury Sunday at Indiana, has been able to observe the team from a different vantage point.
"We looked tired on the road trip," he said. "Even Michael looked tired, and that's something."
Is Jordan more susceptible to breaking down because of the time he spent on the baseball diamond and away from the basketball court?
With little money, Reds can't pitch offers to good players
"If he were a normal man, yes," Longley said. "But he's not, and that's why we like him so much."
Owner cuts payroll Davis,Sabo agree to base salaries
The Associated Press
CINCINNATI — Eric Davis will be there. So will Chris Sabo.
The Cincinnati Reds' training camp will look like last year's gathering, when over-the-hill players such as Pedro Borbon and Barbaro Garbee were trying to win jobs.
There are no replacement players this time, but the team that went to the National League championship series has many positions to fill.
"The big focus, right now, is on center field, left field, third base, the starting rotation, the bullpen, the catchers, the bench, the new manager," general manager Jim Bowden said.
Owner Marge Schott's decision to cut several million dollars off the payroll has turned the NL Central champions into a fitting project for first-time manager Ray Knight.
There are a lot of unknowns, from the top down.
Although the Braves solidify their roster to make another run at the World Series, the Reds lost left fielder Ron Gant, their leading home-run hitter; starting catcher Benito Santiago; center fielder Darren Lewis; third baseman Mark Lewis; utility infielder Mariano Duncan; backup outfielder Jerome Walton; No. 3 starter David Wells and setup man Mike Jackson.
The Reds will replace them with players who are long past their best days or coming off serious injuries.
Last year Borbon fell down. When the Reds hold their first workout Saturday, everyone will be waiting to see if Sabo and Davis can keep from stumbling.
Knight said he didn't know what to expect. Sabo, 34, was nearly driven out of the game by chronic back problems during the last few years. Davis, 33, missed last season because of a neck surgery.
They're not the same players who led the Reds to a World Series championship in 1990.
"...for the first time since Ive been here,we have open positions."
Jim Bowen Cincinnati Reds general manager
"I remember what Eric was," Knight said. "You tend to remember what they were and what they could do. When they mentioned Eric Davis's name, I kind of got real excited. And I looked at his last couple of years, and I couldn't find anything on him."
The Reds brought him and Sabo back because they fit the team's salary structure. The Reds wouldn't pay more than a $500,000 base
salary, Knight said.
Besides Sabo and Davis, Vince Coleman, Don Shaught, Trevor Wilson, Bryan Hickerson and Gene Harris accepted the base salary offer. They'll be pushed by minor leaguers invited to compete for the eight roster spots that have opened since the playoffs.
"What will make for an interesting spring is that for the first time since I've been here, we have open positions," said Bowden, in his fourth season as GM.
"Also for the first time since I've been here, we have a tremendous amount of young players who appear to be ready for the big leagues ... and some older guys trying to make comebacks."
The nucleus is intact: first baseman Hal Morris, second baseman Bret Boone, shortstop Barry Larkin, right fielder Reggie Sanders, closer Jeff Brantley and starters Pete Schourek, John Smiley, Mark Portugal and Dave Burba.
"A lot of the key figures that have allowed us to win in '94 and '95 are
back." Bowden said.
But Knight, who has never managed, has a lot of decisions to make: Who will play center and left? Who will platoon with Jeff Branson at third? Can Eddie Taubensee be the everyday catcher? Who will fill out the bullpen?
Bowden doesn't have the financial latitude this year to start spring training with questions and fill in the blanks and then make deals in Florida like the past years.
Bowden is interested in reacquiring free agents Kevin Mitchell, Deion Sanders or Joe Oliver.
Bowden said that right now he couldn't afford to pay the salaries those expensive players wanted.
"Our signings have been in the $109,000 to $500,000 range. We have not deviated from that."
But I would not rule out any of the three until they sign with another team" he said.
In the meantime, they'll be doing without Prime Time. Instead, they'll be watching guys who are Past Prime.
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.102 NO.98
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
KANSAS
KU BASKETBALL
Freshman isn't homesick yet
Kansas freshman Paul Pierce was a bit of a homebody before he left Los Angeles for college. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Ringing in the New Year
KU students will sponsor a party tomorrow to celebrate the Chinese New Year. Page 3A
FEATURES
Virginity: save it or share it?
These days, defining virginity isn't as easy as most students might think. Page 6A
WORLD
London bomb deactivated
Coded telephone warnings led Scotland Yard to a bomb in the city's busy theater district. Page 5A
WEATHER
SUNNY
High 35° Low 15°
Woodland Cemetery
Weather: Page 2A
INDEX
Opinion ... 4A
Nation/World ... 5A
Features ... 6A
Sports ... 1B
Scoreboard ... 2B
The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents.
Senate rec center meeting spirited
By Nicole Kennedy
Kansan staff writer
Turnout was low at the Student Senate town-hall meeting last night, but tensions ran high.
Only about 15 students, including senators, showed up to discuss the proposed recreation center.
Dan Hare, student body vice president, and Renee Speicher, graduate senator, outlined the recreation center plans.
Hare and Speicher sponsored the bill that was passed by the Senate on Tuesday to hold a student referendum on Feb. 27 and 28. Voting booths will be set up across campus.
Shannon Tauscher, Lawrence junior, spoke at the meeting.
"I am astonished and disgusted that the Senate would even consider a proposal such as one for this glorified gymnasium," Tauschen said. "We're here for an education, not a four-year gym class.
"Spending money on NordicTracks and treadmills is irresponsible."
Tauscher said student money could be better spent on improving the academic facilities and classroom technology.
The money, she said, should be used to purchase more computers and upgrade the printers in the Computer Center.
Kim Cocks, student body president, responded to Tauscher's concerns about the quality of KU's academic facilities. She said the Board of Regents soon would discuss increasing tuition or student fees to pay for
academic improvements and new technology.
Hare said he understood Tauscher's frustrations.
"I think technology is a problem at this University," Hare said. "It's definitely a priority of the chancellor and that makes it a priority for the University."
Hare also said that Senate was resistant to raising student fees to pay for academic improvements on campus.
Paying for academic improvements is the responsibility of the University and the state, he said.
Speicher also responded to Tauscher's comments.
"I advocate strongly that education doesn't always occur in the classroom," Speicher
said. "Your point is well taken, but I would encourage you to consider the benefits."
After the meeting, Tauscher said she hadn't changed her mind about the recreation center.
"They addressed concerns from their perspective, but I'm still very much opposed to it." Tauscher said.
Brian Flink / KANSAN
Brian Schaal, Overland Park senior, attaches a container of liquid nitrogen during a dress rehearsal for the testing of the rocket engine Schaal and three other engineering students designed
Students have a blast with rocket
Cocks said that she wasn't sure why the meeting turnout was low, but that she expected to see more discussion on the issue next week.
"You can't complain when it's over if you don't make your voice heard beforehand," Tauscher said.
Volatile fuel forces increased safety
By David Teska
Kansan staff writer
After one-and-a-half years, it all comes down to a 10-second test.
Today, if all goes as planned, four students from the department of aerospace engineering will test-fire the first liquid-fueled rocket engine ever designed and built by KU students.
Brian Schaal, Overland Park senior and president of the Rocket Systems Development Organization, said a significant feature of the engine was that it used a fuel mixture of liquid oxygen and ethyl alcohol.
Because of the fuel's volatile nature, the presence of any contaminant in the fuel system, such as a speck of dirt or oil residue, could lead to a violent explosion, Schaal said.
"A particle in the fuel line with a diameter of .05 inch to .06 inch could destroy this motor." he said.
With safety always in mind, the four students — Schaal; Bill Harms, Olathe senior; Troy Wallace, Wichita senior; and Arthur Fowler, Atchison senior — had to pay particular attention to the many safety issues during the design and construction of the engine.
"It blew me away how much safety stuff went into it," Harms said.
The group held a full dress rehearsal on Wednesday to finalize
the procedures. At the rehearsal, the team went through the entire preflight checklist, with each student assigned a specific task.
Schaal and Wallace simulated loading the fuel. Because it was only a simulation, they used liquid nitrogen and water instead of real fuel.
During the actual engine test, the two fuels will be brought together in a controlled burn, a regulated reaction that creates an explosion, giving the rocket its thrust.
Because the explosion could escalate out of control, the group worked closely with the Lawrence Fire Department. Again citing safety, Schaal said they worked with the same crew of firemen throughout the project.
Building the engine wasn't cheap either, Schaal said.
Although the engine won't be used in an actual rocket in its current form, Schaal said they used parts certified for space flight.
This increased the cost, but the students were still able to build it for less than $3,000 from money they received from the NASA Space Consortium, a group that grants money to school projects.
Schaal said that by working together, the students had all grown to appreciate the effort required to put the space shuttle into space.
TEXAS
He added that the complex nature of space flight meant that one group could not do it alone.
Troy Wallace, Wichita senior, helps Brian Schaal, Overland Park senior, get ready to work on their rocket engine, which will be test-fired today.
Brian Flink / KANSAN
Profs on leave give up pay
Instructors on leave
Legislature includes 2 percent adjustment in University budget
By Jason Strah
Kansan staff writer
More than $1 million worth of knowledge is on leave without pay from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences this semester, and most of the money is not being used to hire replacements.
Twenty-one professors from 14 departments in the college have forfeited their salaries to go on leave for various reasons. The Legislature builds in a 2 percent adjustment to account for the salaries of professors who may leave during the year. The forfeited salaries already had been accounted for by this adjustment, and therefore a majority of the money is not used for replacements and is returned to the Legislature.
Jolene Fairchild, accountant of the college, said that when the Legislature budgets finances for the University, it assumes that 2 percent of the faculty will leave for either personal or medical reasons.
Part of the forfeited salaries goes to hiring lecturers, instructors or graduate teaching assistants to cover essential classes, Fairchild said. The remainder of the money is used to pay back the 2 percent to the Legislature.
Ling Bian, geography
The University still is given its full budget but must pay back the 2 percent.
Diana Carlin communication studies
Raymond Christensen, political science
Ann Willner, political science
Debbie Corner, political science
C.K. Rowland, political science
Philip Schrodt, political science
William Comer, Slavic languages & literature
Bryant Freeman, African & African-American studies
Bartholomew Dean, anthropology
Aletha Huston, human development & family life
John Wright, human development & family life
Rex Martin, philosophy
James Carothers, associate dean of the college, said the department chairmen in each college recommended a professor be granted leave without pay, which then is approved or disapproved by the college.
James Muyskens, philosophy
Amy McNair, history of art
Xiaang Mo mathematics
“If the purpose has something to do with developing a career, we try to find a way to accommodate that.” Carothers said. “I've never heard of someone wanting to take leave because they're tired of teaching. It's always for a purpose.”
Amy McNair, history of art
Xiaokang Mo, mathematics
Allen Omote, psychology
Alan Ortona, psychology
Phillin Paludan, history
"The question is, can we continue to meet our academic concerns?" Carothers asked. "That's what drives all of us."
Theodore Wilson, history
The department chairmen who make the requests usually make them with the knowledge that the courses can be covered by other professors in the department, he said.
De-Min Wu. economics
The decision to find a replacement for a course depends on whether it is an introductory course that can be covered easily or a specialty course for which instructors are hard to find, he said.
Each department in the college is responsible for hiring replacements, and the decisions are approved again by the college.
Carothers said that a department's request for a professor to go on leave usually is made prior to class scheduling so that no problems with canceling courses after enrollment occur.
But sometimes unexpected opportunities arise for professors to work outside the University.
Five classes, POLS 618 Political Leadership and 662 Political Persuasion, HAIT 110 and 120, Elementary Haitian I and II, and AFS 320 Haiti Today, were canceled because the instructors had such opportunities.
Both departments said students in the canceled courses were accommodated with replacements.
Police continue embezzlement investigation
By Amy McVey Kansan staff writer
No charges were filed yesterday against a former KU employee arrested in connection with the embezzlement of $39,000.
KU police arrested 53-year-old Lenexa resident Theresa Louis Mercer on Wednesday night on 109 counts of forgery, 17 counts of felony theft and 98 counts of misdemeanor theft. She was booked in the Douglas County Jail on $172,500 bond but was released at 11 a.m.yesterday.
Mark Knight, Douglas County district attorney, said Mercer was released because the investigation wasn't completed.
KU police Sgt. Chris Keary said that although police hadn't finished the investigation, they thought the arrest was warranted.
"We knew that there was still more investigating to do, but the officer who made the arrest felt there was probable cause for the arrest he made," Keary said.
Mercer, former administrative assistant for the department of pharmacology and toxicology, is suspected of forging documents and writing fraudulent checks from the department's endowment account to herself and others during a three-year period.
Elias Michaelis, chairman of the department of pharmacology and toxicology, discovered the money was missing two weeks ago. Mercer had quit to work in the private sector.
Michaels said Mercer intercepted the checks and documents before he had a chance to see them.
Keary said KU police were continuing the investigation.
2A
Friday, February 16, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Homefest '96 raises money for homes
By Heather Kirkwood
Kansan staff writer
Musicians, seats and an audience are not the tools that come to mind when one thinks of building homes, but at Habitat for Humanity's Homefest '96, they are as important as hammers and nails.
This year's Homefest '96 is the seventh annual variety show the Lawrence branch of the national Habitat organization has sponsored to raise money to build homes for people living in inadequate housing
"All different tastes in music are going to be satisfied — all the way from jazz to folk and blues to classical," said Hank Booth, general manager of KLWN and KLZR.
- Kim Forehand, a singer, songwriter, and entertainer who specializes in humorous ballads
Linda Maxey, a concert marimbiist who has performed across the country including the Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall
He has been master of ceremonies of the event for the past three years. Some of this year's featured performers will be:
The Prairie Wind Dancers, a modern dance company that has performed at the National Dance Association Conference and the Smokey Hill River Festival
The Babylon Sisters will present a jazz combination of blues and folk music
The KU Jazz Ensemble I, which has appeared at state, regional, national and international music conventions
Simon Carrington, founding member and co-director of The Kings Singers and director of
Habitat for Humanity Homefest'96
Where: Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
St. Liberty Hall, 042 Massachusetts St.
When: 7:30 tonight
How much? Tickets are $10 and can be purchased at the Habitat for Humanity office, 1204 Oread Ave. or the Liberty Hall box office.
choral activities at the University of Kansas and Jeffrey Anderson, director of choral music at Lawrence High School, will give a vocal presentation.
John Gingerich, who founded the Lawrence branch of Habitat for Humanity eight years ago and is now a board member, said he hoped that the event would raise $8,000 to $10,000, enough to pay for one-fourth of a house.
The organization has built 16 houses in Lawrence and now is working on another. The group tries to build three or four houses each year and sell them at cost with no interest to families who cannot purchase a home through more conventional means.
"The people who are involved are leading the way in making sure low-income people can own their own homes," Booth said, "I believe in this 100 percent. Volunteering a few hours of my time to help them raise some money is no problem at all."
The show will be at 7:30 tonight at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. Tickets are $10 and can be purchased at Habitat for Humanity's Lawrence office, 1204 Oread Ave or at the Liberty Hall box office.
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, 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, K6045.
ON CAMPUS
P. A.R.T.Y. (Promote Alcohol Responsibility Through You) is having a meeting at 5 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. Call Shelly at 749-1819 for more information.
KU German Club is sponsoring a Fasching Party, a traditional German costume ball, at 8 tonight at "the sac" at 935 Michigan St. Prizes will be given for best costume. Call John Lougher at 838-4775 for more information.
■ KU Ki-Aikido Club is having a meeting at 10 a.m. tomorrow in 207 Robinson Center. Call Matt Stumpte at 864-6592 for more information.
Circle Francais is sponsoring its "Valentine's Day Fete" at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at Sarah Peth-
■ Hong Kong and Macau Student Association is sponsoring a Chinese New Year Dinner Party at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Call Helen Lo at 865-1599 for more information
an's house. Call Sarah at 865 0696 or the department of French for more information.
KU Dance Club is having a lesson at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Call Sonia Ratzlaff at 864-1581 for more information.
KU Habitat for Humanity is having a long-range planning meeting at 2 p.m. Sunday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Everyone is welcome. Call 832-0777 for more information.
ON THE RECORD
A KU student's parking permit was stolen between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tuesday in lot 91. The permit was valued at $53, KU police reported.
A KU student's wallet and its contents were stolen between 3:10 and 5:20 p.m. Wednesday
in Allen Field House. The wallet and its contents were valued at $46, KU police reported.
A KU student's parking permit was stolen between 10:15 a.m. and 12:20 p.m. Feb. 7 in lot 90. The permit was valued at $53, KU police reported.
Weather
HIGH LOW
Atlanta 42 ° • 35 °
Chicago 26 ° • 14 °
Des Moines, Iowa 25 ° • 8 °
Kansas City, Mo. 29 ° • 13 °
Lawrence 35 ° • 15 °
Los Angeles 68 ° • 50 °
New York 32 ° • 25 °
Omaha, Neb. 30 ° • 5 °
St. Louis 28 ° • 17 °
Seattle 58 ° • 37 °
Topeka 30 ° • 10 °
Tulsa, Okla. 42 ° • 18 °
Wichita 35 ° • 12 °
TODAY
Sunny with light winds.
3515
SATURDAY
Mostly sunny and warmer.
4825
SUNDAY
Warm weather continues.
5328
TODAYS
Atlanta 42 ° • 35 °
Chicago 26 ° • 14 °
Des Moines, Iowa 25 ° • 8 °
Kansas City, Mo. 29 ° • 13 °
Lawrence 35 ° • 15 °
Los Angeles 68 ° • 50 °
New York 32 ° • 25 °
Omaha, Neb. 30 ° • 5 °
St. Louis 28 ° • 17 °
Seattle 58 ° • 37 °
Topeka 30 ° • 10 °
Tulsa, Okla. 42 ° • 18 °
Wichita 35 ° • 12 °
TODAY
Sunny with light winds.
3515
SATURDAY
Mostly sunny and warmer.
4825
SUNDAY
Warm weather continues.
5328
$Source$ : Gabbie Hunninnghark / KU Watterser Service
$Souce$ : Gabbie Hunninnghark / KU Watterser Service
Bonuses could hurt scholarships
Chief officer awards proposed to Regents
By John Collar Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — KU student body president Kim Cocks is concerned that a bonus plan for university executives could hurt student scholarships.
could have an impact on scholarship funds available to students.
"I think it's an awful lot of money," she said.
The Board of Regents considered a proposal yesterday from Kansas State University's endowment association that would offer bonuses of up to $500,000 to university chief executive officers and vice presidents at all Regents schools.
After the meeting, Cocks said that even though the funds would come from private sources, the proposal
Ted Ayers, general counsel for the Regents, said the proposal's goal was to provide an incentive for university leaders to provide lengthy service to their institution.
"It's no secret that many of these individuals have been courted by other institutions," Ayers said. "It will keep people from leaving."
Of about 10 institutions that were consulted by Regents staff in assembling the proposal, two or three had such a bonus program. Avers said.
Some institutions were not able to make public the existence of the program, he said.
reluctance of those institutions to provide this information."
Docking said the Regents should consider carefully public opinion before they acted on the proposal.
Regent Bill Docking of Arkansas City said, "I don't understand the
"I worry that this issue might be divisive," he said. "I feel that we might be creating image and credibility problems with the public."
Regent Sid Warner of Cimarron said the program should be enacted.
"It's in our best interest to do so," he said. "The most critical people we have in our system are our chief executive officers."
Under the proposal, a selection committee chosen by a university's endowment association would nominate the university president or vice president for the award.
The Board of Regents would have final authority on choosing the
selection committee and whether the nominee would receive the bonus.
The maximum amount of the award would be $50,000 per year. The nominees at every Regent university could win the award yearly as long as the total did not exceed $500,000. The recipient would be able to collect the entire bonus, including interest, after leaving the institution on good terms after at least 11 years of service.
The Regents will consider the proposal again at their Anril meeting.
In other business, the Regents approved a transaction that will donate land on West Campus to the University of Kansas Endowment Association. In return, the University will receive the association's current building, Youngberg Hall.
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 16, 1996
3A
Students labor on campaigns
By Heather Kirkwood Kansan staff writer
Andy Obermüller, Liberal sophomore, won't be in his campaigns and elections class today. Instead he will be on his way to New Hampshire to work on Sen. Bob Dole's presidential campaign.
Obermueller is one of several students on campus who are participating in presidential primaries as a way to learn about the political process and make a difference.
Obermueler will be focusing on getting college students out to vote for Dole.
But the job won't be easy.
Obermueller, who is chairman of the Student Legislative Awareness Board, has tried before to get students out to vote.
"It's like pulling teeth," he said.
To make matters worse, politicians know that students generally are apathetic.
"Students don't vote in numbers that mean anything to politicians," Obermueller said.
Ken Collier, professor of political science, agreed with Obermuelter's observations.
"If you look at their participation, students vote much less than other age groups," he said.
One reason students don't get more involved in politics is that they don't have much experience in the political process and have not been socialized to vote, Collier said.
"It used to be drilled into your head that voting was what a good citizen did," he said.
Political parties used to have a stake in getting citizens out to vote, but these days they don't want to waste resources on people who might not vote for their party. Collier said. Young people don't have much attachment to a certain political party, and that makes them a dangerous investment.
"They are interested in students who are willing to get involved, but they are not going to waste a bunch of time on students in general." Collier said.
But that is not to say that students such as Obermueller shouldn't jump into the political process.
Collier said that while issues such as taxes and home mortgages may seem distant to the average college student, social issues have a more immediate effect.
For example, college students are more likely to be faced with an unwanted pregnancy and may consider abortion.
Susan Malone, Linwood senior, discovered last week end while participating in the Iowa caucus that students do have power.
"Voters seemed to think that if there was a reason for this student not to be apathetic about this candidate, then maybe they had better take some notice," she said.
Malone spent the Iowa caucus calling registered voters for Dole's campaign and hopes to organize a trip to the South Carolina or Georgia primary for Super Tuesday on March 5th.
James Grau / KANSAN
Joe McComb, Lawrence graduate student, defends against Scott Millbern, Eudora sore, as Mill伯n lungs in for the touch. McComb and Mill伯n fenced sabre style
Catholic forum will discuss sex
Center aims to address society, church conflict
Catholic students who are looking for love can prepare themselves by attending the Human Sexuality Forum tomorrow at the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
En garde!
By R. Adam Ward Kansan staff writer
The forum, which is free and runs from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. with a break at noon for a free lunch, will examine the Catholic Church's position on human sexuality issues and will encourage participants to incorporate these values into their lives.
The center is trying to address issues that students are concerned about, said Vince Krische, chaplain at the center.
planning at the Archdiocese of St. Louis.
Krische said he would start out with a theological speech.
Human sexuality forum
Because Santner is single and Catholic, she is in a good position to talk to young people about balancing relationship choices with the church's message, said Mitchel Zimmerman, Houxie senior and outreach minister
Then Santner would speak about the more practical parts of relationships, he said.
WHEN: 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
tomorrow.
WHERE: St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road The forum is free to University students, faculty and staff. A free lunch will be served at noon.
Krische will speak along with Christine Santner, director of youth and young adult ministry for the Diocese of Wichita, and Diane Daly, Archbishop's Designate for natural family
"Students are confused about the message they get from society and the message they get from the church," he said.
WHY: The forum will examine the Catholic Church's position on human sexuality issues.
for the center.
Daly, who is a licensed natural family planner, will talk about understanding fertility, Krische said.
Zimmerman said he started planning the conference last summer.
And he said student interest was high, judging by the 50 people who had preregistered for the event.
olic students because they usually didn't give much thought to the church's teachings when they were in relationships.
"It's something the Catholic Church would like them to think about more," he said. "Catholics are no less likely to be sexually active than any other denominations."
He said he thought the conference was important for Cath-
Chinese students ring in the new year
Kansan staff writer
By Susanna Löof
Kansas staff writer
For more than 600 Asian students at the University of Kansas, the Chinese New Year holiday, which begins this weekend, is like Christmas and Thanksgiving combined.
To celebrate, the Hong Kong and Macau Students Association is inviting the Lawrence community to a dinner party at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Tickets are $8.50 at the SUA box office or $9.50 at the door.
Leo Chang, Hong Kong senior, said he planned to attend the party.
If he were in Hong Kong, however, the
celebrations would have been more extensive.
"It's like Thanksgiving dinner," Chang said. "You get together with your family and put out whatever you accumulated during the last year. It's a lot of good food."
People in Hong Kong prepare for New Year's celebrations by buying new clothes, Chang said. Then they wear the new clothes on the first day to symbolize the fresh start of the new year
On Sunday, which is the Chinese New Year's Eve, families eat a big reunion dinner at the name of the most important family member.
A typical reunion dinner includes at least eight or nine dishes.
"The whole idea is that you carry the wealth into the new year," Chang said.
The gift, called laisee, varies in amount depending on how rich and how close the relatives are.
Giving laisee is considered a privilege in the Chinese culture, and only married people are entitled to do it. Chang said.
"Giving a laissez is telling somebody that I have the ability to make this kind of money and that I can share my fortune with you." Chang said.
Relatives who are older and married also give red envelopes containing money.
Shengli Feng, assistant professor of East Asian Languages and Culture, said people in China received at least three or
four days off from work at the beginning of the new year because according to tradition, they should visit family and friends.
In farming villages, the celebration can go on for two weeks, said Feng, who came to the United States from Beijing 10 years ago.
The Chinese New Year holiday has ancient roots. It has been celebrated since 500 B.C. Feng said.
The year of the pig will end Sunday, and the year of the rat will begin Monday. The year of the rat is special because it begins a new zodiac, said Helen Lo, Hong Kong senior and president of the Hong Kong and Macau Association.
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Friday, February 16, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Despite a few criticisms, some senators work hard
The Student Senate of the University of Kansas has been criticized harshly about members who are not performing their Senate duties. For every member who does not perform his or her duties to the fullest extent, there is at least one who does. Without these members performing their duties, the Senate could fall apart. These members should be commended for getting involved with Senate and for accepting responsibilities that affect all students.
Within Senate, the positions of treasurer, assistant treasurer, and executive secretary require a great deal of time to make sure that Senate runs smoothly. Treasurer Bob Grunzinger, St. Louis senior, and assistant Treasurer Jade Shopp, Estes Park, Colo., junior, each spend about 40 hours a week, including evenings and weekends, to keep track of more than 40 organizations that receive funding.
This means that they have to account for more than
THE ISSUE:
Student senators
$1.5 million from student activity fees. This includes managing expenditures and revenues for some of these organizations. In addition, Grunzinger and Shopp sit on boards that are funded through restricted fees.
The Center for Community Outreach is a Senate organization created to provide opportunities for learning outside the classroom, and equipping individuals to make community change.
Co-directors Lorraine Claassen, Hesston senior, and Julie Harris, Mission Hills senior, should be commended for their great work in putting about 500 students into volunteer programs throughout the area.
These are just a few of the many hard-working students who deserve a pat on the back for their dedication as student leaders within the University community.
SARBPAL HUNDAL FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
City commission needs to take musician ordinance seriously
It is going to take a lot more than a toot from one street musician's horn to change a city ordinance. Unless city officials are influenced otherwise, the request by Lawrence musician Tom Miller to legalize playing music for money on Massachusetts Street will remain in the archives of the city manager's office.
Chances are, not even a marching band could motivate officials to consider the proposal.
the decision to leave well enough alone leaves musicians such as Tom Miller to find free expression and financial opportunity elsewhere.
David Longhurst, president of the Downtown Lawrence Association, said he felt uncomfortable with the proposal, foreseeing problems with enforcement and solicitation. This comfort zone, created through casting away the request without serious discussion, may avoid potential problems, but it also denies an opportunity to enhance the downtown atmosphere.
The request must be
THE ISSUE:
Downtown Lawrence
The city should at least consider allowing downtown street performers.
favored by three of the five city commissioners for placement on the agenda, and at least three members
— Mayor Bob Moody, Bonnie Augustine and John Nalbandian — have stated that they either oppose or hold no opinion on the matter.
The city categorizes street musicians as beggars. A beggar is someone who takes away from the community. These musicians desire to provide an enjoyable experience to the residents of Lawrence.
If proper precautions and limitations were added to the mix, such as establishment of designated playing areas and licensing requirements, and if a limited number of musicians were allowed, the benefits the music would bring to the ambiance of Massachusetts Street would outweigh the potential risks.
ERIN KRIST FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
MAXNEILY Chicago Tribune.
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Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Hate comes from the inability of people to accept differences
This country needs an enema.
We live in a country that still holds on to antiquated ideals and moronic notions. So often are we bombarded by the self-serving media that it makes it impossible for us to make our own decisions or to take our own stances. And this is why America is losing its grip on reality.
Those who find fault in the government find it necessary to splinter off and form militias and conspiracies. These groups deviate from the norms of society in that they stand for what they believe in. However, their mantra is the antithesis of what the United States should be.
People such as Randy Weaver and Timothy McVeigh wanted so badly to see the United States in their perspective.
Weaver and McVeigh saw what they disliked about the United States and did something about it. They took their stance and acted upon it. In no way do I advocate random bombings or federal shoot-outs. But what I do endorse is the gumption to do something about what we don't like.
Their perspective, however, is one of racism, anarchy and violence. But why should this scare people like you and me? It should not scare us as much as it should make us realize the present state of this country's society.
CARTER
VOLKEL
STAFF COLUMNIST
see, somewhere hidden beneath the thin veneer of personal worry, that is these incidents no longer will be random or tragic.
What the United States needs to
They will soon become commonplace and ho-hum if the citizens of this country do not come to grips with their problems.
Sure we all have problems, some traumatic and some inconsequential. The main problem of this country, however, seems to be one of race. It seems that everyone has some sort of problem with someone else.
People complain continuously about oppression, "the man," tension and injustice. The root of this problem, however, lies in the inability of people to get past it and move on.
So what if you have a problem with Jews, African Americans, Hispanic Americans or Caucasians? Most people do. Chances are that most of the people in the United States find just as much fault with you as you do with them. This is a cynical attitude, but at least it's realistic. We are all so afraid to get past these differences and actually realize the similarities.
The racial problem in this country is more than just preconceived notions and stereotypes. It is consistent and powerful thought. It is the conscious acceptance that you are better than someone else.
What is happening to this country can be seen in the microcosmos of the Weavers and McVeighs of this world.
They thought extremists thoughts and performed extremist actions — but look where it got them.
At the rate we are going now, these thoughts, instead of being extremist, soon will be boring.
The only difference between you and Randy Weaver, however, is that he went on record speaking his mind.
He publicly said that he hated people and that he wanted no part of their actions or government. We just think it and never deal with it.
And there lies the problem with the United States and why it will either die with a social cancer or explode in racial warfare. We think too much about the wrongdoings of the other races, dote too much on our own achievements and never fully want to do any different.
It is simply a matter of time before everyone we hate rises up, hates you more and actually does something about it.
Carter Voekei is a Dallas senior In English.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Exercise does not outweigh classrooms
it seems that the physical fitness bug has bitten Student Senate in regard to a proposed increase of student fees to pay for a $31 million recreation center.
fee
I am shocked and dismayed at the astounding lack of vision displayed by even considering such an expenditure. Get your priorities straight, senators. We are here for an education, not to work out. I would like to point out that abundant opportunities already exist for students wishing to get in shape.
We have Robinson, Anschutz and Allen Field House to meet those needs. Many organized living groups maintain exercise equipment for their residents. No less than eight fitness centers exist in Lawrence that can be used for a
If that isn't enough, there also exist many student groups that cater to specific fitness interests such as cycling and running. Additionally, students may participate in intramural sports. I think you get the point.
On the other hand, it is often the case that students have to wait an hour or more before being able to use a computer on campus to complete an assignment for class. Printers in the labs are substandard and most labs require a fee to use the better printers which produce assignment quality output.
Many of my classes are in Blake and rarely does a class session go by that the overhead projectors overheat and are rendered useless. In doing research in the library, it is not uncommon to find that an article from a needed journal is unavailable because the subscription no longer could be afforded.
Just a few weeks ago, we were reading about the shortage of desks in Wescoe.
It is clear that our campus has some very distinct needs that, if met, surely would en-hance the educational experience for all involved.
I do not mind an increase in student fees as long as that increase will be put to the best possible use. I simply do not believe that new recreation center is a necessity at this time and I urge all students who agree to vote on the referendum.
Send a clear message to your student senator that you are at the University for an education, not an aerobics class!
Shannon I. Tauscher Lawrence junior
America fights the bad fight in war on drugs
Somewhere in the beginning of my primary education, I became enamored with the image of the ideal American. The early revolutionary could not be swayed by public opinion, political rhetoric or the obfuscation of the popular media. His — it was always a he — thoughts were his own, his judgments slow and measured and his convictions un-shakable.
But maybe this was just a myth.
Maybe Jefferson was merely a pup.
per of the masses
trying to make a
name for himself.
Maybe what
Patrick Henry
really said was,
"Give me liberty
or give me a com-
fortable condo in
key West. I'm not
that picky." "Whatever
the case,
today we hardly
resemble that
American ideal."
For the most part,
we buy the offi-
cial line of drive
STAFF COLUMNIST
TODD
HIATT
and are more willing to compromise our rights than take a stand on principle.
Let's look at the so-called war on drugs, for instance. Since its inception in the mid-80s, coca, from which cocaine is manufactured, and marijuana fields in Colombia have grown five-fold. Opium production, which has grown by four times, is expected to triple during the next two years. We sit here and spit in the wind and then do it again when the first wad hits us in the face. It's moronic. When we spend money like this on welfare, which at least does a certain amount of good, it is a broken program. But when we do it with the war on drugs it is called the price of success. Why?
Illegal drugs produce a net profit of $300 billion across the globe. Ninety percent of that is reinvested in industrialized nations such as the United States. We aren't likely to give this revenue up, which is evidenced by our continued supplying of drug manufacturers with the chemicals needed to produce cocaine and heroin and in our unwillingness to destroy the fields in which the products are cultivated. With modern satellites we can watch a monk take a nap in Budapest, but supposedly we can't locate a coca field. I don't buy it. We could napalm every coca field during Sunday brunch, but we don't and we won't. The money simply is too important to the world's economy
But if buying this hypocrisy weren't enough, the American people seem all too willing to give up their hard won Fifth Amendment rights to fight the drug war. We have let the government pass laws allowing federal agents and police to take our possessions on the basis of hearsay evidence without so much as a hearing. Then the burden of proof, as well as the cost, lays with the citizen to prove his innocence. The revenues from this civil forfeiture then go directly to the agency that confiscated it. Conflict of interest? Tempation for rampant abuse?
Enough is enough. It is time for the American people to take a stand and say that the war on drugs is not working. It is time we stopped financing law enforcement with money and assets taken unconstitutionally. It is time we focused our efforts on treatment, education, and providing the hopeless with hope. It is time we got our government out of the business of drug trafficking and into drug rehabilitation.
In short, it is time to think for ourselves, weigh the evidence and stand up for our rights. Did Patrick Henry die for nothing? Apparently so. We are just too blind and apathetic to do anything about it.
Todd Hattis is a Lyndon senior in social welfare
KANSANSTAFF
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Campus ... Joann Birk
... Phillip Brownlee
Editorial ... Paul Told
Associate editorial ... Craig Lang
Features ... Watt Hood
Sports ... Tom Blakemoon
Associate sports ... Bill Petula
Photo ... Andy Ruledest
Matt Flinkner
Graphics ... Noah Muisser
Special sections ... November Bommer
Jen Humphrey
Wire ... Tern Trenny
Illustration ... Mioh Leaker
HEATHER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Business Staff
THE COMPLETELY POINTLESS ADVENTURES OF BRIGG AND FRO
Campus mgr ... Karen Gerach
Regional mgr ... Kelly Connelysa
National mgr ... Mark Ozmek
Special Section mgr ... Nerm Blow
Production mgr ... Rachel Calhill
Marketing director ... Heather Valler
Public Relations dir ... Angle Adamson
Creative director .. Ed Kowelski
Classified mgr ... Stacey Weylingen
Internship/co-op mgr .. J. T. Clark
I'll see if I can find one with a more polished look. I'll use a darker tone and maybe a black-and-white palette to give it that feeling. Let me check the image again.
Brigg!
Fro!
Oh Brigg!
My goodness.
Froooooh!
Brought to you by
B. Bloomquiet
& J. Frosolone
this is the longest you
guys have ever gone!
Brigg!
Fro!
Ok Brigg!
My goodness,
Froooooh!
this is the longest you guys have ever gone!
Yeah, we've been practicing.
Brought to you by
B. Bloomquist
& J. Frosolone
Brigg!
Brigg!
Froooooh!
Fro!
Fro!
Oh Brigg!
My goodness.
this is the longest you
guys have ever gone!
Froooook!
Oh Brigg!
Oh Brigg!
this is the longest you
guys have ever gone!
My goodness.
this is the longest you guys have ever gone!
Yeah, we've been practicing.
NATION/WORLD
Friday, February 16. 1996
5A
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Second bomb found in London
The Associated Press
LONDON — Police deactivated a bomb in London's theater district yesterday hours after the Irish Republican Army appeared to reject demands for a new cease-fire.
No one claimed responsibility for the small bomb found near Shaftesbury Avenue, famous for its theaters and restaurants, but Scotland Yard said two coded telephone warnings bore all the hallmarks of the IRA.
Police were evacuating buildings in a London business district on Feb. 9 after similar warnings when a truck bomb exploded, killing two people, wounding more than 100 people and causing an estimated $125 million in damage.
The bombing broke a 17-month cease-fire in the IRA's campaign to end Britain's eight-century rule of Northern Ireland.
Just after 12:30 p.m. yesterday, barricades went up after police received seven coded warnings. Some people were evacuated, and others were told to stay inside.
Police sealed off Piccadilly Circus, Trafalgar Square, the bustling shopping district along Oxford Street and six subway stations but reopened them about three hours after the warnings.
The bomb was found in a sports bag in a phone booth on Charing Cross Road after two imprecise warnings, a Scotland Yard statement said.
Police described it as small, but such devices have killed passersby in the past.
In the IRA's first pronouncement since claiming responsibility for the Feb. 9 bombing, it made what appeared to be a threat of further attacks, saying it would continue to
assert Irish national rights in the face of British denial for as long as is necessary.
The statement blamed British Prime Minister John Major for the breakdown of the truce and repeated its demand for all-party talks on the future of Northern Ireland.
The IRA wants its political ally, Sinn Fein, included in the talks. The British and Irish governments have barred elected cabinet members from contact with Sinn Fein.
Irish civil servants plan to meet Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams today in Dublin.
The British and Irish governments have demanded a new cease-fire.
Protestants, the majority in Northern Ireland, largely favor British rule. The IRA draws its support from a minority within the Roman Catholic community, about 40 percent of the population.
The IRA statement yesterday urged pro-British militants to hold their fire.
"The IRA leadership delivered a complete cessation of military operations on a clear, unambiguous and shared understanding that inclusive negotiations would rapidly commence to bring about political agreement and a peace settlement," the IRA statement said.
Irish Prime Minister John Bruton said Protestant militant leaders shared a responsibility to salvage the peace, and that they could not use the Feb. 9 bombing as justification to halt the process.
"The building of peace and the working toward agreement requires a greater generosity of spirit from the two main unionist parties than was evident throughout the past 17 months," he said.
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Ask about our DAY OF BEAUTY
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DICKINSON
HOLIDAYS
412-800-7500
Dickinson 6
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STUDENT UNION # ACTIVITIES
SUAC FILMS
Friday, Feb 16: Sunday, Feb 18:
STRANGE DAYS
Friday 7:00 & 9:30 PM
Saturday 7:00 & 9:30 PM
Sunday 2:00 PM
THE OUTSIDERS
Friday and Saturday
Midnight
ALUMNI SPECIAL EVENT
WESTERN AUTHORIAL
AUTHOR OF THE TRILOGY
TRU WITH SEL AND MARK WILSON
CALL SHOW FOR MORE INFORMATION
642
Mass.
Liberty HALL
749-
1912
Theatre 1 is accessible to all persons
"A true original!"
Gallery, Group, WMA, NY
beautiful girls
...good times never seemed so good
4:30, 7:00, 9:40 DAILY
2:00 SAT/SUN
642
Mass
749-
1912
Theatre it is accessible to all persons
"A true original!"
642 Mass Hall 749-1912
Theatre 51 is accessible to all persons
"A true original!"
beautiful girls
good times never seemed so good
4:30, 7:00, 9:40 DAILY
2:00 SAT/SUN
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6:PM. ADULTS $3.00
(ENTRIED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
HILM MASS ACHIEVEMENTS 841-5191
Leaving Las VegasR 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
Happy Gilmore$013 5:00, 7:20, 9:45
The JurorR 9:35
Bed of RosesR 5:00, 7:30
Sense & SensibilityPG 4:45, 7:25
Mr. WrongPG 4:45, 7:15, 9:40
Mr. Holland's OpusPG 4:45, 7:35
CINEMA
HILM MASS ACHIEVEMENTS 841-5191
Ace Ventura 2$013
BabeR
Friday, Feb. 16, 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. and Saturday, Feb. 17, 10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
ECM Center (One block north of the Kansas Union)
Volunteer and Intern Placement Fair
CROWN CINEMA
BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00
(UNITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
IOWA STATE HOSPITAL $841-5191
Leaving Las Vegas$^R$
5:00, 7:15, 9:30
HILLCREST
925 IOWA $841-5191
Happy Gilmore$^{G13}$
5:00, 7:20, 9:45
The Juror$^R$
9:35
Bed of Roses$^G$
5:00, 7:30
Sense & Sensibility$^G$
4:45, 7:25
Mr. Wrong$^G$
4:45, 7:15, 9:40
Mr. Holland's Opus$^G$
4:45, 7:35
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ome spend an evening with Dr. Po-Lung Yu, a distinguished professor at the University of Kansas, Kung Fu Master and author of
Habitual Domains Freeing Yourself From the Limits or
From the Limits on Your Life
Wednesday, February 21st
7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.
free admission
Paul H. Henson
"Dr. Yu's concept of Habitual Domains, the human software that directs the function of the most marvelous computer - your brain - can actually change the way you think for the rest of your life."
Chairman, Kansas City Southern industries
Dr. Yu will speak in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. He will then sign copies of
his book, which will be available
for purchase. Any questions please call the bookstore at (913) 864-4431
OREAD
BOOKSHOP
UNIVERSITY OF NASSAU
Plan to attend this exciting and unforgettable evening!
The University of Kansas
Theatre for Young People
Presents
Story Theatre
Directed by
Brad Shaw
2:30 and 7:00 pm:
Saturday, February 17, 1986
Crafton~Preyer Theatre / Murphy Hall
Co-sponsored by
WKU Candidate
THE UNIVERSITY
THEATRE
General admission tickets are on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office, public $6, all students $3, senior customers $5; for reservations, call 913/864-3928, both Visa and MasterCard are accepted for phone orders; the box office is open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, and will open at 1:30 and 6:00 on Saturday, January 17.
Recommended for families with children ages five and older
The Virginity crossroads: Saving it or Sharing it
Story by Teresa Veazey
RESTRAINT
ABSURD
Y
nas remained at its post for 40 years.
ou won't hear this on any campus tour. Legend has it that when a virgin graduates from the University, the bronze Jayhawk in front of Strong Hall will fly away. A gift from the class of 1956, the Jayhawk is at its point for 40 years.
In light of National Condom Day, Protect a Sweetheart Week and Valentine's Day, tis't the season of love, romance and sex for many KU students. But not every student experiences sex, and some haven't experienced it at all.
The American Heritage Dictionary defines a virgin as "a person who has not experienced sexual intercourse." But does this definition help decide who is and who isn't a virgin?
Using the library
When you just say the word virginity, its definition can be different from one person to the next, said Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare and certified sexologist.
On the flip side, Dailey said he knows men and women who have done every conceivable sexual thing imaginable except have intercourse and yet pride themselves on being virgins.
"I think our society is very confused about it because there is such a wide range of attitudes and stances towards it," Dalley said. "Virginity gets its meaning from our society's definition of what sex is, and that is, sex equals having intercourse."
Oral sex or anal sex play into the definition of virginity, said Stephanie Sanders, associate director of The Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction at Indiana University-Bloomington.
"If you do everything else, why does vaginal intercourse hold the key to virginity?" Sanders asked.
Most people would say that a person who had vaginal intercourse was not a virgin, she said. But people can be sexually active and have a variety of behaviors while never having vaginal sex.
In 1991, the institute conducted a survey among undergraduate students at a Midwestern university about sexual behavior, Sanders said. According to the study, 40 percent of the 600 respondents said that if people had oral sex, then they had had sex. Four out of five respondents also said that anal intercourse counted as sex.
What would be interesting, Sanders said, would be to conduct a survey on how people defined virginity. If a person did not have vaginal intercourse, but had anal or oral sex, would that person be considered a virgin?
"If you've had oral-genital sex with your partner, to still consider yourself a virgin is silly to some people," Sanders said. "There is a lot of ambivalence about this subject."
A view on virginity
"Virginity is part of a patriarchal mentality, because I think it has to do with controlling women," Dailey said.
Keeping a man's woman to himself and keeping his property pure for himself is the mentality that usually accompanies the definition of virginity, he said. The standard for virginity always seems to weigh heavier for women than for men.
Loss of virginity for men can equal rewards, achievement and recognition, while loss of virginity for women can result in labels, such as slut or whore, Dalley said.
Art by Joel Francke
"Losing it," a phrase which usually accompanies discussion about virginity, sometimes has a negative connotation, he said.
When a woman who is a virgin has sex on her marriage night, Dailey said that people generally did not run around talking about her losing her virginity. She just got laid, he said. But if she has sex with her fance six months before she got married,
Talking about it!
then she loses her virginity.
"Anything to do with sex is a great mystery," said Bob Berkowitz, whose talk show Real Personal on CNBC was canceled two weeks ago. "We're afraid of what people will think about us when it comes to sex."
Berkowitz said his show four years ago focused on relationships. Discussion soon turned to sex
and sexuality. At the time, Berkowitz said his show was the only one that talked about sex openly, and topics ranged from AIDS to virginity.
to some people, to 'give it up' is something that is negative," he said. "But if you 'lose it' too soon, that says something about character and morals."
Berkowitz said having ordinary people as guests talking about sex and virginity was a way to connect with the audience that was watching.
"Very few people want the whole world to know about their sexuality," he said. "Most people want to know how they stack up against their friends and neighbors."
Most people, by the time they get married, have had some sexual experience, Berkowitz said. At age 45, but not married, Berkowitz admitted that he wasn't a virgin. His first time was with a girlfriend in college when he was 18.
"I didn't know what the hell I was doing," he said.
"And she was one, too. But we got the hang of it real fast."
"I'm a Christian," said Erin Webb, Hutchinson freshman. "My youth group took a pledge three years ago to abstain from sex before marriage."
As part of the pledge, which included a ceremony at her church, Erin wears a silver purity ring to remind her of the vow she took to remain a virgin until marriage. On the day of her wedding, she will give that ring, which bears a key and a heart, to her husband.
"Your virginity is something special, and you can only give it away once," she said. "Since you can only give it once, you should save it for someone special."
Webb said she was proud of her decision, but she felt she was part of a shrinking minority. While all of her really close friends are virgins, Webb didn't think most of her classmates were.
"I don't think a lot of people have the same morals I do," she said. "Virginity is not important to them as it is to me."
Table 1 and Table 2
Losing her virginity at age 13 wasn't a big deal, said Kaela Weaver, Lawrence freshman, and she had no regrets about her decision.
"I was in love with him at the time, and I was happy about my decision," she said. "It was a new experience but not something I got worked up up about."
Weaver said the one thing that she has gotten worked up about is her wedding on Sunday. Her fiance, Richard, is the one with whom she lost her virginity.
"I don't think a lot of people end up marrying the person they lose their virginity to," she said. "They have sex with someone they're not in love with and that's the reason why you don't end up with them."
with the
There's no way to absolutely tell how many students are virgins and how many aren't, said Stephanie Sanders. The Kinsey Institute's 1991 survey was aimed at a random sample of heterosexual college students, and the findings aren't specific to college students in general. According to the study, 80 percent of the males and 73 percent of the females had experienced vaginal or anal intercourse. The average age at first vaginal intercourse was 17.2 years. But that doesn't mean most college students lost their virginity in high school.
"Some people don't meet a suitable person until college," she said. "When living at home, some would never take a chance at doing this kind of thing."
"Even if you look at this kind of thing, and get 70 to 80 percent for having had intercourse, one in four or five is not having sex yet," she said.
What is important to remember is that there's quite of bit of individual variation on whether or not people should lose their virginity, Sander said.
Berkowitz said he agreed that the decision to lose your virginity was up to the individual.
"It's OK either way, as long as it's consenting," he said. "Nobody should pressure you about making this kind of conscious adult decision."
Tunetopics
Mercury Rev to Dangerous comedy
Review by Robert Moczydlowsky
Mercury Rev See You On The Other Side (Work). Longtime KJHK favorites Mercury Rev made an appearance at the Bottleneck with Hum not long ago, and those in attendance were treated to a well-played — and extremely loud — set of tunes from their latest album.
Mercury Box
So thick was the feedback from their set that when notoriously fuzzy rockers Hum took the things actually
Iercury Rev
with hardly a moment of silence. Not until very near the end of the album is there a standard break between songs, and it is that connectedness that makes this disc
See You On The Other Side opens with the almost-orchestrated lushness of Empire State, and from there it moves in and out of the jazz and art-rock worlds
cleared up a bit. Thankfully, that kind of ear-splitting feedback isn't included on the album.
so appealing.
Too often bands write songs and hit singles instead of albums. Writing and focusing on individual songs is fine, as long as there are ten or eleven worthy songs on each disc. Recently, one or two good songs have been enough to make a record.
Just ask Gren, Better Than Ezra,
Deen Blue Something or Joan Os-borne. It is about time a band put the emphasis back on writing and recording an entire album.
But what Mercury Rev has done isn't for everybody. Putting the songs second in importance to the album is risky business. No hit songs means no radio airplay, and
that means slow record sales. Let's hope this disc survives on KJHK play and word of mouth long enough for it to open a few minds. Overall: 7, and climbing.
Marta Marta self-titled (I.R.S.). Two years ago Mazyz Star came along and made it a little easier for everybody to unwind during the evening. Now, in that same spirit, I.R.S. Records has released the latest album from Marta Marta.
After all, it turns my stomach to see Alain Morrisette lauded as the latest feminist torch-bearer in rock. I love to see women rockers laugh at the gender issue and render it insignificant.
Marta Marta are five women who respond to questions about their roles as women in rock with the quip, "We're a band made of five women for exactly the same reason that the Rolling Stones is a band of five guys."
This band has too much to say musically to be considered with questions about why there aren't any great women guitar players.
Sounds good to me.
The disc is full of songs you'd expect to hear from the back corner of your favorite
smoky bar or cabaret. The album is mixed without any frills, allowing the bands' complementary vocals and guitar solos to shine without a reverb or feedback disguise.
Try this disc out while talking long distance on the phone or when eating a meal by yourself. It's a guaranteed muscle relaxer. Overall: 7
La Carrière
Rodney Dangerfield La Contessa, A Humor Romance Novel (Dove Audio). As a big fan of stand-up comedy and off-color humor in general, it pains me to write this review.
La Contessa
But I have to be honest.
This disc stinks.
disc's live track, laughter from the audience blocks almost twenty seconds of Dangerfield's act.
The idea behind the album is that Dangerfield is a great lover and that now,
Not only does Dangerfield seem to have lost his once flawless comedic timing, the sound quality of this disc is only slightly better than my answering machine. The sound is so poor that at one point on the
years later, he's telling the kiss-and-tell story of his affair with La Contessa. What you get is a lewd and often sexist locker room-style brag session. Don't buy this, it's just not funny. Over-all: 1 (This disc gets a one by default. Dangerfield's a great comedian and he deserves a one so that he can have at least a little of the respect he've been cryin' about
for so long.)
You can reach Robert Mocdowsky at mozuckd@falon.cc.ukans.edu. Please send any demo tapes, 7* records or CDs to be reviewed to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60645
Hill
Hill
Page 6A
Tonight
Salty Iguanas with Nil Lara and Brother, p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. Cost: $4-$5.
February 16, 1996
- Blues Jam with Bento & Friends, 10 p.m. at the Full Moon Cafe, 803 Massachusetts St. Free.
Tomorrow
— Shiner with Molly McGuire and Priss, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck. Cost: $4-$45.
— The Band that Saved the World, 10 p.m. at the Full Moon Cafe. Free.
— Caribe, 9 p.m. at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. Cost: $4-$5.
Sunday
— Simplexity, 9 p.m. at the Grand Emporium. Cover Charge.
Monday
- Irie Vibrations, 9.p.m. at The Bottleneck. Cost:
$4.45
Open Mike night, 8 p.m. at The Bottleneck.
Free.
The Commitments, 9 p.m. at the Granada
Tuesday
— The Commitments, 9 p.m. at the Granada.
Advance Tickets: $10.
- Arthur Dodge with James Gruaerholtz and Alan Levine, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck. Cost: $3-$4.
— Chucklehead with Chill Factor and Big Mouth, 9 p.m. at the Bottleneck. Cost: $3-$4.
Just-In-Case, 9 p.m. at the Granada. Cost:$3-$4.
*Wednesday*
— Blues Stew, 8 p.m. at Full Moon Cafe. Free.
— Seven Mary Three with Poe, 9 p.m. at the Granada. Advance Tickets: $8.
Thursday
Carol Dressler's Open Mike, 8 p.m. at the Full Moon Cafe. Free
Thursday
The Rentals with Elevator Drops, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck. Advance Tickets: $7.
Humdrum & the Cat, 9 p.m. at Full Moon Cafe.
Free.
SWIMMING Results and scores from the second day of the Big Eight Championships in Oklahoma City. Page 2.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1996
Since his arrival last fall, Kansas freshman forward Paul Pierce has been...
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
SECTION B
P
Kansas freshman forward Paul Pierce signs an autograph after Wednesday's game in Allen Field House. "At home, people say 'hi' to you," he said. "They don't treat you like here — like a celebrity. But I don't really mind it."
Flying High
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
Paul Pierce can see no way out.
In front of him, to his left, to his right — he is boxed in.
They're closing in from behind.
And all of these kids are waving pens and pieces of paper in his face.
Pierce wants to enjoy a women's basketball game in Allen Field House. All everybody else wants is his autograph.
"At home, people say 'hi' to you," Pierce said. "They don't treat you like here — like a celebrity. But I don't really mind it."
People have been noticing Pierce, a freshman forward from Inglewood, Calif., for quite a while. But the high school McDonald's, *Parade* and *USA Today* All-American wasn't always known for his basketball abilities.
While growing up in California, Pierce showed promise on the baseball field. He threw and hit baseballs better than kids two years older, said Jamal Hosey, Pierce's oldest brother.
Pierce had a good teacher. His other brother, Steve Hosey, is a minor league outfielder who recently signed with the Kansas City Royals.
"Paul was a great baseball player for his age," Steve Hosey said. "He really picked up baseball very fast. It came very easy to him."
So did football. So did basketball. Maybe that was because Pierce played sports all the time.
Playing sports was better than the alternative. When his family lived in a Los Angeles apartment, drug deals went down in the nearby alley. Buildings in the neighborhood were spray-painted with graffiti. Gangs were the only family for many kids the same age as Pierce.
"It's easy to start hanging out with the gangs, then bam, you're right there with them," Pierce said. "I just thank my brothers for steering me in the right direction."
Pierce's two brothers didn't just get him involved w athletics instead of gangs. They drove him to practices They rebounded for him. They threw batting practice. And they were also his fathers.
But after the family moved to Los Angeles about 10 years ago, George Pierce never was seen again.
George Pierce and Lorraine Hosey, Pierce's birth parents, never were married and never lived together. As Paul was growing up in east Oakland, Calif., his father only visited from time to time.
"I don't think that I've ever lost anything from that," Pierce said. "There's just a lot of love that comes between us four."
Much of that has to do with Pierce's mom. She has worked as a nurse for 26 years. She has held down other jobs during that time, too, to pay for new basketball shoes, a replacement baseball glove or a pair of cleats.
"She would do anything for anybody," Jamal Hosey said. "I remember times when she had holes in her shoes."
She was able to send Jamal to Wyoming, where he was a forward on the Cowboys' basketball team. A few years later, Steve headed to Fresno State on a baseball scholarship.
But by far the biggest buildup of interest in one of Lorraine Hosev's sons before college was around Paul.
Pierce had focused on basketball by his sophomore year of high school. After he was invited to several summer basketball camps between his sophomore and junior years of high school, the letters and calls started coming.
"Paul's last year in high school was utterly hell," Lorraine Hosey said, carefully searching for the precise words. "I was glad when that was over."
The remnants remain, though. Pierce's mom has boxes of mail — much of it unopened — sitting in her garage. Schools might send 10 to 30 pieces of mail some days.
"I kind of played with it at first, but then after a while, it
really got hectic," Pierce said. "And I didn't know whether to answer the phone. You don't know whether it's your friends or a coach."
Amid the overflow, Pierce narrowed his choices to Kansas, UCLA, California, Arizona and Oregon. Very few people, including Jamal Hosey, who called him "mama's boy", didn't think he could stray far from his mother's doorstep.
With his mom living in Inglewood, Pierce thought long and hard about staying 15 minutes from home and playing for the Bruins.
"Then I started realizing: This is my life. What's going to be best for me?" Pierce asked.
to be best friend! I have asked.
His family thought that somewhere other than UCLA
See PIERCE, Page 4.
Title hopes hinge on road trip
Women want to hold back Oklahoma, Oklahoma State
By Evan Blackwell
Kansan sportswriter
There seems to be a dim light at the end of the tunnel for the Kansas women's basketball team in its race to become the final Big Eight Conference champion.
That glimmer of light appeared Wednesday night when No. 18 Colorado stumbled in its pursuit of the first-place Jayhawks. The Buffalo loses at Nebraska, dropping them a full game behind Kansas entering this weekend's play, and into third place.
The Colorado loss wasn't missed by the Jayhawks, who are preparing to make their final road trip of the regular season to Oklahoma on Sunday.
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said she and the assistant coaches called each other with updates on the score throughout the game.
"I stayed up working until about 2 a.m." she said.
All the late-night work might pay off with the Big Eight title if Kansas takes care of business this weekend. The Jayhawks will play No. 24 Oklahoma State tonight in a battle of the top two teams in the conference.
With only two weekends left in the regular season, Kansas remains in first place at 8-3. The Cowgirls are right behind at 7-3.
"We're not focusing on our position, other than the fact that we know we're in contention," Washington said.
Although the Jayhawks do control their own destiny, Washington said Kansas must be careful not to worry about the standings.
Oklahoma State coach Dick Halterman said the Jayhawks were more than just in contention they're the team to beat.
"We want to win the Big Eight, and we know we have to win our games at home," Halterman said. "The Eagles must win."
"Especially after what they did to us up there."
Kansas pounded the Cowgirls 85-58 earlier this season in Lawrence, and the Jayhawks have been near the top of the standings ever since. Washington said the team knew Oklahoma State would have plenty of motivation tonight.
"They haven't lost at home this year and I'm sure they want to try and even things up," she said.
It will be the Jayhawks who will be looking to even the score Sunday afternoon when they travel to Norman to take on Oklahoma.
Kansas suffered one of its more disheartening losses of the season when the Sooners upset them 71-68 in Allen Field House last month.
Kansas senior guard Charisse Sampson said that mistake wouldn't be made again.
"I'm not taking anything away from Oklahoma, but we just weren't ready to play that night," Washington said.
"We'll be ready," Sampson said. "We're this close to the Big Eight title, and we're going to fight for every game."
Sharp Texas Longhorns may spear dull Jayhawks
Kansas baseball team is off to a slow start
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team is going to get a history lesson this weekend when it travels to Texas to lock horns with the No. 20 Longhorns.
ing a school that is up to its cap in winning tradition.
He has led Texas to 17 College World Series appearances and two national championships.
Texas coach Cliff Gustafson is the winningest coach in NCAA Division I baseball history with 1,427 victories.
Although the Jayhawks will play a Texas team that is 5-5 this year, they will be play-
For Kansas senior pitcher Clay Baird, keeping focused on the present Texas team and not the past will be vital to Kansas' success.
"Everybody's pumped up to go down there," he said. "But they've been beat. They're not 10-0.
In contrast, Kansas has been to the College World Series once.
Kansas is counting on Baird for another solid pitching performance. He led the Jayhawks (1-2) to their first win last weekend at the Duel in the Desert.
"To us, even though they've accomplished a lot, we're looking at them as just another team."
Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall has simple goals for the weekend.
"Our goal is to go down there and play well," he said. "Winning will take care of
itself.
The Jayhawks didn't throw many strikes or play a strong defense last weekend. They gave up 29 runs and made nine errors in three games.
"Pitching-wise, we haven't made the progress this week that I'd hoped we'd have made," Randall said. "The pitchers have not pitched enough games and we haven't been outside enough, which doesn't help us."
"Our concentration is going to be on throwing strikes, swinging the bat well and playing good defense.
Kansas senior catcher Ted Meadows said the pitching was going to have to make drastic improvements for the Jayhawks to succeed.
"We've got to get the ball down and throw more strikes," he said. "Last week, we were throwing it high and getting hit hard."
But Texas is off to an uncharacteristically slow start, which disappoints Gustafson.
"We've really been struggling. I anticipated starting off a little bit better than that," he said. "We're not happy to be 5-5. But it looks like we're starting to come around a bit."
KANSAS
TRACK & FIER
Steve Punno / KANSAN
High jumper known for his talent, humor
Kansas freshman high-jumper Jason Archibald, a Garden City native, was a two-time Kansas state champion in high school.
By Adam Herschman Kansen sportwriter
At the beginning of fall training last year, Kansas senior high jumper Debbie Jacobs didn't know any of the freshmen.
Kansan sportswriter
Jacobs said she told the newcomers to introduce themselves so everybody would get to know each other.
She proceeded to walk to 6-foot-4-inch Kansas freshman high jumper Jason Archibald as he was stretching on the ground.
"I got to him and asked him his name," Jacobs said. "He said, 'Chaz, with a z.' I was like, 'OK. Chaz.'
For the next week, Jacobs called Archibald "Chaz" until she found out his real name.
TRACK & FIELD
"He totally played it off the whole time," Jacobs said. "He jokes around a lot."
One person who knew Archibald's name last fall was Kansas assistant track and field coach Rick Attig.
"For a long time they were calling him Chaz, until they heard me call him Jason," Attig said. "He's really quiet, and sometimes you don't know whether he is serious or not."
Archibald, a Garden City native,
was a two-time Kansas 6A high jump
champion in high school, and he was
ranked as the best high school
jumper in the country by Track and
Field News.
When it was time for Archibald to choose where to attend school, he
decided to stay in his home state.
Archbald took first in the Kansas Invitational, the Missouri Invitational, and the Jayhawk Invitational.
"I wanted to go to school here; they just happened to have a track team," Archibald said.
Last weekend, he finished third in
Archibald has not equaled his preseason performance; his best jump during the season has been 7 feet.
In high school, Archibald jumped 7-3 1/4 inches, and at the team's preseason meet before winter break, Archibald jumped 7-4. However, the preseason meet was not an official meet.
Kansas sophomore high jumper Erica Low said if the meet had been official, Archibald would have qualified for nationals.
the Husker Invitational.
Despite his success, Archibald has had to face the tough transition from high school practices to college practices.
Low said in high school teams, high jumpers are basically allowed to do whatever they want.
"The training here is a whole lot different from what he was used to in high school," he said.
Although Archibald will spend this weekend preparing for the Big Eight Conference Indoor Championships Feb. 23-24, several of the Jayhawks will travel to Manhattan tomorrow for the KSU Meet.
---
SWIMMING Results and scores from the second day of the Big Eight Championships in Oklahoma City. Page 2.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1996
Since his arrival last fall Kansas freshman forward Paul Pierce has been...
Tvler Wirken / KANSAN
SECTION B
P
Flying High
Kansas freshman forward Paul Pierce signs an autograph after Wednesday's game in Allen Field House. "At home people say 'hi' to you," he said, "They don't treat you like here — like a celebrity. But I don't really mind it."
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
Paul Pierce can see no way out.
In front of him, to his left, to his right — he is boxed in. They're closing in from behind.
And all of these kids are waving pens and pieces of paper in his face.
Pierce wants to enjoy a women's basketball game in Allen Field House. All everybody else wants is his autograph.
"At home, people say 'hi' to you," Pierce said. "They don't treat you like here — like a celebrity. But I don't really mind it."
People have been noticing Pierce, a freshman forward from Inglewood, Calif., for quite a while. But the high school McDonald's, *Parade* and *USA Today* All-American wasn't always known for his basketball abilities.
While growing up in California, Pierce showed promise on the baseball field. He threw and hit baseballs better than kids two years older, said Jamal Hosey, Pierce's oldest brother.
Pierce had a good teacher. His other brother, Steve Hosey, is a minor league outfielder who recently signed with the Kansas City Royals.
"Paul was a great baseball player for his age," Steve Hosey said. "He really picked up baseball very fast. It came very easy to him."
So did football. So did basketball. Maybe that was because Pierce played sports all the time.
Playing sports was better than the alternative. When his family lived in a Los Angeles apartment, drug deals went down in the nearby alley. Buildings in the neighborhood were spray-painted with graffiti. Gangs were the only family for many kids the same age as Pierce.
"It's easy to start hanging out with the gangs, then bam, you're right there with them," Pierce said. "I just thank my brothers for steering me in the right direction."
Pierce's two brothers don't just give athletics instead of gangs. They drove him to practices. They rebounded for him. They threw batting practice. And they were also his fathers
But after the family moved to Los Angeles about 10 years ago, George Pierce never was seen again.
George Pierce and Lorraine Hosey, Pierce's birth parents, never were married and never lived together. As Paul was growing up in east Oakland, Calif., his father only visited from time to time.
"I don't think that I've ever lost anything from that," Pierce said. "There's just a lot of love that comes between us four."
Much of that has to do with Pierce's mom. She has worked as a nurse for 26 years. She has held down other jobs during that time, too, to pay for new basketball shoes, a replacement baseball glove or a pair of cleats.
"She would do anything for anybody," Jamal Hosey said. "I remember times when she had holes in her shoes."
She was able to send Jamal to Wyoming, where he was a forward on the Cowboys' basketball team. A few years later, Steve headed to Fresno State on a baseball scholarship.
Pierce had focused on basketball by his sophomore year of high school. After he was invited to several summer basketball camps between his sophomore and junior years of high school, the letters and calls started coming.
"Paul's last year in high school was utterly hell," Lorraine Hosey said, carefully searching for the precise words. "I was glad when that was over."
The remendants remain, though. Pierce's mom has boxes of mail — much of it unopened — sitting in her garage. Schools might send 10 to 30 pieces of mail some davs.
"I kind of played with it at first, but then after a while, it
really got hectic," Pierce said. "And I didn't know whether to answer the phone. You don't know whether it's your friends or a coach."
Amid the overflow, Pierce narrowed his choices to Kansas, UCLA, California, Arizona and Oregon. Very few people, including Jamal Hosey, who called him "mama's boy," didn't think he could stray far from his mother's doorstep.
With his mom living in Inglewood, Pierce thought long and hard about staying 15 minutes from home and playing for the Bruins.
"Then I started realizing: This is my life. What's going to be best for me?" Pierce asked.
His family thought that somewhere other than UCLA
See PIERCE. Page 4.
Title hopes hinge on road trip
Women want to hold back Oklahoma, Oklahoma State
By Evan Blackwell Kansas sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
There seems to be a dim light at the end of the tunnel for the Kansas women's basketball team in its race to become the final Big Eight Conference champion.
That glimmer of light appeared Wednesday night when No. 18 Colorado stumbled in its pursuit of the first-place Jayhawks. The Buffalooes lost at Nebraska, dropping them a full game behind Kansas entering this weekend's play, and into third place.
"I staved up working until about 2 a.m." she said.
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said she and the assistant coaches called each other with updates on the score throughout the game.
Tayed up working them about 2 a.m., site said.
All the late-night work might pay off with the Big Eight title if Kansas takes care of business this weekend. The Jayhawks will play No. 24 Oklahoma State tonight in a battle of the top two teams in the conference.
With only two weekends left in the regular season, Kansas remains in first place at 8-3. The Cowgirls are right behind at 7-3.
Although the Jayhawks do control their own destiny, Washington said Kansas must be careful not to worry about the standings.
"We're not focusing on our position, other than the fact that we know we're in contention," Washington said.
Oklahoma State coach Dick Halterman said the Jayhawks were more than just in contention they're the team to beat.
"Especially after what they did to us up there."
"We want to win the Big Eight, and we know we have to win our games at home," Halterman said.
Kansas pounded the Cowgirls 85-58 earlier this season in Lawrence, and the Jayhawks have been near the top of the standings ever since. Washington said the team knew Oklahoma State would have plenty of motivation tonight.
"They haven't lost at home this year and I'm sure they want to try and even things up," she said.
It will be the Jayhawks who will be looking to even the score Sunday afternoon when they travel to Norman to take on Oklahoma.
Kansas suffered one of its more disheartening losses of the season when the Sooners upset them 71-68 in Allen Field House last month.
"I'm not taking anything away from Oklahoma, but we just weren't ready to play that night," Washington said.
Kansas senior guard Charisse Sampson said that mistake wouldn't be made again.
"We'll be ready," Sampson said. "We're this close to the Big Eight title, and we're going to fight for every game."
Sharp Texas Longhorns may spear dull Jayhawks
Kansas baseball team is off to a slow start
By Dan Gelston Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team is going to get a history lesson this weekend when it travels to Texas to lock horns with the No. 20 Longhorns.
ing a school that is up to its cap in winning tradition.
He has led Texas to 17 College World Series appearances and two national championships.
Texas coach Cliff Gustafson is the winningest coach in NCAA Division I baseball history with 1,427 victories.
Although the Jayhawks will play a Texas team that is 5-5 this year, they will be play-
For Kansas senior pitcher Clay Baird, keeping focused on the present Texas team and not the past will be vital to Kansas' success.
"Everybody's pumped up to go down there," he said. "But they've been beat. They're not 10-0.
"To us, even though they've accomplished a lot, we're looking at them as just another team."
In contrast, Kansas has been to the College World Series once.
Kansas is counting on Baird for another solid pitching performance. He led the Jayhawks (1-2) to their first win last weekend at the Duel in the Desert.
Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall has simple goals for the weekend.
"our goal is to go down there and play well," he said. "Winning will take care of
itself.
The Jayhawks didn't throw many strikes or play a strong defense last weekend. They gave up 29 runs and made nine errors in three games.
"Pitching-wise, we haven't made the progress this week that I'd hoped we'd have made," Randall said. "The pitchers have not pitched enough games and we haven't been outside enough, which doesn't help us."
"Our concentration is going to be on throwing strikes, swinging the bat well and playing good defense.
"We've got to get the ball down and throw more strikes," he said. "Last week, we were throwing it high and getting hard."
Kansas senior catcher Ted Meadows said the pitching was going to have to make drastic improvements for the Jayhawks to succeed.
But Texas is off to an uncharacteristically slow start, which dispoints Gustafson.
"We've really been struggling. I anticipated starting off a little bit better than that," he said. "We're not happy to be 5-5. But it looks like we're starting to come around a bit."
KANSAS
TRACK & FIET
Steve Puppe / KANSAN
High jumper known for his talent, humor
Kansas freshman high-jumper Jason Archibald, a Garden City native, was a two-time Kansas state champion in high school.
By Adam Herschman
At the beginning of fall training last year, Kansas senior high jumper Debbie Jacobs didn't know any of the freshmen.
Kansan sportswriter
Jacobs said she told the newcomers to introduce themselves so everybody would get to know each other.
She proceeded to walk to 6-foot-4-inch Kansas freshman high jumper Jason Archibald as he was stretching on the ground.
"I got to him and asked him his name," Jacobs said. "He said, 'Chaz, with a z.' I was like. 'OK, Chaz.'"
For the next week, Jacobs called Archibald "Chaz" until she found out his real name.
TRACK & FIELD
"He totally played it off the whole time," Jacobs said. "He jokes around a lot."
One person who knew Archibald's name last fall was Kansas assistant track and field coach Rick Attig.
"For a long time they were calling him Chaz, until they heard me call him Jason," Attig said. "He's really quiet, and sometimes you don't know whether he's serious or not."
Archibald, a Garden City native, was a two-time Kansas 6A high jump champion in high school, and he was ranked as the best high school jumper in the country by Track and Field News.
When it was time for Archibald to choose where to attend school, he
decided to stay in his home state.
Archibald took first in the Kansas Invitational, the Missouri Invitational, and the Jayhawk Invitational.
just happened to have a track team,
Arethold said.
Archibald has not equaled his preseason performance; his best jump during the season has been 7 feet.
Last weekend, he finished third in
In high school, Archibald jumped 7-3 1/4 inches, and at the team's preseason meet before winter break, Archibald jumped 7-4. However, the preseason meet was not an official meet.
Kansas sophomore high jumper Erica Low said if the meet had been official, Archibald would have qualified for nationals.
the Husker Invitational.
Despite his success, Archibald has had to face the tough transition from high school practices to college practices.
Low said in high school teams, high jumpers are basically allowed to do whatever they want.
"The training here is a whole lot different from what he was used to in high school," he said.
---
Although Archibald will spend this weekend preparing for the Big Eight Conference Indoor Championships Feb. 23-24, several of the Jayhawks will travel to Manhattan tomorrow for the KSU Meet.
2B
Friday, February 16, 1996
SCORES & MORE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Men's Top 25 Schedule Yesterday's Games
No. 1 Massachusetts 70, La Salle 53
No. 7 Utah 69, Hawaii 59
No. 8 Wake Forest 85, Maryland 78
No. 1 Purdue 63, Ohio State 55
No. 13 Arizona at No. 18 UCLA, (n)
No. 20 Stanford 65, Oregon State 50
No. 24 Louisville 67, North Carolina Charlotte
64
Tonight's Games No games scheduled
**Tomorrow's Games**
No. 1 Massachusetts at No. 10 Virginia Tech, 11 a.m.
No. 2 Kentucky at Tennessee, 2 p.m.
No. 3 Connecticut vs. Notre Dame, 12:30 p.m.
No. 4 Villanova at Pittsburgh, 11 a.m.
No. 5 Kansas at No. 22 Iowa State, 3 p.m.
No. 6 Cincinnati at DePaul, 1 p.m.
No. 7 Utah vs. San Diego State, 8:30 p.m.
No. 8 Wake Forest at Georgia Tech, 3 p.m.
No. 9 Penn State at No. 11 Purdue, 7 p.m.
No. 12 Texas Tech at Houston, 7:30 p.m.
No. 13 Arizona at Southern Cal, 3 p.m.
No. 14 Georgetown vs. No. 15 Memphis, 2 p.m.
No. 17 North Carolina vs. Virginia, 1 p.m.
No. 18 UCLA vs. Arizona State, 4 p.m.
No. 20 Stanford at Oregon, 6 p.m.
No. 21 Boston College at Providence, 8:30 p.m.
No. 23 Eastern Michigan at Ball State, no.
No. 25 Mississippi State at Mississippi, 4 p.m.
No. 5 Kansas at No. 22 Iowa State
3 p.m. Tomorrow — Ames, Iowa
TV: Channels 4, 13
Radio: 807.7, 105.8 FM
Radio: 90.7, 105.9 FM
Kansas (2022-8-1)
34 Paul Pierce F 6-6 Fr.
34 Raef LaFrentz F 6-11 So.
35 Scot Poland C 6-10 Jr.
11 Jacque Vaughn G 6-1 Jr.
13 Jerod Hasse G 6-3 Jr.
No. 22 Iowa State (18-5, 7-2)
13 Shawn Bankhead F 6-6 Fr.
46 Kenny Pratt F 6-4 Jr.
13 Kevin Cato C 6-11 Jr.
10 Jacy Holloway G 6-0 Jr.
23 Dedric Willoughy G/F 6-3 Jr.
Women's Top 25 Schedule
yesterday's Games
Tonight's Games
MitteBay G Games
4. No Stanford 86, No 15 Oregon St. 62
5. No Tennessee 79, South Carolina 73, OT
6. No Clemson 79, North Carolina 78, OT
No. 1 Georgia vs. No. 13 Vanderbilt, 8 p.m.
No. 7 Iowa vs. No. 9 Penn St., 7 p.m.
No. 8 Old Dominion vs. Richmond, 6-30 p.m.
No. 10 Virginia at Florida St., 6 p.m.
No. 11 Wisconsin vs. Ohio St., 6 p.m.
No. 22 Purdue at Minnesota, 7 p.m.
No. 23 Stephen F. Austin vs. Sam Houston
No. 24 Oaklahoma St. vs. Kansas, 7 p.m.
Tomorrow's Games
No. 2 Louisiana Tech vs. South Alabama, No. 2
No. 4 Stanford vs. Oregon, 9 p.m.
No. 6 Texas Tech vs. Houston, 2 p.m.
No. 12 Albany vs. No. 17 Florida, 7 p.m.
No. 14 Duke at Georgia Tech, 1 p.m.
No. 15 Oregon St. at California, 9:30 p.m.
No. 19 Clemson at Wake Forest, 1 p.m.
No. 21 Mississippi vs. Arkansas, 1:30 p.m.
No. 25 Notre Dame at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m.
Sunday's Games
No. 3 Connecticut at Rutgers, 1 p.m.
No. 5 Tennessee at No. 20 Auburn, 6 p.m.
No. 7 Iowa at No. 11 Wisconsin, noon
No. 8 Old Dominion vs. Va. Commonwealth, 1p.m.
No. 9 Penn St. at Minnesota, 2 p.m.
No. 16 N. Carolina St. at North Carolina, 11
No. 18 Colorado at Iowa St., 2 p.m.
No. 22 Purdue at Illinois, 2 p.m.
No. 24 Oklahoma St. vs. Kansas St., 2 p.m.
Kansas at No. 24 Oklahoma State
ton. Tonight Stillwater, OKa.
7 p.m. Tonight
Kansas (15-8, 8-3)
33 Tamecka Dixon G 5-9 Jr.
34 Charisse Sampson G 5-10 Jr.
34 Angie Hartleib F 5-10 Jr.
51 Nakla Santford F 6-3 Jr.
51 Nakla Santford C 6-3 Jr.
No. 24 Oaklahoma State (17-5, 7-3)
11 Kilien Chroniator G 5-3 Sr.
10 Stacy Coffey G 5-10 Sr.
10 Renee Roberts G 5-10 So.
10 Misty Wenster F 6-1 Sr.
10 Gina Shaterkina F 6-3 Sr.
Kansas at Oklahoma
2 p.m. Sunday — Norman, Okla
Kansas (15-8, 8-3)
33 Tamecka Dixon G 5-9 Jr.
34 Charise Sampson G 5-10 Jr.
40 Angie Halbleb G 5-10 Jr.
51 Jennifer Trapp F 6-1 Jr.
43 Nathan Stallard C 6-3 Jr.
Oklahoma (11-11, 3-7)
25 Pam Pennon G 5-6 Sr.
10 Roxanne Lone G 5-7 So
12 Etta Maylubly G 5-11 Sr.
2 Tina Taylor F 6-0 Jr.
21 Lana Jones F 6-5 Sr.
PRO HOCKEY
Yesterday's Games
San Jose 2, Ottawa 2, tie
Calgary 6, N.Y. Islanders 3
Montreal 1, N.Y. Rangers 2, tie
Tampa Bay 4, Colorado 2
Detroit 4, Washington 3
Chicago 3, Boston 0
Anaheim at Vancouver, (n)
PRO BASKETBALL
TV
Yesterday's Games Late Games Not Included
SPORTS WATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Friday (schedule subject to change and/or blackout).
(All times Central)
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18
10 a.m.
ESPN — NASCAR Auto Racing.
Dash Series, Florida 200 NASCAR Goody's Dash, at Daytona Beach,
Fla.
2 p.m.
ESPN -- Senior PGA Golf, Suncoast Classic, first round, at Lutz, Fl.
PRIME --- NCAA Hockey, Notre Dame at Michigan
ESPN2 — Women's NCAA Bas
7n.m
ESPN — PBA Bowling, Oregon
Open at Portland, Ore.
TNT --- NBA Basketball, Denver at Charlotte
PRIME — Tennis, ATP Tour.
Sybase quaterfinal match, at San Jose, Calif.
Cleveland 95, Toronto 76
Cleveland 95, Toronto 78
Miami 91, Denver 98
Chicago 112, Detroit 98, OT
Minnesota 108, Washington 98
Houston 112, San Antonio 86
Udah 106, Dallas 103
Phoenix at Portland, n)
KANSAS SOFTBALL
Three full days of play await the Kansas soft ball team this weekend.
Red Lvon Tavern
The Jayhawks are opening their spring season today at the Third Annual Pepsi-Cola Intercollegiate Classic in Grand Prairie, Texas. Kansas plays at 11:15 a.m. against Southwest Missouri State and again at 3:45 p.m. against Northwestern.
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass. 832-8228
The first round will conclude for the Jayhawes tomorrow when they face future Big 12 Conference foe Texas A&M at 1:30 p.m.
After the opening round, the 20-team field will be bracketed and play in a single-elimination tournament. The championship game is scheduled for 3:15 p.m. Sunday.
And LaFrentz expects the same reaction again when No. 5 Kansas faces No. 22 Iowa State at 3:05 p.m.toorrow in the Hilton Coliseum.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Jayhawks are eager for high-stakes game against Iowa State
LaFrentz ready for homecoming
There was no trumpet fanfare for Kansas sophomore forward Raef LaFrentz, only a chorus of boos welcomed the Iowa native when he returned to his home state last year.
"But I hope my reaction is a little bit different," said LaFrentz, who scored four points last year in Ames, Iowa. "I can't wait to get up there."
It's likely that the Cyclones can't wait for the Jayhawks to get there, either.
By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter
Kansas leads the Big Eight Conference with an 8-1 record, but Iowa
State is just one game behind with a 7-2 record.
One of Iowa State's losses came on Feb. 7 in Allen Field House when the Jayhawks won 89-70. Kansas junior guard Jacque Vaughn said he had been impressed by the Cyclones before the game, but was even more so after it.
"Each player knows his role and plays his role to the best of his ability every night," Vaughn said. "And I think they even play better at their home."
Team sets goal to focus this weekend
By Spencer Duncan Kansan sportswriter
The Minnesota ICE Vollies are where the No. 22 Kansas men's tennis team will be
This two-day tournament is scheduled for today and tomorrow. Participating are No. 27 Florida State, No. 9 South Alabama, No. 23 Minnesota and the Jayhawks. In today's competition, Kansas is scheduled to play
KU Tennis
Florida State, and South Alabama will play Minnesota. Tomorrow, the winners of each match will meet one another and the losers will meet each other.
The weekend offers good competition for the team.
said men's tennis coach Michael Center.
"We have to be physically and mentally ready," Center said. "This is a good opportunity to see if we are."
Kansas will compete in both doubles and singles competition at the tournament. Among the players competing for Kansas in singles will be No. 13 sophomore Enrique Abaro, No. 36 senior Victor Fimbres, and No. 96 sophomore Trent Tucker.
The match with Florida State will be a reunion for the Jayhawks. Former teammate J.P. Vissepo, who transferred from Kansas to Florida State after the fall semester, will be in singles competition. Vissepo is 3-0.
Fimbres said the players' goals are to head into competition with direction.
London, 1885
"We are a good team," he said. "We just want to stay focused and win."
Swimmers eyeing two conference titles
By Dan Gelston Kansan sportswriter
He outdistanced his nearest competitor by six seconds.
I could have done better, but I got the points for the team, and that's what matters most," Jorgensen said.
Day two of the Big Eight Conference Swimming and Diving Championships in Oklahoma City saw the Kansas men and women position themselves for the conference title
The Kansas men trail Nebraska 205-182. The Jayhawks were hurt when they failed to qualify a swimmer for the 50-yard freestyle.
The Jayhawks also placed first through fourth in the 200-yard individual medley.
201-199.5.
But Kansas kept the score close thanks to a standout performance by junior Erik Jorgensen, who set a new conference meet record in the 500-yard freestyle with a time of 4:43.51.
Kansas men's and women's swimming coach Gary Kempf said the performances were almost what he expected.
"This is a six-session meet, and we're in good position after one day," he said. "We need to swim the rest of the meet mistake-free."
Kansas junior Rebecca Andrew won the 50-yard freestyle in 23.35, and senior Jennifer Peltier placed second in the 500-yard freestyle with a time of 4:53.26. Sophomore Kristen Nilsen placed second in the women's 200-yard individual medley at 2:03.30.
After a strong showing by the Kansas women's divers on the one-meter boards on Wednesday, the men had a lower finish.
Senior Kris Hoffman was second with 510.96 points, and sophomore Brian Humphrey finished fourth with 481.96 points.
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
MALES AND FEMALES WITH ASTHMA
IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company is currently seeking males and females with asthma to participate in our medical research studies.
TO QUALIFY YOU MUST**
**Be 4 years of age or older** Be diagnosed with asthma
**Be able to complete several short visits to our clinic.
Call today to find out if you can qualify to participate in this study.
IF YOU QUALIFY You may receive up to $250-$650 for your participation.
IMTCI
International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc.
1-800-669-4682 or (913)599-2044 16300 College Boulevard, Lenexa, KS. 66219
-
KU Student Recreation Center Referendum
If approved your fee
Feb 27 & 28. Your Vote Counts
- A Recreation facility open 18 hrs per day during the week and 141/2hrs on the weekend
- will provide...
- The design and construction of the New Rec Center
- Unlimited student use
- Low cost Family Membership
- One year Free alumnus membership to students who pay fees any time from fall '96-'99
O
- Over 150 new student Jobs
How To Vote . . .
- Bring Your Current KU ID to one of the above locations on Feb.27 & 28 from 8 am to 4:30 pm
---
Where to Vote. . .
- Burge Union (open until 7pm)
- Kansas Union (open until 7pm)
- Wescoe Hall (3 polling sites)
- Strong Hall
- Robinson Gym
↑
NOTE.
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 16. 1996
3B
Horoscopes
By Linda C. Black
Today's Birthday (Feb. 16).
You'll learn through both experience and books this year, and you'll get plenty of opportunities.
Get the latest tools in March. Fall in love in April, in a classroom setting. Around July or August, you'll have a chance for a breakthrough. It might look like a breakdown first, though. Tough it out. Your long-term goals should start to materialize in December for romance and, in January, for your career.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).
There won't be any point making suggestions unless you are very tactful. If you can see a better way of getting the job done, speak up — but do it nicely. An attraction to an intellectual type could be very interesting. Pursue those possibilities tonight.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
You might be able to find a way to use your opponent's moves to achieve your own objectives.
Don't get stuck in an outdated way of thinking, but don't give up on your objective either. Start a new project with an old friend or a close relative.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). It looks like a friend wants
you to do something you can't
afford. By cutting expenses, you
may be able to go. Discuss the pos-
sibilities during dinner. If you're
looking for love, go to a place
where athletes and sports fans
hang out.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).
Being a person of action, you probably have already figured out what you would do if you could.
Now is the time to get started. Use the information you've been gathering to help you make an intelligent choice. Tell only the truth in love tonight.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Although you've been doing well lately, you might have overlooked something important. Be especially watchful of those things you don't like. One of them may be something you need. An intimate conversation might enhance your love. Share your secret wishes.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). The business that works best for you also provides a good outlet for your creative energies. If you're not in it, look further away. A
group of people who share your beliefs will help you renew your spirit tonight. Ask your elders for pearls of wisdom.
Aries (March 21-April 19).
This is one of those times when the job needs to be done quickly and well, with no arguments. You sometimes have a problem with that, because you don't like to be told what to do. So do it before being told! Reward yourself with good food and good company later.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) Be nice to a quiet person and you could be tipped off about a secret in time to use it to your own advantage. Take traditional methods into consideration, but don't overlook new technology. A trick could backfire on you, so be careful! Learn from a smart woman.
Gemini (May 21-June 21).
Don't be afraid to work hard and with fierce determination. Your objective might seem like it's impossible to achieve, but if you can manage to keep from giving up, what you gain will be valuable. Tonight, a drive to visit a friend will be worth the bother.
Cancer (June 22-July 22).
Pressure form a financial partner can be handled easily. You may find it's meant as a compliment. If you have anything you don't want to have spread across the neighborhood, keep it to yourself.
Tonight, complete paperwork with a partner concerning your legacy.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). You are a cheerful person most of the time. If a job's tough, you might have a tendency to put it off until later, though. Well, this is later—call an old friend if you want to add something slightly outrageous to the evening. Discuss your job for a new idea.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Others may resent having to perform to your high standards, but take pride in how well you do your job. You might even appreciate the chance to show off a little today. Avoid a friend who talks too much and concentrate on one who has a heart of gold.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and are to be read for entertainment only.
REVOLUTION
FRIDAYS
with DJ Roland and Guest DJs TBA
$1.75
WELLS & DOMESTIC BOTTLES
GRANADA
1020 MASS • LAWRENCE • KANSAS
BACON ON THE DOUBLE.
just when you thought we could top the original Double Docker package. But now, you're introducing innable irresistible tease-bent! introduced the BLT.
Double Docker Taco and the Double Docker Taco. The soft and
TACO BELL
original layers you lay on from our original Double Dexter, only one of the three ways you now get into your skin, cushion, and stitch together in one taste. They are all for a limited time. If you want to own them, on the double.
At Participating locations. ©1996 Taco Bell Corp.
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
842-1212
"NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
TWO-FERS
2-PIZZAS
2-TOPPINGS
2-COKES
THREEFERS
3-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
4-COKES
PARTY "10"
10-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
1-TOPPING
1-COKE
CARRY-OUT
1-PIZZA
1-TOPPING
1-COKE
$9.25 $11.75 $30.00 $3.50
DELIVERY HOURS
Sun-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
DELIVERY HOURS
Lunch • Dinner • Late Night
1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence
DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS
Ninth Annual James E. Seaver Lecture ON CONTINUING ISSUES IN WESTERN CIVILIZATION
"Eros in French Feminist, Black Womanist, and Anglo Care Ethics" CYNTHIA J. WILLETT Assistant Professor of Philosophy
Assistant Professor of Philosophy The University of Kansas
February 26,1996
8:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
Reception Following
WESTERN CIVILIZATION PROGRAM
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Sponsored by the KU Western Civilization Program
Mardi Gras Is Cajun For
Party Naked!
come join us for
MARDI GRAS
Tue. Feb. 20th
Cheap Drinks, Free Stuff
Lots of Cajun Fun
• Wear a costume & win a FREE t-shirt •
Barefoot Iguana
9th & Iowa • 749-1666 • Hillcrest Shopping Center
乐
Barefoot Iguana
PIZZA PAPA JOHN'S
PIZZA
PAPA JOHN'S
Better Ingredients • Better Pizza
865-5775
Carryout Special
One Large
One Topping
$ 9.99
carryout only
2233 Louisiana
(23rd & Louisiana)
Free Delivery
NEW HOURS:
Sun 12pm-2am
Mon-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Carryout Special
One Large
One Topping
$ 99
5.
carryout only
NEW HOURS:
Sun 12pm-2am
Mon-Thurs 11am-2am
Fri-Sat 11am-3am
One Large $6.98
One Topping
$10.00
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offer.
Valid only at participating locations.
her pays all applicable taxes. Additional location
Two Tens for Ten
Two Small
Two Toppings
Add a Second $5.00 Pizza of Equal or Lesser Value for
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offers.
Valid only at participating sites.
Have never办 all applicable sales tax. Additional fee
Free Pepperoncinis & Special Garlic Sauce
Free Pepperoncinis & Special Garlic Sauce
Free Pepperoncinis & Special Garlic Sauce
One Large All the Meats or Garden Special
$9.96
Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offers.
Valid only at participating locations.
Ensure once all applicable fees have been added.
Two Large $19.96 All the Meats or Garden Special
Learn to Fly
842-0000
Cheap Beer. Cheap Food. Any Questions?
Discover Willie's Javhawk Belly-Full Burger & Beer Buy
• A Willie Burger with Cheese
• French Fries
• And a Soft Drink or Draw
with a student or faculty ID
Only $5.00
Tax not included...somebody has to pay the government!
Also, check out Willie's Hump Night Wednesdays or Tex-Tex Sunday Specials for great deals on great food.
Willie's Cafe
AND BEER
A Certified Texas Joint
6th & Vermont
(Besides what else are you going to do with your money? Save it?)
LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS
Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care
842-8665
2858 Four Wheel Dr.
CARNIVAL &
MARDI GRAS COSTUMES
• Beads*
• Masks*
• Rental Costumes*
• Accessories*
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. St.
841-2451
Willie C's Cafe
YARD & BREW
(Besides what else are you going to do with your money? Save it?)
CARNIVAL
&
MARDI GRAS
COSTUMES
* Beads*
* Masks*
* Rental Costumes*
* Accessories*
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. St.
841-2451
AMHIGH
Scholarships Available
ble
If you have two or more years of full time college remaining, a tuition, books and fees scholarship may be yours. We have several options available to you depending on your major. GPA, etc. the deadline to apply for fall '96 is rapidly approaching. Act Now Contact Dean Wilson at 864-5676 or come visit us at Air Force ROTC Room 108 Military Science Building
AIR FORCE ROTC
4B
Friday, February 16, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DILBERT® BY SCOTT ADAMS
I CAN'T BELIEVE THEY EXPECT US TO SIGN THESE NEW EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT FORMS.
Sally and David are talking to the man.
ACCORDING TO THIS,
ANYTHING WE EVEN
THINK OF BECOMES THE
COMPANY'S PROPERTY. I'M
SURPRISED THEY DON'T
CLAIM OUR FIRSTBORN
SONAL
SONS!
WHAT DO YOU SUPPOSE IT MEANS WHEN THEY COPYRIGHT OUR "DNA AND ALL DERIVATIVE WORKS"? THEY'D MAKE AN EXCEPTION FOR YOU.
EXCEPTION FOR YOU.
PIERCE: Happy to be a Jayhawk after getting big offers
Continued from Page 1.
might be best, especially with Pierce's large group of friends. The Hoseys worried that his friends might be a distraction from school and basketball.
In the end, that wasn't what sent Pierce packing for Kansas.
He saw no internal problems at Kansas.
And Jayhawk coach Roy Williams was there from the start, never lying or promising anything but always
being straightforward. Williams even flew to Inglewood on occasion just to see a game or watch Pierce practice.
"You see this guy on TV, and he's like a legend," Pierce said, wideeyed. "Just to see him at one of your high school games was really shocking."
With that attention and positive recruitment, Pierce chose the Jayhawks in the late-signing period.
Expectations for Pierce ran high even before the season began. He
not only felt that pressure but also struggled with the transition into college basketball.
"At first I didn't really know what coach wanted and what I was supposed to do," Pierce said. "In my first practices and conditioning, I almost wanted to walk off the court some days. We were running so much."
Those uncomfortable days are gone, Pierce said. He is Kansas' second-leading scorer, averaging 13 points. And he leads the team with
23 dunks, including several baseline drives.
But for now, Pierce is having the time of his life.
pierce dreams of continuing his high flying. He wants unlimited success for the Jayhawks and eventually for himself in the NBA.
"I hear so much about the NBA; you're just there for business," he said. "I just like the situation I'm in right now. I wouldn't trade it for anything. I'm going to stay all four years."
Build a
B
ody
V. I.P. Membership $20 per month for students, faculty and KU staff
B
BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility
50% OFF ENROLLMENT
749-2424
925 Iowa
Offer expires June 17, 1995
Buy 10 tans
Get 10 tans
FREE for $30
New Tanning Bulbs
THE HOUSE
Sunday Dinners thatll remind you of home without all the nagging
Try one of our mouth-watering Tex-Tex Sunday dinners
Willie O's Cafe
WAND TART
A Certified Texas Joint
6th & Vermont
(Doesn't all this make you hungry? Then why aren't you here yet?)
Mama's Meat Loaf
with real mashed potatoes & green beans.
with real mashed potatoes & green beans.
Chicken Fried Steak (Lunch size) with our scratch made country gravy.
Only
$4.95 ea.
Sundays-after
4:00 p.m. with student or faculty ID
Willie C's
Cafe
AND BAKERY
Also, check out Willie's Jayhawk Belly-Full Burger & Beer Buy or Hump Night Wednesday Specials for great deals on great food.
A Certified Texas Joint
6th & Vermont
(Doesn't all this make you hungry? Then why aren't you here yet!)
400s Real Estate
704 New Hampshire
STUMBLE INN
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
**Call drinks add a dollar/cover charge
$2.50 Pitchers
25¢ Draws/$1.00
House Shots*
$1.00 Anything**
2 for 1 Well drinks
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
*Cover charge.
**Call drinks add.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal FAA rules and regulations. You may be able to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin, or an invention, to make any such preference, limitation
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
A
Mia
1:00am Wi & Sat until 2:00am
We are what's hot.
Wednesdays are
Student Nights
$2 admission with
your student ID.
Juicers
Showgirls
913 n. Second
Mia
Thurs 7:30pm-1:00am M & Sun until 2:00am
300s Merchandise
Juicers Showgirls 913 n. Second
...To Fetch a Pail of Knowledge!
X
Classified Directory
AMERICA'S CHRISTIE'S Adult Love & Gift Store JOY BOX
From the beach to the bedroom. Christie's has something for you.
Post Valentine Day's Sale 30% off selected items February15,16,8.17th
LINGERIE • GAGS • ADULT GIFTS
CHRISTIE'S TOY BOX
Jack and Jill Read Through the Hill...
Choose from 20 colors!
America's #1 Adult Gift and Joke Store
Coupon
DESIGNER
PERM
SPECIAL
$39.95
Beau
105 Personals
110 Business Personals
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Beauty
WAREHOUSE & HAIRZONE SALON
OF LAWRENCE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Announcements
Detoxifying Treatment
to purify your hair
Removes henna debris
Removes paraben
removes borate, lactic acid
OUR DESIGNER
PERM INCLUDES:
1
Custom Cut, Blowdry
A Style
A '10' value for '19'
A '20' value for '29'
REDKEN
200s Employment
Reconstructive Treatment for a deep penetrating condition. Amputated damaged and chemically burned skin.
CALIFORNIA
TAN
PAUL MITCHELL
AVEDA. Lanza
BODY DRENCH
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BACK TO BASICS
JOICO
OPI
IMAGE
TIGI
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SEWASTIAN
BROCKTO
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$3'00 OFF
(515 purchase minimum; includes sale items)
Hours, M F 9:8 Sat 9:6 Sun Noon &
exp. 1/16/96
UDK.
SEDASTIA
100s Announcements
Coupon
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CONDITION
& SMINE
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REDKIN
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only
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From
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Servi-
520 West 23rd. Lawrence * 841-5885
$300 OFF
OPI
TIGI
MAGE
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(Hours are minimum for public collections)
Hours M-F 9-8, Sat 9-6, Sun Noon &
235 Typing Services
男 女
The Kardan will knowlessly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, religion, sexual orientation, disability or ethnicity. Further, the Kardan will not knowingly advertise that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation.
1
100s Announcements
110 Business Personals
Need Cash?
We loan cash on almost anything of value: CDs, VCRs, TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence is a more liberal loan company. JAWHAK PAWN & JEWELRY 1841 W. 645-7109
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Hoops, naval rings with charm, too rings;
body piercing rings and more!
The Eic. Shop
193 Main St.
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
CREATED
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8 Saturday 8-4:30 Sunday 12:30-4:30
864-9500
120 Announcements
SPRING BREAM PAKAAN City Beach Florida Press $10 Per Person Week, Trik Shirt Brace, True Fashion Hotel $40 per person
http://www.springbreaktravel.com 1-800-675-6386
7. w/ash ALL DAY EVERY DAY Independent Laundromat, 20hrs, & lows | Access the street from dairy farm
Spring break specials, Cucumis and Jamaican $11.99 lowest price? 7 nights, air and hotel at $420.00
$10 on food and drink!
http://www.westervilletravel.com/ 1-800-675-696
Spring Break
GUARANTEED
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ON CAMPUSEN
Spring Break - Price WAR!
CANT BEAT THIS! South padre Island
Beachfront from $114. includes Party Package*
1. 1,800 Hour Bundle (includes 2,427)
2. 500 Hour Bundle
Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise! 7 days $2,700+
Includes 15 meals an $6 free parties Great beach
night life! Leaves from Pt. Lauderdale http://www.
springbreakrevel.com/876-687-6386
GET AGROUP OF 14 TOGETHER & YOU TRAVEL FREE!!!
ASK YOURSELF THIS:
**SPRING BREAK **96
With only 1 week to live - DON'T BLOW IT!
BOOK NOW!
sides & beds $100 Babies $250 Jumbo 'anuary'
HOT SPRING BREAK TRIPS
CANCUN PADDEE HELIZE!
FREE FOOD & DRINK PACKAGES
food http://www.studentadvtra.com
Local Contact(s:
Kevin @ 749-1399
Ash @ 836-3247
Bob @ 749-1395
Classic Travel @ 749-1555
Destination Unlimited
@ 842-7447
Spring Break! Panama City! 6 days, room w/inchits.
$119.00 Walk to best bays 7 nights in Key West, $250.00
Corona Beach Hilton ( great beaches, near Disney), $80.00
sarthetravel.com 1-800-678-6386
sarthetravel.com 1-800-678-6386
COMPLETE S. A. R. MICHAEL TAPO
Jamaica Cancun Florida
Organize a group. TRAVEL FREE!
SunSplash Tours 1-800-426-7710
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
PANAMA CITY BEACH
DAYTONA BEACH
INCLUDES DAILY BEACH PARTIES
EVENING CLUB PARTIES AND
GREAT DISCOUNTS !!!
(800) 998-TOUR
PARTY ON THE BEACH
SPRING BREAK '96
Who pays for AT&T, Spinnit, and MCU's multi-billion dollar advertising and marketing campaign? YOU GO U.S. DUNS! You don't advertise or bother you with calls; it just money you pay on long distance in Russia. The U.S. DUNS cost about $15 billion.
CANCUN MEXICO FROM $ 339
PANAMA CITY BEACH FROM $ 129
120 Announcements
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
HINTON HEAD ISLAND
SPRING IS NET ON US NEWS 14HOURS BREAK
BABY BROWN SUNSHINE
MILK CANDY
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from $439
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from $119
FREEDOM OPTIONS ON SCREENS
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OR SUMP OVER TO OUR USER BITE AT:
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130 Entertainment
Free party room for 20-200 at Johnny's. 842-0377
MIRACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale starting at $9.98 and up.
1910 Haskell, 814-7504
Enjoy House Back Biking on our historic and pictureure 140-acres - Onured Trail Rides any time weather permits (above 25 degrees) by appointment. $10 per hour. 24 hour notice. Call (913) 604-6810
Spring Break 1996
TRAVEL FREE !!
Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas
Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas Panama City, Davtona, Padre
**Great low, low prices
**Free Trip on only 15 sales
Call for a FREE information packet!
电话
Sun Splash Tours 1-800-426-7710
140 Lost and Found
Kilten found near 11th and Idiaca. 3-4 month old. Call
865-2291.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, February 16, 1996
5B
男 女
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
$35,000 / YR. *Income* potential. reading books. Took Free (1) 800-988-0779 ect. R. 1892 for details.
Carpenter / Hardy person. Full-time or part time. Good wang
conditions/ call 841-7827.
HELP WANTED: Help needed in licensed day care. Call
843-0602.
Looking for someone to do pay work and farm clean-
ance. Please e-mail 278.001.9019
Marketing Majors meet marketing genius and make money
Call 794-1775
Rental / Showing Agent / Office Assistant, Full-time or part-time, good wages. Call 841.7827.
FLEX HOURS HUGE $ POTENTIAL!
You say WHEN... You say How MUCH?
Sure beats waiting tables! Call 665-2757
Apartment Management. Great job for graduate student or work. Work in home. Average 30 hours per week. $800 per month plus apartment. Call 913-382-1062
United Child Development Center in accepting applications for preschool. Hours are 10am-3:30pm, M-F. (866) 724-9900.
Wanted. 100 Students. Low $8 to $100. New metabolism breakthrough! Left 15 to 19 in 3 week. Guaranteed Results
Adams Atulun Center/The Learned Club has imminent opening for dessert prep. person. 3 days a week, flexible schedule: 3-10F.M. Apply in person at 1266 Oread Avenue.
Assistant Mgt. wanted for leading women's retail store in Oksa, Ks immediate position with full benefit package. Send resume to Claudia Sophir at Catu Fahsions 2008 S. E Santa Fe, Taupe, Ks. 6002
Adams Alumni CenterThe Learned Club has innate opening for fine dining pantry cook Prefer experience, but will train, aggressive work. 5 day, full-time position with benefits 8AM-4M'TH shift.
5 day, full-time position with benefit 8AM-4PM shift.
apply in person at 216 Broadway Area
Part-time now, full time in summer. General office work & apartments must be a Kansas resident, be enrolled at KI, with at least 12 hours, have GPA of 2.0 or be a business analyst or related field
e-courses open. Great jobs for Students. Telephone fundraising for SADD (Students Against Drunk Drunk). We work early evening and St. murgant, $4hr plus possession. Call 843-810 or apply at 610 Mass. St. Bate.
Wait staff position available at the Mass St. Deli. Must have MWF daytime lunch availability. Applied at Schumun Food Company business offices 8am-4pm Monday Friday at 719 Mass (Upstairs about Small house).
CAMP COUNSELORS Join the adventure and share the memories at SUMMER CAMP!
instructors for hurdles and land sports, WSLife Lake Guards, Tennis, Climbing, Arts and more! 2 hours from NYC. Call 215-867-9070 or write 151 Washington Lane Jewettville, PA 10320
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for swimming Michigan boys' girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterkising, gymnastics; rifley, archery, golf, sports, computers, campers, crafts, drummals. Or more than 15 years old. Apply to BK 800 or more plus R & B (Camp WC) GWC, 176 Maple Ridge, IL 010083 847-446-2444
Kitchen start positions available at the Mass Street Deli and Buffalo Bob Smoke House. Food prep and line cooking. Some daytime hours are helpful. Start at $4 per hour. Shipping time to New York,费州, or port of call; profit sharing plus length of service benefits of $200 May 30th and $400 by Dec. 30th. Apply at Schumm Food Co. (859) 671-3820, Mfr. Pc. 217-7195 (mass) above Smoke House.
500 SUMMER CAMP OPPORTUNITIES IN NY, PA.
NEW ENGLAND.
Monday, Feb. 19-6:45 a.m. 12:00 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 20-9:30 a.m. 3:00 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 22-9:30 a.m. 3:30 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 23-9:30 a.m. 3:40 p.m.
Caterers, Kansas and United Inns Catering
Department, $4.60 per hour, paid in cash on they pay-
labor.
Maint follow dress codes, able to stay for long periods,
and lily up to 90 minutes. Apply Makeup and Dresswear.
Please use the provided masking tape.
Choose from over 30 camp instructors need tennis, Baseball, Hockey, Rollerblading, Soccer, Lacrosse, softball, Volleyball, Basketball, PE Majors, Gymnastics, lifespan, Lifeguard, WSL water-skiing, Sailing, Wurfbing, Fitness,攀岩, Mountain Biking, Promerizing, Rock Climbing, Scuba Diving, Ceramics, Stained Glass, Jewelry, Wood-Working, Photography, Radio, Nature, RN's, Chefs, Food Service, Call Amherst: 516-433-4883
Part Time Marketing Support
Great opportunity for that special person wanting to gain business experience in marketing. Position requires position related knowledge & typing of 50 wpm. Position involves data entry & spreadsheet development, research, trade show preparation, & more! Please request to Amberls Lowell Service 1065 Lowsell Ave, Suite 600 (Overland Park, KS 69210) Overland Park, KS 69210 OR call us at 400-234-5460 Ext. 1128
CITY OF LAWRENCE
SEASONAL POSITIONS
LANDSCAPE WORKER: March through November, 32
40 hr / wk Must be 18 years of age and have valid drivers
license.
BALL DIAMOND MAINTENANCE-E 20 hr / wk March through May, 30 hr / mid-august - 4th, 45 - 50 h/day
CUSTOMER: Year round. 18-22 hr (w) privately 24hrs
(th). Valid for lease only. Certified & valid drivers license $ 6.90 / hr. Deadline
Dec 31, 2015.
Complete application at admin. Services, 2nd floor, City Hale Rd 67th Lawrence ROWS 8640E. EMPLOYED MAY
205 Help Wanted
205 Help Wanted
GRADEMENT STUDENT POSITION
Sunnypark Instructor/Toddler is seeking grade student application in addition to a position. Duties include supervising student-takers in a toddler early intervention program, training teachers, assisting in classroom activities, and attending staff meetings. Applicant must be a KU graduate student enrolled in at least one credit hour. Full experience with codifiers is required. Please fill out application in Room 1149 Haworth.
EDUCATION PROGRAM ASSISTANT
EDUCATION PROGRAM ASSISTANT
The Assistant will help the student work approximately 50 hours per week beginning this Spring. This person would serve as an assistant to our professional staff assisting with clinical and administrative duties and would be able to take work on a regular weekly schedule. Program Assistants also work with art / teachers (primarily working with the children's classes and/or preschool) and are responsible for equiv classes. The Assistant must have a Kansas Career Work Study qualified. To apply, please pick up an application and return with
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER, 200 W.9TH LAWRENCE, KS 66044 843-ARTS
PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN MASSACHUSETTS
Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Golf, Archery, Bicycle, Posing Overnight Camping, Ropes and Rock Climbing, Weight Fitness and Cycling, other openings including Performing Arts, Fine Art, Figure Skating, Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Cooking, SEWING and Rocketry; All Waterfront/Pool Activities (Swimming, Sailing, Windsurfing, Diving), Residential rooms, room, board and travel. June 18th - August 17th.
MAH-KEE-NAC (Boys): 1-800-753-9118
DANBEE (Girls): 1-800-302-3752
AMERICA'S PREMIERE SPORTS CAMPS
WNADU FOR BOYS/DANBEE FOR GIRLS
(Western Massachusetts)
GVER 100 POSITION AVAILABLE
ALI LANE, Bldg. Arts and Crafts,
Gymnastics, Horseback Riding, Drama, Woodshop,
Jacket and Ice Roller Waterkies, H水壶s, and more!"
No Prevence Experience Required
Top position available for Advance
on CAMPUS INFO AND INTERVIEWS
DATE: FEBRIARY 28-29,1006
TIME: 9AM TO 4:00PM
PLANS FOR ADVANCE
FIELER 28-INFO TABLE: 29-OREAD AND REGION
ALIST ROOMS
SUMMER JOB HISTORY
Men Call:
1-800-404-0238
Women Call:
1-800-392-3752
CAMP WNADU
CAMP DANBEE
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W 24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
DUI / TRAFFIC / CIMRALINE
OVERLAND PARK - KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTN: WAYNE AWK
Call for a free consultation (613) 866-094
LA
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 TENNESSEE 843-4023
$ $ $ MONEY $ $ $ FOR COLLEGE
Hundreds & thousands of grants & scholarships available to all students. Immediate qualification. No repayments EVER.
Call 1-800-585-8243
Fusion Lighting Inc., is redefining the limits of light through electrodesense lighting technology. We are looking for a creative and self-motivated person to act as our Product Applications Specialist. This position will provide direct technical support to customers wishing to adopt Lighting's products to specific Original Equipment Manufacturer (O.E.M.) applications and will support demonstration projects.
If you are a graduating senior or a recent college graduate who would like to work for a company involved in cutting edge technology, then Fusion Lighting, Inc., is the place for you.
In addition, this position will develop customer application notes and presentation materials in support of sales and marketing programs; host customer visits; and design custom reflections and other optical components required to meet the needs of O.E.M. customers.
Qualified applicants must have: B.S. in a technical field; knowledge of lamp reflector design; and knowledge of lamp specifications and the design of area lighting. Relocation to the Rockville, MD area is required. Please fax or resume salary and salary requirements to Fuelon Lighting, Inc.,
PRODUCT APPLICATIONS SPECIALIST
FusionLighting
FUSION LIGHTING, INC.
225 Professional Services
PROMPT ABORTION AND CONTRACEPTIVE SERVICES
The Classifieds
Save You:
TIME
AND
MONEY!
Dale L. Clinton, M.D.
Lawrence 841-5716
$
Take a Free Test Drive
205 Help Wanted
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake DU' s & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole
16 East 13th
Sally G. Kelsey
842-11-33
XT10 Clipper Road, Gatherersburg,
(601) 278-9571
(AT&T) TX32-FL1
LSAT
LSAT MCAT
235 Typing Services
AA/EEO Employer M/F/D/V
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
GMAT
Preparing for the GMAT, GRE, LSAT, or MCAT? Take a practice test, learn valuable test-taking strategies, & receive a detailed computer analysis of your performance. The exam will be administered FFFFFFREE of charge, under simulated test conditions.
GRE
Sat., Feb. 24th, 10:00 am
KAPLAN
X
To reserve a seat Call 1-800-KAP-TEST
Call Jacket 865-8585 for applications, term papers,
transactions, etc. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Phone: (865) 8585-7211.
1000 Massachusetts
1-800-KAP - TEST
Preparing for the
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
Black 10 Eye Dr. Marcellen. British size 7. 465-70. Call
864-6666.
Canon AP-300 300 electronic typewriter, one line memory,
Four typewriter bodies. 845-842-4848
COMPUTER MEMORY: $20-$30 per MEG
leave message at 1(800)511-9065.
Volin, appraised at $1,500. Yours for $120. Try it for yourself.
842-484-498
FOR SALE 1992 white Acirc Intrema GS3 door, 5-heel,
fully loaded, bra, sunroof, with visor, and spoiler. Excellent
condition 72,000, $10,500. Serious inquiries only.
749-4606
For sale! 1982 kawasaki 500 Limited. Book price in
$110, asking $600, but price is negotiable. $4,000 miles,
garage kept, well maintained. Leaving sate must sell!
Please call Travis 706-7396
Basketball tickets for sale in student section.
Price negotiable. All remaining games
Call 850-2674
405 For Rent
340 Auto Sales
AM/FM; stereo; Hard Tank (Speed). Get Approx.
AM/FM; Great Car, Very Good Condition. Phone 913-874-
2600. www.amfirmedia.com
Guarantee: 1006 natural honeys - 1-800-2320-0232 ext. 3255.
Fast Funds Transfer - Raises $1 in 5 Days. Green Groups,
Motivated Individuals, Fast, Easy - No Financial
Obligation (800) 802 1982 Ext. 33
360 Miscellaneous
NEEDED: 36 PED TOLOE LOSWEG NOW!
Guaranteed! 100% natural! 1-800-299-627 ext. 3255.
A
EAST MIDLAND HIGH SCHOOL
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon · 6:00 Tues · Sat.
BUY · SELL · TRADE
THE CHAPMAN USED & CURIOUS GOODS
BRE BR townhouse at 1831 Valley Lane. Walk to campus. Firefighters, W2D backup, guard with equipment. Call 507-499-1442.
1 Bedroom Subsuite Feb. Bent Paid Water, Cable,
Padded Tailor, Laundry Pachrayi. Call Amy Atty
403-268-3555.
400s Real Estate
1/2 block from campus, studio apartment. $310.00
mnt, all utilities included. 842-7544-864
405 For Rent
One Bedroom Available March 1st. Wet turpitude location,
Bes. Et. 6 month lease, for $800. Bq451-001 or
912-734-5611.
2 Bedroom Sublease.
Walking distance to campus.
Maloney, laundry facilities.
Rockaway Avenue.
Evenon - ERobert #842-621.091.
Shannon Plaza Apartments & Townhouses 2 & 3 bedrooms townhouses available immediately. Ask about us.
Spring Break Berenice Condo, Hot Location. South Patrén area with plus people. Deposit required. 1000-2499. Cdav $500. 1000-2499. Cdav $500.
Available immediately. 1 bedroom, unfurnished apartment. 12th floor. from $700 per room. Overland Heights.
Jo Spin
1/2 block from campus. One bedroom apartment.
$850 + utilities/month, 842-7644.
Two-bedroom apt. (outside). WeatherDyer and dishwasher. Close to canyon. Yery Clemen. Parking.
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Studio apartment at Oread
(1/1&2 blocks from Union). Water & gas on rent
6 month lease, $475/month.
Email: info@northeast.edu
Washer and Dryer Units for Rent!
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842 5111
Large 3 bedroom apt. and studio apt
in remodeled house near KU.
Call 841-6254
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.
1&2Bedrooms
February rent FREE on 1 Bdm apt. sublease
Laundry, near campus, on bus route. $280.00.
CALL 841-4177
*Normally $30.00, for a short训
are $4.50, a month per set.
*NEW Whirlpool Large Capacity
neither dryer sets.
*Renting now and for the fall of
1996.
Call Now! 766-8177
Call 841-4177
301 W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
M-F10-6 SAT10-4 SUN12-4
OnKU Bus Route
3 Hot Tubs
Quail Creek
ExerciseRoom
Apartments & Townhouses 2111 Kasold Drive 843-4300 Call for Appt.
"In a busy, impersonal world, we provide good, old fashioned personalized service."
Managed & maintained
by Professionals
Mackenzie校区 1138 Kentucky. New leasing for Aug. 1, 59 old luxury apts, close to campus. All 3 BR, bathroom, washer & dryer, all kitchen appl. 2, laundry room, well-lit enclosure, energy efficient. Call 749-1606
405 For Rent
--is what you want
your new home awaits...
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
24th and Eddingham Dr.
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
- Exercise weight room
- Fireplace
- Laundry room
- On site management
- Energy Efficient
Professionally managed by
KVM
MASTERCRAFT
Offers
--is what you want
your new home awaits...
Completely Furnished
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Tangrove
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Segents Court Campus Place
19th & Mass. 1145 Louisiana
749-0445 841-1429
Sundance
7th & Florida
841-5255
Orchard Corners
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasol
749-4226
COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTALS
DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND
Mon.- Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
MASTERCRAFT
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Winter Special
2 BR $ 399
3 BR $ 499
- On the bus route
- 3 Bedroom (2 baths)
- Laundry facility
- Quiet Location
Short time Only!
Equal Housing Opportunity
- 2 bedroom (1 & 1/2 baths)
- 2 Bedroom (2 baths)
(call for appt.)
843-4754
- 24 hr. Emergency maintenance
meadowbrook If BIG
UNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1460-Fem
student housing alternative. Open & dress member
ship, non-profit organization, democratic control
room, now $190-240 incl. dining tables, TWL. Wii-
table Close to campus & Maus Call or step by 841 0464
2&3 bedroom
townhomes are available now.Walk or ride the bus to KU. Enjoy the quiet feel of the country with the convenience of the city.
---
MEADOWBROOK
15th &Crestline
842-4200
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Saturday 10-4
Sunday 1-4
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
7TH & FLORIDA
NOW LEASING FOR SPRING
FOUR BEDROOM
ASK ABOUT
Our Three Person Special
$690 and Up
Pool and Clubhouse
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
Eldridge Street. On Bus Rd. Feb. Req. Fsb.
$210/Mo. Pbs 1/4 Utl. Call 842-0556.
E.H.O.
841-5255
Roommate needs, Summer Suburban. New room may retraced W/T/8200 + 1518 hours. Cust-NR-9494.
Room配备 wanted to stay 3 hitters, 2 bats per
permit at Maulwockle. Must be 18 years old.
Credit: Barkley, Bill (Fall 2016)
430 Roommate Wanted
Female wanted for 5 Bedrooms, luxury living space all amenities, WBAC, 120 square feet. Sizes large and small.
Female graduate student to share time 2-1 HR, $80/hr+ Calling 654-793-1200. Must like cash and can not be married.
Female roommate wanted to share two furnished apartments in the Anfi Floor through single cell furniture. Send resume to: Roommate@anfi.com.
Need 1 NS param to share core portable b2 unit B4
CALL CALM_01 DW, FDW, firewall, fire extinguisher CALL CALM_01
CALM_01
Remainance: assume A15P 24M plan plus 14M. On kVr
banks, need good health, very site and maintenance.
On kVr banks, need good health, very site and maintenance.
Reservoir is share space located 104 feet northwest of
Rockville, MD. A support lift with 8th floor
address: 308-546-6769; 308-546-6770.
roommate wanted. 3 male sharing 1 bedroom roommate 1 roommate 19th, March. Most rent paid for
Female roommate needed. Almost new house with map of campus room. Welcome APC, DVG, Deck, Gauge, Deck near route. Short or long term lease starting March 1st. $275.00 per week. Call 859-6546.
Female NS Boommate needed to stay 2 baggel kit. Furnished except aboard WFD. W/Dishwasher, A/C Rent $350/mo & 12 IU/Avail, 57 or for Fall 90, must include cases 832-2697
Roommate wanted for 8床room apartment clone to campus (UFS and other). Weather and room, rent is negotiable and one third utilities. Call Mike Terry or CAM: as43 at 843 4267.
**WANTED ASA!** Female resumant to share 3 bedrooms
stairsty, wgf flirting, dishwasher,卫衣器 B265mma
staircase, treadmill, air conditioning
Wanted ASAP - NM MEM to provide to share space in Balm atpt, altn & other. Ask for and arrange on offreet parking $250 + 1 oil. Call Wade 88-4082. Leave message
Stop by the Kleaner offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check,
charged on MasterCard or VISA.
- In person: 119 Stauffer Flint
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for; that amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Endure.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be cropped for the unused days. Refinds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Broad and narrow.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of insertions: Cost per line per day 1X 2-8X 4-7X 6-14X 15-20X 30+X 3 lines 2.20 1.70 1.15 0.95 0.80 0.55 4 lines 2.05 1.30 0.85 0.75 0.70 0.50 5-7 lines 2.00 1.15 0.80 0.70 0.65 0.45 8+ lines 1.60 1.00 0.70 0.65 0.60 0.40
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days= $17.00 (4 lines TX 85 per line X 5 days).
Classifications
100 personal
112 business perennials
118 announcements
123 entertainment
125 loyal services
140 land & found
128 help wanted
129 professional services
129 hybrid services
305 for sale
340 auto sales
380 miscellaneous
430 roommate wanted
370 want to buy
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
Please print your ad one word per box:
Date ed begins: ___ Total days in paper.
Name:
Classification:
Phone:
Address:
VISA
Account number:
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daisy Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Signature:
Account number:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Expiration Date:
The University Daily Kansas. 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60045
"Just For You Lawrence!"
Dillons FOOD STORES
We Honor:
KU
NOVUS
VISA
MasterCard
Diners
Prices Effective Feb.16-20, 1996.
Low Prices On The Items You Buy The Most.
That's Value. That's Dillons.
EXCEL
GROUND BEEF
BEE REFORMED
913-725-7800
Fresh Ground Beef 5 Lb. Chub $590
BAR S
FRANKS
Bar S Meat Franks 12 oz. Package 78¢
-From Our Deli-
Deli Wafered
Turkey Breast
$298 lb.
California Head Lettuce 59¢
WHITE ENRICHED BREAD
Top Fresh
White Bread
16 oz. Loaf
35¢
Campbells
MILK CHOCOLATE
Cream of Mushroom
SOUP
Campbell's
Mushroom
Soup
10.75 oz.
51¢
Softie Gentle
A Delia Hines Adventure Tale
A MARVEL WEEKLY NO. 273
BEGINNER'S GUIDE TO ADVENTURES WITH SOFTIE
Soft'N Gentle Bath Tissue 4 Roll Package 83¢
Art & Design
Folgers
Annual Report
Folger's Coffee
39 oz. Can -Selected Varieties
$597
Perc./Reg. and Auto dri
Dillard'S
MILK & LAVENDER
COTTAGE GHEESE
FLAVOR
6 FL OZ (170 mL)
NET WT 5.25 OZ (142.9 g)
Dillons
Cottage Cheese
24 oz. Assorted Varieties
$139
Food Club
100% FROZEN CONDENSATED
Orange Juice
12 FL. OZ. (350 mL) - HOMEMADE 17% CALORIE (12.7 kJ)
Food Club
Frozen
Orange Juice
12 oz. Can Reg. or Hi-Pulp
66¢
edge edge
edge edge
FOR THE WEEKEND
Edge Shave Cream
7 oz. Asst. Varieties
$133
NEW CAPTION
ORIGINAL
MOISTURIZER
Moisturizer for all skin types
100 ml (3.38 fl oz)
DAIRY UV PROTECTANT
UV Protectant
Moisturizer
for all skin types
100 ml (3.38 fl oz)
Oil Of Olay
3.5 to 4 oz. Asst. Varieties
$529
EXTRA STRENGTH
TYLENOL
Strong Pain Relief
Contains No Azoic
Caplets
60 CAPLETS - 500 MG EACH
RALSCH & LOME
Sensitive Eyes
19.4 FL. OZ. (500ml)
RALSCH & LOME
Sensitive Eyes
19.4 FL. OZ. (500ml)
Tylenol $312
Bausch & Lomb Saline Solution 12 oz. Bottle For Sensitive Eyes $122
Sudafed
Premium Quality Non-steroidal
Namax Decongestant
Nasal Decongestant and nasal congestion
Do not use in baby or young children
Without Prescription
24 TABLETS 20 mg each
Sudafed Cold Tablets 24 Ct. $346
Qtips
300
Q-Tips Cotton Swabs 300 Ct. $137
DOUBLE COUPONS UP TO 50¢ IN VALUE!
---
"Just For You Lawrence!"
Dillons FOOD STORES
We Honor:
KU
HONVUS
VISA
MasterCard
Credit Card
Prices Effective Feb. 16 -20, 1996.
Low Prices On The Items You Buy The Most.
That's Value. That's Dillons.
EXCEL
GROUND BEEF
SUP AUTOMOTRIC LTD.
0421 73 52 08
Fresh Ground Beef
5 Lb. Chub
$590
BAR S
FRANKS
Bar S Meat Franks 12 oz. Package 78¢
-From Our Deli-
Deli Wafered
Turkey Breast
$298 lb.
California Head Lettuce 59c
WHITE ENRICHED BREAD
Top Fresh
White Bread
16 oz. Loaf
35¢
Campbells
Cream of Mushroom
SOUP
Campbell's
Mushroom
Soup
10.75 oz.
51¢
Softin Gentle
Judith
Wilkie Robinson Theatre
THE STUDIO OF ROSS ROSE
MUSIC BY LISA BROOKS
ART DESIGN BY DAVID LITTLE
Soft'N Gentle Bath Tissue 4 Roll Package 83¢
Int &
Exclus
Folgers
Avonne Knoxed
Folger's Coffee
39 oz. Can -Selected Varieties
$597
Perc./Reg. and Auto drip
Patriot's
Deli's
UNIVERSAL
COTTAGE CHEESE
75%
NET WT. 16.2 OZ (450 G)
Dillons
Cottage Cheese
24 oz. Assorted Varieties
$139
FoodClub
100% FRACTION CONCENTRATOR
Orange Juice
12 FL OZ (340 mL) 500 METERS 1 2/3 CUPCAKE (8.5 oz)
(277 g)
Food Club
Frozen
Orange Juice
12 oz. Can Reg. or Hi-Pulp
66¢
edge edge
edge edge
edge edge
Edge
Shave Cream
7 oz. Asst. Varieties
$133
NEW CARTER
ORIGINAL
SPF 15/PA 18
DAIRY UV PROTECTANT
SPF 15/PA 18
WATER LESS
SPF 15/PA 18
Oil Of Olay
3.5 to 4 oz. Asst. Varieties
$529
EXTRA STRENGTH
TYLENOL™
Strong Power Relief
Contains No Ages!
Caplets www.caplets.com
50 CAPLETS - 500 MG EACH
Tylenol $312
BANSOH & LOREM
Sensitive Eyes
17.9 FL. OZ. (530 ml)
17.9 FL. OZ. (530 ml)
Bausch & Lomb Saline Solution 12 oz. Bottle For Sensitive Eyes $122
Sudafed®
Penalizante sin oxígeno de carbono
Nasa Decongestant
Immediate nasal congestion relief
Not for use in pregnant women
Without Bromethiazine
94 TABLETS 20 mg each
Sudafed Cold Tablets 24 Ct. $346
Qtips
300
Q-Tips Cotton Swabs $137 300Ct.
DOUBLE COUPONS UP TO 50c IN VALUE!
THEJAYHACKER
Academic Computing Services University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Spring 1996
Welcome to the world of KU computing
Inside
THEJayhacker
KU Computer Center
Computing services for students
2,3
You've surfed the Web Now you want your own home page! 4,5
When you think about computing does your first thought involve a computer nerd?
Campus map and lab information 6,7
Here at the KU Computer Center, we know about the "computer nerd" stereotype. In fact, some Computing Services staff sport pocket protectors and speak a language that bears little resemblance to English.
Dialing-in from home made easy 8
The care and feeding of floppy disks 8
Like most stereotypes though, the computer nerd doesn't represent the people who work here and come to the Computer Center to use the student computer lab.
Instead you'll find all sorts of people at the Computer Center—and soon learn that they are doing all kinds of computing.
In the labs you'll see people processing words, crunching numbers, and surfing the Web for research or fun.
Staff in Business Services and Office Services use word processors and spread sheets to keep up with the day-to-day business of Computing Services.
Behind the scenes there are lots of people who do exactly the same kind of computing you might do in the lab.
It isn't surprising that staff in almost every area of the Computer Center surf the Web (of course, staff only surf the Web for research!).
Behind the scenes youd also find the people who keep the machines running and develop software used on the KU multiuser systems. While these people focus on different kinds of computing, many are using the same tools available in the Computer Center lab.
The trainers who help you learn about software and hardware are an important part of the Computing Services staff. They develop and teach a variety of classes about the Internet (free) and other aspects of computing ($). You may see them teaching in the lab or auditorium—
and you can get to know them if you attend the Internet classes (see schedule on page 3).
Min. Deck Min. Deck
If you use the Computer Center lab (between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m. or midnight), you may encounter the staff from Customer Assistance-they can help you with your questions about using the lab. You'll see them helping students, handing out laser prints, loading the in Brief documentation rack, and generally lending a hand.
FUEL INDEXS
If you come to the lab between 10 a.m. and noon or 1 to 4 p.m. on weekdays, you may also see the User Services consultants. They are the ones that answer the more complex computing questions--about statistics, programming, and more.
What all these people have in common—and what you'll discover if you come to the Computer Center—is that computing at KU is for everyone. And Computing Services staff is working to make it accessible for you.
THEJayhacker is published by Academic Computing Services at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. Volume 5, number 2, spring 1996.
KU computer services for you!
Get your accounts for e-mail (free) or terminal server ($)
All KU students, faculty, and staff can get free accounts on KU multiuser systems. What this means is that you can use e-mail and access the Internet at no charge.
If you want to use e-mail, read Usenet news, and surf the Web with user friendly software, you may want to get an account on FALCON. Accounts on FALCON and on KUHUB are both free. You can do the same things on both systems, but computers like FALCON are more common—and a future employer might own such a system.
If you own your own computer and modem, and want to "dial-in" to
use computing resources, you'll also want a Terminal Server account. You'll have to pay a $30 fee (July '95 through June '96) for dial-in access. You may pay for your Terminal Server account at the Business Office in the Computer Center (Room 202).
How do you get these accounts? You can get them from a computer. If this sounds a little intimidating, you can come to the Computer Center lab, pick up a set of instructions, and (using any compn the lab) apply for the accounts you think you will need.
If you have computer access elsewhere—and access to Netscape, or other World Wide Web browser, you
can apply for e-mail and terminal server accounts at the URL:
http://lark.cc.ukans.edu/account.htm From Netscape, click on the open button and enter the URL. Fill in the blank boxes (remember to click in them first), scroll down to the bottom of each electronic page, and click the continue buttons.
Your e-mail account will be activated by 7 p.m. the day you apply. Terminal server accounts are usually activated at 7 p.m. the day you pay your fee ($30) at the Computer Center Business Office or at Networking and Telecommunications in Ellsworth Annex.
University of Kansas New E-mail and New Terminal Server Accounts
Start here to apply for new e-mail computer account(s) or a new terminal server account (dial-in). Please identify yourself as a valid staff/faculty or student at the University of Kansas by entering your ID and birth date. Click in the first box.
Enter your ID number:
For KU students, this is your KUID number (ex: 123456)
For staff and faculty, this is your SSN number (ex: 123456789)
Enter your birth date (MMDDYY): August 13,1969 would be 081369
Click here to continue
Click here to clear
Come compute in the Herb Harris Student Computing Lab
Need to use a computer? The Herb Harris Student Computing Lab at the Computer Center never closes although sometimes computers in the lab are used for teaching workshops and hands-on seminars.
In the lab you'll find both Macintosh and IBM-compatible microcomputers. You are welcome to use either or both.
If you don't know which type of computer is best for you, just ask. If you have a friend with special computing expertise,ask your friend Or ask at the Customer Assistance Window in the south end of the main lab room. Computer Center staff will be glad to talk about what platform best meets your needs.
The Customer Assistance Window
is one of the best reasons to use the Computer Center lab. It is staffed from 8 a.m. until 10 p.m.every night (until midnight on Sunday through Thursday). The people here can answer many questions and tell you how to get help with problems they can't solve. When the window is closed, the in Brief documents are available in the lab.
Your laser print card don't leave home without it
If you haven't discovered the importance of having your papers (and resumes) look good, come discover laser printing at the Computer Center. It's only 20¢ per page-a great deal when you price laser copies around town.
But you can't do it without a laser printing card from the Computer Center. Like copy cards from the library, you can purchase a plastic laser printing card for $1 from a vending machine in the Herb Harris Student Computing Lab in the Computer Center Lab (Room 202). You can add cash to prepay for laser printing with $1,$5,$10,and $20 bills.
Remember! The only way you can pay for laser printing at the Computer Center is with your laser card.
Insert Face Up
VendaCard
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900154
Computing Services
VendaCard
Recorder No. 900154
Sign Here
University of Kansas
VendaCard is a registered Trademark of XCP INC.
Computer Center • Lawrence, Kansas 66045 • (913) 864-0100
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2
THEJayhacker
Spring 1996
The in Brief project was created to help people like you—if you're new to KU,new to computing, or an experienced computer user who wants some help getting started with a new computing technique.
Why did we call it in Brief? Because we know that sometimes you need just a little help. Formally, we say the in Brief project combines computer training and single-page, single-task documentation for KU computer users.
What this really means is that you can get started with e-mail, learn about Usenet newsgroups and electronic mailing lists, become familiar with the variety services from KU's Academic Computing Services or discover any of dozens of topics covered in the in Brief series.
The in Brief documentation is available in Room 202 of the Computer Center. That's the Herb Harris Student Computing Lab. Look for the in Brief rack on the wall. Or look for it on KUfacts-at the URL: http://www.cc.ukans.edu/cwis/inbrief
You can choose whether youd rather start with a piece of paper or spend an hour or so listening (and watching) one of trainers walk through a computing task that interests you.
The in Brief training is offered in the auditorium or the Herb Harris Student Computing Lab at the Computer Center. The schedule below lists the classes taught-and you may read the complete descriptions of free computer training online through KUfacts—at the URL: http://www.cc.ukans.edu/cwis/training
New this semester, there are now three training steps you may choose.
Step I. If your computer is not connected to the Internet, you may want to take one of the Step I classes (marked I on the schedule that follows) on Direct Connect with Mac or Windows or Dial-in Connect with Mac, Windows, or Windows 95. All Step I classes are held in the Computer Center Auditorium.
Step II. Once your computer is connected to the Internet, you may attend as many Step II classes (labelled Internet Mac,Internet Windows,Internet Multiuser) as you wish. These classes cover basic Internet services—you'll learn how to use electronic mail, how to read and post to newsgroups, how to move files, and how to use a World Wide Web browser from the platform of your choice (Mac,Windows, or KU multiuser system). Step II classes (marked II) are listed below. All Step II classes are held in the Computer Center lab.
Step III. If you are interested in more advanced Internet or other training, attend as many Step III classes (marked III) as you like You'll learn to create Web pages and more. Step III classes are held in the Computer Center Auditorium or lab On the day of your class, look for signs in the Computer Center or ask the Computer Center receptionist.
20 Internet Multiuser (II)
9-10:30 a.m. E-mail basics (II)
10:30-noon Usenet news (II)
1-2:30 p.m. Telnet and file transfers (II)
2:30-4 p.m. Web browsing (II)
22 11a.m.-12:30 Basics for KUfacts providers (III)
1-4 p.m. Set up a DNS (III)
27 9 a.m.-noon Dial-in connect/Mac (I)
6-9 p.m. HTML: Basics (III)
28 Internet Mac (II)
9-10:30 a.m. E-mail basics (II)
10:30-noon Usenet news (II)
1-2:30 p.m. Telnet and file transfers (II)
2:30-4 p.m. Web browsing (II)
29 1-4 p.m. Set up a Mac server (III)
March
1 1-4 p.m. Direct connect/Windows (I)
5 6-9 p.m. Dial-in connect/Win 95 (I)
February
16 1-4 p.m. Direct connect/Mac (I)
6 9 a.m.-noon Dial-in connect/Windows (I)
7 Internet Windows (II)
9-10:30 a.m. Web browsing (II)
10:30-noon E-mail basics (II)
1-2:30 p.m. Usenet news (II)
2:30-4 p.m. Telnet and file transfers (II)
8 1-4 p.m. Intro to UNIX (III)
11 Internet Multiuser (II)
9-10:30 a.m. Web browsing (II)
10:30-noon E-mail basics (II)
1-2:30 p.m. Usenet news (II)
2:30-4 p.m. Telnet and file transfers (II)
in Brief
in Brief documentation and free computer training
12 9 a.m.-noon Dial-in connect/Mac (I)
1-2 p.m. Windows 95: Desktop
4 1-4 p.m. Dial-in connect/Win 95 (I)
6-9 p.m. Dial-in connect/Mac (I)
14 1-4 p.m. Direct connect/Mac (I)
9 1-4 p.m. Set up a DNS (III)
1-4 p.m. Direct connect/Windows (I)
19 1-2:30 p.m. Basics for KUfacts providers (III)
April
2 6-9 p.m. Dial-in connect/Windows (I)
20 Internet Mac (II)
9-10:30 a.m. Web browsing (II)
10:30-noon E-mail basics (II)
1-2:30 p.m. Usenet news (II)
2:30-4 p.m. Telnet and file transfers (II)
10 9 a.m.-noon Direct connect/Mac (I)
12 Internet Windows (II)
9-10:30 a.m. Usenet news (II)
10:30-noon Telnet and file transfers (II)
1-2:30 p.m. E-mail basics (II)
2:30-4 p.m. Web browsing (II)
22 Internet Mac (II)
9-10:30 a.m. Usenet news (II)
10:30-noon Telnet and file transfers (II)
1-2:30 p.m. E-mail basics (II)
2:30-4 p.m. Web browsing (II)
18 Internet Multiuser (II)
9-10:30 a.m. Usenet news (II)
10:30-noon Telnet and file transfers (II)
1-2:30 p.m. E-mail basics (II)
2:30 4 p.m. Web browsing (II)
16 1-4 p.m. Set up a PC Web server (III)
THE Jayhacker
Jerry Niebaum
Executive Director
Information Technology Services
Wes Hubert
Assistant Director
Academic Computing Services
Michael Grobe
Manager, Distributed Computing Group
Martha Bryant
Managing Editor
Dean Wilson
Photography
THEJayhacker is published by Academic Computing Services at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, for KU students, faculty, and staff.
Contributions to *theJayhacker* were made by Jeff Bangert, Jerree Catlin, Megen Duffy, Kathryn Huxtable, Nancy Miles, Amy Miller, Doug Miller, Pat Miller, Brian Moore, Cole Robison, Mickey Waxman, and Rose Winters.
The use of trade, firm, or corporation names in this publication is for the information and convenience of the reader. Such use does not constitute an official endorsement or approval by the University of Kansas of any product or service to the exclusion of others.
The University of Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer.
Spring 1996
THEJayhacker
3
You've surfed the Web—Now
First you started seeing those weird addresses on television commercials and billboards. You know, the ones that start with "http" and end with punctuation and groups of letters that aren't quite English—or any other known language.
Then you surfed the World Wide Web, probably using Netscape. And you realized that something that starts with "http" is a Web address—or more properly, a uniform resource locator, or URL.
Now you're thinking about providing information on the Web yourself. You may want to start a home page because your bookmark list is too big to be manageable, or perhaps you have important information to publish on the Web.
Before you start working on your home page, you'll need an account on one of the KU multiuser systems. Most students have accounts on FALCON.
You need to know a little something about how the World Wide Web works, some basics about moving around on FALCON, and finally, how to create a World Wide Web document. Computing Services teaches free classes on these topics (there's a schedule on page 3).
You can also learn HTML from your friends, from information on the Web, and from a myriad of other places. But it is important for you to know something about HTML which stands for HyperText Markup Language. It is the most common way to prepare documents for the World Wide Web.
The first step in creating your home page is to log into your FALCON account. When you have a shell prompt (a dollar ($) sign), enter the following commands.
chmod og+x $HOME
mkdir public html
chmod og+rx public html
cd public html
These commands prepare your "Web directory"—the directory where you will keep your World Wide Web documents. And they move you to your current (working) directory.
As you enter these commands—and the others that follow, remember that FALCON is a "case sensitive" system. It sees dog, Dog, and DOG as different words.
Now your Web directory (public_html) is set up. Next you can begin to create your first HTML document using one of the text editors available from your FALCON account. (Most people use Pico—and the instructions here assume you'll make this choice.)
Create a file called index.html. Do this by entering the command:
pico index.html
This command opens a file named index.html in your current directory.
To include material in your file, enter the following lines, substituting your actual e-mail address for the phrase "your_email_address":
My first home page
My first home page