WEDNESDAY, MAY 1. 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.102,NO.145
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY In the KANSAN
SPORTS
Wild night
The Kansas baseball team suffered a 24-10 loss to Emporia State last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Stressed out for a reason
KU students may be suffering from anxiety disorders but may not know it. Page 5A
NATION
High gas prices to be checked
The Justice Department will investigate the recent surge in prices. Page 7A
WORLD
Chaos returns to Monrovia
U. S. marines kill three and injure one intruder near the American Embassy. Page 8A
WEATHER
PARTLY CLOUDY
High 70° Low 44°
Weather: Page 2A.
INDEX
National News ... 7A
World News... 8A
Features ... 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.
KU bids farewell to Shankel
Reception held to honor his 37 years of service
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Del Shankel has done it all at the University of Kansas. From professor to acting athletic director to chancellor, Shankel has held 10 different posts in his 37-year career at KU.
But yesterday Shankel, 68, stepped into a new role as he entered the ranks of the retired at a reception in his honor.
About 250 friends and colleagues attended the 4 p.m. reception to celebrate Shankel's
career. The line of people waiting to offer their congratulations snaked out the door of the ballroom and into a hall of the Kansas Union during much of the reception.
Chancellor Robert Hemenway said the reception reflected what an important person Shankel had been to so many at the University.
"Del Shankel has played a part in so many things, and they're all things that make KU a better place," Hemenway said. "He will be missed by a chancellor who's been here only a year and by people who have known him almost 40 years."
Shankel's colleagues said he would be remembered as someone who was willing to step in and serve when the University needed him. Shankel has served as acting chairman of microbiology, acting dean of liberal arts and sciences, acting athletic director, acting vice chancellor for academic affairs, acting executive vice chancellor and acting chancellor.
"He'll be remembered for being the great
pinch hitter of all time," said David Shuenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs. "He just knows everything about everything, and there's no obvious successor for him."
Now Shankel and his wife, Carol, will divide their time between Seattle and Lawrence, spending much of the school year in Lawrence.
"I don't want to miss the Lied Concert series or KU football and basketball games," Shankel said. "There are a lot of books I want to read and a lot of places I want to travel to, but I want to stay close to the University."
Shankel said that he never said never but that it was unlikely that he would accept an administrative position at KU in the future.
"I really am retiring," he said. "But I did tell the biology department that I would be willing to teach a class in the spring for the next couple years."
So, while Shankel may not leave the University completely, his administrative era has concluded.
...
Matt Flickner/KANSAN
Del Shankel shakes hands with friends and colleagues at a reception held yesterday to honor his 37 years of service to the University.
"He has been an institution within an institution," said Kansas football coach Glen Mason. "He's been a very stabilizing force for the University of Kansas, and I wouldn't have missed the chance to tell him that today."
Star-Spangled ceremony
PETER BROOK
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
Mark Schulenberg, Mound City sophomore, and Jeremiah Reed, Olaithe freshman, lower the American flag at the beginning of the KU Air Force ROTC Annual
Awards and Change of Command Ceremony. The ceremony was held yesterday in front of the Kansas Union.
Student, KU disagree on dress
Graduation committee says grads must don gown
By Susanna Löofi
Kansan staff writer
Dorothy Stites wants to wear a Native-American dress instead of a cap and gown at Entrancement. But the University of Kansas doesn't like the idea.
Sites, Lawrence senior, said she wanted to wear the dress to honor her heritage and spirituality.
"In being a nontraditional Native-American student, I have come across a lot of discrimination at KU," she said. "I've been ignored, tolerated and challenged on my Native-American beliefs."
Sites said she felt she always had to keep quiet to fit in at KU.
Last week, Stites was told the Commencement Committee had decided that she could wear her Native-American dress if she wore the gown over it and a cap. She will be allowed to wear her gown unzipped, something that students receiving bachelor's degrees normally aren't allowed to do.
Sites said she didn't think wearing her culture's traditional regalia would be a problem. But to be sure, she went to the Student Assistance Center about a month ago to ask.
"I'm being forced again to fit in."
she said. "I think I give enough.
.
That decision was not acceptable to Stites.
George McCleary, professor of geography and chairman of the Commencement Logistics Committee, said he was not familiar with details of the decision but that the issue would be discussed at a meeting today. He also said he thought caps and gowns should be worn at Commencement.
dress like that," she said.
"I would never treat my honored
McCleary said that the cap and gown symbolized the exchange of ideas, open dialogue and tolerance of diversity unique to the academic world.
"It's not a procession of cultural heritage," he said. "It's a procession that reflects the universality of Universities."
Sites has appealed the committee's decision.
Hong Kong's fate in 1997 unclear
KU students fear coming unification
By Susanna Löof
Kansan staff writer
Eugene Lo, Hong Kong sophomore, won't decide where he'll live until he knows what will happen after July 1, 1997. That's the date when Hong Kong again becomes part of China after 155 years as a British colony.
"If nothing happens, I'll go back," he said.
But Lo fears that things will change. He fears that a wave of Chinese people will create unemployment in the area, which has developed into an island of prosperity as a colony of Great Britain.
He also fears that the freedom Hong Kong people have enjoyed under British rule will disappear.
Despite his fears, Lo said he wished he could return to Hong Kong.
"I'm born there," he said. "Everybody wants to go back home one day. I want to go home, but not to a home that is messed up."
Lo is fortunate compared to many other Hong Kong residents. His father works for the government in Hong Kong, which gave Lo and his family British passports. Lo's British passport allows him to travel more freely than his friends who have Chinese passports.
"Some of my friends' parents have panicked," Lo said. "They are just willing to go anywhere."
Lo fears not only for himself, but also for his future children.
"I don't want them to grow up without freedom, without anything," he said.
The Chinese government promised to uphold Hong Kong's freedoms after the merging of the colony into China. But Lo doesn't trust that promise.
"I don't believe what the government says," he said. "They are far too corrupted."
But Shengli Feng, an assistant professor of East Asian languages and culture who moved to the United States from Beijing 11 years ago, said he thought the Chinese government would keep its promise.
"They want to keep their promise to impress other countries," he said.
Feng said he thought the people of Hong Kong would have more freedom than Chinese people even after July 1997. And unlike Lo, he said he thought the Chinese government would be able to prevent mass immigration from mainland Chinese people.
"They have to," he said. "Otherwise, they are going to destroy Hong Kong."
Although Feng said he did not think unemployment in Hong Kong would rise after 1997, he said he did believe that Hong Kong employees no longer get salary raises as often as they had in the past.
Daniel Bays, professor of history, said he also thought salaries would decrease after 1997.
This is especially true for university professors, said Bays, who teaches a class in Chinese history. Hong Kong university professors have been highly paid to outweigh Hong Kong's uncertain future.
Bays said that intellectuals would suffer from the political transition — not only in their wallets, but also in their minds.
"The big change will be for that stratum of Hong Kong society that appreciate freedom of press," he said. "Intellectuals and students will be greatly apprehensive of what they can say and write when they are in Hong Kong."
No matter what will happen after July 1, 1997, the transition of power will be a historic event. And despite Lo's hesitation about making the new Hong Kong his permanent home, he has decided to visit next summer so that he can see history happen.
"I want to be there and see it, and if possible, tell my grandchildren about it," Lo said.
Textbook thieves strike bookstores as semester ends
Resale attempts can lead to arrest
By Ed Turrentine
Special to the Kansan
Thieves who think they can get away with stealing textbooks and selling them back for extra cash better think again. They might get caught.
It's not that simple, but Bill Getz, Kansas Union Bookstore assistant manager, said those who scam the textbook buyback program are at much greater risk of getting caught than they think.
Some methods of determining ripped-off texts include looking for
a name or marks on certain pages of the stolen text that the theft victim left behind, as well as noticing any sort of pattern the suspected thief uses to sell the stolen texts.
Getz said that a thief could sell so many textbooks — an amount so high that no student would purchase that many in a single semester—and raise suspicions.
Other thieves sometimes dare to resell books that would make them students in law, medicine and architecture all in the same semester.
"You wouldn't just find someone selling a journalism text along with a pharmacy text and an engineering text," he said.
Jayhawk Bookstore owner Bill
Muggy said that a student once tried to scam the buyback program by stealing books from different stores and selling each book back separately throughout the semester, hoping that the bookstores wouldn't become suspicious. Bookstore employees did become suspicious, and the thief was caught.
Another incident involved a disgruntled employee shoving books out the back door and reselling them at other stores.
When he tried to resell a stolen architecture text, suspicion arose because it happened to be much more important than a typical architecture text.
"It was the Bible of every architecture student. Why would any architecture student give up that
book?" Muggy said.
But Burge Union bookstore clerk Jesse Jackson doesn't think that will happen anytime soon.
"It's too expensive to mark each book separately, so why bother?" he said.
People have suggested that placing some sort of magnetic strip that could be scanned by a computer can help catch book thieves.
Once a bookstore is fairly sure that someone has sold back a stolen textbook, it files a police report. If another book from the suspected thief shows up and is identifiable, the thief can be arrested.
Most of the textbook thefts at the University occur around finals week, which is when the buyback
Most of the thefts take place at the libraries and residence hall cafeterias on campus, especially at Mrs. E's, said Gayle Reece of the KU police department. Restrooms and parked cars are also hot spots for book thieves.
Reece said that once someone became a victim of textbook theft, there was not much that could be done right away.
Reece said that the way to avoid becoming a victim, especially during finals week, was common sense.
"Be sure you don't leave your backpacks and books unattended anywhere," she said. "Take your stuff with you."
2A
Wednesday, May 1, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Spring brings talk of twisters
On screen and off, tornado time nears
It's tornado season, and twisters are whirling through Hollywood this spring.
Fascination with them also is blowing across the University.
By R. Adam Ward Kansan staff writer
"The new movie about tornadoes called Twister is freaking me out," said Brad Shanks, Overland Park sophomore. "I have dreams about tornadoes."
Shanks said that he didn't think he had a phobia about tornadoes but that watching the movie probably would give him one.
The movie, written by Michael Crichton, opens on May 10.
Dave Nadler, Overland Park sophomore, said he thought he understood people's fascination with twisters.
"I think unexplained things are interesting to the public," said Dave Nadler, Overland Park sophomore.
Because meteorologists don't understand the details of tornado formation, it adds to the mystery in people's minds. Nadler said.
He said he intended to see the movie because he thought it would be fascinating if it showed the way tornadoes formed and what it was like to be in one.
Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology and physical astronomy, said a tornado was a vortex extending from a cloud to the ground and
formed by a thunderstorm.
Eagleman said that the right circulation of air in warm lower levels of a storm rose and collided with the backside of a storm, forming a double vortex.
If the circulation is strong enough to extend to the ground, it becomes a vortex, which is a tornado.
He said that the last big blast from a tornado in Lawrence was September 21, 1993.
Tornadoes cause more than 100 deaths a year nationwide, which is more than hurricanes but not as many as deaths caused by lightning, he said.
Last year 48 tornadoes and mesocyclones, a part of a thunderstorm from which tornadoes form, were spotted in Kansas. Texas and Oklahoma have a few more tornadoes a square mile, he said.
Eagleman said that the odds of surviving were not good if a person were picked up by a tornado.
"Normally, if you're traveling at 300 miles per hour it's not a safe landing." he said.
People have many misconceptions about tornadoes, Eagleman said. For instance, trailer courts don't attract tornadoes. But the construction methods in them are so weak that the damage is much more evident when a tornado hits one.
Another misconception is that you should open windows during a tornado, he said.
He completed a study of tornadoes and found the northeast corner of the lowest level of the house to be the safest place to take cover.
ON THE RECORD
ON CAMPUS
A yellow mountain bike was stolen from a KU student between 4 p.m. Saturday and 4 a.m. Sunday in the 2000 block of Stewart Avenue. The bike was valued at $2,300, Lawrence police reported.
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center is sponsoring a resume writing and interviewing tips session from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today at 115 Strong Hall.
12:30 p.m. Saturday in Blake Annex. The modem was valued at $200, KU police reported.
A KU parking permit and sunglasses were stolen from a KU student's car between 1:30 and 2 p.m. Monday in the 1100 block of Mississippi Street, KU police reported.
A modem was stolen from the School of Social Welfare between 3 p.m. Friday and
University of Kansas Naval ROTC will sponsor a Pass in Review/ Awards Ceremony/ 50th Anniversary at 4 p.m. today at the Anschutz Sports Pavilion and Frontier Room at the Burge Union. Guest speaker will be Admiral L.A. Felton, USN. Call Lt. Michael W. Bastian at 864-3161 for more information.
OAKS—Non-traditional Student Organization is sponsoring a brown bag lunch and meeting from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. tomorrow at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Laura Morgan at 864-4064.
pus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel.
Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting about Western Civilization Study Abroad at noon tomorrow at 212 Spencer Museum of Art. For more information, call Heinz Kattenfeld at 864-4935.
St. Lawrence Catholic Cam-
Process often takes up to eight weeks
Book repair leaves students in a jam
By Amanda Traughber Kansan staff writer
Looking for research materials sometimes makes students feel as if they're in a real bind.
The library doesn't have a system that designates when particular volumes are to be sent away, said Brian Baird, preservation librarian.
Brad Schaffner, Russian and East Slavic studies librarian, said he had helped students in Slavic studies find articles they needed to complete end-of-semester research because several volumes of Slavic materials had been sent out to be bound.
By coincidence, the periodicals reading room had worked its way to the Slavic shelf at the same time reference did, and both departments sent Slavic materials away at the same time.
Binding may not be convenient for researchers, but it's necessary to protect volumes from theft and wear and tear.
Schaffner said students can get more articles from other sources. Interlibrary loans are the easiest way, but Schaffner said that students should start work early to ensure that they get what they need.
Other alternatives are downloading articles from computer networks or asking other libraries to send photocopies, Baird said.
"It's unfortunate, but it needs to be done," Schaffner said. "If it doesn't get bound, it gets destroyed."
The library sends about 1,150 volumes every other week, Baird said. "When you're sending out that many volumes, you're going to be taking something that someone wants."
And the wait could be as long as eight weeks. If a library department just misses a shipment, the volumes the department wants bound can sit for two weeks until the next pickup. Binding takes two to four weeks. When volumes return, they can sit in an area up to two weeks waiting to be checked for binding errors before reshelving.
The library recognizes this wait as a problem and is trying to find ways to alleviate it.
The libraries have been negotiating a new binding contract with provisions to cut turnaround time by one to two weeks, Baird said. The libraries also are trying to coordinate binding preparation so that volumes aren't removed from shelves until just before shipping out.
Weather
TODAY'S TEMPS
Atlanta 73 ° • 51 °
Chicago 56 ° • 40 °
Des Moines, Iowa 62 ° • 40 °
Kansas City, Mo. 65 ° • 47 °
Lawrence 70 ° • 44 °
Los Angeles 88 ° • 70 °
New York 62 ° • 46 °
Omaha, Neb. 64 ° • 42 °
St. Louis 63 ° • 47 °
Seattle 57 ° • 47 °
Topeka 67 ° • 45 °
Tulsa, Okla. 73 ° • 54 °
Wichita 68 ° • 45 °
TODAY
Partly cloudy.
7044
THURSDAY
Partly cloudy and warmer.
7550
FRIDAY
Mostly cloudy.
7352
TODAY
Partly cloudy.
7044
THURSDAY
Partly cloudy and warmer.
7550
FRIDAY
Mostly cloudy.
7352
Source: Chian-Wei Chang/KU Weather Service
Woman charged with arson
Kansan staff report
A Lawrence woman was charged with aggravated arson yesterday after a fire destroyed her apartment and damaged at least three neighboring apartments early Monday evening.
ment when firefighters arrived. However, authorities brought her to the fire scene when she became a suspect, McSwain said. After interviewing Smith, police arrested her in connection with the aggravated arson.
Police arrested Rhonda Smith, 35, after authorities concluded through evidence and interviews that the fire was not accidental, said Jim McSain, fire chief.
Authorities would not say how the fire started but said that it was not accidental.
Smith was not present at the apart-
"It was not accidental," he said.
"We know how it started, but the information is not available for release at this 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 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.
Coming September 1, 1996
UDKI
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
interactive
www.kansan.com
For information on how you can be part of the Kansan’s new world wide web service, contact: David Teska, Kansan Online Editor, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4810. The UDKi is looking for correspondents from every department and school at KU. We are also looking for html designers and coders.
UDKi THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN interactive
iO
The LAZER 1959 Coors LIGHT. The Silver Bullet.
The LAZER 1059
Coors LIGHT. The Silver Bullet.
Ready For Some Fun? (and freebees) The Lazer Presents Coors Light Nights!
Tonight and every night through Saturday from 10-midnight join The Lazer at 4 of your favorite places. We'll be giving away a Sony Discman each night and on Saturday we'll also be giving away a bookshelf stereo system. Plenty of freebees and of course, plenty of Silver Bullets too.
It's been a long semester. Join us and blow off a little steam.
Wednesday:
Thursday:
Friday:
Saturday:
The Yacht Club Duffy's Johnny's Tavern The Bottleneck
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday.May1,1996
3A
Sports medicine doctor goes for the gold
Magee chosen as Olympic physician
By Teresa Veazey Kansan staff writer
He hasn't started counting down the days quite yet, but Lawrence Magee knows he'll soon be leaving for the Olympic trials in Atlanta.
However, he won't be competing as an athlete — he'll be working as a physician.
Magee, coordinator of sports medicine at Watkins Memorial Health Center, will spend much of his summer taking care of athletes and their
injuries as the U.S. Olympic team physician responsible for track and field and judo. The games begin on July 19, but Magee said he had many things to do before then.
One of those things is the track and field trials that begin on June 14. Magee said that he would be burning up all of his vacation time but that he was willing to make the sacrifice.
"You don't go for the media attention," he said. "The best experience will be to work with high-level athletes and be around trainers and other sports medicine physicians."
"You can never know until you get
Magee, who found out about the appointment in September, said the application process was lengthy.
chosen," he said. "Usually, you're put on a waiting list for two to five years."
In 1987, Magee submitted an application to the Olympics' sports medicine committee.
He began working with the University of Kansas' athletic teams in 1988 and was chosen to help at the Olympics' training center in Colorado Springs, Colo., two years later.
Magee's first U.S. Olympic Festival was in 1991, when he was a physician for the basketball and track and field teams. He was head physician for the same teams last summer at the World University Games in Japan.
Magee said working with Olympic
athletes would be challenging, but no different from students and University athletes that he had worked with in the past.
Charles Yockey, Watkins' chief of staff, said that being a team physician at the Olympics was a very high honor for physicians.
"The injuries are the same. The bodies are the same," he said. "The location, equipment and people you have to work with are different."
"It's almost like competing in the Olympics — to get there takes a long process," Yockey said.
Yockey said Magee's appointment showed the health center had one of the elite sports medicine physicians in the country.
Tvler Wirken / KANSAN
Lawrence Magee, coordinator of sports medicine at Watkins Memorial Health Center, has been chosen as a physician for the Olympic Trials in Atlanta. Magee will spend his summer as the U.S. Olympic team physician responsible for the track and field and iouda teams.
KANSAS
27
FLATLANDER
26
Students test bike design at contest
Engineering project places 11th in race
ter senior; and Mike Stittsworth, Lawrence senior (not pictured), designed and built their own bike. Their project placed 11th in a competition last weekend in Reno, Nev.
By David Teska Kansan staff writer
For five KU mechanical engineering students, last weekend was a test of their design skills and physical stamina.
The students competed in a bike race in Reno, Nev., Saturday and Sunday and finished 11th out of 36 teams. The students designed and built their bike as part of a senior design class project.
Team members were Ada Laudie, Lawrence senior; Richard Tidd, Yates Center senior; Kerri Graunke, Prairie Village senior; Brian Nab, Overland Park senior; and Mike Stittsworth, Lawrence senior.
The bike was made of carbon fiber with aluminum inserts and was surrounded by an aerodynamically shaped shell also made from carbon fiber. Laudie said the materials made the bike lighter and stronger.
"The size-to-weight ratio is 10 times that of steel," he said. "We've got about 80 square feet in the shell, and it weighs only nine pounds."
The two-day event consisted of two races, a 400-meter sprint and a 65-kilometer relay, Tidd said. The sprint had women's and men's races.
"You have 300 meters to accelerate, and they time you for 200 meters," Tidd said.
Graunrake raced in the women's sprint and placed sixth. She said her finish spot in the sprint determined the team's place in the relay.
"The only requirement is that I go first
and ride 8 kilometers." she said.
Laudie said they didn't have time for a timed run before shipping the bike to Reno, so they had to test the bike inside Learned Hall and at the Lied Center parking lot.
Instead of reaching the projected speed of 56 mph, Laudie said the team's top speed was 37 mph. Wind forced them to remove the shell because it was
knocking bikes over.
"A lot of the bikes flipped and crashed," he said.
In addition to the racing events, Laudie said each bike was judged on design, safety, data analysis of the design and physical tests of the bike.
Laudie said funds for the $3,300 bike came primarily from the School of Engineering. Local bike shops and busi-
neses also contributed cash and parts, he said.
Tidd was the only team member not enrolled in the design class, but he plans to take it next year. Although the rest of his teammates completed the project for a grade, Tidd said he participated for other reasons.
"I'm just doing it for fun," he said. "It'll be good experience for next year."
Shelter a haven for women and children
Service needs students to volunteer their time
By Scott MacWilliams Kansan staff writer
Women's Transitional Care Services is looking for volunteers, and an abbreviated training session begins tomorrow.
"Normally, anyone can volunteer, but this will not be a regular training session," said Loretta Pyles, community facilitator for the shelter.
"Our normal training consists of 50 hours of training over five weeks and is
open to anyone," she said. "But this one is only for women who are being battered or were previously in a battering relationship."
Women's Transitional Care Services provides temporary shelter and assistance for women and children fleeing domestic violence.
Documentation such as police reports or restraining orders are not required to identify oneself as battered, she said.
Pyles said the definition of having been battered included emotional, economic and physical abuse.
Last year, the shelter took in 369 people, 201 of whom were children.
Pyles said the training sessions
included staff from Rape Victim Support Service, Headquarters, the Lawrence Police Department and the Douglas County Health Department. She said about 20 of the current volunteer group of about 40 people were KU students.
"We sign up for four-hour shifts," said Sonnja Blevins, Lawrence senior. "Normally, anyone can volunteer, and they're always looking for males to volunteer, too."
Blevins said she thought they could use another 40 to 50 volunteers, because some usually were weeded out during the training process.
Blevins said volunteers performed different tasks at the shelter.
"We tell them about community resources and explain the house rules," Blevins said. "Sometimes we go with them to hearings, for emotional support."
Volunteers also can take extra training to become child advocates. Child advocates work closely with children and help them overcome their fears.
Guests can stay up to 30 days if room is available. No one ever will be turned away, Pyles said, even if she had to stay on the couch for the night.
The informational session for those interested in the abbreviated volunteer training will be held from 6 to 9 tomorrow night at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.
Backpacks still stolen from Ekdahl
Upgraded security, cameras don't offer security guarantee
By Amy McVey Kansan staff writer
Lunch at Ekdahl Dining Commons cost one KU student $345 on Thursday and another student $170.
Both students went in, left their backpacks in the designated area and ate. When they returned, the backpacks were gone.
Dan Leong, St. Louis senior, had his backpack and books, valued at $170, stolen Thursday afternoon.
"I went in last Thursday during lunchtime, and I really didn't eat all that long," he said. "When I came back, it was gone."
Leong said he didn't think he ever would see his backpack again.
To increase the turnover of people eating at Ekdahl Dinning Commons, students are required to leave their backpacks in a room at the front of the commons, said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
"The purpose of Mrs. E's is to eat," Stoner said. "You can't bring your boom box and backpack in and camp out. It just wasn't designed for that. There just isn't room."
An $8,000 camera system was installed to deter theft from the room when the commons opened two years ago.
But the watchful eye of the three cameras wasn't giving police the description they needed to catch backpack thieves. The department upgraded the system in December with another camera and a split-screen VCR.
With the help of the new cameras, Leong saw the last of his backpack on tape. Then he saw a man walk in, pick up his backpack and leave.
"He stole my bag, and加 an hour later he stole someone else's bag," Leong said. "For mine, he just came up and grabbed it. But for the other bags he went through them and picked one."
KU police Sgt. Chris Keary said that the cameras had been helpful in determining when and what had been stolen from the room but that they hadn't offered a very good description of the thieves.
"We can see the crime occurring," he said. "But other than clothing descriptions and basic physical descriptions, it's hard to tell who it is."
Stoner said he had been working with police to solve the theft problems in the commons before December and wasn't aware there still was a problem.
"I know we installed what was recommended," he said. "We may still need to make adjustments."
But other than advising students to leave their backpacks at home, Stoner hasn't found an immediate, safe solution.
"I'm open for suggestions." he said.
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SATURDAY, MAY 4
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24th & Iowa•PO Box 2•Lawrence, KS 66046
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4A
Wednesday, May 1. 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Senate homepage a good idea but it could be too impersonal
Do you know the names of your student senators?
Most of us never have received mail or been approached by and talked with the senators we elected.
It seems that student senators are visible only during election time.
Scott Sullivan, liberal arts senator, passed a bill for a senate online outreach program.
But when the outreach program begins, students who visit the Student Senate site will be able to leave their name and e-mail address. This will allow senators to send information directly to them each week via e-mail.
About 13,000 students have an e-mail account at the University of Kansas and that number is growing. It makes sense for Student Senate to take advantage of the World Wide Web.
Obviously, Senate is trying to find innovative ways to reach the public.
THE ISSUE:
Senate On Line
Senate is moving in the right direction, but senators also must try to find some way to communicate directly with students. Not every student has time to get to the Computer Center and surf the Internet. The page is a good way for students to learn what Senate is doing, but it does not allow for a more personal relationship with their representatives.
Senate has shown that it cares about communicating with the students and giving them a chance to find out about issues. However, senators should not just make the effort to inform students about what they are doing. They also should get to know the people they represent.
Whether by open forum or by suggestion box, there would be a connection established that previously did not exist.
DOUG WEINSTEIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
University should consider expanding use of Saferide
Students at the University of Kansas are lucky to enjoy free cab service in the evening.
Someone who needs to go home after dark can take advantage of Saferide. As a result, the risk of harm is reduced.
Students returning from a party do not have to walk home through dark streets and risk being assaulted. Those who had too much to drink can be driven home safely.
In addition, fewer drunk drivers would circulate at night. Safenide therefore is a useful service.
However, because Saferide cabs can take students only to their homes, this system puts itself in contradiction with the educational purpose of the University.
Although Saferide cabs can pick up people from any place, its drivers can only take passengers to one destination: their home. A student who needs to do research or type a paper cannot use Saferide to go to the library or the computer center. At the same time, drunk people who go home from a party can take advantage of a free ride.
THE ISSUE:
Saferide
Because Saferide cabs do not take students to campus buildings, Saferide has created an atmosphere that does not encourage students to study on campus.
If students know they can ride home safely from a party — as opposed to getting a ride to the library or another place they would like to go to study — this would make going to the party more appealing.
Changing the rules of the Saferide system so that free cabs could take people to the computer labs or the library would be a good solution.
No one should worry about overuse of this system.
The number of people who need a ride to the computer lab or the library probably would not exceed the number of students who are coming back from a party.
HENRI BLANC FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Sequel to murder case could best be ignored by audience
Bernhard Goetz, like a dull shard, rather clumsily and crudely has torn through the increasingly threadbare tarpaulin of obscurity. Eleven years after he shot four African-American youths who were trying to rob him on a New York subway, and nine years after a mostly white jury acquitted him of all but a weapons charge, Goetz is in court again. This time because Darrel Cabey — one of the four youths he shot and who is paralyzed — successfully has sued him for $43 million.
And for some reason, we are going to give this case the critical attention and the hurting momentum it doesn't deserve.
Admittedly, the Goetz case glistens and cuts. It jabs at our society's notoriously sensitive spots — race, crime and guns. Those in attendance at the new trial looked much like those at Goetz's previous trial in 1987, and like something from a TV docu-drama. There was the white man, twice-mugged, who in December 1984 came up shooting when four African-American teenagers surrounded him on a subway and demanded $5.
There was the African-American man, now 30, who at the time of the shooting already was facing a robbery charge, and whose gang chose Goetz from the subway throngs because he "looked like easy bait."
And, like then, the two men were accompanied by their Doppelgangers. There was the NRA-backed gunman who once said the only way to clean up the streets was to expunge the "niggers" and "spies." He also said his attackers'
GUEST COLUMNIST
SCOTT WORHINGTON
mothers should have had abortions and admittedly took pleasure in hunting the hunters. And there was the tortured youth, his movements confined forever to a wheelchair and his thoughts garbled forever by a damaged brain.
mostly was minority, we were bound, once again, to make a judgment in this case and to find meaning in it. But oddly, the 1996 Goetz case seemed a barren place for such pursuits. Thrown into the somewhat hackened mix this year were a pony-tailed lawyer firmly clutching the "race card," a Broadway actor permitted to give a dramatic reading of testimony from a deceased 1987 witness, and a bunch of money that the plaintiff never will see.
Like the jury, which this time
Where, as we reflect upon the Goetz case, should we look for meaning among its ingredients, which resemble ballpark amenities designed to lure us to a game that no longer deserves our attention?
But we will look for meaning anyway, won't we? Our profoundly religious and lawyerly society will demand that we find the guilty and the innocent, the good guy and the bad guy.
And we won't accept the guy in between, will we? We will push him
and prod him until he squares is in our corner and staring directly across at his counterpart. We will be ironic, indignant and dramatic.
Eventually, we will embrace the financially and emotionally bankrupt victim, who is frank and disarmingly aware of his faults and who was pushed to the brink by dregs and criminals. Or we will embrace the physically and mentally bankrupt victim, who temporarily was misguided and was punished mercilessly for $5. And we will fix evil eyes on their assaults.
But doesn't it seem, as we struggle to separate Goetz and Cabey, that they don't belong far apart? Where is the space between a man who shot four teenagers in a fit of rage and racism and a man who now is using any means, including race, to collect $50 million from the man he tried to rob?
Should we not throw down our natural impulses and our emotions and bask in the peculiar serenity afforded by an indistinct presence or absence of virtue?
Maybe there is nothing important to be gleaned from two everyday low lifes in a Bronx courtroom. Maybe there is no reason for us to divide them and for them to divide us.
Maybe we should release this unfortunate sequel from our thoughts, and let the actors unite for one brief and final alley dance until the screen fades mercifully to black.
Scott Worthington la la Manhattan graduado astudent in Journalism.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Kansan portrays greeks negatively — once again
There you go again! In a Thursday column by Ian Ritter, I noticed one more in a long line of anti-greek positions taken by the Kansan. As long as there is a greek system there will be those outside of it who feel more secure by constantly attacking it. Ian, you have the right to join or not join a fraternal organization, but don't blame them for existing without you. Your opinions regarding a recent theft of building materials by several KU students who are members of a fraternity caught my eye. I have to agree with you that these acts are wrong and should be punished. I don't believe the fraternity sat down at a meeting and decided to steal materials for a party, but rather a few pledges thought this would be a cute stunt to pull. They were wrong. Like most
people, sometimes in life we make wrong decisions, and we need to pay the consequences.
But, lan, it is amazing to me that you and others at the Kansan always find room for every negative story about the fraternity system at the University of Kansas or anywhere else in the nation, but you can't find the space or interest to mention the thousands of good things that go on here. Last week end the Greek system at the University held a recognition ceremony to reflect a little on the great things it has accomplished this year. I must have missed it, but I didn't see one word about it in your paper.
More than 500 of the University's best students attended. They recognized the thousand of hours of time and energy given to the University and the Lawrence community by fraternities and sororities. They acknowledged that, once again, the
grade point average of greeks was higher than the GPA of all university students. They honored many individual students for their leadership, academic and civic accomplishments. They thanked Greek organizations that have raised thousands of dollars for local charities. It was a great night. I wish you could have been there! Oh, and by the way, they did all this without so much as a schooner of beer.
I know of no other student group that is more involved in all of the University's activities or volunteers more time to community organizations. Sometimes the members make individual bad decisions, but more often they make some really superb decisions. The University is better off with a strong Greek system. Try it, Ian. You may like it.
Gary Hawke KJHK general manager
Chain stores are replacing Mom and Pop establishments
Kansas City-based and independently owned, Whistler's Books announced last week that the store is closing its doors forever. Closely following the lead of Lawrence's Adventure Bookstore, I took the news more painfully than I had predicted.
It seems that locally owned bookstores are going the way of
STAFF COLUMNIST
soon-to-be extict Mom and Pop gas stations and department stores. It is becoming impossible for one person to battle for competition from the "big guys" — corporate chain superstores such as Border's or Barnes & Noble.
The frustration that culminates from witnessing the demise of so many quality shopping areas can be overwhelming. Why do people shop at the Plaza's Barnes & Noble? Granted, they do have a larger in-house stock, but they lack many fundamental qualities that a bookstore should be noted for: a knowledgeable staff, a personal feel and an environment conducive to browsing.
LESLIE
BOWYER
In one visit, I discovered that many of the Barnes & Noble's staff did not know who owned the store. Instead, it seems today's modern shoppers are content with fake marble wallpaper columns, fake wood print posters of pop-star quality authors and overcrowded conditions.
This concentration on the immediate shopping experience pales in the face of the true problem, however.
Many shoppers do not realize and do not care where their money goes.
If you write a check at Border's, a few pennies will remain at the store as employee salaries. The rest will go to the faceless head honchos at Kmart, the owners of the Border's chain.
Exchange money with the people at Whistler's, and the profits remain with that store.
The money then is exchanged again with another neighborhood business, such as a restaurant or a movie theater like the Tivoli.
Your purchase at the independently owned store stimulates the local economy, retaining jobs and remaining in the community.
Also going the way of independently owned businesses is neighborhood identity. Corporate-owned store stores rarely sway from the typical cookie-cutter layout that the executives choose.
They are void of individuality and atmosphere. And generally, they exist merely to serve their own greedy needs, neglecting the responsibilities of community members.
Unless we wish to face the doom of obtaining our culture from strip-mall quality businesses, we as a community need to join forces and refuse to shop from the devouring chain stores.
Lawrence is filled with locally owned stores, but they are feeling the threat that has obliterated the community-oriented stores of Johnson County.
Mega-chains such as Wal-Mart are difficult to conquer, but it is possible to take back our communities if we watch where we put our money.
Leslie Bowyer is a Lawrence senior in art history.
KANSAN STAFF
SHLEY MILLER
editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
managing editor
OBERT ALLEN
news editor
OM EBLEN
general manager, news adviser
Editors
campus ... Joann Birk
torial ... Phillip Brownlee
torial ... Paul Todd
localize editorial ... Crig Lang
corrections ... Matt Hend
arte ... Tom Erickson
chocolate sports ... Bill Petulla
to ... Matt Flickner
public ... Keith Mileson
social sections ... Novelda Bommers
p ... Tara Trecnary
institution ... Mian Leaker
HEATHER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Business Staff
Campus mgr ... Karen Garsch
Regional mgr ... Kelly Connely
National mgr ... Mark Ozmek
Special Sections mgr ... Norm Billow
Production mgrs ... Maureen Canhli
Heather Vallier
Marketing director ... Cary Breloff
Public Relations dir ... Angie Adamson
Creative director ... Ed Kowalski
Classified mgr ... Stacey Wellington
Internship/co-op mgr ... T.J. Clark
OUT FROM THE CRACKS
ONE MORE WEEK OF CRAMMING A WHOLE SEMESTER OF INFORMATION IN MY HEAD FOR FINALS! WHAT AM I GOING TO DO?
MY LIFE SUCKS!
I LOVE YOU MAN!
GOOD LUCK!
ONE MORE WEEK OF CRAMMING A WHOLE SEMESTER OF INFORMATION IN MY HEAD FOR FINALS! WHAT AM I GOING TO DO?!
ONE MORE WEEK OF CRAMMING A WHOLE SEMESTER OF INFORMATION IN MY HEAD FOR FINALS! WHAT AM I GOING TO DO?!
MY LIFE SUCKS!
I LOVE YOU MAN!
GOOD LUCK!
MY LIFE SUCKS!
I
I LOVE YOU
MAN!
GOOD LUCK!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, May 1, 1996
5A
Anxiety disorders common
Symptoms include sweating, shaking
By Nicole Kennedy
Kansan staff writer
Students who think that they're just stressed out actually may have an anxiety disorder.
Raymond Higgins, professor of psychology, said that many students at the University of Kansas were suffering from an anxiety disorder but didn't know it.
"About 20 to 25 percent of people will suffer from some type of anxiety disorder in their lifetime," he said. "Anxiety disorders begin in the teens and 20s, so you know a lot of students out there have an anxiety disorder."
Some students said they were stressed out because of the end of the semester and final exams.
Melissa Nemer, Minneapolis, Minn., senior, said she was feeling pressured because she needed more time.
"I have three papers," she said. "My life is definitely in front of a computer."
But Nemer said she was experiencing only mild stress and was taking
measures to keep herself sane.
"I just have to plan it out and schedule myself so I don't get crazy," she said. "Keeping in touch with families and friends helps with stress."
Higgins said that people's feelings of stress during finals time might not always be the result of an anxiety disorder.
"Sometimes stress can make their regular anxiety disorders worse, just like anyone else." he said.
However, people who have anxiety disorders feel stress more intensely than people without disorders.
"When the stress or anxiety starts to affect your life, then you're in a problem area," said Suzie Taylor, community relations coordinator at Bert Nash Community Health Center, Inc., 336 Missouri St.
If people are so jittery that they can't concentrate or work, they may have an anxiety disorder, she said.
Higgins said that someone who had an anxiety disorder could suddenly feel extremely frightened for no reason at all. People with a disorder could experience the same physical reactions that they would if a vicious dog were suddenly chasing them, he said.
Other symptoms of anxiety disorders include anxiety attacks, persistent senseless thoughts, pounding-heart sensations, sweating, trembling, shaking, sleeplessness and a feeling of choking or shortness of breath.
Anxiety screening
Bert Nash Community Health Center, Inc.
336 Missouri St.
6:30 to 8:30 tonight
Free
Higgins said that there were several types of anxiety disorders: phobias, social phobias, panic disorders and generalized anxiety disorders.
People with phobias are afraid of specific things, such as small animals or flying. An example of a social phobia is fear of public speaking. Generalized anxiety disorders are marked by excessive worrying. Panic disorders are marked by erratic panic attacks in which heart palpitations, restlessness, sweating and shaking occur unexpectedly.
The community mental health center will hold a free Anxiety Screening Day from 6:30 to 8:30 tonight. The screening includes a confidential meeting with a mental health professional.
Schoofs sets sights on KU students
Congress candidate campaigns at Union
By R. Adam Ward Kansan staff writer
Students had the chance to do more at the Kansas Union yesterday than sign up for a credit card and get a free slinky and free Reese's Peanut Butter Cups.
Greg Schoofs, a Republican Congressional candidate, met students from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at a table in the Union.
His appearance was sponsored by KU for Schoofs, a 15-member student organization.
"I believe a Republican will win the race, so if students really want to make a difference, they should
vote in the primary," Shoofs said.
Schoofs has served since 1991 as a staff aide for Congresswoman Jan Meyers and now is running for the 3rd Congressional District seat, which Meyers is vacating.
The issues he talks about affect economic growth and government downsizing, Schoofs said. These issues impact KU students because they are important to people who are looking for jobs and houses and are saving to have children and start businesses.
Maggie Wilson, Lawrence freshman and vice-chairwoman of KU for Schoofs, said she was impressed by Schoofs' willingness to spend so much time trying to reach students.
Schoofs said getting students to vote in the August 6 Republican primary was important because he foresaw a close race between the
three main Republican candidates for the 3rd District.
The other Republican candidates are Vince Snowbarger, Ed Eilert, and two other candidates who have not fully started campaigning, Tim Rodewalde and Bonnie Rahimian.
David Hennessy, Ballston Lake. N.Y., sophomore, said Schoofs' appearance in the Union was good contact with students.
He said he'd be more likely to vote for somebody he met.
Aaron Franz, Olathe senior, said that Schoofs's appearance showed he had more interest in student turnout than the other candidates and that it was important for name recognition.
"I don't have any idea who his opponents are," Franz said.
He said he would vote for Schoofs if he was in town.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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This section will appear in the last paper on Monday, May 6th.
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YOU
THE
FUTURE
After spending 18 years working in the kitchen of the Chi Omega house, Eveline King is going home.
As a surprise birthday gift, Chi
Omega sorority members raised
$900 to fly King, their head cook, to
her homeland of Germany.
When Shelley Burkhart, Wichita sophomore and Chi Omega member, heard of King's situation last December, she decided to try to help.
King, who was born and raised in what was formerly Sudetenland, Germany, came to the United States in 1963. Though she has wanted to return, she hasn't been able to do so for 33 years because of financial restraints.
By Lindsey Henry Kansan Correspondent
Sorority cook to go home
Chi Omegas pay for flight to Germany
"She likes to tell stories about her half-brothers in Germany and their escape from a concentration camp
The Chi Omegas presented King with the tickets and money a few days before her birthday in March, Burkham said. The members told King they went just a little past their usual $50 for her birthday gift.
Burkhart proposed sending King to Germany to the 145 members of the sorority. Burkhart said the members were happy to help the woman responsible for their famous cinnamon rolls.
during the war," Burkhart said. "But her son died last year, and her husband died this year, so with funeral expenses she had no money for the trip."
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"She is really popular around the house," Burkhart said. "She sits up late with us and watches TV or tells stories."
The members of Chi Omega raised more than $900 for King's trip, $700 for airfare and the remainder for spending money.
girls for all they have done."
Shelley Burkhart Chi Omega member
"This is so overwhelming for me. I had no idea," King said, dabbing her tearing eyes. "I love my girls here. This is my home away from home, and I just really want to thank my
King plans to take the trip in June or July for about three weeks.
She said she planned to visit her mother's grave, something she never had done because her mother died while King was in the United States.
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"I am so excited," King said. "I don't think I could wait another year."
Police find two-year-old remains in Jefferson County
Authorities have found the remains of a man who has been dead for more than two years in southeast Jefferson County.
THE NEWS in brief
Sheriff Roy Dunnaway said deputies and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation had been searching for the body for five days. He would not say what prompted the search, but he said Monday the remains
were found in the last five days.
were found in the last five days. The man was in his mid- to late-20s, according to a doctor's report. The man's identity and cause of death are unknown, Dunnaway said.
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NATION/WORLD
Wednesday, May 1, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7A
Investigation opened in gas-price rise
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Justice Department opened an investigation yesterday into the causes of the recent surge in gasoline prices at the pump.
Assistant Attorney General Anne K. Bingaman, head of the department's antitrust division, named a five-person task force of lawyers and economists to conduct the investigation, department spokesman Carl Stern said.
She acted at the request of Associate Attorney General John Schmidt and in response to inquiries by three members of Congress, Stern said.
Two Senate Democrats from Connecticut, Christopher Dodd and Joseph Lieberman, and Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., requested an investigation.
The task force first will study whether market forces account for the increase in prices. Stern said.
"If not, then they will determine whether there is evidence of collusion, which is illegal under antitrust laws," he said.
Republicans have used the price rise to propose repeal of the 4.3-cent-per-gallon gasoline tax increase that Clinton won in 1993 as part of a deficit-reduction package.
On Monday, Clinton authorized the sale of about 12 million barrels of oil from the nation's strategic petroleum reserves. He also asked Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary to report within 45 days on possible reasons for the increase in prices.
Gasoline prices are at their highest level since the Persian Gulf War. They have jumped five cents in the past two weeks and 14 cents in the past year. The average price nationwide, including all grades and taxes, was $1.36 a gallon as of Friday, according to the Lundberg Survey of 10,000 gasoline stations.
But in California, a crucial swing state in the presidential race, regular unleaded gasoline averaged $1.55 a gallon, and in some areas, full-service premium exceeded $2 a gallon.
U.S. cars getting faster, thirstier
Soaring fuel prices may be due, in part, to gas-guzzling consumption brought about by higher speed limits. How an increase in speed means burning more fuel:
Speeding up from 45 to 55 mph
+8.3%
55 to 65 mph
+22%
65 to 75 mph
+25%
Covering a 100 mile distance at a higher speed costs more
75 mph: $9.10
55 mph: $6.07
75 mph: $6.64
55 mph: $4.36
SOURCES: American Automobile Association, National Center for Statistics and Analysis; research by BRENNA SINK
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, Clinton's GOP presidential rival, and House Speaker Newt Gingrich, RGa., said Congress would vote by Memorial Day to roll back the gas
tax through the end of the year. The White House says it's willing to discuss repeal.
Democratic lawmakers suggested that oil-company profiteering had
more to do with motorists' pain at the pump than the 4.3-cent-per-gallon surcharge.
"Just before the tourist season begins, it's interesting that these prices would go as high as they are," said Senate Minority Leader Tom Dashle, D-S.D. "I have a feeling it has a lot more to do with profits than it does with taxes."
Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., called on O'Leary to investigate whether price increases were the result of collusion, price-fixing or deliberate efforts to limit supply by the oil industry.
Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, cited the depleted oil stockpiles because of the unusually cold winter and the new requirement in California for using emissions-reducing reformulated gasoline as reasons for the price increase.
But Markey said that oil companies — whose profits have increased strongly — have curtailed refining rather than increasing it after the severe winter.
Storms, flooding claim six victims in Midwest
The Associated Press
Torrential rains eased and the cleanup began yesterday in the Midwest, where hundreds of people were forced out of their homes by weekend storms that killed six people, including two children.
The storm system, which had dropped up to nine inches of rain on Illinois, Ohio, Indiana and Missouri since Sunday, broke up and moved on, leaving behind swamped homes,
power outages and plenty of damage.
Donald Beachler watched as workers fixed the battered roof of his fireworks company outside Dayton, Ohio, which was raked by winds up to 120 mph. Shingles and other debris were scattered around his Imperial Enterprises Inc.
"You've got to go on with life," Beachler said. He estimated the damage at $100,000.
towering Siberian elms toppled onto the streets. Cleanup crews used chain saws and chippers to clear them away.
In Dayton's Deeds Park, a stand of
"These trees are top-heavy." Charles Barlow said as he helped clean up. "When a storm gets a hold of them, it blows them over."
Two deaths in Ohio were blamed on the weather: a 6-year-old boy who grabbed a live electrical wire in his flooded back yard, and a 15 month old who wandered into a
creek. In Missouri, three people died in weather-related traffic accidents, and a fisherman was killed when his boat capsized.
The storm caused widespread flash flooding in the St. Louis area, where about 500 homes were damaged. Most of that water had receded by Monday. State damage-assessment teams will figure the cost of the storm.
The Mississippi and Missouri rivers were expected to crest in the
next couple of days, but only at or slightly above flood stage.
In Illinois, Gov. Jim Edgar declared three counties disaster areas, making them eligible for state aid.
Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228
Some 3,800 Madison County residents still didn't have electricity yesterday and could be without service until today. And in Ohio, about 2,500 customers were still without power.
Around East St. Louis, Ill., about 400 homes and 163 nursing home residents were evacuated.
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The 1996 Jayhawker yearbooks are here!
Wescoe Beach:
April 22 - May 6
9 a.m.- 4:30 p.m.
If pre-ordered, present KUID To purchase, bring cash/check for $30 made payable to: Jayhawker yearbook
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1994 and 1995 yearbooks also available
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864-3728
8A
Wednesday, May 1, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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TAKE THE CHALLENGE MAKE A DIFFERENCE *APPLY TO RUN A VOLUNTEER PROGRAM*
CENTER FOR COMMUNITY OUTREACH the campus volunteer center, is now accepting applications for:
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- Campus Volunteer Coordinator
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- Financial Coordinator
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>> Please contact Emily Heath or Amy Turnbull Co-Directors of the Center for Community Outreach, at 864-3710.
>>> Applications available in the Student Senate office, 410 Kansas Union. Applications Due May 7, 5:00.
Fighting erupts in Liberian capital
The Associated Press
One U.S. Marine was grazed — possibly by a cartridge from his own weapon — but required no medical attention, said two senior defense officials in Washington who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
U.S. Marines kill three men who threaten embassy
At an army barracks a few blocks from the embassy, the floor of a clinic was awash in blood as scores
The shootings, the first exchange of gunfire involving U.S. troops since Liberia's civil war reigned in early April, came as new factional fighting left the 10-day-old, U.S.-brokered truce in tatters.
MONROVIA, Liberia — U.S. Marine guards shot and killed three Liberians firing toward the U.S. embassy yesterday as fierce battles engulfed the capital, littering its streets with bodies a day after a cease-fire collapsed.
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of victims were carried in or dragged themselves through the door. Doctors said at least three people had died and 60 were wounded.
Defense officials in Washington said that in separate incidents at the embassy three Liberians were killed and one wounded by U.S. Marine gunfire.
The fighting violates an April 19 truce negotiated by peacekeepers, warlords, government officials and foreign diplomats, including the U.S. ambassador.
Fire from mortars, machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades echoed through the city, forcing George Moose, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for African affairs, to cancel talks at the embassy with government peacekeepers and factional leaders.
day's fighting was the worst he had seen in the city.
More than 2,000 people have been evacuated, and about 30 people were awaiting airlift from the embassy yesterday.
Moose, in a telephone interview from the embassy, warned of a major catastrophe if the fighting continued. He blamed warlord-turned-politician Charles Taylor, whose standoff with a rival on April 6 provoked two weeks of warfare culminating in the cease-fire.
"Taylor will be responsible." Moose said. "If he persists in taking power, he should expect a strong international reaction."
In all, the Marines counted four separate shooting incidents beginning in late afternoon.
In Monrovia's Mamba Point diplomatic section, where the embassy is located, rival factions battled for control through the afternoon. At least nine bodies were scattered on the streets of the beachfront neighborhood.
Pentagon representative kevm Bacon said that the most serious exchange took place at a guard post near U.S. Ambassador William Milam's residence.
Taylorwill be held responsible. Ifhe persists in taking power, he should expect a
strong
international reaction."
It was unclear whether those killed died while fighting or were caught in crossfire.
George Moose U.S. assistant secretary of state for African affairs
Similar chaos spread across the capital. Chawki Bsaibes, a Lebanese businessman who runs the Mamba Point Hotel, said yester-
Liberia's war began in 1989 when Charles Taylor led his rebel army against the dictatorship of President Samuel Doe. Doe was toppled and executed by a rival faction, and the war continued among several different groups.
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Tied up AND Hosed down
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Society dictates that men and women wear clothing that's seemingly senseless and sometimes sadistic.
Neckties by
Js
Jason Strait
Neckties may not be the scourge of men, pantyhose are to women. They don't really snag
In a gray-suit business world in which each man is a clone of the next, businessmen cling to one piece of clothing that allows them to stand out — the necktie. Neckties may not be the only
or itch, and the only thing the wearer really has to worry about is spilling soup on a $40 item from Brooks Brothers.
Fashion aside, however, the necktie serves little more function in the clothing world than being an annoyance. And like pantyhose, it is a societal norm that has been around for years. But most students would rather throw fashion to the wind and not tie a piece of silk around their neck for the sake of looking good.
"I hate ties," said Lonnie Lichtenberg, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. "They're annoying and they're kind of funny looking."
Lichtenberg, like many KU students, just doesn't understand the function of neckties. Shoes, socks, pants, shirts and even hats are worn for a reason other than fashion. The necktie, however, is not.
In Giannri Versace's book No Neckties, an effort to rid
A prisoner to a piece of cloth.
the world of the choking menace is pleaded and described in a four-word quote from Socrates: "Man is a prisoner."
As time progressed, the necktie evolved, or deevolved, into a bourgeois sign of elitism and an emblem of the businessman.
The necktie entered the world in the 17th century as a "mark of military conformity and propriety."
Enter the necktie as people of the world know it today.
"The tie emerges into the 20th century as a trim and taut sign of the business establishment," according to the book.
So little has changed over the years
Scott Haeffner, Shawnee junior, said he didn't envision wearing a tie in the future on a day-to-day basis. In fact, he owns only one tie, which he uses for all occasions.
"The only one I have is a Fred Flintstone tie. I wear it whenever I have to get dressed up, like weddings," he said. "I haven't gotten any negative comments."
The tie apparently has transformed from a symbol of
David Nations, salesman at Campbell's Clothing, 841 Massachusetts St., said that although ties still were a popular item, he saw a trend of people going away from them.
"I think the fact that there are so many jobs where people are dressing down and being more casual has changed them," he said. "Some say, 'What's the point in wearing one?'
elitism to a mode of expression.
Nation said that ties still were selling well at Campbell's and that the consumer was focused on fashion.
But others do see the point, and for those who must wear a tie, fashion is foremost.
"We're seeing larger exploded patterns," he said. "They've settled down in the last few years. We're even seeing stripes again."
John Katzer, Ottawa freshman, said he enjoyed wearing neckties and looked forward to the day when he would wear one each day.
"I don't wear one every day, but I like it when I have to," he said. "It adds to what you're wearing. That way it's not like you're just putting on a shirt everyday. And besides, suits don't really have a function either."
"There's nothing better than taking them off at the end of the day." Stephanie Guerrin, Lenexa senior.
Hosiery by NK Nicole Kennedy
T they tear, they snag, they itch, and they never seem to fit just right. Pantyhose are the scourge of women. Few are excited about the prospects of being confined by nylon tights, but most say they wear them because society expects them to
"I hate panyhose because they're just restricting, but you have to wear them because if you don't, it looks tacky," said Leslie Pritkin. Chicago sophomore.
Susan Malone, Linwood junior, said she only wore pantyhose when she had to.
"I wear them when the situation calls for them," Malone said.
Even though some women hate wearing pantyhose today, stockings and tights have been a part of the female attire for about 400 years.
And historically, women loved them.
In her book, Dress and Undress: A history of women's underwear, Elizabeth Ewing writes that Queen Elizabeth was the first woman to wear silk stockings in 1666.
The queen received a pair of silk stockings from an attendant as a New Year's present. Ewing wrote.
Ewing wrote that the queen was extremely pleased with the silk stockings, preferring them over her old cotton ones.
"I like silk stockings so well, because they are pleasant, fine and delicate, and henceforth, I will wear no more cloth stockings," the Queen said.
Silk stockings were the rule until the 1940s, when the DuPont Company introduced nylon.
DuPont invented nylon in October 1938. About $27 million was spent developing the new wonder fabric. The company introduced its stockings to the public in 1938 at the World's Fair in New York.
But other American women would have to wait until after World War II.
"All of the industry was focused on wartime production," said Cathy Lynn Gasser, textiles professor. "Women really wanted them, especially young women who were dating."
The first nylon stockings went on sale to DuPont employees only in February 1939.
During the war, stockings were considered a frivolous use of valuable nylon that was needed for the war effort.
Because of stocking shortages, women started going
Hill
HT
Topics
We don't look good if you don't look at us.
bare-legged in summer and winter. Women used leg makeup to paint mock stocking seams up the backs of their legs to make their nude legs less obvious.
By the 1960s, stockings were out of fashion. The invention of the miniskirt made wearing them impossible, because the skirts were so short that the elastic bands used to hold the stocking up could be seen. Pantyhose, underpants combined with stockings, were invented to make wearing the mini skirt easier.
Today, as they have been since the 1940s, women are expected to wear pantyhose in some
Photos by
Matt Flickner
Both Malone and Guerrin said pantyhose were good because when they wore them, they didn't have to worry about shaving their legs.
Malone said pantyhose were good for covering up blemishes and scars.
Stephanie Guerrin, Lenexa senior. "There's nothing better than taking them off at the end of the day."
"In the winter time, I wear really thick tights and they're great," Guerrin said. "Two, three days, I'm fine."
May 1, 1996 Page 10A
位
KANSAS SOFTBALL The search continues for a head softball coach, Page 3.
SPORTS
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1996
Kansas roughed up by Emporia State 24-10
SECTION B
Matt Flickner / KAMSAM
35
Emporia State left fielder Chris Malsam scores as the ball bounces away fromKansas junior pitcher Aric Peters. The Hornets defeated the Jayhawks 24-10 last night at Hogtland-Maupin Stadium.
Jayhawk pitching gives up 24 hits in offensive showdown
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team did not look ready for the upcoming Big Eight Tournament.
It didn't even look ready for a Division II tournament.
In a wretched effort in pitching futility, Division II Emporia State defeated Kansas 24-10 last night at Hogglund-Maupin Stadium.
The Kansas pitching staff tied a school record by allowing 24 hits. The last team to achieve that total against Kansas was Missouri in 1938.
"Do we get a trophy for that?" Kansas coach Bobby Randall asked fecitiously.
Kansas, 21-26 overall, saw a record-tying six pitchers allow in every inning but two, and every pitcher allowed at least two runs.
The Hornets also came within one run of tying the school record for runs against Kansas. Oklahoma State scored 25 in a 1985 game.
"They were awfully good out there," Randall said. "And we were awful bad on the mound."
The Hornets chased Kansas starter Chris Williams (2-1) after just 1 2/3 innings, allow
Aric Peters wasn't any better in relief of Williams. He was roughed up for four hits and five runs in just one inning.
The Jayhawks tried to come back early after trailing 7-0 in the second inning. They cut the lead to 9-7 after four innings, thanks in part to second baseman Josh Kliner's 10th home run of the year, a two-run shot in the third. Kliner now has 88 RBI, putting him on second in the Kansas single-season RBI list.
ing seven hits and five runs.
Former Jayhawk Darryl Monroe set the record at 71 in 1994.
"We had a lot of fight in us early on," Kansas first baseman Justin Headley said.
But the Jayhawks would not get any closer. The Hornets scored five times in fifth and sixth innings and pulled away for good.
"I thought we'd be much more improved, but we're not," Randall said of the pitching staff. "Guys are getting a lot of opportunities, but they're not pitching very well."
Kansas players seek pro-football options
Every Hornet starter but one got a hit. Right fielder Darin Canady and left fielder Chris Malsam each had four hits, while Canady, third baseman Tim Bergen and first baseman Steve Claiborne had four RBI each for the Hornets.
Kansas will be back on the field at 3 p.m. today against Cameron at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
This is the second consecutive year Emporia State has defeated Kansas. The Hornets won last season 7-5 at Hogland-Maupin Stadium.
"Hopefully the whole team will be embarrassed," Headley said.
Smith, Rodgers and Williams look for employment
By Evan Blackwell Kansan sportswriter
Ashaundai Smith, Keith Rodgers and Mark Williams have a couple of things in common.
While they all were productive players for the Jayhawks, they all were passed on for one reason — they're too small.
They all were seniors for the Kansas football team last season, and not one of them was drafted into the National Football League earlier this month.
PROFILE
"Whenever you're moving to the next level, whether it be from high school to college or from college to the pros, they look for bigger," said Kansas assistant coach Golden Pat Ruel. "If you're big, you have to prove you can't play. But if you're small, you have to prove you can."
While the three former Jayhawks were not drafted, they haven't given up on their dream of playing professional football. All three are pursuing other options.
Williams, the quarterback that guided Kansas to a 10-2 record last season, reportedly has been contacted by several teams from the Canadian Football League. British Columbia and Vancouver are among the teams reportedly interested in Williams.
Ruel said he was surprised no NFL team took a chance on Williams, who threw for nearly 2,000 yards last season.
UU
"If you're going to look for a
quarterback, you look for three things," Ruel said. "You have to make good decisions, you have to throw the ball well and you have to be mobile. Mark Williams is all three."
Maybe even more so than Williams, Smith and Rodgers have been hindered the most by the "too small" rap. Smith, a wide receiver only 5 feet 6 inches tall and 160 pounds, was second for the Jayhawks with 41 catches for 550 yards last year.
Smith attended the Kansas City Chiefs mini camp over the weekend, and he was invited back to the Chiefs' next camp in June.
Rodgers, a 5-foot 11-inch 200-pound outside linebacker, isn't much bigger than most NFL safeties. However, Rodgers' size didn't prevent him from recording 69 tackles and seven sacks last season.
Rodgers said that three or four NFL teams initially had shown interest in him before the draft but that the interest had died down a little.
Ruel agreed with Rodgers that the professional football scouting process had become too heavily weighted by size.
His best opportunities now seemed to be in the CFL, he said.
There's too much reliance on size as a determining factor for a prospect, Rodgers said. So much so that even the all-time leading rusher in the NFL was once considered a marginal prospect.
"Everybody would be better off if you were judged on how good a football player you are," Ruel said. "Not how big you are."
"Bill Parcells once said he thought Walter Payton was too small coming out of college," Rodgers said. "I guess he was wrong about that."
Atkerson decides to move on
Despite eligibility, tennis player leaving
By Spencer Duncan Kansan sportswriter
It was one of the biggest decisions of Jenny Atkerson's life. But, in the end, she decided it was time to leave.
Despite a year of eligibility remaining, Atkerson, a senior on the women's tennis team, decided she will not return to the tennis team after graduating this month.
"She is going to move on," Kansas women's tennis coach Chuck Merzbacher said. "It's time for her to get on with her life."
Atkerson has been at Kansas for four years. She will graduate with two majors, psychology and human development.
Despite finishing her studies, Atkerson has a year of athletic eligibility left because she red-shirted her sophomore season after injuring her right knee.
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
"I looked at the pros and cons of staying or leaving," she said. "I decided it was time to go." The decision was not an easy one.
Kansas senior Jenny Atkinson returns a shot during a doubles match. Despite a year of eligibility remaining, Atkinson will not return to the Kansas tennis team next year.
"I had a lot of things to weigh. I'm through with school, and I have nothing else to do here," Atkerson said. "Also, the weather. I don't like the cold."
The Kansas coaching staff is sorry to see Atkerson go, but the decision was not a surprise.
Assistant women's tennis coach Frank Polito, who is in his first season as an assistant, knew Atkerson was considering leaving when he arrived in January.
"She began talking about it when I got here," Polito said of Atkerson's decision. "I think it was a little shocking, but it was also kind of expected."
Merbzacher hates to see Atkerson leave, but he said that it was not a decision for him to make. Merzbacher understands that Atkerson must do what she feels is right.
"She is doing what is best for her, and that is what matters," Mierzbach said.
The Jayhawks are losing a player that has
been a strong force for the team.
As a freshman, Atkerson recorded her best Big Eight mark, 10-0. She also was named to the All-Big Eight team in singles and doubles.
Atkerson redshirted because of an injury during her sophomore year. After recovering, she came back strong her junior year.
She went 9-0 in the Big Eight and finished the season ranked No. 97 nationally and No. 9 regionally.
This season finished the Big Eight undefeated, 9-0. She finished her Big Eight career 27-0.
"Jenny has proven to be one of the better players in this conference and in the country." Merzbacher said. "She has worked hard to get where she is."
Atkerson also holds a No. 12 doubles ranking with partner Kylie Hunt.
All of this success can be attributed to one thing.
"She is a very hard worker," Polito said. "She is a very focused person. Some players have a tendency to get emotional, but Jenny stays focused."
Akerson plans to return home to Texas and either go to graduate school or work on a teaching degree. She also has another plan.
"I am getting married," Atkerson said. "But I made my decision to leave before I knew I was getting married."
Atkerson leaves Kansas believing she has made the right decision, but there still are things she will miss.
"There are people I will miss, and I will really miss the tennis," Atkerson said. "But it is time to move on."
Kansas sprinter Nathen Hill is a chip off the old starting block
Despite losing his father at a very young age,'Hawk runner inherits his interest in track
By Adam Herschman
Kansan sportswriter
Stretching in a circle of sprinters at a Kansas track and field practice, junior sprinter Nathen Hill sits down, wearing a cutoff t-shirt and bandana.
Kansas teammate Brian Martin said Hill always competes well on the track, but he always wants to look good doing it.
"He's got his own style," Martin said. "He's the pretty boy of the team."
Hill's mother, Jerrien Hill, said her son got the charisma of lighting up a room from his father, John
Mungan.
"I think there's a natural inclination to be the center of attention," Jerrien Hill said. "He's got a natural talent that way."
Hill's aura is not the only thing that runs in the family. Both Mungan and Nathan Hill ran track in high school and college. Mungan ran at Burlington High School in Iowa and at Bob Jones University in South Carolina. Besides running for the Jayhawks, Hill ran at Blue Valley North where he owns school records in the 200 and 400 meter dashes.
Hill's aura is not the only thing that runs in the family.
Despite their interest in the sport, they have never taken a jog together.
When Hill was 5 months old, he was eating breakfast with his 4-year-old brother, Kurt, before church. His father picked up the dishes, set them down in the sink and fell straight backwards.
Mungan died before he hit the floor. Mungan had a heart disease called idiopathic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, which causes the lining of the ventricle to
enlarge and constrict blood flow to the brain.
Both Hill and his brother get checked for the disease three times every year.
"It's kind of like a legacy, like a story you hear that I just kind of grew up with," Hill said. "I don't know John the person. I know John the story. It's hard for me to say, 'dad,' just because he's not a dad to me even though he was. To me, when I was young, he was a fictional character almost."
When Hill was about 15 years old, he saw an old video of his father running in the 4x200- relay at Burlington High School.
"Looking at the pictures and watching all the videos, it kind of made me frustrated, because you look at this guy that looks just like me and hear all these stories and watch these videos," Hill said. "Even when I watch the videos I can see the resemblance. It looks like me out there."
JOHN MORRIS
See HILL, Page 3.
Matt Rickner / KAMBAM
Kansas junior sprinter Nathan Hill takes a cardboard baton from the Drake Relays to every track meet he competes in. Hill does this as a remembrance to his father, who died when Nathon was five-months old.
]
---
2B
Wednesday, May 1, 1996
SCORES & MORE
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Tuesday's College Baseball Scores By The Associated Press EAST
Boston College 4, Holy Cross 3
Davis & Elkins at W. Virginia St., ppd, rain
Mass.-Dartmouth 5, Worcester St. 1
Princeton vs. Lehigh, ppd, rain
Providence 1, Northeastern 0
Stonehill 7, Bryant 6
Tufts 11, E. Connecticut 4
SOUTH
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ala.-Birmingham 5, Auburn 3
Austin Peay 9, Memphis 5
Birmingham-Southern 8, Bamford 2
Centenary 9, McNeese St. 3
Cumberland, Tenn. 7, Lambeth 1
Georgia Southern 14, Georgia St. 12
Georgia Tech 10, Georgia 3
NW Louisiana 9, SW Louisiana 8
South Alabama 5, SE Louisiana 2
Southern Miss. 6, Mississippi St. 2
Tennessee Tech 6, Carson-Newman 2
Vanderbilt 7, Middle Tenn. 6
Virginia 3, George Washington 0
Wofford at Wake Forest, pd, rain
MIDWEST
Bradley 8, Saint Louis 6
E. Kentucki at Cincinnati, ppd, rain
Emporia St. 24, Kansas 10
Illinois St. 8, Illinois 7
Illinois St. 7, Iowa 2
Mount Marty 12, Midland Lutheran 8
Mount Vernon Nazarene 16, Kenyon 9
Ohio St. 11, 13,-Ind.-Pur. 10-3
AK St. 11, 13
SW Minnesota 11, 2e, Northern St. 11-
Upper Iowa 12, Coe 5
Wichita St. 6, Hastings 4
Wis.-Lake 3,8-Luther 2,0
SOUTHWEST
FAR WEST
Texas Christen 13M, Arlington 1
West Texas A18, Wayland Baptist 1
BYU 17-8, Air Force 5-10
CSU-Chico 11, CS Dominguez Hills 7
Fresno St. 6, Long Beach St. 4
Menlo B, San Francisco St. 6
Pacific 11, St. Mary's, Calif. 10, in innings
Santa Clara 9, California 5
Stanford 10, San Francisco 1
UC Davis 14, Patten College 4
Washington 10, 6-Cent. Washington 4-3
Washington St. 18, Gonzaga 10
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
Sunday, April 28
Chicago 106, Miami 75, Chicago leads series
Playoffs
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times EDT
First Round
(Best-of-5)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Chicago vs. Miami
Friday, April 26
Icago 102, Miami 85
Wednesday, May 1
Friday, May 3
am 8 p.m. if noon
Chicago at Miami, 8 p.m., if necessary (TNT)
Sunday, May 5
Miami at Chicago, TBA, if necessary (NBC)
Orlando vs. Detroit
Friday, April 26 Orlando 112, Detroit 92
Sunday, April 28
Orlando 92 Detroit 77
---
Orlando 101, Detroit 98, Orlando wins series
Indiana vs. Atlanta
Thursday, April 25
Indiana 80
Saturday, April 27
Atlanta 90, Indiana 83, Atlanta leads series 2-1
Thursday, May 2
Indiana at Atlanta, 7 p.m.
Sunday, May 5
Indiana at Atlanta, 7 p.m.
Sunday, May 5
Atlanta at Indiana, TBA, if necessary
Cleveland vs. New York
New York 84, Cleveland 80, New York leads
season 2.
Wednesday, May 1
Cleveland at New York, 7 p.m. (TBS)
Friday, May 3
New York, NY 10236 (1-855) Friday, May 3 Cleveland at New York, TBA, if necessary Sunday, May 5
New York at Cleveland, TBA, if necessary
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Seattle vs. Sacramento
Friday, Aug 20
Seattle 97, Sacramento 85
Sunday April 28
Sacramento 90, Seattle 81
Tuesday. April 30
Thursday, May 2
Seattle 96, Sacramento, 89, Seattle leads
Thursday, May 2
Seattle at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 4
Sacramento at Seattle, TBA, if necessary (NBC)
San Antonio vs. Phoenix
Friday, April 26 Antonio 120. Phoenix 98
Sunday, April 28
San Antonio 110, Phoenix 105, San Antonio
TV
San Antonio at Phoenix, 10:30 p.m. (TNT)
Wednesday.May 1
Friday, May 3
San Antonio at Phoenix, TBA,lf necessary
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Wednesday. (schedule subject to change and or blackouts):
SPORTS WATCH
(All times Central)
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1
WGN Major League Baseball, St.
Louis at Chicago Cubs
4:30 p.m.
1 p.m.
ESPN — Cycling, Tour DuPont,
stage No. 1, at various sites (same-
dav tace).
ESPN — Thoroughbred racing, post position draw for the Kentucky Darby, at Louisville, Kv.
TBS — NBA Playoffs, doubleheader, first round, game No. 3's, Cleveland at New York and Utah at Portland
6 p.m.
ESPN — Major League Baseball,
N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore or Pitts-
burgh at Cincinnati
L.A. Lakers vs. Houston
6:30 p.m.
TNT — NBA Playoffs, doubleheader, first round, game No. 3s, Chicago at Miami and San Antonio at Phoenix
8:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — USAC Auto racing, scotts of Winchester ind
9:30 a.m
ESPN --- Major League Baseball Colorado at Los Angeles
10:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — Cycling, Tour DuPont,
stage No. 1, at various sites (samed-
day tape)
Phoenix at San Antonio, TBA, if necessary
Thursday, April 25
Houston 87, L.A. Lakers 83
Sunday, May 5
Utah vs. Portland
Thursday April 25
Utah 110, Portland 102
Portland 94, Utah 91, OT, Utah leads series 2-
Saturday, April 27 Utah 105. Portland 90
Wednesday, May 1
Monday, April 20
Portland at Utah, TBA, if necessary
land, 9:30 p.m., (TBS)
Sunday, May 5
Houston 104, L.A. Lakers 98, Houston leads
Thursday, May 2
Houston at L.A. Lakers, TBA, if necessary (NBC)
PRO BASEBALL
L.A. Lakers at Houston, 9:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 4
National League
AT A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times EDT
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Montreal | 17 | 9 | .654 | — |
| Atlanta | 16 | 11 | .593 | 1½ |
| Philadelphia | 16 | 11 | .542 | 3 |
| New York | 11 | 13 | .458 | 5 |
| Florida | 11 | 16 | .407 | 6½ |
Central Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Chicago | 13 | 14 | .481 | — |
| Houston | 13 | 14 | .481 | — |
| Pittsburgh | 12 | 14 | .462 | ½ |
| St. Louis | 12 | 15 | .444 | 1 |
| Cincinnati | 12 | 16 | .360 | 3 |
West Division
W 10 L Pct GB
San Diego 17 14 630
San Francisco 17 14 538 2½
Los Angeles 14 14 500 3½
Colorado 14 14 450 1¼
Saint Diego 2, Houston 1
New York 3, Montreal 2
Los Angeles 10, Chicago 4
Only Games Scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Florida 7, Philadelphia 2
Pittsburgh 10, Cincinnati 7
Montreal at New York, ppd., rain
Atlanta 7, Houston 5
Chicago 7, St. Louis 6
Los Angeles 7, Colorado 4
San Francisco 9, San Diego 4
Wednesday's Games
Montreal (Martinez 2-1 and Alvarez 1-0) at New
Clark (1-2 and an leslambages 2, 2, 5; 1-10
Philadelphia (Hunter 1-1) at Florida (Leiter 4-1)
Philadelphia (Hunter 1-1) at Florida (Leiter 4-1)
Philadelphia
Colorado (Thompson 1-1) at Los Angeles
Pittsburgh (Hope 0-1) at Cincinnati (Burba 0-2),
7-35 m
Manta (Avery 2-1) at Houston (Hampton 2-2),
1.05 m
Colorado (Thompson 1-1) at Los Angeles
(Astacio 2-2), 10:35 p.m.
San Francisco (Gardner 2-0) at San Diego
(Valenzuela 0-1), 10:35 p.m.
Thursday's Game
Philadelphia at Florida, 7:05 p.m.
Only game scheduled
American League At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times EDT East Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 13 | 10 | .565 | — |
| Baltimore | 14 | 12 | .538 | ½ |
| Toronto | 11 | 14 | .440 | 3 |
| Detroit | 9 | 18 | .333 | 6 |
| Boston | 7 | 19 | .269 | 7½ |
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Cleveland 16 8 .667 —
Chicago 15 10 .600 1½
Minnesota 13 12 .520 3¼
Milwaukee 12 12 .500 4½
Kansas City 9 18 .333 8¹
W 10 L Pct. GB
Seattle 18 16 .615 —
Texas 16 12 .615 —
California 13 12 .520 2 1/4
Oakland 13 12 .520 2 1/4
Monday's Games
Seattle at Milwaukee, ppd., rain Chicago, 4 California, 3 New York Minnesota 11, Kansas City 6 Only Games Scheduled
Scheduled
Tuesday
Tuesday's Games
Cleveland 5, Chicago 3
Boston 13, Detroit 4
Toronto 9, Milwaukee 8
Minnesota 16, Kansas City 7
Seattle 8, Texas 0
New York 13, Baltimore 10
California 7, Oakland 3
Chicago (McCaskill 0-1) at Cleveland (McDow
Wednesday's Games
Detroit (Alfredd 0-2) at Boston (Clemens 0-4),
7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Miranda 1-0) at Toronto (Guzman
3-11; 7:35 p.m.)
New York (Rogers 1-0) at Baltimore (Wells 2-1)
7.25 6:35
Specially designed (bachelor 2-1) at Minnesota (Hadke
3-3), 8:05 p.m.
7, 35 p.m. Kansas City (Belcher 2-1) at Minnesota (Radke
Seattle (Wolcott 1-3) at Texas (Oliver 1-0); 8:35 p.m.
California (Leftwich 0-0) at Oakland (Van Poppe-
0-2) 10:35 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Wilmington at Toronto 12:35 p.m.
California at Oakland, 1:35 p.m.
San Francisco at Oakland, 5:15 p
Texas at Detroit 7:05 p.m.
Texas at Detroit, 7:05 p.m.
Chicago at New York, 7:35 p.m.
Chicago at New York, 7:35 p.m.
Cleveland at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Only games scheduled
TRANSACTIONS
Tuesday's Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American league
National League
CALIFORNIA ANGELS—Placed RHP Scott Sanderson on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to April 25. Recalled RHP Phil Leftwich from Van-couver of the PCL.
BOSTON RED SOX—Named Sammy Ellis pitching coach. Transfered pitching coach Al Nipper to coordinator of minor-league pitching. Demoted Dave Carluci, bullpen coach, to bullpen catcher. Named Herman Staretull bullpen coach.
BASKETBALL
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Announced Johnny Podros, pitching coach, will take a leave of absence for the rest of the season for health reasons. Named Jim Wright interim pitching coach.
National Basketball Association TORONTO RAPTORS—Announced that C Oliver Miller has exercised an option in his contract to become a free agent.
WASHINGTON BULLETS— Announced the resignation of John Nash, general manager.
National Football League
FOOTBALL
National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS—Signed WR Terance Mathis to a four-year contract. NEW YORK GIANTS—Agreed to terms with K Olindo Mare.
COLLEGE
CLEVELAND STATE—Named Rolle Massimino men's basketball coach. MANHATTAN—Named John Leonard men's basketball coach.
NOTRE DAME—Announced women's lacrosse will begin varsity play next year, and crew will become a varsity sport in 1997-98.
ST. JOHN'S—Named Charlteen
Thomas women's basketball coach.
ROBERT MORRIS--Named Jim Boone men's basketball coach.
WAKE FOREST-Named Jody Adams women's assistant basketball coach.
WESTERN NEW MEXICO—Named Troy Hudson mens basketball coach
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, May 1, 1996
3B
Search continues for softball coach
Coach Luedke has applied for head coach spot
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
The search is on to permanently replace former Kansas softball coach Kalum Haack.
Kansas associate athletics director Betsy Stephenson said the deadline for applications was today. Assessment and interviews will begin soon to fill the vacancy left when Haack resigned on Dec. 26 to start the softball program at Alabama.
"My hope is to work through the process and have a coach by the first of June," Stephenson said. "We've accelerated a little
bit by starting before the end of the season, primarily because we don't want to disadvantage ourselves in recruiting."
The search and selection process was originally slated to begin after the Jayhawks' season ended, which could have been as late as May 27 if Kansas were to advance to the College World Series.
Stephenson could not release the number of applications she had received or any of the applicants' names, but at least one candidate is known — and known well at Kansas.
Kansas softball coach Gayle Luedek, who took over this spring, submitted her application yesterday. Luedke has assumed full responsibility of being the Jayhawks' head coach in the interim, ordering supplies, scheduling games for next season, recruiting and budgeting for the program.
"Being a head coach wasn't a career goal of mine before started coaching five years ago, Luedke said. "Since then, I've always had the mind whether could be a head coach." Luedke said her trial run this spring did not come under circumstances ideal for anyone involved. Haack left the team midseason after the Jayhawks had just completed a perfect 14-0 fall season.
But the awkwardness of the situation was eased somewhat by Luedke's familiarity with Kansas and Lawrence. She was a player from 1985 to 1988 and has served on the Jayhawk coaching staff for the past seven years. She resigned her assistant position in August to become a volunteer coach at Texas, a first-year program, before returning to Kansas in January.
Stephenson said she expected
Luedek to be a candidate for the job when she agreed to return.
"We assured her that she would be considered for the position," Stephenson said.
Even with Luedke's likely application for the job, she has not felt she had something to prove this spring.
"If it was to prove anything, it would be to myself," Luedek said. "I'm still trying to do that. I don't know what expectations the players had or the administration had."
Even with the selection process in progress, Luedek plans to concentrate on the Jayhawks' remaining games. That includes the Big 12 Conference tournament next weekend and a doubleheader against Wichita State today in Wichita.
"I don't want this stuff to interfere with what we have left to do," Luedke said.
Hill: Track runner takes after his father
S. C. BORNLEY
Continued from Page 1.
Nathan Hill's father, John Mungan, poses in his Burlington High School (lowa) track uniform.
Contributed photo / KAMSAN
His mother agrees.
His mother agrees.
She said Hill's voice and looks were very much like his father's.
"He so much like his dad," Jerrien Hill said. "I remember track was really important to him, and it is to Nathan."
Hill put his first college medal, fourth in the 200-meter dash his freshman year at the Big Eight Championship meet, on his father's grave in Burlington.
Running is not the only interest Hill has in common with his father.
Mungan was a broadcaster for a while in Iowa and Ohio. He anchored the 10 o'clock news in Debuke, Iowa. He left the broadcasting field to work as a program director for General Electric in Cincinnati.
Hill wants to go into broadcasting, also.
"Honestly, the first reason I got into it was because he did it," Hill said. "I just wanted to see what it was like. I don't feel obligated to go into broadcasting, but I think it's something I can do."
Hill anchors the news Wednesday mornings on KJHK.
His mother said that his interest in both track and broadcasting were probably triggered by the videos, pictures and stories of his father.
"I think it's an attempt to know
the father he never got to know by being so very much like him," Jerrien Hill said. "I know his father would be very proud of him."
Thirty years ago, Mungan ran in the Drake Relays during his senior year at Burlington High School.
"It's better than Big Eight's, just because he ran there," Hill said. "He put his hands down and started, he ran on those turns, he handed off in those exchange zones. I never thought I'd get to run somewhere that he ran."
Last weekend, Hill and the rest of the Jayhawks competed in the Drake Relays.
Hill's most prized possession is a cardboard Drake Relays baton that follows him to track meets and hangs above his desk when he's not competing.
"I don't step onto the track without thinking about him," Hill said. "He's something that keeps me going in workouts and track meets. It's kind of like I'm living out some dreams that he couldn't. I know he's watching every race."
Hill did not make it to the finals in any of the relays he ran last weekend. He had made it to the finals the past two years.
His mother was planning to go to the Drake Relays, because she was unable to attend the meet on Friday. But since he did not make the finals, she didn't travel to Des Moines, Iowa.
But his adopted father, Skip Hill, showed up last weekend to support Hill and the team.
"To me he's my dad," Hill said. "In high school, he did not miss one meet, I don't think, in the four years. In college he's probably gone to well over 80 percent of them.
He always gives me thumbs up before and after my races. He's been so supportive of me."
Two years after Mungan died, Hill's mother married Skip Hill and moved to Overland Park. Skip Hill adopted both kids.
Skip Hill said that Nathan always had the freedom to explore his love for and interest in his biological dad.
"By Nathan having the ability to express his feelings, I think it actually brought us closer together," Skip Hill said.
At the Kansas Relays last year, Hill won a Kansas Relays watch and gave it to his dad.
"To me, I felt that was the least I could do to show my gratitude towards him." Hill said. "Here's a guy that comes out, to watch me run for like 10 seconds."
Hill said that he was slowly but surely learning that there was a reason for everything.
Hill once told his mother, "John was my father, but Skip's my dad."
"It's like a tragedy happened, but on the same side a miracle happened," Nathen Hill said.
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Horoscopes
Today's Birthday (May 1). Negotiate this year to achieve your goals. Your sweetheart's advice is priceless in June. You can figure out the right answer in August to keep from getting uprooted. Your work in October will lead to success. An old mystery is solved in December. Travel's fun in January, but things aren't what you expected. Be ready for a change in your career around February. Use old skills to advance in April.
Rating System: 10 is the easiest day, 0 is the most challenging.
Arles (March 21-April 19) -Today is a 6 -
You've got a bad case of spring fever. You'd much
rather play with your sweetie than work. Get serious at for least part of the day. You'll want money
for something important soon.
By Linda C. Black
Taurus (April 20-May 20) -Today is a 7 -- Work clashes with travel plans this morning. The effort you're expending brings you closer to your goals. You're learning skills that you'll need. Dinner out is expensive, but your sweetie will love it.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) - Today is an 8 -
You're good with words all the time, but even better now. Get your thoughts down in writing this morning, so you can make a gift of them to sweeter tonight. Celebrate May Day with a commitment.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) - Today is a 7 - You have another conflict of interests. You're more interested in goofing off than in working today. Cover it up by holding meetings. You might accidentally get something accomplished.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) --Today is a 7 --You're faced with several things you'd rather not face. Luckily, you've got a friend on your side. Ask him or her to help you make a tough decision. Do what your sweetie wants tonight.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -Today is an 8 - A
friend form far away can help you make a good deal. Your plans are thwarted through lack of funds this morning, but could work out later. Let people know what you want and what you have to trade.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Today is a 6 - Don't let a lack of funds make you blue. Your real friends love you even if you don't have all the latest toys. Better you should have a nice nest egg. Heed a wealthier person's advice.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) - Today is a 6 - You may be able to avoid something you don't want to do. Talk a compliant person into taking care of it for you. A letter concerning a financial matter could fall into the wrong hands, so be careful.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) - Today is a 6 -
Don't let your friends distract you during business hours.
You can't afford it. Plan something special for dinnertime instead. A double date with your sibling and your sweethearts would be fun.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Today is a 7 --You're making slow and steady progress toward your dreams. Remember that if things look difficult today. Show your supervisor that you can be counted on. He or she relies on you more than you know.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - Today is an 8 - Celebrate by taking a drive in the prettiest country you can find. You may not get the whole day off, but you will sure appreciate the time you get. And you'll be refreshed for a tough day tomorrow.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) --Today is a 7 --Financial paperwork requires attention – either bill or investments. Or perhaps it's a legacy or your own will. Whatever, make sure it's done right. You don't have the time to do it over.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
Puckett healing well, doctors say
Baseball player's eye shows improvement following laser surgery
The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Doctors say they see some encouraging signs following Kirby Puckett's eye surgery.
Puckett plans to fly to Baltimore to see his eye specialist again early today and return after his examination to join the Twins on a road trip that begins Friday night at California.
Minnesota Twins physician Leonard Michienzi said Monday that Bert Glaser, a physician overseeing Puckett's treatment in Baltimore, found six visible laser spots inside Puckett's right eye.
Puckett, who has had blurred vision for the past month as a result of glaucoma in his right eye, had the laser surgery two weeks ago.
"Of the six spots, four are beginning to show signs of tiny capillaries," Michienzi said. "It is hoped the other two spots will also show some success Wednesday when Kirby has his next examination by Dr. Glaser."
Michienzi cautioned that the discovery of capillary growth was just a beginning and that it still was too early to tell whether the surgery would prove successful. The hope is that the capillaries will continue to grow and eventually provide a sufficient blood supply to heal Puckett's eye.
Puckett, who has not played this season, said that sitting on the bench was getting harder. He said the vision in his right eye was improving but still was dark and cloudy.
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2
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, May 1, 1996
5B
Laettner comes alive in playoffs
Former college star plays intense in first dose of postseason
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Christian Laettner looks as if he's back at Duke.
The fist is pumping. The lungs are howling. The body is diving to the floor for loose balls.
Look closely and you might even see the beginnings of a smile, something that was unthinkable during his three-plus seasons with the Minnesota Timberwolves.
"I can't remember when I've had more fun playing basketball," Laettner said, savoring his 24-point, eight-rebound performance Monday night in a 90-83 victory against the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference playoffs. "It was like a practice game with no refs. If you get fouled, don't worry about it."
Laetner was a fixture in the postseason at Duke, leading the Blue Devils to NCAA titles in 1991 and '92. But when he got to Minnesota, he found himself on a team that had no hope of making the plavoffs.
With every defeat, Laetner's patience diminished and his reputation as a whiner grew. Finally, after he directed an outburst at teenager Kevin Garnett, the Timberwolves shipped him to the Hawks in February.
In Atlanta, Laettner has been leery of opening up to the media, but he seems to be making a concerted effort to mesh with his new teammates. He's constantly offering encouragement and hasn't complained about having to play out of position at center.
He credits his change in attitude to being with a playoff team.
"Working hard for three years in the NBA, playing and practicing as much as anyone else and you're not winning your share of games because you're not on a very good team," he said. "I'm glad to be on a better team, that's all."
The Hawks, who have a 2-1 edge in their best-of-five series with the Pacers, are one victory away from moving into the second round for just the second time in eight years. Game 4 will be tomorrow night in Atlanta.
Laetner's passion for the game was evident against the Pacers on Monday night. Giving up five inches and 35 pounds to Rik
Smits, Indiana's 7-foot-4, 265-pound center who scored 29 points in Game 2, Laettner made up for the size disadvantage with pure effort.
He hurled his body on the floor for loose balls. He waded inside to keep the ball alive on the offensive boards. He brought the crowd to its feet midway through the third quarter when he out muscled everyone for a rebound and was fouled on the following shot, his emotions erupting in a primal scream.
"Yeeeaaahhh!" he yelled, his fist pumping furiously.
"It was like something was born tonight," he said later. "The refs let us bang a little more than in Indiana (during the first two games). The intensity was overwhelming, and we played with a lot more fire."
The Pacers, who needed a big performance from Smits to compensate for the absence of Reggie Miller because of an eye injury, couldn't help but notice Laettner's play. Smits finished 5-of-14 from the field and had only five rebounds.
"Laettner was great," Indiana coach Larry Brown said. "He fought Rik on the post. He made pressure plays. And he kept rebounds alive."
Cardinals wait for Gant's slump to end
$25 million contract hasn't produced much in batting statistics
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — The St. Louis Cardinals' $25 million man isn't giving much of a return on the investment right now.
Cleanup hitter Ron Gant, who signed a five-year free-agent deal last December, is in a 5-for-43 tailspin that has his batting average down to .214. Everybody is waiting for the explosion.
Manager Tony La Russa, at least outwardly, has a patient attitude.
tion will be there."
"This is April," La Russa said. "If he was a rookie struggling, maybe it'd be different.
"This guy has an established track record. So you just make sure he's healthy and getting the work he needs, and the produc-
Braves manager Bobby Cox, who managed Gant for four seasons, also said it was just a matter of time.
"If you're going to give anybody a contract like that, Ronnie Gant is the perfect guy to give it to," Cox said. "He gives you everything he's got."
"He's the type of guy who's going to carry you, but he's like anybody else. There are going to be periods where he's not going to get any hits."
The just-completed series against Atlanta was one such example. Gant was 1-for-10 with four strikeouts. He fanned looking against Mark Wohlers with runners on second and third, ending the eighth inning in a 4-1 loss to Atlanta Monday night. The Cardinals got swept in three games.
Gant, who had 29 home runs and 88 RBI last year for Cincinnati, said he typically was a slow
starter. At least this year he's got a little cushion after a nice start, with the slump taking 103 points off his average.
"It usually comes around, and I know it will," said Gant, a .197 career hitter in April. "The hardest thing is to stay positive, but I've been around long enough that I'm not going to get my head down.
"I'm going to keep batting. Even Tony Gwynn goes 0-for-4."
Gant said perhaps he had been trying too hard to produce for the Cardinals, who are expected to contend for a postseason spot but were two games under .500 entering last night's game at Chicago.
"I was real aggressive at the start of the year, but I think I got to the point where I was trying to do too much, and it started taking its toll," Gant said. "Now I'm trying to just relax and let my natural talent flow."
practice, although that has nothing to do with the slump.
"Oh yeah, I do that all the time," Gant said. "If I'm hitting well, I still come in and get extra hacks just to keep it going. You shouldn't change anything if you're going good or bad."
He's also taking extra batting
One thing that is not a factor, Gant said, is his contract.
"The money I'm getting now is for stuff I did in the past," he said. "I was rewarded well for the career I've had, and I'm not going to think about it."
Actually, Gant's numbers are pretty good for a guy who's slumping. He leads the Cardinals in home runs with four, RBI with 19 and walks with 18.
"Ronnie is one of the better players in this league, and has been for a number of years," Cox said. "He is a guy who's going to be there at the end.
"His numbers will be there, believe me."
Brewers seek cash in players' salaries
Deferment request not that unusual executives claim
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — The Milwaukee Brewers insist there's nothing unusual about asking their highest-paid players to defer part of their salaries until after the season.
The Brewers sought assistance from six of their eight players who are earning more than $1 million this year because the team won't be getting money into its coffers as quickly as it thought.
Laurel Prieb, team vice president of corporate affairs, termed the deferment requests "a common business sports practice," but declined to cite examples of other teams he said had made similar appeals.
Salary deferments are common in professional sports. But usually it's the player and his agent who seek the deferment, not the team.
"I've never heard of it happening before," said one player who was courted. "Some guys ask for their payments to be deferred. Some guys ask for an advance. But I've never heard of a club actually asking players to defer because they're having problems."
Manager Phil Garner, who requested that part of his salary be deferred when he played for Houston in the early 1980s, said he was told the Brewers had "a cash-flow misunderstanding."
The Brewers get money from major league baseball's central fund, which includes revenue from television, licensing, postseason income and other sources.
"From a player's standpoint, I guess you're letting the ballclub be a bank for you, and if you don't have a problem with that, it's not like you're going to lose," Garner said.
"The other thing about it is when you're in that stratosphere, you probably don't need to have all of your money immediately anyway."
Ben McDonald, who will earn $2.5 million this season, said he had no problem helping the team.
"If I can help them out in any way that I can, I'll be glad to do it," said
B
McDonald, who referred club vice president Tom Gausden, who negotiates player contracts, to his agent, Scott Boras, to work something out.
"I was told at the time it was hushhush," McDonald said as the team prepared to fly to Toronto following a rainout at County Stadium.
"The revision cannot represent a reduction in the level of benefits the old contracts had," said Gene Orza, the No. 2 official of the players association. "What the team proposed is to defer with interest. On that basis, we'll approve all the renegotiations, I'm sure."
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported Monday the team was seeking $1.5 million in deferments and found three players who agreed to the request, which includes payment of interest.
The team said the appeals made earlier this month were unrelated to the Brewers' efforts to obtain their $90 million share of the $250 million stadium project.
Robert Trunzo, chairman of the board that will oversee the stadium project, didn't return calls from The Associated Press seeking comment.
The team asked the players to keep the requests quiet, and several members of the front office were angered the story was leaked.
Team president Bud Selig insisted the Brewers weren't having trouble meeting their $21 million payroll and declined further comment.
Several players asked about the deferment requests Monday agreed to talk only on the condition they not be identified.
"I told them I couldn't do it right now," one player said. "It didn't make me uncomfortable, no. It was not that big a deal, really."
Recycle your Daily Kansan
"I think they miscalculated their budget and they miscalculated the time they were going to have their monies coming in," another player said. "They're going to have their money. It's just that they're not going to have their money when they thought they'd have it."
"This money will get paid." Garner said. "So, I don't see any risk."
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6B
Wednesday, May 1, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Classified Directory
105 Personales
107 Business Personales
122 Announcements
128 Lost and Found
100s Announcements
男 女
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
300s
Merchandise
or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that in violation of University of Kansas regulation new federal law would prohibit its use in a courtroom.
400s Real Estate
Classified Policy
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
---
I
100s Announcements
105 Personals
LeBiCageOS-OK offers individual peer counseling to people who are biased, blackish, gay, or unsure. Please call KU info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for more information.
110 Business Personals
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120 Announcements
ATTENTION STUDENTS! GRANTS & SCHOLARIES AVAILABLE. YOU MAYQUALIFY BECAUSE LESS OF YOUR GRADES OR INCOME. 1-800-633-3834.
itation or discrimination. *
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing issued in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
WTC5 Support for battered women & their children
42/2:30 7:50-6:00 call for more info. 843-3333
Housing Act of 198B which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, gender, national origin or education.
Gay, lesbian, bisexual or muscular? *LeBlasRiS* OR- offers a confidential support group Wednesday at 7:00am. Call KIJ info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for location.
1:30 Entertainment
Free party room for 20-200 at Johnny's.842-0377
I found a black ladies shirt on Jayhawk Boulevard about a week ago. Ank for John II. 749.0871.
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140 Lost & Found
Found! Men's eye glasses in a black case. Found in record kit #60. Date found #42. Call 654-8136 and ask if you need them.
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Childcare for 5 yrs. old needed for June and July 10-20 hrs/week. Call 841-4778 after 6pm
Moving & Storage Company. TOP PAY. Packers and
Locksmith. Call Steve (913) - 818-8700.
Roofier will train Leucaena, starting pay to $8. Call (818) 888-6304
Sitters needed weekends and days in a rural setting. Call Maureen 749-1719.
Part time yard work. No moving for older state. State experience and pay per hour. 843-0850
Do you summer job ask? Work with 50 KU design team members for the summer, and get great feedback on your work.
Applications are being accepted for staff positions at Lawrence Center Club. Lunch and dinner shifts are offered.
Batteries, Watertresses and Doormats are needed for the Bottles and Grouted Mold. Please apply only between the hours of 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on weekdays.
Corporate Sponsor Child Care. Have part time and full time position open. Please send resume to 170 W. 120 S., Suite 500, New York, NY 10016.
Needed 2 people for light set up and not serving party at conferences. Afternoon RU Graduation, May 13. No reservations needed.
Emmanuel Lutheran Child Center is needing a lead teacher with early childhood experience.
Creative Baby班 for 2 country kids, age 7 and
8 afternoon summer $58. Referees require $84.
INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN NEWS AGENCIES NEWS
PART-TIME HIERARCHIES. 20HR per day. PAX
25HR per day. EACH WEEK.
Live-in building manager for First United Methodist Church. Housing in return for nighttime security and Sunday morning setup. Call 814-7500.
NEWS AGENCY SEEKS COMPUTER ASSISTANT
Must have experience of Macintosh programs. Send resume immediately to Video information 749-0080.
Retired Professor颈教授student (male) night attenuation 1 or 2 nights if a week includes summation sleep 3 days.
205 Help Wanted
Summer babysitter, professional couple with 4 and 14 year olds needs help. Good hours, must have own car.
The Learned Club has immediate opening for part-time霍 Some day time availability prefer. Apply in
Houston or Los Angeles.
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Sports Minded in M hiring 18-10 method index, PT, ideal job,
equipment & training reqs. Call pt. Gill Grant biomarkers (914) 567-
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Looking for motivated individuals interested in saxophoning, traveling possible, Environmental Travel possible, etc.
4:00 to 4:30 pm, Full-time babysitting position available for 3 kids. Infant experience required. $250 per week. Non-smoker. References required. Mon - Fri. Start May 22. 86-1861.
ADAMS ALUMI NINI CENTER. The Learned Club has immediate opening for part time dishwashers, flexible hours both am and pm shifts. Apply in person at the Adams Alumil Center 1206 Eread Ave.
CHILD CARE: Full time/hour teaching positions,
early childhood or elementary ed. backgrounds.
Send resume or call school. Sunshine Acres Pre-school 2141
Mage, phone 842-2239
Drivera, Packers, Helpers needed in the Kansas City Area. Will Train, no experience necessary. FYW.GRAVEN-BUNCTED VAN LINES. Call Darin Baldwin 1-800-3049-0075. exp55
Farm and ranch help wanted for the summer near Lake Perry. Must have experience with cattle and farm equipment. Write to Ranch Office, Route 1 Box 100, Perry, KS 60873
Hiring for summer. PT teaching assistance, need at Brooke Creek Learning Center starting May 20th. Valuable experience in an early innovation program. For more info call 805-1022. Ask at 300 Mount Hope Ct. EOGA/AN
Hing attractive dinners and waltzes 18. Apply
in person after 7:30. Sat. or Sat-481-1422, or 18-
6:30. Sun. or Sun-481-1422.
MOTHERS HELPER NEEDED IN EKCHANGE FOR A FREE ROOM. APPLICATIONS BEING TAKEN FOR SUMMER OR FALL. REFERENCES REQUIRED. CALL 842-3830
Panchero's Mexican Grill House of the Sliders
We are looking for a reliable assist. manager. Flexible
Work. Work late night. 20-35 hrs./week.
Child care and light housekeeping for suburban Chicago families. Responsible live non-smoker. Call Northwest Housing at (212) 647-3500.
Therapy needed for old boy with age applied. Applied to children aged 5-13 years, two hours. KCMO resident call collection (810) 361-291-470.
Two experienced child caregivers wanted fall 96 for part-time in home care for our one year old daughter. Parents K31 professors. Easy walking distance to campus. 852-8208.
Full time summer nanny. Must be experienced child care giver. Have own car and be available part time in Spring and next year. Send references, schedule and resume to: Daily Rangers, 1100 Flutter St., NSW, KS4059.
positionism. Start May 31. Excellent scheduler.
Competitive Fees, free meals. Apply at Humana Hall
(Hall of Science) D.D.O.C.
Help Wanted. Now hire line servers. Dining room attendants & dish washers. For summer employment positions. Start May 31. Flexible schedule. Competitive Wages. Free meals. Apply at Nannahall Hall.
BPI BUILDING SERVICES
Is accepting applications for Part-time evening & weekend custodial positions. No experience necessary. Possibility of Full-time summer employment Call Jeannie at 842-634 to apply.
Full 4 part telephone secretary wanted. Taking and relaying messages in your job. Second and third ward of the building, with holidays. Experience preferred, but will train. Apply at Renaissance House.com, 2441 W. dth St.
positive issues. Great jobs for students, Telephone fundraising for SADD (Students At Drivetime Drunk) and New Jersey Special Olympics. We work early evenings & midnights; morning calls. Contact 848-532-1060.
Summer jobs available for full and part time hourly delivery drivers. Must have valid driver license and clean driving record. Heavy lifting is required. Call Fox Bell Corp, at (013) 557-1000 or apply to an at 81 Lumley Avenue, Columbus, OH 43207.
Yogi Berta's Jellystone Camp-Resort, Divide, Colorado needs clutch, maintenance, camp cook, rest, cleaning, and high energy. and fun-loving people. Salary and room place Apply P 810289 San Antonio, TX
Camp Runow Annoa in St. Louis, MO is seeking mature, committed individuals for specialists and counselor positions in a creative Jishiva Day Camp setting for the summer of 1996. For more information, contact the camp office at Congregation B'Nai Annoa@ (314)576-9906. Ask for Marcia of Eliaa.
CAMP COUNSELOR Loved for private Michigan boys' girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, rifley, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, campers, crafts, dramas, or Riding Above kitchen, office, maintenance. $1250 81009-346-4444 JNC/WC/GV/176, Maged, MPhL, 010083-740-4444
Gouth Group Director, Fall 96: Lawrence Jewish Community center seeks enthusiastic, self-motivated, creative person to lead our senior youth group (grades 12) in the fall. Send resume and cover letter to: Youth Search Committee, Lawrence JCC, 917 Highland Drive, Lawrence, DC 48624. Deadline for application: may 3rd.
Summer Employment - Caterers, Kursae and Burgee Unions Catering Department, $4.50 per hour. Monday thursday 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. Requires valid driver's vious food service experience, waitressing experience preferred, but will train. Must follow drive code. Begin immediately. Will work through summer with possibility of continued employment in fall. Apply Kansas and Burgee Personnel Office Level 5. 13th & Greer AAZEO.
Nations leading stainless fabric and bridal gift outlet store is now taking applications for Aas. Manager. Management Position requires a high level of customer interaction, 30-40 hr. wk. some day shirts will be work around school schedule. Send resume or apply in person: Lawrence KI 60044 - 748-4012
Lawrence KI 60044 - 748-4012
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
managers positions. Wages range 6-10 an hour with
bonus opportunities. Positions are available all over
Kansas and Missouri. Call today for applications as
positions fill up. 1,800-255-1138
Summer Job Opportunities
ATTN: STUDENTS
**Summer Job Opportunities**
College Programs, North America's largest student painting company, accepting applications for summer painter, crew leader, and production manager positions.
Earn top pay with travel opportunities!
Full time summer employment, 40 to 50 hrs
per week. Must be 18 yrs. and have two
moving Services- 12905 W. 63rd St.
Shawnee, KS.
L. D. s (Drivers, S.S. or State LD.). Drivers, packers and helpers needed. Call for phone interview to resume.
205 Help Wanted
Graduating Seniors - John Hancock Financial Services is looking for professional individuals for their market research and consulting positions for recent college graduates. Pay or mail resume to 600 College Hlth #1, Overland Park, PA 47413. Attn: Paul M. Hancock, Sr., 500 North Riverside Drive, Suite 801, New York, NY 10024.
CUSTODIAL WORKER- Two (2) positions open for student hourly custodial workers at Walkins Health Center. The length of the appointment is starting now through the 1995-97 school year. A possible 40 hours per week during the summer and break periods and 15-20 hours per week during the school year. This includes occasional Saturday. Work schedules will vary according to the facility is open. Must be an enrolled KU student.
dust apply in person to Personnel Office, Watkins health center, Monday April 15 through Friday, April 19
Student Hourly Position. Clerk Typist; Hourly Rate $5.00, Hours Per Week: 15-20 Duties: Various typing duties, answering multi-line phone, running errands, copying of class materials, processing of graduation admissions and other duties. Qualifications Required: Typing speed of 35 words per minute. Work with various people on diverse projects, have a basic understanding of word processing, be detailed oriented and able to follow instruction. Preferred Qualifications: Preferred office experience, able to work some University holidays, prefer experience with WordPerfect. Req. Master's degree or 4 Monday through Friday at 6048 Maitland, Dept. of Pharmacology and Toxicology. Deadline: May 19, 2013
Lawrence manufacture seeks experienced draftsperson involved in Pro-E or degree mechanical engineer requirements. Requires excellent sketching ability a must. Excellent candidate will be able to generate multiple conceptual designs and develop the necessary technical experience in marketing a plan. This position fulfills five objectives offer a complete benefits package including health, life & dental insurance as well as 40 (1) & E.S.O. P.O. Packages. Req's Bach deg plus 5 years of work experience. Qualified applicants should submit resume along with salary application to: *Packerwave Lawrence Coordinator*, 2230 Packer Rd., Lawrence, KS 60040
PRODUCT DESIGNER
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
EOE/M/F/D/V
Return Donors - Extra Bucks
New Donors - Extra Bucks
**New Donors earn $20 Today**
Up to $40 this week
**New Donors earned since Nov. 4**
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Financial Director
Graduate and Professional Association
Financial Director and Professional A
Duties: financial management of budget for 35 grad student organs and GPAoffice
Qualifications: Knowledge of Lotus 123 and WordPerfect, Budging Experience, Flamantiny Interpretation, Interpersonal Skills Salary; Half Time (July) to June 30th Graduate Assistancehip
Application: Submit Resume; Application Letter
Names, Titles, & Phone Numbers of Current
Employee
GPA Search Chair 400 Kansas Union, KU
Summer Employment
Drivers + Helpers + Packers for local moving company.
Full summer
part-time employment between spring and summer sessions.
Women are encouraged to apply
Please apply at 721 E. 9th St.
SALES AND MANAGEMENT CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
operations in Oklahoma and Kansas.
We are seeking energetic, highly motivated individuals who aspire to work in Sales and Management.
northAmerican.
205 Help Wanted
Hughes LUMBER
Hughes Lumber is a growth oriented building material retailer with
WE are looking for friendly, outgoing and reliable people who can work any of the national race events at Heartland Park Tpeka on June 7, July 4 or Sept. 25, 1986. Carparks may be arranged. Many positions allow Sun/Sun hours only. Position includes: Ticket takers, Attendants, Hospitality, Parking Attendees and General Staff. Applications to participate by working outdoors and greeting racing fans at one of the Fastest Tracks in the World! Apply!!
- Very Competitive Wages.
* Life, Health, Dental Insurance.
* 401(k) w company contribution.
HR Code: Campus
Hughes Lumber PO Box 220
Tulsa, OK 74101-2200
Drug free workplace. EOE.
- 401(k) w/ company contribution.
TEACHERS / STUDENTS
Manpower 211 E.8th ST.,(913)749-2800
Racing Enthusiasts
Work in a professional business environment conducting market research and telemarketing.
Advanced Business Consultants in Mission, KS has fulltime positions available immediately. Part-time positions available during the traditional school year. $7.00/hr. to start. Benefits available to full-time employees. Contact Jim Schulz, 831-2121 x 3013 for an interview.
Internationa Graduate Students
May 1,1996
Earn $25
TECOM, an international marketing consulting firm
Anytime between 8:00 and 5:00
Summer Employment Opportunities Available in KC-Metro, Overland Park Area
international graduate student marketing study for national and multinational firms. Take 30 minutes and fill out our survey and earn $25.00 cash immediately.
Student ID required
Brazilian B Holiday Inn McDonald Drive
is engaged in an international graduate
$ Top Wages
$ Flexible Work Schedules
$ Long and Short Term Assignments in Clerical, Administrative, & Technical
205 Help Wanted
- CALL TODAY -
TRC STAFFING SERVICES
(913) 608-1212
205 Help Wanted
BASIC CLEANING SERVICE is expanding its staff of cleaning associates. We are located:
- 40hr startage wring
10:35 am
- 4.50 to $1 hr bonus after 60 days probation
- Flexible evening hours
You won't find a site where you offer more.
Limited openings - CALL TODAY 78-9022
225 Professional Services
Portfolio portfolio photography; will help you put together a good portfolio. Excellent rates. 90% of the time. 4.500 USD.
DUI/TRAFFIC/Criminal
OVERLAND PARK - KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R. GREEN
ATTorney - AT-1234
Call for a Fee 615-984-0664
For free consultation call
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
The law offices of
Rick Frydman, Attorney 701 Tennessee 843-4023
TRAFFIC-DOIS
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
Typing & Editing, Cheap, fast, accurate. Call 841-4097.
Call Jack at 865-2858 for application; term papers;
thesis, translations, transcripts, etc. Satisfaction
inquiries may be made to:
Professional Word Processing, Spreadsheets, Tape
Transcription, and Laser Printing, 8267-5705
Catalog Number: EA213900000010501
NESTED SOMETHING TYPE? Experienced typist can create high quality papers for you. Lateral printing, paper and inkjet printing.
*Professional Writing
*Cover Letters
*Consultation
RESUMES: consultation, cover letters & logos,
Graphic Ideas, Inc., 927 12/2 Mass. 841-1071
(800) 361-5411 or (800) 361-5400
TRANSCRIPTIONS
842-4619
1012 Mass, Suite 201
- Cover Letters
• Consultation
Linda Morton, Certified
Professional Resumé Writer
RESUMES
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
486252 40 Meg. 8 meg. 14 meg. SVC4. 1 meg SVG4 card
mouse. Windows and software warranty. 760-3897.
For sale 1890 Vega P20MR scooter. 2800 miles. Extra
condition. $1,000. C叫 749-1125.
FOR SALE: PITTON double with cover. $150 or best offer.
Call 865-368-3688
205 Help Wanted
Garth Browse tickets, cheekup for May 3.4, & 5th at Skipton.
Call Airbnb at (380) 875-9233
ROBERT HALF
accountemps
FREE JOB PLACEMENT!
FREE SOFTWARE TRAINING
Specializing in Accounting, Office Administration & IS since 1970! If you're looking for the perfect first job or flexible summer employment, give us a call to discuss your options!
*Staff Accountants *Accountants *Administrative Assistants
*Customer Service PCs *PC Experts *Sales *Bookkeepers
NATIONAL ALLIANCE W/MICROSOFT!
Now interviewing for:
Johnson County & KC Metro Area locations! (913)451-7600- Ask for Michelle
SUMMER WORK
- Excellent resume experience
$9.45 to start
- interview now, start after finals.
Finish the schedule.
- Internship/ scholarship opportunities
- Part/Full-time, entry level all areas
- No experience necessary - training provided.
- National company
Johnson County & South K.C.
K.C. North
St. Louis
Manhattan
Topeka
Wichita
(193) 811-9675
(816) 455-0117
(314) 953-5353
(816) 776-9800
(913) 273-9119
'97
305 For Sale
Beds, Desks, Bookcases, Lamps, Other Stuff
Layaway Now. $30 Mas
Everything Bait Ice.
1844 Ford Thunderbird, 1844 Pontiac Firebird, 7100 Mountain Bike, crochet and arm chair; and more
19,400 people
19,400 people
19,400 people
19,400 people
19,400 people
19,400 people
19,400 people
19,400 people
19,400 people
AVAILABLE NOW! 1 twin bed (Seatmair,床垫间
spring and frame). About 3岁 old, no奖金, $450 or
less.
INTERNET ADVERTISING
Classifieds 109 words 90 days 450
Homepages and Websites available
(013) 823-6862
(013) 823-6862
340 Auto Sales
2 doz, 1gcea, AMPM FCS for Sale
4,800 miles, $27.50/bus. Call 643-934-6616.
85 Waggeer Limited, With A/C,睫眉 interior, new
engine and transmission, 4-WD. Must Go
to www.waggeerlimited.com
370 Want to Buy
Your used computer (PC or Macintosh)
WANTED:
We are paying up to $ 1.000 Reward
for your used computer at UW1 Computers 2449 Iowa
841-4611
1-SB Hotels. Close to KU and Downtown. Available for Fall. Call 842-7544.
405ForRen
G get a group. Large homes for rent! Morning Star, 841-
STAR(7827).
1/2 blk. from campus. Studios & I bdmr, avail for summer & fall. Call 842-7644
Guzman BZR between downtown/vampus. Purch. WC,
waterpaid. Avail June 1, 2008 month. Cali-8174-7649
Studio available in old house. Very good condition. Close to campus. (C) 913(832) 1108
Chicago Close Hospice Call (918) 563-0000
Sublane 1B Studio 12th and Ohio
**8/20/10** All 13 validates. *S82-8878*
Submit validates. Available May 18, May is
validated. Call S82-8878.
Call S82-8878.
Sublet Studio. 4520 Wiacowsin, Bus route, No Pets. $300-
897-4820
Summer Sublease for studio apt. 1/2 Block from campus
Summer sublease. 1 bedroom, fully furnished. Call
jfsti 841-4814. Available from June
Summer Sublease. 1 bedroom apt. fully furnished.
Call: 811-4814-04. Available from June.
MORNING STAR. For rooms, apartments and well kept
electronics, phone calls. Cellphone (STAB1287)
MONKINSTAR F. For room, apartment and well kept older homes, some calls. House 81-STAR (7827).
Available June 1st - a space, spacious two bedroom apartment between Downtown and campus. Close to GSP.
1+2 bedroom apartments. Next to KU. All utilities paid:
341 W. 14th St. 1000-1001. Bedroom 2: 1000-2000.
Bedroom 3: 1000-2000.
2 to 3 person apartment avail. for summer or next fall
$1,000; for 2 people $850; for 3 people $1,450. Url included:
http://www.aerolink.com/availability
3 Bdm Duplex, new carpet, dishwasher, WD, centrally air, fenced bydge, pool, $600. Avail. May or June. Pek止 AP Call:823-854-6 or Corpy 843-8348.
3 bedroom house avail Jawel 1. Bedroom avail apJ. avail
1. Bedroom avail. avail Aug 1. Room avail Ago 1. Neptet
1. Room avail Ago 1. Neptet
3 of 4 person rooms. Close to campuses. $250 per person.
Or $800 per person for 3. W/Book up at A&T.
3 rooms avail. June & July in huge 6 bedroom house:
Wood floor, W/D, big closets, all new kitchen, front porch.
114 kitchens. Call 832-6708 for shannon.
3-4 Bedroom Townhouse.
Centralair, pool, spacious, summer lease, $600/month
821324.10748
1.8 BR 34mm on Eldridge or BDW, D/W, drawcase, cut.
Oi, garage. Aug 1st, 1 yr load. Bauer with BDW, 8000 w/ 5000
watts.
b. house no close to campus you can charge for park; b. $12 mile lease Avig. $1,835 per bedroom. Call: (704) 369-6400.
Aid for rent, Avail Aug. 1. E of campus in restored historic house, 3 blocks to campus, close to downtown, water, electricity.
Avail. Angl. - Unufur. 3BR Duplex. 1306-07 E. 25th Ter. A/D/Wookbound, all Apple. 150 No. Dnbs. 103. Dwnb. 1306-07 E.
Coming to KU Med?
Available Now or June 1 at Brady Apts $150 Teen. Completely remodeled studio apt, water / gas are paid, start up at $300/mo also | 1 BR apts for June or Aug #11-5192
4 BR house, good condition, one minute walk to class. $110/ month. (816) 832-5538
DRASTICALLY REDUCED! Must Sublet. Large 18cm,
big kitchen, 9th and Mississippi. $250/mo. Available May
1. Call Stavney B280 or Lois B411-1074.
Excellence locations 1348/1349/1104 Treasurer,
2 in Birmingham, CVA, DW, DW bookshop,
3 in London, CVA, DW, DW bookshop
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1.4
Wednesday, Mav 1.1996
7B
111
105 For Rent
BEAT HAEMSTONER 3.28 all utilities paid. Remodeled,
new carpet in Fallown, 09% Only $20 per bedroom. 1 yr lease
available Aug 6, Call 843-5217. Leave a message.
Great Summer Beach! Available May 12-31.
Great summer beach. 4000 spots. Utilities. Still a good deal. May paid.
LOCATION - 50ft. FROM UNION. Summer Sublease.
1 or 2 bedroom. HURRY Call 838-3734. No Pets. Rent is NEGOTIABLE.
Maintenance technician needed. Full time permanent and summer positions available. Apply in person at Colony Woods Apts, 1301 W. 24th N. Nazalm.
Nice 2 bedroom duplex in Eborora. Available June 1.
4855/month + utilities. Large yard, dishwasher, W/D
bookups, garage. Call 543-2849.
Cars, two & three bedrooms pre-leasing now for fall. Call 611-7728 for an appointment to see your new home at Shannon Plaza.
One Bedroom summer sublease, avail. 15 may,
14th and 14th, Comb. 200n., Monl. 841-7931 or 841-7947.
Male only.
Perfect Studio Avail. immed. Invited fireplace, GCA,
Bathroom, pet bed, petola kit 120 & Louniture $110
up to 749. Use code BATHROOM for full discount.
Quiet, comfortable, spacious, furnished rooms and apts.
2 bikes to KU, some utilities paid, off-street parking. No Pets. Call 841-500-6301.
Real nice 1 bedroom apartment close to KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, off-street parking. No pets.
Real nice 2 bedroom house. Quiet neighborhood. Close to street parking. Nopets. Available. June 1. Call 784-391-90
Roommate wanted for 3-story apartment.
Only $175/month!
9th & Emery location. Call 838-447
Singles 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, close to KU. W/D) hook-up, off-air parking, pet references, is available.
Sibune Jane 1, July 2 dbm. CA walks in close, off,
parking a bible from KU $800. BM $417/597 or
parking a bill for $400.
Summer Delight available June-Aug. Furnished home
"upper level," 3 or excellent neighborhood. References
rg, no pets. $600 per m., call 749-6489 by 5 p.m.
**SUMMER $8 LLELLAGE** 1 BR apt, w/room for two, pool
& basketball courts. Call 850-249-3600 to campaise.
Only 850% of租金. Call Ed at 850-249-3600.
Summer Sublease - 2 bdrm, W/D, 2 min. walk to campus,
$200/mo. Avail. May 18. May rent free! Please call
886-9442.
**summer sublease available June 1, 2018 apartments in**
**ACN, ace college, campus, hardwood floor, VENUE, NICE**
**NICE**
Summer Sublease House:$185/per (up to 5 people).
Washer/dishwasher, microwave, pool table, pet, etc to campus. Call 832-4956. Ask for Steve.
Summer Sublease wipper for fall 3, br. 2 foot,
bath/shower, AC $209/perperson. Available end of May.
May rent free. 8th & Missouri. Call 842-0733
Siblum submerse with options for fall. 212dmth Disc
submerged in a small pool, window/driver. Rent 1400 Mo-
dable for fall.
**Summer Sublease:** 4 person, 1 l/2 bath, May rent
$150/month = vatim, Poo, close to campus. WD,
SUV, Trucks allowed.
Sublimer Schalter. Available May 17, August 15. 2 HDRM. Furn. AUC. No Pets. Close to Campus and Mars.
https://www.hdrm.com/products/hdrm-schalter/
Signer Sublease. Furnished 1 bdrm. apt. 10 minute
walk to campus. $345/mo Contact Robert @841-8993 or
building manager @841-1212.
Splinter Sublease. Available June 1. Splacce 2
Splinter sublease, to close or rent. Reentrant. Call Enly
Splinter.
Summer Sublease. Large 1 bedroom apartment. Close to campus no hills. Willing to make deals. Available May 15 through June 30. Call (800) 279-8000.
Summer sublease, Spacious, furnished, one bedroom
apartment. 9th aid Illinois. Central air, dishwasher.
Available May20-Aug. 10 $350/month Call 838-845-6
Summer Subset, one bedroom, one bath, Close to campus. W12 in building. Clean cat allowed. $3500. Call Me
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Pete Welcome! Spacious 2 bdml/r1 bath, unfinished, AC; dishwasher, swimming pool, sand volleyball court, $475/month. Call 748-329-309
SUMMER SIBIRA BANK, Fri. 2月11日, 1/22庙. CLOSE TO KAU
BALANCE TRAIN, FRI. 2月18日, 1/22庙. CLOSE TO KAU
BALANCE TRAIN, FRI. 2月18日, 1/22庙. CLOSE TO KAU
Townhome 2 blocks from campus and close to downtown, furnished, offstreet parking, dishwasher, for JuneJule, $180.00, Call 843-6258.
Available August, 2Bpt. in, renovated older house,
10th and New York Wood. floor, claw foot cup, ceiling
fitting. Finished with carpet.
4 Bedroom available @/8/16. 1725 Gibbon, Bath, Fridge, stove, W/O, Garage and offstream parking. Pet negative. 8060 + Deposit + references. Call (913) 643-8105 or 8635-847 by apts.
Sapacious one bedroom apartment in older house, one half block from campus. For summer studies 200/month.
Avail June 1, Great 1 Br Apra near campus at 1000 Energy Rd. Energy efficient D/W, microwave, ceiling fan, W/D hookup, Balcony/Patio, 425/month. Cable TV paid. No Pets. 841-3800.
2 bedroom bathroom available 10th & New York, Window
AC ceiling, fans W/D book up, windows floor, wood小房,
large bedrooms. $400. No pets. 841-1074, phone
usually answered 5P-11PM.
Avail. Aug. smallest 2 bdm apt. in renovated older houses
Old West Lawrence. Wood floor, claw foot tub, window
A/C. No pets. $ 460. Call 841-1074, phone usually
awarded 8PM -11PM, or leave message.
Available 9th on 10 month lease, 1 bedroom apartment, 8th and Mississippi. Wood floor, ceiling fan, no pets, off-street parking. $359, 841-1074, phone usually answered 8 PM-11 PM.
Great downtown location. 100 yds from South Park
Gazebo, 2 bdr wduer AC. All city utilities paid $21/hr.
12 mo lease available Aug. 1. Call #843-5217. Leave a message.
GREAT DEAL
2 Bedroom. Burner submile avail. May 15. Close to
Washington Avenue. Included: interior facilities,
AC, off-street parking. $800/month.
1 brombam 1 brombam in 3 brombam needed for May 28 to July 5. Wairatua, acetting faces in gas area off the water.
股价 slashed. For June & July, & Walk to 12B spots in updated older houses. Walk to KU & downtown. Lots of features, off-street parking, no pets. Starting at $250. Cali 811-7407. Phone usually answered 8pm to 11pm.
Rooms available. Great 4 bedroom, 2 bath house with patio and large yard, W/D, W/D/C, A on bus route or close to downtown. A must see! Available mid May $230/month Call 838-9843
Summer Sublease for 2 rooms of apartment.
Furnished, 2 full bath, 2 floor, just down the hill from campus. $495 per month. Dishwasher, AC.
Call Carrie or Karin 843-9806.
LEASE NOW FOR FAIL. Available Aug 1, possible room. SONNY LUXURY 3+ BR duplex/townhouse on bus line. Basement, garage, PF, DW hookup. No phone calls. 480-7436 after a leave message. Must see to appreciate.
Small 28bm apt. to be renovated this summer available August, 1300 bickerm Vermont. Large bedrooms, large kitchen, deck, no living room, window AC, ceiling fan, bathroom, kitchenette, bathroom, 1047, phone usually answered 8 PM-11PM, or leave a message.
Small 2 bedroom apt. in renovated older house. Available August. 14th and Con連. Walk to KU, downtown, or Dillon. Ceiling fans, window AC, off-street parking, or Bathroom. 841-104-8174, phone usually 8PM on 11AM.
Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom apts available starting Summer and Pall. Several locations including next to campus. All on bus route. Good quality. Well maintained. Quiet with affordable rates. Bail 841-1156 for more information
405 For Rent
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. June 1- July 31.
Colony Words. $435/month. Call 839-9241.
AVAIL JUNE 18F. Note: Since Ninth, I bath unit in tilt-in
at 10ft/3m from floor. I cared detaily garage. No pail.
No ladder.
AVAIL. AUG. 18T. Fully furnished condo at 9th/Emerny will accommodate four people. Dishwasher, microwave, full size W/O size. No pets. $800/mo/dep.
Call Mary @M43-101 (days) or 843-2323 (even).
22ND AND HARPER
LUXURY LIVING
Easy Access to K-10
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
**Keep your adult Apt available**
Full size water closet, fully monitored fireplace,
Walk in closets, fully monitored system, and much,
no NOES, Harper Square Apartments, Call Today!
918-841-8408. Ask about our move in special.
PRE-LEASING FOR AUGUST 1,1996
New 1 & 2 BEDROOM
APTS. Laundry facilities
841-4935
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT 92
COLLEGE HILL. CONDOMINIUMS
3 BR/2 BATH, fully equipped kitchen,
full size W/D, separate dining room,
private patio or balcony
801-465-7929
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
AVAILABLE FOR AUGUST 1,1996
Duplexes, Condos,
Townhouses, Apartments.
3 BEDROOM units
with full kitchen,
1 & 2 bathrooms
without garage/carpets.
Some have free cable TV
Over 400 Rentals Available
841-4935
BERKELEY FLATS APARTMENTS
Now leasing for Summer & Fall
11th & Mississippi
Lorimar Townhomes
2 Bedroom Available
June 15, July 1, Aug 5
4580
Washer/Dryer Fireplace
Dishwasher Cable Paid
Microwave Back Patio
HOME
For Appointment: 841-7849
Sundance Apartments 7th & Florida
- Now also leasing for Fall
- Ask about our 3 person special $690 and up
105 For Rent
- Furnished Apartments 4BP/2BA
Pool and Clubhouse
On KU Bus Route
841-5255
1&2Bedrooms
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W.24th & Naismith
842-5111
PALM TREE
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
Leasing for Summer & Fall
*2 Bedroom $420-$435
*3 Bedroom $610-$630
*4 Bedroom $735-$745
3 Hot Tubs
M-F10-6 SAT10-4 SUN12-4
Summer Sublease Location
1 Bkk, from Stadium. $205/person
May rent negotiable. 838-8760
- On bus route
211 Mount Hope Court # 3
For more Info, or Appt.
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Pets Welcome*
- Nice quiet setting
- Energy efficient
South Points
AUTO SPAREHOUSE
2166 W. 26th
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- Laundry facility
- Nice quiet setting
- Sand volleyball court
- 1,2,3 & 4 bedroom
- apts. available
- Now leasing for Spring and Fall
*Restrictions Apply
apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE
SQUARE
- Spacious2bedroom
- Close to campus
105 For Rent
9th & Avalon 842-3040
- Laundrylacinity
• Swimmingpool
• OnBusRoute
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Spring Special
2 BR $ 399
3 BR $ 499
( on select apartments )
Short time Only !
- On the bus route
- Quiet Location
- 2 bedroom (1&1/2baths)
- 24 hr. Emergency maintenance
- 3 Bedroom (2 baths)
- Lounge of facility
843-4754
(call for appt.)
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400 Tenn. a student housing alternative. Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation, democratic control. Rms 8-12. Travel allowance. Close to campanile & Maus. Call or stop by 814-484-3950.
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts
Great Location - Near Campus
Chamberlin Court 1 & 2 BR's, microwave, DW, on-site laundry facilities 17th and Ohio
No appointment needed
Mon-Thurs
12:30-4:30
OPEN HOUSE
CAMPUS LOCATIONS
STILL AVAILABLE
FOR AUGUST!
Abbottts Corner
2 BR's, Newly remodeled, full-size washer/dryer, all new carpet, viny & paint
18th & Ohio
Bradford Square
2 & 3 BRs, microwave, DW, formal
dining area, on-site laundry facilities,
private patio/sundeck, on KU bus route,
accepted
601 Colorado
S
Management
2512 West 6th St, 749-1288
LRP 8344
OPEN HOUSE
1 - 4:30 Mon - Fri 10 - 3 Sat
EDDINGHAM PLACE
CALL TODAY 841-8468
M-F9a.m.-5p.m., 1820 W.6th
SAT11a.m-3p.m, 1740 Ohio
Swan
24-hour Emergency Maintenance On-site Management
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
EAGLE & GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS
OVERLAND & SUMMER TREE WEST
TOWNHOMES
New 2 & 3 Brs
OPEN HOUSE
1.4:40 Mm, Friday 12:40
Kansan Ads Pay Big Dividends
- Exercise weight room
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
- Fireplace
- Swimming pool
- Laundry room
- Energy Efficient
- On site management
For Rent Now
Professionally managed by
June 1 or July 31
1 & 2 BDRMS at
SOUTHRIDGE APTS
1722 W. 24th
* 1 Bdram $265 and $275
* 2 Bdram $385 and $375
Lease through July or for one year plus. Water, Trash, and Basic Cable Paid.
Rent before July 1 to take advantage of these economical rates
843-6177
OR
843-1433
105 For Rent
Aspen West
Summer sublease. Female non-amoler to share 2 bdm.
apk, 7th & 8th, Mid May - July 31st, #215/rm0: oob + 1/2
uail. Wood fire, ceiling fans. Call 749-4481 or 841-1074.
Now Leasing for Fall!
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
Why stay on Baltic Avenue When you can ADVANCE TO:
- Water Paid
- No Pets
Boardwalk
- Water & Trash Pd.
- K.U. Bus Route
- K.U. Bus Route
- Heated Spa & Pool
- Laundry on Site
- Spacious 1 & 2 BRs
* Water 8 Tank Rd
- Reasonable Rates
o. 8 Radiation
NOW LEASING FOR FALL 1996
524 Frontier
8424444
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
- Basketball Court
2900 West 15th Lawrence,KS66049 865-2500
- Heated Spa & Pool
- On Site Management
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
- On KU Bus Route with
- Basketball Court
- Sand Volleyball
4 stops on Property
- Volleyball Court
- Sand Volleyball
- Laundry Facilities
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer
Hookups
(sorry no pets)
We are now accepting deposits
meadowbrook
On apartments for the fall term.
We offer 10 month leases. We
that are some of the largest in Lawrence
We offer 10 month leases. We
feature 1 & 2 bedroom apartments
Park25
Office open Monday - Saturday
Call or stop by today 2401 W.25th,9A3 842-1455
- Laundry Facilities
- Much More
2 pools, 3 tennis courts.
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
- Need Furn. call TC Rental 841-7111
Large apartments with big closets in a friendly service oriented community surrounded by nature.
2 volleyball areas,
playgrounds,KU bus stops
basketball court.
Lots of room to
walk or jog.
Walking distance to campus
Most of all we have a home just for you!
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon - Fri
10-4 Sat 1-4 Sun
405 For Rent
105 For Rent
LCV
Studios, 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedrooms Available
Waderer Drye Dialkawae, CA
Waderer Drye Dialkawae, CA
34 HR Maintenance Service
Civil 1920 YEAR
"Convient and Affordable"
Studios, 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedrooms Available
130 Roommate Wanted
2 roommates for the summer. May pay is for $175/mo. plus utilities. W/ 70% full furn. Call 841-1389.
Need 1 or 2 non-smoking females to get together and find an apartment for fall 1999. Call 861-414-699.
Summer or Fall, 2 bldm, one bath, garage, fireplace,
wheelchair; $256/mo. Call 832-253-683
Preneed needed for summer sublease. $195/mo. May rent.
Call 842-9083
air conditioner, air purifier, air dryer 949.5e-13.
Summer or Pall, 2 broms, core bath, fireplace, fireplace,
8225mm, Call 82250, Call 82250
2 Male Recommends to share 3BDE dorm house start:
85% male, 175% male, < 155% male.
Call Tom 82-2985 - 1011 line.
Need Roommate to share 3 bedroom apartment at Need Roommate Hill Colorado. On bus route, washers-dryer. No parking. Free Wi-Fi.
Non smoking female to share 2 BR 1 bath, 30 min from campus. Must love dogs but not own any pets. 842-711-8.
Summer or Fall, 2 bdm, one bath, garage, fireplace,
**Female non-smoking room needed for summer.**
Clone to college. Separate bathroom. $200/month plus
furniture. $150/month.
2 Roommates needed to share 3 bedroom at Regents
Court, W/D, AC, DW, dw furnished. Available May 1.
$420/mo per person. Call Jonathan or马尔 B14:872-618
Avail, now 1 bdm in 3 bdm house at 12th & Ohio. PETS,
SMOKERS OKAY. $250/mo includes utilities. Huge
bdm. Porch. Call 842-4679
Ober beim avail. in bdshome for sublease. June-July.
Close to campus and downtown. Call Erica
800-734-1200.
Fall or summer: 1 or 2 female n-men. Wanted to share
room in a downtown, wired house. WD, DW, & on bus
route $850.
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR THE SUMMER! NICE Apt.
at 12th and Louisiana 5 min to campus or downtown.
Only $200 (negotiable) Call 832-1866 Caron or Andrew
Roommate wanted to share 4 BR townhouse with
males, May 1, Aug 1, Wig 1, free cable, $242, *1U Call*
Cust.
- Professionally designed interiors
* Three bedrooms, twin full hatha
**Summer Subway:** 1 person for a 3d床, apt.W,
central air, close to campus. $12/month.
Sleep away from noise.
Male Roomeater bath. Suitlet summer or Fair rental.
3 Bdm 2 Bath (New Tile and Carpeting) W/D and Dish.
Close to campus. $250/month including water. Call Nick at
843-4087.
Now Leasing for Spring and Fall 1996
2166 W. 26th St.
Female roommate needed. Almost new home west at campus, Roomy, WD, AC, DW, Garage, Dear. New bus route. Short or long term lease available. $ 275.00 /mo.
Call 838-4546.
Summer sublease. Female non-smoker to share 2 bdm. ap. 27th. Ohio. Mid May - July 31st. 421$/mo. obl + 12 util. Wood firs. ceiling fans. Call 749-841 or 841-1074.
ROOMMATE NEEDED! Large, spacious 2 bedroom.
Large living rm, dining rm, kitchen, big balcony, on KU bus route. $230 + 1/2 utilities. Looking for both/either Summer and Fall. Call Amber at 838-3846
THE HOUSES
- Three bedrooms, two full baths
* On KU bus route Great Location!
Next to
northside
Call for details
405 For Rent
Call For Appt. 843-6446
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAIRY KANSAN
Ads chosen in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
**Enrage:** 119 Stuffie Elf
- By Mail: 119 Stuart Flint, Lawrence, KS. 60645
Stop by the Kanan offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or VISA.
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.
Calculation Rates:
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gage lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for missed days. Fees on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Dadliness
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.
Chest per unit price per easy
2.4X 1-2X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.26 1.70 1.15 0.95 0.80 0.85
2.05 1.30 0.85 0.75 0.70 0.80
2.00 1.15 0.80 0.75 0.65 0.45
1.90 1.00 0.70 0.65 0.60 0.40
Example: a 4 line ad, running 5 days=$17.00 (4 times X 85¢ per line X 5 days).
Classifications
168 personal
119 business persons
120 announcements
129 entertainment
141 land & foot care
128 help wanted
123 professional services
125 training services
360 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
438 restrooms 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 ___
Total ad cost:___ Classification:___
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Account number:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
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The University Dalry Kensae, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68045
8B
Wednesday, May 1, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass.
832-8228
FEATURE FEATURE
TERRAPLANE
BICYCLES & GOODS
EST. 1995
CANNONDALE BICYCLES
HANDMADE IN THE U.S.A.
VERY LIGHT! VERY SMOOTH!
M-300'S $487.95 OR M-400'S $884.95
(POR A LIMITED TIME ONLY!)
(BO HURRY!!!)
ALL BIKES COME WITH FREE TUNE-UPS FOR LIFE!
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT JOHNSON COUNTY
Clerical Position
File Clerks
Typists
Word Processors
Data Entry
Receptionists
Bank Tellers (exp.)
Light Industrial
Packers
Assembly
Warehouse
General Labor
Lawn Maintenance
Production
Call Kris (913)768-1331 Olathe
Applications accepted Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
Call Joanne
(913) 384-6161
6405 Metcalf
Call Ann
(913) 491-0944
11015 Mcalf
Bossler TEMPORARY SERVICE Hix 11015 Metcalf, Overland Park, KS
ABT®
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Learning how to stop doesn't have to be a crash course.
Get the revolutionary Active Brake Technology" (ABT") from Rollerblade. Easy-to-use and incredibly stable, the ABT brake makes getting stopped as easy as getting started.
ROLLERBLADE
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Save time and money! PRE-ORDER your Fall '96 textbooks
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
22
24
26
28
30
Pre-ordering your textbooks means they are packaged and waiting for you before classes start. That will save you
time hunting for books. Pre-order customers also get first 'shot' at used books in stock, which saves you money, up to 50% off new prices. Plus you'll save an additional 5% on your entire purchase if you pick up your pre-order before the first day of classes. Also receive a FREE JBS multi-card good for discounts, easy check writing and low long distance phone rates.
Your Pre-order must be received by August 5, 2008.
Your Pre-Order must be received by August 5, 1996
Please indicate comment this order is for: Fall___ Spring___ Summer___
Date/Care Number Instructor or Staff (Please note full or Donation Group) LINE NUMBER (APPROVED) TIME/DAYS PREFERENCE New Used
ENG 203 Schmidl 82345 8:30 MWF
| | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
Your Books Will Be Ready 3 Days Before Classes Begin
Name:___
KU Address:___
City:___ State:___ Zip:___
KU Phone:___
Home Phone:___
Fresh _Soph_ Jr_ Str_ Grad_
"The Fine Print"
*Books not picked up before the 2nd day of classes are returned to book*
*Prior Order must be eligible for 5% discount*
*Classes to be eligible for 5% discount*
*Some books may not be available prior to start of classes*
*All books are returnable, with receipt, through 2nd week of classes*
*Classes must be suitable as new to qualify for full refund*
*Prior Order must be received by August 9, 1996*
ayhawk Bookstore
your Book Professionals at the top of Palsmith Hill
1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044
843-3826 FAX:(913)843-9578
BABY
Airplane dispute remains unresolved for Carew
Conflict with attendant occurred after funeral of slugger's daughter
The Associated Press
EAGAN, Minn. — A dispute between Rod Carew and a flight attendant on a Northwest Airlines flight was the result of "poor communication," and the attendant will not be reprimanded, an airline spokesman said yesterday.
The baseball Hall of Famer told a California newspaper last week that he and his wife were nearly kicked off the plane on their way back from their daughter's funeral on April 21 in St. Louis Park. Minn.
Carew told the Orange County Register that the flight attendant roughly handled a portrait of his 18-year-old daughter, Michelle Carew, who died April 17 after a seven-month battle with leukemia. He also said the attendant was rude to him.
"We don't believe the flight attendant did anything wrong or that he deserved a reprimand," Austin said. "He has been an employee for 17 years and has received four customer commendations for service. I think he feels as badly as anyone."
Airline spokesman Jon Austin said yesterday that airline officials talked with the flight attendant and crew and decided no punishment or reprimand would result.
A written synopsis of the dispute was sent out yesterday on the airline's internal news service. Austin also said the airline might include the situation in the airline's biweekly newsletter, giving some advice on how it might be handled better in the future.
Austin said the crew was unaware that the Carews had just come from a funeral.
"We regret that this happened, and we hope we can all put it behind us," he said. The Carews said they had no comment on the airline's decision yesterday.
The Carews had boarded the California-bound Northwest Airlines flight April 22 with their two adult daughters. Carew's wife, Marilyn, asked the attendant to put the wrapped photograph in the plane's front storage area. Carew said.
Carew said he confronted the flight attendant after the man snatched the picture out of his wife's hand and said, "don't tell me how to do my job."
Moments later, the jetliner's captain told the Carews to step off the plane. He then gave them the choice of apologizing to the attendant or taking another flight.
When they arrived at John Wayne Airport in Orange County, Carew refused to leave the plane until a Northwest Airlines supervisor and officials from the county Sheriff's Department met them.
He said he wanted to charge the flight attendant with harassment. Two deputies responded but declined to intervene and did not take a report, sheriff's Lt. Ron Wilkerson said.
Former Villanova coach to take job
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — Cleveland State University is expected to appoint Rollie Massimino its head basketball coach today, The Plain Dealer reported.
The school called a news conference for 3:30 p.m. EDT to introduce the coach.
While the university would not confirm the appointment, the newspaper said, "It is obvious the former Villanova and Nevada-Las Vegas coach is the new man for the job."
Rick Love, assistant athletic director for communications and marketing, said yesterday morning that a news conference would not be scheduled until Claire Van Ummersen, university president, finalized a contract. Love said he could not confirm the newspaper report on Massimino's hiring.
Massimino, 61, won the NCAA championship in 1985 at Villanova University, where he had an 18-year record of 357-241.
He replaced Jerry Tarkanian at UNLV in 1992 but left in 1994 amid fan displeasure over his slower-paced basketball style and disclosure of a supplementary contract with the Nevada-Las Vegas athletic department. He was 36-21 in two seasons at UNLV.
John Konstantinos, UNLV athletic director, told the newspaper that he could not comment. "I'm aware of all the rumors," he said.
Massimino could not be reached for comment.
None of the three other finalists has been contacted by Cleveland State since initial interviews two weeks ago, the newspaper said. The other finalists were Bolt Weltich, former coach at Mississippi, Texas and Florida International, former Southern Cal coach Charlie Parker and former California coach Lou Campanelli.
HEADLESS SHELL-ON SHRIMP
FATFISH DOG CHOW
Friskies
FRISKIES
IQF 60-70 SIZE, 1LB. BAG
DOG FOOD 18 LB & LARGER
1
1¢ PER POUND
Over Invoice Cost
ALL 12QT. TUB ICE CREAM
Over Invoice
1€ PER QT
DAILY SPECIAL
Begin Tour, May 2 and EBNs Fit, May 2. 7am
BANANAS 19¢
18
HUGGES
JUNS
JUNIS
JUMPS
No. 102
Date
CITY, STATE
Phone No.
BY JIMMY
NABISCO
GRAHAMS
1 LB. BOX
218
EA.
PRICES
NABISCO
AIR CRISPS 170
8.5 OZ 1
C
TASTEY REC. OR LIGHT
D'ITALIANO
BREAD
I LB. LOAF
99¢
EA.
ALL GRADE
"AA" EGGS
DOZEN PACK
MICKEY JUMBO
DONUTS BOX 179
GUYS
100%
1/2$ PER EGG
NATIONAL BRAND BEER
24 PACK 12 OZ CANS
50c
6 OZ. BAG
98¢
EA
EA.
MICKEY JUMBO
DONUTS BOTTOM 1 79
GUYS
POTATO CHIPS
6 OZ. BAG
98¢ EA.
MT. DEW, DR. PEPPER
DIET PEPSI OR
PEPSI
2 LITER BTL.
89¢ EA.
FAIRMONT-ZARDA
FRUIT DRINK
1 GAL. JUG
88¢ EA.
BLUE BELL
MINI
RAINBOWS
24 PK.
1 99
MAINE, TAIL & BODY
SHAMPOO OR
CONDITIONER
Over Invoice Cost
POTATO CHIPS
6 OZ. BAG
98¢ EA
MT. DEW, DR. PEPPER
DIET PEPSI OR
PEPSI
2 LITER BTL.
89¢ EA.
Budweiser Budweiser
BUD LIGHT OR
BUDWEISER
BEER
12
45
24 PACK
120Z CANS
LIMIT 1
FAIRMONT-ZARDA
FRUIT DRINK
1 GAL. JUG
88¢
EA.
BLUE BELL
MINI
RAINBOWS
24 PK.
1'99
MAINE, TAIL & BODY
SHAMPOO
OR
CONDITIOR
---
88¢
ADDITIONAL Purchases $12.95
BUDWEISER BEER
24 IN 120 CANS
1245
24 PACK
120Z CANA
LIMIT 1
16 OZ EI 2$^{69}$ Ei
THE MEN OF AMERICA
A Biography
STEPHEN R. SMITH
THE MEN OF AMERICA
A Biography
STEPHEN R. SMITH
W A C C E T G E R
W W C O P U L S
W I C O P U LERS &
MANUFACTURERS
COUPONS
DOLE COLE SLAW OR SALAD MIX
DOLE COLE
SLAW OR
SALAD
MIX
1 LB. BAG
78¢
EA.
ECONOMY PAK
BONELESS BEEF TOP SIRLOIN STEAK OR ROAST
HOMELESS
OPEN
24
HOURS
EVERY DAY
168
68
U.S. NO. 1
RUSSET
POTATOES
10 LB. BAG
128
BONE-IN BEEF
RIB
STEAK
ECONOMY PAK
258
LB.
48 CT. SIZE
RED RIPE
STRAWBERRIES
1/2 FLAT, APPROX. 5 LBS.
349
RIO-STAR GRAPEFRUIT
BELFONTE ICE CREAM 1/2 GAL ALL FLAVORS 328 FA
THE DIFFERENCE
BETWEEN
TREATMENTS FOR
CHILDREN
VINEGAR
88¢
FARMLAND
BACON
188
FARMLAND
SAUSAGE
1 LB. ROLL
88¢
FARMLAND
RACON
1 LB.
188
5
348
LIFETIME
Ice Cream
HAAS
AVOCADOS
70 CT. SIZE
38¢
EA.
ELEFONSA
Ice Cream
CO
BONELESS BEEF
SIRLOIN TIP
STEAK OR
ROAST
ECONOMY PAK
128
LB.
100
---
FROM THE BAKERY
PICK UP DATED
CHERRY PIE
8 26 OZ.
2 FOR $4
T-BONE
STEAK
ECONOMY PAK
388
LB.
MILD MEDIUM
YELLOW
ONIONS
16¢
LB.
FRESH LEAN
PORK
STEAK
ECONOMY PAK
118
LB.
MOTOR COMPANY
FROM THE DELI Sliced OR SHARED
HONEY
CURED HAM
298 LB.
ECONOMY BACK
IMPORTED FROM HOLLAND
SMOKED GHEESE $ 3'98
LB.
FRYER BREASTS WITH RIB BONE 96¢ LB
FROM THE DELI SUCED OR SHAVED
HONEY
CURED HAM
298 LB.
ECONOMY
MIX
IMPORTED FROM HOLLAND $398 LB.
SMOKED GOUDA CHEESE
PATIO
PATIO
DINNERS
FROZEN 12 OZ. ASST. VARIETIES
98¢
EA.
PATIO
PATIO
DINNERS
FROZEN 12 OZ. ASST. VARIETIES
MOOSE BROTHERS
SUPREME PIZZA
LARGE 12" SIZE
498
EA.
MOOSE BROTHERS
SUPREME PIZZA
LARGE 12" SIZE
4 98
EA.
FROM THE BAKERY
FRESH BAKED
CROISSANTS
5 CT. BAG
98¢
FROM THE BAKERY
FRESH BAKED
CROISSANTS
5 CT. BAG
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
checkers LOW FOOD PRICES
SONY PLAYSTATION
2 EVENINGS FOR
$6.99
2 GAMES FOR
2 EVENINGS
$2.99
PRICES EFFECTIVE
MAY '98
SUN MON TWED FRI SAT SUN MON TWED FRI SAT
1 2 3 4
1 2 3 4
5 6 7
THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SECTION A VOL.102, NO.146
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
Losing streak ends
The Kansas baseball team snapped a five-game losing streak yesterday. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Finals and diet
Nutritionists say that proper rest and good nutrition are the first steps to success on exams. Page 6A
NATION
Ron Levin alive?
Leader of Billionaire Boys Club, convicted of Levin's murder, asks for a new trial. Page 7A
WORLD
Arafat lashes out
PLO leader condemns Israel for keeping borders closed. Page 8A
WEATHER
Morning Showers
High 77° Low 45°
TIGER
Weather: Page 2A
INDEX
Opinion . . . . . . . 4A
National News . . . . 7A
World News. . . . . 8A
Scoreboard. . . . . 2B
Horoscopes. . . . . 5B
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.
Native Americans voice concerns
By Susanna Löof
Kansan staff writer
Native-American remains ought to be given back to their tribes, The University Daily Kansan's opinion page staff ought to be more sensitive and Native-American clothing ought to be allowed as an alternative to caps and gowns at graduation.
Those were the main issues addressed by the Native-American Student Association during a panel discussion on the lawn in front of Fraser Hall yesterday afternoon.
Pemina Yellow Bird, Lawrence resident and representative of the North Dakota Intertribal Reinterment Committee, said to the audience of about
60 students that the remains of the 219 ancestors that are kept in boxes by the University of Kansas are not only languishing, but also suffering.
"They are wandering between that world and this world, crying and pitiful and lost." she said.
The association had invited representatives from the department of anthropology and the Museum of Anthropology to attend the discussion, but none did.
Alfred Johnson, director of the Museum of Anthropology and professor of anthropology, said he did not attend the discussion because he did not expect it to give fruitful results.
"I didn't see any need to go over
things that I've already gone over and hear things that have already been heard several times," he said.
The Native-American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, passed in 1990, required the University and all other institutions in possession of Native remains to make an inventory of all remains and submit the lists to tribes that are connected to the remains.
According to the law, this had to be done by Nov. 16, 1995, but the University's deadline was extended until yesterday. The inventories are now finished, and the remains will stay at the University until Native-American tribes claim them. Johnson said
Yellow Bird criticized the time it
"Why hasn't the very simple task of listing what they have in their possession been done until now?" she said.
has taken for the University to inventory the remains.
Johnson said that regulations surrounding the inventory process and limited staff and resources made it time consuming.
Paul Todd, editorial editor of the Kansan, participated in the panel discussion. The association invited him because an editorial written by a member of the newspaper's editorial board had upset the association's members.
Todd, Littleton, Colo., senior, apologized for the offensive content of the editorial.
"The editorial went through us, and we were blind to it, and that was wrong," he said.
Todd said that future opinion page staff members would receive sensitivity training.
The panel discussion also addressed the wish of a Native-American student to wear a Native American dress instead of a cap and gown at commencement.
Michael Haney, a participant in the discussion and executive director of the Glenpool, Okla., office of the American Indian Arbitration Institute, said he supported the student's wish and that he urged all students to do the same.
STOP
WILL THEBUSES STOP?
As KU on Wheels rolls deeper and deeper into debt, Student Senate,the administration and KU students are wondering if the buses will run as usual
Story by Nicole Kennedy
A
nne Michaels depends on KU on Wheels.
a KU bus route.
kU on Wheels. When she and her husband bought a home, they specifically looked for one on
"We looked at some homes in North Lawrence and that was kind of a big problem that there were no buses at all," said Michaels, Lawrence graduate student.
They settled on a home in East Lawrence, so she could ride a bus to campus.
When the weather is nice, she walks or rides her bike.
But in the dead of winter, she rides one of the 19 buses supported with $400,000 each year from KU's Student Senate.
Part of those predictions hinge on the outcome of competitive bidding for the contract to run KU's buses, which begins today.
Next year, however, Michaels may be left out in the cold.
Photos by Tyler Wirken
In fact, many students who live off campus could be without a ride if transportation board members' gloomy predictions come true.
No one seems to know exactly what's in store for KU on Wheels, but given its financial situation, without more money from the University or the city of Lawrence, students may be left stranded at the bus stop next Fall.
Leaving the buses in the hands of students has led to a series of disasters for KU on Wheels.
MISSING FUNDS
Students got into the bus business in 1971 to save the ailing Lawrence Bus Co. from financial ruin. Reports in 1971 that the bus company was sinking deep into debt, and that the bus service might end, brought
Student Senate to the rescue. Senate began a business relationship that year with the Lawrence Bus Company that continues today.
Past board decisions to expand routes and raise bus pass prices, an enrollment drop at the University and Senate decisions not to increase the bus subsidy have contributed to KU on Wheels' financial woes.
But the bus system continues to face a monetary meltdown.
Steve McMurray became the first student coordinator for the bus system in 1974. He embezzled $257,000 while serving as coordinator. He was arrested in September 1982 and served 17 months in a state prison. He was paroled in 1984, but KU on Wheels has never recovered the money.
KU on Wheels has been plagued by serious problems through the years.
David Hardy, former adviser to the transportation board, said new safeguards had been added since the embezzlement.
Today, the board's finances are examined through both internal and external auditing systems.
In theory, Hardy said, a student-run bus system was a good thing.
"The problem was that without some additional oversight or advice from the University, the system got into trouble," Hardy said.
But transportation board members admit that KU on Wheels never fully recovered from the embezzlement.
"There's probably overkill in checking," Hardy said. "We do that because we don't want that to happen again."
PROBLEMS CONTINUE
Students continue to run the bus system, and KU on Wheels is still plagued by serious problems:
Student Senate bailed out the bus system this semester with an emergency $140,000 loan. Student fees also were increased by $2 to finance the bus system. Before the recent fee increase, students paid a $12 transportation fee per semester. Next year the bus system will get $28 from every student, regardless of whether he or she rides the bus.
- The transportation board has raised bus pass prices by $47 during the past 20 years. Prices have increased by $20 since 1992 alone, and a bus pass now costs more than a student parking permit.
Through the years, KU on Wheels continued to expand routes, following students as they moved farther from campus. At the time, the board was able to pay for the new routes. But ridership dropped. Bus pass sales decreased and newly added routes such as West 6th became nearly impossible to operate efficiently.
Just how bad things are now is hard to determine. Chris Ogle, owner of the Lawrence Bus Co., has been the only vendor to hold the bus contract. Now board members fear he will raise, not lower, the bus contract price in the face of competition.
Although transportation board members receive free bus passes, they don't consistently ride the buses. Their decisions, therefore, are often based solely on ridership statistics provided by Ogle.
The figures Ogle provides only indicate the total number of riders on each bus on an average day, making it impossible for board members to determine where riders get on and off buses. Often, board members say, the ridership numbers misrepresent how many students are using buses to travel off campus and how many are using the buses just to ride on campus.
Since board members don't ride the buses
themselves, and can't afford to pay for a consulting firm to produce more detailed ridership figures, decisions made about changing or adding off-campus bus routes rely on the information provided by Ogle.
"We are aware of the problem that could potentially exist from using just those numbers," said Ken Martin, transportation board member.
In a 1992 letter to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, Hardy wrote that for a number of years the board had only one or two members who were regular users of the system. For several years, Hardy wrote, no member of the board had been a regular user of the system.
"While the manual requires members of the board to ride the buses periodically in order to receive a bus pass, this is not always done with dispatch, and there are months at a time when there are members of the board who have not been on a bus," Hardy wrote.
As a result of incomplete ridership statistics, routes like East Lawrence, which are often used by students riding from the Hill to Naismith and Oliver Halls, continue to travel far into East Lawrence for only a few student riders each day.
“It’s very difficult to make those decisions when you have no idea what the impact will be because you’ve never actually ridden a bus,” Hardy said.
But Scott Sullivan, transportation board member, said board members knew the system well enough to make decisions about routes.
FEWER RIDERS, LONGER ROUTES
KU on Wheels is so muddled, say board members, that the University or the city of
See KU on Wheels, Page 5A.
2A
Thursday, May 2, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence resident accused in murder
Kansan staff report
A Lawrence resident was charged yesterday with the murder of an Iowa man whose bones were discovered yesterday near a Jefferson County pond.
Jefferson County authorities arrested Michael Dean Wilkins, 25, about 7 p.m. Monday in connection with the murder of David Lee Shipley.
Authorities found what was believed to be Shipley's skeletal remains yesterday afternoon near a pond in southeastern Jefferson County, northwest of Lawrence, said Jefferson County Attorney Daniel D. Owen.
"The remains are being analyzed to make further identification," Owen said.
Wilkens appeared yesterday in court in front of Jefferson County District Magistrate Dennis L. Reiling, where he was formally charged with first-degree murder. He is being held without bond in the Jefferson County Jail in Oskaloosa.
Wilkins was convicted of perjury and criminal damage to property in 1991 for spray painting "KKK Rul" on the side of the Spencer Museum of Art.
Jefferson County authorities, along with the Lawrence police department, Davenport, Iowa, police department, Kansas Bureau of Investigation and the FBI had been investigating the disappearance of Shipley for about 14 months. Owen said
Police would not say what prompted the investigation or the connection, if any, Shipley had to Wilkins.
Shipley had been a resident of Davenport, Iowa, at the time of his disappearance. He was 21 years old when he disappeared and had not been seen alive since July or August of 1993, Owen said.
Wilkins' preliminary hearing is scheduled for May 10 in the Jefferson County District Court.
Semester at sea floats KU student's boat in fall
By Heather Kirkwood
Kansan staff writer
Ashley Hammerschmidt won't be walking up and down Jayhawk Boulevard next fall.
Instead, the Fort Collins, Colo., junior will be on a ship in the Pacific Ocean on her way to such exotic places as Vietnam and Morocco. But that doesn't mean she will be free from classes or textbooks.
Hammerschmidt will be taking classes at the world's only floating university on board the S.S. Universe Explorer as part of a study abroad program sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh.
The S.S. Universe Explorer is equipped with multi-media classrooms, a library, computer lab,
theater, student union and two dining rooms.
It may not be the Love Boat, but for Hammerschmidt and 500 other college students from across the country, it will be home.
The ship departs from Vancouver, British Columbia, on Sept. 14, travels westward around the world stopping at 10 different countries, and returns to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on Dec. 23.
The program offers 50 different course selections. Students spend time in class while they are at sea, then dock to visit the various places they have been studying.
"I thought it sounded like a really great opportunity to see a lot of places," Hammersmith said. "But it will be really expensive."
charges $12,500 for standard accommodations, tuition, board and passage fare. Students can apply for federal financial aid towards the cost of the program, and work study is available in the ship's various offices.
The University of Pittsburgh
Hammerschmidt estimates the semester at sea will cost her $15,000, which includes spending money and transportation to the ports.
Nancy Mitchell, assistant director of the Office of Study Abroad said the program is much more expensive than many other study abroad opportunities.
"It is definitely unique," she said,
"But it is exciting for students.
They don't have to write many papers, they get to see many places, and they do get credit."
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor Resume Writing and Interview Tips from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today at 115 Strong Hall. For more information, call the center at 864-3552.
Western Civilization Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting from noon to 1 p.m. today at 1050 Wescoe Hall and from 4 to 5 p.m. at 208 Spencer Museum of Art. For more information, call Heinz Kattenfeld at 864-4935.
ON CAMPUS
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 Tsubaki will sponsor KU Ki-Alkido Club from 6 to 8 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Matt Stumpe at 864-6592.
KU Meditation班 will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ravi
Hirekatur at 832-8789.
Student Assistance Center and CAPS will sponsor a Managing Test Anxiety Workshop from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call the center at 864-4064.
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 will meet at 7 tonight at the auditorium in the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call Lori Hauxwell at 864-1799.
InterVarsity Graduate Christian Fellowship will sponsor a Bible study at 7 tonight at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Becky at 864-8039.
Serbon Dance Theatre in 240 Robinson Center. For more information, call Janet Hamburg at 864-4264.
The Department of Music and Dance will sponsor a student choreographers concert at 7:30 tonight at the Elizabeth
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.
■ LesBiGayS OK will hold elections at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Sam or Joe at 864-3091.
Community Support Services will sponsor a support group for people with schizophrenia from 10:30 to 11:15 a.m. tomorrow at the Community Room in Vermont Towers, 1101 Vermont St. For more information, call Community Support Services.
Recovery Medicine Wheel Support Group will meet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Multicultural Resource Center. For more information, call Sanantha at 842-4797.
Weather
HIGH LOW
Atlanta 80 ° • 59 °
Chicago 60 ° • 44 °
Des Moines, Iowa 65 ° • 44 °
Kansas City, Mo. 65 ° • 56 °
Lewrence 77 ° • 45 °
Los Angeles 82 ° • 65 °
New York 65 ° • 48 °
Omaha, Neb. 70 ° • 45 °
St. Louis 70 ° • 54 °
Seattle 58 ° • 46 °
Topeka 67 ° • 56 °
Tulsa, Okla. 77 ° • 59 °
Wichita 73 ° • 51 °
TODAY
Chance for morning showers.
7745
FRIDAY
Partly cloudy.
8350
SATURDAY
Mostly cloudy and cooler.
7148
TODAY
Chance for morning showers.
7745
FRIDAY
Partly cloudy.
8350
SATURDAY
Mostly cloudy and cooler.
7148
FRIDAY
Partly cloudy.
8350
7745
8350
SATURDAY
Mostly cloudy
and cooler.
7148
Source: KU Weather Service
7148
ON THE RECORD
A blue backpack, calculator and textbook were stolen from a KU student between 11:35 p.m. Tuesday and 1:20 a.m. yesterday in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street. The backpack and contents were valued at $140, Lawrence police reported.
A watch, emerald, 1991 class ring and miscellaneous items
were stolen from two KU students' apartment between 1 and 3:30 a.m. yesterday in the 2300 block of West 26th Street. A radar detector and other miscellaneous items also were stolen from one of the students' cars, which was parked in the apartment complex parking lot. The items were valued at about $3,500, Lawrence 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, Kan. 66045.
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, May 2.1996
3A
KU grade-appeals process lengthy
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
Students often disagree with professors about the quality of their work, but few actually make it all the way through the University of Kansas's grade appeal process.
Richard Levy, law professor,
said that when he was chairman
of the Judicial Board that hears
student complaints about
grades, only two or three student appeals were actually heard by the board.
"Only in the situation when you have an extreme problem is it appropriate to appeal a grade." Levy said. "I understand and sympathize with students. I think that it's a mistake to think about grades as rights and get overly litigious about them."
Robert Shelton, University Ombudsman, said that he handled complaints from students who wanted to appeal grades informally, but that he did not know how many students actually appealed grades.
Shelton said he did hear from
more students towards the end of the semester.
But students can't appeal grades for arbitrary reasons.
"What doesn't count as a valid basis for a grade appeal is a belief that their work is better than a faculty member thought it was," Levy said. "There's only certain narrow instances."
He said most grades were appealed because of procedural errors in the assignment of a grade.
curve would make an 85 percent an A, and then at the end of the semester the instructor decided a 90 percent would constitute an A, students would have legitimate reason to appeal their grades. Levy said.
For example, if an instructor's syllabus indicated that the class
Before beginning a formal appeals process, students should discuss their grade with their professor, he said. If the professor and student still disagree about the grade after having an informal talk, a department chairperson will try to work with them and reach an agreement.
In most schools and departments, if those three parties can't reach an agreement about the grade, the dean of the school or department will make the decision.
If the student still disagrees with the dean's decision, the University's Judicial Board will hold a hearing on the matter.
Levy said the appeals process could be lengthy.
"Under the current system, it's not unusual for a case to go 6 to 8 months or to drag on even into the next academic year," he said.
Overcooked beef may leave stomachs well done
...
Photo illustration by Brian Hott / KANSAN
People who eat their meat too well-done run the risk of stomach cancer, according to a recent study by the National Cancer Institute. The study found that levels of carcinogens increase the longer meat is cooked.
Scientist skeptical of study that links red meat and cancer
By Teresa Veazey Kansan staff writer
When cooking steaks for dinner, KU students might want to take them off the grill a little sooner.
Last week, researchers at the National Cancer Institute released preliminary results of a study on Nebraska farmers, showing the longer red meat is cooked the greater the risk of stomach cancer.
"Cooking meat causes compounds called heterocyclic amines, which are compounds formed when amino acids are cooked at a high temperature," said Rashmi Sinha, member of the senior staff at the National Cancer Institute and one of the study's researchers.
to find a higher risk of pancreas and colon cancer in people who ate well-done red meat.
"We discovered that 19 totally novel compounds are formed when you cook meat," Weisburger said. "Animal tests show that every one of these chemicals can cause cancer."
Studies in humans confirmed the animal research. Weisburger said that researchers can account for the reoccurrence of major cancers by what people eat and how they cook it.
These compounds have been known to be animal carcinogens, which are cancer-causing agents. Sinha said she and her colleagues found a three-fold risk in stomach cancer for people who were eating well-done meat.
John Weisburger, a senior member of the American Health Foundation, which has done studies linking meat to cancer, said it was common
However, Weisburger said he questioned the study's conclusion that well-done meat increased the risk of stomach cancer. The study's results could have been skewed if the Nebraska farmers also ate salted, pickled foods, which would confound the results, he said.
After hearing about the study, Tammy Davis, manager at Don's Steak House, 2176 East 23rd St., said she and other employees discussed the results. They weren't concerned, however, because 85 to 90 percent of their steak-eating customers don't like their meat cooked well-done, she said.
"Most of our customers like their meat cooked medium-rare to medium," Davis said. "When you've cooked out all the redness and juice, then there's not as much flavor."
For people who are concerned about the study's preliminary findings, Weisburger recommended changing the way meat is cooked. To cook a burger patty, add 10
percent soy protein, which lessens the likelihood of the carcinogens, he said.
By removing or significantly reducing the amount of juice in a steak, Weisburger said the amount
of heterocyclic amines also would be reduced.
"Put the meat in the microwave for three to four minutes and let the juices run off, then fry the meat any way you want," he said.
ROTC salutes achievements at end of academic year
Guests and awards, change of command celebrated at ceremony By David Teska Kansan staff writer
More than 100 family members and guests helped the Jayhawk Navy yesterday celebrate its 50th anniversary in a ceremony held in the Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
The ceremony, which lasted almost two hours, consisted of an awards ceremony, change of command and pass in review, the ceremonial parade in which the battalion marches past the grandstands.
The ceremony marked the end of the academic year for the students, said James Fightmaster, Lawrence senior, and master of ceremonies of the event.
After the the anthem and invocation, Capt. Patrick Fagan, commanding officer of Naval ROTC, introduced the guest speaker, Rea
Adm. Lewis Felton, Felton, a Fort Scott native, graduated from the University of Kansas in 1966.
Retired Capt. Joseph Marzluff, who commanded Naval ROTC from 1969 to 1974, was also a guest.
Turning to the student formation, Felton said that he was there to honor the students who were about to embark on careers in the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps.
"You are leaving here as leaders," he said. "Your real job is to lead the people."
Before they could succeed as leaders, Felton said they must first learn to be followers. They also need to recognize that the people they lead are motivated by success and want to work, Felton said.
After Felton's remarks, 25 awards were presented. As each of the awards was read, the recipients came forward. Representatives from organizations such as the U.S. Naval Institute and Retired Officers
"They need someone to take the point and that will be your job," he said.
Charles and Carol Sawyer of Lenexa, parents of Tom Sawyer,Lenexa senior, were in the audience. Charles Sawyer said he was proud of his son, who will spend the summer aboard the USS Nassau, based out of Naples, Italy. But Sawyer said he was worried about his son's safety.
"You're always concerned with them being in areas where he may have to do something," he said.
In the simple act of exchanging the unit's guidon, or flag, command of the unit passed from Chris Doyle, Wichita senior, to Terrance O'Neill, Blair, Neb., senior. O'Neill said his unit's biggest challenge next fall would be the education of incoming freshman into military life.
THE TREATY CENTER, ANKARA, SINGAPORE
"The biggest thing is teaching leaders and what it takes to be a leader," he said.
At a reception after the ceremony, Felton said naval officers faced the same challenges he did when he joined the Navy 30 years ago. The end of the Cold War hasn't really changed things for young officers.
Gina Thornburg / KANSAN
Midshipman 2nd Class Andrew W. Garlick gives the invocation at the Naval ROTC Awards Ceremony, Battalion Change of Command and Pass in Review at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Yesterday's ceremony also celebrated the KU NROTC unit's 50th anniversary before honored guests Capt. Patrick M. Fagan, Rear Adm. Lewis A. Felton and retired Cap. Joseph O. Marzluff.
Tenure review system debated
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
---
A balance between academic freedom and tenured faculty accountable is being debated both by professors and politicians.
"I've heard all sorts of things," said Sally Frost-Mason, dean of liberal arts and sciences. "I've heard by the year 2020, tenure won't even exist."
But for some KU professors, the elimination of tenure is a scary prospect.
"I'm one of those people who is very concerned about tenure and academic freedom," said Robert Harrington, professor of educational psychology and research. "In a lot of ways, tenure is being insidiously attacked."
“What it's really saying is, 'No academic freedom,' Harrington said. "You begin to ask questions: Is this person a team player?"
Harrington is also president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, a national organization concerned with faculty rights. He said throughout the nation and in the Kansas Board of Regents, talk of creating a "post-tenure review" system had many people concerned.
Under the system, professors would be reviewed every five or six years to see if they had retained their worth to the department, he said. Currently, professors are only subject to peer review, and the process of removing a tenured faculty member is difficult.
Harrington said if faculty members were reviewed every few years, they would be less likely to speak their mind or voice concerns, consequently eliminating academic freedom.
Harrington said faculty are actually over-reviewed, and creating a system for further review would be self-defeating.
The reason for creating a new system is that some think when faculty members receive tenure, they become unaccountable for their actions.
"The buzzword is accountability in politics," he said, "But what concerns me is I don't think it's well intended. It's sort of an attempt to force accountability."
Allan Ciglar, professor of political science and government, stressed that faculty should be held more accountable for their actions, but had reservations toward moving to a post-tenure review system.
Frost-Mason said that academic freedom was an important function in a good university, but acknowledged that entrenched faculty with full tenure rights might be a thing of the past.
"It's something that could even happen here," she said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday. May 2.1996
3A
KU grade-appeals process lengthy
By Nicole Kennedy
Kansan staff writer
Students often disagree with professors about the quality of their work, but few actually make it all the way through the University of Kansas's grade appeal process.
Richard Levy, law professor, said that when he was chairman of the Judicial Board that hears student complaints about grades, only two or three student appeals were actually heard by the board.
"Only in the situation when you have an extreme problem is it appropriate to appeal a grade." Levy said. "I understand and sympathize with students. I think that it's a mistake to think about grades as rights and get overly litigious about them."
Robert Shelton, University Ombudsman, said that he handled complaints from students who wanted to appeal grades informally, but that he did not know how many students actually appealed grades.
Shelton said he did hear from
"What doesn't count as a valid basis for a grade appeal is a belief that their work is better than a faculty member thought it was," Levy said. "There's only certain narrow instances."
more students towards the end of the semester.
But students can't appeal grades for arbitrary reasons.
He said most grades were appealed because of procedural errors in the assignment of a grade.
curve would make an 85 percent an A, and then at the end of the semester the instructor decided a 90 percent would constitute an A, students would have legitimate reason to appeal their grades. Levy said.
For example, if an instructor's syllabus indicated that the class
Before beginning a formal appeals process, students should discuss their grade with their professor, he said. If the professor and student still disagree about the grade after having an informal talk, a department chairperson will try to work with them and reach an agreement.
In most schools and departments, if those three parties can't reach an agreement about the grade, the dean of the school or department will make the decision.
If the student still disagrees with the dean's decision, the University's Judicial Board will hold a hearing on the matter.
Levy said the appeals process could be lengthy.
"Under the current system, it's not unusual for a case to go 6 to 8 months or to drag on even into the next academic year," he said.
...
Overcooked beef may leave stomachs well done
Scientist skeptical of study that links red meat and cancer
Photo illustration by Brian Hott / KANSAN
People who eat their meat too well-done run the risk of National Cancer Institute. The study found that levels of stomach cancer, according to a recent study by the carcinogens increase the longer meat is cooked.
By Teresa Veazey Kansan staff writer
When cooking steaks for dinner,
KU students might want to take
them off the grill a little sooner.
Last week, researchers at the National Cancer Institute released preliminary results of a study on Nebraska farmers, showing the longer red meat is cooked the greater the risk of stomach cancer.
"Cooking meat causes compounds called heterocyclic amines, which are compounds formed when amino acids are cooked at a high temperature," said Rashmi Sinha, member of the senior staff at the National Cancer Institute and one of the study's researchers.
These compounds have been known to be animal carcinogens, which are cancer-causing agents. Sinha said she and her colleagues found a three-fold risk in stomach cancer for people who were eating well-done meat.
to find a higher risk of pancreas and colon cancer in people who ate well-done red meat.
"We discovered that 19 totally novel compounds are formed when you cook meat," Weisburger said. "Animal tests show that every one of these chemicals can cause cancer."
John Weisburger, a senior member of the American Health Foundation, which has done studies linking meat to cancer, said it was common
Studies in humans confirmed the animal research. Weisburger said that researchers can account for the reoccurrence of major cancers by what people eat and how they cook it.
However, Weisburger said he questioned the study's conclusion that well-done meat increased the risk of stomach cancer. The study's results could have been skewed if the Nebraska farmers also ate salted, pickled foods, which would confound the results, he said.
After hearing about the study, Tammy Davis, manager at Don's Steak House, 2176 East 23rd St., said she and other employees discussed the results. They weren't concerned, however, because 85 to 90 percent of their steak-eating customers don't like their meat cooked well-done, she said.
vor."
"Most of our customers like their meat cooked medium-rare to medium," Davis said. "When you've cooked out all the redness and juice, then there's not as much fla-
For people who are concerned about the study's preliminary findings, Weisburger recommended changing the way meat is cooked. To cook a hamburger patty, add 10
percent soy protein, which lessens the likelihood of the carcinogens, he said.
By removing or significantly reducing the amount of juice in a steak, Weisburger said the amount
of heterocyclic amines also would be reduced.
"Put the meat in the microwave for three to four minutes and let the juices run off, then fry the meat any way you want," he said.
ROTC salutes achievements at end of academic year
Guests and awards change of command celebrated at ceremony By David Terka
By David Teska Kansan staff writer
More than 100 family members and guests helped the Jayhawk Navy yesterday celebrate its 50th anniversary in a ceremony held in the Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
The ceremony marked the end of the academic year for the students, said James Fightmaster, Lawrence senior, and master of ceremonies of the event.
The ceremony, which lasted almost two hours, consisted of an awards ceremony, change of command and pass in review, the ceremonial parade in which the battalion marches past the grandstands.
After the national anthem and invocation, Capt. Patrick Fagan, commanding officer of Naval ROTC, introduced the guest speaker, Bear
Adm. Lewis Felton, Felton, a Fort Scott native, graduated from the University of Kansas in 1966.
Retired Capt. Joseph Marzluff, who commanded Naval ROTC from 1969 to 1974, was also a guest.
Turning to the student formation, Felton said that he was there to honor the students who were about to embark on careers in the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps.
"You are leaving here as leaders," he said. "Your real job is to lead the people."
Before they could succeed as leaders, Felton said they must first learn to be followers. They also need to recognize that the people they lead are motivated by success and want to work, Felton said.
After Felton's remarks, 25 awards were presented. As each of the awards was read, the recipients came forward. Representatives from organizations such as the U.S. Naval Institute and Retired Officers
"They need someone to take the point and that will be your job," he said.
Association presented awards.
Charles and Carol Sawyer of Lenexa, parents of Tom Sawyer, Lenexa senior, were in the audience. Charles Sawyer said he was proud of his son, who will spend the summer aboard the USS Nassau, based out of Naples, Italy. But Sawyer said he was worried about his son's safety.
"You're always concerned with them being in areas where he may have to do something," he said.
In the simple act of exchanging the unit's guidon, or flag, command of the unit passed from Chris Doyle, Wichita senior, to Terrance O'Neill, Blair, Neb., senior. O'Neill said his unit's biggest challenge next fall would be the education of incoming freshman into military life.
[Photograph of three sailors in naval uniforms seated in a carriage, with one man speaking to the others. The man speaking is wearing a white cap and dark shirt.]
"The biggest thing is teaching leaders and what it takes to be a leader," he said.
At a reception after the ceremony, Felton said naval officers faced the same challenges he did when he joined the Navy 30 years ago. The end of the Cold War hasn't really changed things for young officers.
Gina Thornburg / KANSAN
Midshipman 2nd Class Andrew W. Garlick gives the invocation at the Naval RCOT Awards Ceremony, Battailon Change of Command and Pass in Review at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Yesterday's ceremony also celebrated the KU NROTOC unit's 50th anniversary before honored guests Capt. Patrick M. Fagan, Rear Adm. Lewis A. Felton and retired Capt. Joseph O. Marzluff.
Tenure review system debated
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
A balance between academic freedom and holding tenured faculty accountable is being debated both by professors and politicians.
But for some KU professors, the elimination of tenure is a scary prospect.
"I've heard all sorts of things," said Sally Frost-Mason, dean of liberal arts and sciences. "I've heard by the year 2020, tenure won't even exist."
Under the system, professors would be reviewed every five or six years to see if they had retained their worth to the department, he said. Currently, professors are only subject to peer review, and the process of removing a tenured faculty member is difficult.
"I'm one of those people who is very concerned about tenure and academic freedom," said Robert Harrington, professor of educational psychology and research. "In a lot of ways, tenure is being insidiously attacked."
Harrington is also president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, a national organization concerned with faculty rights. He said throughout the nation and in the Kansas Board of Regents, talk of creating a "post-tenure review" system had many people concerned.
"What it's really saying is, 'No academic freedom,' Harrington said. "You begin to ask questions: 'Is this person a team player?'
Harrington said faculty are actually over-reviewed, and creating a system for further review would be self-defeating.
Harrington said if faculty members were reviewed every few years, they would be less likely to speak their mind or voice concerns, consequently eliminating academic freedom.
The reason for creating a new system is that some think when faculty members receive tenure, they become unaccountable for their actions.
Allan Ciglar, professor of political science and government, stressed that faculty should be held more accountable for their actions, but had reservations toward moving to a post-tenure review system.
"The buzzword is accountability in politics," he said. "But what concerns me is I don't think it's well intended. It's sort of an attempt to force accountability."
Frost-Mason said that academic freedom was an important function in a good university, but acknowledged that entrenched faculty with full tenure rights might be a thing of the past.
“It’s something that could even happen here,” she said.
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Thursday, May 2, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Men displayed courage support at women's rally
This is about real men: men who support, protect and respect women,men who take responsibility for being part of an oppressive group by demonstrating an effort to understand and stop violence against women.
They are the men who attended the eighth annual "Womyn Take Back the Night" rally on April 25. About 20 male participants applauded a woman's effort to speak out against violence as opposed to attaching it to male bashing.
Advertisements for the event may have intimidated those men who are unaware of its purpose. It is not to blame, bash or denounce males but to share experiences and support one another's attempts to understand and stop the threat of violence.
It is men and women working together to combat violence, not women vs. men.
Jason Schreiner, WaKeeney junior, said he attended the rally to recognize the efforts of women and to celebrate a woman's courage to speak out.
THE ISSUE:
Womyn Take Back the Night
The support from these men promotes women to continue expressing courage.
Connie Burk, house manager of Women's Transitional Care Services, said that men always had been an integral part of the event and said she appreciated those who supported the surviving women.
Jeni Schmidt, Leawood junior, said her father had attended the event to show his support.
She said that it was nice to see men participate because women couldn't do it alone.
We can't.
The more effort that is made to help each other, the stronger our shield will become against violence.
Men who support and help women to "take back the night" are displaying their strength, courage and ability to protect for the good of their fellow man, or in this case, woman.
ERIN KRIST FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Joining student organizations can add experience to your résumé
Today is the perfect opportunity to take a step above your classmates. The University Daily Kansan, Student Union Activities and many other worthwhile organizations are asking for a favor. They want you to be part of their staffs.
This might seem like a novel idea,but we are sure you,the normal college student,will ask,"What's the catch?"
The only catch is that applying will bring you a step closer to pursuing your dream. If you are interested in journalism, what better way to get more involved than by being on the student newspaper? The summer Kansan still is looking for reporters and staff.
If your niche isn't journalism, then there are other things that you can do.
SUA has at least nine student committees set up to choose events ranging from live music events to feature films. The first step is to find one that you think would intrigue you and pursue it.
Most professional schools' clubs are changing
THE ISSUE:
Student Involvement
their executive boards. Ask friends, advisers or teachers if they know something about the club. You also can get more information from your school's dean's office.
If you decide not to join a professional club or fill out an application for a committee,you might be denying yourself a prime chance to set yourself up for future engagements.
Many students get discouraged during the summer because nobody is willing to hire a student without any experience. But opportunities such as the ones mentioned can give you an edge. This experience can lead to internships or to professional jobs.
But it is time to move. Usually, organizations receive the bulk of their applications at the beginning of the fall semester. If you turn in your fall application now, you could have a slight edge over the competition.
DOUG WEINSTEIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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The Power of One
Julie Harris and the Center for Community Outreach lead the fight to get students involved in their com-munity
Can make a difference
M. L. RUSSELL
By Paul Todd Photo by Matt Flickner
ike many KU students, Julie Harris spent the Spring Break of her final year at KU in a far off place. She, like most stu-
in general have even considered. Students can learn from Harris' devotion to community service.
dents, wanted to do something fun. So she packed a bag, grabbed some friends and headed to sunny El Paso, Texas.
In El Paso she worked on public projects projects for citizens, helped feed and clothe El Paso residents and led her group in an effort to understand the problems in that part of the country. Not your typical Spring Break, but Harris and her comrades are not your typical students.
Harris is one of the coordinators of the Center for Community Outreach, a branch of the University of Kansas' Student Senate, and was the recipient of this year's Student Senator of the Year award from her fellow senators. She has organized more projects, seminars and field excursions that benefit the community than most students, faculty or people
Harris, Mission Hills senior, and her co-coordinator, Lorraine Claussen, organized the Spring Break trip as part of the University's Alternative Spring Break program. Harris and Claussen secured funding for the trip from Breakaway, a national Spring Break community service program partially financed by the federal government. Three other groups, totaling 26 students, went to Washington D.C., Fort Collins, Colo., and Cape Charles, Va.
The University's program was different from those at other universities because it was curriculum-based, something Harris said she felt was vital to getting students involved with community service.
She said that the participants in the program researched areas of their own interest, such as
migrant worker issues and the North America Free Trade Agreement, shared their findings with the group and then saw firsthand what they were studying and researching.
"It gave them the opportunity to apply what they've learned, especially the way this class was set up," Harris said.
Harris' devotion to public service, however, has not just been at vacation time.
---
The Center for Community Outreach was not Harris' brainchild, but it has been her passion for the last year. The Center was started seven years ago. Its original intent was to match students who wanted to serve in the community
I will use a descriptive image with the following details:
- The image is black and white.
- It features three people in a close-up, seated on a bench or similar structure.
- The background appears to be an indoor space with a wooden panel or wall.
- There are no other discernible objects or text present in the image.
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
KU Alternative Spring Break participants plant a garden for elementary school students in El Paso, Texas. Student Senate's Center For Community Outreach co-sponsored the program.
with local service agencies. But the center's coordinators saw a problem.
"It was more of a clearing house," Harris said. "They decided that the Center shouldn't just place students with other agencies, and they made a big jump last year."
The Center began using its own resources instead of depending on non-University agencies to get students involved in the community. It became an umbrella agency that KU community service groups could use for guidance and recruiting.
"The Center wanted to directly utilize the strengths of students," Harris said. "Before, students were isolated as far as who was interested in volunteering. The Center organized a sort-of movement on campus."
It has been Harris' job to increase the number of students involved with Center groups and activities financed by Senate, and increase they have.
"Last year we had 70 students who made a semester or year-long commitment to help with a service," she said. "This year we had about 200."
With Harris' help, the Center has become a powerful and relatively non-political branch of Senate.
“It’s hard to pick your battles,” she said. “This year we expanded so much, but we still need to work on awareness — students still need to understand what CCO is.”
---
Harris isn't new to Student Senate. She has been active in Senate for three years and has been a CCO director twice. She knows the University political system, and, in the past year, has used the system to the Center's advantage.
"I give my support to other senators, but I'm pretty apolitical," she said.
Jamie Johnson, newly elected student body vice president, said that Harris was extremely influential to other senators.
"It's an implicit power," he said. "If she gets up and says something, people are inclined to listen."
Increasing funding and more firmly linking the Center with Student Senate have been two of the co-coordinator's goals this year. Higher status in Senate means more funding for Center programs, and more funding means more programs in which students could get involved.
"We tried to sell Senate on CCO as a really positive thing." Harris said. "Moving the Center closer to Senate has strengthened and expanded it."
Harris has been fighting for the past year to make the Center an organization that students could use to get involved in the Lawrence community. Whether they get involved is up to them.
Harris is realistic, though, about student community service. She doesn't preach service as a moral duty. Instead, she calmly explains that community service provides an opportunity for students to apply their education and to understand other peoples' lives.
"Cultural exchange occurs in any volunteer experience," she said. "It is the most effective way to break down barriers."
Most students sit idly and watch the days go by, completely oblivious to what is going on around them. Getting them interested in helping in the community is an impressive task, especially when it is done by another student.
"Students need to recognize how important giving back to the community is," she said.
"It's part of being a community member. I'm hoping that, even if it's just a few people, to instill in them the importance of community service. It creates empathy for others instead of anaphy."
If one student can be such a factor in the community on a daily basis, then surely all KU students could find the time to help themselves and others, even if only once in a while.
Students who want to know more about volunteerism at KU can call the Center for Community Outreach at 864-3710.
KANSAN STAFF
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Campus ... Joann Birk
Philip Brownlee
Editorial ... Paul Todd
Features ... Matt Hood
Sports ... Tom Brokken
Photo .. Andy Rabinstein
Graphics ... Falkenrick
Graphics ... Noah Musser
Special sections ... Novella Bommers
Wire ... Tara Trenary
Illustration ... Mitch Leaker
HEATHER NIEHAUS
Business manager
KONAN HAUSER
Retail sales manager
JAY STEINER
Sales and marketing adviser
JUSTIN KNUPP
Technology coordinator
Business Staff
Business director
Campus mgr ... Glensear Gersen
Regional mgr ... Kelly Connelye
National mgr ... Mark Oxlmkel
Special sections mgr ... Korm Blow
Production mgr ... Rachel Cahill
Heather Vallier
Marketing director ... Cary Bresløst
Art Director ... Annette Ackerman
Creative director ... Ed Kowalski
Classified mgr ... Stacey Weygarten
Internship/co-op mgr ... T.J. Clark
HUBIE
STUDYING
Poof!
BURNED OUT?
ALL WET.
By Greg Hardin
WELL CHEER!
IT'S OUR FINAL STRIP
OF THE YEAR!!
HM! SEE YOU
ALL NEXT FALL!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, May 2, 1996
KU on Wheels: rolling to a stop?
Lawrence may be forced to step in and clean up the mess.
Though board members have engaged in informal talks with administrators and city officials this year, neither the University nor the city has made any formal commitments to subsidize KU on Wheels.
At the root of KU on Wheels' problems is the expanding area in which students live. As students moved off campus, the bus supplier, apartment owners and students encouraged board members to expand the bus routes.
To finance these new routes, the board raised bus pass prices. But the number of bus passes sold dropped from 13,917 in 1992 to about 10,990 this year. And a bus pass that cost $18 in 1976 now costs $65 per semester.
"Because parking passes are $53 a year and a bus pass is $180 a year, people would rather buy a parking pass and try to find a parking space," he said.
Vanderslice said that he understood why students would buy a parking pass instead of a bus pass.
While fewer students were buying bus passes, the basic subsidy from Senate remained static.
Hardy said most transportation systems received a portion of their funding from the governments that operated them. He said most bus systems were subsidized about 30 to 40 percent. KU on Wheels received $400,000 from Senate this year, or 32 percent of its total $1.2 million budget.
KU students board the bus at the stop in front of Bailey Hall. It's possible that some off-campus routes could be cut if the bus contract price increases. Officials won't make any decisions about cutting routes until after a new bus contract is signed.
10
But Bob Grunzinger, financial adviser to the transportation board,
sake the subsby was once as high as 38 percent. The decrease in Senate's subsidy contributed to KU on Wheels' f i n a c i l a r crunch.
Ridership that was 12,500 per day in 1992 fell to 11,000 students per day this year. When ridership dropped off, Senate had to compensate for the decrease in revenues.
Now, student bus routes run as far as 8 miles away from campus. One runs far, into East
Senate spent $140,000 this year to make up KU on Wheels' losses.
The Lawrence Bus Company has worked under this arrangement for 25 years because, under Kansas statutes, KU on Wheels didn't have to take competitive bids unless another vendor inquired about the contract.
The Lawrence Bus Company has been the system's only provider of buses since KU on Wheels' inception. Ogle's father, Duane Ogle, originally owned the bus company and began providing buses for KU in 1971.
But Ogle's monopoly may soon come to an end.
But that perspective has changed.
Another national bus vendor, Laidlaid Transit, Inc., has inquired and transportation board members must now bid out the contract.
ple change and what works today may not work tomorrow."
HIGHER PRICES
Cutting bus routes is not what Ogle wants. The transportation board pays the Lawrence Bus Company by the hour, so the more routes that run, the more money the company makes.
Competition normally drives prices down, but in this case, board members say, competition may have the opposite effect.
Now board members are betting that bus routes will have to be cut. Some scenarios would leave what is now a city bus system as little more than a people mover on campus.
Some board members believe that Oleo will raise his prices.
"In the past, the University has pretty much been willing to say, 'Oh isn't that nice that the students are doing that,'" Ambler said.
Since then, the administration has begun to view transportation as part of their responsibility to students. Ambler said.
"We know we have some issues that we're going to have to address," Ambler said. "The same problems plaguing any metro bus system have come to KU. Attitudes change, peo-
The transportation board's expansion strategy didn't reach crisis level until enrollment began to drop in 1992.
Ogie will neither confirm nor deny
Haskell pays no money for the service, nor does the city of Lawrence, although it is clear that some residents use the buses to travel through the city and never ride to the KU campus at all.
Lawrence and serves Haskell Indian Nations University.
"The same problems plaguing any metro bus system have come to KU. Attitudes change, people change and what works today may not work tomorrow."
David Ambler
Vice chancellor for student affairs
confirm nor deny that he plans to raise the contract price, but he did say the new conditions may influence his bid.
Ogle said that in the past, he was able to keep the bus contract price low because he believed he would never have to compete for the contract.
Since there was no competition, Ogle said he was able to pay for improvements, such as replacing bus tires and refurbishing old buses, out of his pocket. Without competition, Ogle was assured that
through the years, he would get his money back as profits increased.
But now, Ogle said he might have to raise his contract price to pay for repairs immediately. He said he couldn't use his own money because he couldn't be assured that he would be repaid.
"I haven't expanded into other areas, but there are several opportunities waiting," Ogle said. "I came very close to bidding on the Lawrence school bus contract. I'm looking at the Johnson County transit system."
"I don't want this to seem like a threat," he said. "that's not at all what I want to do. As a business person, I have to look at things differently. I think KU on Wheels understands that."
Despite those opportunities, Ogle
If the Lawrence Bus Co. doesn't receive next year's contract, Ogle said he had several deals in the works.
would prefer to stick with KU on Wheels.
"As I expand, Chris Ogle is going to lose control of the bus system if I branch out into other cities," he said. "I've been approached by other Universities and other cities, but I feel comfortable where I'm at."
CUTTING ROUTES
Board members remain fearful that Ogle will raise his contract price and students will suffer.
The transportation board now pays the Lawrence Bus Company $28 per bus hour.
"Since our contract price is so low, it will probably have an adverse effect and our prices will increase," Vanderslice said.
And if that happens, board members say KU on Wheels may have to trim routes.
Vanderslice said if the contract price increases, serious decisions about KU on Wheels' future would have to be made.
The board decided Feb. 26 to consider cutting any route that costs more than 70 cents per rider to run. That means that the board would be examining routes such as West 6th, where the cost is $3.02 to take one student from campus to his or her home.
According to board estimates, if the bus contract price increases to $45 per bus hour, all but seven of the system's 27 bus routes would be examined for possible cuts.
If routes are cut, KU students who thought they would be on a bus route when they signed their leases for next Fall may be stranded miles from KU with no transportation.
Lori Seaberg, Atchison senior said she rode the buses everyday to class.
A busload of troubles
"A semester ago, I didn't have a car and I rode the 24th and Ridge Court bus to school." Seaberg said. "A year ago, I rode it everywhere, even downtown. If I hadn't had the bus to ride, it would have been really hard for me to get to school."
Lawrence Bus Company route Average passengers per day on each route Boardings per hour each day
Noen Extra 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 150 100 50 0 12 10 8 6 4 2
KU 3
Ridge Court Extra
Lewis Extra
Colony Woods 1
Holidome
Naismith 2
Naismith 1
KU 1
Heatherwood 1
KU 4
Ridge Court 1
East Lawrence
Stewart Extra
Heatherwood 2
Naismith Extra
Malls
KU 2
Trailridge
Ridge Court 2
Extra
Meadowbrook2
Night Campus
Meadowbrook1
West 6th A
Night Trailridge
West 6th B
All routes costing more than 70 cents per passenger are in jeapordy of being cut
Ridge Court 1
East Lawrence
Stewart Extra
Heatherwood 2
Naismith Extra
Malls
KU 2
Trailridge
Ridge Court 2
Extra
Meadowbrook2
Night Campus
Meadowbrook1
West 6th A
Night Trailridge
West 6th B
Charles Battista, resident general
At least one other bus company manager said that it sounds like the board hasn't been running the bus system effectively.
Cost to KU per passenger (paid by the KU Transportation Board)
UP FOR BID
Contract price $28 □ $30 ■ $35 ■ $40 ■ $45 ■
The bus contract price could rise as high as $45 per hour, pushing the amount it costs KU to subsidize each student's bus ride to $6.75 on some expensive routes. The fare paid by the passenger is a separate issue, to be determined at a later date.
Currently the Lawrence Bus Company charges the KU Transportation Board $28 per hour to run the KU bus routes. The board is considering eliminating routes costing more than 70 cents per passenger to operate.
PASSENGER LINE
Noah Musser/KANSAN
The buses that travel to and from West Lawrence typically have few riders. This is one of the routes that could be cut, leaving students who live in the area without transportation to campus.
"There's a lot of opportunity for people to get in bed with each other there." Battista said.
KU on Wheels is banking on help from the administration and the city.
But financial assistance from the city or the University administration seems unlikely. Past negotiations between the three entities have been less than fruitful.
manager for VanCom, a national bus company that provides buses for the student system at Northern Illinois University, said key parts of the KU on Wheels system weren't working.
Vanderslice said the city had made no commitments to help pay for KU on Wheels.
"I would say that the meetings with the city have been informational meetings to inform the city that there will be changes made that will affect city residents," he said.
Fred Sherman, transportation planner for the city, said Lawrence would not agree to help pay for KU on Wheels until the transportation board and the administration had reached a consensus on how to handle the bus system.
"Right now I don't know if there's a common vision." Sherman said.
The administration hasn't made any commitments to KU on Wheels either, but Amber said the University was beginning to view transportation as an issue to be dealt with.
"All of us in the central administration have been impressed with the maturity and creativity of the students in trying to deal with their
financial problems." Ambler said.
"It's a good characterization to say that nobody knows what's going to happen and nobody has come up with a solution."
But the bus crisis is rolling toward
some sort of solution. The bus contract bidding process begins today. Companies bidding on the bus contract will attend a pre-bid meeting this morning on campus.
Chris Ogle will be there, as will representatives from Laidlaw Transit, Inc.
--former transportation board adviser
The bidding process will close on May 15 or 16. Then the Kansas secretary of administration, the Kansas director of purchases and the KU on Wheels coordinator will meet to decide which company will receive the contract.
"The problem was that without some additional oversight or advice from the University, the system got into trouble."
David Hardy
and charter buses for fraternities and sororites at KU.
tract is signed.
"I know there's a bid meeting Thursday, and we will be attending the bid meeting," said Tim Dennis, manager of Laidlaw's Lawrence division. "We're very interested and we'll present a bid. We're already in Lawrence running 90 school buses. Why not work for the University and make it one happy family?"
The state requires the contract go to the lowest bidder whose service will meet KU on Wheels' needs exactly.
Diane Goddard, KU director of purchasing, said she was hoping to have a contract signed by July 1, but she said she was not sure how long the negotiating process would take.
Decisions on the routes will be made after the bus con-
For now, back at her new home in East Lawrence, Ann Michaels is wondering how she and other students will get to campus next Fall if KU bus routes are cut.
Today marks the first step in the process that will determine whether the bus will stop for students like Michaels on the first day of classes.
6A
Thursday, May 2.1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Say goodbye to all of your graduating friends with a personal advertisement in the "Goodbye Grads" section of The University Daily Kansan!
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Quick highs during finals lead to long lows later
"Getting proper rest and good nutrition the night before an exam is your best bet," said Ann Chapman, registered dietitian at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Carbohydrates exercise and water are recommended
By Jill Farrell Special to the Kansan
But some nutritionists say that this typical scenario during finals was the worst possible thing a student can do to prepare for an upcoming exam.
It's 2 a.m., and with a diet coke in one hand and M&M's in the other, it's time to dive into studying.
She also said it was important not to rely on caffeine to stay awake. It can have negative side effects, such as causing dehydration, which can result in a loss of minerals and irritability.
Chapman said foods with sugar as the prime ingredient gave a person a quick high and then significantly lowered the body's energy level.
"Runners are always told to eat carbohydrates," Chapman said. "It's no different for students using energy to study for final."
It is best to eat foods high in carbohydrates such as fruits, vegetables, cereals and grains, she said. These foods provide the body with longer lasting energy and better nutrition.
Alan Paduano, a national certified massage therapist at the Lawrence Athletic Club, 3201 Mesa Way, said
caffeine did not allow the body proper rest.
"Drink water." Paduano said. "It flushes out your system and replenishes your body."
Chapman and Paduano both stressed how important a good night's sleep was.
"If you don't get enough sleep, you compromise your energy level and your diet," said Chapman. "I think they go hand-in-hand. A person who sleeps right generally eats right."
"Come visit the Peak Performance Clinic, and then ride one of the bikes in the weight room," he said. "You're bound to relieve some of your stress."
Paduano agreed that it was a big mistake to stay up all night.
He said exercise increased circulation, which helped the body get rid of stress, and then returned the body to a lower, more relaxed resting heart rate.
Starting to study early and taking frequent breaks prevents lack of sleep, which causes tension in the body and mind, he said. Eating right and getting proper rest is crucial, but it still may not relieve all the stress that comes at final time.
Paduano agreed that exercise relieved stress.
So, what can a student do to release this anxiety?
Paduano said massage therapy did the same thing for the body.
"When you are stressed out, the entire body tightens up," he said. "When given a massage, the nervous system calms down and the person is more relaxed and can handle stressful situations better."
The Peak Performance Clinic at Robinson Gymnasium is available to students who need to find a stress reliever.
Michael Norwood, Peak Performance staff member, said the clinic provided mental and confidence training for students and athletes.
Norwood said exercise was also a great stress reliever.
"This is a valuable resource students aren't aware of," he said. "We can help them test anxiety through imagery and perspective."
The Clinic helps students come up with a good routine for finals time, Norwood said.
He recommended writing down the amount of studying the student planned to do each day.
The Clinic also sells relaxation tapes to students for $15. These tapes focus on relaxing certain body parts with soothing music in the background, such as the New Age music of Yanni.
It's necessary to have a reasonable goal and to try to attain it, he said.
Paduano said he also believed people enjoyed being touched in a comforting way.
"Finals are not the end of the world if you properly prepare and relax," he said.
"Massage therapy is very soothing and very personal," he said. Paduano said that how often a person got a massage depended on the needs of the clients and their financial positions.
"College is the best time or your life," Norwood said. "Finals don't have to stress you out. Be prepared and do the best you can."
Chef cooks up hungry crowd
The third floor of the Kansas Union is a little busier on Thursdays than on other days.
Union Square pasta is a popular entrée for Thursday lunches
By Robert Elton Special to the Kansan
One day has proved enough for the word to get out: this guy can cook.
People go to the Union to taste the creations of Robert Saia, a certified chef and registered dietitian who works one day a week at the Union.
Students and staff recognize Saia's talents.
Kristen Prior, Galena sophomore, works in the Union Square restaurant where Saia cooks.
"We see increased business because of the chef. Not only students, but Kansas staff come too," Prior said.
Jay Glatz, Union Square Manager, said that Saia's meals were put on display and that made them hard to resist.
"The sales in that area are increased somewhere from 10 percent to 15 percent on days that Rob's meals are sold," Glatz said.
"I'm really big on pasta. I'm fascinated with the endless possibilities," Saia said. "I use a simple method of deciding what to cook. I think what I would really enjoy eating on whatever particular day and I make that meal." he said.
Many patrons seem to share common tastes with Saia. Jeff Kuntz, Dallas senior, said he had been eating at the Union for the entire spring semester.
The popular meals are pasta-oriented.
Since July 1995, Saia has been practicing his talents at the University of Kansas. The University is not the only place the 30-year-old chef practices, though. Most of his week is spent catering for local events. This is why Saia only spends one day a week at the Union Square. Saia is often preoccupied with work at various functions from bachelor parties to
"I have no idea who makes the pasta lunches here, but I can testify that they are good enough to keep me coming back." Kuntzsaid.
"We see increased business because of the chef."
Kristen Prior
Union Square employee
country club dinners.
The Thursday gourmet prides himself in making his food healthy. Saia said one reason he used so much pasta was because it's healthy to eat a diet with substantial amounts of carbohydrates.
To his co-workers, Saia adds a
dash of life to the Union food court.
"He is definitely an unique person," Prior said. "He is a people person."
There are no free meals, however,
A Rob Saia meal usually will cost from $4.50 to $4.75 per entrée.
Other entrées in the à la carte buffet usually cost about $3.
Dave
Matthews
Band
the new album
featuring too much
crash
http://www.dmband.com
produced by Steve Lillywhite
Available at Penny Lane
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7A
Witnesses testify con man still alive
Convicted killer hopes evidence will force new trial
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — At a restaurant on the Greek island of Mykonos a door opened, and a familiar figure stepped inside, the witness said.
It was Ron Levin, she said.
"I thought to myself, 'God, I know this person,' Connie Gerrard testified.
Levin was supposed to have been murdered in 1894 by members of the Billionaire Boys
Thursday, May 2.1996
Club, a group of ruthlessly ambitious young men who put their money into getrich-quick schemes.
Levin has been sighted at different locations since then, long after he supposedly had died.
The Ron Levin sightings now form the basis of an effort to win a new trial for Joe Hunt, the 36-year-old former leader of the Billionaire Boys, who was
the recognition on his face and he kind of paed," she said.
sentenced to life without parole for ordering Levin's murder.
George Gerrard, her husband, recalled that his wife had said to him, "That's Ron Levin."
■ Nadia Ghaleb, former waitress at a Beverly Hills restaurant, said that one morning in 1987, she had spotted Levin getting into a brown Mercedes convertible on San Vicente Boulevard in Brentwood.
Hunt's lawyers contended that Levin, a con man whose body was never found, had faked his death and framed Hunt. Prosecutors insist Hunt was convicted on firm evidence. They have refused to comment on the sightings, but they have said that they would offer witnesses who would cast doubt on the tales.
Hunt's lawyers have presented these witness stories:
Gerrard said she had recognized Levin in Mykonos because she had been introduced to him before. "When Mr. Levin saw me, his facial expression changed," she said. "I saw
She said she had known Levin in the 1970s and '80s and remembered him as tall, prematurely silver-haired and groomed in trendy clothes.
This was surprising because I hadn't seen him in 21/2 years and I heard that he was missing." Robble Robinson Former City News Service reporter
Robbie Robinson, a former reporter for City News Service, testified that he had been waiting in line to see a movie in Westwood in 1986 when Levin walked up to him and said, "Hi, Robbie."
"This was surprising because I hadn't seen him in 2 1/2 years and I heard that he was missing," Robinson said.
Ivan Werner, a funeral director, identified Levin as a mourner at a West-wood funeral in 1987. He said the man had white hair, a close-cropped beard and was impecably groomed. Werner said he recognized Levin's picture in the
paper several months later.
The witnesses had not testified at the 1987 trial.
Prosecutors contended that Levin had been killed after swindling Hunt in a $4 million commodities scam.
A Hunt cohort, James Pittman, said on A Current Affair in 1993 that he had shot Levin and helped bury the body in the Angeles National Forest.
But law officers found no trace of the body. The evidence against Hunt included a to-do list in his handwriting, found in Levin's apartment, which said tape mouth, close blinds, handcuff, put gloves on, kill dog.
Two more attorneys to aid in travel probe
Federal prosecutors will try to sort out White House firings
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The hiring of two veteran federal prosecutors gives new intensity to the Whitewater counsel's investigation of the firing of White House travel office employees later cleared of wrongdoing.
Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr has hired Roger Adelman, a former prosecutor specializing in white-collar crimes, and, on Tuesday, borrowed Eric Dubelier from the U.S. attorney's office.
Starr's action comes four months after the White House suddenly produced a 21/2-year-old memo in which an aide, David Watkins, said he discharged the seven career employees at the insistence of Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Under scrutiny is whether that nine-page statement disagrees with Watkins' congressional testimony, which did not assign so substantial a role to the first lady. Clinton has said in writing that she had no role in the firings.
Watkins' lawyer, Bob Mathias, said yesterday that Watkins was cooperating with Starr's investigation.
Asked if he thought the case would wind up in a courtroom, Mathias said, "Absolutely not. There is absolutely no basis for charging him with any crime."
Prosecutors also have been concerned about the White House's failure to give the late Vincent Foster's detailed handwritten notes on the travel office matter.
Six weeks ago, the matter was handed to Starr who already is investigating the complex Whitewater case in Arkansas. Unlike Whitewater, the travel office case is fairly clear cut. Also unlike Whitewater, it occurred after the Clintons had moved into the White House.
Shortly after the first family moved in, the
travel office staff was replaced by people from a Little Rock, Ark., travel firm. In the uproar that followed, five of the seven were given new government jobs. The sixth retired, and Billy Dale, the travel office director, was put on trial on charges of stealing
100
Hillary Clinton
travel office funds and later was acquitted.
travel office funds and later was acquitted. Both newly hired prosecutors have experience with high-profile, federal cases. Adelman's most famous case was the prosecution of John Hinckley, who has been held since 1981 after being found not guilty by reason of insanity in the assassination attempt on President Reagan, Dubieler recently handled the case of Francisco Martin Duran, convicted of firing a gun at the White House in an assassination attempt.
Adelman continues to work at his law firm, Kirkpatrick & Lockhart; Dubelier, who worked under veteran New Orleans district attorney Harry Connick Sr., will work the case full time.
Victoria Toensing, former deputy assistant attorney general in the Reagan administration, said she saw special significance in Starr's use of Adelman.
"It's obvious that Ken Starr feels there is evidence that has to be looked at by a serious prosecutor and has to be managed by someone who had extensive experience." Toensaid said. "Ken's very methodical. He knows how to build a case. You would never see anything shoot-from-the-hip from him.
In addition to practicing law, Adelman teaches evidence courses at Georgetown University Law School. Among his students was Toensing's son, and she praised Adelman as someone who taught because he cared about the law.
A former colleague in the prosecutor's office, E. Lawrence Barcella, said both Adelman and Dubelier were intimately familiar with trying cases in front of Washington juries.
YOU WILL BELIEVE.
DENNIS QUAID, DAVID THEWLIS, SEAN CONNERY, AND DRACO
DRAGONHEART
UNIVERSAL PICTURES AFFAELLA DE LAFRENTUS ROB COHEN DENNIS QUAID
DRAGON HEART DAVID THEWLIS JEFE NYSTELETHAMME DINA MEYER JULIE CHRISTIE SEAN CONNERY DRACO RANDY EDELMAN
INDUSTRIAL LIGHT & MAGIC HENTER HARGETT David NOTMAN PATRICK READ-JOHNSON
PATRICK BEAD-IOHNSON & CHARLES EDWARD-POGUE CHARLES EDWARD-POGUE
RAFFAELLA DE LAFRENTUS ROB COHEN A UNIVERSAL RELEASE
Universal Pictures online at http://www.mca.com
MAY 31st
Parking in the rear
Eyeglasses
"
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown
From the Producers of "JURASSIC PARK" and the Director of "SPEED"
Don't breathe. Don't look back.
TWISTER
The Dark Side of Nature.
WARNER BROS. UNIVERSAL PICTURES
AMBELEN ENTERTAINMENT JAN DE BONT
HELEN HENT HILL PANTON - TWISTER JAMIGERTZ - CARY ELWES
MICHAEL KARN JOSEPH NERCIF JACK N GREEN MARK MANINA
STEVEN SPITTERBERG WALTER PARKES LAURIE WG DONALD GERALD R MOLEN
MICHAEL CRIGHTON ANNE-WARRIE MARTIN
KATHLEEN KENNEDY JAN BRICE MICHAEL CRIGHTON JAN DE BONT
http://www.movies.warnerbros.com/twister
THIS FILM HAS NOT YET BEEN RATED
MAY 10
NATURALWAY
100*
Unique computer accessories
Save paper, money, time and space
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KL Grad
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FARGO
4-45 7-15 0-45 DAILY
:45,7:15,9:45 DAILY
www.rock.chalk.com libetics
DICKINSON
1481800
Dickinson 6 2349 Sawyers 5
Moving to a
$3 50 Adults Before * Hearing * Baby
4 O'D P.M. * Instrument
Set-Sun Fri. Mon-Thurs
Fear *R* 1:40 1:45 1:50 9:40
Celtic Pride *P13* 1:30 4:30 7:20 9:40
Flirting with Disaster *R* 1:30 4:20 7:00 9:40
The Substitute *R* 1:40 4:20 7:00 9:40
Sunset Park *K* 1:50 4:15 7:10 9:50
Mohlandella Falls *K* 1:50 4:15 7:10 9:50
NewPad?
Lawrence Paper Company
Can Solveyour moving hassles
Sturdy boxes for moving and storage. Reasonably priced.
Small quantities. Walk-ins
---
welcome.
Cash & carry
Call 843-8111 or stop by 2500 Lakeview Rd Ask for sales service
Crown Cinema
The Birdcage $ ^{R} $ 5:00,7:15,9:30
BEFORE 6 PM, ADULTS $3.00
(limited to SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841 5191
The Quest PGM13 5:00.730.940
W. Winterbourne PGM13 4:45.720.935
Truth About Cats & Dogs PGM13 4:45.720.950
Primal Fear PGM13 4:45.715.945
James and the Giant Peach PGM13 5:00.710.915
CINEMA TWIN AUL 154.25
31101OWA 841-5191 $1.25
ALL SEATS
$1.25
Broken Arrow $ ^{R} $ 5:00,7:20,9:45
Black Sheep $ ^{\text{PG13}} $ 5:00,7:00,9:20
SHOW TIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
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HIGHEST CASH FOR BOOKS NOW THRU FINALS
Two Convenient Buying Locations
Two Convenient Buying Locations
*Jayhawk Bookstore...Now-Finals*
*Naismith Hall. May 5-Finals*
FREE PARKING AT BOTH LOCATIONS
*Home of Guaranteed Buyback*
*(Purchased from Jayhawk Bookstore This Semester)*
*Up-to-the-Minute Computerized Pricing*
Plus In-store Discount Coupons
Jayhawk Bookstore
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
...at the top of Naismith Hill
1420 Crescent Road■843-3826
Open Mon-Thur 8-6 Fri 8-5 Sat-9-5 Sun 12-4
FREE STORESIDE PARKING
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7A
Witnesses testify con man still alive
Convicted killer hopes evidence will force new trial
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — At a restaurant on the Greek island of Mykonos a door opened, and a familiar figure stepped inside, the witness said.
"I thought to myself, 'God, I know this person,' Connie Gerrard testified.
Levin was supposed to have been murdered in 1984 by members of the Billionaire Boys
Club, a group of ruthlessly ambitious young men who put their money into get-rich-quick schemes
Levin has been sighted at different locations since then, long after he supposedly had died.
The Ron Levin sightings now form the basis of an effort to win a new trial for Joe Hunt, the 36-year-old former leader of the Billionaire Boys who was
the recognition on his face and he kind of paed," she said.
George Gerrard, her husband, recalled that his wife had said to him, "That's Ron Levin."
Nadia Ghaleb, former waitress at a Beverly Hills restaurant, said that one morning in 1987, she had spotted Levin getting into a brown Mercedes convertible on San Vicente Boulevard in Brentwood.
She said she had known Levin in the 1970s and '80s and remembered him as tall, prematurely silver-haired and groomed in trendy clothes.
Robbie Robinson, a former reporter for City News Service, testified that he had been waiting in line to see a movie in Westwood in 1986 when Levin walked up to him and said, "Hi, Robbie."
sentenced to life without parole for ordering Levin's murder.
"This was surprising because I hadn't seen him in 21/2 years and I heard that he was missing." Robbie Robinson
Hunt's lawyers contended that Levin, a con man whose body was never found, had faked his death and framed Hunt. Prosecutors insist Hunt was convicted on firm evidence. They have refused to comment on the sightings, but they have said that they would offer witnesses who would cast doubt on the tales.
Hunt's lawyers have presented these witness stories:
Gerrard said she had recognized Levin in Mykonos because she had been introduced to him before. "When Mr. Levin saw me, his facial expression changed," she said. "I saw
Robbie Robinson
Former City News service reporter
"This was surprising because I hadn't seen him in 2 1/2 years and I heard that he was missing," Robinson said.
Ivan Werner, a funeral director, identified Levin as a mourner at a Westwood funeral in 1887. He said the man had white hair, a close-cropped beard and was impec cably groomed. Werner said he recognized
paper several months later.
The witnesses had not testified at the 1987 trial.
Prosecutors contended that Levin had been killed after swindling Hunt in a $4 million commodities scam.
A Hunt cohort, James Pittman, said on A Current Affair in 1993 that he had shot Levin and helped bury the body in the Angeles National Forest.
But law officers found no trace of the body. The evidence against Hunt included a to-do list in his handwriting, found in Levin's apartment, which said tape mouth, close blinds, handcuff, put gloves on, kill dog.
Thursday, May 2, 1996
Two more attorneys to aid in travel probe
Federal prosecutors will try to sort out White House firings
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The hiring of two veteran federal prosecutors gives new intensity to the Whitewater counsel's investigation of the firing of White House travel office employees later cleared of wrongdoing.
Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr has hired Roger Adelman, a former prosecutor specializing in white-collar crimes, and, on Tuesday, borrowed Eric Dubeler from the U.S. attorney's office.
Starr's action comes four months after the White House suddenly produced a 2 1/2-year-old memo in which an aide, David Watkins, said he discharged the seven career employees at the insistence of Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Under scrutiny is whether that nine-page statement disagrees with Watkins' congressional testimony, which did not assign so substantial a role to the first lady. Clinton has said in writing that she had no role in the firings.
Watkins' lawyer, Bob Mathias, said yesterday that Watkins was cooperating with Starr's investigation.
Prosecutors also have been concerned about the White House's failure to give the late Vincent Foster's detailed handwritten notes on the travel office matter.
Asked if he thought the case would wind up in a courtroom, Mathias said, "Absolutely not. There is absolutely no basis for charging him with any crime."
Six weeks ago, the matter was handed to Starr who already is investigating the complex Whitewater case in Arkansas. Unlike Whitewater, the travel office case is fairly clear cut. Also unlike Whitewater, it occurred after the Clintons had moved into the White House.
Shortly after the first family moved in, the
travel office staff was replaced by people from a Little Rock, Ark., travel firm. In the uproar that followed, five of the seven were given new government jobs. The sixth retired, and Billy Dale, the travel office director, was put on trial on charges of stealing
100
Hillary Clinton
travel office tunnels and later was acquitted. Both newly hired prosecutors have experience with high-profile, federal cases. Adelman's most famous case was the prosecution of John Hinckley, who has been held since 1981 after being found not guilty by reason of insanity in the assassination attempt on President Reagan. Dubelier recently handled the case of Francisco Martin Duran, convicted of firing a gun at the White House in an assassination attempt.
travel office funds and later was acquitted.
Adelman continues to work at his law firm, Kirkpatrick & Lockhart; Dubelier, who worked under veteran New Orleans district attorney Harry Connick Sr., will work the case full time.
Victoria Toensing, former deputy assistant attorney general in the Reagan administration, said she saw special significance in Starr's use of Adelman.
"It's obvious that Ken Starr feels there is evidence that has to be looked at by a serious prosecutor and has to be managed by someone who had extensive experience." Toenensing said. "Ken's very methodical. He knows how to build a case. You would never see anything shoot-from-the-hip from him.
In addition to practicing law, Adelman teaches evidence courses at Georgetown University Law School. Among his students was Toensing's son, and she praised Adelman as someone who taught because he cared about the law.
A former colleague in the prosecutor's office, E. Lawrence Barcella, said both Adelman and Dubelier were intimately familiar with trying cases in front of Washington juries.
YOU WILL BELIEVE.
DENNIS QUAID DAVID THEWLIS SEAN CONNERY IN ORACLE
DRAGON HEART
UNIVERSAL PICTURES RAFFAELLA DE LAUPERTIN ROB COHEN DENNIS QUAI
DRAGON HEART DAVID THEWLIS NETE PONTLETHWAITER DNA METER JULIE CHRISTIE SEAN CONNERY DRACO RANDY EIELMAN
INDUSTRIAL LIGHT & MAUR HESTER HARGEFT DAVID NOTMAN PATRICK READ JOHNSON
PATRICK READ JOHNSON & CHARLES EDWARD POQUE CHARLES EDWARD POQUE
RAFFAELLA DE LAUPERTIN ROB COHEN A UNIVERSAL RELEASE
Universal Pictures online at http://www.mca.com
MAY 31st
Parking in the rear
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass.Downtown
P
From the Producers of “JURASSIC PARK” and the Director of “SPEED”
Don’t breathe. Don’t look back.
TWISTER
The Dark Side of Nature.
WARNER BROS. UNIVERSAL PICTURES
ANDLIN ENTERTAINMENT JAN DE BONT
HELEN HENT BILL PAYTON TWISTER JAMI GERTZ CARY ELWES
MICHAEL KAHN JOSEPH MARCUS JACK N GREEN MARK MANCINA
STENEEN SHELBERG WALTER PARKE LARRIE M DONALD GERALD R MOKEN
MICHAEL CRICHTON ANNE MARIE MARTIN
KATHLEEN KENNEDY IAN BRYCE MICHAEL CRICHTON JAN DE BONT
THIS FILM HAS NOT YET BEEN RATED
MAY 10
NATURAL WAY
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100s
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FARGO
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www.rockchalk.com liberty
DICKINSON
THRIFTY
841-8600
Dickinson 6
23190
Moving to a
Set-Sun Fri. Mon-Thurs.
Fear $ ^{R}$ 1:40 4:15 9:30
Celtic Pride $ ^{R,C}$ 1:30 4:30 7:20 9:40
Flirting with Disaster $ ^{R}$ 1:30 4:20 7:60 9:30
The Substitute $ ^{R}$ 1:40 4:20 7:60 9:30
Sunset Park $ ^{R}$ 1:50 4:15 7:10 9:50
Muhholland Falls $ ^{R}$ 1:50 4:15 7:10 9:50
$3 50 Adults Before * Mealing * Dolby
6:00 P.M. * Impaired Sound
NewPad?
---
Lawrence Paper Company
Can Solve your moving hassles
Sturdy boxes for moving and storage. Reasonably priced.
Small quantities - Walk-ins
welcome.
Cash & carry
Call 843-8111
or stop by 2500 Lakeview Rd.
Ask for sales service
Crown Cinema
The Birdcage $ ^{R} $ 5:00,7:15,9:30
VARSITY
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3 00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3 00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191
The Quest $^{P613}$ 5:00, 7:30, 9:40
Mrs. Winterbourne $^{P613}$ 4:45, 7:20, 9:35
Truth About Cats & Dogs $^{P613}$ 4:45, 7:25, 9:50
Primal Fear $^{R}$ 4:45, 7:15, 9:45
James & the Giant Peach $^{P613}$ 5:00, 7:10, 9:15
CINEMA TWIN A11 5/14/19
3110/OWA 841-5191 $1.25
Broken Arrow $ ^{R} $ 5:00,7:20,9:45
Black Sheep $ ^{Pc13} $ 5:00,7:00,9:20
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Are you prepared?
LSAT GMAT MCAT GRE
We are.
- Limit of 15 Students per Class
- Free Extra Help
- The Best Instructors
♦ Satisfaction Guaranteed
↑
THE PRINCETON REVIEW
Call today! Classes are forming now.
(800) 865-7737
HIGHEST CASH FOR BOOKS NOW THRU FINALS
Two Convenient Buying Locations
□ Two Convenient Buying Locations
Jayhawk Bookstore...Now-Finals
● Naismith Hall...May 6-Finals
FREE PARKING AT BOTH LOCATIONS
Home of Guaranteed Buyback
(If Purchased from Jayhawk Bookstore This Semester)
Up-to-the-Minute Computerized Pricing
Plus In-store Discount Coupons
M
Jayhawk Bookstore
...at the top of Naismith Hill!
1420 Crescent Road 843-3826
Open:Mon-Tue 8-6 Fri-8-5 Sat-9-5 Sun 12-4
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Thursday, May 2, 1996
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It Doesn't Just Look
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--time hunting for books. Pre-order customers also get first 'shot' at used books in stock, which saves you money, up to 50% off new prices. Plus you'll save an additional 5% on your entire purchase if you pick up your pre-order before the first day of classes. Also receive a FREE JBS multi-card good for discounts, easy check writing and low long distance phone rates.
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Arafat deplores closed borders
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Accorded a statesman's welcome by President Clinton, Yasser Arafat lashed out at Israel yesterday for keeping its borders closed to Palestinian workers.
Arafat said that the travel restrictions had deprived 120,000 Palestinians of their jobs and had prevented export of goods.
Arafat also affirmed his confidence the Palestinians will have a state by 2000.
In talks with Israel due to open Sunday, the Palestinian Authority, which controls Gaza and all but one of the West Bank's centers of population, will push for nationhood, with its capital in Jerusalem.
Long despised in the West as a terrorist, Arafat advanced his transition to statesman with an invitation to the White House. In 45-minute private talks, President Clinton agreed to establish a joint commission for studying economic problems of the West Bank and Gaza and promised to help persuade donor countries to make good on promises of almost $2 billion in aid.
Summing up Arafat's visit, White House representative David Johnson said, "The real significant aspect of this meeting is it took place. The extraordinary has become the ordinary."
[Name]
"Our Palestinian people are facing a very serious economic siege," Arafat said. "Israel's military occupation destroyed the infrastructure of Palestine."
Clinton praised Arafat for acting under difficult circumstances to persuade the Palestine Liberation Organization's policy-making body to remove clauses in its 32-year-old charter that mandated an armed struggle to destroy Israel.
Bill Clinton
Arafat spoke warmly of Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres and Peres' predecessor Yitzhak Rabin. He called the assassinated prime minister a cousin.
But Arafat deplored steps taken
Israel's ruling Labor party last week dropped its opposition to a Palestinian state. Clinton did not repeat U.S. policy against statehood or his own stand four years ago that Jerusalem should be recognized as Israel's capital.
"I hope Israel will reduce its collective punishment against our people," he said.
Arafat said Israel should comba terror by complying with U.N. resolutions that demanded its with drawal from land the Arabs had los in the 1967 and 1973 Middle Eas wars.
by Peres to screen out infiltrators, principally sealing of the borders with territory controlled by Arafat's Palestinian Authority.
Arafat had come to the White House twice before to sign accords with Israel. This visit was different. It was to celebrate the April 24 decision by the PLO's Palestine National Council to revoke the PLO charter's armed-strugle clauses.
"I want to applaud the action Chairman Arafat has taken in keeping the commitment he made," Clinton said. "Under difficult circumstances, he kept that commitment."
The Clinton administration has pledged one-half billion dollars in five years to help the Palestinian Authority. So far, $175 million has been delivered.
Parents suspected in disappearance of 10-year-old son
Happy ending for lost boy sours
The Associated Press
CASSVILLE, Mo. — The parents of a mentally disabled boy, who survived three nights in the woods with the help of stray dogs, are suspects in a criminal investigation into the ordeal.
Josh Carlisle, a 10 year old with Down's syndrome, did not wander away from his Cassville home in March, nor did he spend days in the
Ozarks wilderness, as his parents have claimed, Barry County Prosecutor David Cole said yesterday.
"If he was in the woods for 70 hours in the weather conditions that existed at that time, one would expect his injuries to be significantly greater than what he experienced," Cole said.
The boy's parents denied any wrongdoing yesterday.
Josh was found almost unconscious March 9 in a dry river bed by a Springfield, Mo., man on horseback who heard two dogs barking. The two strays later were credited for helping Josh survive during the ordeal. He sustained no serious injuries.
Cole refused to reveal specifics of the investigation conducted by the Missouri State Highway Patrol and offered no motive. He said he did not have enough evidence to bring charges, but called Josh's mother, Johnny Coffey, and his stepfather, Lynn Coffey, suspects of some unspecified crime.
While Cole held his news conference, the Coffees were bowling with now-healthy Josh, unaware of the allegations being made against them.
Reporters were waiting for them when they returned home. Both parents steadfastly denied any involvement in Josh's disappearance.
"We lived through the nightmare of our lives," Johnny Coffey said.
"And we're still putting up with garbage," her husband said.
Johnny Coffey maintained that her son followed two strays out of the yard and disappeared while she was fixing dinner in the kitchen March 6.
"The final outcome is getting our son back," she said.
But that is not the end.
The Coffeys have sold their rights to the story to a Hollywood movie producer for an undisclosed amount. Larry Garrison, of Silvercreek Entertainment in Los Angeles, said he continued to believe the family.
Cole said the investigation would continue, but it is at a stand-still until someone comes forward with more evidence.
Coming September 1, 1996
UDKi
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
interactive
www.kansan.com
For information on how you can be part of the Kansan's new world wide web service, contact: David Teska, Kansan Online Editor, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4810. The UDKi is looking for correspondents from every department and school at KU. We are also looking for html designers and coders.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, May 2, 1996
9A
Australians mourn for massacre victims
The Associated Press
HOBART, Australia — Tiny flames flickered at the base of a simple wooden crucifix yesterday, one candle for each of the 35 people methodically slain by an enraged gunman Sunday as they visited a popular tourist site.
Hundreds of mourners prayed at Hobart's St. David's Anglican Cathedral for the victims, ages 3 to 72. And as residents of Australia grieve for the dead, their anger only grows toward the murder suspect.
Martin Bryant, 28, was badly burned in a house fire he set just before police arrested him. Now, under heavy police guard, he is being treated for burns in the same hospital that is caring for survivors of Australia's worst massacre in modern times.
Hospital officials say people have called to complain that Bryant should not receive any medical treatment. In an act of protest, 20 nurses at the Royal Hobart Hospital called in sick yesterday, said hospital chief executive Lindsay Pyne.
Doctors said Bryant, who was charged with murder at a bedside hearing, might require plastic surgery and could remain hospitalized for another week.
"This is an event that has shaken the core of this country in a way that no individual crime has done
in my lifetime."
John Howard
Australian prime minister
Yesterday's tearful state service started with a minute of silence observed throughout Australia, which includes the island of Tasmania 300 miles southeast of Melbourne.
At 10:30 a.m., streetcars stopped running, financial exchanges suspended trading and schools interrupted classes.
Inside the Anglican cathedral where the service was nationally broadcast live on television, 800
friends, relatives and neighbors of the victims sat with the nation's leaders.
Before the service, Prime Minister John Howard, who has promised to tighten gun controls, visited the death scene, 30 miles south of Hobart.
Bryant is accused of shooting sightseers and staff at the picturesque Port Arthur colonial prison complex on Sunday, using high-powered assault weapons. He then barricaded himself inside a guest cottage with three hostages, setting fire to the house Monday morning.
"This is an event that has shaken the core of this country in a way that no individual crime has done in my lifetime," Howard said.
Police said they captured Bryant when he fled the inn after his clothes caught on fire. The charred bodies of the hostages were found in the building's ashes.
Even tiny children were not spared.
"In an afternoon my whole life has been erased," said Walter Mikac of Hobart, whose wife Nanette and two daughters Alannah, 6, and Madeline, 3, were gunned down.
THE NEWS in brief
Changes in ocean environment threaten whales
The Associated Press
CANBERRA, Australia — The world's whales are more threatened by climate change, ozone depletion and pollution than by whaling, International Whaling Commission chairman Peter Bridgewater said yesterday.
International efforts to revitalize whale populations, such as the establishment of sanctuaries and the IWC whaling ban, has led to a
much healthier general population, Bridgwater said.
Aside from a few nations, such as Japan and Norway, enthusiasm for commercial whaling has waned.
"The biggest danger to whales is ... global change," Bridgewater said, addressing a lecture series on whales at the National Science and Technology Center. "By global change I mean not only climatic change, but also other effects, such
as the ozone hole, and the spread of pollutants."
Bridgewater said evidence of the direct effects of chemical pollutants on whales, dolphins, and porpoises was still circumstantial. The IWC has urged its member countries to focus on researching and monitoring the issue.
An IWC meeting in June will consider a report on the likely impact of climate change.
"The teaching at Johnson County Community College is first-rate. Summer is the perfect opportunity to take a class at JCCC." -John Thorne, Overland Park, Kan.
PETER
"I was attending a large state university when I decided to enroll in a summer class at JCCC," recalls student John Thorne. "I was back in Kansas City for the summer, and I wanted to get a class out of the way so my fall load would be lighter.
"I intended to go back to the university in the fall. But my experience at JCCC was so positive, I decided to stay and finish my first two years here.
"What sold me on JCCC was the fact that I had real instructors here, not teaching assistants and grad students."
JCCC
JCCC
Call us at 469-3803 for more information about summer classes at JCCC Johnson County Community College 12345 College Boulevard Overland Park, Kan. 66210-1299
UNIVERSIDAD DE MADRID
UNIVERSIDAD DE MADRID
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT JOHNSON COUNTY
NATURAL WAY
• NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING • NATURAL BODY CARE
•820-822 MASS. •841-0100·
Clerical Positions
Eight industrial Packers Assembly Warehouse General Labor Lawn Maintenance Production
Light Industrial
Call Ann
(913) 491-0944
11015 Metcall
Call Kris (913)768-1331 Olathe
Applications accepted Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
Call Joanne
(913) 384-6161
6405 Metcalf
Bossler TEMPORARY SERVICE Hix 12
11015 Metcalf, Overland Park, KS
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For all your repair needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
We have Storage!
Call Now 800-722-5456 Pick up from your Dorm/Apt Return to Your Dorm/Apt Climate Controlled Secure Storage as low as $35.00/month
UNIVERSITY SHIPPING & STORAGE We Gladly Accept MC-VISA-AMEX
Oaks Non-Traditional
Non-Traditional Student Organization 864-7137
Non-Traditional Student Organization
864-7137
Come join us @ the O.A.K.S. End of the Semester Celebration
12:30 - 7 on Thursday, May 16th
OLD CHICAGO
2329 IOWA
Congratulations to our new officers !!
Ranita Overton-Wilks, Co-Director David Butler, Treasurer
Pat Howell, Co-Director Mary Ellerd, Coordinator
Good Luck with Finals !
The Summer Option
Won't be in summer school but will be in Lawrence? If you were a KU student in the spring or if you will be in the fall-you can be seen at Watkins this summer. It's the Summer Option. Students not attending Summer Session will be charged on a fee for service basis.
Break Period Hours
Break Period Hours
8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., M-Sa
12:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m., Su
Summer Session Hours
8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m., M-F
8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Sa
12:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m., Su
HEALTH Since 1906 Watkins For KU
GRADUATING?
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---
10A
Thursday, May 2, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Healthy function found in high-fat foods
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Don't hold the mayo, after all. Or the margarine or salad dressing.
Evidence is building that reasonable amounts of these foods — shunned by many because they are so high in fat — can be an important part of a heart-healthy diet. Why? They are good sources of vitamin E.
A major study published in today's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine found that women who get lots of vitamin E-rich food cut their chance of heart disease by almost two-thirds.
Vitamin E "is the most exciting, interesting area in diet and heart disease at the moment. We don't have the final word yet, but it looks like the potential for reduction in risk could be extremely large," said Walter Willett of the Harvard School of Public Health.
Last month, British researchers
reported that daily vitamin E pills seem to reduce heart attacks by 75 percent when taken by people with bad hearts. The new study looked at the effect of vitamin E in food alone.
Lawrence H. Kushi, an epidemiologist from the University of Minnesota, followed 34,486 older women with no outward signs of heart trouble. Just 242 died of heart disease during seven years of follow-up.
Diet seemed to play a big role. The researchers divided the women into five categories, depending on how much vitamin E they consumed in their food. Women who ate the most were 62 percent less likely than those who ate the least to die of coronary heart disease.
Those in the highest consumption group got at least 10 international units of vitamin E per day from food, which is the recommended daily allowance for women. Those
"...people who are eating diets rich in vegetables seem to be better off. These can be foods that are rich in fat, too..." Lenore Katie
infat, too..."
in the lowest group got less than five.
Of course, too much high-fat food of any kind is not a good idea, and Kushi noted that the women who
benefited didn't overdo it. For instance, mayonnaise consumption was considered to be high if they ate it four times a week.
Besides mayo, other good sources of vitamin E include margarine (especially if made from sunflower, safflower, canola or corn oil), salad dressings, vegetable oil, peanut butter, nuts, wheat germ and eggs.
"The public health recommendation falling out of these studies is clearly that people who are eating diets rich in vegetables seem to be better off," said Lenore Kohlmeier, a nutritionist at the University of North Carolina. "These can be foods that are rich in fat, too, and still be desirable."
Indeed, Willett worries that people who think fat and cholesterol are the whole story may do themselves a disservice by switching to such things as fat-free salad dressing.
"One of the unfortunate parts of the fat phobia is that people eliminate major sources of vitamin E in their diets," he said.
Vitamin E is one of a group of nutrients known as antioxidants for their ability to offset the damage done by oxygen to the body. The Minnesota study found no sign that two other such nutrients — vitamins A or C — did any good. Vitamin E supplements also did not appear to reduce the risk, although the researchers cautioned that they did not know enough about how long the women had taken the pills to be sure of this finding.
Other recent studies also discount the benefits of beta carotene, the vegetable form of vitamin A.
In January, the National Cancer Institute released two large studies concluding that beta carotene pills do nothing to ward off cancer or heart disease, as many had hoped, and might actually speed up the
development of lung cancer in smokers.
Those studies, done by doctors from Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, were also published in the latest New England Journal of Medicine.
A strongly worded editorial by E. Robert Greenberg and Michael B. Sporn of Dartmouth Medical School said the two reports "unequivocally rule out the possibility that there is even a slight reduction" in cancer or heart disease from taking beta carotene.
However, the Council for Responsible Nutrition, which represents vitamin makers, raised the possibility that beta carotene blocks the very early stages of cancer development, something the two studies probably would miss.
APARTMENT & SUBLEASE GUIDE
Available now, 1 Bdrm.
in 4 Bdrm. Townhouse.
Furnished, washer/dryer,
garage & on Bus Route.
$250/month + utilities. May Rent is Free.
Call 749-0890
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR SUMMER
Starting Mid-May until August.
Just steps away from Fraser.
Contact Tyr or Lance 841-7433
1 Roommate needed in 2 Bdrm. apt. on Ridge Ct. & 27th.
$215/month + 1/2 utilities.
No dep., pets allowed
Call 842-2508
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
Available May 20. 2 BR
apt.Close to campus. Central A.c.
Water and trash paid. $375 b.o.b
838-3712
Summer Sublease for 2 rooms of an apartment. Furnished, 2 full bath, 2 floors, dishwasher, and AC. $196 per month. Just down the hill from campus. Call Carrie or Karin 842-3805.
PRE-LEASING FOR AUGUST 1, 1996
New & 1 BED ROOM APFTS
Laundry facilities.
841-4935
2 bedroom apartment available Aug.1
Close to campus, only $420, Includes utilities. No pets.
Call 841-4909
1 Large bedroom for female to sub-lease in 2 bedroom apartment.
$200/month + 1/2 utilities.
Close to downtown and campus.
A/C, furnished, large deck.
Call Lisa or Michelle 838-9127
Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold • 749-4226
Campus Place 1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Summer Sublease-Nice, newer 2 bed room apartment on the southwest side of Lawrence, DW, WD, CA and FREE cable, water and trash. Available mid May with rent paid.
$490/month.838-4018
MASTERCRAFT
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
OPEN HOUSE Furnished Apartment Homes
- Mon-Fri 9 am-5 pm Saturday10 am-4 pm Sunday 1 pm-4 pm Studio,1,2,3,&4 Bedrooms & Townhomes
CLOSE TO CAMPUS
Sundance
7th & Florida • 841-5255
Regents Court 19th & Mass • 749-0445
Hanover Place 14th & Mass • 841-1212
AFFORDABLE PRICE QUALITY SERVICE
- Affordable Rates
- Custom Furnishings
- *Laundry Facilities*
- Locally Owned
- Designed for Privacy
- Energy Efficient
- Close to Shopping
- Close to Campus
- Many Built-ins
- Locally Managed
- Private Parking
- Central A/C
*On Site Managers*
*Washer / Dryers *
*available some locations
*Microwaves*
*Pool*
Kansan Classifieds Work !!!! Call 864-4358 for details
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
MOBILIVERSITY
DEPENDENCY
6027 Entry Road
BALMORROW COLLEGE
COLLEGE OF MEDICINE NURSURES
3 BR (2baths), fully equipped kitchen, full size W/D,
separate dining room, private patio or balcony
841-4935
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts
Great Location - Near Campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon-Thurs
12:30-4:30
No appointment needed
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
VILLAGE
SQUARE
apartments
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swi mming pool
• On Bus Route
9th & Avalon 842-3040
meadowbrook
12
How much time did you spend looking for your apartment? Do you want to live in a beautiful centrally located community? If you spent over 1 hour you wasted a lot of your time! MEADOWBROOK is leasing for now and for fail. If you can spare one hour we can solve your housing needs!
Mon - Fri 8-5:30
Sat 10-4
Sun 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
TRAILRIDGE
Check out Trailridge!
Great Studios $355-365/mo.
1, 2, & 3 bedroom apartments
$440-555/mo.
2-4 bedroom townhouses
$575-935/mo.
Call 843-7333 or come by 2500 W.6th
Equal Housing Opportunity
USA NATIONAL OPERATIONS
SQUIRREL
325
Wake Up To CEDARWOOD APTS.
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall.
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)
Be sure to call Pat for the
SUPER! SUMMER! SPECIAL!
43-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave
SQUIRREL
"
AVAILABLE FOR AUGUST 1, 1996
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
Duplexes, Condos, Townhouses, Apartments.
1, 2, or 3 Bedroom Units with Fully Equipped Kitchens.
1 & 2 bathrooms, with or without garage/carports.
Some have free cable TV.
OVER 400 RENTALS
AVAILABLE 841-4935
For Rent Now
June 1 or July 31
1 & 2 BDRMS at
SOUTHRIDGE APTS
Lease through July or for one year plus. Water,Trash,and Basic Cable Paid.
1722 W. 24th
* 1 Bdmr $265 and $275
* 2 Bdmr $360 and $375
Rent before July 1 to take advantage of these economical rates
843-6177 OR
843-1433
CAMPUS LOCATIONS
STILL AVAILABLE
FOR AUGUST!
Chamberlin Court 1 & 2 BR's, microwave, DW, on-site laundry facilities 17th and Ohio
Abbottia Corner
2 BR's, Newly remodeled, full-size washer/dryer, DW, all new carpet,
vinyl & paint
18th & Ohio
Bradford Square
2 & 3 BR's, microwave, DW, formal dining area, on-site laundry facilities,
private patio/sundeck, on KU bus route,
cata accepted
501 Colorado
24-hour Emergency Maintenance On-site Management
CALL TODAY 841-8468
M-F9 a.m.-5 p.m., 1820 W.6th
SAT11 a.m.-3 p.m., 1740 Ohio
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Spring Special
3 BR $ 499
( on select apartments)
Short time Only!
- On the bus route
* Real
- On the bus route
* Pool
* Quiet Location
* 2 bedroom (1 & 1/2 baths)
* 3 Bedroom (2 baths)
* Laundry facilities
* 24 hr. Emergency maintenance
843-4754 (call for appt.)
---
---
COLLEGE FOOTBALL Police have arrested a man in connection with the murder of a Miami football player. Page 3.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THURSDAY, MAY 2. 1996
Women's tennis has advantage
Bid for nationals to begin at home
By Spencer Duncan Kansan sportswriter
This is the time of year when Chuck Menzbach is eager.
He will step onto the Allen Field House tennis courts tomorrow hoping that the Jayhawks can begin a championship run.
As coach of the No. 16 Kansas women's tennis team, that is his only goal.
"We will be playing among an elite group from around the nation," Merzbacher said. "We're ready and anxious to play. We just want to get things going."
Kansas is playing host to the NCAA
Central Region Women's Tennis Championships, which begin tomorrow.
There are eight teams in the regional and the winner gets an automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Tennis Championship, May 16-18 in Tallahassee, Fla.
SECTION B
Kylie Hunt has been waiting for the regions all season long
The Jayhawks enter the tournament as the top seed in the region and the 16th seed nationally.
"My goal and the team's goal is to win the NCAA tournament," Hunt said. "We want to play well and I would really like to win the NCAA's."
Kansas will meet Boise State, the Big Sky Conference champions, in the quarterfinals round at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Allen Field House tennis courts.
having finished the Big Eight Conference season undefeated at 7-0. They also captured the regular season and conference tournament titles for the fifth consecutive time.
Kansas heads into the tournament
Although players say that is a great accomplishment, the team goal is to make some heads turn in the post-season.
"Winning the Big Eight is a goal, but we want to play well in the NCAA tournament," said Bianca Kirchhof. "Playing well in the NCAA is more important than anything else."
Kansas will receive home court advantage because earlier in the year Kansas put in a bid to play host to a tournament. The NCAA committee approved of the bid and chose Kansas.
The Jayhawks hope that playing at home will give them an advantage.
"I think we have earned it."
Merzbacher said of playing at home.
"We are No. 1 in the region. It's also nice because we know the courts and finals are beginning so we do not have to worry about travel."
In the other quarterfinals matchups tomorrow, No. 2 seed Oklahoma will face Colorado at 2 p.m. at Allen Field House.
At the Robinson Center tennis courts, No. 4 seed Kansas State will face Utah at 10 a.m. and No. 3 seed Oklahoma State will play New Mexico at 2 p.m.
Tickets for single day admission are $5 for adults and $3 for students. Weekend passes are $12 for adults and $7 for students.
The semifinals are set to be played at the field house courts on Saturday at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. The finals will be played at 10 a.m. on Sunday at the field house courts.
In case of inclement weather, play
NCAA Regional Women's Tennis Championships
Game played at Allen Field House
Game played at Robinson Center
1 Kansas
10 a.m.
Boise State
10 a.m.
Utah
10 a.m.
4 Kansas State
Championship Match
1 p.m.
3 Oklahoma State
2 p.m.
New Mexico
10 a.m.
Colorado
2 p.m.
2 Oklahoma
Friday, May 3 Saturday, May 4 Sunday, May 5
CHAMPION
Advances to NCAA
Championships
May 18-26
Tallahassee, Fla.
The Jayhawks hope that on Sunday afternoon they will be the only team left on the court.
will be moved to Woodvalley Racquet Club in Topeka.
Andy Rohrback/KAMAR
"We have been working all year to make it to the regionals," said Christie Sim. "We just hope that we can play well and win no matter what the situation is."
Pitching shuts out Cameron
Opipari takes the mound to help Jayhawks end five-game losing streak
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
The search may be over.
After spending all season looking for another consistent starting pitcher behind Josh Belovsky, the Jay hawks seem to
hawks seem to have found their man.
Mario Opipari continued to impress as he and three other pitchers combined on a six-hitter in a 10-3
Baseball
victory against the Cameron Aggies (14-35) yesterday afternoon at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
The win snapped a five-game losing streak for the Jayhawks (22-26), who were just a day removed from their worst loss of the year.
"We needed the confidence we're getting from this game," Kansas second baseman Josh Kliner said. "This is how we need to play."
Opipari (1-2) pitched six solid innings, allowing just three hits while striking out four batters. He allowed just one home run in the fourth inning.
"I was real happy with the way I threw," Oipari said. "I feel improvement each time I throw. Today, I was able to keep the ball low and not make any big mistakes, except for that one guy (the home run)."
Kansas jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the first inning on an RBI double by center fielder Isaac Byrd and an RBI single by Kliner.
Kliner now has 69 RBI, putting him within two of the single-season record.
Right fielder Stephen Matthews began the inning with his second home run of the year.
The Jayhawks added two more in the second.
After starting more than half of the games in the first half of the season, Matthews has started just three of the last 12.
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
But the rust didn't show as he also added a double, finishing the day two for five with two RBI.
"I just have to keep working hard every day,"
Kanaae
Kansas junior Mario Oppiari delivers a pitch in yesterday's 10-3 win against Cameron at Hogund-Maupii.
Stadium. Oplipari pitched six innings and gave up just one run.
"We all threw good. All four of us. That's good to see going into the tournament."
Mario Opiparl
Kansas pitcher
Matthews said. "I have to keep doing the things that got me there. For me as a player, I want what's best for the team. If (the coaches) see something in me and feel I don't need to be in there, that's OK if they think that's what's best for the team."
Josh Winged relieved Opipari in the seventh and gave up two runs, cutting the Jayhawks' lead to 6-3.
Clay Baird, making his first relief appearance this year after 12 starts, and Casey Barrett each pitched a shutout inning for Kansas.
"It was a good outing for Mario," he said. "He threw low, hard strikes. He's getting better at that."
But Kansas scored one more run in the seventh inning and four in the eighth inning, including a pinch-hit, three RBI triple by Josh Dinnick.
Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall was pleased with Oipiarl's performance.
"We all threw good," Oiparii said. "All four of us. That's good to see going into the tournament."
"He probably has the best combination of the fastball with the curve of anybody on the team. I'm sure he has a high confidence level and that comes with success."
He said it would be between Opipari and Belovsky.
Opipari's battery mate Ted Meadows, also noted that ability with confidence is what separates Opipari from the other pitchers.
"Mario's starting to understand what he has to do in terms of adjustments on the mound," Meadows said. "He's keeping the ball down and becoming more consistent with his velocity. A lot of it has to do with ability, but it's also confidence. He has a lot of confidence, not just on the mound, but with life in general."
Randall said Opipair would get a start in the Big Eight tournament but wasn't sure when.
Kansas will be play again on May 4 when it starts a two-game series with Oral Roberts University in Tulsa, Okla.
Iverson exits Georgetown to enter draft
Sophomore star cites family as reason for leaving college
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — All-America sophomore Allen Iverson yesterday became the first player under coach John Thompson to leave Georgetown early for the NBA.
"After carefully weighing my options with coach Thompson and my family, I've decided to enter the NBA draft," Iverson said at a news conference yesterday. "I definitely plan to further my education, but my family needs to be addressed right now."
cause for his younger sister, whom he said was suffering from seizures.
Iverson, who announced for the first time that he is a father of a 1-year-old girl, said he wanted to get a specialist for his younger sister, whom
he said was suffering from seizures. By making the jump, Iverson countered the Georgetown tradition embodied by former Hoyas stars such as Patrick Ewing and Alonzo Mourning, who resisted the temptation to leave school early.
In 24 years under Thompson,72 of 74 players who have stayed four years have received their degrees.
Yesterday, Thompson blamed Iverson's departure on NCAA rules that prohibit the university from giving the sophomore's sister the medical help she needs. "We have the most antiquated set of rules," Thompson said. "There are almost archaic."
T
Allen Iverson
Widespread speculation had surrounded Iverson's future since Georgetown's season ended with a loss to Massachusetts in the East Regional finals in March.
Since early April, Iverson has been driving a $130,000 Mercedes on loan from a dealer, an apparent violation of NCAA rules that would have come under scrutiny if he had decided to return.
Iverson displayed a mastery of the up-tempo game last season, though he struggled occasionally in the half-court offense. Perhaps the nation's quickest player, he averaged 24.7 points, 3.8 rebounds, 5.0 assists and 3.5 steals. He was named the Big East defensive player of the year for the second time.
Iverson, a football and basketball standout in high school, almost lost on on a college career.
In 1993, he and two friends were convicted in connection with a bowling alley brawl in Virginia. Iverson was given a five-year sentence, of which he served four months before then-Gov. L. Douglas Wilder freed him on the condition he complete his high school education. Last July, a state appeals court overturned the convictions, saving that there was insufficient evidence.
On Monday, Massachusetts junior Marcus Camby and high school player Kobe Bryant became the eighth and ninth early entrants for the June 26 draft.
Men's basketball to sign autographs at field house today
For anyone who has ever wanted the Jayhawks' John Hancocks, today is the day.
The Kansas men's basketball team will sign autographs from 5 to 7 on p.m. at Allen Field House.
The autograph session is free and open to the public.
Autograph seekers will be limited to one item, and it is requested that the item is flat.
Softball team splits with Wichita State
Loss in 10 innings closes Big 12 regular season; tournament starts May 10
Kansan staff report
The Kansas softball team was originally scheduled to have almost two weeks off between its final regular-season game and the Big 12 Conference tournament, a long layoff that worried coach Gayle Luedke.
But bad weather during spring break prompted the rescheduled of a doubleheader at Wichita State yesterday.
warmup for the postseason and a little bit more. After a 5-4 victory in the first game, Kansas lost the second game 2-1 in 10 innings, the Jayhawks' third 10-inning game this season and the second in less than a week.
The Jayhawks got their two-game
The doubleheader split was also the Jayhawks' 11th in their last 13 twin bills.
Wichita State matched Kansas' every move early in the first game at the WSU Softball Diamond. After the Jayhawks scored runs in the top of the first and third innings, the Shockers responded with a run of their own in the bottom of the inning.
With the score knotted 2-2, Kansas scored two runs in the fifth inning and one in the sixth, opening up a 5-2 lead.
The Jayhawks got two RBI out of right fielder Sara Holland, who went three for four. That included a triple and a home run, the sophomore's team-leading sixth this season.
Freshman pitcher Sarah Workman came out of the bullpen, picked up her second save of the season and preserved Robinson's 16th victory.
Wichita State mounted a comeback in the seventh inning, scoring two runs and knocking Kansas starting pitcher Beth Robinson from the game.
In the second game, the teams battled through four scoreless innings before the Jayhawks got on the scoreboard in the fifth inning. Holland recorded the RBI as she went three for five in the second
G
game.
But just as in the first game, the Shockers responded to the Jayhawks' run by scoring a run of their own. Wichita State center fielder Bobbie Paull drove in a run on Workman, who started the second game for Kansas.
After the fifth inning, the teams again hit a stretch of four scoreless innings, sending the game into the 10th inning. Paul drove in her second run of the game and dropped Workman's record to 15-12.
The Jayhawks' record fell to 31-25 overall while Wichita State stands at 27-26. Kansas closed out its regular season yesterday and will be in action again at the conference tournament May 10 in Oklahoma City.
---
2B
Thursday, May 2, 1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PRO BASEBALL
American League East Division
W 10 L Pct. GB
New York 13 10 .565 —
Baltimore 14 12 .538 ½
Toronto 12 14 .462 2½
Detroit 9 19 .321 6½
Boston 8 19 .296 7
Central Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cleveland | 17 | 8 | .680 | — |
| Chicago | 15 | 11 | .577 | 2½ |
| Minnesota | 14 | 12 | .538 | 1½ |
| Milwaukee | 12 | 13 | .480 | 1 |
| Kansas City | 9 | 19 | .321 | 9½ |
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Texas 17 10 630 —
Seattle 16 11 630 —
California 13 12 520 3
Oakland 13 12 520 3
Yesterday's Games
Boston 5, Detroit 1
Cleveland 9, Chicago 5
Toronto 9, Milwaukee 3
New York at Baltimore (n)
Minnesota 6, Kansas City 5, 10 innings
Columbia at Oakland (n)
Today's Games
Minwakoo
11:25 a.m.
Milwaukee (Karl 2-1) at Toronto (Hanson 2-4).
California (Abbott 0-4) at Oakland (Joins 0-2),
2:15 p.m.
Texas (Witt 3-1) at Detroit (Lira 1-3), 6:05 p.m.
Chicago (Fernandez 4-1) at New York (Cone
3-1), 6:35 p.m.
Cleveland (Hershiser 2-2) at Seattle (Wolcott
1-3), 9:05 p.m.
Only names scheduled
Tomorrow's Games
Toronto at Boston, 8:05 p.m.
Texas at Detroit, 6:01 p.m.
Milwaukee at Baltimore, 8:05 p.m.
Chicago at Baltimore, 8:05 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota at California, 9:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Seattle, 9:05 p.m.
National League East Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Montreal | 18 | 10 | .643 | — |
| Atlanta | 16 | 12 | .571 | 2 |
| Philadelphia | 16 | 11 | .560 | 2 1/2 |
| New York | 12 | 14 | .461 | 5 |
| Florida | 11 | 17 | .393 | 7 |
W L Pct. GB
Chicago 14 14 14 .500 —
Houston 14 14 1.500 —
Pittsburgh 13 14 4.81 ½
St. Louis 12 16 4.29 2
Cincinnati 12 17 3.46 4
W L Pct. GB
San Diego 17 10 .630 —
San Francisco 14 12 538 2½
Los Angeles 14 14 500 3½
Colorado 11 14 440 5
Yesterday's Games
Tonight's Game
Chicago 9, St Louis 1
Montreal 4, New York 0, 1st game
New York 0, Montreal 0, 2nd game
Houston 3, Atlanta 0
Pittsburgh 4, Cincinnati 1
Philadelphia 6, Florida 5
Colorado at Los Angeles (n)
*an francisco at San Diego (n)*
Philadelphia (Grace 4-0) at Florida (Brown 2-3),
6.05 p.m.
(Crown)
Tomorrow's Game
New York at Chicago, 2:20 p.m.
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh, 8:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 6:40 p.m.
Montreal at Houston, 7:05 p.m.
Florida at Colorado, 8:05 p.m.
St. Louis at San Diego, 9:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at San Francisco, 9:05 p.m.
PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League Playoffs
Conference Semifinals
Tonight's Games
Florida at Philadelphia 6:30 p.m.
Tonight's games
Florida at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m.
Chicago at Colorado, 8 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m.
St. Louis at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.
Saturday's Games
Florida at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.
Chicago at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Florida at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.
Chicago at Atlanta, 9 p.m.
Sunday's Games
N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 2 p.m.
St. Louis at Detroit, 2 p.m.
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
Playoffs
First Round
(Best-of-5)
Yesterday's Games
New York 81, Cleveland 76, New York wins series 3-0
Chicago 112, Miami 91, Chicago wins series
3-0
Utah at Portland, (n)
San Antonio at Phoenix, (n)
Tonight's Game
Indiana at Atlanta, 6 p.m. (TNT)
L.A. Lakers at Houston, 8:30 p.m. (TMT)
Seattle at Sacramento, 9:30 p.m. (TBS)
Chicago at Miami, 7 p.m., if necessary (TNT)
Cleveland at New York, TBA, if necessary
San Antonio at Phoenix, TBA, if necessary
Tomorrow's Games
Houston at L.A. Lakers, TBA, if necessary
Saturday's Games
TV
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Thursday. (schedule subject to change and-or blackouts.)
SPORTS WATCH
(All times Central)
HURSDAY, MAY 2.
THURSDAY, P.M. 2.
ESPN — NHL Playoffs, conference semifinals. Florida at Philadelphia, game No. 1.
WGN — Major League Baseball,
Chicago White Sox at N.Y. Yankees
7 p.m.
TNT — NBA Playoffs, Indiana at Atlanta, First Round - Game 4.
7:30 p.m.
■ ESPN2 — Cycling, Tour DuPont,
stage No. 2, at various sites (same-
day)
■ ESPN2 — NHL Playoffs, conference semifinals, Chicago at Colorado, game No. 1
TNT — NBA Playoffs, L.A. Lakers at Houston, First Round - Game 4.
8:30 p.m.
TBS — NBA Playoffs, Seattle at Sacramento, First Round - Game 4.
■ ESPN2 — Cycling, Tour DuPont,
stage No. 2, at various sites (samedi lace)
ESPN — Cycling, Tour DuPont, stage No.2, at various sites (delayed tape)
11 p.m.
11:30 p.m.
■ ESPN — Major League Soccer, Columbus at Kansas City (delayed tape)
ESPN2 — Men's Division NICAA Volleyball tournament, Hawaii vs. Penn State, at Los Angeles (delayed tape)
(NBC)
Sacramento at Seattle, TBA, if necessary 'NBC)
Miami at Chicago, TBA, if necessary
Atlanta at Indiana, TBA, if necessary
New York at Cleveland, TBA, if necessary
Phoenix at San Antonio, TBA, if necessary
Portland at Utah, TBA, if necessary
Sunday'a Games
TRANSACTIONS
Wednesday's Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
NATIONAL BASEBALL HALL OF FAME AND MUSEUM—Named John Ralph assistant director of public relations and promotions.
BALTIMORE ORILES—Signed RHP Tom Edens to a contract with Rochester of the international League and placed him on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to April 28.
American League
CALIFORNIA ANGELS—Reassigned C Todd Takayoshi from Vancouver of the Pacific Coast League to Lake Elsinore of the California League; INF Tony Moeder and RHP Kyle Sebech from Midland of the Texas League to Lake Elsinore of Edible Christian from Lake Elsinore to Midland.
NEW YORK YANKEES—Released OF Dion James. Recalled RHP Jim Mecir from Columbus of the International League.
TEXAS RANGERS—Purchased the contract of RHP Jef Russell from Oklahoma City of the American Association. Optioned RHP Rick Helling to Oklahoma City. Transferred RHP Chris Nichting from the 15-day to the 60-day disabled list.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
DALLAS MAVERICKS—Announced the sale of 67 percent of the team to a group of investors led by Ross Perot Jr. and David McDavid. Announced that Dick Motta, coach, will give up the coaching job but remain with the organization as a consultant.
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS—Named Dave Coskey vice president of communications; Jodi Silverman director of public relations; Keith Green assistant director of community relations; Nina McErioy assistant director of public relations; and Patti Butter communications assistant
WASHINGTON BULLETS—Named Wes Unseld vice president and general manager.
National Football League
NEW YORK JETS—Walved DT Keith Dray-
BRITISH COLUMBIA LIONS—Signed LB Andy Mason, LB Jason Holanda and DL Jeff
Canadian Football League
National Hockey League
HOCKEY
NHL—Fined Tampa Bay Lightning general manager Phil Esposito an undisclosed amount for foul language directed at a reporter.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS—Announced the retirement of RW Brett Ihtros
U.S. SCOCER -Named Bobby Howe
national coordinator of coaching education
SOCCER
National Professional Soccer League
NPSL—Suspended Lee Tschantret of the Kansas City Attack and find him 2,500 for his conduct following Games 4 and 6 of the NPSL Finals; suspended Jeff Rogers of the Kansas City Attack for three games and find him $1,500 for his conduct following Game 6 of the NPSL Finals; suspended Brian Haynes of the Kansas City Attack for two games and find him
$1,000 for his conduct following Game 6. Fined Goran Hurak and John Linniah $100 for their conduct following Game 6 of the NPSL Finals. Fined the Kansas City attack an undisclosed amount for failing to comply with league rules regarding game conduct. Suspended Matt Knowles for three games and fined him $1,500 for election and conduct during a game on April 21.
COLLEGE
DEPAUL—Announced Jermaine Watts,
sophomore basketball guard, has been dismissed from school after being charged with drug possession.
DREXEL-Named Katie Curry women's assistant basketball coach.
DUKE—Named Elizabeth Tchou field hockey coach.
GEORGETOWN—Announced that sophomore basketball guard Allen Iverson will forego his remaining eligibility and enter the NBA Draft.
JOHNS HOPKINS—Elevated the women's lacrosse program from Division III to Division I.
KINGS POINT—Announced the resignation of Craig Fink, sports information director. Named Kim Robinson interim sports information director, Brian Hughes assistant football coach, and Jay Fazande and Terry Pfeuter men's assistant basketball coaches.
MINNESOTA—Dismissed Rafael Cooper, sophomore running back, from the team "violating team rules regarding personal property rights." Suspended Tony Wynn, freshman split end, and Spergon Wynn, freshman quarterback, for one game for their roles in Cooper's
PURDEU—Named Caroly Peck and Pam Stackhouse women's assistant basketball
SOUTHERN OREGON STATE—Announced the reinstablishment of the women's tennis program and named Dr. Sally Jones coach.
VANDERBILT—Named Ron Bargatze men's assistant basketball coach.
WRIGHT STATE—Announced the resignation of Kathy Warner, women's assistant basketball coach.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Wednesday's College Baseball Scores EAST
Army 9, N.Y. Tech 3
Bentley 20, Bryant 17
Binghamton St. 9-4, Marywood 0-0
Brandela 3, Worthown 0
Caldwell 13, Jersey City St. 6
Coast Guard 8, Nichols 5
Connecticut 7, Brown 1
Drexel 14, Fairleigh Dickinson 13
E. Connecticut 12, W. Connecticut 1
E. Nazarene 10, Mass. Martime 3
Fairfield 5, Providence 2
John Jay 14, Stevens Tech 6
Princeton 19, Lehigh 3
Staten Island 4, Keane 1
Staten Island 4, Keane 1
Trinity, Conn., 7, Westfield St. 6
W. New England, 4, Framingham St. 2
SOUTH
Centenary 7, Texas-Arington 1
David Lipipscomb 7-7, Martin-Methodist 0-1
Davidson 10, N.C.-Ashville 2
Delta St. 7, Jackson St. 0
E. Kentucky 9, Louisville 8
Eckerd 4, Embry Riddle 1
George Mason 9, Maryland 6
Georgia 8, Mercer 4
Georgia Southern 12, Georgia St. 5
Kansas 10, Cameron 3
Lamburb 3-1, Cumberland, Tenn. 2-1
Liberty 13, Virginia Tech 10, 11 innings
Limestone 6, N.C. Charlotte 5
Memphis 9, Mississippi 8
Miami 12, Lymn 4
Mississippi St. 4, Southern Miss. 1
N. Iowa 6-8, Creighton 2-12
Pikeville 6, Union, Ky. 4
SE Louisiana 10, New Orleans 9
Shorter 4-0, Berry 2-1
South Alabama 12, Nicholls St. 8
South Carolina 9, Furman 8
Spring Hill 2, Auburn-Montgomery 1
Tennessee 7, Austin Peay 6
Troy St. 9, Auburn 2
Winnorth 11. Wake Forest 10
MIDWEST
Aurora 17, North PARK 4
Anderson, ind. 12-1, Manchester 0-8
Bowling Green 23, Cincinnati 9
Windling 14, Napoleon 5
Calvin 9, Grand Valley St. 8
Cent. Iowa 10-3, Grinnel 1
Cornell, Iowa 20-1, Mount Clare 5-11
E. Michigan 10, Oakland, Mich. 4
Fort Hays St. 7, Sterling 0
lowa 22, Ammose 5
lowa 16-14, Kansas St. 8-8
North Central 15, Benediceta 4
lowa 6-8, Creighton 2-12, 4 game, 7
nnings
SOUTHWEST
St. Francis, III, 11, Lewis 5
St. Xavier, IV, Timothy Christian 2, 10 innings
Sagina Val. St. 11, Adrian 9
S. Illinois 8, E. Illinois 6
Wichita St. 8-6, SW Missouri St. 1-5
Wis. Parkside 6-1, Lakeland 4-7
Dallas Baptist 5, McMurry 5
Okahoma 2-6, Missouri 17-1
Sul Ros St. 6, Heward Payne 2
SW Texas St. 3, Texas AM2 8
FAR WEST
Brigham Young 10, Air Force 9
San Jose 16, Hawthorn St. 3
Wyoming 20-13, Metro St. 1-8
TOURNAMENTS
MAC Championships
First Round
Kings, Pa. 21, Albright 4
Compiled from The Associated Press.
COME PARTY ON THE PATIO
Friday, May 3 WE'RE ON THE PATIO!
The LAZER will have a live remote from 10-Midnight Giving away a Sony Discman & other prizes Register for the GRAND PRIZE GIVEAWAY!
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Also drop by Johnny's in K.C. 119th and Metcalf, and Shawnee at Shawnee Mission Pkwy & Pflumn
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UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Thursdav. May 2.1996
3B
Massimino's magic makes return
Coach is heading to Cleveland State
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — Rollie Massimino will go to the struggling basketball program of Cleveland State for another chance to rekindle his coaching magic.
Massimino, 61, had success at Villanova, but faltered as Jerry Tarkanian's successor at UNLV. He left UNLV under unseemly circumstances and is returning to coaching after a two-year absence.
"I felt I wanted to coach," Massimino said Tuesday as he was introduced as the successor to Mike Boyd, who resigned March 25. "It
didn't make any difference what it took. I wanted to be part of young people."
Claire Van Ummersen, Cleveland State president, introduced him and gave him a green and white Vikings baseball cap. Massimino briefly wore it, then took it off.
Massimino signed a four-year contract with Cleveland State for a base salary of $100,000 a year. He also has the opportunity to run a basketball camp and do radio and television work.
He said he will disclose all aspects of the contract, an important consideration after a secret, supplemental contract with the UNLV athletic department helped expedite his departure from the Runnip 'Rebels.
the colorful Massimino won the NCAA tournament in 1985 at Villanova, where he had an 18-year record of 357-241. His squad pulled off one of the biggest upsets in tournament history when it defeated Georgetown 66-64 in the final game.
Massimino replaced Tarkanian at UNLV in 1992, but left in 1994 with a $1.8 million buy-out amid fan displeasure about his slower-paced basketball and the disclosure of the supplemental contract.
He was 36-21 in two seasons with the Rebels.
Boyd was 79-88 in six seasons at Cleveland State. The other finalists to replace him were Bob Wetlich, former coach at Mississippi, Texas and Florida International; former Southern California coach Charlie Parker; and former California coach Lou Campanelli.
Cleveland State was 5-21 last sea
son and has made only one trip to the NCAA tournament.
Massimino said that it would take time to rebuild the Cleveland State program, but
his experience at Villanova might be a model.
His initial goals are to win the Midwestern Collegiate Conference, go to a major tournament and after that he can only speculate.
John Konstantinos, Cleveland State athletic director, said Massimino met the criteria the school was seeking: head coaching experience, a clean NCAA record and the ability to excite players and fans.
"The man is a proven winner," Konstantinos said. "He has coached and won at every level."
Dumas beats girlfriend is arrested for assault
The Associated Press
DALLAS — Dallas Mavericks guard Tony Dumas faces assault charges after police say he beat and punched his pregnant girlfriend.
Police filed a Class A misdemeanor assault charge against Dumas stemming from an
Incident on Friday. The charge carries a penalty of up to a year in jail and a $4,000 fine.
Police said Dumas repeatedly hit her in the face with the back of his
According to police reports, Dumas, 23, was driving his girlfriend, Georgia Foy, 25, on Interstate 635 in North Dallas about 4 a.m. when the two began arguing.
---
Tony Dumas
hand and punched her in the torso.
Foy, who is four months pregnant, then dove from the car, hitting her head on the ground, police said.
Dumas allegedly stopped the car, got out and dragged her on her knees back into the car.
"She was just trying to get away from him," Detective William Everett said.
After the incident, Foy called police and sought medical attention for a black eye, cuts and scraps. police said.
Mavericks spokesman Kevin Sullivan said the team had no comment on the incident.
Sullivan said the team is still investigating the incident to uncover all the facts.
Police records show that Foy has filed no previous complaints against Dumas.
Dumas' lawyer, Danny Garner, said he has spoken briefly to his client about the incident.
"I hope we can get this thing resolved without any further legal action," he said.
The assault charge is Dumas' second brush with the law this year.
On Jan. 14, Dumas was arrested and charged with falsely reporting to police that his car had been stolen.
Police say he filed the report as a cover for fleeing the scene of an accident earlier that night. The false report charge against him is pending.
Dumas was a first-round draft pick by the Mavericks in 1994 after leaving the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
Dumas' lack of consistency kept him from earning more playing time this season. He played in 67 games, averaging 11.6 points.
DePaul player dismissed for drug possession
The Associated Press
CHICAGO - Jermaine Watts — who led DePaul in scoring, assists and steals as a sophomore last season — has been dismissed from the school after being charged with drug possession, according to a newspaper report.
The 6-foot-1 guard was dismissed for violating school policy prohibiting students from possessing illegal substances, the Chicago Sun-Times reported yesterday.
"We can't comment on whether he was dismissed or not," said DePaul sports information director John Lanctot, citig privacy laws.
Cook County prosecutors charged Watts with one count of possession of a controlled substance on April 19 after a package containing marijuana worth an estimated $3,000 was mailed to his dormitory room.
DePaul's vice president of student affairs, James Doyle, said only that the school had taken action on the matter, adding that the school was not bound by the same rules of evidence as the courts.
The player from Tuscon, Ariz. averaged 16.2 points, 5.3 steals and 2.6 assists per game this past season.
Watts can appeal the school's decision through a hearing process, but has not yet asked to do so, the SunTimes reported.
Watts is scheduled to appear in court for a preliminary hearing on June 11, state's attorney's office representative Suzanne Rollier said yesterday.
Domestic violence led to Miami murders
The Associated Press
Ex-boyfriend arrested for deaths of woman Hurricane linebacker
apartment last month.
MIAMI — A 24-year-old man was arrested in the murder of a University of Miami football player and a woman friend found dead in a campus
Labrant Deshawn Dennis, described as an exboyfriend, was charged in the killing of Timwanika Lumpkins and reserve linebacker Marlin Barnes.
The murder was called a case of domestic violence by school president Edward Foote today.
Dennis was arrested at his Miami home Tuesday night after police received a Crime Stoppers tip. A shotgun believed to be the murder weapon was found in a drainage culvert off Interstate 95 north of Miami.
The victims were found the morning of April 13 by Barnes' roommate in a murder that raised tensions on this quiet campus in Coral Gables, just south of Miami.
Dennis, held in Dade County jail, was charged with two counts of first-degree murder, burglary and criminal mischief.
Barnes, raised in a Miami housing project, maintained good grades and trained hard enough to be selected "most improved player" last season. He was expected to compete for a starting position.
Keep It Clean
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Sell Your Books
New Book Price (example) $50.00
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Cost of using a textbook $9.87
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Buyback prices vary based on if the book will be used next semester or if a new edition will be available.
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CINCO DE MAYO
IT'S FIESTA TIME!
SAY OLE' ON THE 5TH OF MAY FOR OUR SOUTH OF THE BORDER SPECIALS!
Enjoy tacos, tamales, fajitas, enchiladas and MUCHO MAS!
(that's "much more" for you gringos)
*specials vary day to day*
Drinks: Mexican Beers $1.50
Mexican Beers $1.50
Margaritas $2.00
Cuervo Shots $1.00
Pina Coladas $2.00
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Sun.- Mexican Music
Sat.- 9:00 PM Fun Karaoke
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Also featuring:
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SIBUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
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Sponsors:
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---
4B
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, May 2,1996
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NFL
Bill would restrict franchises
New law could require six-month move notice
WASHINGTON — Tennessee's junior senator is threatening to squash an attempt to compensate cities deserted by their NFL, NBA or NHL teams.
The Associated Press
On Tuesday, the same day NFL owners approved the switch of the Houston Oilers to his state. Sen. Fred Thompson vowed to use all the muscle he can muster to make sure a bill now in the House would not make it to the Senate.
The owners' vote allows the Oilers to move to Nashville, Tenn., once a 65,000-seat stadium opens there in 1988.
The legislation would require football, hockey or basketball teams to give their current home-towns at least six months notice before a move.
Other bills on franchise free agency have been introduced in the Senate, but do not duplicate the provisions of Hoke's bill, which Thompson condemned as irresponsible.
It also would force those leagues to give an
The House Judiciary Committee has approved the bill, sponsored by Rep. Martin Hoke, R-Ohio.
"I will make use of every vehicle available in the Senate to prevent this from being approved," Thompson, a Republican, said in a news release.
"Congress has no business whatsoever meddling in this, and I will do everything in my power to kill it."
Hoke's response: "Apparently Fred's found himself a new scriptwriter — the NFL."
"This bill is as important for Nashville as it is for Houston, because it's the insurance policy that will prevent Bud Adams doing to Nashville what he's already done to Houston," Hoke said. "It doesn't ensure that a community will always have a team, but it does ensure that a community will always be dealt with fairly."
Hoke's legislation is high enough on the NFL's radar screen to merit a mention by the owners.
Hoke's bill would be retroactive to Aug. 1, to include Houston.
NFL Commissioner Paul Taglabue said Tuesday that the Oilers-to-Nashville deal was contingent on whether the legislation was passed by Congress.
That provision had been fought in committee by Rep. Ed Bryant, R-Tenn., but he failed to sway his committee colleagues, and was defeated 22-8 on changing the bill's effective date.
"The last time I checked, Congress isn't in the business of guaranteeing Detroit that General Motors will stay there," he said. "We certainly don't need to start experimenting with such a misguided policy by meddling with the business affairs of professional sports franchises."
Yesterday, Bryant issued a written statement echoing Thompson's kill-the-bill promise.
Voters to decide fate of Oilers
The Associated Press
Nashville could gain team if referendum wins approval
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Dick Darr knew he had to set an example, so he went to the polls early, like a politician hoping for
a photo opportunity on election dav.
To Darr, this was just that, although the balloting on the Houston Oilers' referendum would last nine days.
"We had a meeting at 10
Early voting, which allows Nashville's 300,000 registered voters to vote at their convenience at one of five locations, started April 17 and ends
a. m. that morning, and how can you tell people to get out and vote if you haven't?" said Darr, chairman of the "Yes for Nashville" campaign.
A
today.
Voters will decide if Nashville should issue $80 million in bonds to help finance a $292 million relocation deal that would bring the NFL team to the city for the 1998 season.
He admitted that having an NFL franchise in town may hurt the Opryland theme park because people have only a limited number of dollars to spend on entertainment.
Several businesses, including Opryland USA, have bused employees to the polling locations to vote during the past two weeks. Gaylord Entertainment Co., which owns Opryland, transported workers twice a day, three days a week, said spokesman Alan Hall.
"We certainly feel it would benefit Nashville tremendously to have the NFL here. As to whether it benefits us is kind of a tossup," Hall said.
"We did a voter registration drive up until the date that could no longer happen," Hall said. "Now we're busing people to the voter center and trying to encourage our employees to be involved in this issue."
Election officials expect a strong voter
turnout, though the early voting has been lighter than projected. Preliminary figures through last weekend show that 19,719 people had taken advantage of the early-voting period.
Registrar-at-large Michael McDonald said he thinks between 28,000 and 30,000 will vote in the early period, down from a projected 35,000 to 45,000.
"But for the actual election May 7, I feel certain we will have better than 50 percent, maybe a little bit better than that," McDonald said. "These early voting numbers still are impressive compared to the number of people who voted early in the presidential primary."
The referendum is the last step toward getting the team. State and local governments have approved financing, and NFL owners authorized the move at a meeting Tuesday in Atlanta.
The Oilers would be the first major league franchise not only in Nashville, but in Tennessee.
Those opposed to taxpayer support of the team were able to force the referendum by getting the required number of signatures on a petition this spring.
Ariadne
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DAY ON THE HILL
THE POSTER PRESENTS
WARNING: POSSESSION AND/OR
CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES AND DRUGS ARE NOT PERMITTED.
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
the Floyds (formerly Floyds Funk Revival),Paw Stick, and Justin Case
Also featuring:
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
STUDENT
SENATE
West Campanile Hill Noon to about 6pm Saturday, May 4
AURH • BOCO • Ellsworth Hall • GSP-
Corbin Hall • Vanguard Airlines•
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Now thru Commencement
Gracest 96
Jayhawk Bookstore still has all the necessary regalia for that memorable stroll down the Hill.
• Caps
• Gowns
• Tassles
• Personalized Announcements
• Complete Land of Claire
• NV Hotel Jones
CHECK OUT OUR STORE AT THE TOP OF NAISMITH HILL!
1420 Crescent Road - 843-3826
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
only at the top of Naismith Hill!
1420 Crescent Road - 843-3826
KU
Holiday Inn
Welcomes KU 96 Graduation Guests to Join us in the Regency Ballroom Sunday, May 19, 1996 10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
For Our Special Graduation Brunch
Omelette Bar-Cooked to Order Pasta Bar Station Unlimited Salad Bar Baked Rigatoni Stuffed Chicken Breast
Oven Roasted Pork Loin with Hunter Sauce
Roast Beeef Forestiere
Baked Cod Nicoise
Vegetable Medley
Green Beans Almondine
Parsley Potatoes
Assorted Pastries to include Pies, Cakes & Mousses Rolls & Butter Coffee, Tea & Decaf $12.95 Plus Tax Reservations Suggested - Call 913/841-7077
And don't forget our
Mother's Day Brunch
Sunday May 12
10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
200 McDonald Drive • Lawrence, KS 66044
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, May 2, 1996
5B
Horoscopes By Linda C. Black
✩
Today's Birthday (May 2). Finish up old stuff and set goals in May. Buy a loved one an expensive gift in June. Put down roots in August. Work through September and form a partnership in October. Choose carefully; this union will last. Find a treasure in December. Go back to a favorite old place around the first of the year. Make a career decision in February. There's a test in April.
Rating System: 10 is the easiest day, 0 is the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 4 — Financial matters need to be handled now. Don't put them off any longer or they'll cost you even more. Be careful if you're taking out a loan. The other guy's advantage is hidden in the fine print.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 6 — Jump into an old job this morning and finish it up. You'll get a new burst of energy this afternoon. The competition gets fiercer then, too. Don't worry, you may win through sheer bravado.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) — Today is a 4
— Somebody you've been stalling is starting to
get upset. Save your errands for this weekend;
you need to concentrate now. This afternoon
will be horrible if you don't get an overdue job
done this morning.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 10 — Your numbers are on the rise again — life's getting easier. An old friend has a serious proposition. If you want a forever commitment, ask for it this evening. Don't let a stranger spoil your plans.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 5 — Things grind to a standstill. Consider all your options carefully before proceeding. An older person is pushing for a decision, but you need to make sure your interests are protected.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 10— You're on a roll. A long-distance call could bring what you need. Take a bold move toward goals you and your sweetheart share this afternoon. Watch out for a bizarre development tonight.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Today is a 4 — You're not much of a businessperson, but you can learn. Do that. If you aren't wise about your money, you'll lose it to somebody who is. If you need help, ask a trustworthy Taurus.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7 — You're strong today, but the other guy's even stronger. This could be one tough poker hand. Play it close to the vest. You'll be well advised to go along with your partner's decli-
sion tonight.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 3 — You're under almost too much pressure. If your sense of humor's wearing thin, you know you're in trouble. Hold out a little while longer. It'll get slightly worse, unfortunately, before it gets better.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Your friends give you the support you need to turn a tough job not child's play. Get that handled early, so you have plenty of time for love tonight. You and your sweetie need to make a big decision.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.18) — Today is a 5 — You have decisions to make, affecting your home, your career, or both. Choose carefully, but don't procrastinate much longer. Your options diminish soon.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 10
— A distant contact is very valuable. Skills you're learning will help you make the right connection. A sibling's or neighbor's expertise helps you push past whatever was in your way.
Go for it!
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
DILBERT $ ^{\circ} $
By Scott
Adams
AFTER THE MERGER, WE'LL REDUCE STAFF IN AREAS THAT ARE REDUNDANT.
A judge is speaking to the two men.
I HOPE THE EMPLOYEES OF THIS COMPANY WILL BE EVALUATED FAIRLY COMPARED TO THOSE IN THE BUYING COMPANY.
WE ALREADY HAVE A DALD GUY.
DOES YOUR STEAL OFFICE FURNITURE, TOO?
The Etc.
Shop
TM
928 Mass. 843-0611
Rey-Ban
BANQUET & LINE
HOLIDAYS ONLY
MAXIMIZE YOUR INCOME
Earn money to buy your dreams. Career opportunity with one of country's fastest growing telecommunications co. No degree required, only motivations. Full or part time.
[800] 689-3931 ex. 0610
[800] 785-2524 ex. 1381
EXCEL
Kansan Classifieds get results. Fast!
West Coast Saloon
West Coast Saloon
Come in and enjoy
25¢ Pool tables
and late night grill.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
2222 Iowa
841-BREW
Bucky's Hamburgers
Double Hamburger
Double Cheeseburger
Root Beer Float
99¢
$1.24
99¢
Limited Time offer
9th & Iowa 842-2930
Mac OS
Get up to a
$500 rebate
when you buy a Power
Macintosh - 200 series
computer with a qualifying
Apple display and or printer
Mac OS
Get up to a $500 rebate when you buy a Power Macintosh 200 series computer with a qualifying Apple display and or printer.
Power to the Macs
$2372
PowerMac 7200 Bundle
Ppower Mac 7200/75
8/500/CD
Apple Mutli-Scan 15" Display
AppleExtended Keyboard
Color Stylewriter 2400
GeoportTelecomAdapter
Versatilities
10pk 3M HD Disks
Jayhawk Mousepad
Get up to a $500 rebate when you buy a Power Macintosh 200 series computer with a qualifying Apple display and/or printer.
Third Floor Burge Union
Get up to a $500 rebate
when you buy a
Power Macintosh Computer
with a qualifying Apple
display and new printer.
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union technology center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Support
Burge Union • Level 3 • 913-845-5000
$2372
PowerMac 7200 Bundle
"Unsurpassed since 1993"
Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Massachusetts 832-8228
"Unhurried since 1993"
Total Fitness Athletic Center
Summer Extravaganza
20% off Summer Special
832-0818 ASSESSMENT
Ask about Summer/Fall
Discount Package
Corner of 27th & Iowa
Drink up cowboy!
SPECIALS
THURSDAY
$1 anything
FRIDAY (LADIES NIGHT)
quarter draws
$1 big beers
$1 well drinks
SATURDAY
$1 anything
Cedillace RANCH
Country Western Bar
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, May 2, 1996
5B
星
Horoscopes By Linda C. Black
By Linda C. Black
Today's Birthday (May 2). Finish up old stuff and set goals in May. Buy a loved one an expensive gift in June. Put down roots in August. Work through September and form a partnership in October. Choose carefully; this union will last. Find a treasure in December. Go back to a favorite old place around the first of the year. Make a career decision in February. There's a test in April.
Rating System: 10 is the easiest day, 0 is the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 4 — Financial matters need to be handled now. Don't put them off any longer or they'll cost you even more. Be careful if you're taking out a loan. The other guy's advantage is hidden in the fine print.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 6 Jump into an old job this morning and finish it up. You'll get a new burst of energy this afternoon. The competition gets fiercer then, too. Don't worry, you may win through sheer bravado.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) — Today is a 4 — Somebody you've been stalling is starting to get upset. Save your errands for this weekend; you need to concentrate now. This afternoon will be horrible if you don't get an overdue job
done this morning.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 10 — Your numbers are on the rise again — life's getting easier. An old friend has a serious proposition. If you want a forever commitment, ask for it this evening. Don't let a stranger spoil your plans.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 5 — Things grind to a standstill. Consider all your options carefully before proceeding. An older person is pushing for a decision, but you need to make sure your interests are protected.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 10— You're on a roll. A long-distance call could bring what you need. Take a bold move toward goals you and your sweetheart share this afternoon. Watch out for a bizarre development tonight.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Today is a 4 — You're not much of a businessperson, but you can learn. Do that. If you aren't wise about your money, you'll lose it to somebody who is. If you need help, ask a trustworthy Taurus.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7 — You're strong today, but the other guy's even stronger. This could be one tough poker hand. Play it close to the vest. You'll be well advised to go along with your partner's decision tonight
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 3 — You're under almost too much pressure. If your sense of humor's wearing thin, you know you're in trouble. Hold out a little while longer. It'll get slightly worse, unfortunately, before it gets better.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Your friends give you the support you need to turn a tough job not child's play. Get that handled early, so you have plenty of time for love tonight. You and your sweetie need to make a big decision.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.18) — Today is a 5
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 5 — You have decisions to make, affecting your home, your career, or both. Choose carefully, but don't procrastinate much longer. Your options diminish soon.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 10 — A distant contact is very valuable. Skills you're learning will help you make the right connection. A sibling's or neighbor's expertise helps you push past whatever was in your way. Go for it!
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
DILBERT® By Scott Adams
AFTER THE MERGER,WE'LL REDUCE STAFF IN AREAS THAT ARE REDUNDANT.
I HOPE THE EMPLOYEES OF THIS COMPANY WILL BE EVALUATED FAIRLY COMPARED TO THOSE IN THE BUYING COMPANY.
Theater at 10am Thursdays
WE ALREADY HAVE A BALD GUY.
DOES YOURS STEAL OFFICE FURNITURE, TOO?
GIVY% 0 1990 United Fees
The Etc.
Shop
TM
928 Mass. 843-0611
Ray Ban
BANER & LUNGE
MANUFACTURED IN
NEW YORK, NY
MAXIMIZE YOUR INCOME
Earn money to buy your dreams. Career opportunity with one of country's fastest growing telecommunications co. No degree required, only motivations. Full or part time.
Kansan Classifieds get results. Fast!
(800) 699-391 ex. 0610
(800) 785-224 ex. 138
**EXCEL**
West Coast Saloon
Come in and enjoy
25¢ Pool tables
and late night grill.
841-BREW 2222 Iowa
West Coast Saloon
Bucky's Hamburgers
Hamburgers
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Double Hamburger
Double Cheeseburger
Root Beer Float
99¢
$1.24
99¢
Limited Time offer
9th & Iowa 842-2930
Mac OS
Get up to a
$500
rebate
when you buy a Power
Macintosh - 250 series
computer with a qualifying
Apple display and or printer
Mac OS
Get up to a $500 rebate when you buy a power Macintosh - 290 series computer with a qualifying Apple Display and/or printer.
Power to the Macs
$2372
PowerMac 7200 Bundle
Ppower Mac 7200/75
8/500/CD
Apple Mutli-Scan 15" Display
Apple Extended Keyboard
Color Stylewriter 2400
GeopportTelecomAdapter
Versatilities
10pk 3M HD Disks
Jayhawk Mousepad
Get up to a $500 rebate when you buy a PowerMacintosh - 7200 series computer with a qualifying Apple Display and/or printer.
Third Floor Burge Union
$2372
PowerMac 7200 Bundle
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KIU.
union technology center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Education
Burga Union • Level 3 • 915.864.5090
Get up to a $500 rebate
about with this:
Power Macintosh 7200 series
computers with matte finish Apple
display and touchpad.
"Unlurred since 1993"
Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Massachusetts 832-8228
"Uthumal simu 1993"
Total Fitness Athletic Center
Summer Extravaganza
20% off Summer Special
832-0818 AMSTERDAM
Ask about Summer/Fall
Discount Package
Corner of 27th & Iowa
Drink up cowboy!
SPECIALS
THURSDAY
$1 anything
FRIDAY (LADIES NIGHT)
quarter draws
$1 big beers
$1 well drinks
SATURDAY
$1 anything
Cadillac Ranch
Country Western Bar
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, May 2, 1996
5B
Horoscopes By Linda C. Black
★★★
Today's Birthday (May 2). Finish up old stuff and set goals in May. Buy a loved one an expensive gift in June. Put down roots in August. Work through September and form a partnership in October. Choose carefully; this union will last. Find a treasure in December. Go back to a favorite old place around the first of the year. Make a career decision in February. There's a test in April.
Rating System: 10 is the easiest day, 0 is the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 4 — Financial matters need to be handled now. Don't put them off any longer or they'll cost you even more. Be careful if you're taking out a loan. The other guy's advantage is hidden in the fine print.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 6 — Jump into an old job this morning and finish it up. You'll get a new burst of energy this afternoon. The competition gets fiercer then, too. Don't worry, you may win through sheer bravado.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) — Today is a 4
— Somebody you've been stalling is starting to
get upset. Save your errands for this weekend;
you need to concentrate now. This afternoon
will be horrible if you don't get an overdue job
done this morning
Cancer (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 10— Your numbers are on the rise again — life's getting easier. An old friend has a serious proposition. If you want a forever commitment, ask for it this evening. Don't let a stranger spoil your plans.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 5 — Things grind to a standstill. Consider all your options carefully before proceeding. An older person is pushing for a decision, but you need to make sure your interests are protected.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 10 — You're on a roll. A long-distance call could bring what you need. Take a bold move toward goals you and your sweetheart share this afternoon. Watch out for a bizarre development tonight.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Today is a 4 — You're not much of a businessperson, but you can learn. Do that. If you aren't wise about your money, you'll lose it to somebody who is. If you need help, ask a trustworthy Taurus.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7 — You're strong today, but the other guy's even stronger. This could be one tough poker hand. Play it close to the vest. You'll be well advised to go along with your partner's decision tonight.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 3 — You're under almost too much pressure. If your sense of humor's wearing thin, you know you're in trouble. Hold out a little while longer. It'll get slightly worse, unfortunately, before it gets better.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Your friends give you the support you need to turn a tough job not child's play. Get that handled early, so you have plenty of time for love tonight. You and your sweetie need to make a big decision.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 5 — You have decisions to make, affecting your home, your career, or both. Choose carefully, but don't procrastinate much longer. Your options diminish soon.
Plaesces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 10 — A distant contact is very valuable. Skills you're learning will help you make the right connection. A sibling's or neighbor's expertise helps you push past whatever was in your way. Go for it!
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
DILBERT® By Scott Adams
AFTER THE MERGER,WE'LL REDUCE STAFF IN AREAS THAT ARE REDUNDANT.
A
Reviews I-email: SCOTTADABBAGI AMA
I HOPE THE EMPLOYEES OF THIS COMPANY WILL BE EVALUATED FAIRLY COMPARED TO THOSE IN THE BUYING COMPANY.
I'll just put the text in a table or layout as it looks like a cartoon. I'll use plain text for this.
| Character | Description |
| :--- | :--- |
| A boy with glasses | |
| A tall man with an elbow on his head | |
| Another character | |
This is a simple cartoon with three characters. The boy has glasses, and the tall man has an elbow on his head. Another character is not clearly visible.
WE ALREADY HAVE A DALD GUY.
DOES YOURS STEAL OFFICE FURNITURE, TOO?
The Etc. Shop
TM
928 Mass. 843-0611
Ray-Ban
ALEXANDRIA
BANGU & LONG
TOWN, FLORIDA
MAXIMIZE YOUR INCOME
Earn money to buy your dreams. Career opportunity with one of country's fastest growing telecommunications co. No degree required, only motivations. Full or part time.
| | |
| :--- | :--- |
| $(800) 689-3931 ex. 0610 | EXCEL |
| $(800) 785-2254 ex. 1381 | |
West Coast Saloon
Kansan Classifieds get results. Fast!
West Coast Saloon
Come in and enjoy
25¢ Pool tables
and late night grill.
2222 Iowa
841-BREW
Bucky's Hamburgers
Double Hamburger
Double Cheeseburger
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Root Beer Float
99¢
$1.24
99¢
Limited Time offer
9th & Iowa 842-2930
Get up to a
$500
rebate
when you buy a flower
Macintosh - 29p series
computer with a qualifying
Apple display and or printer.
Mac OS
Get up to a $500 rebate when you buy a Power Macintosh 200 series computer with a qualifying Apple display and or printer
Power to the Macs
$2372
PowerMac 7200 Bundle
Ppower Mac 7200/75
8/500/CD
Apple Mutli-Scan 15" Display
AppleExtended Keyboard
Color Stylewriter 2400
GeopportTelecom Adapter
Versatilities
10pk 3M HD Disks
Jayhawk Mousepad
Get up to a $500 rebate when you buy a Power Macintosh 200 series computer with a qualifying Apple display and/or printer.
Third Floor Burge Union
S 500 rebate
Get up to a
when you buy a
Power Macintosh 200 Series
computer with a quality of Apple
display and/or monitor
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KI.
union technology center
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Repaircenter
Borge Union - Level 3 - 913-844-5090
$2372
PowerMac 7200 Bundle
"Unburied since 1993
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Massachusetts 832-8228
"Unknown since 1993"
Total Fitness Athletic Center
Summer Extravaganza
20% off Summer Special
832-0818 ATHLETIC
Ask about Summer/Fall
Discount Package
Corner of 27th & Iowa
Drink up cowboy!
SPECIALS
THURSDAY
$1 anything
FRIDAY (LADIES NIGHT)
quarter draws
$1 big beers
$1 well drinks
SATURDAY
$1 anything
Cadillac Ranch
Country Western Bar
---
---
6B
Thursday, May 2, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Classified Directory
1.08 Personale
1.08 Business Personale
1.30 Entertainment
1.30 Entertainment
1.40 Lost and Found
100s Announcements
1
105 Personals
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, gender, age, sex, disability, marital status, or other protected characteristic.
200s Employment
男 女
300s
Merchandise
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of the Kansas regulation or law. The state shall also accept advertising from the Federal Fair
×
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
366 Micellaneous
370 Want to Buy
X
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin.
400s Real Estate
nation or disaffection. We are only informally informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
100s Announcements
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
105 Personals
LeBabGay/SK-OK offers peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, or unsexual. Please叫 KU Info at 841-3060 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for more information.
110 Business Personals
Mother's Day/Father's Day/Great Graduation Gift.
Your magnetos to video. Your music. Unfortunate
business.
SNO PALACE is open!
M-F 2-10pm , Sat. 12-10pm
Need Cash?
Wwein cash on almost anything of value, CTR, VCRS, TVS, stereo equipment, jewelry, mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence's most liberal company. JAHAWK PAWN & JEWELRY 8: W 6th 79-10
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Hoops, naval rings with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Box Shop
282 Miss
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
HEALTH CENTER
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
864-9500
---
Don't let your friend graduate without saying goodbye...
Send a personal messge in the Kansas on May 6th.
$6** per col. inch
with KUID
$7** per col. inch
without.
But hurry,TODAY is your last chance?
Stop by our table in front of Wescoe or our business office in 119 Stauffer-Flint. Call 864-4358 for more info.
120 Announcements
WTCs Support for battered women & their children
422; 328-5100; call for more info. 843-3333
ATTENTION STUDENTS! GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE. YOU MAY QUALIFY BEGGEDNESS OF YOUR GRADES OR INCOME. 1-806-633-934
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, or unsure? LeBiaqSK OK offers a confidential support group Wednesdays at 7:00pm. Call KU Info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for location.
Attr: Graduation Business or Financial Studies Students:
I am searching for the right entrepreneur to expand my business. I have a specialized catering company (Just liquor & bartending part of business) in Lawrence and will be expanding to Overland Park and Tampa within 6 months. I will be offering part ownership to the right business must be responsible in management, and business skills. Serious exigencies only. 842-4392, Michael Cushman.
130 Entertainment
Advertise in the Kansai to reach the best customers
Free party room for 20-200 at Johnny's.842-0377
MIRACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale starting at 49.98 and up.
1910 Haskell, 841-7504
男 女
110 Lost & Found
I found a black ladies shirt on Jayshaw Boulevard
as a week ago. Ank for John H. 749-0871.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Childcare for 5 yrs. old needed for June and July
(0-20 hrs/week) Call 841-4778 after 6pm
Moving & Storage Company TOP PAY. Packers and
Loaders. Call Steve (913)-858-8789
Boiler will train Lenexa area, starting pay to 48. Call (913) 888-6364.
Sitied needless weekends and days in a rural setting. Call Maureen 740-1719.
Creative Babysitter for 2 country kids, ages 7 and 3.
Aftermorn all summer. $45/hr. References required. 841-
1999
Desperately seeking, lively responsible person w/car to
spend summer afternoons w/weighty 3-year-old girl. 2 to
5 afermers per week. Please call 825-6500.
Emmann Lutheran Child Center is needing a lead teacher with early childhood experience.
INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN NEWS AGENCY SEeks
PART-TIME RESEARCHER. 20 hrs per week. Fax
resume immediately to Video Information. 740-6000.
Live-in building manager for First United Methodist Church. Housing in return for nighttime security and Sunday morning setup. Call 841-7500.
needed 2 people for light set up and serving for small patio settings. Please contact Kate at k82503. May have to travel 4 hours. Please contact Kate at k82503. May have to travel 4 hours.
NEWS AGENCY SEEKS COMPUTER ASSISTANT
Must have experience of Macintosh programs. Send resume immediately to Video information, 749-0069.
Retired Professioner need student (male) eight night attendant or 2 nights a week including summer. Can study & sleep at home. Must be a licensed therapist.
The Learned Club has immediate access for part-time servers. Some day time availability preferred. Apply in the form of a written request to the Learned Club.
Wanted: 100 Students. Lose 8-10 Bax. New metabolism
results. Hold 15 hrs in 15 bax. Guaranteed Results
MI-18000 MI-18000
Housekeeper needed through the summer, references needed and transportation required. Call 842-1343 after 2p.m.
Talent Scout
Looking for motivated individuals interested in salesmanagement/training Travel possible Environ-mental training
7:30 am-4:30 pm. Full-time baby requesting position available for 3 kids. Infant experience required. $250 per week.
Non-smoker. References required. Mon - Fri. Starting May 22, 185-8151
ADAMS ALUMNI CENTER. The Learned Club has immediate opening for part time dishwashers, flexible hours both am and pm shifts. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1266 Oreavead.
CHILD CARE. Full time/part time teaching positions, early childhood or elementary e.l. backgrounds. Send resume or call school. Sunshine Acres Pre-school 2141 Maple, phone 842-2233
Drivers, Packers, Helpers needed in the Kansas City Area. Will Train, no experience necessary. FRY-WAG-NERUENT UNTED VAN LINES. Call Darin Baldwin 1-800-3840-0497 ext. 255
Farm and ranch help wanted for the summer near Lake Perry. Must have experience with cattle and farm equipment. Write to Ranch Office, Route 1 Box 100, Perry, KS 60073.
323-6117. Ask for Pat.
JUICERS SHOWGIRLS
MOTHERS HELPER NEEDED IN EXCHANGE FOR A FREE ROOM APPLICATIONS BE TAKEN FOR SUMMER OR FALL. REFERENCES REQUIRED. CALL 842-3830.
hiring at after 7:30 Tues. - Sat. or call 814-1242 or 8160-
Panchero's Mexican Grill Home of the 21b. burrito.
We are looking for a reliable assist. manager. Flexible Hours. Work late night. 20-38 hrs./week.
Therapist needed for 9 year old boy with autism. Applied behavior analyst preferred and training provided. PHI. Please send resume to [address].
Two experienced child caregivers wanted fall 96 for part-time in home care for our one year old daughter. Parents KU professors. Easy walking distance to campus. 832-8208.
Pall time summer nanny. Must be experienced child caregiver. Has own car and be available part time in Spring and next year. Send referrals, schedule and resume to Laurie Kerns 66005, Nairn 149, Staffle Plaint Lawrence, KS 66005.
Help Wanted. Now hire living lines. Dining room helpers & dishwashers. For summer employment positions. Start May 31. Flexible schedule. Competitive Wages. Free apply at Nanaimah Hall.
Competitive Wages. Free meals. Apply at Nainah Hall 1800 Nainah Hall. No phone calls. E.D.O.C.E
Full-time Pre-school lead teacher position now available. Must have 1 year experience in group child care. HDFL degree preferred. Great benefits. Cover letter and resume to Stephen Stones *100 Wakaran Dr. *60440
BPI BUILDING SERVICES
Is accepting applications for Part-time evening & weekend custodial positions. No experience necessary. Possibility of Full-time summer employment Call Jeannie at 842-824 to apply.
Full & part-time telephone secretary wanted. Taking and relating messages is your job. Second and third shifts avail. Must be willing to work some weekends and holidays at Rouseau Comm., 441st W. Church, Apply in person at Rouseau Comm., 441st W. Church, 325 W. Church Street, Montreal.
Camp Ranot Amoona in St. Louis, MO is seeking mature, committed individuals for specialists and counselor positions in a creative Jewish Day Camp setting for the summer of 1906. For more information, contact the camp office at Congregation B'Nal Amoma @ (314) 676-9900. Ask for Marcia of Elsa.
Positions open. Great jobs for students. Telephone fundraising for SADD! Students At Drink Drunk) and New Jersey Special Olympics. We work early events & sal. mornings. 40h +耐心解答. Call 643-752-6190.
Summer jobs available for full and part time humber delivery drivers. Must have valid drivers license and clean driving record. Heavy lifting is required. Call Fox Lumber, 220 west 31st, Lawrence LA. *Ask for Kyle*
*STUDENT HOURLY POSITION AVAILABLE*
Duties: Receptionist; filing; duplicating; running
rarrands; proofreading; data entry; bulletin
boards; other duties as assigned. Position available May
1986 or so, or position offered by Student Assistance Center,
22 Strong, 840-4044. Deadline is May 19, 8:00 am.
Yogi Bellira Jellystone Camp-Resort, Divide, Colorado needs clears, maintenance, camp cook, rec, asst. cleaning, and high energy. and fun-loving people. Salary & benefits. Box 78035, San Antonio, TX 78778, (410) 469-8242
Graduating Senior~ John Hancock Financial Services is looking for professional individuals for their marketings/ sales training program, which is designed for recent college graduates. Fax or mail resume to 6000 College Blvd. 4001, Overland Park, KS 65211, Attn: Pam SwardFAX 813-9345-6078
CAMP COUNSELOBS wanted for private Michigan boys' girls summer camp. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, skiing, archery, tennis, golf, sports, computers, computer, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, computer, maintenance, LAB 1200 B.C. Rd., HWY 496, l.w.c. WC/ GWC, 1750 Maple, MN 61008 7088-464-2444
Kansan Ads Pay
205 Help Wanted
operta MEDICAL is hiring 8-10 position IPP her ideal
job title is **MEDICAL** BST 8111 or 809-7647-7709
Top Gig Warehouse BST 8111 or 809-7647-7709
College Proponent, North America's largest student painting company is now accepting applications for summer painter positions. Wages range 40-10 an hour with bonus opportunities. Positions are available all over Kansas and Missouri. Call today for applications as positions fill quickly. 1-800-565-1133.
Summer Job Opportunities
Assistant Manager
stainless staircase flatware and bridal gift outfits now taking applications for Ass. Manager. Detailed position description. Position requires a high level of customer interaction. 30-40 km, wk. Some day shifts but could work around school schedule. Send resume or apply in person. Lawrence KS 69044 FAX #163 Lawrence KS 69044 749-4612
-85 hr starting wage
-10-25 hr/week
-$.50 to $1 /hr bonus after 60 days probation
-Flexible evening hours
BASIC CLEANING SERVICE is expanding its staff of cleaning associates, who care
you won't find a better part-time job that offers more-
limited CALLTODAY-740-0022
Summer Employment - Caterers, Kansas and Burge Union's Catering Department, $4.50 per hour. Monday thru Saturday 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. Requires valid driver's license able to lift 50 pounds, stand for long periods, preride, or lift chairs. Must be trained but will train. Must follow dress code. Begin immediately. Will work through summer with possibility of continued employment in fall. Apply Kansas and Burge Personnel Office, Level 5, 11th & Gretna AVA/EEG
HIGH-INCOME SUMMER OPPORTUNITIES
NEWLY AVAILABLE! Businesses are quickly realizing the advantages of marketing over the Internet. If you can sell private Internet Web sites to eager businesses in your region, you will be able to profit by entering your entire academic bill by September, possibly even as a second job. This is one-time, real offer from an ethical firm located in New Haven, Connecticut. For additional information, visit our email beginning May 6 to summer69@newtheam.com.
Cottonwood Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for part-time employment in their residential division. All positions include evening and weekend hours, some may require sleep overs. College coursework and related experience helps but may not be required. Applicants must pay hourly payee $6.00 per hour. Hourly payee is $6.00 or $6.50. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc., 2801 W. 31st, E.O.E.
Assistant Manager
Responsible, and Reliable
Flexible Hours
Panchero's
Home of the 2 lb. Burrito
843-670-8
WANTED:
ATTN: STUDENTS
Eam top pay with travel opportunities!
Full fall time employment, 40 to 50 hrs per week. Must be 18 yrs and have two D's. Dr. (S.v. S.C. or State L.D.) Bachelor's degree in Nursing. Call for phone interview to reserve your position today @ 1-900-282-1472 or apply in person, Coleman American Moving Services, 12900 W. 63rd St.
CUSTIDUAL WORKER- Two (2) positions open for student hourly custodial workers at Watkins Health Center. The length of the appointment is starting now through the 1966-97 school year. A possible 40 hours per week during the summer and break periods and 15-20 hours per week during the school year. This includes occasional work. Work schedules will vary according to the facility's purpose. Must be an enrolled U.S. employee.
Must apply in person to Personnel Office, Worka-
kts Health Center, Monday, April 15 through Friday, April 10
PRODUCT DESIGNER
Lawrence manufacturer seeks experienced draftapper versed in Pro-E or degmechanical engineer who desires Pro-E training & exposure Drawing & sketching ability a must. Successful candidate will be responsible for designing and implementing response to design changes. Interest or experience in marketing a plus. This position is full-time and offers a complete benefits package including health, life & dental insurance as well as 401(k) @ E.S.O.P. Packer provides a pleasant work environment and competitive wages. Qualified applicants should submit resume with expected application to Packer Corp.: Employment Coordinator, 229 Packer Roan Lawrence, KS, 66049
EOE/M/F/D/V
WE are looking for friendly, outgoing and reliable people who can work any of the national race events at Heartland Park Toppers on June 7, July 47 or Sept. 19, 1996. Carpets may be arranged. Many positions involve Su/Su housings only. Positions include: Ticket tixers, Box office staff, General labor / Anmolist. *Come experience drag racing by working outdoors and greeting fans at one of the Fastest Tracks in the World! Apply Today!*
205 Help Wanted
Manpower 211 E.8th ST.,(913)749-2800
Racing Enthusiasts
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
205 Help Wanted
Return Donors - Extra Bucks
New Donors earn $20 Today
Up to $40 this week
New donors include who
haven't donated since Nov. 4
Return Donors - Extra Bucks
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Summer Employment
∞
Drivers • Helpers • Packers for local moving company.
Full summer or part-time employment between spring and summer sessions.
Please apply at 721 E. 9th St.
Women are encouraged to apply
northAmerican.
$ $$ $
NOW HIRING!
Earn extra cash over Summer break! Many full-time jobs available in Topeka for production, retail, office and warehouse. Work as much as you
Apply at
KEY Staffing
400 SW Croix, Topeka
267-9999
want.
SALES AND MANAGEMENT CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
Hughes Lumber is a growth oriented building material retailer with operations in Oklahoma and Kansas. We are seeking energetic, highly motivated individuals who aspire to certain outside Sales and Management.
- Very Competitive. Wages.
* Life, Health, Dental Insurance.
* 401(k) w/ company contribution.
Send resume to:
HR Code: Campus
Hughes Lumber PO Box 9220
Tulsa, OK 74101-9220
Hughes LUMBER
ROBERT HALF
hes LUMBER
Drug free workplace. EOE.
FREE JOB PLACEMENT!
205 Help Wanted
accountemps
SUMMERWORK $9.45 to start
Specializing in Accounting, Office Administration & IS since 1970! If you're looking for the perfect first job or flexible summer employment, give us a call to discuss your options!
NATIONAL ALLIANCE W/MICROSOFT!
FREE SOFTWARE TRAINING
*Staff Accountants* *Accounts* *Administrative Assistants*
*Customer Service Repcs* *PC Experts* *Sales* *Bookkeepers*
Johnson County & KC Metro Area locations! (913) 451-7600- Ask for Michelle
Now interviewing for:
- Interview now, start after finals.
- Excellent resume experience
- Internship/scholarship opportunities
- Part/ Full-time, entry level all areas
- No experience necessary - training provided.
- Work begins ASAP
- National company
national company Johnson County & South K.C.
Johnson County & South K.C.
K.C. North
St. Louis
Manhattan
Topeka
Wichita
(913) 381-9675
(916) 455-0117
(914) 993-5535
(913) 776-9900
(913) 273-9119
(913) 652-722
205 Help Wanted
Part time yard work. No moving for older couple. State experience and pay per hour: 843-6850
Academic Program Coordinator-McColum Hall Half-time position, facilitates academic progress, encourages good study skills, works with resident groups in group program activities, promotes an enrollment opportunity, and provides required. KU graduate student meeting minimum enrollment required for KU student payoff. Enrollment in more than 9 credit hours must be approved in advance. Preference: Residence hall living and supervisory facilities. KU programs and commercially available software. Must be available at least three weeks/evenings/ week. Compensation: $7.65/kg, from July 18, 2016 through May 31, 2017. Some meals provided during dining center is serving. To Apply: Submit letter of application outlining the purpose of your visit to KU Department and phone numbers of 3 references to KU Department of Student Housing, 422 West 11th, Lawrence, KS, 65035. Deadline: May 19, 2016. EEO/AA
Scholarship Hall Director-Douthart Hall
Three-quarter time, live-in position during academic year, to facilitate academic progress, help plan a balanced diet by purchasing food items for residents, co-operative academic community in a women's scholarship hall. Required: One year of residential group living experience. KU graduate student meeting minimum requirements in college or
ASSISTANT COMPLEX DIRECTORS LEWIS And Corbin Halls
Assistant Complex Directors (ACD's) hold live-in, academic year, three-quarter time positions, managing student personnel aspects of a residence unit housing between 150 and 350 students with a special student function; supervising student staff; facilitating resident's personal and academic development, adjustment to university life, and conduct, and providing counseling and referral services to residents. Position offered by KU graduate student meeting minimum enrollment required for KU student payroll. Enrolment in more than 6 credit hours must be approved in advance. Preferred: Residence Life Internship. Experience with payroll, budgeting, and administrative duties. Microcomputer experience. *Salary and Benefits* Total salary is $7.21 for first year staff ($328 twice). A furnished apartment in the city center. Dining room at dining center is serving. Employment from July 28, 1996 through May 31, 1997. To Apply: Submit letter of application outlining interest and relevant experience; resume, plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers for reference. For non-employed applicants, faxing 422. w11H 8, Cortin Hall, Lawrence, S65445. Deadline: May 17, 1998. EEO/AA
Work in a professional business environment conducting market research and telemarketing.
Advanced Business Consultants in Mission, KS has fulltime positions available immediately. Part-time positions available during the traditional school year. $7.00/hr.to start. Benefits available to full-time employees. Contact Jim Schulz, 831-2121 x 3013 for an interview.
225 Professional Services
DUI/TRAFFIC/CRIMINAL
OVERLAND PARK-KANSAS CITY AREA
CHARLES R GREEN
ATTN: JAYE W. SMITH
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964
OUI/Traffic
I
Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Nassau 843-4023
Thesis & Dissertations
Handbinding and Gold Stamping
3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
CALL TODAY
FOR
MARINE CORPS
TOWNSEND
AIRLINE TICKETS HOME
EUROPE SUMMER TRAVEL
TRAVELLERS INC.
749-0700
225 Professional Services
831 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
Free Consultation
Model portfolio photography, will help you put together a good portfolio. Execu-
tionally designed in Adobe Illustrator (913) 725-7406 412P.
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Typing & Editing, Cheap, fast, accurate, Call 841-6977
235 Typing Services
RESUMES - consultation, cover letters & more. -
Graphic Ideas, Inc., 127/212 Main, 814-1071
www.gidginc.com
Call Jack at 865-2855 for applications, term papers,
thesis, dissertations, transcriptures, etc. Satisfaction
guaranteed.
X
Professional Word Processing, Spreadsheets, Tape
Transcription, and Laser Printing. 842-6703. Fax /
Modem 749-8995.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
condition on $4300 call S32-0021
___ conditioning, a recorder
For sale 1980 Vespa P200 Scooter, 2800 miles. Extra good condition. $1,000. Call 749-1125.
4862362 432 Mqg, 8 meg, 14 SVCA, 5 megVSA card,
mouse, Windows software and warranty. 766-3097
N7 Nissen Pulasr, T-tops, Air conditioning, excellent
condition in $400 call $83-0201
Garth Brooks tickets, cheap for May 3, 4 & 5 at Kemerrell Center. Call Chris at (309) 875-9233.
Beds, Desk, Bookcases, Lamps, Other Stuff
Layaway Now. 936 Mass
Everything But Ice.
1994 Deep Cherokee Sport. Blue 4 Dy. 4 wheel drive, ATM
6507 Towing Capacity. Towing Capacity (913-758-6266)
340 Auto Sales
1984 Ford Thunderbird, 1984 Pontiac Pacer, Trek 7000
Cadillac, couse and arm chair, set and
look.
360 Miscellaneous
85 Wagner Limited. With A/C, leather interior, new engine and aircon. Must Go! Call us at 823-8124 or visit www.bailey.com
THE CHAPMAN USED & CURIOUS GOODS
VIRGINIA
USED & CURIOUS GOOD
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon • 6:00 Tues • Sat.
BUY • SELL • TRADE
370 Want to Buy
WANTED:
Your used computer (PC or Macintosh)
We are paying up to $1.000 Reward
for your used computer at UNI Computers 2449 Iowa 841-4611
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1-3 Br houses. Close to KU and Downtown. Available for Fall. Call 842-7044.
1/2 blk. from campus. Studios & I bdmr. avail.
for summer & fall. Call 842-7644
G get a group! Large homes for rent! Morning Star. 841-
STAR(7827).
Guest HBR between downtown/campus, Parch, WC1
water paid. Avg. June 1, 1500/month. Phone: 841-7964-
Studio available in old house. Very good
condition. Close to campus. Phone: (819)862-1106
Sublease 1Br Studio 12th and Ohio $390/month All utilities paid. 832-9373
8390/monta
Subleaser needed 1 br, £350. Available May 18. May is paid w/fall option. Call 843-1305
Sublet Studio. 520 Wisconsin. Bus rout. No Pets. $300
807-4920
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, May 2, 1996
105 For Rent
Summer Subsite for studio app, 1.0 KB from campus
May 31 at 11:08am | Cell 841-6098
Summer sublease. 1 bedroom, apt fully furnished. Call
Joe 841-8141. Availability from June.
Summer Sublease. 1 bedroom apt, fully furnished.
Call Jeff at 841-8414. Available from June.
MORNING STAR. For rooms, apartments and well kept older homes, call 841-7827 (7827)
1+2 bedroom apartments. Next to KU. All utilities paid.
W14 W 14th St. $830-350 - 1 bedroom. $600-2 room.
August Glen 841-9900
1 person needed for summer sublease in gracious 4 bdrm
2 person needed for summer sublease in spacious 5 bdrm
Call 808-389-7438
Call 808-389-7438
2 Bedroom apartment available Aug. 1.
Close to campus, only $420, includes utilities. No pets.
Call 841-4009
to 3 person apartement for summer, until next full $2000; to 2 people $2500 for 3 people. I will hold a job.
Bri Dupuis, new cepat, dishwashers, W/D, central air,
central heating, garbage pool, goods. 600av. All map.
Murray OK, CA 93217.
3 of 4 per person house. Close to campus. $250 per person OR $80 per person W/ 3.DW. Book up AD and AC.
3 rooms await. June & July in huge 6 bedroom house. Wood floor, WD, big closets, all new kitchen, front door. 114 KHRC Call: 832-4078 onak for Shannon.
3 bedroom house avail. 1 June 1 bedroom avail. 2
bedroom house avail. Aug 1 Bedroom avail. 1 No pets.
Bedroom avail. Aug 1 Bedroom avail. 1 No pets.
Central air, pool, spacious, summer lease, $400/month
823-0614 823-8079
A 1w 2 BA duplex on Elkridge. Bus u r, D W, lawncare, cat OK, garage. Aug 1st. 1 yr lease. $840 with W/D. $800 w/hookups. 10 month lease option. $835 482.
6 ft. house two campus and campus can be parking for 15 min. lease available Aug. 1. 8 ft. office call: Bathroom
Apt for rent, Avail Aug 1, E of campus in restored historic house, 3 blocks to campus, close to downtown, water and heat paid, 845-3029
Avail. Ang. - Unfur. 28D Bpu教。3000-07 E. 250 Tern.
A/D, W/CD bpo教。4400 No. 460s. N312-193-065
Available. Now or June 1 at Brady Apts 1530 Tenn. Completely remodeled studio apt. water gas are paid; gas started at $400.00 also 1 BRI for June or August 841-3123
7B
DRASTICALLY FITMU Must Subset. Large ldbm,
bigtikchen, Mh and Mississippi $20xmo. Available May
16th, 17th or 18th. See www.draasticall.com
Excellent locations 1341Ohio/1104 Tennesse
2 Br in 4-plex. C/A/D,W/D hookups.
$400 Auc 1,no pets. Cat #82-4242
A 1-bath treatment 2.8R, all utilities paid, Remodeled,
new carpet in Fallout 5.0, EoR bed for 1.9R, 1.9R
bed frame, 1.4R mattress.
LOCATION - 50% FROM UNION. Summer
LOCATION - 50% FROM UNION. Summer
No. 1 or 2 bedroom. Phone: 884-735-0000.
No. 2 bedroom. Phone: 884-735-0000.
Maintenance technician needed. Full time permanent
dumbo position required. Apply in person at
www.raleigh.com/tech/us.
9. Second bedroom duplex in Eddison. Available June 14.
$65/month units. Utilities, large yard, WD/WH
decor.
Otweigh and tate business counsellor you fit for
Office 7 & tate business counsellor you fit for
Calif. tate business counsellor you fit for
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Venezuela tate business counsellor you fit for
** perfect Studio! Awake! Invited! Hardwired fire, freakspace, set back big bat pcs at 120 & Louisiana $150. to set up yourself**
One Bedroom summer sublease, avail. May 15, large bed, off parking, 14 and Cen. room, 208cm². Call (617) 293-5988.
Comfortable, spacious, furnished rooms and
2 bites to Kit, some utilities paid, off street parking. No
Real nice 2nd bedroom. Quiet neighborhood. Closet to Offitare room. Noporter. Availability June 14.
Realize i bedroom apartment close to KU. Hardwired
fittings, locks of windows, off-stair parking. No pets
in the home.
Summer Delight available June-Aug. Pursued home
*super level* 1,hr excellent education;References
*no credit* available
Staunton 5 bedrooms house, 2 bath, close to KUW / hotel, offspring park, no pet, references required.
SUMMER SUBLEASE 18 br apt, wroom for two, pool side balcony, fully furnished, FREE cable, water, trash. Close to campus. Only $360/mo. Call Ed at S88-666
Sublease June / July, 2 bdm, 8cm, Walk-in closure at street parking 2104 from KU. BURU 800/1647 or DYSE 800/1639.
Summer sublease available June 1. 2BR apartment in
Downtown St. Louis, parkland, hardwood floors, VEER
NICE. (913) 896-2000
Summer Sublease House $150/pg (up to 5 people)
Winterender, dainvillean nursery, food table, pet
table, large closet, laundry room.
**Submarine Sublease** - 2 bdm, W/D, 2 min; walk to comp. $259m Avail. May 14, 2018; rent please Call
**Summer Submarine** swiption for fall 3, br 1, bush fah.
Monthly rent $18.95 / week. End of May. Manty may rent 5th & 8th months. Call 424-7471.
Summer Sublime - spacious 2 bedrooms, 2 full bath.
Water pipe. Pool/spa £600/month. You pay £500
per month. Gas/mesh pool cover £100/month.
Summer subseries with options for fall 25th Bimonth
Rent 480,000 for June and July 814,447.
**Summer Sublease:** 4 person, 1/2 hour; May rent
$100/month + 10% commission; campus W/D.
BU 841-10635. BU 841-10636.
Summer Submarine. Available May 17, 15, 2
Summer Submarine. A*C, No Petie. Close Campus and Mass.
Mass.
Summer Sublease. Available June 1. Spacesize 2
bedroom, close to campus. Rent negotiable. Call Enllym
914-637-8000.
Summer Sublease. Pursued 1 bdsm. apt. 10 minute walk to campus. $480/mo. Contact Robert @ 841-6903 or building manager @ 841-1212.
campus - no billing. Will make to make dead. Available to 20 August. Call 839-6375 or leave message.
apartment, 6th and Illinois. Central air, dishwasher, May Available May 2-18. $850/month. Call 834-945-841.
Summer cabinets, Cute 2 bedroom, 18 & Minnesota summer, center room, and hardwood floor. Rent for May 2-18. $750/month. Call 834-945-841.
Summer Suburban Furnace. $unr 1/2 bath. Close to KU and
Mass Water, treat May p. $245. Available May.
May p. $245. Available May.
Summer Bullet. One bedroom, big room. Close to Canopy. WTJ building. Clean cabs allow $800. Call (314) 627-5299.
Very large 3 BR apt. Pete OK. Bootspace close to campus. Move in lease. Receiving rent negotiable.
2 bedroom, lower half of house/duplex. 12th and
Kentucky. No pets or smokers. Available 9/11.
paid. Owner occupied. $406 per month. Call 841-0774.
Available Aug. 2018. B38 age in renovated older house,
bath, kitchen, fireplace, cat bed, tab, ceiling
window, insulation, AO, no pets. B45 841-1074
GREAT summer outside well full option. H 2p hikers up to 450m, pedley, close to KU,
GWREATHEN on a bus route.
105 For Rent
2 bedrooms available August, 10th at New York. Window AC, ceiling fans, W/B uphooks, wood floor, small living room, large bedrooms. $400. No pets. Bai-1074, phone usually answered 8 PM-11PM
Spectacular one bedroom apartment in older house, one room back to the apartments. For summer vacations call 516-294-3570.
Summer sub-league Very-cute 2 Bedroom House-Great location. 5 minutes from campus. 1722 Louisiana. Hardwood floors, screened in back porch, 2 car garage and fenced in backyard. Call Kay or Amanda. 838-4376.
4 Bedroom available 19/28/16 1720 AM, 2nd Bridge, stowage, WD, Gauge and offsite parking. Pet welcome. $850 - Deposit for references. (613) 943-855 or 865-475 by apt.
Ann Juice. 1 June. I B Jr Apr a new campus at 1000 Energy Rd. Energy efficient D.W., microwave,清洗台, W/D hookups, Balcony/Patio, 425/month. Cable TV paired. No Petts. 841-3800.
Avail. Aug smaller 2 bdm kit, in motivated offer house,
Old West L陡erville, wood floor, claw foot, window,
A/C. No pets. $ 460. Call 814-7748. phone usually
answered SPM 1-1PML, or leave message.
Available August on 10月 lease, 1 bedroom apartment
9th and Ninth Street. Wood floor, ceiling fan,
offs. street parking. $359.841.074, phone usually
answered PM-11 PM.
Great downtown location 100 yds from South Park Zone,
Grabber, 2bdr plu w A/C. All city utilities paid $215/hr.
12 mo lease available Aug. 1. Call 843-5217. Leave a message.
2 Bedroom. Summer sublease avail. May 15. Choose on campus, bus route, dishwashers, laundry facilities. Call 800-473-6900.
11k mdbLEASE in 31km townhome needed for May 28 to July 31. WALKAY, ACCE, cicing fans in townhouse.
Now sign one-year bedrooms starting June and August. Extra nice two bedroom appliances, ACs low utilities, bus route and more! Our $300 per month. Spanish Crest Bedrooms 841-6888.
Price slashed. For June & July, a 2 & 12 bdm ages to renovated older houses. Walk to WM in downtown. Lots of features, off street parking, no pets. Starting at $250. CAB 841-1744. Phone usually answered 6pm to 11pm.
Room available. Great 4 bedroom, 2 bath house with patio and large yard. DW/D, W/D, CA. On bus route & downto town. A must see! Available mid May $200/month Call 838-9843.
Summer Sublease. Nice, newer 2 bedroom apartment on the southwest side of Lawrence. DW, WD, CA and FREE cable, water, and trash. Available mid May with rent paid. $490/month. 838-4018
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Available Aug. 1, possible.
boomie BLOOMY LUNAR 3* BR duplex/houseon on
tan line. basement, garage, FC, CA, W/D hook. no
locking. balcony. door. 847-736
2 for a ferry leave. Must see map.
2 small dbt arm, to be recovered this summer available
August 18, 3000 block Vermont. Large bedrooms, large
kitches, large baths, large clothing rooms, cofitting
street-parking. No pets. $400. Call home, phone
usually unanswered 8 P.M.-11 P.M., or leave message.
oetrom pit, in renovated older house. Available
autohot, 14th and Connecticut. Walk to KU, downtown,
private porch, windows, fire access. OE-office parking,
private porch, NJ, #410. 841-7043, phone usually
answered PM 11-MM.
Studio. 1 and 2 bedrooms avail. starting Summer and Fall. Several locations including next to campus. All on bus route. Good quality. Well maintained. Quite with affordable rates. Call 841-1154 for more information
Summer Sublease
we will pay $18 per month for you to live in our apt. Yep,
we pay you. All you have to come up with is the other
rent. Can't best that. 30m³/habitats allowed.
allowed/required contract. Call 482-8438 for details at
d修前 6 m.
AVAIL, AUG. 15T. Full furnished condo at
80%/Enery will accommodate four people. Dishwasher,
microwave, wide size W/D size. No pets. 4805+mO. plus:
Call Mark M&R. 403.101.104 (or 843.222.027) (season)
22ND AND HARPER
LUXURY LIVING
Easy Access to K-10
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! 913-841-8486. Ask about our move in special.
PRE-LEASING FOR AUGUST1,1996
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
ICA
Washlet/Dryer, Dishwasher, CA
24 HR Maintenance Service
24 HR Maintenance Service
Call (913) 748-7948
"Caution: High Temperature"
Equal Opportunity
Graystone Apartments
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
Female roommate wanted to share 4 HH rooms for next school year with 3 Females. Smoke-free. Roommate ID: 0C21-1839-1028
Townhouses. Apartments.
1, 2 or 3 BEDROOM units
with fully equipped kitchens.
1 & 2 bathrooms, with or
without garage/carports.
Some have free cable TV
AVAILABLE FOR AUGUST 1,1996
Over 400 Rentals
Available
841-495
105 For Rent
Available June 1st - a late, spacious two bedroom apartment between Downtown and campus. Closet to GSB-1. Fee applies. Call (607) 835-4988.
Naismith Place
New listing for commercial land
BERKELEY FLATS APARTMENTS
*Jacuzzi in each ept,
*Close to KU bus route
*Private balconies (Plazas)
*Basketball court/Park
*Basketball court/Park
*On-Site management
Office On-Site 1815 1815
Call for appointments
Call for appointments
5:15 pm - 7 Mon-Fri 10-2 Sat
Now leasing for Summer & Fall
843-2116 11th & Mississippi
For Appointment: 841-7849
合
Lorimar Townhomes
2 Bedroom Available
June 15, July 1, Aug 5
$580
Washer/Dryer Fireplace
Dishwasher Cable Paid
Microwave Back Patio
Sundance Apartments 7th & Florida
- Now also leasing for Fall
- Furnished Apartments
- Ask about our 3 person special $690 and up
841-5255
Pool and Clubhouse
S
405 For Rent
wan
EAGLE & GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS
OVERLAND & SUMMER TREE WEST
TOWNHOMES
New 2 & 3 BRS
OPEN HOUSE
1: 4-30 Mon - Fri 10: 3 Sat
Management
2512 West Gb St, 749-1288
1 BR $345
2 BR $400 - $420
TRAILRIDGE
1, 2, & 3 bedroom apartments
$440-555 / mo.
---
2-4 bedroom townhomes
$575-935/mo.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Call 843-7333 or come by 2500 W.6th
Holiday Apartments
- Exercise Room
- On KU Bus Route
- 1&2Bedrooms
Tropical Palm Tree
- Indoor/Outdoor
Colony Woods
Fall Leases
- Laundry facility
Nice quiet setting
- On bus route
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400 TERRITORY, Suite
HOSPITALITY HOMES INVITE. OPEN & DEMONSTRATE
mon-priori operation, demonstrate conflict. Insure
monitoring of C&E. Monitor & call by 814-434-0600.
Mon-priori operation, demonstrate conflict. Insure
monitoring of C&E. Call by 814-434-0600.
Mon-priori operation, demonstrate conflict. Insure
monitoring of C&E. Call by 814-434-0600.
*3 Bedroom
*4 Bedroom
- Energy efficient
mmer & Fal
$420-$435
$610-$630
$735-$745
211 Mount Hope Court # 3 For more info. or Annet
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Pets Welcome*
South Point
AFRAMENTS
2166 W. 26th
- Swimming Pool
- Or KU Bus Routes
- 1,2,3&4 bedroom
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
apts. available
- Sand volleyball court
- Now leasing for Spring and Fall
*Restrictions Apply
Spring Special
2 BR $ 399
3 BR $ 499
Short time Only!
( on select apartments)
Short time Only!
- 2 bedroom (1 & 1/2 baths)
- On the bus route
- 3 Bedroom (2 baths)
- Laundry Facility
(call for appt.)
- 24 hr. Emergency maintenance
843-4754
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts
Great Location - Near Campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon-Thurs
12:30-4:30
No appointment needed
105 For Rent
Chamberlin Court
1 & 2 BR's, microwave, DW, on-site
laundry facilities
17th and Ohio
CAMPUS LOCATIONS
STILL AVAILABLE
FOR AUGUST!
**Abbots Corner**
2 BR's, Newly remodeled, full-size washer/dryer, DW, all new carpet, 18th & Philo
2 8 BR's, microwave, DW, formal dining area, on-site laundry facilities, private patio/sundees, on KU bus route, ca accepted COI. Collegiate
CALL TODAY 841-8469
M-F9a.m-5p.m., 1820 W. 8th
SAT1A9.m-3p.m, 1740 Ohio
24-hour Emergency Maintenance On-site Management
Bradford Square
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 RDRM APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
Summer sublime. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. June 1- July 31.
Colony Woods. 4430M廊户. Call 832-9411.
- Spacious2bedroom
- Close to campus
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
- Spacious2bedroom
- Laundry facility
Energy Efficient
- Laundry facility
- Swimming pool
- On site management
- Laundry room
VILLAGE
SQUARE
- Daily 3:30-5:00
- Exercise weight room
KVM
Professionally managed by
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
Aspen West
Now Leasing for Fall!
808 W. 24th
841-6080
841-5444
- On Bus Route
9th & Avalon 842-3040
- No Pets
- Laundry on Site
- Water Paid
- Reasonable Rates
- 2 Pools
- Dishwashers
2900 West 15th Lawrence,KS66049 865-2500
Volleyball Court
*Stops On Property*
*2 Laundry Rooms*
- On KU Bus Route with
- Some Washer/Dryer
- Hookups
Part25
We are now accepting deposits on apartments for the fall term.
We offer 10 month leases. We feature 1 & 2 bedroomapartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence
Hookups
Call or stop by today
2401 W. 25th, 943
842-1455
Office open Monday - Saturday
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
(sorry no pets)
---
Large apartments with big closets in a friendly service oriented community surrounded by nature.
meadowbrook
2 pools, 3 tennis courts,
2 volleyball areas,
playgrounds, KU bus stops
basketball court,
Lots of room to
walk or jog.
Summer Sublease. for 2 rooms of apartment.
Furnished. 2 full bath, 2 floors. down the hill from campus. $190 per month. Dishwasher. AC.
Call Carrie or Karin: 842-3805
105 For Rent
Most of all we have a home just for you!
Walking distance to campus
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon - Fri
10-4 Sat 1-4 Sun
Boardwalk
Spirituals
Why stay on Baltic Avenue When you can ADVANCE TO:
524 Frontier
842-4444
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
- Basketball Court
- K.U. Bus Route
- Heated Spa & Pool
405 For Rent
- Laundry Facilities
- Much More
- Need Furn. call TC Rental
841-7111
Offers
Studio,1,2,3,& 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
MASTERCRAFT
Completely Furnished
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas 749-2415
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
MASTERCRAFT
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
Equal Housing Opportunity
Preneed please for summer sublease. $105/mo. May rent free.
Call 821-9083
430 Roommate Wanted
Non smoking mice to share 2 BR 1 bath, 30 min from campus. Must love dogs but not pets any more. pk428-7118.
Summer or Fall, 2 lb, each, one bath, garage, fireplace, wash/dry, #225/mo. Call 822-2553
- Male Reemountees must to share iBJDRM house start*
* with roommate. 177%/100% = 16 unfilll*
* 82-2298, 82-2398, 82-23
2 roommates for the summer. May is pay for $175/mo. plus utilities. W/ full-fury. Call 841-129-1801
Roommates needed to share 3 bedrooms at Regents
Court, W/D, AC, DW, furnished. Available May 1
$440 per person. Call Jonathan or Mike at 841-8277
Pall or summer; 1 for 2 female n-niens. Wanted to share
cabin; l belfort, Formaled. Wanted, & on bus
transportation.
Female roommate required Aug. 1. 2 bfrm, 2 bath, with
dishwasher, cable, AC, and bakery ($67.50 per month)
or $90 for roommates.
Need Roommate to share 3 bedroom apartment at College Hill Condo. On bus route: whelry/drives.
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR SUMMER. Starting mid-August, Augt will be the first stepes from Prairie Hall. Rent a room at the office for 1 hour per day.
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR THE SUMMER NCE App
at 12th and Louisiana. 8 to camp on or downtown
center.
Summer subscriptions. Female non-smoker to share 2 bites, 7th & 8th Mid-May -July $13.90 $18.00 + o/2 £11.90
9th & 10th Mid-August -September $16.90 $23.90 + o/2 £15.90
Roammate will want to share 4 BR (towpath) with 3
mates May 1, AWD 1. WFD $242. = 14 BR towpath
$290.
Summer Sublease, 1 person for a bdmr wt. WD,
central air, close to suspensio, $21/month.
Air conditioning included.
Male Roommate wanted. Suit summer or Fall rental. 3 Berm 2 Bath (New Tile and Carpeting) W/Dish. Close to campus. $250/month including water. Call Nick at 843-4087.
Female roommate needed. Almost new home west of campus, Roomy, WD, AC, DW, Garage. Dear Ben港路 Short or long term lease available. $ 275.00 / mo.
Call 838-4546
ROOMMATE NEEDED! Large, spacious 2 bedroom.
Large living room, dinning room, kitchen big, on balcony, on KU bus route. $230 + 12 utilities. Look for bothier Summer and Fall. Call Amber at 838-384-368.
Roommate wanted for Fall term
3 BDRM, 2 full bath Townhouse.
Fully Furnished -
only 3 blocks from Union,
Call Miles at 864-6370
or Amir at 864-6780
THE HOTEL
SOUTHPOINTE ParkVillas
2166 W. 26th St.
405 For Rent
- Professionally designed interiors
- Three bedrooms, two full baths
- Washer/dryer Included
- On all bus routes. Great location!
Now Leasing for Spring and Fall 1996
Nevada
northern
all borderlands
843-6446
8B
Thursday, May 2, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
GRANADA
THURSDAYS
$1 Pitchers!
Retro Dance Party
GRANADA
THURSDAYS
$1 Pitchers!
Retro Dance Party
FRIDAYS
REVOLUTION
cutting edge dance explosion
18 & OVER
Sat. May 4
Son
Venezuela
SUNDAYS
Q-CLUB
w/DJ KURT Z
18 & OVER
Sun. May 5
the JESUS LIZARD
Contortion Horse
Wed. May 8
BLUESHEAD BEGGARS
HUCKLEBERRY
MOUTHS WIDE OPEN
18 & OVER
COMING DATES:
5/11LUSH
5/14 FREDDY JONES BAND
5/15BCR
5/18 JUSTIN CASE
Visit Lawrence's hippest Lounge
ACQUA
"Serious Drinks for Drinking Seriously"
SUNDAYS
Q-CLUB
w/DJ KURT Z
18 & OVER
Sun. May 5
JESUS LIZARD
Contortion Horse
Wed. May 8
BLUESHEAD BEGGARS
HUCKLEBERRY
MOUTHS WIDE OPEN
18 & OVER
COMING EVENTS:
5/11 LUSH
5/14 FREDDY JONES BAND
5/15 BCR
5/18 JUSTIN CASE
Visit Lawrence's hippest Lounge
ACUA
LOVINER
"Serious Drinks for Drinking Seriously"
Local support won't make Royals better
Last week, a student wrote in Sports Rap that the Cleveland Indians were helped by local support in becoming the power they are today. I disagree.
While it may be true that the Indians were downright terrible for decades, fan support did not rescue the team from anything on the field. Likewise, the Royals have found themselves in the same situation — no one can help the team get better except for its members.
SPORTS RAP
Today, the Indians are good enough to sell out all 81 home games less than two months after losing the World Series (Jacobs Field holds 42,000 people). Ask Albert Belle or Carlos Baerga whether they had much, if any, support in the early 1990s. I can guarantee they would say no.
They were the woeful Indians. Who was going to spend the time and money to see a perennial loser make another bid for 100
The lack of fan support for the Indians earlier in this decade did nothing to hamper the chemistry that now surrounds this epic team. If anything, 54 years of fan misery surrounding the team only brought their local feeding frenzy to an unprecedented level of devotion.
losses in a season? Nobody, except for the true diehards.
the Royals are lucky enough to have a team that can flourish into a real contender during the next couple of years, perhaps the author of the original letter might be content. Otherwise, he might keep pleading for us to go see a product that we either do not appreciate or simply don't care for, much like the woeful Indians of years past.
Chiefs problems aren't at quarterback
Tommy Gallagher Olathe junior
Many are upset that the Chiefs have not
traded or drafted for a new quarterback. Apparently, fans feel that Steve Bono is incapable of leading the Chiefs to the promised land. But the past has shown that the reason the Chiefs can't reach a Super Bowl is poor play calling, not poor quarterbacking.
From 1992 to 1994, the Chiefs had two of the best quarterbacks in the game, but they failed to win the AFC championship.
In 1992, Kansas City acquired three-time All-Pro Dave Krieg to take it to the next level. With a powerful running game and Krieg's deep ball, the Chiefs walked all over NFC powerhouses like Philadelphia and Washington.
They beat San Diego twice in the regular season with a balanced attack, but forgot all that in the playoffs when they relied on the running game and failed to score.
In 1993, Kansas City had the best quarterback situation in the league since free agency. The Chiefs had in Joe Montana the highest-rated quarterback as their starter and the tenth best in Krieg. Two come-from-behind victories against Pittsburgh and Houston
advanced the Chiefs to the AFC championship game.
But a struggling Montana went down with a concussion, and the defense failed to stop Buffalo running back Thurman Thomas.
The pressure was put on Bono, and it showed when he threw three interceptions
The Chiefs probably had their strongest team last season. Bono, despite looking shaky at times, did an adequate job in his first year as starter. He struggled in the playoffs against the Colts. However, no adjustments were made in play calling.
The Chiefs took a step backward in 1994, finishing 9-8 after losing a Wild Card playoff game against Miami. Kansas City's offense was the NFL's fifth-best in yardage and produced more yards than any other team in history.
slowed with he drew three interceptions. The Chiefs have had some fantastic quarterbacks. Play calling has kept them from post-season glory.
Matt Woodruff Olathejunior
THOMAS T. HUNTER, M.D.
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass.
832-8228
ATTENTION ATTENTION ATTENTION
NATIVE AMERICAN STUDENTS
CAN PICK UP
NASA SCHOLARSHIP GRANT APPLICATIONS
FROM THE OFFICE OF MINORITY AFFAIRS
FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 1996-97
PLEASE CONTACT THE OFFICE OF MINORITY
AFFAIRS FOR DEADLINE INFORMATION
Office of Minority Affairs 145 Strong Hall University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 66049 (913)864-4351
STUDENT
SENATE
Summer
Summer Bus Schedule
- 24th & Ridge Court
- 15th & Crestline and 6th and Crestline
Summer passes availabe June 3,1996 on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union at the Banking window.
Non Student $35
K
THIS AIN'T NO CARDBOARD PIZZA!
"SPRING SPECIALS"
~For A Limited Time~
10" PIZZA
$ 3.74*
12" PIZZA
$ 5.63 $
14th & Ohio
(Under the Wheel)
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Carry Out
Only
"We Pile It On!"
15" PIZZA $ 7.51 *
Special Price Includes One Topping,
(Add. Toppings: 70¢ for 10" 94¢ for 12" $1.17 for 15")
*Price does not include tax
842-3232 Carry Out Only
Kief's Sounds Great Car Audio
Invites YOU to come see the new
ALPINE factory vehicle on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Special pricing on ALL ALPINE car audio products ALPINE
2429 Iowa • 842-1438
FRIDAY, MAY 3. 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NEWS 864-4810
SECTION A VOL.102.NO.150
ADVERTISING 864-4358
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
(USPS 650-640)
HJ
Jayhawk ace
Kansas senior Josh Belovsky has become the Jay hawks' top pitcher. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Cinco de mayo
Celebrations are planned for Sunday that will celebrate Mexican culture. Page 6A
NATION
Economy surges to life
White House staff is ecstatic,but financial markets are fearful. Page 7A
WORLD
Warlord vows all-out assault
Liberian rebel leader calls off a cease-fire and orders troops to attack.Page 9A
WEATHER
WARM
High 80°
Low 54°
falcon
High 80° Low 54°
Z
Campfire Circle
Weather: Page 2A
INDEX
Opinion ... 4A
Nation/World ... 7A
Features ... 12A
Sports ... 1B
Scoreboard ... 2B
egislature
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.
Signature
The Hill
Graduation '96
May 1996
1
Underage drinkers beware: Tonight, the clerk at the liquor store down the street may be an undercover cop.
In an attempt to crack down on the increasing problem of underage purchases of alcohol in Lawrence, police will be posing as clerks in area liquor stores.
"The goal of this program is to discourage minors from attempting to purchase alcohol," Police Chief Ron Olin said. "This is not an effort to spearhead arrests toward minors but a joint effort by local businesses and the Lawrence Police Department to emphasize that it is illegal to purchase alcohol beverages if you are a minor."
Police announced the program, Cops in Shops, during a press conference yesterday.
Police have been preparing to implement the program for about a month, Lawrence police Lt. Ed Brunt said.
"We are going to be doing this for basically two months and take a look at its effectiveness," he said.
John Webb, owner of Webb's Fine Wine & Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., said he would be participating in the program but that he felt pressured by police to do so.
mandatorv.
Webb said that in the past five years he has seen a rise in the use of fake IDs. He stressed that the problem stemmed from the number of fake IDs being made — not the liquor stores intentionally selling alcohol to minors.
"Try not doing it and see what they'd do," he said. "They'd sit here and watch until you made a mistake."
"I don't want any underage business," he said. "And I have never gone out on 23rd Street and made someone buy from me."
Tom Dangermond, manager of Patterson Liquor, 846 Illinois St., on the other hand, said he thought the program would help retailers address the growing problem of underage drinkers in Lawrence.
"The liquor store owners face a rather severe penalty if they sell to minors," he said. "I think it is a good idea to try and
Chad Coellner, Salina freshman, said that the new program would discourage him from purchasing liquor from a liquor store this weekend. But he doesn't think it will last.
"It won't make that big of an impact," he said. "They can't bust everyone. I think they are going a little overboard."
Cops in Shops was a program developed by The Century Council, a national, not-for-profit organization founded in 1991. It is supported by more than 800 distillers, vintners, brewers and wholesalers. Its headquarters are in Los Angeles. United States Ambassador to Mexico, John Gavin, is the chairman of the council.
Area liquor stores participating in the program will posts signs reading: "Warning: police officers may be posing as store employees," and signs on beer coolers, reminding customers that the participating shop will check for identification, Brunt said.
"So, if you are underage — don't try it," Brunt said.
4
because the original projects were budgeted for $450 million, $125 million more than bond issue, said Warren Corman, Regents director of facilities.
Corman said each school would have the option of raising private funds to make up the difference or cutting funds for the projects.
Lindy Eakin, associate executive vice chancellor, said the Regents were waiting until the measure was signed by the governor before informing the universities of their options.
He said all the Americans with Disabilities Act and fire-safety projects would be completed.
147
"It's still unclear how the Regents will deal with it," Eakin said.
Corman said that no actual work could begin until the bonds were sold, which is expected to occur in September.
He said that small projects related to ADA and fire-safety improvements could begin as early as this fall.
The Regents can begin interviewing possible architectural firms for the major projects before the funds are available, Corman said. Completion of the JRP and Murphy Hall projects tentatively is scheduled for the summer of 1999.
---
FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SECTION A VOL.102.NO.150
ADVERTISING 864-4358
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
Jayhawk ace
Kansas senior Josh Belovsky has become the Jayhawks' top pitcher. Page 1B
KO
(USPS 650-640)
CAMPUS
Cinco de mayo
Celebrations are planned for Sunday that will celebrate Mexican culture. Page 6A
NATION
Economy surges to life
White House staff is ecstatic, but financial markets are fearful. Page 7A
WORLD
Warlord vows all-out assault
Liberian rebel leader calls off a cease-fire and orders troops to attack. Page 9A
WEATHER WARM
High 80°
Low 54°
felcon
Z
Cumberlandia
Weather: Page 2A
INDEX
Opinion . . . . . 4A
Nation/World . . . 7A
Features . . . . 12A
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.
egislature
美
The Hill
Graduation '96
May 1996
1
Underage drinkers beware: Tonight, the clerk at the liquor store down the street may be an undercover cop.
In an attempt to crack down on the increasing problem of underage purchases of alcohol in Lawrence, police will be posing as clerks in area liquor stores.
"The goal of this program is to discourage minors from attempting to purchase alcohol." Police Chief Ron Olin said. "This is not an effort to spearhead arrests toward minors but a joint effort by local businesses and the Lawrence Police Department to emphasize that it is illegal to purchase alcohol beverages if you are a minor."
Police announced the program, Cops in Shops, during a press conference yesterday.
Police have been preparing to implement the program for about a month, Lawrence police Lt. Ed Brunt said.
"We are going to be doing this for basically two months and take a look at its effectiveness," he said.
mandatory.
John Webb, owner of Webb's Fine Wine & Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., said he would be participating in the program but that he felt pressured by police to do so.
Webb said that in the past five years he has seen a rise in the use of fake IDs. He stressed that the problem stemmed from the number of fake IDs being made — not the liquor stores intentionally selling alcohol to minors.
"Try not doing it and see what they'd do," he said. "They'd sit here and watch until you made a mistake."
"I don't want any underage business," he said. "And I have never gone out on 23rd Street and made someone buy from me."
Tom Dangermond, manager of Patterson Liquor, 846 Illinois St., on the other hand; said he thought the program would help retailers address the growing problem of underage drinkers in Lawrence.
"The liquor owners face a rather severe penalty if they sell to minors," he said. "I think it is a good idea to try and
Chad Coellner, Salina freshman, said that the new program would discourage him from purchasing liquor from a liquor store this weekend. But he doesn't think it will last.
"It won't make that big of an impact," he said. "They can't bust everyone. I think they are going a little overboard."
Cops in Shops was a program developed by The Century Council, a national, not-for-profit organization founded in 1991. It is supported by more than 800 distillers, vintners, brewers and wholesalers. Its headquarters are in Los Angeles. United States Ambassador to Mexico, John Gavin, is the chairman of the council.
Area liquor stores participating in the program will posts signs reading: "Warning: police officers may be posing as store employees," and signs on beer coolers, reminding customers that the participating shop will check for identification, Brunt said.
"So, if you are underage — don't try it," Brunt said.
because are original projects were budgeted for $44 million, $125 million more than bond issue, said Warren Corman, Regents director of facilities.
Corman said each school would have the option of raising private funds to make up the difference or cutting funds for the projects.
Lindy Eakin, associate executive vice chancellor, said the Regents were waiting until the measure was signed by the governor before informing the universities of their options.
He said all the Americans with Disabilities Act and fire-safety projects would be completed.
"it's still unclear how the Regents will deal with it," Eakin said.
143
Corman said that no actual work could begin until the bonds were sold, which is expected to occur in September.
He said that small projects related to ADA and fire-safety improvements could begin as early as this fall.
The Regents can begin interviewing possible architectural firms for the major projects before the funds are available, Corman said. Completion of the JRP and Murphy Hall projects tentatively is scheduled for the summer of 1999.
R=20
---
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Graduation Issue
May 1996
Features
p4 COMMON SENSE Common sense,luck help former students starting businesses BY PER JOERGENSEN
p6 PAYING OFF COLLEGE LOANS Average senior owes $15,000 in college loans BY ERIC WESLANDER
p8 DIPLOMAS DON'T GUARANTEE JOBS BY LINDSEY HENRY
p11ECCENTRIC BEHAVIOR SHINES IN MARCH BY BRADLEY J. BROOKS
p10 BUMPER CROP YEAR FOR JOBS Placement centers say 1996 is a bumper crop year for jobs
p12 THE BLAME GAME How to recover from criticism with ego intact STORY BY ALICE YEO ILLUSTRATION BY DEMOND ROBINSONP
p14 BELLS WILL TOLL Campanile is repaired BY BRADLEY J. BROOKS
p18 GRADUATING ON TIME?
Graduating in four years not common anymore
BY JEN HUMPHREY
p15 SO YOU DIDN'T MEET MR. OR MS. RIGHT? BY ALICE YEO
p 23 A GOOD RESUME GETS THE JOB BY STEPHANIE MCDUFF
May 1996 The Hill
Graduation 2
The Hill
Staff
Graduation Guide
page 9 Schedule of Events
page 17
parking map commencement parking bus service
NOVELDA SOMMERS special sections editor, tabs
page 20 miscellaneous info
NORMBILOW special sections manager
ALICE YEO special sections assistant/designer
ASHLEY MILLER VIRGINIA MARGHEIM news editors
Kristie Blasi, Bradley J. Brooks Lindsey Henry, Jen Humphrey, Per Joergensen, Stephanie McDuff Eric Weslander. contributing writers
BRADY NIEMIEC designer
CHRIS BENNISH,NICK CHARALAMBOUS,STEVE CROSSLAND CARLYN FOSTER,GREG JOHNSON,CRAIG LANG,VALERIE PALMBERG,SARAH WIESE copy editors
BRIAN HOTT, DARCY COLES photographers
MATT FLICKNER photo editor
NOAH MUSSER, ANDY ROHRBACK graphics
LILI BARRIENTOS, BILLY BOWSER, DEMOND ROBINSON illustrators
UNIVERSITY RELATIONS, KANSAN CORRESPONDENTS special thanks to:
The Hill is published at the Univer sity of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, montly during the regular school year, excluding June, July, and August.
COMING EVENTS
Tues. May 7
VELOCITY GIRL
Wed. May 8
Lisa Loeb
Thurs. May 9
POE
Tina & the B-Side Movement
Wed. May 15
Fri. May 17
TENDERLOIN
THE BOTTLENECK
COMING EVENTS
Sun. May 5
JESUS LIZARD
Sat. May 11
LUSH
No. May 13
Freddy Jones Band
retro dance
$1 PITCHERS
TURNS
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cutting edge dance explosion every Friday
GRANADA
3
Graduation
May 1996 The Hill
CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES!!!
Continue your commitment! Stay with the Hawks. Begin your advanced degree through Academic Outreach Programs.
Graduate-level Independent Study courses now available in...
Curriculum and Instruction
Educational Policy and Leadership
History
Health, Physical Education,and Recreation
Psychology
Special Education
Call 1-800-532-6772 or 913-864-4440 for fees and information.
On-line catalog:
http://www.cc.ukans.edu/cwis/courses/courses_main.html
The University of Kamea
Diplomate of Continuing Education
Academic Outreach Programs
Independent Study
Lawrence, Kamea 60045-2606
Eagle
Common sense, luck help former students starting businesses
Good advice and a lot of hard work pay off for owners
By Per Joergensen Kansan correspondent
Gregory Keenan started Papa Keno's Pizzeria, 1035 Massachusetts St., with less than $10,000 and a dough mixer that was salvaged out of a walnut tree.
He said bankers laughed at his first business plan.
As Keenan found out, starting a business begins with a good idea,a little luck and a lot of hard work.
Keenan, a former KU student, tried his idea the hard way. He thought the ramshackle little restaurant he opened in June 1991 would only last through the summer.
People liked Keenan's pizza, and as business picked up, so did the paperwork.
"I wasn't very well versed in management, paying taxes, and so forth," he said. "I worked from open until close."
He worked through the problems as they appeared.
"It succeeded by virtue of me being stupid," Keenan said. "I wasn't concerned with heating or air-conditioning. I thought all I needed was an oven, a mixer, and a cooler."
Most of the original equipment came from a Wichita restaurant that was torn apart by a tornado. The owner told Keenan to keep whatever he could salvage, which included a cooler and the 500-pound dough mixer.
Keenan said he always wanted to open his own business. He landed in the restaurant business after friends complimented him on his homemade pizza.
Today, Papa Keno's employs 60 people and is expanding to Overland Park.
Wendy Jordan DeHoff started her own collection agency using inheritance money and learned how to incorporate from a book.
"I thought it would be really complicated, but it wasn't," she said.
The opportunities are there for young entrepreneur, and success may not always come easy. For those who want to
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May 1996 The Hill
Graduation 4
4
BUY
SELL
TRADE
Gina Thornburg/KANSAN
Michael Kiefer, Lawrence resident, displays audio equipment and CDs in the window of his store, Refound Sounds, 823 Massachusetts.
play it safer, the Small Business Development Center, 734 Vermont St., offers free and confidential consultation. The center is an outreach program of the University of Kansas School of Business.
The process starts with an idea, said Melinda Bryan, the center's associate director.
"There's no such thing as a bad idea," she said. "People want to get into business by themselves for a number of reasons they've been laid off, they want to start something new, they have a hobby or an interest, or they come up with an idea by accident."
DeHoff, a former KU business student, knew she wanted to start a collection agency.
"That's the thing I really knew how to do." she said.
DeHoff said the development center was useful as she researched her idea and developed a business plan.
"Make a business plan — it's kind of a road map, if you will. Write out exactly what you want to do." Bryan said.
Keenan said he would have laughed at a business plan like the one he came up with. He could not find backers and ended up using insurance money from a hail-damaged car to finance his venture.
DeHoff said she used inheritance money, because she wanted to avoid debts. She learned how to incorporate her business using a book.
"It's amazing what you can do without a lawyer if you know how to do it," she said.
Business picked up, but there were discouragements.
"I'd advertised a lot, and I was paying for this 800-number. People would call
and just ask for advice, and then I'd never hear from them again," DeHoff said. "I felt sorry for a lot of people. It was a little controversial sometimes, like in bankruptcy cases. Some people just didn't have the money."
Although she was at the point where the business would break even financially, DeHoff recently decided to sell the company because she found she did not like
the work.
"Do something you like," Bryan said. "You might end up working 60-80 hours a week."
Keenan said Papa Keno's was run three people when it opened its doors, and he worked about 60 hours a week.
"But you don't seem to experience the fatigue that much when you're doing it for yourself," he said.
Kiss 'em goodbye in style!
Say goodbye to all your graduating friends with a personal advertisement in the "Good Bye Grads" section of the University
Daily Kansan!
This section will appear in the paper on Monday, May 6th.
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Featuring: Single Malt Scotches and a Variety of Wines
5
Graduation
May 1996 The Hill
B
Sunday, May 19 Kansas Union Ballroom 7:45 a.m. Breakfast 8:30 a.m. Program
STAY TRUE TO THE CRIMSON AND BLUE Commencement Breakfast For graduates and their families
The Chancellor's Student Awards and the class gift and banner will be presented during the program.
For tickets, return the card from your Commencement packet or contact the Alumni Association, 864-4760.
SAA
BUSTEROUT ALLMAN ASSOCIATION
Sponsored by the KU Alumni Association, the Student Alumni Association and the 1996 Board of Class Officers
KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Average senior owes $15,000 in college loans
Debtors should work out plans to avoid default
By Eric Weslander
Kansan correspondent
Graduates who fail to repay their loans learn quickly that garnishment is not a culinary skill. It is the power the federal government has to take money out of a debtor's paycheck.In addition to the having the authority to take parts of wages, the federal government also can hold on to debtors' tax refunds.
"It's important for students to realize that the federal government has a huge amount of power in terms of collecting loans," said Julie Cooper, associate director of the office of student financial aid. "They don't ask; it just happens."
The average college senior owes $15,000
at graduation, Cooper said. She said 90 percent of students who took out a loan didn't have any problems paying it back in ten years.
"It's kind of ironic," she said. "For some, everything goes smoothly; for others, anything you could possibly imagine goes wrong."
Cooper said that health problems, pregnancy, and failure to find a job were common causes of repayment problems for graduates. Although these problems can hamper a graduate's ability to repay his or her loan, Cooper said there were ways to work it out.
Karen VanMeter is the manager of college and university relations for the Lawrence branch of Sallie Mae, a national agency that buys loans from banks. She said that they always took students' financial situations into account.
In extreme cases, Van Meter said, they offered graduates an income-sensitive repayment plan.
"The student tells me how much he can pay, and I agree," VanMeter said.
GRADUATING?
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May 1996 The Hill
Graduation
6
"We can't help them if we don't know they're in trouble."
Karon VanMotor
Manager of college and university relations for the Lawrence branch of Sallie Mae
VanMeter said that Sallie Mae came to campus for counseling and tried to help graduates as much as possible during repayment.
"We're not the bad guy," she said.
She said that the students who had financial trouble often didn't let anyone know about their problems.
"The smartest thing students can do is to work with the servicer," VanMeter said. "We can't help them if we don't know they're in trouble."
In order to avoid the damaged credit rating and tangles with the government that come with a defaulted loan, Cooper said students should keep three things in mind during repayment:
Make sure to notify lending institutions of all address changes. Cooper said that graduates' first few years out of school could involve so much packing and unpacking that graduates forget to tell people they've moved.
Keep paperwork. Cooper said that lending institutions often sell loans to other agencies. Although the institutions are required by law to notify graduates of all changes, Cooper said that the frequent deals often caused graduates to lose track of where to send payment.
✓ Notify lending institu-
address changes.
✓ Keep paperwork.
✓ Most importantly, let your
lender know if you are having
financial problems.
Source: Office of student financial aid
Never assume that there isn't something that can be done. "If a graduate has health problems, gets a minimum-wage job or gets a part-time job, institutions have options they can work with," Cooper said.
If you do not repay your student loan any of the following may happen:
The federal government may withhold your tax refund.
"Students tend to think that if they can't pay it, they are in trouble," she said. "So, they don't do anything and they get in trouble."
Your wages may be garnisheed.
The default will be reported to national credit bureaus and your credit rating will be damaged for seven years.
You will be required to pay the entire loan, including interest immediately.
Paradise Cafe and Bakery
Good Real Food Innovative and traditional American Cuisine Breakfast Lunch Dinner
728 Massachusetts • Lawrence,KS • 913.842.5199
Breakfast
Served from 6:30-2:30 Mon-Sat. 8:00-2:30 Sun.
Price Range: $1.95-5.95
Potato Pancakes-Three swiss-cheesey cakes served with two eggs as you like, hash browns and toast or biscuits.
Fresh Salmon Trout Fillet-Grilled with a light lemon-herb butter and served with two eggs, hash browns, and toast or biscuits.
HAPPY
Cowboy Eggs Two eggs on fresh hot cornbread, covered with chile con queso. Pinto beans and guacamole on the side.
Breakfast Enchiladas-Three corn tortillas stuffed with a spicy egg and cheese mixture. Served with beans, rice and a soft flour tortilla.
Black Jack's Flap Jacks-Whole wheat or buttermilk pancakes. Try them with pecans or blueberries and real maple syrup!
Fresh bakery items-include nice big cinnamon pecan rolls, a muffin of the day, and bagels.
Lunch
Served from 11:00-2:30 daily. Price: $1.95-5.95
Spinach Enchiladas-Blue corn tortillas stuffed with spinach and swiss cheese, topped with chile con queso. Served with beans, rice and a soft flour tortilla. Enchilada exotica!
Kung Poa Stir Fry.A medley of colorful vegetables and your choice of tofu or chicken stir-fried in a slightly spicy sweet-and-sour sauce. Topped with crunchy peanuts and served over brown rice.
Philly Steak-Sliced roast beef, grilled with onion and green peppers and topped with swiss cheese, on a homemade sourdough bun.
Nicolse Salad-Paradise style,with smoked tuna,sliced tomatoes, steamed broccoli and potatoes on a bed of fresh spinach.
No time for dessert?Take along a few cookies, made daily with such good things as butter, nuts, and chocolate.
Dinner
Served from 5-10 Mon-Sat. Price range: $4.75-13.95 Wine List Available
Calamari-Light, crispy rings, served with our own cocktail sauce.
Stuffed Mushrooms-Filled with crab and cheese, baked with sherry.
Mannicottl-Homemade pasta stuffed with spinach, mushrooms and ricotta, and topped with our red Italian sauce.
Artichoke Chicken-Sauteed with mushrooms and artichoke hearts in a creamy white wine sauce.
Peppered Steak-K.C. Strip coated with crushed green and black peppercorns, sauteed as you like and flamed with brandy.
Fish and Seafood Specials These change daily, and are always worth looking into! Ask your server for details.
7 Graduation
May 1996 The Hill
Edmondson-Berger
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Diplomas don't guarantee jobs
By Lindsey Henry Kansan correspondent
Attention graduating seniors: that shiny, new diploma you labored over for four years may not be enough to ease into corporate America's top positions.
"College is not a major key to open doors," said Mike Heuring, assistant director of the University Placement Center. "Employers don't hire graduates because they have a degree. You have to have certain skills to do the work. If you want to be the Chief Executive Officer after graduation, you will be disappointed."
Doug Borcherding said that when he graduated from the University of Kansas in 1990, and received a job with NCR, a computer company later acquired by AT&T, the marketability of one powerful skill was not as important as it is now.
Excellent oral and written communication abilities, computer science skills and an outgoing personality were among the top requirements employers want to see in their applicants, Heuring said.
"I don't think corporate America can afford to hire someone without a marketable skill," Borcherding said. "You have to build one skill that you can really
sell because it is so incredibly competitive; you've have got to build credibility around your skills."
Though he enjoyed his first job because of its location and his position, Borcherding said that it took three to four years to establish what exactly he wanted to stem from his degree in business.
A common mistake graduates make is disregarding opportunities that do not come directly from their major, Heuring said.
"Graduates think, 'I'm getting my degree in this, so what can I do with it?" Heuring said. "That is too limiting, they need to look at life after graduations as 'I'm a college graduate, what can I do now?"
One way to feel out options in a career is interning during the college years, said Kim Scarbrough, graduate assistant and UPC internship coordinator. She said those with practice in a field will be more prepared after graduation.
Interning after her sophomore and junior years led Julie Hammond, Hays senior, directly into post-graduation employment.
A journalism major in advertising, Hammond's first internship was with a large advertising agency in Kansas City, and
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6. Are there any visual elements that enhance the meaning?
7. Why is this a suitable choice for a title or heading?
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• Clothing & Accessories for Men & Women
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May 1996 The Hill
Graduation E
8
her second was with Sam Meers and Associates advertising agency, also in Kansas City.
"I intermed there last summer, and in November they offered me a job," Hammond said. I never had to apply for a job."
Hammond said that she thought the difference in financial situations and being self-supportive would bring the biggest changes after her May graduation.
"I am as ready as I am going to be," she said. "I don't think I know all I should, but I can stumble along."
For Alice Kreitzer, Lawrence graduate student, stumbling along is something she hopes to avoid.
Kreitzer graduated from the University of Virginia in 1992 and decided to attend KU for a competitive graduate program in Spanish. She said as an undergraduate, she enjoyed school and knew graduate school would be in her future in order to become a professor of Spanish.
She said that life after graduation was much more intense than life as an undergraduate. As a teaching assistant, a student and a single mother, Kreitzer knows the definition of real life
intensity.
"I think graduate school is good practice for women," she said. "It is the best preparation for real life, playing different roles and balancing all the different aspects in your life."
Kreitzer advised graduating seniors to roll with the punches and be persistent.
"You need to be able to keep going after graduation," Kreitzer said. "There are a lot of opportunities that are not always well publicized."
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9
Graduation
May 1996 The Hill
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Placement centers say 1996 is a bumper crop year for jobs
By Kristle Blasi
Kansan correspondent
All four placement centers on campus have predicted that the students walking down The Hill this May will encounter one of the most promising job markets in recent years.
The business, engineering and journalism schools operate placement services within the professional schools. The University Placement Center serves all KU students including those in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and the schools without individual placement services.
Terry Glenn, director of the UPC said nationwide publications had predicted a "pretty positive" job market. He said students with degrees or experience with technology-engineering or computer studies-were doing especially well finding employment. There are also indications that manufacturing jobs will be available and that students in the health services field will continue to be in demand.
To be eligible to interview with companies through the UPC, students must register with the center and pay a fee.
He said students should register at the
"A lot of employers are requesting resume referrals instead of interviewing on campus," Glenn said. "We will continue to receive requests through the summer."
center by the beginning of their senior year.
Fred Madaus, placement director for the School of Business, said the economy was the most important factor in business students finding employment.
"We're getting good vibes from employers looking for more new employees than they were last year," Madaus said. "Students who are out looking for jobs and are flexible about where they will go have a good market."
Madaus encouraged students to register with the business placement center immediately after being accepted to the school, but at the very latest during the second semester of their junior year.
Engineering students must register with Karen Kelm, director of the Engineering Career Services Center to be eligible to interview on campus. The engineering center is the only center without a registration fee. Companies interviewing engineering students request resumes of students interested in interviews, and then the company selects students to interview.
Kelm said the job market looked promising. "We still have some companies coming to campus and we will continue to send resumes in May," she said. "Sometimes the employers didn't realize what they needed or how great their need was."
Kelm recommended that engineering
See Placement, Page 20.
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LASTING IMPRESSIONS
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May 1996 The Hill
Graduation
10
Eccentric behavior shines in march
By Bradley J. Brooks
Kansan correspondent
Graduating KU students who look to add a little excitement to their march down the hill during commencement will be in for a big surprise. KU police often confiscate many items, animals, and oddities during graduation.
"No live animals. No puppies, dogs or snakes," said KU police Sgt. Chris Kearv.
Keary said that although there aren't written guidelines that specify what can and can't be brought into Memorial Stadium, any items that might hurt someone in the stands are prohibited.
Keary said one item that stuck in his memory was the concrete canoe the engineering students have made every year.
"I've worked the gate for three or four years, and I've seen quite a lot of different things," Keary said.
Ryan Lynch, Lenexa senior, is project manager of the civil engineering team that built the concrete canoe this year.
"We will march it down the hill if we win the regional contest," Lynch said, referring to the April 27 concrete-canoe race at Lone Star Lake.
"We will have someone ride in it. It is not very strong, so we will pick a lighter person," Lynch said.
In previous years, Lynch said, the engineers had been allowed to take the canoe into the stadium, but not through the Campanile itself.
Keary said that while the KU police do
confiscate some items, such items are held only temporarily.
"We tell people that they can come back to the gate and pick it up afterwards," Keary said. "We can put it in our command post if people don't want it stolen."
Alcohol is not allowed on the KU campus, and graduation weekend is no exception.
While there are some graduates who might partake in a little ceremonial drink, Keary said that students usually have not resisted handing over their alcohol if caught.
Brian Shawver, Prairie Village senior, doesn't plan on bringing a bottle of alcohol down the hill with him.
"The only alcohol I'm bringing will be in the inside of me," Shawver said.
And then there are the more eccentric activities that occur during graduation over which the police have no control.
"I know people who have walked down the hill in dress socks, dress shoes, and absolutely nothing else underneath their gown," said Amy Leigh Beecher, former KU student. "God, I never knew graduation could be so much fun!"
Other students see graduation as a chance to show respect for their graduating friends.
"In honor of a buddy, we did the Iwo Jima pose around the flagpole at the bottom of the hill," said Chris Ulmer, Stanley senior.
"All I could think was 'let's hurry up and get this thing done with so we can go
party," Ulmer said.
Whether it is puppies or snakes, canoes or bare buns, the commencement exercises seem to imbue people with the need to express their individuality.
As long as such individuality doesn't break any state or local ordinances, a student should be able to avoid being arrested or having items confiscated, Keary said.
But for those graduates who do get caught with contraband, they can pick up their boa constrictors, ferrets, and bottles of Quervo Gold at the gate.
STOP THE BOMBING!
Brian Hott/ZKANSAN
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Graduation
May 1996 The Hill
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The blame game How to recover from criticism with ego intact
- Story by Alice E. Yeo
- Illustration by Demond Robinson
Francis De Salvo directs the KU counseling and psychological services at Watkins Health Center. The good news, De Salvo said, is that the cycle is normal. The bad news is it has troubled the twenty-something generations for decades.
If only everyone would follow rule No.312 in H. Jackson Brown, Jr.'s Life's Little Instruction Book, there would be no blame game cycle. The rule states: "When tempted to criticize your parents, spouse, or children, bite your tongue."
proval, from how you dress to what you choose to do to make a living. As college students leave the microcosm of academia, it is important to evaluate self-esteem and confidence. After all, confidence shows in a job interview. Trying to find a job can wear down any recent graduate's freshly polished ego.
Unfortunately, all people are caught in the blame game at some point in their lives, usually early adulthood. Young adults often blame parents for the pain they inflict by expressing any disap-
Preventative measures can be taken however. The more prepared students are for the formal emotional break from parents post-graduation, the better they will fare in "the real world."
"It's about learning to be who you are, nothing less." De Salvo said.
De Salvo sees the blame game as a universal stage of development, and not a current generational problem of delinquent young adults. The way out of the cycle of hurt, anger, defensiveness and blame is technically called separation individuation, and it first involves matching up your values with your parents — seeing which ones fit and which don't.
parent-child relationships. Dealing with emotional independence early on is one key to happiness. Otherwise, your successes will never be your own. They will always be based on someone else's evaluation—a parent or an employer's.
Separating your values from your parents, taking the step beyond rebellion, requires hard work and causes tension in
The process requires you to identify your models, and most importantly, make your stamp of approval count the most.
Step 1: Don't blame.
William Mundy blamed his parents for never giving him the approval he needed as a child. In 1958, Mundy accomplished
enjoy his success.
"My successes made me transiently happy, not permanently content," Mundy said.
Richard Nadeau was born clinically blind and cross-eyed. He learned the hard way that blaming his parents for his disability didn't change the fact that he was
He had not learned to depend on his own approval for satisfaction. When he changed jobs and became a psychoanalyst, he said that he loved going to work every day and that he finally felt less need for his parents' approval.
10.2.2014
his professional goal of becoming the President of the Heart Association and the Kansas City Society of Internists' founding member. Still, he didn't completely
blind.
father's approval.
"If you're blaming, you're not learning. You're putting someone else in charge," he said.
He overcame his self-doubt and learned to believe that he could succeed. He now manages a successful 30-year-old psychotherapy practice.
Above all, he learned that when he blamed his parents for things they did or didn't do
— whether it be an inherited disability or the withholding of approval for an occupational choice — the persons he blamed were still in charge.
"You just respond to what they want by rebelling and doing the exact opposite, not evaluating what you really want or need," Nadeau said.
Step 2: Create your own models.
Lots of people don't get approval from their parents for everything they do. This is natural. People have differences in opinion and this includes parents and their children. If your parents don't approve, don't let it keep you from enjoying little or big accomplishments. Look somewhere else.
Nadeau said people wait a lifetime to get their mother's or
It's not because parents don't love their children that they disapprove, it's because each parent has a set of their own values
May 1996 The Hill
Graduation 12
that they inherited from their parents. They're trying to teach right from wrong based on what they were taught.
Sometimes there's a generation gap of expectations. It's up to children to figure out which rules and values apply to him. If a woman wants to dress like her mother, she should listen to her mother's advice on how to dress. If the woman creates her own style, she should make sure that it is a true reflection of who she is, not a rebellion against a parental value.
Other role models are just as important as parental models for value development. Nadeau said you have to figure out who your role models are and evaluate what you do and don't admire about them. No one role model will have everything you need, but the sum of these parts will provide a strong base for what will make you feel happy about who you are and what you accomplish.
Since childhood, Siri Vik, Eugene, Ore., junior has grappled with the voices in her head that repeat mean-spirited remarks her mom made about her appearance.
The most cutting remark Vik remembers her mother saying was, "You're so much prettier than all your friends, but no one can see that because you sabotage yourself by not keeping thin."
Vik copes by focusing on her opera singing.
"Being a big person and being an opera singer go hand in hand," she said.
Many parents say mean-spirited things. Usually they're unaware of the impact of harsh criticisms. The bottom line is that it's up to you to get rid of the childhood voices and replace them with positive reinforcement from other sources. Look at your parents' positive contributions to
Many parents say mean-spirited things. Usually they're unaware of the impact of harsh criticisms.
your self-esteem and values instead of picking apart their parenting.
Step 3: Your own approval counts most.
Learn to approve of yourself. Define what you are proud of based on both achievements and your personal qualities. Develop the ability to make your own decisions and opinions count more than anyone else's, including your parents.
"Compliments can be helpful, but they'll never be enough unless you set your own standards," DeSalvo said. A part of self-approval is learning to accept, take responsibility for, and even enjoy your mistakes.
Also admit your defeats. This starts the process of feeling assured in the choices you make and having the ability to learn from mistakes.
This rite of passage into adulthood takes time. It takes courage to break away from unfulfilled parental expectations and consider them void. Graduation is the jumping off point. Inevitably, self-evaluation becomes part of the process. It can be rough trying to show your parents that you don't love them less, you're just learning to love yourself.
The University Daily Kansan would like to congratulate all the 1996 graduates and wish them Good Luck in the Future!
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Timmy Verdin of the Verdin Company of Cincinnati adjusts the ringer in one of the bells at the Campanile. The Campanile has been under renovation for three years.
Darcy Coles / KANSAN
Bells will toll
Bells v Campanile is repaired
By Bradley J. Brooks
Kansan Correspondent
There will be something in the air during the 1996 KU commencement that has been missing for more than two years: the sounds of the 53-bell carillon in the Campanile, which will ring once again in this year's graduation.
The bells have not been heard since October of 1993 as a result of extensive
Gerken not only is in charge of playing the carillon, he has overseen the entire renovation project.
renovations to the Campanile.
"We didn't only restore it, we tried to improve it beyond its
"I can now play and do things musically with much more ease, much more control. It makes the instrument more expressive," said Albert Gerken, University carillonneur since 1963.
original state." Gerken said.
"The placing of the bells in new locations will simply make them ring better."
Gerken said the biggest factor in improving the sound was the repositioning of the bells. The treble bells have been moved nearer the top of the Campanile, enabling their sound to be more exposed.
"We tried to improve the action so that when it is played,it improves the sound," Gerken said.
He said the renovations included replacing all of the clappers, which ring the fixed bells, and mounting the clappers on new bearing mounts. A new keyboard was also purchased.
Albert Gorken University carillonneur
"I can now play and do things with much more ease, much more control."
All this adds up to a more comfortable working environment, Gerken said, but playing for the commencement is still a concern.
In addition to work on the carillon, the playing and practice rooms were improved. The rooms, which are half-way up the Campanile, have been repainted, the electrical system has been improved, and new air-conditioning and heating units have been installed.
The playing of the carillon can be physically taxing. Gerken strikes the maple keyboard with a clenched fist to activate the bells with higher tones. He uses foot pedals to play the bells with lower sound.
"I've been away so long, and I only will have two weeks to practice." Gerken said.
Gerken said.
"There is physical activity to it. When its warm, it can be very uncomfortable," Gerken said. "I'm out of shape now; it's been a couple of years. Like an athlete, I'll have to get back into shape."
The physical work is not the only thing that has been a stress.
Gerken has estimated that the renovations have cost $450,000. The University allocated $45,000 in 1984, when he first proposed the project, and the rest has come from private contributions. A separate fund is also in existence to help maintain the renovations.
Keith and Joan Bunnel of Pittsburgh have contributed $425,000 to establish the restoration fund, making the project possible.
The Bunnels planned to attend the April 26 rededication ceremony for the carillon, which coincides with Keith Bunnel's 50-year class reunion.
May 1996 The Hill
"I'm delighted. It has taken a long time to get it done," Bunnel said. "I hope it comes off without a hitch so that we all can hear the bells again."
Graduation
14
1
So you didn't meet Mr. or Ms. Right
You're graduating and you still haven't met that perfect man. Or any man (or woman) for that matter. Have no fear you're not alone. According to the Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1994, you have forty-two million single people to choose from still
For some college graduates, dating life blossoms after they find their social niche in the work force. For instance, my brother, Tom, has dated two women at the same time consistently since he received his undergraduate degree. Sometimes it takes a new city or
POLYPHOTOGRAPHY
In my high school and college dating adventures, I've resolved a few things before entering the world of paid work.
Alice Yeo
workplace to find someone with similar enough interests to spark a relationship.
The first decision I've made is to not ask men out. For me, this presents a challenge. I love risk. The most ballys dating endeavor of my life was asking out Joel O'Laughlin when he didn't even know my name. He just seemed like the perfect combination of John Lennon and James Taylor — wire-rimmed specs and long brown hair, a sweet smile and a soft voice.
school. We had met briefly that weekend at a party. He answered the door with a confused Jook. I introduced myself and asked him out for D'Bronx pizza. He accepted. We talked for two hours and that was the end. I've always wondered why he never called.
I knocked on his door on a chilly, fall afternoon during my junior year of high
My brother, Tom, and I were discussing the possibilities. He commented that when a woman asks a man out, it challenges the male dating role. Instead of offering the options and finzing a "yes,"
men simply give a
response. My brother think this takes away the adrenaline rush and the challenge that accompanies asking a woman out. This may sound sexist, but I've found some realities in life are not politically correct. I'm keeping his advice in mind.
flirting a lot, laughing at some jokes that aren't funny and perfecting the combination hair-flip with the giggle from the movie About Last Night.
MIS MIS HERD
Occasionally asking a man out feels empowering and helps me sympathize with men who do most of the asking.
When guys ask me out it seems to reduce role confusion and tension from the start. To avoid asking men out, I've resorted to
These tactics are supposed to make me more approachable to most men. They also keep me from taking too much control and becoming a dominatrix.
Another change I've made is to let the guy make the first move. Also a hard change for me because I get frustrated around the third date if nothing has happened. My most memorable first date move was when my high school sweetheart, Doug, was dropping me off from our third date. He hadn't kissed me
HIS HIS HERE
Borg
yet, and I was getting trigger-happy for a kiss.
On the first date, he brought flowers, took me to an intimate Italian cafe, and we had an unusually comfortable time. When he hadn't kissed me two dates later, I thought maybe he needed a little encouragement. As I pulled away from the good-night hug, my eyes focused on his lips like the zoom lens of a Nikon cam-
era.I gave him the big kiss.
But wait. Something was amiss. He looked dazed, bewildered. I felt panic-stricken. What was wrong? Too much tongue? Not enough? These are questions I'm sure guys ask in junior high, but I'm a virgin first-kisser here.
A peck might have worked, and the serious kiss yielded the response, "My! Aren't we forward tonight!" So I calmly said good night and cowered my way inside, not really knowing how else to respond to his rejection.
He brought a La Bonne Bouché raspberry muffin (my favorite) to my work the next day in apology. We dated for three months. Nonetheless, I learned guys may feel threatened with such an advance without any previous nonverbal warning. I've revised my tactic: make the pass, but let him make the play.
Comedian Jerry Seinfeld took a positive approach on the differences between men and women and the lack of understanding in relationships.
In his book Seinposts, he wrote, "I believe we're all secretly happy that we can't figure relationships out. It keeps our minds working. I think we have to be grateful for the one thing in our lives that keeps us from being totally focused on eating."
Alice Yee is a Prairie Village senior in magazine Journalism.
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15
Graduation
May 1996 The Hill
Commencement guide
Where to go and what to do on graduation weekend
KU
Schedule of Events
Fridav.Mav17
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Pick up pre-ordered regalia at gates 22-23, Memorial Stadium. Late orders also accepted.
4 to 5:30 p.m. Reception for graduating international students.Malott Room Kansas Union.Co-sponsors: International Studies,International Student Services Phi Beta Delta.
6 to 8 p.m. Business School Graduate Business Council reception for graduating master's business students. Adams Alumni Center.
Saturday.May 18
8:30 to 10:30 a.m. Reception for Chancellor's student awards recipients. Kansas Room, Kansas Union.
9 a.m. School of Allied Health student recognition. Memorial Hall, Kansas City, Kan.
University Relations
10 to 11:00 a.m. College Graduate Division master's hooding. Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall. Luncheon follows, Burge Union. Tickets: CLAS Graduate Division, 209 Strong.
10 a.m. to noon. Graduating student athlete recognition brunch and awards. Adams Alumni Center.
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Pick up pre-ordered regalia at Memorial Stadium. Late orders also accepted.
10:30 a.m. School of Nursing recognition. Jack Reardon Civic Center, Fifth and Minnesota Ave., Kansas City, Kansas.
11 a.m. to noon. Phi Beta Kappa initiation. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union.
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Luncheon and open house for graduates of Allied Health, Medicine, Nursing, Medical Center graduate programs and families. Fountain courtyard, Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan.
Noon. Phi Beta Kappa initiates reception Big 12 Room, Kansas Union.
1 to 3 p.m. Reception for graduating seniors who have completed the honors program and the University Scholars program and Summerfield and Watkins-Berger Scholars. Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall.
3 p.m. Graduate School doctoral hooding. Lied Center.
3:30 to 6 p.m. School of Business undergraduate reception. Bruckmiller and McGee Rooms, Adams Alumni Center.
4 to 5 p.m. Reception for graduating minority students and their parents. Malott Room, Kansas Union.
5 to 6 p.m. School of Pharmacy senior recognition and Pharmacy hooding. Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall. Reception follows. Murphy courtward.
5 to 7 p.m. Minority graduation banquet. Kansas Union Ballroom.
7 to 9 p.m. Biological Sciences graduate recognition, honors and awards reception. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas
Union. Reception follows, Big 12 Room.
7:30 p.m. School of Education convocation and reception. Lied Center.
Sundav.Mav19
a. m. to 8 p.m. Memorial Drive closed to traffic. (Parking ban begins midnight Saturday.)
7:45 to 9:30 a.m. Class of 1996 breakfast for graduating students and guests. Program begins 8:30 a.m. Ballroom. Kansas Union.
8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Pick up preordered regalia at the stadium. Late orders also accepted.
9 a.m. School of Law hooding. Lied Center. Reception follows, Green Hall.
Graduates at the 1995 commencement ceremony.
9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Speech- Language-Hearing graduate recognition. 3139 Wescoe. Reception follows, Schiefelbusch Clinic, 2101 Haworth.
9 a.m. School of Journalism hooding for master's degree candidates and recognition for bachelor's degree candidates. Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall. Reception follows, Murphy Hall courtward.
9:30 to 10:30 a.m. School of Engineering recognition and awards. Allen Field House. Reception follows, Learned Hall patio.
9:30 a.m. to noon. School of Business and Beta Gamma Sigma honors brunch, Ramada Inn, 2222 W. 6th.
10 a.m. to noon. Chancellor's reception for graduates and families. Chancellor's residence. 1532 Lilac Lane
10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Dept.of Music and Dance student recognition. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
10:30 to 11:30 a.m. School of Pharmacy open house. Second floor, Malott Hall.
11 a.m. to noon. College of Liberal Arts and Sciences recognition for students graduating with distinction
Crafton-Prever Theatre, Murphy Hall.
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. School of Social Welfare hooding for M.S.W. candidates. Recognition of B.S.W. candidates. Lied Center.
11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. School of Architecture and Urban Design brunch. Ballroom, Kansas Union.
Noon. School of Medicine hooding and awards. Allen Field House. Reception follows.
Noon to 2 p.m. Theatre and Film recognition for graduates, families. Big 12
Room, Kansas Union.
2 p.m. Commencement participants assemble for procession. Memorial Drive.
2:30 p.m. Commencement procession begins.
4 to 5:30 p.m. Rental regalia return at stadium.
6 p.m. School of Business dinner for doctoral graduates. Adams Alumni Center.
9 a.m. to noon. Rental regalia may be
Mondav, Mav 20
returned without penalty at stadium.
11 a.m. ROTC joint service commissioning. Lied Center. Reception follows, Seymour Gallery, Lied Center.
Questions or Information.
The KU Information Center is open 7 days a week to answer questions about KU and Lawrence and to assist in handling problems. If you need assistance, call the center at (913) 864-3506. For emergencies, dial 911.
May 1996 The Hill
Graduation
16
Commencement parking
Free parking will be available on the day of commencement in the lots near Memorial Stadium. A shuttle will run from 11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. with wheelchair accessible service provided on request.
★ Free parking lots
Shuttle route
15th St.
Sunnyside Ave
Nalsmith Dr.
Commencement parking and bus service
Free parking is available in lots 94 and 91 east and southeast of Memorial Stadium. Enter from Mississippi Street near 11th Street or south of the Spencer Museum of Art.
Buses will run Sunday from 11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. The loop route will serve the stadium, the Kansas Union, Jayhawk
Blvd., Murphy Hall, the parking garage, the Burge Union and Daisy Hill, returning to the stadium via 15th Street. West Campus Road (stopping at the fountain) and 11th Street.
For wheelchair-accessible service, notify any of the bus drivers at designated stops.
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Graduating in four years is not common anymore
By Jen Humphrey Special to the Kansan
Eight years after beginning her academic career, Ginger Thasuda is finally a junior. With a divorce behind her, two children and financial aid problems complicating her education, the 25-year-old Lawrence sophomore hopes she can continue to attend classes full-time until she graduates.
"With day care and the money involved and work, it's hard to focus attention on school," she said.
Often, plans for graduation get sidelined by a student's sophomore year.
If students reach their junior year undecided or have changed their majors, they have to catch up on missed classes.
"I would say a good 75 percent of incoming freshmen haven't chosen a major yet," said Kathleen Hall, director of the Advising Support Center, 4017 Wescoe Hall. "During the sophomore year, it has an impact on the classes they choose to select."
Thasuda is one of the many students who find that graduating after four years is not possible. In the past 12 years, less than 26 percent of incoming KU freshmen have graduated in four years, according to Office of Institutional Research and Planning records.
Sometimes students even change their major their fourth year. This is rare, and Hall said the center usually advised
against such a change by showing students how many additional hours it would take to graduate.
"A lot of times, just seeing how long it will take is enough to change their minds," Hall said.
Matt Gunnin changed his major his fourth year, and it will now take him seven years to graduate. The St. Louis senior, who will have completed 176 credit hours at the end of this semester, changed his major from voice to theater three years ago.
"I changed majors because I didn't want to be an opera singer," Gunnin said.
Sticking around a little longer
On average, less than half of an incoming freshman then manages to graduate in four years. Often, professional schools and other concerns keep students around for five or six years.
Incoming freshmen 1990+
Graduated in Five years 1999
Four years 1988
Five years 1987
Six years 1994
3,940 1986
3,694 1985
3,402 1984
3,353 1983
* Gift year options not available
* Gift and Gift year options not available
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Graduation 18
Gunnin said graduating later than most of his peers was bittersweet. While he realized he had friends who had already been in Los Angeles acting for a few years, Gunnin said he was grateful for the time to grow and mature.
"I look back on when I was 22, and I realize that now I'm a lot more open to ideas," Gunnin said. "I was less accepting then."
Students who enter the job market after an extended education aren't as behind as they might think, said Michael Heuring, assistant director.
of the University Placement Center.
"Employers are more interested in the best individual candidate," Heuring said. "It says something about you if you took longer to get through school than the person who had their nose buried in the books for four years. It shows a more well-rounded person than just how fast you got through school."
Hall agreed.
"To rush through school just to say you graduated in four years may cause you to limit yourself." she said.
Melissa Seigel. changed her major her junior year but still will be out in
four years. She said she was glad to be graduating but sorry that she had to finish her course work in a hurry.
Seigel, who had financial restraints on her education, said she had to settle for a bachelor of general studies in sociology instead of a bachelor of arts.
and accommodations along the way. she said.
Sometimes students have to drop out of school. When they return to the University, Hall said they usually had to balance many responsibilities.
"I have had to rush all my classes to graduate in four years," the Chicago senior said. "This semester I took 21 hours just to graduate on time."
"Very seldom can they just go to school, so we advise a gradual adjustment back to taking college course work so that they don't get overwhelmed," she said.
"You have to take 15 or 16 hours a semester in order to graduate on time," she said. "You get just a highlight of everything, but it's hard to retain it because it's so much information every semester."
Hall said she tried to determine what was best for the individual. If the student had the time and the resources to attend school longer, there was more room for changes
Graduating in four years also may be difficult if a student cannot get into the right classes.
"This semester I took 21 hours just to graduate on time"
To counter this, some schools are beginning to offer
Mollaca Soigel
Chicago senior
guaranteed-placement agreements with students. If students maintains a certain grade point average and agree to several other terms, a university will make sure the students get the classes they need, when they need them.
"It's like a marketing technique," Heuring said.
Heuring said larger state schools with a reputation for full classes and long waits for graduation were using the plan to keep up enrollment.
While KU officials have discussed such a program, there is no plan to try one, said Richard Morrell, University Registrar.
"It has been discussed in passing, but there's been no formal discussion about it," he said.
Regardless of whether a student can or cannot graduate on time as a result of classes, money or family, the Advising Center supports individual decisions. Hall said.
"I'm just astounded at what students can do when they're motivated to do it — work full time, raise children and go to school," she said.
Thasuda said the biggest obstacle in her education has been raising her two daughters. As a result, she has had to start and stop her education several times during the last eight years.
"I'm used to it now," she said. "It gets frustrating because I think I should be done, but at least I know that I am getting it done."
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University Relations
Dates and information about 1996 graduation
University Relations
Receiving Regalia
Order receipts must be presented to pick up regalia.
Lawrence campus: pick up pre-ordered regalia from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., May 17; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., May 18; or from 8 a.m. until commencement, May 19 at the stadium. Candidates who missed the April 26 ordering deadline may receive regalia those same hours. A late fee of $5 will be assessed.
Medical Center-Kansas City: regalia may be picked up in the Medical Center bookstore from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., May 15-17.
School of Medicine-Wichita: regalia may be picked up at the Student Services Office during regular business hours. Wichita students will be notified when regalia arrives.
Regents Center: students may pick up regalia May 8-11 during regular business hours.
Commencement Breakfast
The class of 1996 breakfast will be from 7:45 to 9:30 a.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The program begins at 8:30. The breakfast is open only to graduates and their guests. A reservation card has been sent to all degree candidates. Chancellor's Awards, the Class of 1996 gift and banner, and honorary class members will be presented.
Commencement Procession
Graduates wearing appropriate academic dress should assemble on Memorial Drive for the procession beginning at 2 p.m. (Note: parking will not be allowed on Memorial Drive commencement day.) A map in this publication shows the approximate location where graduates and faculty should gather without regard to alphabetical order. School assembly areas will be marked by signs. University marshals wearing gold shoulder braids will organize the procession.
Persons receiving bachelor's degrees should wear gowns closed; master's and doctoral degree recipients may wear gowns open or closed. The tassel should be attached to the center of the mortarboard and worn hanging on the left side of the face, where it will remain throughout the ceremonies. Participants should not remove their mortarboards at any time during the ceremonies.
Warning: Please do not smoke or use flammable materials during the procession or ceremonies. The cap and gown material is not flame resistant.
The procession will start promptly at 2:30 p.m. Graduates should march close to the person in front of them so gaps do not occur in the line. After entering the stadium, graduates march through a gauntlet of faculty members. Graduates may sit down when they reach their seats.
When the time comes for conferring of
See Dates and Information, Page 22.
Placement: Jobs are out there
Continued from Page 10.
students update their resume at the beginning of each academic year. She said some employers interviewed only once each year for May and December graduates, and summer temporary help.
Dana Leibengood, director of student services for the School of Journalism, said he thought this year would be the best for
graduates in recent years.
"We are in the process of checking with the May graduates," Leibengood said. But based on the reports we have, the number of interviews on campus and the good placement of interns are good indicators for May graduates."
Journalism students should register as soon as they are admitted to the school, he said, and must do so before being eligible to interview on campus.
May 1996 The Hill
Graduation
20
(2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)
Olympic torch to pass through campus
The Olympic Torch Relay is coming through Lawrence and the KU campus on its way to the 1996 Centennial Olympic Games in Atlanta.
The torch is expected to arrive in Lawrence at about 6:30 p.m. May 16. The "Community Heroes" carrying the torch and the escort runners will travel west through Lawrence, arriving from Kansas City on Highway 10 and leaving for Topeka on Highway 40. The torch bearers are expected to enter campus on Mississippi Street and pass Memorial Stadium parking lot at about 7:25 p.m.
On its way through campus, the torch bearers will continue on Memorial Drive, go left on West Campus Road, right on Jayhawk Boulevard, and left on Naismith Drive. The relay will leave campus by going west on 15th Street.
Torch route
The Olympic torch will pass through Lawrence on May 16 on its way to the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta. Torch bearers will pass through campus at approximately 6:30 p.m.
Torch route
Torch route
The Olympic torch will pass through Lawrence on May 16 on its way to the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta. Torch bearers will pass through campus at approximately 6:30 p.m.
Torch route
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Graduation
May 1996 The Hill
Dates and information
Continued from Page 1.
Cutline information goes here. Be sure to fill out both lines. They need to be well written and concise as well as complete and accurate. Edit these to fit on two lines maximum; people won't read more.
Staff Photographer / KAN$AN
degrees by school, graduates should stand for presentation by their dean and for the conferring of degrees by Chancellor Robert Hemenway. Graduates should remain in place until the ceremonies conclude with the singing of one stanza of "Crimson and the Blue."
Returning regalia
Graduates and faculty should follow return instructions for the campus where they rented their caps and gowns. Do not return regalia to the Thomas A. Peterson Company.
Lawrence campus: bachelor's and master's degree recipients may keep their regalia. Advanced degree recipients and faculty should return rented caps, gowns, and hoods to gates 22-23 at the stadium. Returns will be accepted without penalty charges until 5:30 p.m., May 19, and 9 a.m.-noon, May 20.
Kansas City campus: graduates and faculty should return regalia to the Medical Center bookstore. Returns will be accepted without penalty 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 20-21
Diplomas
After commencement, diplomas may be picked up by the recipient on the first floor of Strong Hall until 5:30 p.m. Sunday (photo ID required). In the event that
bad weather delays commencement diplomas may be picked up in Strong until 8:30 p.m. Allied Health, Medicine and Nursing diplomas will be available at
the Medical Center in K.C. after May 20.
Students wanting their diploma mailed should return the card sent to them or contact the student records or registrar's
office on their campus. There is a $5 fee to mail diplomas in the U.S., $10 outside the U.S. Unclaimed diplomas are held 30 days and then destroyed.
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A good resume gets the job
A good resume can get a foot in the door, and a bad one doesn't get a second glance, some employers say.
Kesume and cover-letter writing can be a major cause of students' stress. The chances of getting that dream job or internship are often determined by the difference between a well-developed resume and a mediocre one.
Michael Heuring, assistant director of the University Placement Center, said that the earlier students began developing a resume the better were their chances of getting ahead in the job market.
To begin building resumes early in college, students should participate in different activities, internships and jobs that could be included in resumes, Heuring said. Students should also put important credentials down on paper throughout college rather than waiting until their senior year and trying to remember everything they were involved in.
While there is no magic formula to resume and cover-letter writing, there are several basic steps that students can take to improve their resumes. Students should begin by compiling a list of things that they have accomplished, participated in and learned during college, Heuring said. Next students should select which items would be the most important to
include, and then to begin grouping them into categories.
the categories.
Heuring said that students should make sure the information they include in the resume is relevant to their main objective.
Rather than simply listing job experience or work history, students should detail experience and skills that would be transferable from a previous job to the new one.
By listing related experience, students can show a correlation between past experiences and future career goals as well as show what abilities they can bring to the company.
Rather than just listing all the jobs a student has held, they should include what relevant duties they performed at the job.
information into a resume format about one page long. Numerous manuals and handouts are available to give suggestions about how to design the make-up of a resume. It is important to make sure the information provided is organized.
the job and what they accomplished while working there.
Information provided is organized. Fred Madaus, director of the Business School Placement Center, said that following the organization stage, it was advising the organization stage, it was advising
A resume's effectiveness often is enhanced by using key action verbs.
A resume's effectiveness often is enhanced by using key action verbs. Compiled, formulated, organized and synthesized are good examples. It is important to show the employer what the applicant has accomplished and learned through his or her experiences.
The next step is to compile all of this
able to get an evaluation of the resume. The Placement Center offers free resume consultations provided that a student brings in a rough draft of his or her resume.
Madaus said that it was also important for students to spend some time developing their resumes. Several drafts will probably be needed in order to refine a resume.
When printing the final draft, special paper can be used to help the overall look of a resume and to make it more appealing. Neutral shades or heavier bonded paper can add a professional look.
Heuring warned students to use the same style of paper for their cover letters as they do for their resumes. Bright colors do not necessarily make a resume stand out, rather the content of the resume is
what will catch an employer's attention.
Like the resume, cover letters should be concise while still communicating relevant information to the employer. Cover letters should be individualized for each company. Students should include their current status in school and the degree for which they are in pursuit. Where the student got the idea to apply to that company through an advertisement.
— through an advertisement, a friend, or personal interest — should also be included. Madaus said that a student should always close a cover letter by asking the prospective employer for an interview.
One of the biggest problems with most resumes is that they are not tailored to the job for which students are applying.
Heuring said that students are often mistaken when they assume that once they have one copy of a resume that they are through with the writing process.
The Placement Center offers free resume writing workshops several times each semester and once in the summer. The next workshop will be at 3:30 p.m. Thursday, June 20 in room 149 of the Burge Union. While it is not mandatory to register for this workshop, the Placement Center asks students to sign up inside the center prior to the workshop.
App to the workshop.
Students can also access more information on resume building via the Internet net home page for the Placement Center at http://kuht.cc.ukans.edu/cwis/units/sydfacts/upcfacts/upc_main.html.
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FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SECTION A VOL.102,NO.150
ADVERTISING 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY KANSAN
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Jayhawk ace
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CAMPUS
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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.
Caught in the web
Story by Heather Kutwood Illustration by Lenn Hilsen
Everybody knows the tragedy of addiction to alcohol, drugs, gambling, but what about the Internet?
it's 5 a.m. I turn over and beat my pillow. From the other side of my apartment I hear a high-pitched squeal, followed by a slightly lower-pitched grinding. I moan, peep through the blinds, see that it is still dark outside and realize that the noise is my roommate's computer modem.
I roll over onto my stomach, pull the covers around my ears, and moan again. How could any normal human possibly want to get out of bed at 5 a.m., much less sit in front of a computer?
At 8:30 a.m. I am jolted awake by the buzz of my alarm clock.
"Good morning," my roommate calls from her study. I can hear her computer chattering away. She is blind and uses a voice synthesizer to read what appears on the computer screen. Could she still be on-line? I'm not sure. She could just be typing a paper.
4
It's 12:30 p.m., and I decide to go home and find something to eat besides vending machine food and find my roommate eating lunch and watching her favorite soap opera. We talk for a few minutes, and when the soap opera ends, she goes back to work. I hear the squeal and grind of the modem as leave.
At 2:30 p.m. I call home but the line is busy. We have call waiting, so I know she is on-line.
By 12:15 a.m. I'm making noise in the kitchen and wake my roommate. We talk for a few minutes and then I announce I'm going to bed. She says that she's awake now and thinks she might check her e-mail before she goes back to sleep.
I lay in bed and listen to the squeal and grind of the modem. "Amazing." I think to myself.
"Hi, I'm an addict"
Was I simply one of those people who could never catch up with the times, who fought modern progress at every turn? Sure, I had an e-mail account, but my seldom used it. I'd done my share of surfing the 'Net too, but when it came down to it, sitting in front of a
computer felt too much like work to me.
I turned the idea over for several days, thinking back to a magazine article I had read about people "addicted" to the Internet.
I imagined a room full of people who have been to hell and back and whose only hope was to help each other.
"Hi, Joe," everyone else would answer in unison.
"Hi, my name is Joe and I'm an Internet addict," someone would say.
They would trade stories about endless nights in chat sessions or
checking out Web sites, and compare carpal tunnel syndrome aches and pains.
The scenarios seem silly compared to what I know about alcoholism. Families being destroyed or careers ruined by an obsession with the Internet didn't seem all that possible.
But as I tossed the idea around among friends, everyone had a story about someone they would call an "Internet addict." I couldn't help but wonder if this exploding technology, that promised every-
See INTERNET, Page 5A
Undercover cops to staff liquor stores
Bv Amv McVev
Kansan staff writer
Underage drinkers beware: Tonight, the clerk at the liquor store down the street may be an undercover cop.
"The goal of this program is to discourage minors from attempting to purchase alcohol," Police Chief Ron Olin said. "This is not an effort to spearhead arrests toward minors but a joint effort by local businesses and the Lawrence Police Department to emphasize that it is illegal to purchase alcohol beverages if you are a minor."
In an attempt to crack down on the increasing problem of underage purchases of alcohol in Lawrence, police will be posing as clerks in area lounge stores.
Police announced the program, Cops in Shops, during a press conference yesterday.
Police have been preparing to implement the program for about a month, Lawrence police Lt. Ed Brunt said.
John Webb, owner of Webb's Fine Wine &
Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., said he would be
participating in the program but that he felt
pressured by police to do so.
"We are going to be doing this for basically two months and take a look at its effectiveness," he said.
Brunt said a majority of the liquor stores in Lawrence have agreed to work with police, even though cooperation was not mandatory.
Webb said that in the past five years he has seen a rise in the use of fake IDs. He stressed that the problem stemmed from the number of fake IDs being made — not the liquor stores intentionally selling alcohol to minors.
"Try not doing it and see what they'd do," he said. "They'd sit here and watch until you made a mistake."
"I don't want any underage business," he said. "And I have never gone out on 23rd Street and made someone buy from me."
Tom Dangermond, manager of Patterson Liquor, 846 Illinois St., on the other hand said he thought the program would help retailers address the growing problem of underage drinkers in Lawrence.
"The liquor store owners face a rather severe penalty if they sell to minors," he said. "I think it is a good idea to try and
deter underage drinking from buying in my store. To me it is taking a little heat off the retailers."
Chad Coellner, Salina freshman, said that the new program would discourage him from purchasing liquor from a liquor store this weekend. But he doesn't think it will last.
"It won't make that big of an impact," he said. "They can't bust everyone. I think they are going a little overboard."
Cops in Shops was a program developed by The Century Council, a national, not-for-profit organization founded in 1991. It is supported by more than 800 distillers, vintners, brewers and wholesalers. Its headquarters are in Los Angeles. United States Ambassador to Mexico, John Gavin, is the chairman of the council.
"So, if you are underage — don't try it," Brunt said.
Area liquor stores participating in the program will post signs reading "Warning: police officers may be posing as store employees," and signs on beer coolers, reminding customers that the participating shop will check for identification, Brunt said.
Legislature approves crumbling classrooms
Revised bill will provide millions for improvements
By John Collar
Kansan staff writer
The Kansas Legislature brought music to Stanley Shumway's ears yesterday.
"This is wonderful news," Shumway said. "It's quite important to the band program to have adequate rehearsal space."
With the Legislature's approval of the Regents' crumbling classrooms plan, the University's associate dean of fine arts said he was pleased that music students soon would have expanded rehearsal and storage space in Murphy Hall.
Yesterday, the House voted 82-40 to adopt a conference committee report containing the proposal. A part of the bill that had delayed its passage was removed from yesterday's version. The section had stated that the Legislature should approve moving certain state agencies out of the Capitol.
The Senate later adopted the report 39-0. The bill now will go to Gov. Bill Graves. The $163-million capital improvement project virtually is assured of going forward because Graves endorsed the proposal earlier this year.
"I think it's monumentally important," said Ted Ayres,
regents general counsel and director of governmental relations.
"Iif we don't take care of our students, we've let them down," he said.
He said providing safe and adequate facilities was vital to the Regents system.
"It's quite
The University of Kansas would receive about $53.2 million. About $8 million would be used to expand Murphy Hall, and $12 million would go to renovate Joseph R Pearson Hall.
At the May meeting, the Regents are scheduled to begin allocating funds to each university.
important to the band program to have adequate rehearsal space."
Stanley Shumway associate dean of fine arts
However, the universities will face another decision.
Stopping the Crumbling
Funds from the 10 major projects in the proposal, including Murphy Hall and Joseph R. Pearson Hall, have been cut
$8 million
Fund that the University of Kansas will receive from the Regents' crumbling classroom proposal;
Murphy Hall
Joseph R. Pearson Hall $12 million
Americans with Disabilities improvements
1
Repair and Renovation $20 million
Fire code improvements $4.2 million
Classroom improvements $4.9 million
because the original projects were budgeted for $288 million, $125 million more than bond issue, said Warren Corman, Regents director of facilities.
He said all the Americans with Disabilities Act and fire-safety projects would be completed.
Corman said each school would have the option of raising private funds to make up the difference or cutting funds for the projects.
Lindy Eakin, associate executive vice chancellor, said the Regents were waiting until the measure was signed by the governor before informing the universities of their options.
"It's still unclear how the Regents will deal with it," Eakin said.
Corman said that no actual work could begin until the bonds were sold, which is expected to occur in September.
He said that small projects related to ADA and fire-safety improvements could begin as early as this fall.
The Regents can begin interviewing possible architectural firms for the major projects before the funds are available, Corman said. Completion of the JRP and Murphy Hall projects tentatively is scheduled for the summer of 1999.
2A
Friday, May 3, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU's choral director recalls singing career
King's Singers group toured for 25 years
By Jen Smith Special to the Kansan
When Simon Carrington and a few of his friends and colleagues at King's College at Cambridge University in England began the vocal group the King's Singers, they had no idea the group would last as long as it did.
"We did it for fun. But then we began to realize that we rather enjoyed it and that there was the possibility of making it into some sort of a career, but we had no idea," Carrington said. "We thought maybe a year or something, certainly not 25 and now 30 years."
After the group turned 25, Carrington retired with a feeling that it had been a good span of time, and he moved to the United States to become a choir director.
He is now an associate professor of music and dance at the University of Kansas, and head of the choral department, which will perform William Walton's Belshazar's Feast at 3:30 p.m. Sunday at the Lied Center.
"Here they have these jobs, which don't exist anywhere else in the world. There's nowhere you can have a salaried, faculty job being a choir director.. It's wonderful," Carrington said.
The decision to become an instructor in the United States was fairly easy, Carrington said.
The King's Singers have toured the world, which helped Carrington land the job at the University. The group had performed one of the opening concerts at the Lied Center in the fall of 1993.
"They had decided to appoint somebody on an interim basis, which is what I was after because I wanted a chance to show, well, to learn whether or not I could do this job. So after a bit of doing and showing, they gave me the job for one year, 1994-1995," he said.
He was then hired permanently and given tenure soon afterward.
"I think that his teaching method is effective because quick sight-reading will help us after graduation," said Jennifer Stvanson, Pittsburgh, Pa., sophomore and voice major.
Carrington began his career as a professional musician at age eight at the Christ Cathedral Church in Oxford, England.
In addition to developing his techniques, the years spent touring the world have given Carrington a number of good memories.
"Our 10th Anniversary Concert in London was a tremendous highlight. It was recorded live," he said. "It was packed with all the friends we'd made over 10 years singing in Britain, and it was probably the high spot of the career of the group in Britain as we began to develop more and more overseas.
"At the end of the concert, the audience, after we'd done a couple of encores, they broke spontaneously into 'Happy Birthday.' And that's on the record," he said.
His goal for the choir department is to give students an exciting but not overly stressful experience through singing.
"What we try to offer in the choral department is a bit of therapy in a way, a different kind of excitement," he said. "We hope they go away feeling fulfilled in a rather different way than they would siting in a lecture of some sort."
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 Staufer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
ON CAMPUS
Community Support Services will sponsor a support group for people with schizophrenia from 10:30 to 11:15 a.m. today at the Community Room in Vermont Towers, 1101 Vermont St. For more information, call Community Support Services.
International Studies will sponsor a meeting about Fulbright Grants at noon at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Hodgie Bricke at 864-1414.
tion Final Round at 8 p.m. tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Heather Entrekin at 864-3633.
The Department of Communication Studies will sponsor the Wil Linkugel Speech Competi-
KU women's rugby team will play Kansas State at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow and Missouri at 1:00 p.m. tomorrow at Shenk Complex. For more information, call Stacey Stringfellow at 749-3380.
KU Dance Club will sponsor a dance lesson at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Sonia Ratzlaff at 864-1580.
CORRECTION
An error appeared on page 5A per semester for a bus pass is of yesterday's Kansan. The price $60, not $65.
ON THE RECORD
A computer and computer equipment were stolen from a KU student's apartment between 9 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the 400 block of
Wisconsin Street. The computer and equipment were valued at $3,115, Lawrence police reported.
Weather
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta 86 ° • 60 °
Chicago 60 ° • 47 °
Des Moines, Iowa 72 ° • 49 °
Kansas City, Mo. 75 ° • 55 °
Lawrence 80 ° • 54 °
Los Angeles 74 ° • 61 °
New York 61 ° • 50 °
Omaha, Neb. 69 ° • 46 °
St. Louis 82 ° • 59 °
Seattle 52 ° • 40 °
Topeka 80 ° • 53 °
Tulsa, Okla. 86 ° • 64 °
Wichita 79 ° • 56 °
TODAY
Partly cloudy and warm with a slight chance for morning rain.
8054
SATURDAY
Clear blue skies during the day with a chance for thunderstorms late.
8555
SUNDAY
Cooler and dry.
7247
TODAY
Partly cloudy and warm with a slight chance for morning rain.
8054
SATURDAY
Clear blue skies during the day with a chance for thunderstorms late.
8555
SUNDAY
Cooler and dry.
7247
8054
8555
Source: Gabe Hunninghake/KU Weather Service
SUNDAY
Cooler and dry.
7247
7247
Committee says hazing remains but is declining
By Matt Meusev
Special to the Kansan
The committee formed in response to the Delta Chi hazing incident last fall confirmed that hazing still is alive on campus but that it might be on the decline.
Jim Sampson, Lawrence junior and member of the New Member Education Committee, said the results of the committee's research were not surprising.
"Before we ever started, we knew that hazing was going on at KU," Sampson said. "We wanted to know to what extent it was happening."
The New Member Education Committee is part of the 13-point plan Delta Chi must complete as part of its suspension. The fraternity was suspended after a hazing incident last August that sent two pledges to the hospital.
Braden Hopkins, former Delta Chi president and present co-chairman of the committee, said the committee members were selected from a pool of leaders in the Greek community.
Hopkins said the committee interviewed four focus groups to evaluate the status of hazing on campus.
"We talked to two fraternity pledge classes, a group of older chapter members from numerous fraternities and sororites, and about 20 women from the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority," Hopkins said.
The committee initially was concerned whether the focus groups would be honest and open about their new member education programs.
Hopkins said the committee was pleased by their candor.
about the Delta Chi incident, and they were assured no repercussions for their responses."
The committee's observations came as no surprise to Gina McClain, Overland Park junior.
"Judging from the answers, the focus groups were very honest," Hopkins said, "I was open with them
McClain is the vice-president for external relations for the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. She said she had seen numerous hazing events.
"We have at least one naked guy tied to a chair on our property about once a month, and I know he is not there by choice," McClain said.
Bill Nelson, coordinator for greek programs, said that although hazing may be present on campus, the committee had been successful.
"We had no interest in getting someone in trouble for individual responses. We wanted to get an accurate assessment of new member programming, and I think we did that," Nelson said.
The committee is compiling a comprehensive resource manual to help chapters develop contemporary new member education programming.
Hopkins said he thought the resource manual will be very helpful to chapter leaders.
"We want to see people change before someone else makes them change." Hopkins said.
Committee members said that talk about hazing has already increased awareness.
Nelson said he felt good about the future of new member education and hazing at the University.
"I don't see this committee going away," Nelson said, "For quite some time, we have sent the message that hazing is unacceptable in any form. This committee has let the greek community know that everyone now has a level of responsibility in addressing this problem."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, May 3, 1996
3A
Finals can exacerbate bad habits
Doctors say vices can be dangerous
By Teresa Veazey
Kansan staff writer
Biting fingernails, cracking knuckles and ingesting lots of caffeine.
While cracking knuckles doesn't cause arthritis as some people believe, Yockey said the habit could be a vicious cycle.
"The more you crack your knuckles, the stifter they get and the more you feel like they need to be popped," he said.
These habits can plague KU students during the semester, but bad habits such as these seem to manifest themselves during finals, said Charles Yockey, physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
With nervous habits, or ticks, people do things subconsciously and often don't realize it. One such habit is nail biting, which can cause dental problems. Susan Hall, a Lawrence dentist, recommended that fingernails should not be part of a student's diet.
"When people get nervous, the electrical activity in the brain is heightened," he said.
"I see little nick and fractures in the teeth because the nail substance is so hard," Hall said. "They can get embedded underneath your gums and cause infection. You touch everything, and there's lot of bacterial contamination on your nails."
(1)
Cracking knuckles doesn't do any
“It's just something you do with your hands, just like smoking."
Luann Arnoldy radiological technologist
harm, but can be a problem for people who have arthritis, said Luann Arnoldy, radiological technologist at Associated Orthopedics in Lawrence.
"What caffeine does is distort your perception of your accomplishments," he said. "You can stay up all night and absolutely retain nothing."
As with almost everything, moderation is the key, Yockey said. That means drinking only as much caffeinated beverages in one evening as students normally do.
Other students chew the inside of their mouths, which brings trauma
"It's something to do with your hands, just like smoking," she said. "If it was painful, you wouldn't want to do it."
Late-night studying often means drinking coffee to keep awake, but Yockey said students who use caffeine to avoid sleeping could end up studying for hours and not remember a word of what they read.
to the mouth that can set up an infection.
"If you bite the inside of your mouth, it swells up," Yockey said. "The more you bite it the more it swells. If you do it enough, it can be infected."
Yockey said one of the most common habits students have was picking their nose, especially in class or
while studying. Yockey said that when you pick your nose, the mucus gets on your hand and is transferred to another person when you shake hands. When that person touches their eye for example, then the cold virus is spread.
"The only way to stop spreading colds is to stop picking your nose," he said.
LesBiGayS OK chooses new group name
Queers & Allies approved as title
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
After debating for more than an hour, LesBiGay Services of Kansas decided last night on a new name — Queers & Allies.
Twenty-one members of the group met at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union and discussed new names that would be more inclusive. They finally agreed on the group's full name, Queers & Allies serving LesBiGayTrans Services of Kansas.
The group had been called LesBiGay S OK for two years. It previously was called Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas but was changed to include bisexuals.
Samantha Korshin, Ballwin, Mo. senior, said the group wanted to include those people who either expressed themselves as the opposite sex or have had their gender surgically altered.
The motivation behind the name change was the inclusion of transsexual and transgendered people.
Tony Phillips, Lawrence graduate student, said that although he had no problem with the term queer, he was aware that it had negative connotations with many people
"A lot of people grew up knowing queer as a negative word," he said.
"But over the past few years, I think the word has undergone a generational shift."
Queer is being used by the group as a term of encompassing power, rather than something negative, and was selected for a specific reason, he said.
"It's all-inclusionary," Phillips said. "More people are using it in a more positive way these days."
Other names suggested were KU KUeers, KU Lambda Alliance, Queer Services Of Kansas and KU Queer Rights Coalition.
But whatever the name was going to be, the group decided "queer" needed to be in the title.
The group also discussed using the initials Q & A as its moniker, in part to stimulate discussion in groups who aren't fully aware of the group's purpose.
"We can constantly see opportunities to talk about it and explain what it means," Phillips said.
Assistant rejoins Hemenway
Mary Burg, Chancellor's aide at Kentucky, resumes role at KU
By Colleen McCain Kansan staff writer
Although she knew relatively little about the University of Kansas, Mary Burg felt a sense of familiarity upon arriving in Lawrence last month.
"I don't know the institution yet," Burg said. "But I do have a fundamental understanding of the person I'm working for."
Burg, executive assistant to the chancellor, did not know the names of all the buildings on campus, but she did know Chancellor Robert Hemenway. Burg, who assumed her post April 15, came to the University from the University of Kentucky-Lexington, where Hemenway served as chancellor.
Burg worked as Hemenway's assistant to the chancellor for six years at Kentucky and continued that post after Hemenway's departure a year ago. Until now, Burg's position did not exist at KU, but Hemenway included the job in the new administrative structure announced in January.
"The basics of the job are pretty much the same," Burg said. "Dr. Hemenway is the same person he's always been. His values didn't change when he changed institutions."
Gina Thornburg / KANSAN
; Hemenway described Berg as his right-hand-person and said that she would act and speak with his authority.
"At Kentucky, I saw how really effective she was"
"Hemenway said, 'I think people here will see that, too.'"
MARY HERMAN
Ann Garrity worked with Burg and Hemenway at Kentucky when she served as assistant to the chancellor for special projects. She said that Burg would be a great addition to Hemenway's office.
"She can read Dr. Hemenway's mind, and she knows what needs to get done," Garrity said. "She complements his skills very well."
Burg describes herself as a jack of all trades, working as office manager, issues tracker, liaison and chief of staff for the chancellor. She said that her varied background prepared her well for this position.
Mary Burg, executive assistant to the chancellor, works as Chancellor Robert Hemenway's right-hand person, managing his office and schedule. Burg started the position on April 15, 1996.
Burg wanted to be a mime when she was a student at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, worked as a newspaper reporter in Eden, N.C., and worked for the state arts council before managing a modern dance company and doing marketing at Penn State University. She then was hired as the assistant to the dean of arts and sciences at Kentucky in 1986 before becoming assistant to the chancellor.
Burg said she was acclimating quickly to Lawrence and felt comfortable with the people here.
"I still get a lot of grief for my Southern accent and for wearing purple, not knowing that was K-State's color," she said. "But I'm learning, and I already love Lawrence."
Lighting to improve on Daisy Hill
By Nicole Kennedy
Kansan staff writer
Parking permit costs for campus housing are rising, and the parking department plans to use the money to improve lighting in student housing parking lots.
Campus housing permits for next year will cost students $50, $15 more than this year's price, and some students are upset by the parking board's plans to use the resulting increase in revenues only to improve lighting in parking lots on Daisy Hill.
The parking board plans to spend the approximate $30,000 increase in revenues that will be generated from the price increase and about $7,000 in parking department funds to improve lighting in the Ellsworth and McCollum Hall parking lots this summer.
But some students who live in Jayhawker Towers said they were concerned about safety near the towers.
Allison Ford, Marion sophomore and Towers resident, said she wanted the board to consider relighting the sidewalk that led from Templin Hall to the Towers.
"I'm not going to park at Templin and walk down the hill at night in the dark all by myself," she said.
But lighting plans for this summer don't include that sidewalk.
Nor do they include plans to improve lighting at Oliver Hall, despite the fact that more crimes occur in the Oliver lot than in the Ellsworth and McCollum lots.
KU police officer Gayle Reece said that from Aug. 15, 1995, to April 19, 1996, 22 incidents of theft, burglaries of motor vehicles or damage to property occurred in the Oliver lot.
Only nine such incidents occurred in the Ellsworth lot, and 17 occurred in the McCollum lot.
Reece said theft, burglaries of motor vehicles or damage to property are the most common crimes that occur in the student housing parking lots.
Ward Cook, a student member of the parking board, said the board decided to begin relighting with
Lots of crime
Between August 15, 1995, and April 19, 1996, a total of 91 incidents of theft, damage to property, and burglaries of motor vehicles occurred.
1 19 crimes
Lot 111 GSP Corbin Hall
2 22 crimes
Lot 112 Oliver Hall
3 4 crimes
Lot 101 Tampin Hall
4 10 crimes
Lot 102 Lewis Hall
5 10 crimes
Lot 103 Hashinger Hall
6 9 crimes
Lot 104 Ellsworth Hall
7 17 crimes
Lot 105 McCollum Hall
Total 91 crimes
SOURCE: Officer Gayle Reece, KUPD Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
Ellsworth Hall because they knew exactly what the problems were in that lot.
"We knew the lighting was bad up there and we had a number of complaints," he said.
Jim Modig, design and construction management director, said lighting improvements already had been made in other student housing lots. Modig's department will be making this summer's lighting improvements.
"We've done lighting in the scholarship hall area already," Modig said. "We've also done some lighting improvements around Corbin and GSP."
The board also has agreed to commit $100,000 every year for the next five years to relight other student housing lots, but the group has not decided where lighting will be improved next.
Stevie Case, a student member of the parking board, said board members wouldn't decide which lots would be relit next until after the work was completed at Ellsworth Hall.
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K
S
4A
Friday, May 3.1996
OPINION
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
VIEWPOINT
Campanile bells' return welcomed by KU campus
After almost three academic years, the silence has been broken.
To many people's surprise and relief, the Campanile bells finally started ringing again at 2 p.m. on April 26. The longstanding University of Kansas tradition of the Campanile bells had been taken for granted before the bells stopped ringing.
No one seemed to notice them or think of them as special until their sounds were gone. There are many students who didn't even know the bells existed. They started ringing just in time for this year's senior class to experience them at graduation.
There are many seniors who will graduate this year who are hearing the bells for the first time. Either they did not notice them before they stopped, or they arrived on campus when they were being repaired. Senior classes in recent years have complained that walking down the Hill at graduation lacked meaning without
THE ISSUE:
Campanile bells
For the first time in more than two years, graduating seniors will be able to hear the bells as they walk down the Hill.
the Campanile bells chiming in the background. It will be nice to have them back for graduation.
Now that the bells are ringing again, everyone on campus seems to be enjoying them. People were excited to hear them for the first time. Walking on campus, it is easy to see people smile as they hear the bells ring. And it virtually is impossible to lose track of time on campus because the bells chime every 15 minutes.
It is unfortunate that it took the silencing of the bells for everyone to appreciate them again. Now that they are back, campus is complete because the bells enhance its beauty and tranquility.
TARA FI TZPATKIFIC FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
TARA FI TZPATKIFIC FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Abuse of Saferide privilege unfair to all students at KU
Students at the University of Kansas have the privilege of using Saferide, a way of getting a free ride home whenever they find themselves too intoxicated to get home on their own. Unfortunately, many students find ways to abuse this system and use it to get to places other than home, such as a party.
The Saferide system has created a safe way to get people home who do not own a car or are too drunk to drive. Consequently, students do not have to fear walking home alone at night and less drunk drivers circulate.
Nevertheless, KU students need to learn not to abuse this privilege. Indeed, Saferide is based on an honor system, because drivers have no choice but to take everybody on his or her word. When a student informs a driver of the destination he or she needs to be taken, proof of residence at this address is not required. Drivers have to trust the person.
THE ISSUE:
Using Saferide
So far, there is only one thing a driver can do if he finds out that someone's destination happens to be a party. He can tell the other drivers not to take people to this address for the rest of the evening unless they can prove that they live there.
However, nothing will happen to students caught taking advantage of Saferide.
Dishonest users of this service should be penalized. A good solution would be for Saferide drivers to put students who lied about their destination on a no-ride list.
Students thinking about using Saferide to go to a party need to understand that the entire KU community could be hurt by their actions.
If too many students abuse the Saferide system, they could lose this service altogether.
HENRI BLANC FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
CALM DOWN, BOY.
IT'S JUST UNTIL YOUR
TEETH GROW BACK.
Jeff MacNelly/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Spring is in the air. The flowers are blooming, the birds are singing and students lie down each night to visions of the letter F dancing in their heads.
Yes, it is about that time again. The time when previously calm, collected college students enter their classrooms with their hearts pounding, palms sweating and no fingernails to speak of. Many of them will not have slept in weeks and the combination of stress and fatigue will give them the appearance of zombies on drugs.
Finals that make or break grades can be too stressful
What could cause all this anxiety but the culmination of a semester: the final. For many students the grade they receive on the final will determine the grade they receive in the class. In other words, it is not the time to have a bad day.
But what if you have a bad day?
What if your car breaks down on a late-night coffee run, you don't get to bed until 4 a.m., subsequently sleep through your alarm and wake up five minutes before your final is scheduled to start? Okay, I admit this scenario is a bit far-fetched, but stuff does happen. And if it does, you're screwed. No one cares about your sob story. This is college, and it is time to grow up and accept responsibility.
I agree with the above statement in general, but bad things can happen to responsible people, and it is unfair to punish them because of it. A person can be a model student all semester: attend all classes, complete all homework, ace every test, but if they happen to oversleep the day of the final or catch a nasty cold the day before, four months of work can go down the
drain in the matter of a couple hours.
but often times the final is worth so much that it can make or break a student's grade. This practice of placing so much importance on one exam confuses me, especially considering many professors will drop the lowest grade a student has received for the semester. This prevents any major repercussions from a "bad day." Finals allow for none of this.
There is something seriously wrong with this concept. Students should be graded on their performance throughout the semester, not on one test. Of course, a grade is based on a combination of assignments and tests.
Because of their importance, finals also cause another problem: stress. All year I have read articles and heard of programs devoted to reducing stress in the lives of college students. Suggestions have included getting plenty of sleep, eating nutritious meals and taking time out to soak in the tub or read a book. Maybe this is possible the rest of the year, but during finals? You have got to be kidding me.
STEPH
BREWER
When you have got a week of tests staring you in the face, the vending machine becomes a close friend, sleep becomes a distant memory and cleaning rituals are limited to quickie showers, or if you're really pressed
for time, a spritz of cologne or perfume as you run out the dopr.
Some people work well under stress. These lucky few are stimulated by the challenge and thrive on the anxiety generated by finals. The majority of students however, react by developing nervous ticks and killer headaches that make it even harder to study. Then they realize they aren't prepared for finals and get really stressed out. It is a vicious cycle, and I don't think it is worth it.
Maybe finals weren't so bad in high school when all students had to worry about was getting out of school and starting a summer job. The end of the year simply meant freedom.
STAFF COLUMNIST
In college it is a bit more complicated. Students have to figure out storage for the summer, living plans and job or school plans for next year on top of writing the plethora of yearend papers that are piling up at a frighteningly rapid rate. With the addition of finals, it is enough to drive the sanest person to utter madness.
In my opinion, professors who forgo the traditional comprehensive final and instead give the last class exam during finals week have the right idea.
Students still have a large concentration of tests in one week, but at least it is more manageable. Plus these exams are not worth an unusually large percentage of the class grade as some finals are, so students can go into the test having some idea of their semester grade.
Steph Brewer is a Cary, N.C., freshman in pre-Journalism.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Native American should be allowed to show pride
I am writing in response to the article titled Student, KU disagree on dress, I myself also am a Native American, and I sympathize with Dorothy Stites' problem of wanting to dress in traditional Native American clothing at commencement.
I, too, have experienced some of the same discrimination that she describes in your article.
The only reason I find it necessary to disclose this information is to concede that Stites' claims are not fictional.
KANSAN STAFF
While attending a university, a student learns as much outside to a classroom as he or she does inside.
In my opinion, Sites should be commended for her courage to set herself apart from the crowd. She obviously is proud of who she is and the Native American people she represents. Don't try to take that pride from her.
Jon Beardsley Haskell Alumni
By denying Stites' request to wear her traditional regalia, the commencement committee has contradicted everything that she might have learned while attending the University of Kansas.
For every one of your readers who read that article and sympathized with Stites' plights, there were five more who believed that she merely is another bitter minority who feels she has been treated unfairly by the world. I realize this is a rather broad generalization, but this is the same rationale that is used to deem all Native Americans to be lazy, government-supported drunks.
purpose of a degree is not to make oneself more marketable. A degree should not be viewed as a status symbol, but as a symbol of self-worth.
Contrary to popular belief, the
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Internship/co-op mgr | T. J. Clark
KU student finds security, lucidity in a small town
It is impossible for a 25-year-old journalism student to fully appreciate the kinds of stories that stitch together a 50-year-old marriage or underlie a dying oil town in the middle of the Kansas plains.
ASHLEY MILLER
Editor
VIRGINIA MARGHEIM
Managing editor
ROBERT ALLEN
News editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
It was a warm day in early April. I had driven west 175 miles from the KU campus and arrived late to my grandparents' golden wedding anniversary celebration. Scores of well-wishers had gathered at the Genesee Domino Parlor — the only
remaining social hub in the dusty town.
GUEST
COLUMNIST
Pictures of my grandmother — young, solid, German, a teacher. Pictures of my grandfather — stern, intelligent, German, a farmer. Pictures of their farm — a thousand acre of land with cattle and wheat and an old stone house that had been built in 1870, just five years after Kansas had become a state. Pictures of my dad and his three sisters — healthy and gentleyed. Pictures of Geneseo — a town that grew up on a bed of oil, was full of verve and color in the 1940s and 50s, but died when the oil dried up. Each photograph told a different chapter.
The day was a series of first-time meetings with many interesting people all of whom seemed to know me somehow. The festivities wound down by evening, and after prolonged good-byes, the townsfolk went home.
Campus Joann Birk
... Phillip Brownlee
Editorial Paul Todd
Associate editorial Craig Lang
Broadcaster Tom Erikson
Sports Tom Erickson
Associate sports Bill Petulia
Photo Andy Rulletset
Matt Flickor
Graphics Noah Muster
Special sections Novella Sommers
Journalism Jamie Hamilton
Wire Tara Trenny
Illustration Micha Leaker
Trevor Wohlford is a Wichita graduate student in Journalism.
Genesee was a place where we all felt safe, secure ... lucid.
I was greeted by a stooped man in a baby-blue suit and a red bow tie. "Bill's oldest," he said to me. I didn't recognize this gentleman, and he did not bother to introduce himself. It was irrelevant to him that I knew who he was.
Eventually, the young people went out into the garden to tell our own stories. We sat in solid old lawn furniture and talked about baseball, about cousin Jenny's medical school exploits, about books, and about the people we had met that day.
TREVOR WOHLFORD
The parlor was filled to capacity. There were a few young, familiar faces interspersed among the townsfolk. But for the most part, the assembly was made up of elderly people whom I was sure I had never met. Arrayed in bright spring colors,
these revelers had cornered my grandparents at one end of the refreshment table and were spinning lively tales about this and that.
"How's school, Trevor?" he asked.
"Going to be a journalist, I hear. We need more good journalists."
"Yes." I said perfunctorily.
He continued: "No one can write any more. They just watch those stories on television. When I was your age we wrote letters, and it was always such a delight to read them."
Propped up along the table were dozens of old photographs.
The lively clad gentleman and I walked through the food line together.
I was struck immediately with the inkling that this man's idea of journalism was vastly different from mine. I didn't consider journalism to be writing as much as cramming or cutting or sorting. Information was consumed, not read, I had learned. This man saw a journalist as one who told stories, connected neighbors, invited the community to dance on Saturday nights, kept grandparents in touch with their children who had long since moved away.
THE COMPLETELY POINTLESS ADVENTURES OF BRIGG AND FRO
Brigga Fryd
Brought to you
Brought to you by B. Bloomquist & J. Frosolone
You've got to love this time of year.
91
First dav of class. fall 1996.
We get to see our old friends again...
(Promised friend comes)
(Promised friend cameo)
and have a chance to meet some new ones.
Why do you say?
No, I’ll do that tomorrow.
Thanks for everything KU. B&F.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, May 3, 1996
5A
Internet use: habit or hobby?
Continued from Page 1A.
thing, could actually creep into our lives and ruin them.
A Hundred Years of Solitude
Certainly the numbers show an explosion in the use of on-line services at the University of Kansas.
In February 1995, KU students, faculty and staff spent 31,370 hours (1,307 days or 3.6 years) on-line through systems run by the University. This February, the number of on-line hours mushroomed to 879,500 hours. That would be 36,645 days or 100.3 years of computer time in one month.
The number of terminal server lines, the connections allowing people to dial into the University's computer system, has grown from 56 in Fall 1994 to 256 this spring. The number of e-mail accounts on the Falcon system, primarily used by students, jumped from 2,252 in Fall 1994 to 13,690 this spring, according to statistics provided by the Computer Center.
But it doesn't stop there. Demand appears to be increasing.
Networking and Telecommunications Services, which sets up telephone lines and networks for the University, is considering yet another increase in the number of terminal server lines, said Wes Hubert, assistant director of academic computing services. How are these on-line hours affecting students? Is there a new and scary addiction growing out there in Cyberland? The answer requires a journey onto the 'Net in search of on-line junkies.
The Psychology of the Junkie
What would an on-line junkie be like? What would make one different from the thousands of people who log on to computer systems every day?
Linda Keeler, psychiatrist at Counseling and Psychological Services, said that an addiction was something that caused a disruption in normal functioning and continued its disruption until some outside force stopped it. Addictions disrupt personal lives, families and jobs. When an addiction isn't fed, there are withdrawal symptoms.
Keeler stopped short of saying it was possible to be "adducted" to the Internet but she didn't discount the possibility, even though she was not aware of any studies that connect Net abuse to addiction criteria.
"For some people the kinds of connections they get on the Internet and the sort of immediate stimulation that comes back in terms of interaction can be extremely reinforcing."Keeler said.
But she warned there may be other reasons for excessive use of on-line services besides an addiction.
"Folks that are shy or feel anxious about presenting themselves to other people in real life may be far more bold on the Internet," Keeler said.
The Internet allows shy people to choose communication partners carefully, she said. The risk is minimal because it is easy to cut off communication at any time. If someone is hurt or offended, it is simple to hang up and avoid the consequences.
For other people, Keeler said, the Internet may be a way of avoiding personal communication instead of not dealing with daily life, putting off other tasks and retreating from the world.
If overuse of on-line services is a real problem at the University of Kansas, Keeler has seen little evidence of it.
"I am not really in a position to comment about the other members of staff, but generally, we are not seeing people being hauled in here by significant others using that as a presenting complaint," Keeler said. "It may be something that we need to look at, however."
Are you an addict?
Kimberly Young, professor of psychology at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania, has been looking into the problems that online abuse may be causing. She has begun to do some of the research Keeler said was needed to classify excessive time on-line as an addiction.
Young became interested in the subject after a friend called her one night, distraught over her husband's use of America Online. "She was ready to divorce him. He was running up these bills and he wouldn't stop," Young said. But it wasn't long before Young discovered that no one had researched on-line abuse from a clinical standpoint.
She began to set up criteria for online addiction and screen the online users she met.
The addiction criteria she used were:
Loss of control, such as losing track of time while connected to the Internet
Compulsive use, such as getting up early in the morning to check e-mail
Allowing on-line use to become a central part of one's life
Continued use, despite problems arising from overusage
Depression when not on-line.
Young found a number of people who said they matched the criteria. However, getting a firm hold on the number of current and potential addicts is difficult.
"But even if you are only talking about 1 to 2 percent of on-line users, you are talking about thousands of people." Young said.
She has been convinced by her investigations that the Internet can be addictive. Although it may not do the physical damage chemical addictions can, it definitely does emotional damage.
"When you look at other addictions, you see problems in marriages, problems functioning at work, problems with a person being emotionally withdrawn," Young said, "Then when you look at this, you see people having marital problems, people getting fired from jobs because they played on the 'Net too much.'
And, like other addictions, Young said, an on-line addiction is socially isolating. "The only friends Internet addicts have are other addicts," Young said.
When Young first started her research, she met with skepticism from her professional colleagues. Now an excessive on-line syndrome is becoming accepted.
Young has spoken with numerous college students nationwide who are experiencing academic problems because they are on-line so much. She said it was easy for college students to get sucked into excessive on-line use because of the nature of their lives."They often have free and unlimited access to the Internet and they have an unstructured schedule, making it easy for them to use the computer," she said.
"We are not arguing about whether it is a problem," she said. "We are arguing about how to define the problem." she said.
in the meantime,Young has begun workshops for corporations experiencing decreased productivity from employees who spend too much time on-line and for campus counseling centers which are beginning to see students failing their course work because they are lost in cyberspace.
"A lot of times students are just in denial," Young said. "Even if they realize they have a problem, they
Gina Thornburg / KANSAN
Some researchers argue that the Internet is no more addictive than television.
Watson Library houses one of the many computer labs on campus in which students use the Internet. Many students use the Internet to e-mail and find information.
Location: http://
What's New? What's Cool? Handbook Net Search Net Directory Newsgroups
KU computer center login statistics in thousands of hours
1995
1996
(Full internet access)
(Text only)
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
January
February
"For example," Raulin said, "There has always been a market for pornography, and I'm sure that there are some people that use the Internet for that purpose. Maybe before they were spending too much time in X-rated bookstores."
The Internet is like an electronic library, Raulin said. Many people are replacing reading in more traditional forms with time on the Internet.
I sit back for a few days and take all this information in. I know what an addict would be like, but I don't know if Weboholics are "addicts" in the truest sense of the word.
Connecteot: Host contacted. Waiting for...
think people will laugh at them.
Support groups can be helpful."
It's not just for 'geeks' anymore
Much ado about nothing
I think about my roommate.
Maybe she knows that I will be writing about her and is afraid that no one would understand.
Michael Raulin, administrative director of the Psychological Services Center at the University of New York at Buffalo, is not convinced.
She says she spends six nours a week on-line. It seems like more to me, but then I haven't clocked her. Is she in denial?
After all, she has several good reasons for spending so much time online. She is a graduate student and she does research on her computer. Is her computer any different than any other graduate student who spends all day in the library?
"I hate the term 'Internet addiction,' Raulin said. "It is popular to use the term 'addiction' with behavior, such as compulsive gambling, but behaviors are not the same as an addiction to drugs."
"But that is not to say that the behavior can't be very powerful," he said. "The Internet is an interesting place. It is a little bit like Sesame Street. You can jump from one place to the next. You don't get bored and it is easy to kill an hour."
Raulin said excessive on-line users were not likely to experience the same kind of withdrawal those with chemical addictions experience.
When video games first appeared, Raulin noted, experts began discussing the possibility that people could become addicted to them. Now such discussions have faded out.
More likely the Internet is simply replacing other compulsive behaviors rather than carving out a niche of its own.
I have noticed that her use of the Internet has declined since we first moved in together. She says she likes the idea of getting e-mail as opposed to "snail mail" because she doesn't have to have someone else read it to her.
Sounds fair to me.
"At first there was a stigma about the Internet," she tells me. "People assumed that you would have to be someone very lonely to want to sit down and type to people you didn't know. But now it is a question of being resourceful rather than lonely."
She tells me that when she first was on-line the thrill of being able to instantly access information independently was an incredible temptation, but now she is more selective.
"I do have to discipline myself," she says. "I miss it when I can't get it because I use it where other people might read the newspaper. It is an essential part of my life now."
The only thing she says has changed now is that television is less of a priority.
"It's a good trade-off," she says. "I would rather interact with people than a thing."
Seems reasonable.
But what about the people Kimberly Young has worked with? Are there any of those at KU?
Ask KU lab assistants if they know people who spend lots of time online and you will get wide smiles and affirmative nods.
Anybody out there?
Mike Palazzolo, Topeka senior, works at the computer lab in Ellsworth Hall. He grins and rolls his eyes when I tell him I am working on an Internet-addiction story.
"Yes," he said. "There are a few regulars here. I know a couple of people who spend a substantial amount of time here."
But Palazzalo doesn't speculate about the Internet's addictive qualities.
"I don't think it goes that far," he said. "I'd compare it to television."
I scout his lab for the "regulars." I don't have to look very hard.
Hemin Vaiday, Elmwood, New Jersey, junior, is so engrossed that it takes me several attempts to get his attention. Vaiday said he spent an average of six hours a week on-line, mostly looking for news and talking to friends.
"You don't have to watch TV anymore to find out what's going on," Vaida said. "You can do it whenever you have time instead of having to watch the 10 o'clock news."
Vaidya checks his e-mail three times a day; he says most of his online friends, who live in Lawrence, also check their e-mail frequently. It's how they stay in touch throughout the day.
He confessed that, on occasion, he had missed a class because he was talking on-line.
"It's usually been when I was talking to a friend at another university," he explained, "We don't usually get on the computer at the same time."
Are there addicts? Maybe. The experts don't agree.
Is it a problem? Definitely.
After visiting computer labs, posting to bulletin boards and visiting Internet-addict Web sites, I wonder if the symptoms aren't more important than the disease. Perhaps the symptoms may be the only thing that aren't disputable.
While 'Net abusers need the serenity to accept on-line services as a part of modern life, they also need to find the courage to use and not abuse them, and the wisdom to know the difference between a tool and an emotional trap.
You know you are hooked on the 'Net
when...
Jeff D, San Francisco, Calif.
Jeff D, San Francisco, Calif.
You find your selfarsting at your
"inbox" waiting for new e-mail to
arrive.
Alex K, New York City.
You think "surfing" is something you do on dry land.
You promise yourself that you'll only stay online for another 15 minutes at least once every hour.
Pam K. St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands
Tim P, Cambridge, Mass.
You cut classes or miss work so you can stay home and browse the Web.
You buy a paper so that family and friends that really need to get through can beep you to return their call.
Ed S, Corpus Cristi, Texas.
You purchase a laptop so you can surf while sitting on the can.
Tommy J, Vancouver Island,
British Columbia.
For more information about Internet addiction, check http://www.hkstar.com/-joewoo/hazard.html
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Registration forms for the 1996-97 academic school year are now available at the Organizations and Activities Center 400 Kansas Union Remember: Your organization must re-register each academic year to receive University benefits.
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If pre-ordered, present KUID To purchase, bring cash/check for $30 made payable to: Jayhawker yearbook
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AmeriCorps wants student volunteers
K
By Scott MacWilliams Kansan staff writer
AmeriCorps is on campus today, and it is looking for KU students from all fields to enter the arena of community service.
"We're looking for people to work in the Kansas City area beginning Sept. 1," said Laura Brophy, 1994 KU graduate and AmeriCorps field coordinator for Bridges Across America, the Heartland AmeriCorps in Kansas City, Mo.
AmeriCorps was created in 1993 by Congress and President Clinton as a volunteer organization. The requirements for eligibility are U.S. citizenship or legal residency, at least 17 years of age, a high school degree or GED certificate and the desire to make a difference in the community.
McKenzie said he had volunteered with the Salvation Army and had been an intern with the Juvenile Intake Center in Kansas City, Mo.
"Id like to do some mentoring and help develop policy programs for AmeriCorps," said Darrius McKenzie. Overland Park senior.
"I was a case manager for youth who were first-time offenders," McKinzie said. "I helped them get counseling, mentoring, and make connections for sources of help so they could keep from getting into more trouble."
For their 1,700 hours of community work, AmeriCorps members earn a stipend of about $600 per month. They also get health care benefits, child care for those who are eligible, and an educational award of $4,725 that can be applied toward student loans or reserved for returning to school.
Commitments are for one year, but can be renewed.
Educational awards are limited to two years of service.
Brophy said that each chapter of AmeriCorps had different local agencies and volunteer opportunities. There are more than 400 sponsors and 25,000 AmeriCorps members nationwide.
AmeriCorps volunteers in Kansas City have helped weatherize more than 200 low-income homes, tutored more than 500 youths in the Kansas City metropolitan area, and taught non-violence in area schools. Volunteers plan to begin working with Habitat for Humanity, Operation Breakthrough, Independence Community Services Leagues and the Kansas City, Missouri Public Library next fall.
AmeriCorps is scheduled to have a table from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today at Wesco Beach. The rain location will be in the lobby of the Kansas Union. For further information, call Laura Brophy at (816) 561-8122, Ext. 273.
KU students give cheeky display
Kansan staff report
There was more to talk about at 2 p.m. yesterday in front of Wescoe Hall than the sunny weather.
Kathleen O'Connor, Wichita freshman, said all she saw of the pair was their butts, running shoes and hats.
Two naked men sprinted from the Chi Omega fountain to the Phi Gamma Delta House, 1540 Laurova St.
"I've never seen people do that before." White said.
Ed White, Chicago junior,
said he didn't see all that
much aside from two guys
running on the sidewalk nude.
It made being on campus more interesting, he said. But he was sure it promoted other bad behaviors.
"After all, you can't have everybody running around nude," he said. "Well, you could if it's really hot out you could if it's really hot out."
"Dogs can run around campus nude all day," White said. "Why can't people?"
Cinco de Mayo is date to celebrate
By Susanna Löof
Kansan staff writer
It is easier to say cinco de mayo than diezyseis de septiembre. That could be a reason why Cinco de Mayo, which is Sunday, is more famous than the 18th of September, which is the Mexican independence day.
"That's just my theory," said Nicolas Shump, a graduate assistant at the Multicultural Resource Center. Cinco de Mayo, the fifth of May, usually is celebrated with parades, dances and parties, Shump said.
Several bars in Lawrence offer specials in honor of the holiday and some have live Latin-American music.
"It's been pretty commercialized," he said.
holiday only as an excuse to get drunk.
However, some students see the
"In a college town, that's what it's been reduced to," Shump said.
The real importance of the holiday lies in its history.
"It's just a time to be really proud of your Mexican heritage," Shump said.
The holiday celebrates the Mexican victory in a battle against France in 1862.
Former President Benito Juarez of Mexico had decided to postpone the payments on Mexico's debts to England, France and Spain because of Mexico's tough financial situation.
The three creditors responded with an attack, and the Spanish army advanced to the city of Puebla while the English and French armies withdrew.
The Mexican army, which was ill-equipped and consisted mostly of
Mark Moreno, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said he managed his time and planned ahead.
Moreno, who is the social chairman of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, said the club would celebrate by visiting an elementary school today and giving a presentation about the holiday.
The organization also will have a picnic at 3 p.m. on Sunday in Constant Park, located at Sixth and Tennessee streets. Moreno said that everyone was welcome to attend.
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It is not always easy for college students to celebrate Cinco de Mayo because it often occurs during or right before finals.
Mestizo and Zapotec Indians, managed to defeat the French on May 5 — cinco de Mayo. The victory was not expected because the French army was thought to be superior.
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Friday, May 3, 1996
7A
GDP grows despite setbacks
Surge in economy may trigger hike in interest rates
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The economy is surging back to life, gratifying the White House but jolting Wall Street. Powered by heavy spending for business computers and consumer goods, growth accelerated to 2.8 percent in the first three months of the year in spite of blizzards, government shutdowns and a major auto strike.
The White House, hoping for a strong economy in an election year, was ecstatic, but financial markets tumbled, fearing the stronger-than-expected growth will force the Federal Reserve to start raising interest rates.
"This is plain and simple good news for the American economy and more evidence that the president's economic strategy is paying off," said Laura Tyson, chairwoman of President Clinton's National Economic
Council.
Private analysts agreed that the surprisingly strong increase in the gross domestic product — the nation's total output of goods and services — depicted a sizable rebound from a barely discernible 0.5 percent GDP gain in the fourth quarter of 1995.
"The economy is cooking," said Allen Sinai, chief global economist at Lehman Bros. in New York. "This report says business is terrific and life for American workers is going to be much better this year than last year in terms of job availability and higher pay."
While that is just what an incumbent president facing voters in November would like to hear, financial markets saw clear risks.
Investors fretted that the economy is growing too rapidly for the sixth year of an economic expansion and this will force the Federal Reserve to cool things off with higher interest rates.
The Dow Jones industrial average was down more than 100 points late in the day yesterday.
A huge selloff in the bond market
This is plain and simple good news...and more evidence that the
president's
economic strategy is paying off."
Economic Council
Chairwoman of Clinton's National Economist Council
pushed the yield on the benchmark 30-year Treasury bond above 7 percent, its highest level in a year.
"The market is clearly worried that the Fed will have to slam on the brakes," said David Wyss, chief financial economist at DRI-McGraw Hill Inc.
Wyss said that without the adverse
effects of the General Motors strike, the government shutdown and the snowstorms, the GDP would have expanded at a phenomenal rate of 4.4 percent in the first three months of the year, double the speed limit that Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has set for sustainable, noninflationary growth.
Gasoline and food prices have been surging in recent weeks, but Tyson insisted that the administration saw no reason to change its forecast of steady growth and moderate inflation for the balance of 1996.
An inflation index tied to the GDP showed only a moderate pickup in the first quarter, rising by 2.5 percent, compared with a 2.1 percent increase in the fourth quarter.
Some analysts said the Fed could begin raising rates as early as their next meeting on May 21, but others said a rate increase would only come then if inflation showed signs of worsening dramatically.
Further information on the economy will come today with release of the unemployment report for April.
The jobless rate in March was 5.6 percent.
Police uncover satanic murder site
The Associated Press
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. — Three Satan-worshiping high school boys drugged, raped, tortured and murdered a 15-year-old girl in hopes a virgin sacrifice would earn them a ticket to hell, prosecutors said yesterday.
Elyse Pahler's body was found last month at what prosecutors believe was an altar to Satan in a eucalypt grove outside of San Luis Obispo.
Jacob W. Delashmutt, 16; Joseph Fiorella, and Royce E. Casey, 17; were arrested March 14. They are
being held on charges of murder gang involvement, rape, torture and conspiracy.
Pahler disappeared July 22 and had been listed as a missing person until Casey came forward and led authorities to her body, Deputy District Attorney Dan Bouchard said. She was slain the night she left her house, Bouchard said.
According to Bouchard, the boys selected and stalked her believing that she was a virgin and that her sacrifice would earn them a ticket to hell.
The boys allegedly had a knife when they took Pahler to the apparent altar, which prosecutors would not describe.
Prosecutors refused to say how the
There, prosecutors said, she was drugged, a belt was put around her neck and she was raped and tortured.
According to court papers, the boys formed a musical band to glorify Satan. To enhance their musical ability to worship Satan and thereby earn a ticket to hell, they discussed the need for human sacrifice.
'ultimate sin' against God, (they) selected a virgin ... to sacrifice," prosecutors said.
"To glorify Satan and commit the
Casey's attorney Kevin McReynolds said, "A lot of the allegations are grossly overstated and some of them are flatly without any factual support whatsoever. Our view is that many of these allegations are intended to inflame public opinion and we look forward to the hearing."
A hearing is set for June 12 to determine whether the teen-agers will be tried as adults.
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For course listings and registration, call (816) 235-2736. ext. 45.
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TAKE THE CHALLENGE MAKE A DIFFERENCE *APPLY TO RUN A VOLUNTEER PROGRAM*
CENTER FOR COMMUNITY OUTREACH, the campus volunteer center, is now accepting applications for:
- Alternative Spring Break Coordinator
- Campus Volunteer Coordinator
- Concerned, Aware, Active Students Coordinator
- Community Intern Coordinator
Financial Coordinator
Jubilee Cafe Coordinator
- Peer Mentoring Coordinator
- University Relations Coordinator.
- University Relations Coordinator
* Youth on Board Coordinator
- Youth on Board Coordinator
* Youth Student Council Coordinator
- Youth Student Council Coordinator
>>> Applications available in the Student Senate office, 410 Kansas Union. Applications Due May 7, 5:00.
>>> Please contact Emily Heath or Amy Turnbull Co-Directors of the Center for Community Outreach, at 864-3710.
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841-BREW
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Rush over to the Independent Study office, north of the Kansas Union, and enroll before you leave the campus. Over 120 classes available including graduate. Call 864-4440 for information. How about...
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APER 330c. Principles of Nutrition
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Study contends dinosaurs weren't born defenseless
Researchers say adults still cared for their young
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Dinosaurs, history's terrible lizards, tenderly may have guarded their unhatched eggs, but a study contends that the newborn leaped from their shells ready to scamper into a dangerous world.
"They had the ability to hit the ground running," said Nicholas R. Geist, a researcher at Oregon State University. "They were highly mobile. They were able to run and protect themselves."
The comparative study shows that just-hatched dinosaurs were not defenseless dependents, like most birds, Geist said yesterday in an interview. Instead, the dinosaur babies had the bone and muscle strength to move rapidly and to scamper away from danger, just as modern crocodile young can.
Geist and Terry D. Jones, also of Oregon State, came to this conclusion by comparing the density of pelvic bones in fossilized dinosaur embryos with the bones of modern birds and crocodiles. A report on the study is scheduled to be published today in the journal Science.
Other experts strongly disagree.
Jack Horner, a Montana State University paleontologist who has found and studied fossils from unhatched dinosaurs, said the Oregon State findings have been misinterpreted.
He believes dinosaur adults were
"They had the ability to hit the ground running. They were highly mobile. They were able to run and
protect themselves."
Oregon State University researcher
Horner said that he thought dinosaur hatchlings were nest-bound because they were found in nests.
tender, nurturing parents and that the young remained in their natal nest for feeding and protection. The idea of nurturing dinosaurs is so strongly entrenched that one fossil discovery in Montana has been named malasaura, meaning "good mother lizard."
"It makes little sense that they would leave the nest after hatching and then return to it," he said.
The very size difference between hatchlings and their parents suggests that the newborns could not have lived alone in that dino-eat-dino world millions of years ago, said Homer.
The young would have been tender
morsels snapped up by any passing meat-eater $r$.
"I'm not saying the dinosaur parents left them unprotected," said Geist. Instead, he said, the infancy of the dinosaur was more like that of creatures such as ostriches, chickens, ducks and alligators. The young of all those animals hatch into the world able to walk or swim, but they still are cared for by their parents for some time.
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"It's not a question of parental care. Alligators make good parents and have been known to remain in family groups for two years," said Geist. "Dinosaurs could have been very good parents, but their young were not helpless."
Geist and Jones compared the leg and pelvic bones of a group of modern birds and alligators with those of fossils of dinosaur embryos found in Montana, Canada and Asia.
They found that the dinosaur pelvic bones more closely resembled modern animals whose young were hatched with the ability to walk, run and swim. These are called precocial animals.
Geist said Most birds are atroical, meaning that they usually are hatched nude, blind and helpless. Their bones are soft and lack the heavy structure called ossification that the researchers found in the dinosaur fossils.
"You see the same thing in alligators," said Geist. "There was no reason why these dinosaur babies could not have moved."
Science, which published the study, is the journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, May 3, 1996
9A
Liberian warlord vows to attack rival leader
American military plans to protect the U.S. Embassy
MONROVIA, Liberia — With American warships hugging Liberia's shores to protect the U.S. Embassy, the country's main warlord vowed yesterday to launch an all-out assault on his chief rival. International mediators tried to cobble together a last-minute truce.
A dark cloud of smoke hung over Monrovia as homes set ablaze by militia fighters burned. The fighters have destroyed much of the West African capital during almost a month of unrest and anarchy.
Charles Taylor, a member of the governing council who also leads one of the major rebel factions, called off a cease-fire and ordered his troops to prepare for an assault on the Barclay Training Center army barracks held by rival Roosevelt Johnson.
At the same time American warships were on the horizon, U.S. Ambassador William Milam, U.N. special envoy Anthony Nyakyi and a representative for African peacekeepers said they had received a cease-fire agreement from Johnson's representatives.
A U.S. diplomat who did not want to be named said the mediation team was attempting to reach Taylor.
It appeared unlikely, though, that Taylor would agree to the second cease-fire since April 19 without a promise by Johnson to give himself up.
For the second straight day, three U.S. warships carrying 2,000 Marines moved within three miles of Monrovia's shores after a rebel firefight broke out on the strategically important Johnson Street Bridge.
The bridge leads into the capital and is not far from the U.S. Embassy.
Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said the idea was to provide a more visible presence and to shorten the flight time between the ships and the embassy compound. Bacon said the Marines wanted to be ready to reinforce its detachment if necessary.
Earlier in the day, the U.S. government issued a statement in neighboring Sierra Leone that condemned the warlords for the renewed fighting.
"The Liberian people desperately want peace," the statement said. "It is the faction leaders who have chosen to pursue their political objectives through violent means, regardless of the suffering they are inflicting on the Liberian people."
The United States threatened to work against any rebel leader who seized control of the government.
"Any group leader who comes to power by force or any illegal means will be politically and economically isolated," the statement said. "The U.S. will work to ostracize such a
"Any group leader who comes to power by force or any illegal means will be politically and economically isolated."
U. S. government press release condemning warlords
government from the international community."
Taylor, a member of the six-man ruling Council of State, issued his own warning to the United States, telling Washington to stay out of the internal affairs of Liberia, whose capital has been buffeted by the worst fighting in six years of war.
Rebel factions moved their battles away from the U.S. Embassy and into Taylor's neighborhood Wednesday, a day after U.S. Marines guarding their embassy shot and killed three Liberians who fired toward the compound during heavy fighting.
Match signifies much anticipated peace in region The Associated Press
Soccer fans in Sarajevo see first game since 1992
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — There was no time to practice; the field had just been cleared of land mines.
But the thousands of soccer fans in the stadium didn't care that the teams were a little rusty.
They donned their caps and scarves and turned out with vigor yesterday to watch rival Sarajevo teams play for the first time in four years. The ruined Grbavaca stadium was packed with 15,000 people, all thrilled to savor one of the normal pleasures of peace once again.
Organizers waited until the last minute to announce the match between FC Sarajevo and FC Zeljeznicar — the home team known as Zeljo.
"It is not just the game I am here for," said Kemal Festic, 29. "It is also the feeling of freedom I have, now that I can come here."
Hundreds of deadly mines had littered the field.
They were swept away by mine cleaners in time for kickoff but not for practice.
The stadium saw some of the worst clashes between Bosnian government troops and the Bosn-
anir Serb army. A quarter of its stands were completely demolished. Two craters, each several yards wide, still yawn behind one goal.
Even the smoke and rattle of a 15-minute pre-game fireworks show reminded some fans of when the stadium marked a front line.
"Every time one of these crackers explodes next to me, my stomach jumps," said Festic, wearing a blue-and-white Zejlo scarf. "I feel like it is another shell exploding."
City officials decided to hold the game yesterday to mark the fourth anniversary of the day the Grbavaca neighborhood and its stadium came under Bosnian Serb control.
Grbavaca, just south of Sarajevo's city center, was the last of five Serb-held districts given to government control in March as part of the U.S.-brokered Bosnian peace agreement.
Before he introduced the game, Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic freed pigeons to symbolize the peace that has come to Grbavica.
At least one Bosnian Serb, who identified himself only as Dragan, crossed into what Serb leaders now regard as enemy territory to watch.
"I am a Zejo fan, I have always been and always will be," said Dragan, who traveled 12 miles from the Serb stronghold of Pale and painted his face in ZeJo's colors.
"I came to see the game," he said. "I don't care about the stupid war."
Nedim Tanovic, who left Sarajevo when war erupted in 1992, now lives and practices law in Croatia. Back on a visit, he postponed his departure to see the game.
"I had to see this match to make sure the war is over," Tanovic said. "Maybe now I will come back for good."
"This is what Sarajevo was always about," said another fan, Senad Alic. "If we fight, we should fight for a ball — for a score and not for politics."
Still, not everything was normal. In addition to the police, ambulances and firefighters present at any soccer game, the mine clearers were on hand.
"We did clear the stadium," one said, "but you never know."
Fuad Hozic, 54, brought along his wife and two daughters.
"For me, this is not just a game. I "don't care who wins," Hozic said. "For me, this means the war is over, and we are free."
Most people shared Hozic's feeling as they watched their teams fight to a 1-1 draw.
"It feels very, very strange to be here," Mirroslav Plij said, sipping a beer. "Just a year ago it was unbelievable this could happen."
"It is hard to explain the feeling that I have," he said. "Maybe this is what freedom feels like."
THE NEWS in brief
Bardot objects to dog meat sales in South Korea
The Associated Press
PARIS — Brigitte Bardot wants South Korea to ban the sale and consumption of dog meat during the 2002 World Cup if it wins the right to host the international soccer championship.
South Korea and Japan are competing to host the next World Cup. Soccer's governing body has said the competition would be awarded to an Asian country.
Bardot said Western sensitivities would be hurt by the sight of dead and live dogs sold in the markets for
human consumption.
"This market and the methods of slaughtering these dogs are unbearable to Westerners who consider dogs to be the companion of man and also man's best friend," she said in a letter to Song Young Shik, president of the South Korean
World Cup Organizing Committee.
Bardot noted that the South
"Players, supporters, organizers, football fans and other friends of animals will not tolerate this practice in the country hosting the World Cup," she said.
Korean government forbade the sale and consumption of dog meat during the 1988 Summer Olympics.
In South Korea, dog meat is considered a delicacy that can enhance health and sexual prowess.
It openly is purchased and served.
Oaks
HON TEAM
9
Nontraditional Student Organization 864-7317
Oaks
KOH TEAM
Come join us @ the O.A.K.S. End of the Semester Celebration
12:30 - ? on Thursday, May 16th
OLD CHICAGO
2329 JOWA
Congratulations to our new officers !!
Ranita Overton-Wilks, Co-Director David Butler, Treasurer Pat Howell, Co-Director Mary Ellerd, Coordinator
Good Luck with Finals !
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- Two Convenient Locations
•Jayhawk Bookstore-Now through Finals
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Contact Capt. Dean Wilson At 864-4676 or visit at KU Military Bld.
AIR FORCE ROTC
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
9A
Liberian warlord vows to attack rival leader
American military plans to protect the U.S. Embassy
The Associated Press
MONROVIA, Liberia — With American warships hugging Liberia's shores to protect the U.S. Embassy, the country's main warlord vowed yesterday to launch an all-out assault on his chief rival. International mediators tried to cobble together a last-minute truce.
A dark cloud of smoke hung over Monrovia as homes set ablaze by militia fighters burned. The fighters have destroyed much of the West African capital during almost a month of unrest and anarchy.
Charles Taylor, a member of the governing council who also leads one of the major rebel factions, called off a cease-fire and ordered his troops to prepare for an assault on the Barclay Training Center army barracks held by rival Roosevelt Johnson.
At the same time American warships were on the horizon, U.S. Ambassador William Milam, U.N. special envoy Anthony Nyakyi and a representative for African peacekeepers said they had received a cease-fire agreement from Johnson's representatives.
A U.S. diplomat who did not want to be named said the mediation team was attempting to reach Taylor.
It appeared unlikely, though, that Taylor would agree to the second cease-fire since April 19 without a promise by Johnson to give himself up.
For the second straight day, three U.S. warships carrying 2,000 Marines moved within three miles of Monrovia's shores after a rebel firefight broke out on the strategically important Johnson Street Bridge.
Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said the idea was to provide a more visible presence and to shorten the flight time between the ships and the embassy compound. Bacon said the Marines wanted to be ready to reinforce its detachment if necessary.
The bridge leads into the capital and is not far from the U.S. Embassy.
Earlier in the day, the U.S. government issued a statement in neighboring Sierra Leone that condemned the warlords for the renewed fighting.
"The Liberian people desperately want peace," the statement said. "It is the faction leaders who have chosen to pursue their political objectives through violent means, regardless of the suffering they are inflicting on the Liberian people."
The United States threatened to work against any rebel leader who seized control of the government.
"Any group leader who comes to power by force or any illegal means will be politically and economically isolated," the statement said. "The U.S. will work to ostracize such a
"Any group leader who comes to power by force or any illegal means will be politically and economically isolated."
U. S. government press release condemning wartords
government from the international community."
Taylor, a member of the six-man ruling Council of State, issued his own warning to the United States, telling Washington to stay out of the internal affairs of Liberia, whose capital has been buffeted by the worst fighting in six years of war.
Rebel factions moved their battles away from the U.S. Embassy and into Taylor's neighborhood Wednesday, a day after U.S. Marines guarding their embassy shot and killed three Liberians who fired toward the compound during heavy fighting.
Soccer fans in Sarajevo see first game since 1992
Match signifies much anticipated peace in region
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — There was no time to practice; the field had just been cleared of land mines.
But the thousands of soccer fans in the stadium didn't care that the teams were a little rusty.
They donned their caps and scarves and turned out with vigor yesterday to watch rival Sarajevo teams play for the first time in four years. The ruined Grbavaca stadium was packed with 15,000 people, all thrilled to savor one of the normal pleasures of peace once again.
"It is not just the game I am here for," said Kemal Festic, 29. "It is also the feeling of freedom I have, now that I can come here."
Organizers waited until the last minute to announce the match between FC Sarajevo and FC Zelejnicar — the home team known as Zeljo.
Hundreds of deadly mines had littered the field.
They were swept away by mine cleaners in time for kickoff but not for practice.
The stadium saw some of the worst clashes between Bosnian government troops and the Bosnian Serb army. A quarter of its stands were completely demolished. Two craters, each several yards wide, still yawn behind one goal.
Even the smoke and rattle of a 15-minute pre-game fireworks show reminded some fans of when the stadium marked a front line.
"Every time one of these crackers explodes next to me, my stomach jumps," said Festic, wearing a blue-and-white Zeljo scarf. "I feel like it is another shell exploding."
City officials decided to hold the game yesterday to mark the fourth anniversary of the day the Grbavaca neighborhood and its stadium came under Bosnian Serb control.
Grbavaca, just south of Sarajevo's city center, was the last of five Serb-held districts given to government control in March as part of the U.S.-brokered Bosnian peace agreement.
Before he introduced the game, Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic freed pigeons to symbolize the peace that has come to Grbavica.
At least one Bosnian Serb, who identified himself only as Dragan, crossed into what Serb leaders now regard as enemy territory to watch.
"I am a Zeilo fan. I have always been and always will be," said Dragan, who traveled 12 miles from the Serb stronghold of Pale and painted his face in Zeilo's colors.
"I came to see the game," he said.
"I don't care about the stupid war."
Nedim Tanovic, who left Sarajevo when war erupted in 1992, now lives and practices law in Croatia. Back on a visit, he postponed his departure to see the game.
"I had to see this match to make sure the war is over," Tanovic said. "Maybe now I will come back for good."
"This is what Sarajevo was always about," said another fan, Senad Alic. "If we fight, we should fight for a ball — for a score and not for politics."
Still, not everything was normal. In addition to the police, ambulances and firefighters present at any soccer game, the mine clearers were on hand.
"We did clear the stadium," one said, "but you never know."
Fuad Hozic, 54, brought along his wife and two daughters.
"For me, this is not just a game. I don't care who wins," Hozic said. "For me, this means the war is over, and we are free."
Most people shared Hozie's feeling as they watched their teams fight to a 1-1 draw.
"It feels very, very strange to be here," Miroslav Pilj said, sipping a beer. "Just a year ago it was unbelievable this could happen."
THE NEWS in brief
Bardot objects to dog meat sales in South Korea
The Associated Press
PARIS — Brigitte Bardot wants South Korea to ban the sale and consumption of dog meat during the 2002 World Cup if it wins the right to host the international soccer championship.
South Korea and Japan are competing to host the next World Cup. Soccer's governing body has said the competition would be awarded to an Asian country.
Bardot said Western sensitivities would be hurt by the sight of dead and live dogs sold in the markets for
human consumption.
"This market and the methods of slaughtering these dogs are unbearable to Westerners who consider dogs to be the companion of man and also man's best friend," she said in a letter to Song Young Shik, president of the South Korean
World Cup Organizing Committee.
"Players, supporters, organizers, football fans and other friends of animals will not tolerate this practice in the country hosting the World Cup," she said.
Bardot noted that the South
Korean government forbade the sale and consumption of dog meat during the 1988 Summer Olympics.
In South Korea, dog meat is considered a delicacy that can enhance health and sexual prowess.
It openly is purchased and served.
Oaks
HON TRAD
Oaks NONTRADITIONAL Nontraditional Student Organization 864-7317
Oaks
XCH PRODUCTIONS
Come join us @ the O.A.K.S. End of the Semester Celebration 12:30 - ? on Thursday, May 16th OLD CHICAGO 2329 IOWA
Congratulations to our new officers !!
Ranita Overton-Wilks, Co-Director David Butler, Treasurer
Pat Howell, Co-Director Mary Ellerd, Coordinator
Good Luck with Finals!
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Mon.-Thurs: 11:00am to 2:30am
Fri.-Sat: 11:00am to 3:00am
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10A
Friday, May 3, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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• 820-822 MASS. • 841-0100
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Federal agents break up drug ring
DEA arrests more than 150 in operation
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Federal agents wrapped up more than 150 arrests yesterday designed to break up a coast-to-coast Mexican-Colombian cocaine smuggling ring that revealed new sophistication and distribution by growing Mexican gangs.
Code-named "Zorro II," the operation was the first to arrest Mexican drug couriers and dealers and Colombian traffickers in this country from ring managers down to street-level crack cocaine dealers, Drug Enforcement Administration officials said.
disclosed until they were completed yesterday.
Arrests began in February, but their link to the overall investigation by 10 federal and 42 state and local law enforcement agencies was not
Beginning last September, agents traced cocaine produced by Colombia's Cali cartel as it was driven by Mexican couriers across the U.S.-Mexican border in California, Arizona and Texas to the stash houses of wholesalers in Los Angeles. From there, the cocaine was distributed to Colombian street dealers in the Washington Heights section of New York City and in Richmond, Va., and to Mexican dealers in the West, in Texas and in Chicago, DEA agents said.
Undercover agents, informants and more than 90 court-authorized wirespat were used to track the cocaine and identify ring members.
"We have surgically removed an entire operation," said Mike Horn, chief of DEA special operations. "We took out not just the top people — the cell managers and major wholesalers — but we also attacked the violent local organizations. We took everything."
Horn said the ring moved cocaine
"We have surgically removed an entire operation. We took everything."
mike horn Chief of DEA special operations
Mike Horn
with a wholesale value of $100 million during the eight-month investigation. He said the arrests would only disrupt, not halt, the smuggling because the Mexicans and Colombians have other similar rings operating in this country.
Some of the Mexicans in custody are associates of the Arellano-Felix brothers gang in Tijuana, one of four major Mexican gangs, said Theresa Van Vliet, the Justice Department's
narcotics section chief. The four gangs have emerged, known as the "Mexican Federation," as second only to the Cali cartel in the distribution of cocaine in this country, DEA officials said.
The Mexicans began as transporters of Colombian cocaine across the Southwest border, but they are now taking payment for the courier work in cocaine rather than cash. Mexican members of the ring distributed the cocaine to their own network in the West, in Texas and in Chicago, DEA officials said.
"In Los Angeles, the Mexicans were even undercutting the Colombians on the price of cocaine," DEA agent Mike Fergason said. "The Mexicans were charging about $13,000 per kilo (2.2 pounds), and the Colombians about $16,000," said Bill Healey, Horn's deputy at DEA.
Twenty-nine people were charged in drug-trafficking conspiracy indictments unsealed in Chicago and Midland, Texas, yesterday. Fifteen of them were arrested yesterday morning in Los Angeles,
Chicago, El Paso, Texas, Houston and Midland and more arrests were under way.
An additional 136 people had been arrested earlier, including 44 alleged members of the Colombian organization taken into custody Feb. 22-5 in Los Angeles, New York, Newark, N.J., Miami, Philadelphia and Richmond. Arrests primarily of alleged Mexican gang members took place last week in Los Angeles, San Diego and Midland.
Before yesterday, 5,598 kilograms (about 6 tons) of cocaine had been seized, 1,018 pounds of marijuana and half a pound of crack cocaine. Federal agents had seized $17,060,629 in cash and vehicles before yesterday.
The Colombians flew and drove their money by courier to Miami where some was wired home and the rest shipped in cash, agents said. The Mexicans gathered profits in Los Angeles and sent cash back to Mexico in the hidden compartments of the same private cars used to smuggle the drugs in, agents said.
THE NEWS in brief
Woman jailed for four mercy killings
The Associated Press
GRONINGEN, Netherlands — A nursing home worker was sentenced yesterday to nine days in prison for killing four elderly patients by injecting them with insulin.
The woman, identified under Dutch privacy laws only as Martha U., admitted killing nine elderly patients at the Vihlethoven nursing home in the northern Dutch town of Delfzijl, where she worked.
She told police she killed her victims out of sympathy.
The killings do not fit into liberal Dutch euthanasia rules, under which doctors carry out mercy killings are immune to prosecution if they adhere to government-approved guidelines.
Under the guidelines, the patient must request death, an element absent from the nursing home killings.
Psychological tests carried out after her arrest in September 1995 showed the woman was mentally unstable at the time of the killings and that there was a risk of her repeating the offenses.
Kansas City police shoot, kill knife-wielding man
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Police shot and killed a Kansas City, Mo., man who brandished a knife at officers called to a domestic dispute, police said.
Police representative Sgt. David Bosworth identified the man as James Miller. 42.
Bosworth said the officers responded to a domestic disturbance call about 4 a.m. yesterday at a house in northern Kansas City,
Mo. When officers arrived, they heard a woman screaming inside.
The officers knocked and identified themselves, but a man inside the house said the matter was a domestic problem and that he would take care of it. Bosworth said.
Miller charged the officers with a knife, and one of them shot him, Bosworth said. Miller was taken to an area hospital where he died. The woman was taken to a hospital and treated for minor injuries, he said.
Subway bomber gets 94-year prison term
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Ajobless computer programmer got 94 years in prison yesterday for firebombing two subway trains in an alleged extortion scheme that injured 50 people.
Unmoved by Edward Leary's apology, state Supreme Court Justice Rena Uviller gave him the maximum sentence, complaining that the penalty under law was inappropriately low and that Leary deserved even more time behind bars.
Leary, 50, must serve more than 31 years before he is eligible for parole.
Leary was unemployed and burdened with money problems when he embarked on what prosecutors said was a terror campaign aimed at extorting $2 million from the city's transit agency. He set off firebombs on two subways six days apart just before Christmas 1994, severely injuring himself and 16 others.
A jury convicted him on March 8 of charges including attempted murder and assault, rejecting his claim that he was driven mad by Prozac and other medication.
One of Leary's most severely burned victims, Brenda Dowdell, sobbed in court as a prosecutor read her account of how she didn't have enough skin left for the grafts she needed. When doctors cleaned her body, she said it felt like hot oil, steel wool and salt on an open wound.
Leary, for his part, apologized and claimed to be bewildered by his behavior.
"I still do not understand how I hurt so many people," he said. "I never wanted to hurt anybody in my life."
Leary said prescription drugs affected his thinking and judgment, and added that he would give his right arm, or even his life, to change what happened.
The judge replied that Leary only felt remorse because he, too, was burned, and he got caught.
Prosecutor David Stampley said Leary had plotted to burn 50 innocent people in a tunnel under the East River between Manhattan and Brooklyn. Instead, the firebomb blew up in his face before the train reached the tunnel.
Leaving behind brightly wrapped Christmas gifts that became blackened debris, dozens of subway riders escaped by crawling out onto the platform, where horrified bystanders helped snuff out flames from skin and clothing.
Leary was found at a Brooklyn subway station, his skin seared and clothing charred and tattered. At first, he claimed to be a victim, but later he admitted he had placed the bombs.
"This man brought terrorism to the lifeline of the city," Stampley said. "Anyone who can do what he did to innocent people can do anything. We have to protect society from Edward Leary."
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Come and wish your friends farewell and good luck at the International Students Association's last party of the year. May 4th(Saturday) from 9p.m.till 2a.m. at the Holiday Inn.
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VANGUARD AIRLINES FLIGHT ATTENDANTS
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, May 3, 1996
11A
Call your parents and tell them you're taking the toughest course school this semester.
Guts & Glory Champion
The Champion Great Glory Athletic Challenge Course.
Champion® USA 36 USC 380
Show your stuff at the Champion Guts to Glory Athletic Challenge Course.
Saturday, May 4th
The Hill
Compete for Champion gear and an opportunity to go to the finals at Coca-Cola's Olympic City in Atlanta. There you'll take on America's best for the top prize a trip to the Olympic Games and a 1996 Nissan.
The WAR on DRUGS
Art by Matt Hood
Story by Scott MacWilliams
Is it worth fighting?
Is it WORTH FIGHTING?
the war on drugs has been raging for more than 20 years.
Stephen Hill is a member of the Koch Crime Commission Drug Task Force, which was formed three years ago by Wichita businessman William Koch to study how Kansans could reduce crime.
Hill studied the problem of illicit drugs to make recommendations to the state government regarding the best way to deal with the problem but stressed that he was not speaking for the task force.
"We need to look at the costs of the war on drugs," Hill said. "We are spending $30 billion a year on it, additional mollions on new prisons and jails, and what are we achieving?"
Hill said that about 75 percent of the budget
"for the war on drugs was being spent on
since 1900 marijuana prices have decreased, and marijuana use has increased.
The social costs include the parole of criminals incarcerated for burglary and rape, Hill said, to make room for people convicted of possessing marijuana. Mandatory sentencing guidelines have been passed in some states.
"I think they should legalize
marijuana," said Mary Tighe, Overland Park freshman. "The laws obviously aren't working."
Jessica Cirone, Lincoln, Neb., freshman said, "You can get marijuana wherever you want it. They should legalize marijuana but not cocaine or heroin. They're much more addictive."
Hill said that most people didn't make the connection between the drug trade and the rise in drive-by shootings.
"It's a $50 billion to $100 billion per year business, and people in the business are forced to be ruthless," Hill said. "What we are seeing now is just like the gangster shootings of Prohibition days."
He also said that another less obvious cost of the war on drugs was the corruption of law enforcement officials on all levels, both in the United States and internationally.
"Their slogan is 'A drug-free America,' but they can't even keep drugs out of Leavenworth, a maximum security federal prison," Hill said.
He said that the source countries for illicit drugs have become unstable because of the effects of drug lords' corruption of the police and government officials.
Some police departments across the country have become dependent on income from the sale of seized property and money from
the federal funds for the war on drugs, Hill said. Police could seize the property of suspected drug dealers, sell it and keep the proceeds for their department without getting a conviction in a drug case.
"I don't see the war on drugs as eradicating drugs during my career," said Sgt. Susan Hadl, of the Lawrence police Department. "We can attack the problem and put people in jail. But are we ahead yet? I don't think so."
Hadi said she was not sure how much money Lawrence's department received from the federal government but felt that the majority of it should be spent on enforcement.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said the center didn't see many drug-related problems. However, he attributed that to users being more sophisticated, not necessarily to a drop in usage.
"When I was riding the ambulance back in 1965, we used to see people having bad trips on LSD nearly every night," Yockey said. "Now we mostly have health problems related to alcohol abuse."
Even though medical emergencies related to illicit drugs have become rare, Yockey was adamant in his opposition to the legalization of drugs.
"We shouldn't be in favor of anything that decreases our performance abilities," Yockey said.
Francis Elling is a substance abuse counselor at the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism Center (DCCCA), 3312 Clinton Parkway, a counseling center for those with drug dependencies.
His work deals directly with the failures of the war on drugs.
"I'd say that treatment appears to be effective for some," Elling said. "But I don't think that the war on drugs has given much emphasis to treatment."
Elling said that alcohol and tobacco were major drugs, but they were not part of the war on drugs.
Elling said that he and other counselors typically treated people for alcohol, marijuana, cocaine and amphetamine addictions at DCCCA.
About 430,000 people die each year from tobacco-related illnesses, and treatment and health care costs run up to billions of dollars.
Based on his experiences, Eling said that he didn't see any reason for the separation of the legal from the illegal drugs.
"Lots of people are dying from tobacco and alcohol use," Eling said. "They are both highly addictive, but they are not being addressed in the war on drugs."
---
May 3,1996
Night Topics
Mango Jam with Sherri Jackson,
9 p.m. at The Bottleneck, 737
New Hampshire St. Cost $5-$6.
Tomato Warning Band, 10 p.m.
at Full Moon Cafe, 803 Massachusetts St. Free.
Tonight
Tomorrow
Pamper the Madman with Let's
Rodeo and Tripmaster Monkey,
9 p.m. at The Bottleneck, Cost:
$4-$5.
Son Venezuela, 9 p.m. at The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. Cover.
Java Junkies, 10 p.m. at Full Moon Cafe. Free.
Sunday
Inch with No Knife and Chune, 8 p.m. At The Bottleneck. Cost: $4-$5.
The Jesus Lizard with Contortion Horse, 9 p.m. at The Granada. Advance Tickets: $10-$12.
Page 12A
Monday
Open Mike, 8 p.m. at The Bottleneck. Free.
Dave Hooge, 8 p.m. at Full Moon
Cafe. Free.
Tuesday
Velocity Girl with Fuzzy and Chisel, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck.
Advance Tickets: $8.
Blueshead Beggars with Huckleberry and Mouths Wide Open, 8 p.m. at The Granada. Cost: $4.
Inter Urban Express, 8 p.m. at Full Moon Cafe. Free.
Lisa Loeb with the Mommyheads, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck.
Advance Tickets: $8.
Hilltopics
Wednesday
POE with Stillwater, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck. Advance Tickets: $8.
The Hardy Viking Guruhs, 9 p.m. at Full Moon Cafe. Free.
Thursday
- Chinese inventor Pu Danning recently claimed he had sold $60,000 of the "healthy cigarettes" that he introduced in Beijing in November. The product is a cigarillo-sized tube containing Chinese herbs plus a small battery and microchip and a dozen other components but no tobacco. The cigarette is not lighted; rather, when the "smoker" puffs, a light flashes on the end to imitate a burning ash. Also, the cigarette plays a patriotic song when puffed on, and, said Pu, "The mixture [of herbs] is also good against cancer."
Lead Story
Compelling Explanations
U. S. Rep. David Funderburk, R-N.C., pleaded no contest to a minor traffic charge in Dunn, N.C., in October, despite continuing to deny that he was the one driving when his car crossed the center line and caused an oncoming van to veer off and overturn. Witnesses said Funderburk was driving, but when the
Funderburk car returned to the scene a few minutes later, Funderburk was in the passenger seat, and his wife was driving. (One witness said she actually saw the Funderburks change seats). Furthermore, in a slip-up at a subsequent news conference, Mrs. Funderburk described damage to the car as only on her side — the passenger side — but she quickly corrected herself.
In November, the Arkansas Supreme Court rejected the argument of Erwin Davis (who once ran for governor of the state) that he was not the father of a boy born in 1900. A paternity test showed a 99.65 percent chance Davis was the father, but Davis accused the boy's mother of breaking into his house, stealing a used condom and inseminating herself.
Weird Topics
- In February in Madison, Wis., during a routine search of Leonard Hodge, 22, who had been arrested for failure to carry a driver's license, police found cocaine in his underwear. According to
During the summer of 1995, Philip Morris ran newspaper ads promising to crack down on retailers who sold cigarettes to children. In October, a helpful list of such retailers in Minnesota was sent to the company by the state attorney general. Philip Morris declined to act on it. The company still intended to crack down, said vice president Ellen Merlo, but "We didn't say starting today."
a police representative, Hodge attempted to clear himself of the charge by saying the undershorts he wore were not his.
- In February, a government agency in Modesto, Calif., announced it would take action against the Imperial Wizard of the California (Ku Klux) Klan, Bill Albers, for a Feb. 10 cross burning. The agency is the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District, which plans a civil lawsuit because the diesel-soaked cross burning violates local air pollution laws.
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, May 3, 1996
11A
Call your parents and tell them you're taking the toughest course school this semester.
Guts & Glory
Champion
The Champion Great Story Athletic Challenge Course.
Champion USA 38 USC 380
Show your stuff at the Champion Guts to Glory Athletic Challenge Course.
Saturday, May 4th
The Hill
Compete for Champion gear and an opportunity to go to the finals at Coca-Cola's Olympic City in Atlanta. There you'll take on America's best for the top prize—a trip to the Olympic Games and a 1996 Nissan.
BASEBALL. Former Major League outfielder Darryl Strawberry is expected to sign a contract with the St. Paul Saints today. Page 3.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1996
SECTION B
Semester has been a fun one
Well, I guess this is my last column of the semester, so I'll type while I fight back the tears. It's been a really wild couple of months and I've learned a lot about sports, newspapers and people.
But instead of going quietly into the night, I'd like to go out with a bang. So let me throw out a few miscellaneous parting shots, and I'm setting the trigger on rapid fire
First of all, I'll be back next
believe it or not, I actually got a promotion. So no more associate in my title — there goes the neighborhood.
ASSOCIATE
SPORTS
EDITOR
With the abundance of guards already declaring themselves eligible for the NBA draft, No. 11 will be back to lead the Jayhawks to the promised land
BILL PETULLA
next year. But more importantly, he'll be back to get the degree he's worked so hard for.
There is no finer coach in the college game than Rick Pitino. Look at the record. Look at the results and the programs he has revived. They speak volumes.
Jayhawk middle-distance runner Kristi Kloster is the best role model we have at Kansas.
Glen Mason has injected some pride into a once-lifeless football program. But judging by the attendance at some games last season and the general attitude about Kansas football, few have noticed that this is a top ten program.
We need a new recreation center.
Let me break down our present one
— micro-sized weight rooms, locker
rooms that even rats would refuse to
dwell in, 13 tennis courts and four
(sometimes six) basketball courts.
Former Nevada-Las Vegas forward Stacey Augment once joked about the preferential treatment of athletes at UNLV, saying that he could kill somebody there and get away with it. Hmm ... sounds a lot like Nebraska to me. From woman-beaters getting slaps on the wrists to football players putting their hands in never-never land, Nebraska has certainly set up a double-standard for athletes.
Rules and laws aren't exactly applicable to athletes in 'Husker land. But thumbs up to the New England Patriots for noticing, albeit late, the mistake they made by drafting Christian Peter.
With the exception of Montreal and Kansas City, Major League Baseball is on the comeback. Heck, even Pittsburgh drew 27,000 fans last week to watch the team battle the hapless Florida Marlins.
I would certainly be remiss in not thanking a few people who helped me out along the way. William Blake once wrote, "No bird soars too high, if he soars with his own wings." And I certainly would have crashed and burned a long time ago if it weren't for the following people:
All of the fellows at the shelter, thanks for all of the feedback, ideas and criticism. I always knew you guys would give it to me straight.
To all of my co-workers, you've been great to work with and I hope none of you "pull a Bill" in the future.
Tom Erickson, thanks for your infinite patience with me, it certainly will never be forgotten. Good luck in Liberal.
All of the sportswriters, Evan,
Spence, Thunder Dan, Adam and
Jen-nay — you put in a lot of time and
effort and it showed in what you
wrote. I look forward to working
with you in the future.
To my best friend in the world, my mom, who keeps playing the hand she's dealt.
My brother John and his lovely fiancée Leigh Ann, thanks for everything you've done and continue to do for me.
Finally, thanks to the greatest influence in my life — my father. Dad gave so much of his heart to me and others that it finally quit on him, and he died two Christmas ages.
But I just know that heaven gets the Kansan, and I hope he's proud of what he reads.
Belovsky familiar with moving
KU
Kauai
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
Kansas senior Josh Belovsky throws to first base in a pickoff attempt. Belovsky pitched at three other schools before coming to Kansas.
Pitcher has found home at Kansas after playing for three other schools
By Dan Gelston Kansan sportswriter
Josh Belovsky remembers standing on the mound at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium during fall practice and thinking he'd finally found his baseball home.
But his road to Lawrence was long, winding and often frustrating.
While most seniors have trouble accepting the fact they have to move on come season's end, Belovsky will have it easy.
Baseball
He has grown accustomed to moving on, as his vagabond collegiate base ball career has taken him from California to Texas to Kansas.
"Four teams in four years. It's pretty amazing when you think about it." Belovsky said.
It has been quite a journey for Belovsky. He started at Orange Coast Community College in California. The next year saw him stay in California, but at Cypress Community College.
At Cypress, he played with current Jayhawks Josh Kliner and Mario Opipari and the three of them led Cypress to the California Community College state championship.
"That was a great team we had," Belovsky said. "I really enjoyed the guys and the coaching staff."
But again it was time to move on. Belovsky started considering Division I schools, eventually choosing Southwest Conference powerhouse Texas Tech.
"It looked like the best place as far as pitching at the time," he said. "I knew it would be a good team, which I wanted. I also thought it would be good as far
as coaching and getting a chance to show my abilities in such a strong conference."
He was wrong on both counts.
After making an appearance in the first game of the season, he pitched just twice more.
The Red Raiders won the conference championship, but Belovsky was not a factor. He wasn't injured, he wasn't a malcontent; he just didn't get a chance.
"The coaches never had a specific reason. I just got buried, he said. "I really enjoyed the team, but it just got very frustrating the fact that I wasn't pitching. I didn't feel like a big part of the team at all, I wasn't contributing anything, and it wasn't helping me."
Belovsky asked for, and was granted, his release from Texas Tech, forcing him to again start considering another school.
"This path has been so up and down. When I had to leave Texas Tech I was like 'here we go again.'"
He found that in Kansas, Belovsky stepped up early in the season and assumed the role of staff ace. He has a 5-4 record in 13 starts with a 5.59 earned run average, which swelled after a mid-season slump.
He was also named the Big Eight Conference pitcher of the week.
Kansas baseball coach Bobby Randall said he was pleased with the way Belovsky stepped up.
"Josh came in and really plugged a hole for us," he said. "I know he had a rugged time at Texas Tech, and that may have hurt his development. I think he's really improved during the year; he's been pretty sturdy."
"As the season has gone on, Josh has become more serious about the game. You have to be serious about what you do, but you can't take it seriously, and I think Josh has learned that."
It may have taken some time, but Belovsky is glad he's a Jayhawk.
"I've been able to pitch, and pitch well, and really be a contributor to the team," he said. "This type of season is something I've worked hard to accomplish. I'm glad it's finally happening, and I'm glad it's in Kansas."
Shockers ready for'Hawks
Winner will travel to championships
By Spencer Duncan
Kansan sportswriter
Things have gone fairly well for Bill Nichols this season.
As the Wichita State University men's tennis coach, Nichols has led his team to an 18-8 record and earned a bid to the NCAA Region V Men's Tennis Championships, which begin tomorrow.
Nichols hopes his team's success does not end when the Shockers meet the No.11 Kansas men's tennis team in round one of the regional championship.
"They are certainly the heavy
favorite." Nichols said of the Jayhawks. "Right now I am looking at KU's past performances and noticing they are a great team."
Kansas and Wichita State will meet in the semifinals of the regions at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Sheldon Coleman Tennis Complex in Wichita.
The tournament consists of four teams, and the winner gets an automatic bid into the NCAA Men's Championships on May 18-22, in Athens, Ga.
The Jayhawks, 24-5, enter the tournament as the Big Eight Conference Champions for the third consecutive season. The team hopes its regular season success carries into the post-season.
"We have prepared all year to get to this point," Kansas men's tennis coach Michael Center said. "We just
have to win two more matches to get to Athens."
Playing at home is nice, Nichols said, but not necessarily an advantage.
"Sometimes being at home there are a lot more distractions. Things like girlfriend and not staying focused can be a problem," Nichols said. "Sometimes it's easier to keep your head on the road."
The winner of the match between Kansas and Wichita State will meet the winner of the semifinal between No. 38 Colorado and No. 41 Tulsa, which will be played at 3 p.m. tomorrow.
The championship match will be
placed at 1 p.m. on Sunday.
But Colorado men's tennis coach Ron Smarr knows who he would like to see if his team gets to the finals.
"We'd like to play them one more time because we've got a lot of confidence that we could win," Smarr said after Kansas defeated Colorado in the Big Eight tournament last weekend.
If the Jayhawks keep playing the way
NCAA Men's Tennis Regionals
The 1996 NCAA Region V Men's Tennis Tournament will be played at Sheldon Coleman Tennis Complex in Wichita.
SEMIFINALS FINALS
TOMORROW SUNDAY
1 KANSAS
(24-4)
11 a.m.
4 WICHITA ST.
(18-8)
1 COLORADO
(19-6)
3 p.m.
3 TULSA
(22-7)
1 p.m.
Tickets
Weekend $8
1-day $5
1-day
under 19 $3
(316) 689-FANS
they have all season, they could win the regional. Center said.
Andy Rohrback/KANSAN
"We have been looking at the NCAA tournament all season," Center said. "The key for us is to play to our abill-
ties and play our style of tennis. If we do that, then we will win."
Fans line up early for basketball team
"It's a good problem," Williams said. "It's good that you have so many pee' be wanting autographs, but it's bad because so many people want autographs. You could spend time every day signing autographs."
Kansas coach Roy Williams estimated that about 1,200 people made their way down the table to get signatures from the Kansas players and coaches.
Mike Morgan and Brooks VonThea drove from Topeka, arriving at the field house two hours before the signing began at 5 p.m. No one else was there, which put them at the head of the line.
Autograph seekers came from Lawrence and beyond, including Topeka and Junction City.
"We've done enough of these things to know it's a lot easier to get here early," Morgan said as he held a Kansas Jayhawks pennant with 19 scribbled signatures.
With the vast number of autograph seekers, Williams was happy to see the end of the line.
"Needless to say, I could do better things with my time," he said. "But once people got into line, they were great to us."
4
Williams has gathered and provided Vaughn with information about where he might be drafted and what team he might go to.
"He's got all the information," Williams said. "He's doing the thinking now."
Al Vermell, the Chicago Bulls' strength and conditioning coach, worked with the Jayhawks on Wednesday.
They spent about an hour working
Tyler Wirken / KANSAN
PARKS CENTER
Fans waited in long lines to get autographs from players yesterday.
on a broad range of drills. One required the Kansas big men to hold medicine balls just under their chin, stand directly below the basket and explode upward for dunks.
Oklahoma athletic director accepts new Big 12 position
The Associated Press
The conference includes the current Big Eight teams, plus Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Baylor from the Southwest Conference.
Duncan will serve as director of football operations for the Big 12, which begins play this fall.
NORMAN, Okla. — Oklahoma athletic director Donnie Duncan stepped aside Thursday, ending a 10-year run with the school to take a job with the new Big 12 Conference.
Oklahoma has won a national title in men's golf, baseball and men's gymnastics under Duncan, but its marquee sport — football — has become a non-factor in the
The highlights of Duncan's tenure at Oklahoma included his hiring of baseball coach Larry Cochell and men's basketball coach Kelvin Sampson.
— has become a non-factor in the Big Eight.
But he also hired Howard Schneellenberger, which proved to be a disaster, and in 1990 he disbanded the women's basketball program, only to reinstate it after a public outcry.
The tradition-rich program has gone through back-to-back.500 seasons, and hasn't finished higher than third in the Big Eight since 1988.
The program was placed on NCAA probation in December of that year for recruiting violations. "They wanted us, and they got us," Duncan said at the time.
webLaTeX.org
He hired Gary Gibbs as the football coach in the summer of 1989, after Barry Switzer resigned, and then spent a good part of the next six seasons defending his choice.
Oklahoma's only Big Eight championships since the fall of 1986, when Duncan was hired, have come in men's basketball, men's and women's golf, men's tennis, and men's and women's gymnastics.
Duncan played an important role in the formation of the Big 12 and its football television package, and was heavily involved in the selection of Steve Hatchell as commissioner of the league.
Among the names mentioned as possible successors to Duncan are former Oklahoma football greats Lee Roy Selmon, Steve Owens and Jack Mildren.
---
2B
Friday, May 3, 1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PRO BASEBALL
American League East Division
| | W | L | Pct. | QE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 15 | 10 | .600 | — |
| Baltimore | 14 | 13 | .519 | 2 |
| Toronto | 13 | 14 | .481 | 3 |
| Detroit | 10 | 19 | .345 | 7 |
| Boston | 10 | 19 | .296 | 8 |
W 8 L Pct. GB
Cleveland 17 8 680 —
Chicago 15 12 556 3
Minnesota 14 12 538 3½
Milwaukee 12 14 461 5½
Kansas City 9 19 321 9½
W L Pct. LB GB
Texas 17 11 11 .607 —
Savannah 17 11 11 .596 —
California 15 12 11 .555 1 1/4
Oakland 13 12 11 .481 1 1/4
Toronto 7, Milwaukee
California 3, Oakland 1
Detroit 5, Texas 2
New York 5, Chicago 1
Cleveland at Seattle (n)
Toronto (Quantrill 0-3) at Boston (Sele 1-2),
6:05 p.m.
Texas (Hill 3-2) at Detroit (Keagle 3-1), 6:05
pm.
Milwaukee (Bones 1-4) at Baltimore (Erickson
1-3) d-4, c-6
Chicago (Baldwin 2:0) at New York (Gooden 0:3)
6:36 p.m.
09.55.41X:
Reyes (Oceans 3-3) at Kansas City (Applier 2
Minnesota (Robertson 0-4) at California (Finley
0-6) @ 5:25 p.m.
Tomorrow's Games
Cleveland (Nagy 3-1) at Seattle (Hitchcock 3-0)
9:06 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota at California, 9:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Baltimore, 12:35 p.m.
Chicago at New York, 12:35 p.m.
Toronto at Boston, 12:05 p.m.
Toronto D.C. 1815
Sunday's Game
Cleveland at Seattle, 9:05 p.m.
Texas at Detroit, 12:15 p.m.
Milwaukee at Baltimore. 12:35 p.m.
Chicago at New York, 12:35 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 1:35 p.m.
Minnesota at California, 3:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Seattle, 3:35 p.m.
National League East Division
| | W | 10 | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Montreal | 18 | 10 | .643 | — |
| Philadelphia | 15 | 11 | .577 | 2 |
| Atlanta | 10 | 12 | .571 | 2 |
| New York | 12 | 14 | .461 | 5 |
| Florida | 11 | 18 | .379 | 7½ |
Central Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Chicago | 14 | 14 | .500 | — |
| Houston | 14 | 14 | .500 | — |
| Pittsburgh | 13 | 14 | .481 | ½ |
| St. Louis | 12 | 16 | .429 | 2 |
| Cincinnati | 9 | 17 | .346 | 4 |
W 10 L Pct. GB
San Diego 18 14 643
San Francisco 18 14 519 3½
Los Angeles 14 15 483 4½
Colorado 14 15 483 4½
Yesterday's Game Philadelphia 2, Florida 0 California scherald
New York (Wilson 1-1) at Chicago (Navarro 1-
3,2-10)
Los Angeles (Parks 2-1) at Pittsburgh (Darwin
2-2), 6.05 p.m.
Los Angeles (Parks 2:1) at Pittsburgh (Darwin
0.285 0.285)
Philadelphia (Mulholland 2-2) at Atlanta (Madrid
4-11, 8:40 a.m.
Montreal (Cormier 1-1) at Houston (Reynolds 4-11; 7:05 p.m.
Florida (Burkett 1-4) at Colorado (Reynoso 1-
2-18,805 m.)
St. Louis (Osborne 1-2) at San Diego (Ashby 3-1,
9:05 o.m.
Cincoliniin (Schoukur 3-1) at San Francisco
(Fensterdaten 3-1) 0:05 n.m.
Tomorrow's Games Chicago 4:20 pm
*w York at Chicago, 1:20 p.m.
Florida at Colorado, 2:05 p.m.
Columbia at San Francisco, 8:05 p.m.
Miami at Miami, 8:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m.
Montreal at Houston, 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis at San Diego, 9:05 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 12:10 p.m.
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m.
New York at Chicago, 1:20 p.m.
Montreal at Pittsburgh, 1:45 p.m.
Columbus, Colorado, 2:05 p.
St. Louis at San Diego, 3:05 p.
Cincinnati at San Francisco, 7:05 p.
PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League Playoffs Conference Semifinals
Conference Semifinals Yesterday's Games
Florida 2, Philadelphia 0, Florida leads series 1-0
Chicago 3, Colorado 2, OT, Chicago leads series 1,0
Tonight's Games
N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m.
St. Louis at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.
1995-96 NHL Awards
N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 2 p.m.
St. Louis at Detroit, 2 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Tomorrow's Games
Florida at Philadelphia,6 p.m.
Chicago at Colorado,9 p.m.
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Friday. (schedule subject to change and or blackouts);
SPORTS WATCH
(All times Central)
FRIDAY, MAY 3
2 p.m.
ESPN — Senior PGA Golf,
PaineWebber Invitational, first round,
at Charlotte NC.
2:30 p.m.
WGN — Major League Baseball, NY, N.Y. Cities
■ ESPN — Thoroughbred racing, Kentucky Oaks, at Louisville, Ky.
■ ESPN2 — Thoroughbred racing.
"2Day at the Kentucky Oaks," at Louisville, Kv.
ESPN2 — Cycling, Tour DuPont,
stage No. 3, at various sites (samed-
day tae)
ESPN2 — NASCAR Auto racing,
qualifying for Save Mart Supermarkets
300 at Sonoma Circ.
PRIME — Men's tennis, AT&T Challenge, quarterfinal match, at Atlanta
ESPN — NHL Playoffs, conference semifinals, New York Rangers at Pittsburgh, game No. 1
Pittsburgh, gama No. 1
ESPN2 — NHL, Playoffs, confer-
ESPN2 - WNL. Mayoys, conference semifinals, St. Louis at Detroit, game No. 1
WGN — Major League Baseball,
Chicago White Sox at N.Y. Yankees
TBS — Major League Baseball.
ESPN — Cycling, Tour DuPont,
stage No. 3, at various sites (delayed
tapes)
ESPN2 – Men's Division 1 NCAA Volleyball tournament, semifinal No. 2, UCLA vs. Lewis, at Los Angeles (delayed tape)
Nominees List
Hart Trophy (Most valuable to his team)
(Outstanding defenseman)
TORONTO — The finalists for seven NHL
Ray Bourgeon, Boston; Chris Chellos,
Chicago; Brian Leetch, Rangers.
Norris Trophy
individual awards for the 1995-96 season. The winners will be announced June 19:
Malohe Lehue, Pittsburgh; Ench Corla, Philadelphia; Mark Messier, New York Rangers.
Calder Trophy
Daniel Alfredsson, Ottawa; Eric Daze.
Chicago Eld Juvanovich, Florida
Vezina Trophy
Jim Carey, Washington; Chris Osgood,
Detroit; Daren Pupoo, Tamara Bav.
(Outstanding rookie)
(Sportmanship and gentleness play)
Adam Oates, Boston;
Teemu Lanaiti, Anaheim;
Lady Byng Trophy
Frank J. Selke Trophy
Sergei Fadorov, Detroit; Ron Francis, Pittsburgh; Steve Yarman, Detroit.
Jack Adams Award
Scotty Bowman, Detroit; Terry Crisp, Tampa Bay; Doug MaeLean, Florida.
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
Playoffs
First Round
(Best-of-5)
Yesterday's Games
Houston 102, L.A. Lakers 94, Houston wins
Seattle at Sacramento, (n)
San Antonio at Phoenix, 8 p.m. (TNT)
Tomorrow's Game
Sacramento at Seattle, TBA, if necessary
Sunday's Games
NBA Most Improved Player
Winners
1986 — Alvin Robertson, San Antonio
1987 — Alvin Robertson, San Antonio
1987 — Dale Ellis, Seattle
1987 — Kevin Duckworth, Portland
1987 — Kevin Johnson, Phoenix
1990 — Rony Selaky, Miami
1990 — Scott Skiles, Orlando
1990 — Steve Elvinson, Washington
1993 — Chris Jackson, Washington
1994 — Don MacLean, Washington
1995 — Dana Barros, Philadelphia
1995 — Charlene Hanna, Washington
1996 — Gheorghe Muresan, Washington
Thursday's College Baseball
Scores
EAST
COLLEGE BASEBALL
**Army 9**, Fairleigh Dickinson 5
Hofstra 1, Fordham 6
John Jay 5, Old Westbury 3
Long Island U. 14, Manhattan 9
Mass. -Dartmouth 7, Salve Regina 4
Mass. -Lowell 4, Assumption 1
Montclair St. 8, Rutgers-Newark 0
Seton Hall 9, St. Francis, N.Y. 4
S. Connecticut 10, American Intl. 9, 11 innings
Wm. Paterson 18, Jersey City 9
Albany, N.Y. 9, New Paltz 0, forefeit
Belmont 9, Cumbertand, Tenn. 2
Montreat 9, NC-Ashleve 5
Winniproch 13, Furman 5
MIDWEST
Capital 3, Muskington 2-7
Carroll, Wis. 5-1, Lawrence 2-3
Cent. Michigan 26, Northwich, Mich. 8
Concordia, Wis. 6-3, Lakeland 5-13
Detroit 13, Bowling Green 12
E. Michigan 13, Saginaw Val. St. 9
Heidelberg 14-5, Baldwin-Wallace 5-10
Illinois Tech 7, Olive Nazarene 7
Otterbein 7, Kemyon 3
Wis.-Whitewater 17-12, Rockford 4-4
Wooster 9, Walsh 4
Younastown St. 12, Toledo 9
Thursday's Sports Transactions
American League
National League
PHILADPHELMA PHILLIES—Aquired 1B
J.R. Phillips from the San Francisco Giants for
the 2016 NFC Divisional Championship.
SAN DIEGO PADRES—Activated OF CHris Gwynn from the 15-day disabled list. Placed INF-OF Craig Shipley on the 15-day disabled list, retrauctive to April 23.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS → Activated RHP Rich Deluca and INF Kim Bataite from the 15-day disabled list. Optioned INF Jay Canizaro to Phyton of the BCJ
Pacific Coast League
CALGARY CANNONS—Released LHP Greg Cadaret. Activated INF Rich Aude off the disabled list. Signed RHP Kenny Greer and placed him on the inactive list.
FOOTBALL
NEW YORK JETS—Recalled OT Matt Willi
from waivers and traded him to the Atlanta Fail-
cors for a conditional 1998 seventh-round draft
choice.
National Football League
NEW YORK GIANTS—Signed WR Greg
Quesada and PK Olindo Mare.
MONTREAL ALLOETTES—Signed OL
Adam Cassidy and OBJ Adrian Rainbow.
Arena Football League
ANAHEM IRANHAS—Activated OL-DL
Kevin Carroll from the refused-to-report list.
CONNECTICUT COYOTES—Claimed WR-DB JULIS Reese off waivers. Activated WR-LB
Aubrey Thompson, from injured reserve.
FLORIDA BOBCATS—Recalled FB-LB Joe Johnson from waiters
MINNESOTA FIGHTING PIKE—Signed OL-DL Roosevelt Nix. Walved WR-DB Shawn Narciase.
SAN JOSE SABERACT$^a$-Acquired OL-DL Mike Evans and OL-DL Jim Spencer from the Connecticut Coyotes for WR-LB Anthony Howard.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
LOS ANGELES KINGS—Named Tim Liwake president Promoted Rachon Vecton from
DENVER DAREDEVILS—Traded D Mark Richards, D Steve Gibson and F Don Parsons to Long Island for C Angelo Rici, F Richard Enga and D Glen Stewart.
EMPIRE STATE COBRABS—Traded LW John Vechiorelli and D Jay DeNail to for C Michael Martens and a 1997 third-round draft pick.
COLLEGE
BARUCH—Reinstated men's soccer to status status and named Barrington Fowler
CHARLESTON SOUTHERN —Announced the resignation of Sun Killian, softball coach
the resignation of Sue Killian, softball coach,
widowed Ron Rohn women's basketball coach.
EAST TENNESSEE STATE—Named Tracy Garnick and David Siebert men's assistant basketball coaches. Named Brad Sherrod assistant football coach.
LONG BEACH STATE—Retained Clyde Vauchan, his assistant basketball coach.
MIAMI, OHIO - Promoted Charlie Coles,
men's assistant basketball coach, to men's
hockey coach.
MINNESOTA—Announced RB Rafael Cooper was dismissed from the football team for violating team rules regarding personal property rights.
OKLAHOMA—Announced the resignation of Donnie Duncan, athletic director, to become director of football operations for the Big 12 Conference.
ROBERT MORRIS—Named Dave Gutierez, Dave Pilipovich and Thom Holzshu assistant coaches.
PITTSBURGH—Announced Michael Gill,
sophomore basketball forward, has left the
team.
ST. JOSEPHS, Pa.-Named Greg Nicholls women's soccer coach and Dawn Jaffee and Timothy Lenihan women's assistant soccer coaches.
SOUTHERN COLORADO—Named Les
Morken assistant to the athletic director.
TEMPLE-Named Dr. Lynn Snyder senior associate athletics director.
associate americas director.
WESTMINGTON, PA—Announced the resig:
WESTMINSTER, PA.—Anounced the resignation of Peter Maxwell's soccer coach
WISCONSIN-OSHKOSH -Named Pam Ruder women's basketball coach.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday. May 3. 1996
3B
Track coach's training methods launch record pole vaulters
Attig
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
By Adam Herschman
Kansas assistant track and field coach Rick Attig is regarded as one often copied by other coaches. Two of his pupils are Olympic hope for the best pole vault coaches in the nation. Attig's training drills are fuls Pat Manson and Scott Huffman, both former Javahaws.
Kansan sportswriter
When Louisburg High School track coach Aaron Bower sent Mike Meek to Raytown South High School pole vault camp in 1982, Meek was vaulting 11 feet.
Meek went on to place fourth in the 1984 Class 4A state pole vaulting championship.
After the one-week camp, Meek was vaulting 14 feet, thanks in part to Raytown South track coach Rick Attrig.
"If you asked most high school coaches and college coaches about who they think is the best pole vault coach in the United States, most of them would say Rick Attig without a blink of an eye." Webb said.
Attig, who has been an assistant track and field coach at Kansas for the past 11 years, is regarded as one of the top pole vault coaches in the nation. Attig's success and contribution to the event has warranted other coaches to model his approach and techniques for coaching the pole vault.
Attig was born in Murphysboro, Ill. and competed in the pole vault in high school. He attended college at Southeast Missouri State, where he was a four-year letterman and two-time captain in both football and track.
- He earned a bachelor's degree in biology and a master's in biomechanics.
14 What Attig learned from a biomechanics professor in college influenced the way he coaches the sport.
Biomechanics is the study of the mechanics of a body, especially of the forces exerted by muscles and gravity on the skeletal structure.
"He taught me to learn about an event, or a sport, or any kind of physical skill by understanding biomechanical principles," Attig said. "It really became a much different approach than what I think a lot of other coaches did. I've tried to figure out what the objectives of each phase of the vault was, and what principles you would use to achieve those objectives."
At the high school level, Attig coached four students who pole vaulted over 16 feet, and had the best high school trio ever at Raytown
South. The trio was Cam Miller, Cedric Fuller and Dave Pickett. He coached at Raytown South from 1978 to 1984 before coming to Kansas.
In 1988, Attig was named the first national chairman of the National Pole Vault Development Program and had a lot to do with the sport's turnaround, which had been in serious trouble before.
"All the other track and field development
committees have been modeled after this one, it was so well done." Slippery Rock assistant track and field coach Mark Hannay said. "It was all Rick's idea."
Some of the things coaches often model after Attig are the drills he created that simulate different segments of the vault.
"He's probably developed drills better then anyone I've ever seen." Hayne said.
Webb said Attig's methods were copied because of the results his vaulters produced.
schools practicing the stubby flexin'-close-off drill.
Hannay said he saw vaulters from different
Attig has coached seven vaulters at Kansas who have cleared 18 feet or higher, more than any other university in the country. In 1989, he coached one of the best vaulting groups in the nation in Miller, Fuller, and Pat Manson. The three vaulters had an average
personal record of 18-5.
Jason Church, a volunteer assistant on the Kansas track and field team, said when he met Attig it was like a young basketball coach meeting Roy Williams or Pat Rilev.
"When I started getting into pole vaulting in high school, we started getting outside materials and videos. A lot of it was from him," Church said. "We followed who were the good athletes, the good pole vaulters in the U.S., and a lot of them came from the University of Kansas."
Despite his success, Attig has never coached an Olympic vaulter. This summer, however, Attig may fly to Atlanta if former Jayhawks Scott Huffman and Manson qualify for the Olympics.
Both vaulters are considered two of the top pole vaulters in the world. Huffman set the national freshman record with a vault of 18-5 1/2. Today, Huffman is the American record holder in the event with a vault of 19-7.
"He has a general understanding of all phases of what it takes to coach a pole vault," Huffman said. "And that includes not only the physical training, but also the technical training and the mental aspect of vaulting."
Manson was recruited by Stanford and Harvard but decided to attend Kansas because of the vault program
"Rick Attig is a tremendous pole vault coach," Manson said. "And even more than he's a tremendous person. He's a man of integrity and character, and you sense that when you talk to him and deal with him. I had an unique opportunity to travel the country and see a lot of schools and they brought out the best they could show, and KU came on top."
Attig still coaches Manson and Huffman.
"Scott and I have been so comfortable with him for so long, because we know we're not stuck with what they were doing back in '85," Manson said. We're doing what exactly the top vaulters in the world are doing now. If we're both on the Olympic team, we'll find a way to get him there.
"If he's got two-thirds of the U.S. vault team, he should be there."
Strawberry may sign with Saints
Baseball player unwanted by Major League teams
The Associated Press
yesterday.
The Saints have called a news conference for 1 p.m. today. Although team representative Dave Wright would not reveal the subject, he pointed out that it will be only the fourth news conference in the team's four-year history.
ST. PAUL — Darryl Strawberry, unwanted by the major leagues, is expected to sign with the St. Paul Saints today, joining Jack Morris on the popular independent league team.
"We don't do it very often," Wright said
When Morris signe with the Saints two weeks ago, team president Mike Veeck said there was a 30 percent chance Strawberry also would sign.
Veeck was not available for comment yesterday.
Once among the best power hitters in
the majors when he played for the New York Mets, Strawberry has been unable to catch on with a major league organization since the Yankees paid $175,000 to buy out his contract at the end of last season.
Strawberry, 34, is trying to resuscitate a career that has been derailed by alcohol and cocaine abuse.
An eight-time All-Star, he spent a month in a Los Angeles rehabilitation center in 1994, and he also served time in home confinement last year for tax evasion for unreported earnings from baseball card shows.
He agreed last month to pay nearly $300,000 in overdue child and spousal support by June 24 to avoid criminal prosecution.
Strawberry also is to pay $10,000 a month after June 24 to make up an additional $194,912 he owes to his former wife and their children, Darryl Jr., 10, and Diamond Nicole, 7.
Man overboard after oar breaks
Rower's jump from boat doesn't sink Kansas crew
Bv Evan Blackwell
Kansan sportswriter
Nat Watts had no time to think. He just had to jump.
Watts was racing in the Kansas crew mixed novice eight final at the Midwest Rowing Championships last weekend on Lake Wingra in Madison, Wis., when an unusual problem struck his boat. And it couldn't have happened at a worse time.
"We were in second place at the time," Watts said. "My collar came disassembled from my oar, and I basically couldn't row."
The collar is the device that holds the oar to the boat. Watts, a novice rower, had never
experienced anything like losing an oar in the middle of a race.
"It was all such chaos," Watts said. "I started yelling, 'I broke my ear!'"
That's when Watts heard the coxswain, the director of the crew, tell him to jump. Watts had become 180 pounds of dead weight, and the boat had dropped all the way to last place.
"I jumped, or kind of dove, out of the boat," Watts said. "I went down for a few seconds, and then nopped out."
By staying underwater for those few seconds, Watts, who had been in the first seat at the front of the boat, avoided the strokes of the other rowers. But he still had to contend with the water.
"That water was cold." Watts said. "It's still winter in Wisconsin."
See CREW.Page 4.
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your Fall'96 textbooks
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ayhawk Bookstore
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---
4B
Friday, May 3, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Former Jayhawk to play field hockey in Olympics
JUICERS SHOWGIRLS ENTIRELY NUDE DANCERS 913 NORTH SECOND
Tues-Thurs 7:30pm to 1:00 am Fri and Sat until 2:00am
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
The name John O'Neill probably is not known to Kansas sports fans.
When the 1996 Summer Olympic Games start on July 19 in Atlanta, O'Neill will be representing the United States as well as the University of Kansas. The 1995 Kansas graduate is on the 16-member U.S. Olympic men's field hockey team, which was announced last week.
"Every kid in sports dreams of going to the Olympics," O'Neill said. "You get that raised-hair-on-the-back-of-your-neck feeling."
O'Neill, who holds a bachelor's degree in computer science became interested in field hockey when the
Continued from Page 3.
1884 U.S. Olympic team was training near his home in Ventura, Calif.
Luckily for Watts, the rowers uniforms are long-sleeved and made of a water-resistant material. He was able to stay warm until he was picked up by officials who were trailing the race.
John O'Neill
In 1986, O'Neill joined the national junior team and moved up to the senior squad just a year later. He has been traveling
"There's a ton of sacrifice," said O'Neill, who lives in San Diego. "Spending so much time away, keeping relationships up is hard. It takes a very special person."
Since he's had time to reflect on the situation, Watts said. he can see how the story seems unbelievable.
"It all happened so fast, I didn't logically think about it at the time," he said. "It was just something I knew I had to do."
O'Neill has found someone who understands what it is like to be an athlete. His fiancée, Susan Spry, was an All-American and Big Eight Conference champion swimmer for the Kansas swimming team in the late 1980s.
"Being an athlete, I totally respect his schedule and dedication," Spry said. "I can understand the rigorous schedule where another person would go, 'Are you crazy?'
Despite a schedule that has O'Neill traveling to Spain and Egypt for competitions before the Olympics, he and Spry still plan to be married on Nov. 23 in Chicago, where Spry grew up.
Field hockey is not as popular in America as it is in other countries, O'Neill said. On the roster for the 16-
man U.S. team, three players are American citizens who grew up in Holland and several others are Europeans immigrants.
"It's a huge sport over there," O'Neill said.
O'Neill said that because there are no college men's teams in the United States, the team has to travel abroad to find competition.
U. S. men's field hockey coach Jon Clark said that in the nation, there were about 150 males playing the sport, which is similar to soccer but uses a stick and ball and plays just a 70-minute game.
"The team that we produced from that base is quite amazing. Give us 550, and we'd win it," Clark said, laughing.
Unfortunately for Watts and the rest of the rowers, they were only able to pass one boat after he jumped. They finished fifth.
"The fact that this was the final race and a freak thing like that happened is really disappointing," Watts said.
Kansas crew coach Michael Amick said he was upset because the boat had been running such a great race, only to have an equipment problem disrupt it.
"I feel bad because I feel responsible," Amick said. "It's my responsibility to to check the equipment in
The U.S. team, which is making its first Olympic appearance since 1984, will start on its quest to win it all on July 20 against Pakistan, the world's top-ranked team. Last month, the United States lost to Pakistan by a lone goal, 2-1, in an Olympic warm-up game.
"If we get off to a good start, anything could happen," Clark said.
Whatever happens, O'Neill plans to enjoy it. He will participate in the opening ceremonies and experience some of the other activities in Atlanta. But any distractions or pressure will disappear when the competition begins.
"When you play the game, you don't even think about it," O'Neill said.
While the mixed novice eight boat didn't finish as high as they wanted, the crew team brought home three medals from Madison. The men's lightweight four won a silver, and the women's eight and women's lightweight four both won bronze.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, May 3, 1996
5B
Judge considers removing gag order in Irvin drug case
Defense,prosecutors want order to remain
The Associated Press
DALLAS — A judge is considering five media organizations' request to lift a gag order in Michael Irvin's felony drug case, while his defense attorney and prosecutors want to keep it in place.
State District Judge Manny Alvarez was preparing findings of fact and conclusions of law to support an order that could be issued today.
Meanwhile, a 28-year-old man is accusing the Dallas Cowboys receiver of assaulting him early Wednesday near an area sports bar, according to broadcast reports.
"I sense there is concern from the earlier O.J. Simpson case and I would urge the court not to let that case stand in the way of the really important right of the public to know what is going on in this case," said Paul Watler, a attorney representing The Dallas Morning News and Dallas television station WFAA.
Kevin Clancy, Irvin's attorney, and
a prosecutor urged Alvarez to keep in place the gag order that was issued in March, following an Irving, Tex., motel raid that resulted in the player's indictment.
Alvarez admitted into evidence copies of The News' articles on the Irving investigation, along with a videotape by Fort Worth television station KXAS of a news conference on the case.
Clancy contended that his client has been harmed by false information in media reports. The attorney supported the gag order issued by state District Judge John Creuzot, who presided over the grand jury investigating the March 4 raid.
Joining Clancy in support of the gag order was Mike Gillette, assistant Dallas County district attorney.
But the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, the New York Times Co. and Sports Illustrated magazine also presented arguments to reduce or eliminate the gag order.
A Dallas County grand jury indicted Irvin on charges of felony possession of four or more grams of cocaine and a misdemeanor marijuana charge. Two topless dancers, one of whom is now the target of a
deportation proceeding, also were indicted.
Clancy earlier contended that confidential grand jury information was illegally leaked during a hearing that resulted in Irvin's indictment.
Irvin was indicted April 1 along with Angela Beck, 22, and Jasmine Nabwangu, 21. The women were with Irvin and former Cowboys tight end Alfredo Roberts in the motel room when police officers conducted their raid.
Roberts' trial is set to begin June 24.
In another matter, an assault report by Charles Edward James of Irving was referred to the city attorney's office, Irving police officer David A. Tull said Wednesday.
James, Clancy and Steve Endicott, Irvin's agent, did not immediately return telephone calls today from The Association Press.
Police reported the 28-year-old James was grabbed and pushed, leaving a small scratch mark on his left biceps. Officers said the attack occurred at a shopping center near the Cowboy Sports Cafe and a convenience store.
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Prep star may head to NBA
South Carolina player may bypass college
The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Will he or
won'the?
No one, not even Jermaine O'Neal, knows whether one of South Carolina's most talented prep school players will go to college or follow friend Kobe Bryant from high school to the NBA.
O'Neal, 17, said he would apply for next month's NBA draft by the May 12 deadline to declare. But he also said he would try and qualify for college and listed his final five selections as South Carolina, Clemson, Kentucky, Ohio State or Maryland.
"I really didn't want to be left out in the cold," he said in yesterday's editions of *The (Columbia) State*. "That's the one big reason I'm choosing to apply."
However, his mother, Angela Ocean, said this morning that nothing was certain for the Eau Claire High School star. "That's a possibility, only a possibility right now," she told The Associated Press. She said O'Neal wouldn't decide for sure until the deadline to declare for the NBA draft.
O'Neal is taking the SAT college entrance exam again tomorrow and is looking to raise his score of 830 about 100 points to qualify to play.
"The NBA will probably be my second option," he told *The State*. "I'll still try to go to school. I wouldn't say school is totally out of the question."
I'm still serious about qualifying."
But even if he improves his test scores, O'Neal told WIS-TV in Columbia yesterday that he might stay in the draft.
"If I get drafted anywhere between one and 15, I may stay in the draft," O'Neal said. "Or I may withdraw and go to school."
NBA scouts said O'Neal could be picked late in the first round, potentially earning a contract worth at least $2 million for three seasons.
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
"If he keeps working with the same zeal and aggressiveness he's shown here, he can be All-Pro," Eau Claire coach George Glymph said.
The only players to jump to the pros without having played in college are Kevin Garnett, Moses Malone, Shawn Kemp, Darryl Dawkins and Bill Willoughby.
Congratulations Graduates!
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FIESTA TANGER! Free Family Fun!!
TANGER OUTLET CENTER IS PLEASED TO HOST THE WORLD FAMOUS CAMPANAS DE AMERICA (BELLS OF AMERICA) ON SATURDAY, MAY 4 AT 1:00 PM IN COMMEMORATION OF CINCO DE MAYO.
Featuring innovative and traditional mariachi music, this 12 member band has performed for such dignitaries as President Bush, Pope John Paul II, Prince Charles and more. They were voted "Best Mariachi" at the 1992 & 1995 Pura Vida Hispanic Music Awards and have appeared with/or accompanied Linda Ronstadt, Vikki Carr, George Strait, Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitian and many others. The Tanger Outlet Center is proud to present Campanas to Lawrence!
OTHER ACTIVITIES:
- 2 performances by "Balladores Escolores" at 12:00 noon and 2:15 pm!
- Great Food from LaFamilia, Old Chicago, Quizno's Classic Subs and St. John's Church!
- Other fun-filled activities!
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---
6B
Friday, May 3, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, May 3, 1996
7B
Horoscopes
By Linda C. Black
Today's Birthday (May 3). Decide what you want and start toward it in May. Take time out for love in June. Reach a compromise with a tough competitor in July. Settle down in August in the place you want to stay. A secret is revealed in December. Travel plans get botched in January; go early or not at all. Apply old career skills in February to solve a puzzle. Use your experience in April or you'll learn a lesson the hard way.
Rating System: 10 is the easiest day, 0 is the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 3 — Get all your important business done as early as possible, including your shopping. A financial foul-up this afternoon could cause all kinds of problems. Visit out-of-town friends with your sweetie, tonight.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 5 — You'll have more problems with just about everything this afternoon, so make all
the important decisions this morning. If you can't, stall until the end of the month. Tonight, hide out with your mate.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) — Today is a 3— Keep pushing to meet a big deadline. Communications will go most smoothly early in the day. There could be a massive break down later so have a back up plan ready. Do something really different this evening.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 9 — You're still lucky, but complications are arising. Get your serious business done before this afternoon. Also, make your reservations for this weekend then; you'll have trouble if you don't.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 5 — A decision reached this morning will last a long, long time. If it's not going your way, stall. You'll have to hold off all month, though. You won't get a better opportunity until June.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) —
Today is an 8 — Race around and get everything done as early as possible. Things start to turn to worms around the middle of the day. Concentrate so you can get an important job done.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Today is a 3 — Money's the theme again, and caution is required. Check everything that's coming in or going out. Mistakes will be rampant, especially this evening. Do your shopping from home.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7 — Your primary competitor could make a giant mistake this afternoon, and another one next week. So, if you want to make your own life easier, procrastinate. Run the clock out while you have the advantage.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
— Today is a2 — Not only is there a lot to do, but there are a lot of breakdowns and confusion. Your natural instinct is to cut and run, but fight it off. Get a tough job done today, and you'll enjoy your
weekend even more.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
— Today is an 8 — You're still lucky, but delays are beginning to set in. Push to get what you want in public as well as in private settings this morning. By this a*ternoon, the opportunities may be gone.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 5 — Make up your mind this morning. If you really don't like the options, you'll have to stall for quite a while. It'll be the end of the month before you get better conditions for a big decision.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 9 — You're still powerful and your intuition is incredible. Other conditions are beginning to change, however, there will be more confusion later tonight, so finish a big project as early as possible.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
DILBERT®
By Scott
Adams
I'M PARALYZED WITH
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IT MIGHT BE TIME FOR A MORALE-BOOSTING POTLUCK LUNCH.
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in
downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
"Unsurred since 1993"
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---
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The new Big Border Taco from Taco Bell is just like our original taco, only it's toped with pepperjack cheese.
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THE POSTER OF MARK BENNETT
WARNING: POSSESSION AND/OR
CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES AND DRUGS ARE NOT PERMITTED
WARNING: POSSESSION AND/OR
CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES AND DRUGS ARE NOT PERMITTED.
Also featuring:
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West Campanile Hill Noon to about 6pm Saturday, May 4
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Don't hang on to them if you can't use them.
Textbooks are expensive. And they are like almost no other product you buy You can actually use them and get up to 70% of your purchase price back Do you know what your actual cost of using a textbook can be?
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Runs were up 28 percent from 1992, to an average of 10.58, which is 1.7 percent higher than two years ago.
At 3.98, the Chicago White Sox are the only AL team with an ERA under 4. Detroit's is a major-league high 7.31.
Texas (26), Minnesota (24) and Montreal (21) all scored 20 runs in a game, the first time three teams did it in one month since June 1950.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
Meanwhile, fans are starting to come back. The average attendance was up 7 percent in the first four weeks of the season, from 23,606 to 25,260 for the first 338 dates.
There were 826 homers in 359 games in April for an average of 2.30, up 64 percent from the 1.40 average in 1992, the last year before expansion, and 3.6 percent higher than April 1994.
884-4840
Barry Bonds, Gary Sheffield and
Of the 4,183 days since 1900 on which 12 or more games were played, April 24 (13.93 runs per game average), April 30 (13.92) and April 28 (13.58) all were in the top five, according to research by the Elias Sports Bureau.
We buy more used textbooks than anyone in town.
The record of 14.07 was set on July 25,1937; July 10,1932 also had a 13.58 average.
Television viewers also increased. ESPN's first 14 broadcasts averaged a 1.9 rating, up 27 percent from last year's 1.5, but down 14 percent from 1994's 2.2.
April reaps record number of homers
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Three of baseball's biggest offensive days in this century all came in the last week as the sport's longest April ended with lots of long balls.
Following the strike, the average dropped 20 percent for the first month last year.
Despite efforts to cut game time, the average for a nine-inning game was 2 hours, 53 minutes, down just one minute from last year's average.
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Montreal became the first team to hit six grand slams in a month, topping the previous record set by Baltimore in September 1983 and matched by Seattle in August 1985.
Brady Anderson hit 11 homers each in the month, matching the majorleague record for April shared by Willie Stargell (1971), Mike Schmidt (1976) and Graig Nettles (197).
Bullets center wins the NBA's Most Improved Player Award
The Associated Press
Muresan, led the NBA in shooting percentage at 58.4 percent. His scoring average went up 4.5 points per game and his rebounding average
NEW YORK — Gheorghe Muresan of the Washington Bullets won the NBA Most Improved Player Award yesterday, receiving 50 of a possible 113 votes from a nationwide panel of sports writers and broadcasters.
improved by 2.9 per game. Muresan was eighth in the league in blocked shots.
The 7-foot-7 center from Romania started the first 76 games for the Bullets before a knee injury ended his season. He shot better than.500 from the field in 58 games and blocked two or more shots 43 times.
George McCloud of Dallas was second in the balloting with 23 votes.
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---
8B
Friday, May 3, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sandberg struggles to produce thus far in return to Chicago
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — The Wrigley Field ivy is brown and dry, and the wind off Lake Michigan still carries winter's bite. Spring is struggling to reemerge, and so is Ryne Sandberg after the first month of his comeback season with the Chicago Cubs.
1
tent ear infection.
Even before his stunning retirement announcement almost two years ago, the first month of the season was always a drag, before this season, his lifetime average for April was just 235.
Sandberg quickly celebrated May's advent with two homers Wednesday, tying him for the team lead with seven. He now has 16 RBI and has raised his batting average to 212.
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"Other than being sick last week, I feel like I'm finally coming along. It's a typical start for me," he said.
"It's a long season, so I keep that in mind. It's really the way I've approached it and looked at it. Other than that it's just kind of a struggle through April."
tribute. He left amid struggles on the field and in his personal life but returned with encouragement from the team's new management and energy from a new marriage.
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Wrigley Field is one place that helped Sandberg make his decision to return to baseball. As a spectator, he saw the Cubs become competitive again and felt he could still con-
"I always feel good when he walks up to the plate," said manager Jim Riggleman.
200s Employment
RBI and 325 stolen bases. In his last four full seasons, he averaged 31 homers and 91 RBI. Those figures meant that he, like Michael Jordan, would be judged against himself when he returned.
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"He's still feeling his way a little bit but he's been productive for us, I think he probably would like to get a little bit more on an even keel. Instead of the highs of the home runs and the lows of the batting average, he would probably be more comfortable with something a little bit in the middle."
Sandberg retired with a .289 lifetime average. 245 home runs. 905
Kansan Classified Directory
205 Help Wanted
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"You can't just walk away from this game of baseball and come back and expect to be the old Ryne Sandberg," says Billy Williams, the Cubs hitting coach.
Classified Policy
These things you forget in 16 months because you've been away from the game."
"I think he's coming right on schedule from what I said would happen during the winter when they announced he was coming back. His bat speed is right there. When he first came back he tried to rush it a little bit. Now he's staying back and has the confidence in his hands.
Despite his time away from the game, Sandberg hasn't made an error this season.
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"He's turned a lot of double plays where in situations last year we could not," said general manager Ed Lynch.
Y
"He's still got that."
"We're absolutely, perfectly satisfied. His legs are good, his arm is good and he's got bat speed. Those are the things you can't work on to get better. If your legs are bad or you can't get the bat through the hitting zone, there's nothing you can do to get that back.
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405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
LesBiGaySK-OK offers individual peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, or unsexual. Please叫 KU Info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for more information.
400s Real Estate
110 Business Personals
-outing Act of 1988 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such prefer-
SNO PALACE is open!
M-F 2-10pm , Sat. 12-10pm
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Mother's Day/Day/Year/Day Great Graduation Gift.
Your snapshot to invoke. Your music. Undefinatable.
The day of the week you are celebrating.
Need Cash?
Need Cash? We loan cash on账 anything of value, CLD AVCFS, TVS; stereo equipment any kind of mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence's most liberal loan company, JAY-HAWK PJW & JEWELMER 180 W 74h 149-119
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Hops, naval rings with charm, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Shop
928 Main St.
Washington, DC 20005
HEALTH
Watkins Since 1906
Caring For KU
GREATER
Hours
Monday-Friday 8-8
Saturday 8-4:30
Sunday 12:30-4:30
ATTENTION STUDENTS!! GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE. YOU MAY QUALIFY REGARDLESS OF YOUR GRADES OR INCOME. 1-800-833-3834.
864-9500
120 Announcements
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, or unsure? LeaBibK OK offers a confidential support group Wednesday at 7:00pm. Call KU Info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for location.
Attn: Graduation Business or Financial Studies Students. I am searching for the right entrepreneur to expand my business. I have a specialized catering company (Just liquor & bartending part of business) in Lawrence and will be expanding to Overland Park and Toledo within 6 months. I will be offering part owner training and must be professional on manner, appearance, and business skills. Senior inquiries only. 842-839-4828.
Free party room for 20-200 at Johnny's. s.842-0377
130 Entertainment
MIRACLE VIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale starting at $9.88 and up
1910 Haskell, 841-7504
Childcare for 5 yrs,old needed for June and July, 10-20 hrs/week. Call 841-4778 after 6pm
Creative Babyzafety for 2 country kids, ages 7 and 3
Afterschools all summer. BKs references required.
Babyzafety.com
Carpenter wanted for part-time remodeling company
Experience necessary. References needed. Call 844-735-2610.
200s Employment
3 br. TM 10H - Law Ave, w/d, dw, gar, deck, furnished
500 Woo + 800 Woo + Utld. Pad basic cable on bus route
C
Desperately seeking, lively responsible person wore shirt
and trousers. Posed with arm extended, girdle 2 to
5 aforementioned fingers. Phone call 832-969-0100.
205 Help Wanted
Moving & Storage Company. TOP PAY. Packers and
Loaders. Store (313) 858-8789
男 女
Roofer will train Lenexa area, starting pay to $8. Call (913) 888-6394.
Sitters needed weekends and days in a rural setting. Call Maureen 740-1710
205 Help Wanted
Emmanuel Lutheran Child Center is needing a lead teacher with early childhood experience. (FedEx)
Help Wanted for occasional weekends and some Fridays. Farm type labor involved. Cutting grass, fence posts, building walls, etc.
INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN NEWS AGENCY SEEKS
INFORMED TIME TO VIDEO DATA 748-0090
involved immediately to Video Information
Live-in building manager for First United Methodist Church. Housing in return for nighttime security and food delivery.
Needed 2 people for light up set and serving for small party at residence. Attention of KM Graduation, MK Nursing Scholarship.
NEWS AGENCY SEEKS COMPUTER ASSISTANT
Must have experience of Macintosh programs. Send resume to
New York, NY 10017.
Part-time help wanted. 2 hours or more. Need to be flexible. minimum wage. Apply at Westridge Video. 601-385-7525.
Summer nanny. 3 Kilds, 11,15 & 5 years old. Approx. 30
Summer babysitter. 3 Kilds, 11,15 & 5 years old. Approx. 30
Babysitting. 3 Kilds, 11,15 & 5 years old. Approx. 30
Babysitting. 3 Kilds, 11,15 & 5 years old. Approx. 30
Summer sinter, chauffeur, 2 easy kids, West campus area, flex $100, htm$9.20-25 hours, have reliable car and refs no smoker please. Start June 3, Call 843-2688
The Learned Club has immediate opportunity for part-time servers. Some day time availability preferred. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave.
Wanted: 100 Students. Lose 8-100 Ibs. New metallabism
Wanted in 3 wks! Guaranteed results 855 4-600-496-748
Homekeeper needed through the summer, references needed and transportation required. Call 844-1343 after 9 a.m.
Looking for motivated individuals interested in
sales/management/training Possible environ-
mental opportunities to work with clients
7:30 am-4:30 pm. Full-time baby sitting position available for 3 kids. Infant experience required. $250 per week. Non-smoker. References required. Mon. Pr. Starting May 22. 585-1851.
ADAMS ALUMNI CENTER: The Learned Club has immediate opening for part time dishwashers, flexible hours both am and pm shifts. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1260 Broad Ave.
CHILD CARE. Full t/up time teaching positions,
early childhood or elementary ed. backgrounds. Send
resume or call sch.o. Sunshine Acres Preschool 2141
Maple, phone 842.223
Drivers, Packers, Helpers needed in the Kansas City Area. Will Train, no experience necessary. FRY-WAG NERGUNITUD WL LINES. Call Darin Baldwin 1-800-390-0409 xt 255
Farm and ranch help wanted for the summer near Lake Perry. Must have experience with cattle and farm equipment. Write to Ranch Office, Route 1 Box 100, Perry, KS 66073.
JUICERS SHOWGIRLS
323-6117. Ask for Pat.
Hirtly attractive舞者和 daintiness 18. Apply in person after 7/30 PM. 58th - Sat or 841-1422, or 18-1422.
MOTHERS HELPER NEEDED IN EXCHANGE FOR A FREE ROOM. APPLICATIONS BEING TAKEN FOR SUMMER OR FALL REFERENCES REQUIRED. CALL 842-3860
Panchero's Mexican Grill Home of the 2lb. burrito.
We are looking for a reliable ass. manager. Flexible
Hours. Work late night. 20:30 hrs./week.
Two experienced child caregivers wanted fail- 96 for part-time in home care for our one year old daughter. Parents KU professors. Easy walking distance to campus. 833-8208
Therapist needed for 9 year old boy with autism.
Applied behavior analysis preferred and trained provided. Flexible hours. KCMO resident call collect (816) 361-3914.
Wanted; loving, caring, responsible person to care for girls, 12 and 6 yrs old. After school from Sept. 1966-May 1997, $5.50/hr., must have own transportation. Please contact Jan Boulder 834490 (h) or 824-8125 (h). Full time summer nanny. Must be experienced child care giver. Have own car and be available part time in next year. Send references, schedule and resume to Stuart Daily Kanan, 1195 Stauffler Flair, SK 60505
Help Wanted. Now bring liner servers. Dining room attendants & dish washers. For summer employment positions. Start May 31. Flexible schedule. Competitive Wages. Free meals. Apply at Nasmith Hall.
Full & part-time telephone secretary wanted. Taking and relay messages in your job. Second and third shift at it. Must be willing to work some weeks and in a position as a receptionist. Apply in person at Riescu Hochform, Commission 441, W8 051 St.
Early Pre-school lead teacher position now available. Must have 1 year experience in group child care. HDPI degree preferred. Great benefits. Cover letter & resume. Loading Stones 100 Wakaran Dr. 60440 Deadline May 9
Is accepting applications for Part-time evening & weekend custodial positions. No experience necessary. Possibility of Full-time summer employment Call Jeanie at 842-6584 to apply.
Summer jobs available for full and time part-time driver seats. Must have valid drivers license and driving license from the state or local Bell Corp. at (153) 571-1000 or apply in person at 84 Lumber, 2200 west 31st, Winston, KS. *Ask for Kyle*.
BPI BUILDING SERVICES
205 Help Wanted
Positions open. Great job for students. Telephone fund-raising for SADD (Students Against Driving Drunk) and New Jersey Special Olympics. We work with the DEA to provide funding. Call 845-301-098 or apply at 819. Mae. St. Suite 2
applications for the position of Lead Teacher. A degree in education or a related field with an emphasis in early childhood is required. Send application to director, 946 Vermont, Lawrens, KS, 60044 EOE
Summer intern needed for workweeksewapper. Responsibilities will vary, but mainly encompass production and ad design. Great work environment great experience. Call (193) 483-3800 for more information.
Sports Minded is Miring 8-10 enthusiast. indicate. PT, brt ideas.
Assistants will need to know about the game. Please go
Top Gun Pistol (Gun 9) at 4:30 p.m.
Yogi Birla's Jellystone Camp-Resort, Divide, Colorado needs clearer, maintenance, camp cook, amt, cleaning and high energy and fun-loving people. Salary & benefits: Box 78129 San Antonio, TX 78278 (40) 495-6824
Graduating Seniors · John Hanecko Financial Services is looking for professional individuals for their marketing/sales training program, which is specifically designed for recent college graduates. Fax or mail resume to: 6000 College Blvd. #1000, Overland Park, KS 65012; Attn: Pam Swendal KD. #3134539478
Camp Ranafit in St. Louis, MO is seeking mature, committed individuals for specialists and counsellors who will provide the summer of 1996. For more information, contact the camp office at Congregation B'ai Naim @ acre. (c) 2004 ACEC.
**STUDENT HOURLY POSITION AVAILABLE**
Duties: Receptionist; filing; duplicating; running errands; proofing documents; data entry, bulletin boards; other duties as assigned. Position available May 1st. Applicant should have experience Application available at the Student Assistance Center.
22 Strong, 864-4063. Deadline is May 8, 1995. 5:00 PM.
College Proapartners, North America's largest student painting company is now accepting applications for summer painter, crew leaders, and production managers positions. Wages range 48-10 an hour for a week, and applications are available all over Kauaia and Missouri I call today for applications as positions fill quickly: 1-800-256-1133.
BASIC CLEANING SERVICE is expanding its staff of cleaning associates, two new positions.
Nations leading stainless flatware and bridal gifts outlet store is now taking applications for Asset. Manager. Detailed oriented person to handle daily店 operations. Position requires a high level of customer interaction. Wk. Some shift days but could work around school hours. Apply in person: Oneida Fashion Store 1 Riverfront Plaza #103 Lawrence, KS 60044 749-4612
Lawrence, KS 60044 749-4612
SUMMER HR POSITION
-85 hr starting wage
-10.25 hrs/week
-$.50 to $1/r bonus after 60 days probation
-Flexible evening hours
You won't find a better part-time job that offer more
United States. CALL 718-750-9000.
*Limited appointments* *CALL TODAY* 7-89-0022
Cottonwood Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for part-time employment in their residential division. All positions include evening and weekend work, a desire to travel for work and related experience helpful but may not be required. A GOOD DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc.. 100 West 31st E. OLE. B.
We are currently accepting applications interested in the Human Resources field. This individual would greet applicants, the answer phones, assist with answering phone calls, and the careant would need to be willing to train immediately and start May 20th, full time 8:00 to 5:00, apply immediately PATIOMERY SERVICES, 221E E, 740-890, 740-890
Summer Employment - Caterers. Kansas and Burge Union's Catering Department, $4.50 per hour. Monday thru Saturday 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. Requires valid driver's license, able to lift 50 pounds, stand for long periods, be patient, be polite, be patient
Assistant Manager
Responsible, and Reliable
Flexible Hours
Panchero's
Home of the 2 lb. Burrito
843-6760
WANTED:
CUSTODIAL WORKER: Two (2) positions open for student hourly custodial workers at Watkin. Health Center. The length of the appointment is starting now through the 1995-07 school year. A possible 40 hours per week during the summer and break periods and 15-20 hours per week during the school year. This includes summer and holiday days. Work schedules will vary according to hours the facility is open. Must be an enrolled KU student.
TRC can help! Jobs range from general clerical and工序 entry-to level positions in business. Job roles include Short/长term temp assignments & menu to temp assignments with some of Overland Park-Metro KC's best companies.
Cottowood inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for the full-time position of Residential Manage-er. This position requires no more than 10, all aspects of service provision as well as administration and daily management of a group home. Must have at least 2 years college coursework or at least 5 years experience working in a care environment requiring 4 sleepovers, Monday through Thursday and a good driving record. Excellent benefits. Other part-time positions are also available within the Resi-toned Care Program offered by Cottowood inc. 2801 W. St. 18th, by March 1st EOE.
Join us for a JOB FAIR Tues, May 7 from 7 a.m. - 12 p.m.
at the Holiday Inn (Lawrence 2000 McDonald Drive).
tust apply in person to Personnel Office, Watkins
Injury Center, Hospital, April 15 through April
18.
ATTN: STUDENTS
205 Help Wanted
Earn top pay with travel opportunities!
Full time summer employment, 40 to 50
per week. Must be 18 yrs. and have two
I.D.'s (D's. Drivers, S.S. or State I.D.).
Drivers, packer and helpers needed.
Applicants must have your position today @ 1-800-329-1427
or apply in person, Clement American
Moving Services - 12605 W. 63rd St.
PRODUCT DESIGNER
BUSINESS COORDINATES
Entertainer, Inc. is looking for a
administrator to administer
data processing on one of KC's top 50 fastest
growing companies. Programming,
data manipulation and basic
programming are required. SCQ.
background preserved. Position
is full-time with benefits. Mail
to (812) 492-0800 at entertainer@kc.com
DATA PROCESSING COORDINATOR
Looking for Summer Employment?
Graduating & Entering the Job Market?
EARN CASH
ON THE SPOT
EOE/M/F/D/V
Lawrence manufacturer seeks experienced draftsman versed in Pro-E or degree mechanical engineer who desires Pro-E training & exposure Drawing & sketching ability a mni. Successful candidate will be conceptual designs and respond quickly to design challenges in marketing at a plus. This position is full-time and offers a complete benefits package including health,耳 & dental insurance as well as 40 (k) lt @ E.S.O.P. Packer provides a pleasant work environment and competitive wages. Qualified applicants should submit resume along with salary expectations to Packerware Coordinator, 2230 Packer Rd.; Lawrence KS 60049
Academic Program Coordinator McCollum Hall Half-time position, facilitates academic progress, encourages good study skills, works with resident groups in special program activities, promotes an environment conducive to student success in position. Required: KU graduate student meeting enrollment required for KU student payroll. Enrollment in more than 9 credit hours must be approved in advance. Preferred: Residence hall living and supervisory experience plus knowledge of educational protocol. Students may not be available at least three weeks’ week. Compensation: $7.65hr. from July 28, 1996 through May 31, 1997. Some meals provided when dining center is serving. To Apply: Submit letter of application outlining interest and experience, resume; and names, addresses, and contact information of Department of Student Housing, 422 West 11th Street, NE, Kansas City,KS 60405. Deadline: May 17, 1999. EEOA/
Excellent opportunity! Bust My DL department seeks energetic team player to provide PC user assistance. Responsibilities will include EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) training and providing programming. Qualified candidate will be experienced in PC user support and programming on P.C's or midrange computers. C++, AS400 and EDI experience preferred. Successful candidate will have strong community relations and organization organized易 flexibility to work well with multiple teams. P.C. repair a plus! This is a full-time position with complete benefit package. Submit a resume with letter of interest regarding salary history to Employment Coordinator: 2230 Packer RD. Lawrence; K6004 Gauss.
MIS SUPPORT/PROGRAMMER
Return Donora - Extra Bucks
New Donors earn $20 Today
Up to $40 this week
New donors include anyone who
hasn'tdonated since Nov. 4
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
I Cart Believe It'S Yogurt!
NOW HIRING!
23RD & LOUISIANA
843-5500
15TH & KASOLD
749-0440
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
Summer Employment
Drivers * Helpers * Packers for local moving company.
Full summer
part-time employment between spring and summer sessions.
Please apply at 721 E. 9th St.
women are encouraged to apply
Scholarship Hall
Director-Douthart Hall
205 Help.Wanted
northAmerican.
SUMMER HELP.Softball Umpire…The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department is looking for additional individuals who are interested in working as softball umpires for The Adult Swimwich Legends. Anyone interested should apply to the Office immediately. Some training provided and required. For more information, call Bob at B2-732-7922.
want.
Now hiring for FALL '06 semester in the following post:
Jon's Notes
Advertiser's - Distance filters before class outside of lecture. Earn 18 or 30 for 80 minutes of work. Practical course. www.advertising.su.edu.au
$$ $
NOW HIRING!
Three-quarter time, live-in position during academic year, to facilitate academic progress, help plan a balancing hour by purchasing food item for residents, coordinate academic program, and cooperate academic community in a women's scholarship hall. Required. One year of residential group living experience. KU graduate student meeting minimum enrollment in order to participate in more than 9 credit hours must be approved in advance. Preferred: Experience in men planning, food preparation, budgeting, and bookkeeping. Experience in managing financial interests and Saleney $282 btwely for first year staff. Furnished apartment with utilities provided plus meals when the hall is serving. Employment for full academic program required. Attendance to interest and relevant experience; a resume; plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references to: KU Department of Student Housing, 422 W. 11th, St. KGKS, 60545 May 17, 1996 deadline EGXA/0
Note Takers • Earn $10,410 per lecture taking comprehensive notes in large KU lecture classes for the entire semester. Qualified candidates will have a3.3 GPA and related course work experience. Courses open: ANTH, BIO, CHEM, CLXEN, CECN, ENVOR, GEORG, GEOL, PHSI, HIST, ASTR, PHISJ, PSYCH, SOC, SPEC.
Earn extra cash over Summer break! Many full-time jobs available in Topeka for production, retail, office and warehouse. Work as much as you want.
Office Assistant - Service customers at our KS Union Bookstore location. MWP, 1:4 I-Mor 1:3 Fri, 1:4 I-Mon or 1-5 PM Duties include proofing and filing lecture notes, distributing notes to customers. P4-24 19hr
Apply at KEY Staffing
400 SW Croix, Topeka
267-9999
Pick up an application at our office in KSU Union Bookstore, 2nd floor student union between 9 and 5.
ASSISTANT COMPLEX DIRECTORS Lewis And Corbin Halls
Assistant Complex Directors (ACD) will hold live-in, academic year, three-quarter time positions, managing student personnel aspects of a residence hall position with student personnel and providing student with student personnel functions; supervising student staff; facilitating resident's personal and academic life; providing housing and student products, and providing counseling and referral services to university and community resources. Required: RU graduate student meeting minimum enrollment requirements for the Bachelor of Arts degree, and 9 or credit hours must be approved in advance. Preferred: Residence Life staff experience. Residence Hall management is required. A furnished apartment including amenities is provided as housing and administrative duties. Microcomputer experience. Salary and Benefits total $7,216.20 if commuted. A furnished apartment including amenities is provided as housing and administrative duties. Employment from July 28, 1996 through May 31, 1997. To Apply: Submit letter of application to the RU Department of Student House resume; plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 students who are the RU Department of Student House members. Date of May 17, 1997. EEO/AW
BUSINESS OFFICE
205 Help Wanted
BUSINESS OFFICE
ORDER FILM FILLMENT POSITION
hours spring or fall 1996.
20 hours / week user round
Student hourly position: University Press of Kansas seeks individual to handle order fulfillment/ data entry responsibilities. Work includes learning to interpret purchase orders of varying complexity, entering data from a computer program, preparing the reports and invoices for the warehouse staff to process, dealing with customer shipment data as assigned by the Business Manager. Excellent opportunity for experience in a business office setting.
You will be able to work with excellent organizational skills, cope with complex work tasks. Must be enrolled in a desirable work environment. Must be enrolled in a desirable work environment. Must be enrolled in a desirable work environment.
Flexible hours, but afterterno preferable $8.50.hr to start, $8.50.hr after 3 months.
Applied at 2510 W. 150th St. (west campus). For more info call Sam Cain (617) 897-5454 for applications in p. 5月may 9th.
SALES AND MANAGEMENT CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
Send resume to:
205 Help Wanted
Hughes Lumber is a growth oriented building material retailer with operations in Oklahoma and Kansas. We are seeking energetic, highly motivated individuals who aspire to General Sales and Management
- Very Competitive Wages.
* Life, Health, Dental Insurance.
* 401(k) w/ company contribution
HR Code: Campus
Hughes Lumber PO 2920
Tulsa, OK 74101-9290
Hughes LUMBER
Drug free workplace. EOE.
Work in a professional business environment conducting market research and telemarketing.
Advanced Business Consultants in Mission, KS has fulltime positions available immediately. Part-time positions available during the traditional school year. $7.00/hr to start. Benefits available to full-time employees. Contact Jim Schulz, 831-2121 x 3013 for an interview.
205 Help Wanted
SUMMER WORK $9.45 to start
- Interview now, start after finals.
- Excellent resume experience
- Internship/scholarship opportunities
* Part/Full-time employment
- Part/ Full-time, entry level all areas
- No experience necessary - training provided.
Workshops & S&P
- National company
Johnson County & South K.C.
K.C. North
St. Louis
Manhattan
Topeka
Wichita
(913) 381-9675
(916) 455-0117
(914) 953-5535
(913) 776-9900
(913) 273-9119
(913) 652-7227
100%
ROBERT HALF
FREE JOB PLACEMENT!
FREE SOFTWARE TRAINING
accountemns NATIONAL ALLIANCE W/MICROSOFT!
Specializing in Accounting, Office Administration & IS since 1970! If you're looking for the perfect first job or flexible summer employment give us a call to discuss your options!
Now interviewing for:
*Staff Accountants *Accountants *Administrative Assistants
*Customer Service Reps *PC Experts *Sales *Bookkeepers
Johnson County & KC Metro Area locations! (913) 451-7600- Ask for Michelle
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
205 Help Wanted
Part time yard work. No moving for older couples. State experience and pay per hour. 843-6800
The Kansas City Sta is seeking independent contractors for the outside sales department.
Each contractor will have a sales potential of $700 (and higher) per week soliciting student orders.
Call 1-800-726-2340 ask for Kent or Pat Ext.4597
225 Professional Services
Model portfolio photography; will you help put you a good portfolio. Excellent rates. Call: Robbins 323-734-6124. I-PMH.
DEL / TRAFFIC / CINEMAL
OVERLAND PARK - KAANSITY AREA
CHARLES R GREEN
TOWARDS
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0964
STATE LAW SYSTEMS
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Tennessee 843-4023
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
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
842-1133
235 Typing Services
Friday, May 3, 1996
Typing & Editing, Cheap, fast, accurate. Call 841-4977
NEED SOMETHING THETYPE? Experienced typist can top quality paper for you. Laser printing, scanning, and faxing are available.
Callack k86-8585 for applications, term papers,
thesis, dissertations, manuscripts, etc. Satisfaction
expressed on delivery of materials.
Professional Word Processing, Spreadsheets, Tape
Transfers and Laser Printing, 846-703-0501
www.lexpress.com
BEBMESM - consultation, cover letters & more.
Graphic Ideas, Inc. 097 1/2 Manuscript 841-1071.
www.bebmesm.com
X
305 For Sale
4802-6120 40 Meg. mq 14, SVCV 1, SVCG 7,
Windows, machines and software, w8g 765-987.
87 Nissa Pulasar, T-ops, Air conditioning, excellent condition $4300 call 823-0021.
For sale 1809 Vespa P120E scooter. 280 miles. Extra good condition. $1,400. Cable: 749.125.
Beds, Desks, Bookcases, Lamps, Other Stuff
Layaway Now. 308 Mast
Everything But Ice
FOR SALE. PUTON_double with. cover $ 150 or best offer.
Call: 685-3588.
340 Auto Sales
1994 Jeep Cherokee Sport. Blue 4 Dr. 4 wheel drive, AMC AMFAMCette. Towing Capability 30 kmiles
260 lbs.
Honda Moped, 1960 new brakes, lighta, ZestColor TV, cable ready, good post rain protection Honda ZC210-2130 seven-speed
85 Wagauer者 Limited. With A/C, leather interior, new
bedding. Must Go! Must Go!
Call us 821-6478. Call us 821-6478.
370 Want to Buy
WANTED:
Your used computer (PC or Macintosh)
We are paying up to $1.000 Reward
for your used computer at UMI Computers 2449 Iowa 841-4611
400s Real Estate
105 For Rent
1-8 Br houses. Close to KU and Downtown, Available for Call 812-7644.
105 For Rent
1/2 blk. from campus. Studios & 1 bdrm. avail.
for summer & fall. Call 842-7644-
3-2 bedroom apartment. Available June 1. Wood floors.
2 blocks to NX, near downtown. 842-8844 or 843-8545.
GIRL ZIBE in 2018 downstream/capcrean, Porch, W/CH,
water paid. Avg. June 1, 2005; Monthly: B41-780-796.
$300 per month.
Get a group? Large homes for rent! Morning Star. 841-
STAR(7827)
Subleader needed 1 br, 835. Available May 18. May is paid w/fall option. Call 843-1305.
Sublease 1Br Studio 12th and Ohio
$390/month All written use. 839-827-6878
Subtel Studio, 520 Wiscouten, Bus route. No Prica. $300.
897-4200
**Summer Shade Kit for indigo kit.** 814班 from campus available May 31st to June 1st. Call 814-6088
Summer sukuleen. 1 bedroom apt. fully furnished.
Call Jeff! 814-841-454, Available from June.
Summer sublease w/ fall option. 2B3, available May 18.
8500 mmo + unit Call 8638-0038
Summer Sublease. 1 bedroom apt. fully furnished.
Call Jeff at 841-8414. Available from June.
MORNING STAR. For rooms, apartments and well kept older homes, some calls. C841 7827 (7827).
1 person needed for summer sublease in spaces 4 and
5. Carry 621mm x 210mm vultures. Available
May 31, Call 858-734-4590
2 to person apartmentavail. for summer or next fall.
$500 for people $250 for 3 people. Tull included
upon request.
1 unit avail. 4 BR 2BA @ 2 units avail. 3BR 2BA all in lg.
triplex very near KU. Piv. parking. DW, WD, cat ok.
dep. $860 and $870. Avail. Aug 452 wk. Dep.
3 Bdm Duplex, new carpet, dishwasher, W/D, central air, beech fenced, garage, pool 4000/m². Avail. Map or June. Pets OK Call Andy 832-8554 or Corey 843-9393.
3 bedroom house await. June 11. 1床room apt await.
2 bedroom house await. Aug 1. 2床room await. 1
poet leave, June 11.
3 or 4 person House. Close to campus. $250 per person for 4. Or 800 per person for 3. Wiki hold up and AC.
3 rooms swai. June & July in huge 6 bedroom house. Wood floor, WDF; big chic, all white, kitchen front, large custom staircase.
Central air, pool, spacious, summer house, $600/month
832-0614, 838-3079
bru no hire close to campus you can charge for parking
15 hr lease available Aug. 18. 3pm per bedroom.
www.davis.edu/davis
A spacious 1 bedroom apartment for the summer. Avail
a room in Montana Tennessee. Comfortable and
affordable Dodge Durango.
Avail. Angl. - Unfur 2R Duplic. 1300.07 E 2060 Teer
C/W/D booklist #460 Allc $60 Goods 013-2328
***
***
***
Available now or June at 1st Brady Apt 1530 Team. Completely remodeled with custom built 1BR apartment and BAR IAP 1BR apartment at 844-1410-9160.
Coming to KU Med?
4 BR house, good condition, one minute walk to class. $1100/month. (816) 832-5538
DRACULTLY REDUCED MUST Substant. Large Diblu
DRAWING REDUCED MUST AVRIL. Available.
May 15. Stake Copy 85960 Lout 841-17047
Excellent locations 154310/h/1104 Tennessee
2 Br in 4-plex. C/A, D/W, W/D hookups.
4000 And 1 note CALL 8000 4048
GREATBASE greatmat 2 BH, all utilities paid. Recom-
mended for use with GREATBASE 1 BH, room 1,
room 1 lease available Aug 96. Call 843-6217. Leave
phone number.
Great Summer Subscriptions! Available May 12-31.
Cute Ibri, new carpet, $300 monthlyUtilities. Includes:
Bathroom (2+)
Bedding
Kitchen
Laundry
Dishwasher
Stove
Washing Machine
Dryer
House suitable for up to 6 students. Available @ 6/19.
Located near 110th B #RBD island. lease year 2018.
Not available in other locations.
LOCATION . 50F. PROUNION. Summer Sub-
server. 838-734. Rent: 838-734.
Rent. Best IN NOTGOTTA
Maintenance technician needed. Full time permanent and summer positions available. Apply in person online at www.hawaii.edu/firefighters.
9.2 Bedroom 2bedroom in Eadors. Available June 1.
8. Bedroom 3 bedroom, large yard, dishwasher. W2
bookcases, garage. Call 542-3076.
Give, two & three bedrooms-leasing now for
new home 84171729 for an appointment to your new home
One Bedroom summer sublease, avail May 15, large deck, off street parking 14 and Cordn, 205cm; Call 866-735-8911.
Professional Cast Avail. immiluted. Hrdw firefias, CA,
Boston, ma. percel 120l & Lithonia. $150 a
full 740-262-8000
comfortable, spacious, furnished room and spa.
2 bikes to KSU, some utilities paid, off-site parking. No
excuses.
Real ice bath I bedroom apartment close to KIU. Hardwood floors, off-street parking. No pets. 40-39'2" x 18'7".
Realize 2 bedroom houses. Quit neighborhood. Close to KU. Off street parking. Available June 1.
Spacious 5 bedroom house, 2 bath, close to KU, WU-hookup, off street parking, no pets, references
Sublime June / July, 2 bbm, CA walk-in closet, on-street parking lot from KU $490, 841-707-9707
**Submarine Subseason 2:** 2 bdm, 0.7 w/m², walk to camp,
2500 mow. Avail 14 May. M18 may free please Call
me.
Summer Subbasin : saccharine 2 bedchair, 3 full bath
Summer Subbasin : saccharine 500mm. You pay $300 per call @ 844-736-1928.
Summer Subbasin : saccharine 2 bedchair, 3 full bath
Summer sublease available June 1. 3BR apartment in old house, 428 acres to campground hardwood floors, landscaping, pool, hot tub. $250,000.
Summer Sublease! Furnished studio on bus route great.
空调. AC microwave. May rent支付. $295
per/month H20 paid ttl August. Call after 6pm 895-4034.
Summer sublease with options for fall. 28th-dim
aircentral, air杯, washday/widower. Rent 4480.
Rent 3790.
Summer Submarine House 1185pp (up to 5 people)
Submarine House 1185pp (up to 5 people)
close to campus. Call S239-6050. Ask for Steve
**Summer Subway** w/option for fall, 3 bk, 2 bn flush,
dishwasher, AC $250/mo/no. Available end of May
for fall, 3 bk, 2 bn flush.
Summer Submarine, 4 person apt. 1, 2 bed, May rent,
paid $100/mo. - at utilities, Pool, close campus, WD.
Vehicle #: RV358
**Summer Sublease. Large bedroom apartment. Close to campus - no hills. Willing to make deals. Available May 20 through August. Call 838-367-357 or leave message.**
**Summer sublease. Spacious, furnished, one bedroom apartment, 9th and Illinois. Central air, dishwasher. Avail May 20-Aug. 10. 838/367/month. Call 838-646-646.**
**Summer Suburbia.** Pursued 1 bdem, 16t. 10m of
Summer Submenu. Available May 17 - August 15, 2
BDER
June 6 - Nov. 10. Peele Goes to Campus and
June 6-893-480-2600.
Summer Sublease. Available June 1. Space2u 2
room bedroom, close to rent. Remount. Call Emily
Township 2 blocks from campus and close to downtown, furniture, offereed parking, dishwasher for food service.
Summer Sublease. Pmr. 2br. 1/2 bath. Close to KU
and Main Water trai. May rest pdm 3464. No-mo.
Insurance.
Summer subside. Cute 2 broomed. 18 & Mississippi
surround, central air, and hardwood floors. Rent for
$50 a month.
Summer Sublease, 4 kbm. apt., with the option to rent by the room at 1115 Louisiana, #10. Fm w/2 baths for $217/mo. Av Mt May 16 Call 858-3688. Will negotiate
Very large 28 BR App. Pete OK. Southport house. Must be very well negotiable. Must see to believe. Café 883-2028.
2 bedroom, lower half of house/duplex. 12th and
Kentucky). No pets or animals. Available. 0/1. Utility
space. Free.
105 For Rent
Available August. 28B apt. in renovated old house, 10th and New York. Wood floor, claw foot tub, ceiling window, AC no窗, A$25. 841-1074
available now, 1 bdm. in 4 bdm. townhouse. Purchased, washer/dryer, garage and on bus route.
1250 month + utilities May rent is free. Call 743-9000.
**REAT夏术子 subclass wf[all option];2 BB ap[t]
@iSyrmon; @h Michigan; @86148, pestet, close;虫
@iSyrmon; @h Michigan; @86148, pestet, close;虫
2 Bedroom apartment available Ang. I
Close to campus, only 4200, includes pets.
No cleaning required.
2 bedrooms August 10th & New York, Window
AC, ceiling fans, WD back up, wood floor, small
living room, large rooms. $400. No pets. 814-1074,
phone usually answered 8 P.M.-11 P.M.
summer unleash/Pall option. Need 1 person for a 3 a.m. wdawn, DW new carpeting, Callow Tray Setup. (We'll need to book.)
Available now for non-smoking female. Have use of
entire nice house 2 blocks S. of Washington Library. Pay
only room $425m or best offer. Free utilities. AC,
washer/derver use. Off street parking. 814-3689.
Summer Sublease. Nice, newer 2 bedroom apartment on the southwest side of Lawrence, WD, WD, CA and FREE cable, water, and truth. Available mid May with rent paid. $400/month. 838-4018
Summerub-nice-Bay Nice 2 Bedroom House. Great location: 5 minutes from campus 1722 Louisiana. Hardwood floors, screened-in back porch, 2 car garage and framed in blackboard. Call Kay or Amanda. 888-4376.
Avail June 1. Great 1 Br Apt near campus at 1000 Emlr Energy EI efficient DW, microwave, cooling fan, WD bookings, BalconyPatio, 425mm,电缆 TV no. Nr. Date: 841-3900
4 Bedroom available 8/8/8, 1725 Ohio, 2 bath.
fridge, stove,WD, Gauge and offreet parking. Pet
neighborable $600 + deposit + references. Call (913) 649-3105
+ 865-685 at 4pt.
Avail. Auguager 2 blem apt. in renovated older House, Old West Lawrence. Wood floor, claw foot rub, window A/C. No pets. $400. Call 814-7547, phone answered 894-11PM, or have message.
available August on 10 month lease, 1 bedroom apartment, 9th and Mishawaka, Wood floor, ceiling fan, no sets, off street parking. $360.851-1074, phone usually 8 PM-11 PM.
2 Bedroom. Summer sublease avail. May 15. Close to campus, on bus route, dishwasher, laundry facilities.
Great downtown location, 100 yards from South Park
jazebo. 2 br duplex w/ AC. All city utilities paid $215/
yr. 12 mo lease available Aug. 1. Call 843-5217. Leave a message
Historic 3 brm. house for rent, central air Wood floos and carpet. Close to downtown. No pet or smokers. Must see to appreciate. Call 913-253-7829 or local 842-2701.
bim lb substance in 8 bim townhouse need for May 28 to July 31. Worshipday, AC ceiling in quirity area for May 28.
*New signing one-year leases starting June and August.
Extra nice two bedroom, appliances, CAGS low usable utilities, bus route or more! No pets. $30 per month.
Spanish Credit Apartments 841-6680
Lorimar Townhomes
Price slashed. For June & July, & 2 bd lamps in innoved older houses. Walk to Kit 10 downtown. Lots of features, off street parking, no pets. Starting at $25.60 CAH 841-7447. Phone usually answered 9pm to 11pm.
ombies available. Great 4 bedroom, 2 bath house with
satio and large yard, D/W, D/W, CA. On bus route &
downto town. A must see! Available mid May
1200 month Call 839-8843
Jee bedroom available in a bedroom apt. Regents court 903 Mass. Washer/Dryer in apt. Go to Campus 1576 Mass.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Available Aug. 1, possible room. LUXURY LUXY 3 + BR duplex/townhouse on bus line. Basement, garage, FF, CA W/D hookup. No smoking. Not negotiable. 845-7736 after 6 o'clock. Must be a resident.
imagin 2 alrm bt2, to be renovated this summer available taugst. 1000 block Wermcott. Large bedroom, large dichen, deck, no living room, window AC, celling fans, computer keyboard, desk. This unit also answerably 8 PIM-11M, or have message.
Small 2 bedroom kit, in renovated older house. Available August. 14th and Connecticut. Walk to KU,汀厦; or Dilworth, Celli finn, window, FC off/street,
Studio, 1.8 2 bed room apts available starting Summer and Fall. Several locations including next to campus. All on bus route. Good quality. Well maintained. Quet affordable rates. Bailer 841-1154 for more information.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1406 Tenn-
a student housing alternative. Open to a diverse team.
non-profit operation, democratic control. Runs
the library center. Includes Cable Close House &
mass & Campus. Call or stop by 814-8444.
Want to save money on housework next year?
I need to sell my contract at Nassalh Hall 96-07. I want $800 on the dorm and food, plus I'll throw in the dress. I call Alna at 838-331 or after May 10 at (847)238-2931.
will pay $16 per month for you to live in our apt. Yep,
we pay you. All you have to come up with is the other
$460 monthly rent. can't beat that. $38mm2dhpeta
cellphone call. Contract call. $4284341 for details at
d修后 5.
Summer Sublease
AVAIL JUNE 18F. Nice 8fch, b I bath unit in tlp setup at 18th/century F. car dented garage. No parking.
Large size washer/dryer, fully equipped kitchen, fireplace, Walk-in closets, fully monitored air system, and much more, NO PETS, Harper Square Apartments, Call Today! 913-841-6481. Ask about our move in package.
22ND AND HARPER
LUXURY LIVING
Easy Access to K-10
2 Days a Week, Available at K-10
CALL Mary @ 643-101 (days) or 843-2237 (events).
AVAIL AUG.1ST. Fully furnished condo at
80Energy will accommodate four people. Dishwairer
New 1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS. Laundry facilities 841-4935
MASTER PLAH MANAGEMENT
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
105 For Rent
COLLEGE HILL COMBINUMINIUS
3 BR/2 Bath, fully equipped kitchen,
full size W/D, separate dining room,
private patio or balcony
(0010)
PRE-LEASING FOR AUGUST1,1996
Dippees, Candos,
Townhouses, Apartments,
1 & 2 bathrooms,
with fully equipped kitchens
1 & 2 bathrooms, or
without garage/ carports.
Some have free cable TV
Over 400 Rentals Available
Available August 18th: a size, specimen two ben-
gemented with magnifier. Close to
Huntington Beach. No phone. Call 814-1300.
841-4935
- Jacuzzi in each apt.
* Close to KU bus route
* Private privatezons / Patios
* Basic cable paid TV / Pets Ok
* On-site management
Ousadhi & Sibhl. Chl. 841-1815
Call for appointments
5:15 pm - Monday 7-10 2-Sat
Naismith Place
Naismith Place Now leasing for summer and fall
BERKELEY FLATS APARTMENTS
Now leasing for Summer & Fall
843-2116 11th & Mississippi
Lorimar Townhomes
2 Bedroom Available
June 15, July 1, Aug 5
Washer/Dryer Fireplace
Dishwasher Cable Paid
Microwave Back Patio
For Appointment: 841-7849
Sundance Apartments
7th & Florida
- Now also leasing for Fall
- Furnished Apartments
- 4 BE/2 BA
- Ask about our 3 person special $690 and up
Pool and Clubhouse
841-5255
S
swan
Management
2512 West 6th St. 749-1288
1 BR $345
2 BR $400 - $420
EAGLE & GRAYSTONE APARTMENTS
OVERIAND & SUMMER TREE WEST
TOWNHOMES
New 2 & 3 BRs
OPEN HOUSE
1 - 4:30 Mon - Fri 10 - 3 Sat
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
1&2Bedrooms
On KU Bus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
ExerciseRoom
Check out Trailridge!
Great Studios $355-365/mo.
Holiday
M-F 10-0
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
1, 2, & 3 bedroom apartments $440-555 / mo.
2-4 bedroom townhomes $575-935 / mos.
Call 843-7333 or come by 2500 W. 6th
Leasing for Summer & Fall
* 2 Bedroom, $400 $405
Palm tree island
*2 Bedroom $420-$435
*3 Bedroom $610-$630
*4 Bedroom $735-$745
405 For Rent
- On bus route
- Laundry facility
- Nice quiet setting
- Energy efficient
211 Mount Hope Court # 3
211 Mount Hope Court #3 For more Info, or Appt.
Summer Sublease: for 2 rooms of apartment.
Pumished, 2 full bath, 2 floors. Just down the hill from campus. $198 per month. Dishwasher, AC.
Call Carrie or Karin 843-3805
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Studios, 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedrooms Available
WalkerDryer, Dishwashers, CA
WaterFaucet, Kitchen Appliances
$24 HE Maintenance Service
CERTIFIED YEAR AWARD
"Convienient and Affordable"
*Catering Services*
ICA
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE
- Closet to campus
- Laundryfacility
- OnBus Route
- Swimmingpoo
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Whvstav on
Boardwalk
Why stay on
Baltic Avenue
When you can
ADVANCE TO:
NOW LEASING FOR FALL 1996
842-4444
- Spacious 1 & 2 Brs
* Pkwy D, Jr. Dr.
* U.B. Kus Route
* Heated Spa & Pool
* On Site Management
* 24 Hr Maintenance
* Sand Portrait
* Sand Volleyball
* Laundry Facilities
* Much More
* Tiger TPC Rd
Spring Special
2 BR $ 399
3 BR $ 499
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
- Pool
* Quiet Location
* 2 bedroom (1 & 1/2 baths)
* 3 Bedroom (2 baths)
* Laundry facilities
* ~24 hr Emergency maintenance
( on select apartments )
Short time Only !
(call for appt.)
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts
Mon-Thurs
12:30-4:30
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
ODRAMMENTS
2BDRM APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Laundry room
- Fireplace
- Exercise weight room
- Swimming pool
- Energy Efficient
- Daily 3:30-5:00
- KVM
- On site management
Professionally managed by
405 For Rent
808 W. 24th
841-6080
841-5444
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. June 1 July 31.
Colony Woods. $432/month. Call 832-841-3241.
Graysone Apartments
Under new management.
* 1 & 2 BDRM Apartment Apt. 3BDRM Apt. and townhouses
On KU Kau route
* Adjacent to health clinic
* No pets
* Summer Fall leaves
Open House Noon-Fri
1-4:00 pm
Saturday
10:00 am-Noon
2013, W 6th St.
2013, W 8th St.
New Phone 749-1102
- Volleyball Court
- On KU Bus Route with
2 Laundry Rooms
4 stops on Property
- Some Washer/Dryer
Hookups
We are now accepting deposits on apartments for the fall term.
We offer 10 month leases. We feature 1 & 2 bedroomapartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence
Park25
Office open Monday - Saturday
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Call or stop by today
2401 W, 25th, 9A3
842-1455
office open Monday - Saturday
(sorry no pets)
---
meadowbrook
2 pools, 3 tennis courts,
2 volleyball areas,
playgrounds, KU bus stops
basketball court,
Lots of room to
walk or jog.
Large apartments with big closets in a friendly service oriented community surrounded by nature.
Most of all we have a home just for you!
Walking distance to campus
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon - Fri
10-4 Sat 1-4 Sun
2 roommates need for the summer. May is paid for
175mo. plus utilities. WD, fully furn. (841-129-182)
Pleaired needed for summer sublease. $105/mo. May rent free. Call 842-9083
130 Roommate Wanted
Non smokeable females to 2 BR 1 bath) 30 mum from campus. Must love dogs but not own any pets. b48-7138.
Summer or Pall, 2 bd. lbram, one bath, garage, fireplace,
whrid. $225/mo. Call 822-2553.
2 Male Roommates to share 3 BEDRM house start-
ing August. You need a Stadium - 736RDm + 13
utilities.
Pall or summer! 1 or 2 female nuns. Wanted to share
suspiciously 10 D townhouse, Pursued. W/ & on bus
buses. Rent $560/month.
Female, Non-Smoker needed for Fall
2 bedroom/ 2 bath on bus route. $25 a mo.
Water, gas paid. call 844-2269.
Female roommate required Aug. 1. 2 bdmh, 2 bath, with
dishwasher, cable C and bathhose. 15/30 per month.
May apply.
Need Roommate to share 3 bedroom apartment at College Hill Condos. On bus route -wacker/driver
Rommale suite non-smoker for two bedroom/2
bath apartment, $22500 plus half electric. On KU bus
transit only.
ROOMMATE NEEDED POR SUMMER. Starting new month until August. Just stay away from Friensher. Don't work on the day you need it.
**TERMITE 82512-71E** Needed for THE SUMMER AGE at 81-7435
T dorm 81-724 and Louisiana. 5 min to campus or downtown.
90% (nobust) $1880 (call B288 1880 or Andrew
Roommate wanted for fall to have 2 bedroom spacious apartment. Watertrash paid $260/month,pen allowance $35/month. Must be at least 18 years old.
Roommate wants share 4 BR townhouse with 3
males May 1 - Aug 1 Wnd, free bale $2.62 / 144 sft
room
**Summer Sublease**, 1 person for a 3 abmr. apt, WD,
central air, close to campus, $210/month.
**Winter Sublease**, 1 person for a 3 abmr. apt, WD,
central air, close to campus, $210/month.
SUMMER SAILLEASE. Enlarge big br in 4 lr house,
$170/month + 17 ul month. May pay $340,426 for 4
months.
Pepo roommate requests to share 4 BR house for next 6 months. Roommate wants to live in Jellina, W/D, near KKB hotel. Contact RKL-2213-0057.
Summer internship. Pendle non-smoker to share 3床brm,
7th & 8th FB, Call 1-800-256-2242, 122 Park Ave, New York, NY 10010.
Call 1-800-256-2242, Call 1-800-256-2242
Male Broomhouse wanted. Stulet summe or fall rental.
B 9m Bb2 (Bach Tine and Carpeting) W 10' Dish.
Close to campus. $250/month including water. Call Nick at 843-4087.
Female roommate needs. Almost new home west of campus, Roomy, WD, AC, DW, Garage, Deck. Near bus route Short or long term lease available. $275.00 per call. Call 838-4546.
BOHMATE NEEDED! Large, spacious 2 bedroom.
Large living room, dm. kitchen, drm. bedroom on KU bus route. $230 + 1 utilities for both ensuite Summer and Fall. Call Alarm at 838-3846.
10B
Friday, May 3, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rodman bores all in his new book
Basketball star wants to be nude after final game
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Dennis Rodman wants to leave the NBA the same way he greets and bids adieu to readers of his new autobiography.
In the buff.
"After my last game, I'll walk off the court and take off one piece of clothing with every step," Rodman said. "Then I'll be at about midcourt, and I'll walk the rest of the way into the locker room nude. Nobody's ever done that before, and it can be my parting shot to the NBA."
That's just one of the many revelations the Chicago Bulls' frenetic forward made public in Bad As I Wanna Be, which hit bookstores Wednesday.
On the front cover, striking a backward pose on a Harley, Rodman is stark naked save for a strategically placed basketball. The back cover displays a full-body shot from the backside — also unclothed.
And in the profanity-laced pages within, Rodman really bares all — about basketball, sex, race relations, grooming habits and ex-girlfriend Madonna.
Dennis Rodman
NBA commissioner David Stern said he hasn't read Rodman's book, which includes a few jabs at him. But before the Bulls beat
Miami on Wednesday to advance to the second round of the playoffs, Stern laughed and said, "I understand he wants to play naked? In his last game? It probably would be."
Rodman said Stern is afraid of him and wants every NBA player to emulate squeaky-clean players like Detroit's Grant Hill.
Stern said fear wasn't a factor but admitted that Rodman is not what we (the NBA) set out to be.
He might one day reuite with Madonna, who begged him to get her pregnant.
Rodman, the league's five-time rebounding champion also said:
"In the end, (the relationship) didn't work because I didn't want to be known as Madonna's boy toy. But there were so many strong feelings there; it could happen where we get back together. If I wanted Madonna right now ... she would respond."
Blacks obviously are superior basketball players.
"The whole thing is simple: A black player knows he can go out on the court and kick a white player's butt."
He changes his hair color, paints his nails, wears tattoos, pierces body parts and occasionally cross-dresses because that's normal for him.
"I like bringing out the feminine side of Dennis Rodman."
He's happy he didn't commit suicide when he contemplated doing so in 1993, but probably will someday.
"I'll know when my life is complete. Then I'll take out a gun and shoot myself in the head. That's how it will end."
Now-teammate but then-opponent Scottie Pippen had "Rodman on the brain" during the 1991 playoffs.
"I think he got a little freaked out by me. All of a sudden, he came down with a migraine headache."
Magic Johnson having the AIDS virus hasn't changed the sexual habits of NBA players.
"For the first couple of weeks, I think it made a difference. But then it died down, and it's back to the way it was."
Rodman, who wrote the book with Tim Keown, took shots at several
fellow players but said little about celebrated teammate Michael Jordan. Most of his venom was spewed on the San Antonio Spurs, who traded him to Chicago after blaming him for 1994 and 1995 playoff collapses.
He ripped general manager Gregg Popovich, coach Bob Hill, forwards Sean Elliott and Chuck Person and, especially, MVP center David Robinson.
"They might as well have put 'BIG DISTRACTION' above my locker in San Antonio. You can blame me ... but they might be more of a basketball team if David Robinson didn't freeze up every time they play a big game. I got sold out by the players, the coaches, the management."
Mostly, Rodman spent passage after passage railing about being nothing more than a sports slave at $2.5 million a year. He said he deserved to be one of the league's highest-paid players.
Though he loathes hypocrites, he said, "If a team made a commitment to me, I think I might be willing to play by the rules. I've come to the point in my career where I could be a good little boy, at the right price. Give me $15 million for two years, and you can use me."
Bad As I Wanna Be, published by Delacorte Press, is listed at $22.95.
Knicks sweep Cavs will face Bulls next
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — If the New York Knicks needed things put in perspective, all they had to do was check out Dennis Rodman's opinion of their three-game sweep of the Cleveland Cavaliers.
"We could beat the Cavaliers with our eyes closed. You can't play the way Cleveland plays in the NBA. They're playing high school ball. Beating them is no accomplishment," Rodman said.
The Knicks may have impressed themselves and their fans with their victory Wednesday night against a Cleveland team that gave them problems in the regular season, but the Bulls certainly don't seem worried.
New York will open its second round series at the United Center on Sunday against a Bulls team that had an even easier time in the first round as they swept the Miami Heat 3-0.
This will be the sixth time in the last eight years that the Knicks and Bulls have faced each other in the playoffs, and New York will be fighting history. Their only post-season victory against Chicago in that span was in 1994, Michael Jordan's first retirement year.
"You're looking at two teams that really don't like each other and have a lot of history behind them," Hubert Davis said after the Knicks finished off the Cavs with an 81-76 victory.
In the three-game series against the Cavs, the Knicks answered a few questions about themselves while still showing a weak spot or two.
As a team, their veteran character is intact. After a roller coaster regular season that included the firing of Don Nelson and 15 losses at home, New York showed it can focus itself when the games really start to mean something.
John Starks, who made 14 three-pointers in the three games, still plays better when he's fired up. Starks was five of seven on three-pointers in Game 3, but he had trouble defending bigger guards Bobby Phills and Dan Majerle in one-on-one situations. His next defensive assignment will be Michael Jordan.
Patrick Ewing can still get his 20 points and 10 rebounds, but he went just six of 14 at the free throw line in Game 3.
Coming September 1, 1996
UDKi THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN interactive
www.kansan.com
For information on how you can be part of the Kansan’s new world wide web service, contact: David Teska, Kansan Online Editor, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4810. The UDKi is looking for correspondents from every department and school at KU. We are also looking for html designers and coders.
MONDAY, MAY 6, 1996
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS 864-4810
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING 864-4358
SECTION A VOL.102.NO.151
(USPS 650-640)
TODAY KANSAN
SPORTS
K.U.
Tennis
Jayhawks lose to Cowgirls
Kansas lost a close match and was eliminated from the NCAA tournament. Page 1B
CAMPUS
Looking to the future
New CLAS dean Sally Frost-Mason already has plans for the college. Page 5A
NATION
Dole deals with complaints
Fellow Republicans say that his campaign is poor and that the party tattered. Page 8A
Liberian refugees flee
WORLD
Dozens of homes and buildings burn as Monrovia is consumed by violence. Page 7A
WEATHER CLOUDY
High 72° Low 54°
?
Weather: Page 2A.
INDEX
Opinion...4A
Nation/World...6A
Features...10A
Sports...1B
Scoreboard...2B
SAN ANTONIO
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.
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
Fun brings a crowd to the Hill
Sport course adds to the excitement
By Nicole Kennedy Kansan staff writer
An eclectic group attended Day on the Hill on Saturday.
Three KU students dragged a sunflower-printed couch up the west Campanile Hill to watch the show. A Lawrence mother, flowers in hair, sat bumed while children ran around her. Hacky sackers, frisbee throwers, dogs and moshers dotted the lawn.
About 3,500 people attended the University's annual outdoor music festival.
"There's a lot of different variety of people here," said Amy Fast, Plains freshman. "I come from an area where country music is the main thing, so this is kind of radical for me."
Justin Case, Stick, Paw and The Floyds warmed up the crowd at the festival. Poster Children, a national band, headlined the show.
Howie Kantoff, drummer for Poster Children, described the band's music as aggressive, punk-influenced pop.
"We try to have diverse influences so it becomes an eclectic stew of sorts, but the core of it's post-punk pop," Kantoff said. "Whoever comes, we'll entertain, young, old, todlers."
Some students were disappointed by the musical lineup.
"They don't have a real big headliner like they did last year, but it's some pretty good local and regional bands," said Phillip Smith, Augusta sophomore.
ABOVE: Concert goers pack West Campanile Hill to watch The Floyds play at Day on the Hill. About 3,500 people attended the event on Saturday. RIGHT: Bradford Rogers, keyboard player for The Floyds, surfs on the crowd. Rogers' shirt was torn off him by people in the mosh pit.
But most people said they enjoyed the concert.
"This is the first time I've been here," said Malachi Winters, a high school student from the Wichita area. "It's really relaxing, and it's been a nice day out."
And KU police officers said the day had been safe.
"We haven't seen any medical emergencies out of the mosh pit yet," said KU police Sergeant Chris
Keary. "For the most part, it looks like the crowd is following the noalcohol policy."
During the show, Champion Sports set up an obstacle course at the top of the hill. KU students competed to make the best time running through the course. Two KU students won all-expense-paid trips to the Olympics in Atlanta this summer to compete against students from other universities.
Mike Chandler, Kansas City, Kan, freshman, won a trip with a 16.35 second run through the course.
"I just came up here for fun," Chandler said. "I didn't even think about having the best time."
But Amber Mounday, Valley Center junior, said she ran the course to win. Mounday ran the course in 18.72 seconds for the best female time.
STUDENT NATE UNION SWA
Student to express culture
Lawrence senior to pay tribute to her heritage by graduating in Native-American regalia
By Susanna Lööf
Kansan staff writer
The commencement committee wants a year to consider whether traditional Native-American regalia should be allowed at graduation. But Dorothy Stites won't wait a year.
"I will be wearing my Native-American dress during graduation," she said. "And I'm going to encourage other Native-American graduates to do the same."
Sites, Lawrence senior, said about six Native-American graduates would wear Native-American regalia at graduation.
Sites said she was going to wear a Native-American dress to make the Native-American culture visible and to make people realize that it won't go away. Another reason is to honor the Native-American spirituality, she said.
Sites and George McCleary, chairman of the logistics commencement committee and professor of geography, met Friday.
"The spirituality of being Indian is what has gotten me through college," she said.
McCleary said the issue was too complex for him to decide by himself.
Allowing Native-American regalia at graduation would be changing traditions that are as old as the University of Kansas, McCleary said.
"It's bigger than me, and it's bigger than she," he said.
"We're showing respect for that tradition by examining this carefully," he said.
"There's a spectrum of opinions on this." he said.
McCleary said he had received both support and opposition for Stites' wish.
"There's a spectrum of opinions on this," he said.
The commencement committee will gather opinions from the entire University community before
"I will be wearing my Native-American dress during graduation. And I'm going to encourage other Native American graduates to do the same."
it makes a decision, McCleary said.
The decision will be made in time to publish a potential change in the 1997 commencement brochure, McCleary said.
However, the lack of a decision does not mean that Stites and others wearing Native-American regalia will be forced out of the procession.
"The only time that the marshals at commencement have asked students to leave is when what they were doing was tasteless." McCleary said.
Marshals have asked students that were so drunk that they were falling down to leave the procession, and they have also made a student wearing an offensive sign take it off, McCleary said.
Sites said she hoped that the committee would address ways to make students respect the procession more during their year of consideration. She also said she thought her efforts to get permission to wear a Native-American dress were worthwhile despite the lack of a decision.
"It's worth it because it makes people think about issues such as this," she said.
On-line access may face proposed $55 increase
Kansan staff writer
By Heather Kirkwood
Students who dial into the University's computer system next year may pay more for the privilege.
The University Senate Executive Committee and the Academic Affairs Computing Committee have proposed raising the cost of a terminal server account from $30 a year to $85 a year next fall to pay for more lines, said Jan Weller, director of networking and telecommunications services.
Weller could respond to the proposal as early as this week.
"When the fee went into effect a year and a half ago, we had no idea how many people would sign up," Weller said, "The number of people and the amount of time they are spending on line has far outstripped the cost."
Weller said more lines needed to be added to keep pace with growing demand, but there was not enough money in the budget to upgrade the system again.
There are 256 terminal server lines going into the University's system. More lines must be added in multiples of 32 at a cost of $1,200 per line. Thus a minimum upgrade would cost $38,400.
payment sales representative for America Online, said customers with that service pay $9.95 a month, or $119.40 a year, for five hours a month of unlimited access, plus $2.95 each additional hour.
y
Cherrise Tolliver, acquiring and
"Then you have ongoing charges for maintenance and manpower, and the demand is not showing any signs of peaking." Weller said.
Even if the $55 increase is approved, students wanting access to e-mail and the Internet from home may still get a bargain.
Prodigy also offers an identical package, said Brian Ek, vice president of governmental affairs for Prodigy. But it also offers customers 30 hours a month for $30 and $2.95 for each additional hour.
CompuServe also has a package identical to America On line and Prodigy, plus a package of $24.95 a month for 20 hours a month. Each additional hour costs $1.95 and access is not unlimited, said Shelly Randall, a CompuServe new marketing sales representative.
Weller said she didn't think the increased cost would keep students from using the service.
"It is still pretty inexpensive, and I think we look pretty good in comparison." she said.
Grey Montgomery, newly-elected student body president, was surprised to hear about the possible increase.
"Wow," he said, "I'm a bit concerned by that. It's more than doubling the cost."
Montgomery said that he thought the price increase, if it was implemented, was just another rising cost students would be faced with to get an education.
"It certainly isn't very comforting in this day and age with tuition going up," he said. "The cost of education is going up quite a bit in a lot of different ways."
---
2A
Monday, May 6, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ninety percent of adult males are self-fulfilled
Masturbation more accepted as more people alleviate stress
By R. Adam Ward
Kansan staff writer
If the University of Kansas received a dollar every time a male student masturbated, it wouldn't need financial support from alumni, and it could lower tuition, said Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare.
That is because most adult men, about 90 percent, masturbate, Dailey said. As women enter adulthood, more of them also masturbate. The number of men and women who masturbate increases as they enter college.
The prevalence of masturbation has started to make society slightly more tolerant of it, Dalley said. But most people still have biases, and myths still surround self pleasuring.
The taboos about masturbation are not based on any scientific evidence that masturbation causes psychological or physical harm, Dalley said. The only negative effect it has for people is if they do it compulsively to avoid relationships.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said males run the risk of developing prostatitis from too frequent or too infrequent ejaculations.
Prostatitis is a swelling of the prostate gland, which is located between the rectum and the scrotum.
"Men with prostatitis usually come in for treatment because it can be quite painful," Yockey said.
The swelling can be treated with antibiotics. Yockev said.
Sonney Sapra, Delhi, India, junior, said his friends talked about masturbation more freely than they used to. There is no harm in it, and it is a good way to take out frustration, he said.
Marina Jaffe, Overland Park junior, said people probably were more open about it than they used to be.
"I don't believe in Victorian ideas that the body is something to be ashamed of," Jaffe said. "It's a pretty natural thing."
It is a myth that women don't masturbate as much as men, she said.
"I think everybody should do it because to have sex you have to know what pleases you," she said. "You have to know your own body before you can be with another person."
People masturbate more if they are under stress, Jaffe said, because it is a good way to release tension.
Keep It Clean
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
ON CAMPUS
Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor Resume Writing + Interview Tips from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today at 115 Strong Hall. For more information, call the center at 864-3552.
Scott Nissen will sponsor an Icthus picnic from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. today at Clinton Lake. For more information, call Josh Clark at 832-2119.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union
Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Ravi Hirekatur at 832-8789.
KU Meditation will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill
- Department of theater and film will sponsor a free performance of Ex-Men by Nick Miller-Schlyer, KU student, directed by Alex Kipp at 7 tonight at the Inge Theater in Murphy Hall. For more information, call Leslie Durham at 841-3358.
KU Yoga Club will meet 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.
CORRECTION
A tennis story on page 1B of Friday's *Kansan* incorrectly reported that the NCAA Men's Region V Tournament would be played May 4 and 5. The tournament will be played May 11 and 12 at the Sheldon Tennis Center in Wichita.
ON THE RECORD
A window was damaged and an amplifier stolen from a KU student between 11:30 p.m. Wednesday and 7 p.m. Thursday in the 1300 block of New Jersey. The amplifier and damage were valued at $400, Lawrence police reported.
A Sony Discman and checkbook were stolen from a KU student between 11:30 p.m. Tuesday and 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in the 1300 block of Sigma Nu Place. Checks were cashed totaling $168.31, and the Discman was valued at $204, Lawrence police reported.
A window was damaged at the Alpha Chi Omega House between about 1 a.m. Thursday in the 1500 block of Sigma Nu Place. The window was
valued at $100, Lawrence police reported.
A passenger-side window was damaged in a KU student's car between about 2:15 Thursday in the 1000 block of New Hampshire. The widow was valued at $150, Lawrence police reported.
A deadbolt-style lock in a KU student's apartment was damaged between about 3 a.m. April 29 in the 1200 block of Tennessee. The lock was valued at $30, Lawrence police reported.
A tailgate on a KU student's Nissan pickup was stolen between 11 p.m. April 26 and 8 a.m. April 27. The tailgate was valued at $300, KU police reported.
Weather
TODAYS TEMPS
Atlanta
Atlanta
Chicago
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Los Angeles
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Omaha, Neb.
St. Louis
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Wichita
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6604, 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. 6604A. Annual subscriptions by mail are $90. Student postmaster are paid in semester are paid through the student activity day.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
H I G N L O W
82 * 62 *
59 * 42 *
65 * 43 *
70 * 58 *
72 * 54 *
62 * 61 *
52 * 50 *
52 * 45 *
77 * 56 *
60 * 40 *
68 * 53 *
82 * 65 *
83 * 57 */
TODAY
TUESDAY
Variable cloudy with a chance for storms late.
Partly to mostly cloudy with a chance for storms late.
7254
7254
7758
WEDNESDAY
Partly to mostly cloudy with a chance for storms late.
7860
Source: Grant Wimmer and Aaron Johnson/KU Weather Service
Good Luck on Finals! Have a Great Summer!
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How are you getting to class this summe
How are you getting to class this summer?
It shouldn't be a puzzle, you'll buy a bus pass*.
The summer bus schedule...
- 24th and Ridge Court
- 15th and Crestline will be combined with 6th and Crestline.
- Summer Passes are available June 3rd at the banking window on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union.
- A student pass is only $30.00, non-students are $35.00.
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 6, 1996
3A
Award hits right note with recipients, faculty
The band was formed in 1985. The band members are:
Band members honored for their accomplishments
By D. Leonard Teska Kansan staff writer
"You can't just get into the group because you want to. You have to earn it," said Robert Foster, director of the KU Marching Band.
Playing in a KU band takes more than desire. It takes ability and talent, as well.
In recognition of their musical and leadership abilities, Kaytee Dietrich, Overland Park senior, and Mike White, Overland Park senior, received the Kelly Award, which is given annually to one male and one female member of a KU band. The award includes a $175 scholarship.
White, a trumpet section leader in the KU Marching Band, said he also played in the men's and women's basketball bands and the KU Jazz Ensemble. He said he had been involved in KU bands during his four years at the University.
"It's really not an academic award," Foster said. "It's a distinction that recognizes them for their accomplishments."
"They looked at all the possibilities and chose two people," White said. "It was a total surprise."
Dietrich, who plays flute, piccolo, alto saxophone and clarinet, also said she was surprised when the award was announced.
Kaytee Dietrich, Overland Park senior, and Mike White, Overland Park senior, are the recipients of an award that is given each year to one male and one female musician. The award is given to honor those who exemplify musicianship and leadership qualities.
Foster said the award had been established by Bill and Barbara Kelly of Lawrence in honor of Bill Kelly's father, a high school band director from McCook, Neb. Foster and three other band directors reviewed more than 600 students to find the two that fulfilled the intent of the award.
The other directors were James Barnes, Concert Band director;
Dan Galey, Jazz Ensemble director and Thomas Stidham, University Band director.
Foster said the seniors stood out
because they had the most extensive records." These kids have simply given and given to the University," he said.
School of Education reduces departments from six areas to four
Reorganization mergers account for new cutbacks
By D. Leonard Teska
Kansan staff writer
After months of meetings, public forums and introspection, the School of Education announced Friday how it will reduce from six to four departments.
Karen Gallagher, dean of education, said the decision was not an easy one to make.
"I did spend a somewhat restless night," she said.
The University of Kansas, responding to a Board of Regents requirement to reduce its total number of departments from 72 to 62 by 1998, mandated the school to absorb some of that reduction.
Gallagher said she then distributed the two models to faculty, staff and students for comments. Gallagher said she received 30 written feedback replies.
The task force first developed four models, then reduced them down to two: model A and model B, which were presented to Gallagher on Feb. 8.
Last October, Gallagher established a Reorganization Task Force, chaired by Tom Skrtic, professor of education, and charged it with developing a proposal for reducing departments.
"We had lots of opportunity for input," she said.
In the options she chose, curriculum and instruction will merge with educational policy and leadership to form one department. Counseling psychology will combine with educational psychology and research to become another department. Special education and health, physical education and research will remain separate, she said.
In addition, Gallagher said the school will form two new divisions: the division of teacher education and the institute for educational research and public service.
Each department will have a new chair, and each division will be headed by an associate dean, she said.
In making her decision, Gallagher said that she had to look at the availability of faculty.
She said the school, with 85 percent of its professors tenured, shouldn't expect to add any more faculty positions and won't go back to its 1089 level of 92 professors.
"We are never going to go back to
what we were." she said.
Afterwards, Skrtic said a big change for the school was putting all teacher licensing programs in one section, a move that made it a school-wide responsibility. As the student population becomes more and more diverse across the country, Skrtic said that the school needed to be responsive to them.
"We have to include new certification programs to respond to the education needs of a diverse student population and new certification requirements," he said.
He also said that implementing the new organization would benefit the school since it would require more communications between departments.
"When you want to change and innovate, you have to bring people together," he said.
School of Education Reorganization
The School of Education has reduced its total number of departments from six to four because of a Board of Regents mandate, which requires the University to drop 10 departments.
Dean
Associate Dean
Division of Teacher Education
Associate Dean
Institute for Educational Research and Public Service
Chair
Curriculum and Instruction/Educational Policy and Leadership
Chair
Counseling Psychology/Educational Psychology and Research
Chair
Special Education
Health, Physical Education and Recreation
Noah Musser/KANSAN
KU professor to receive honorary degree in Netherlands
Mandela and Gates also will be honored
By Heather Kirkwood
Kansan staff writer
and Bill Gates, CEO of Microsoft Corp.
Richard De George, professor of philosophy, will get a chance to rub elbows in November with Nelson Mandela, president of South Africa,
The three are being awarded honorary doctorate degrees in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the business school at Nijenrode University in Breukelen, Netherlands.
"It will be a great honor to meet Nelson Mandela, and it will be interesting to meet Bill Gates," De George said.
De George was selected for an honorary doctorate because of the pioneering role he has played in business ethics.
Joe Reitz, professor of business, has worked with De George for eight years. Together Reitz and De George have raised private funds to start the International Center for Ethics in Business.
"One of the reasons I came to KU
was to work with Richard," Reitz said. "He was one of the first people to write a textbook on business ethics 15 or 16 years ago before it became a popular topic."
Reitz said the University was fortunate to have someone as well known as De George on the faculty.
"Richard is a delight," Reitz said. "He is a very intelligent person, well versed in business and ethics. I
encourage my business students to take his class, and they always say they get a lot out of it."
De George has taught at the University since 1959. In 1974 De George and Joseph Pichler, then dean of the business school, organized a conference on business ethics that several academics have called the birth of business ethics as a discipline.
During his career De George has written 17 books and 140 articles. He plans to write a book next fall on ethical issues facing computer users.
"I think that those who can use computers and those who can't will be like the difference between those who can read and those who can't in the business community," De George said.
Legislative cuts force elimination of credit card tuition payment
By John Collar Kansan staff writer
The Kansas Legislature's actions this year will bring significant changes to the University, including forcing KU to stop accepting credit cards for tuition payments and approving a $163 million capital-improvements project, administrators said.
The change that will almost immediately affect students is the cut in bank card fees. Starting July 1, students will not be able to use credit cards to pay tuition. KU administrators made this decision because legislators took away $450,000 that covered the bank card fees. The University could have continued accepting credit cards, but paying the bank card fees would have meant a cut in academic programs.
Lindy Eakin, associate executive vice chancellor, said the Legislature's decision was not wise considering how important credit cards were to the economy.
The Legislature also voted to establish admissions requirements at state universities for the first time in 85 years. Students entering the University in the Fall 2001 will have to meet minimum standards, rather than simply graduate from an accredited Kansas high school.
"That's just a step backwards in terms of how the world does business." Eakin said.
By 2001, incoming freshman must meet one of the following criteria: graduate in the top one-third of
their high school class, score at least 21 on the ACT or earn a 2.0 grade point average.
"All students should be taking a preparatory program, whether they go to college or not," said State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence.
Perhaps the most beneficial change from Topeka came Thursday, when the Legislature passed a $163 million capital-improvements project to renovate the crumbling infrastructure at Regents institutions.
About $53 million will be used for improvements in fire safety and handicapped access. The major projects financed by the plan will be the renovation of Joseph R. Pearson Hall and an expansion of Murphy Hall.
The Legislature also passed a program that will allow the University to respond more quickly to enrollment increases. This new funding mechanism, called tuition accountability, will allow the University to keep additional tuition from enrollment increases and 25 percent of the funds resulting from a tuition increase.
Despite these finances, the university's budget will be cut $300,000 beginning July 1. Eakin said.
He said the cuts were minor compared to last year's Legislative cuts, which were about $1.5 million.
"I don't think you'll see any real impact in the classroom because we'll try to prevent that," Eakin said. "It could be relatively minor on the instructional side."
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4A
Monday, May 6, 1996
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Chancellor's lawn a good place to start cutting costs
The University of Kansas spent $55,000 on campus landscaping last fiscal year.
Of that amount, $24,000 was spent on landscaping the area around the Chancellor's house. The amount spent on the Chancellor's residence is about 44 percent of the University's main campus landscaping expenditures.
It is understandable that the Chancellor's lawn needs to look nice and that it is an area of particularly vital importance to visitors of the University. If VIP's are going to be staying in the Chancellor's guest house, then the grounds ought to look nice. But if it costs only $39,000 to maintain the entire main campus, why does it cost so much to maintain the Chancellor's yard?
At a time when the University is cutting costs in all departments, raising tuition and trying to develop better ways to use and increase its resources, it only seems logical to question this exorbitant amount.
Superior Lawn Mowing
THE ISSUE:
financial responsibility
Service, 2720 Maverick Lane, estimated that total lawn care, flower garden upkeep, bush trimming, tree pruning, sprinkler setting and snow removal would cost between $3,000 and $4,000 per year.
Assuming the Chancellor has reasonable amounts of new flowers and shrubs added each year and the service came out twice as often as needed, the cost only rises to about $5,000 or $6,000 per year.
Now, even if we allow a miscellaneous category equal to the quoted amount for what should be complete service of a comparably sized estate, the grand total still comes in at $12,000 — half of what the University spent last year.
If the Chancellor is serious about saving the University money and is cutting programs and maintaining a hiring freeze to do so, perhaps he should look a little closer to home to be just.
CHRIS VINE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Crumbling classrooms passes with little help from students
The Kansas Legislature finally has passed a conference report on crumbling classrooms, no thanks to the Student Senate. It is as if student leadership decided long ago simply to let things transpire as they have without student involvement.
Kim Cocks, student body president, thinks that making sure the Kansas Legislature knows how students feel is a good idea.
But she said Student Senate had done little else to keep the Legislature informed of student opinion about crumbling classrooms.
Where is the proactive student government that students are promised during election campaigns?
This is not just the fault of the student body president, but it also is the fault of students in general. Student Senate probably would have responded if only students had taken a more active stance. Lobbying is not the exclusive job of student senators, student body presidents and their attendant court of committees and handlers. Everyone can
THE ISSUE:
Crumbling classrooms
KU students and Student Senate should have been more active in supporting the crumbling classrooms bill.
participate, but the message needs to be sent to them if they are to respond.
Public policymaking largely is a process of deciding who gets what. To get what is needed, people
— average people — must participate in the process.
But some blame does rest on the elected leadership of the student body.
Without a louder cry from Student Senate, we can expect to see less notice taken by representatives and senators in Topeka. Student Senate is the largest voice for student concerns. In the future, it should take its responsibilities more seriously and pursue them more actively. If not, this institution will suffer from greater negation without student representation.
TOM MOORE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
WARREN CHRISTOPHER and his SHUTTLECOCK DIPLOMACY
NICE RETURN!
NOW HERE COMES THE WARD ONE...
SYRIA
Jeff MacNelly / CHICAGO TRIBUNE
People magazine defines beauty unfairly for readers
This past week, the annual People's 50 Most Beautiful People issue hit the stores. In a display of consumerism that I am somewhat unaccustomed to, I went out and bought one as soon as I heard about it. I opened up the pages and became more and more distraught as I looked through — I wasn't in it.
Or maybe not. Perhaps they mean to send the message that beauty comes in a 6-foot tall, 110-pound package for women and in a 6-foot-4-inch, 200-pound package for men. Or perhaps they think that you must be famous to be beautiful. Or maybe they did not think at all. In any event, I have no room to complain, as I did spend my precious lunch money on the magazine myself.
I am certain that this was just an oversight on the part of the editors. After all, it makes no sense to me that all 50 are famous. And had the editors realized the precedent they were setting, I am sure they would have made some new choices using more realistic, everyday people.
This may come as a surprise to many of you; it certainly was a surprise to me. Nonetheless, I looked again, this time to find some of my friends, who I am certain rank among the top 10, let alone the top 50.
You can imagine how disturbed I was to find that no one I know made it this year.
STACY
NAGY
STAFF COLUMNIST
This year, the editors included a special section on famous pinups. It ranges from Marilyn Monroe to Farrah Fawcett in brief sections about why each of these women has been drooled over by thousands of men in her time. For most women highlighted the
answer seems to be her measurements.
One of the women included here is the star of television's Lois and Clark, Teri Hatcher, who has received a lot of press lately for being the woman whose picture is downloaded most often on the Internet. The article makes a point to note (as did a similar article in Newsweek) that the 5-foot-6 actress weighs only 106 pounds.
I understand that the people highlighted in the magazine are beautiful. I also understand that to be beautiful, you must be thin. It is a fact that I do not need pointed out by People, or by anyone else for that matter. They are rich, famous, beautiful and thin. OK, I have got it. Let's move on.
as the 50 Most Beautiful People is that they promote an unreasonable standard of "beauty" among men and women to which not everyone can live up. However, that does not stop society as a whole from expecting it. Consequently, problems such as anorexia, bulimia and suicide have become increasingly prevalent, especially among teenagers. And the ages of children with this problem are getting younger and younger.
The problem with features such
In society, we have built a standard for appearance that is impossible for the greater portion of society to live up to.
This standard is visible throughout mass media, including television and films, advertisements and in general on places such as street corners. When it comes down to it, this standard is visible everywhere, except on a normal, average, everyday person.
Until we stop expecting the whole world to live up to this standard, the problems facing the next generation and how people deal with appearance are only going to get worse. It is unfair to expect our children to grow up to be 5-6 and 106 pounds. We need to learn to keep in mind that in reality, beauty is only skin deep. And then, we need to learn to live it.
Stacy Nagy is a Topeka sophomore in Russian.
QUOTES OF THE WEEK
"DOGS CAN RUN AROUND CAMPUS NUDE ALL DAY, WHY CAN'T PEOPLE?"
Ed White, Chicago junior, who witnessed two naked men sprint from the Chi Omega fountain to the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house, 1540 Louisiana St.
"NORMALLY, IF YOU'RE TRAVELING AT 300 MILES PER HOUR, IT'S NOT A SAFE LANDING."
Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology, on why the chances of surviving a tornado are not good.
"THERE'S NOTHING BETTER THAN TAKING THEM OFF AT THE END OF THE DAY."
"YOU GET SOME STRANGE LOOKS WHEN YOU WALK OUT OF THERE."
Canyon Knop, Lawrence junior, on his experience as a research subject at the labs of the Lenexa pharmaceutical company IMTCI.
"PEOPLE HAVE TO HAVE IT, AND THE UNIVERSITY KNOWS THEY CAN GET THE MONEY FROM YOU. YOU HAVE NO CHOICE."
Stephanie Guerin, Lenexa senior, on the positive aspects of wearing pantyhose.
Chris Frati, Los Angeles sophomore, on why he believes the University of Kansas charges $5 per transcript, the largest transcript fee of the Big Eight schools.
"WE HAVE AT LEAST ONE NAKED GUY TIED TO A CHAIR ON OUR PROPERTY ABOUT ONCE A MONTH, AND I KNOW HE IS NOT THERE BY CHOICE."
Gina McClain, vice president for external relations for the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, who was not surprised to learn of the New Member Education Committee's discovery that hazing still occurs at the University.
"STUDENTS NEED TO RECOGNIZE HOW IMPORTANT GIVING BACK TO THE COMMUNITY IS. IT'S PART OF BEING A COMMUNITY MEMBER. I'M HOPING THAT, EVEN IF IT'S JUST A FEW PEOPLE, TO INSTILN THE IMPORTANCE OF COMMUNITY SERVICE. IT CREATES EMPATHY FOR OTHERS INSTEAD OF APATHY."
Julie Harris, Student Senator of the Year and a coordinator of the KU Center for Community Outreach, on why she wants to get students interested in helping the community.
Brevity in term papers should be rewarded, not punished
This column is for those who plan to impress their professors with research papers loaded with big words and long sentences.
pound sentences at every juncture.
You are on page ten of your 12-page paper on mediating political theories, and you need to bloat the piece another two pages. You have used the word "plethora" eight times, and you have added compound sentences.
STAFF COLUMNIST
JOHN
HART
In short, your goal is to make your point in as many words as possible. What is worse is that your professor expects you to do just that.
It is too bad that academia is the only institution in our society that punishes people for being
concise. Many of us have had a professor return a paper with a comment like, "You've made some good points here, but your paper wasn't long and ponderous enough."
Being wordy may boost your grade on a philosophy paper, but it won't help you land a job. I can't think of any bosses who want to read a 20-page opus of a business report.
Here are some tips for students and professors as paper deadlines approach:
Don't start a paper like this:
"Throughout the course of human history there have been many trials that have tested our collective resolve, and in light of those forces that wage war in men's souls, this paper will focus on . . ."
- Communicate to express, not impress.
I used to think I was pretty smart when I started a sentence with a word like henceforth, moreover, or nevertheless. Now, the word "but" usually works just fine. If you get that "I want to flex my muscles in front of the mirror" feeling and start using pretentious words, go flex your muscles in front of the mirror and relax.
Take a journalism course
One recovering word addict recently offered me a stirring confession.
"I used to think I was really smart for using big words," she said with a glazed look in her eyes, "but then I came to the School of Journalism."
Another student said, "Once,
after staying up all night, I printed
out my paper only to have it float
away because it was full of hot
gas."
One more student said, "I used to approach writing with the self-indulgence of a heavy metal guitar soloist. When I graduated I couldn't find a job, so I joined a band that played only old Van Halen covers."
■ In light of these budget-conscious times, professors should reduce the required length of papers by 20 percent. This would put the responsibility back on students to communicate clearly.
Be simple, not simplistic.
People in other disciplines criticize journalists for being simplistic. While I agree that USA Today is the Debbie Gibson of newspapers, learning to communicate the same idea in fewer words works toward, not against, the development of critical thinking skills.
Of course, there is one final solution if you have to write an 18 page paper that could be written in 12 pages:
Geneva font, 18-point type.
John Hart is a Shawnee graduate student in Journalism.
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MAN, ARE YOU OK? YOU BUUMPED YOUR HEAD!
DOONY, I HAD THE WORST NIGHTMARE! ...I DREAM I WAS GRADUATING, AND I HAD TO GO OUT INTO THE REAL WORLD!
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MAN, ARE YOU OK? You BUMPED YOUR HEAD!
MAN, ARE YOU OK? YOU BUMPED YOUR HEAD!
BOONY, I HAD THE WORST NIGHTMARE! ... I DREAMT I WAS GRADUATING, AND I HAD TO GO OUT INTO THE REAL WORLD!
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FROM:
OUT FROM THE CRACKS
BY: JEREMYPATNO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 6, 1996
5A
BSU elects new board members
Kansan staff report
Freda Warren, Coweta, Okla., freshman, is treasurer, and Julian Stevenson, St. Louis sophomore, is parliamentarian. Tamika Mills, Omaha, Neb., freshman, is corresponding secretary, and Rosanna White, Portland, Ore., sophomore, is recording secretary.
Julius Williams, assistant director of the Office of Minority Affairs, and Damon Broadus are the organization's advisers.
New dean sets agenda for fall semester
By Jason Strait
Kansan staff writer
With ten months of experience as acting dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Sally Frost-Mason is ready for the fall semester so she can begin her reign as the real thing.
Frost-Mason was appointed dean of the college last week and has an agenda of improvements for next year.
Among the improvements are creating a student advisory board and downsizing within the college.
Frost-Mason said the college had
Although no decisions had been made on what programs would be affected, Frost-Mason said she was seeking input from staff members.
been instructed to downsize for next year by either eliminating or consolidating programs.
"I've had a lot of good suggestions from a lot person," she said.
One suggestion that had been talked about was creating a department of Romance languages or modern languages. Frost-Mason said.
Right now, Spanish, Portuguese, French and Italian are separate departments.
They would be consolidated if a
"What I want to take a look at is 'Does this make good academic sense?" Frost-Mason said.
department of Romance languages were created.
Frost-Mason said that the consolidations could be accomplished without eliminating faculty or staff.
Roberta Johnson, chairwoman of the department of Spanish and Portuguese, said she had not been contacted about consolidating the departments.
department, anything larger would be unwieldy."
"I don't think it would be particularly helpful," she said. "The individual departments function in a very good way. We are the right size for a
Frost-Mason said she also wanted to create a student advisory board so she could be informed about student's concerns.
"I need their input on where they feel the money should go," she said.
Frost-Mason has stressed that student needs were high on her list for curing the problems in the college, and according to those who work with her, she is sincere.
"I think she's going to be a great dean," said Tricia Wendling, Topeka junior. "She cares about the students a lot."
Mental health problems stigmatized, stereotyped
The notion that mental illness is not biologically based may be part of the problem.
But people suffering from mental illness often are fair game. Mental illnesses are satirized on television shows such as Seinfeld and stereotyped in movies such as What About Bob?
Nobody tells jokes about physical handicaps anymore. Racism and sexism are not expressed as openly as they once were.
"One idea is the idea that mental illness is something that can be changed at will," said Candice Moore, resident psychiatrist with the Menninger Clinic in Topeka.
As many as one in four Americans suffer a serious mental disorder at some point in their lives. More than five million Americans will suffer a mental illness this year.
A major problem that people with mental illness face is the limit placed on care by insurance companies. Typical health policies might limit coverage to 20 visits with a counselor or psychologist and $50,000 for a person's lifetime, but medical coverage for cancer or other illness might have a lifetime limit of $1 million.
But when people exhaust their cov erage limits and are rejected by the public health care system for having too high an income, they are forced to use their savings for treatment. Many mental illnesses can be chronic, needing lifetime care.
A big growth area in medical care is the managed-care business, but it does not address the problems of the mentally ill, either. Managed-care companies also limit mental-health coverage.
"The incentive for the insurance companies and the managed-care company is to withhold payment," said Charlie Mayo, resident psychiatrist with the Menninger Clinic in Toneka.
By Scott MacWilliams Kansan staff writer
Wallace's recent revelations of his personal struggles with depression have helped focus national attention on the need for more federal research funds for mental illness.
The list of the famous who have struggled with mental illness includes Mike Wallace.
The Dallas Morning News contributed information to this story.
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Military murder trial still delayed
The Associated Press
TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. — Five years after the rapes and stabbing murders of a 15-year-old girl and her 20-year-old friend, nerves remain raw in this military town in the Mojave Desert.
There has been no trial yet for the Marine who was charged in the crimes.
That, compared with the U.S. government's relatively swift response to charges that two Marines raped a girl in Okinawa, disturbs some townspeople and the mother of the slain teen-ager.
Others are loyal defenders of the nearby Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, which has strong economic ties to the town.
"Oh, boy, this place is in an uproar," said resident Nancy Turner.
a friend of the teen-age victim's mother, Debie McMasters. "Debie stood up to a lot of people in this town, and they didn't like it."
McMasters' daughter, Mandi Scott, and Mandi's friend Rosalie Ortega each were stabbed more than 30 times in Ortega's apartment. Their bodies were found Aug. 1, 1991.
Several days later, authorities arrested 34-year-old Marine Lance Cpl. Valentine Underwood, who was charged with rape and murder in civilian court. He has pleaded not guilty, and remains jailed without bail in Barstow, a two-hour drive across the desert.
His trial has been delayed by pre-trial wrangling, and yet another round of hearings is set for this week.
McMasters said, "Finding out he was a Marine upset me very much."
"Twentynine Palms is a very small community. There isn't really a lot for the kids to do. For teen-agents, there's nothing. And they are preyed upon by Marines," McMasters said.
She noted that while a crowd turned out for Mandi's memorial service, not a single Marine was there in uniform. By contrast, she said, Underwood's preliminary hearing drew a sergeant, a lieutenant and a major.
McMasters contrasts that with the international outcry after the abduction and rape of a girl in Okinawa.
Less than two weeks after that 1905 crime, U.S. Ambassador Walter Mondale and the commander of U.S. forces in Japan, Lt. Gen. Richard B. Myers, apologized for the rape. Two Marines and a Navy seaman were convicted in Japanese court and sentenced to prison.
"They (Marines) haven't said one word to me — no condolences, no sympathy, no nothing." McMasters said. "I'm hurt, and I'm angry."
A base spokesman, Capt. Philip Thompson, said the Marines do feel for McMasters but are in a difficult position; they can't apologize for an act that the Marine hasn't been convicted of committing.
McMasters, who since has moved to the Chicago area, said many people in Twentynine Palms had turned their backs on her, concerned about keeping the town and the base on good terms and protecting the desert tourist trade.
Teddy Linton, a retired Marine who lives in Twentynine Palms, said people like McMasters unfairly were criticizing the entire Marine Corps for a crime allegedly committed by just one soldier.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 6, 1996
7A
Thousands of Liberian refugees flee to Ghana
Clashes persist, hundreds dead in capital city
The Associated Press
MONROVIA, Liberia — Clouds of dark smoke billowed over the city yesterday as 2,500 Liberian refugees stood on the deck of a freighter, sadly singing a patriotic hymn and waving farewell as the ship inched away from the burning capital.
They were the lucky ones.
Back on the streets, Monrovia was consumed by violence. Young fighters set dozens of homes and buildings on fire yesterday. Rocket-propelled grenades slammed into Monrovia's besieged military bar
racks, the flash point of a month of bloodshed that has ruined the city and killed hundreds, if not thousands, of residents.
At the port, hundreds of Liberians desperately tried to climb up the sides of the Nigerian freighter Bulk Challenge as it chugged out to sea. Fighting erupted among those who had paid $75 for the five-day trip to Ghana but were left behind even after their luggage was packed on the ship.
"It was unbelievable — an exodus. It was pathetic," said Peter Sebok, the Dutch owner of West Coast Fisheries, whose offices are at the port.
The Liberians who made it aboard sailed away singing Lone Star Forever, a national hymn of Africa's first independent republic, founded by freed American slaves in 1847.
Not far from the port, the two
main bridges into the city that run parallel across the Mesurado River were being held by rival enemy camps, making it difficult for anyone to move in or out of downtown.
Rebel leader Charles Taylor had vowed that the battle for the Barclay military barracks held by his enemies would be won by the weekend. But Ulimo-J supporters of his archival Roosevelt Johnson fought fiercely as Taylor's National Patriotic Front of Liberia resumed shelling the barracks.
The clashes shattered hopes that Johnson's evacuation from the country Friday — carried out by American troops — would spur moves toward ending the violence.
Instead, the fighting became even more brutal.
Hundreds of the 10,000 Liberians who have sought shelter at the U.S. Embassy residential compound
stood watching in horror yesterday as five of Taylor's fighters were executed down the hill below.
The five fighters had their throats slit, one had his ears chopped off. Later, a boy who appeared to be about 12 years old danced nude around the bodies, waving an assault riffe above his head in a victory cheer.
"Oh, it's Butt Naked, it's Butt Naked," the civilians murmured, referring to a gang of Ulimo-J fighters who gave themselves that nickname because they fight in the nude.
African peacekeeping troops, who had retreated up the street, entered the fighting yesterday, shooting and killing two of Taylor's militiamen who tried to prevent them from crossing a bridge.
Tens of thousands of Liberians fled the city during the weekend,
heading for rural areas already plagued by disease and serious shortages of food and medicine.
Taylor, a member of the ruling, six-man Council of State, has refused to join Johnson in Accra, Ghana, for talks scheduled to begin Wednesday on ending Liberia's six-year civil war.
Taylor recently aligned his forces with warlord Alhaji Kromah, once a bitter rival. Both men sit on Liberia's governing council, which was seated Sept. 1 after international mediators brokened the country's 13th peace accord in six years.
The council was designed to prepare Liberia for elections by August. Taylor said the council's civilian chairman, Wilton Sankawulo, would represent Liberia at the peace talks.
Johnson, who had been barricaded in the military barracks since
April 6, was hustled out in an armored convoy to the U.S. Embassy on Friday. American helicopters then flew him to neighboring Sierra Leone and on to Accra later that night.
Johnson, a former Cabinet minister, was fired by the government and charged with murder in connection with clashes in March that violated an August 1995 peace accord.
His refusal to surrender sparked fighting that quickly spread into a city-wide spree of looting, shelling and gunfire.
The U. S. military began evacuating foreigners April 10, and by Saturday about 2,135 people had been flown to neighboring countries.
The six-year war has already claimed the lives of more than 150,000 Liberians and forced half of the country's 2.8 million people to flee their homes.
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8A
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1987
"I was attending a large state university when I decided to enroll in a summer class at JCCC," recalls student John Thorne. "I was back in Kansas City for the summer, and I wanted to get a class out of the way so my fall load would be lighter.
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Anxious to help Dole — and congressional Republicans — develop an aggressive election-year agenda, the party research included sessions with an array of critical constituencies, from Ross Perot voters, Roman Catholics and suburban women to Democrats who said their support for Clinton was weak and Republicans who defected to support Clinton against George Bush four years ago.
The Republican National Committee plans a major television advertising effort at mid-month, and had planned to assail Clinton as a liberal hiding behind conservative rhetoric on such issues as taxes, welfare reform and crime.
While the Republican Party's woes have been detailed clearly in public opinion research dating back to last year's budget fights, many top Dole and GOP strategists were stunned at the depth of the dissatisfaction discovered at more than a dozen recent focus groups commissioned by the Republican National Committee.
Republican party image plagues Dole's campaign
Gingrich, concerned that he has become a political problem for Dole and the entire Republican Party, is focusing more on fund-raising these days.
WASHINGTON - As Bob Dole deals with complaints from fellow Republicans that he is doing a poor job of forming a campaign against President Clinton, he must endeavor to repair what many aides consider a bigger immediate problem: the tattered image of his own party.
But, after reviewing the data, top GOP strategists decided the urgent task was boosting the Republican Party's standing.
So new ads were ordered, focusing less on Clinton and more on GOP values.
The Associated Press
The findings suggested that, despite his 20-point lead in national polls, there is considerable discomfort with Clinton among swing voters who question the Democratic
Indeed, at one of the Republican Party focus groups in Knoxville, Tenn., one man made clear he was not a fan of Clinton. But when talk turned to the Republicans, he summed up his feelings this way: "Gingrich ought to be shot."
Several Senate colleagues have made this case to Dole in recent days, as have some top campaign aides and GOP Chairman Haley Barbour, said Senate Republican sources.
10
incumbent's honesty, commitment to principle and leadership skills. But the findings also detailed the toll last year's congressional debate took on the Republican Party's image.
"There is a huge anti-Washington feeling across all groups and geographical lines," said a senior Dole adviser who reviewed the focus group reports late last week. "And a huge feeling that Newt Gingrich is the king of Washington. Dole personally rates better but is wearing the label of Republican Congress extremism around his neck right now."
on issues from protecting Medicare and the environment, and the price Dole, the Senate majority leader, is paying for the GOP's poor standing.
Dole himself has been careful not to blame Gingrich and his conservative House Republican caucus for his own plight in the polls.
Bob Dole
tion. It put our opponents in a position to label us as radicals."
GOP pollster Ed Goeas said, "There is no question the image of the party needs some repairing, especially with swing voters. We do have to question our strategy of labeling this a Republican revolu-
Gingrich said yesterday that Dole should give more authority to the GOP whip, Sen. Trent Lott of Mississippi.
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The 1996 Spring Advertising and News Staff would like to thank our readers and customers for another successful semester. Look for us this summer beginning June 5th.
103 YEARS AND GROWING
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 6,1996
9A
Impotence medication test results offer hope
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A pill that restores full function to impotent men now is in the final phases of clinical testing and could be available in the United States late next year, a British scientist says.
The drug, called sildenafil, works by blocking the action of an enzyme in the penis that tends to aggravate impotence, said Iain Osterloh, a researcher with Pfizer Inc. in Britain.
"The pill is taken an hour or so before it is needed," said Osterloh. "It will do nothing, however, in the
absence of sexual stimulation."
Reports on clinical studies of the drug will be given today at a meeting of the American Urological Association in Orlando. Fla.
In one study, 42 patients who had been impotent for at least three years were divided into two groups, with one group taking the pill and the other taking a placebo. None of the patients knew which they were taking. Later, the two groups
switched. After 28 days, 92 percent of the men reported significantly improved performance while they were on the pill.
A study using 351 patients with an average age of 63 randomly assigned patients to take one of three doses the pill or a placebo.
After 28 days, 89 percent of the men on a 50-milligram dose reported a threefold improvement in their abilities. Interestingly, 38 percent of those on placebo also reported improvement.
Osterloh said the effect of the drug was gauged with a questionnaire
filled out by the patients and another form filled out by their partners.
"This drug may be very important for treating a condition that can cause a lot of distress for many people," Osterloh said. Impotence affects about 10 percent of all adult men.
The drug now is in its third trial phase in both the United States and Europe, and Osterloh said his company planned to apply to the Food and Drug Administration for marketing approval in late 1997.
So far, the side effects of the drug have been minor for most patients,
he said, and still are being tested. They have included headaches, muscle soreness and stomach upset.
Osterloh said that researchers had found sildenfil while trying to develop a heart drug.
It failed as a heart drug, Osterloh said, but patients testing the compound found that it tended to solve their impotence problems.
"After we learned that, we switched to impotence research," he said.
The company plans to market sildenfil under the brand name Viagra.
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Prisoners' Powwow
Native-American inmates at the Leavenworth federal nitentiary use a sacred ceremony to relive their heritage a revitalize their spirits.
In the middle of the gymnasium sits a lone drum encircled by eight empty chairs. It is 8:30 a.m., and pocket of men, all wearing some form of khaki clothing, stand in small groups in the room as visitors and family members slowly come in. Some family members begin to mingle and socialize with the men. Others, uncertain of what to do, sit quietly on a stand of metal bleachers.
As the room fills with more people, eight Native-American men each take a seat around the drum. Soon the sound of drum beats and singing rings out, signaling to all that the powwow has begun. All those in the room are focused on the drumming and singing, some even keeping time with their feet. As the sounds echo around the gymnasium, one can't help noticing the irony that a powwow, a spiritual ceremony that links the past and marks the coming of spring, could occur in this place. This gym is not in a neighborhood high school, but sits behind the high stone walls and steel bars of the U.S. Penitentiary at Leavenworth.
An important part of the powwow was the attendance and active participation of the outside guests. "It feels good to be here and see that everyone is happy," said Joe Arch, an inmate from Cherokee, S.C.
As if it were a family reunion, everyone was invited, cajoled and sometimes pulled into participating in traditional dances that occurred during the seven-hour ceremony. During the first dance, the Ladies' Choice-Rabbit Dance, women picked the men they wanted to dance with and pulled them out on the floor. Even the prison officials managed to take part.
Linda Herman, a drug treatment specialist, and Dan Auxier, a corrections counselor, paired off for the dance. Auxier, who noted that security always was a concern in planning the powwow, said that he helped the inmates put together the event. Watching one of the dances, he described a powwow as analogous to Christmas because of its association with family and friends coming together during a special spiritual time.
Despite the powwow's festive and relaxed nature, one cannot ignore that these men have committed violent crimes. Tisha Morrical, Lindsborg third-year law student, said that many of the inmates were in a federal prison not because of the crime they committed but because of where they had committed it. Unlike other Americans, Native Americans can fall under the jurisdiction of three sovereigns: tribal law, state law and federal law. Morrical said that since reservations are federal land, Native Americans have gone to federal prison.
Morrical said that through the years, the U.S. Supreme Court gradually had extended its jurisdiction to Native Americans.
"It makes it seem like Native Americans commit a more serious crime since they're in a federal prison," she said.
Another serious problem, said Lenny Foster, a spiritual counselor from Fort Defiance, Ariz., was the toll that drugs and alcohol had taken among Native Americans. Events such as the powwow helped the inmates become better humans by giving them the chance to practice their spiritual beliefs.
"We, as Indian leaders and Indian nations, have a legitimate and moral obligation to reach out and help those who are less fortunate," Foster said.
The gray stone, bars and guards effectively limit physical contact between the inmates and the outside world. Yet, it is clear that although these 48 men live in daily isolation from friends, family and the roots of their tribe, they have worked collectively to maintain their Native-American identity and integrity.
Jerel Harris, University Daily Kansan photographer, contributed to this story.
Of the 1,621 inmates housed in the prison that day—the number changes frequently as inmates are released and admitted—48 were Native American and represented tribes from across the country. Pawnee, Dakota, Choctaw, Lakota, Apache, Navajo, Creek, Chippewa, Coeur d'Alene, Seminole and Hopi, to name a few.
Out of a collective need to preserve their identity and cultural integrity and the need to survive the rawness of a prison environment, they formed the United Tribal Culture Group. The group's chairman, Gabe Antelope, has seen many changes among the Native-American population, mostly for the better, in the 23 years he has spent in prison. Antelope said that group members saw themselves as one family, a collective body that supported each other in day-to-day survival in prison and filled the void that came from being cut off from friends, family and tribe.
"It helps us keep hold of not only our spiritual ways but our cultural ways," he said. "Even though we're confined, they can't break our spirit."
"The spring gathering is kind of like that," he said. "It's a renewal."
Looking around the gymnasium at the inmates and watching them interact with one another and with guests and staff, Auxier said that the powwow provided them a respite, albeit a brief one, from the brutish regimen of prison life. The powwow let them relax for a few hours.
"These things are handed down generation by generation," he said. "Even though they're not family, they're related by blood ties."
"When all this is over, they will put back on their 'game face'," he said.
Auxier also said that the powwow was beneficial to the inmates because it helped connect them not only to their culture today but also to the legacy of their ancestors through the drum and dance.
Foster knows the value of the powwow. In his role as spiritual counselor, he said that he had visited Native-American inmates in more than 51 state and federal prisons to conduct powwows and sweat lodges.
"It provides them with the opportunity to go back into the community a whole person," he said.
At age 71, Ken Powlas of Overland Park has been going to the prison to perform traditional dance for about four years. Powlas, a 1951 KU graduate, said that the powwow was good medicine for him and for the inmates because it gave them something else to think about while behind bars.
Keeping up with their cultural heritage also helped the inmates prepare for eventual release, Powlas said, because it helped reintroduce them to their own people.
"We don't think about powwows but once or twice a year," he said. "When you're behind bars, it's a chance to talk to some people, and it's a chance to get involved and learn at the same time."
Art by Matt Hood
图1
Top: A drum similar to this one was used in the powwow.
Top left: Bunches of feathers are used in many Native American ceremonies. Above: Pipes such as this one were used in many traditional ceremonies.
Page 10A
Hilltopics
May 6,1996
1
COLLEGE BASKETBALL Kansan sportswriter Jenni Carlson reveals important information regarding the future of Jacque Vaughn. Page 4.
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MONDAY, MAY 6, 1996
Thanks for your support
SECTION B
Turn out the lights — the party's over.
After two semesters of speaking to the sports world at this University via the printed word, it's time to hang up my keyboard and mouse.
What I have been doing since last August is sharing my normal convers
25,000 of my closest friends
Sports is my life, and although I gave up on my dreams of being an athlete years ago, I'm still living out those fantasies as a journalist.
SPORT EDITOR
TOM ERICKSON
Judging from the number of comments I still get from players and fans, I will be
remembered as the guy who dogged the Kansas football team.
I haven't lost a minute of sleep worrying about it, though.
There weren't many who thought the Jayhawks would finish with a No.9 ranking and 10 victories.
This time I'll be six hours away, but I plan to make it back for at least one game at Memorial Stadium, so save me a seat on the 45-vard line.
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Every high school, college and professional league should adopt a "three strikes, and you're out" rule. Any athlete who is arrested three times should be dismissed from their team and league.
That means former Nebraska football player Christian Peter wouldn't even have been given the chance to get drafted. Perhaps this should apply to Hall of Fame candidates as well, since former Giants linebacker Lawrence Taylor was picked up by police for attempting to buy crack.
I wouldn't want to leave without leaving my mark, so here goes.
It's time for the Kansas University Athletic Corporation to start pouring its top-secret bank account into a new football stadium. While having one of the oldest stadiums west of the Mississippi River is a great honor, it's time to tear Memorial Stadium down and build a new one in its place.
My only stipulations are that it should have more restrooms and natural grass. Let the Jayhawks play in Arrowhead Stadium for a few years while the new stadium is being constructed.
Royals CEO David Glass is pulling the wool over an entire city's eyes. When George Brett and his brother attempted to buy the team last year, he sent them away, further rumors that Glass wants the team for himself.
Soon he may pull an Art Model and move them to the city with the highest bid for a new ballpark. Without strong support from local fans, one of our area's greatest treasures will soon be gone.
I plan to attend the Royals-Blue Jays game on the 17th. My guess is that only about 9,000 others will be there as well, and that is pitiful.
Dennis Rodman is just like Deion Sanders. He's another example of how corporations and the media exploit players to the point that they become schizophrenics.
This column can't end without a barrage of kudos and thanks. My four years here have been shaped by many people whom I have met and shared time.
I've had many outstanding professors who have taught me more that what was on their syllabus. Four who immediately come to mind are Allan Cigler, Dennis Dalley, Tom Eblen and Carole Rich.
While it is easy to remember all of the negative feedback I have received, I can't go out without thanking everyone who had positive things to say about my work.
I guess that's about it. Now it's off to Liberal and the rest of my life. Our sports conversations must come to a close.
But if all of you want to come out there to chat, that's fine with me.
From those who called and wrote letters, to all the nameless faces who come up to me in class or at a bar, thanks a million.
Former Kansas track and field team member Jim Ryun in Lawrence recently. Many Big Eight schools are and current Jayhawk Lewis Theoold pose for a picture actively recruiting foreign athletes.
TRACKING DOWN A CHAMPIONSHIP
CANADA
Foreign athletes are recruited heavily by many Big Eight teams
By Adam Herschman Kansan sportswriter
Two days after arriving in Kansas from Sierra Leone, Africa, freshman Pierre Lisk walked into Anschutz Sports Pavilion for the first time.
"I didn't go to the track office first," Lisk said. "I didn't know where the office was."
At the beginning of the 1993 spring semester and the indoor track and field season, Lisk approached the Kansas track and field coaching staff unannounced. After the coaches heard his track times, Lisk was allowed to walk-on.
Lisk, who attended school at Prempeh College in Kumasi, practiced with the team for weeks to see if he could handle Division I track.
"They said come to practice tomorrow." Lisk said.
After redshirting his freshman year, Lisk, now a junior, earned a scholarship and proved he could handle Division I track just fine. He holds school records in the indoor 55- and 200-meter dashes.
Lisk is one of only a few foreign athletes who have competed for the Kansas track and field team.
The reluctance to recruit foreign talent may have hurt Kansas in the past 15 years. In fact, the Jayhawks have not won a Big Eight Conference championship in track and field or cross country since 1983. In the meantime, other schools such as Iowa State, Nebraska, and Oklahoma State, whose rosters are rich with foreign athletes, have dominated the conference and the nation.
In fact, even Lisk was not recruited to run track for Kansas, instead he came to Lawrence to get an education. He is majoring in mechanical engineering.
Kansas has a long legacy of shy.
ing away from foreign track and field athletes.
Former Kansas track and field coach Bob Timmons did not recruit foreign athletes during his 23 years as Kansas' track and field coach. Before his retirement in 1988, Timmons had won 27 track and field Big Eight titles, three NCAA indoor titles and an NCAA cross country title.
Timmons said that, in his time, coaching could win a national championship, but now recruiting wins one.
"You're not going to win at the national level without foreign athletes," Timmons said.
Colorado track and field coach Mark Wetmore said that his team
does not actively recruit foreign athletes, but he knows the price and the rewards of international recruiting.
"Searching the world for international superstars is an easy way out." Wetmore said.
However, plenty of other college track and field programs do recruit foreign athletes.
"You don't have to be a coach, you have to be a travel agent," Wetmore said.
Reliance on foreign track and field talent raises questions larger than a school's win and loss record. Critics of foreign students in track and field say that the United States is not only failing to develop it's own young athletes, it is also training the very stars who will compete against the United States in the Olympics.
Timmons was part of Kansas' 40-year dynasty of winning Big Eight Conference titles in either cross country, indoor or outdoor track.
Timmons was opposed to recruiting foreign athletes because they would compete against the United States in international competition.
"It goes clear back to the Olympic games for me," Timmons said. "I wanted to see Americans standing on the top step of the Olympic podium."
Timmons said schools bring in foreign athletes, train them, give them scholarships, and then athletes go back and represent their
home countries in international competitions. After the foreign athletes win, Timmons said, some countries turn around and say that the United States' athletic system is a poor excuse for a world level program.
"What it was, was that we were doing the job for any athlete who was in our school, and they were whipping us at the Olympic games, and maybe they got all their good training in this country," Timmons said. "That's why I was really opposed to it."
Timmons said there have only been two national track and field championships won in the last 20 years without international athletes.
"I know Wisconsin won one in cross country, and Tennessee won one in track without foreign athletes. As far as I know those are the only two that have been won in the last 20 years without foreign athletes."
Kansas track and field coach Gary Schwartz said that 10 years ago he thought he didn't have to recruit foreign athletes, but in reality, to stay competitive a coach needed to get quality athletes from overseas.
At present, Kansas has only four foreign athletes on the track and field team, and only one runs on the cross country team. Besides Lisk, senior long jumper Ajmon Moxey is from Nassau, Bahamas, junior spinner Carleen Roberts is from Spanish Town, Jamaica and sophomore distance runner Lewis Theobald is from Nepean, Ontario.
"I'm recruiting the foreign athletes who are interested in an education," Schwartz said. "I think there's a difference to win at all cost and recruiting within an educational framework."
Nebraska's women won NCAA indoor titles in 1983 and 1984.
Iowa State and Nebraska are the only Big Eight schools that have won a national title since 1984. Iowa State's men won NCAA cross country titles in 1989 and 1994.
Both teams won their titles with the help of foreign athletes and also dominated the Big Eight Conference during that same time period.
See ATHLETES, Page 10.
Women's tennis season is over
By Spencer Duncan
Kansan sportswriter
It was a loss that will linger in the minds of the No. 16 Kansas women's tennis team for a long time.
W
The Jayhawks lost 5-4 to Big Eight Conference rival Oklahoma State in the Central Regional NCAA Women's Tennis Championships yesterday at the Allen Field House courts.
Oklahoma State will move on to the Sweet 16, May 18 to 26 in Tallahassee, Fla., and Kansas will be staying home.
"We had some chances to win this one," Kansas women's tennis coach Chuck Merzbacher. "Nobody quit, gagged or choked. We just didn't get it done, and I feel bad for the team."
With the overall score tied at four, the championship came down to the doubles match between Kansas' Bianca Kirchhof and Christie Sim and Oklahoma State's Carolina Hadad and Monika Wirthova.
Kirchhof and Sim won the first set,
6-4, and took a 1-0 lead in the match.
However, Kansas lost the second set. 3-6.
With the match tied at 1-1, the team that won the third set would go to the championships.
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
Sim and Kirchhof took a 4-3 lead in the set until Hadad and Wirthova fought back and tied it at four.
The teams then traded points and played five points at deuce before Hadad and Wirthova broke Kirchhof and Sim and took a 5-4 lead. Sim and Kirchhof could not regain the lead and lost the set, 6-4.
"They just played very well and were able to squeak it out," Sim said. "I feel bad because we should have been able to win."
Kansas sophomore Maria Abatogui returns a shot in her match with Monika Wirthova of Oklahoma State yes-
They lost the match, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4,
and Kansas lost the finals, 5-4.
"I said coming in here that we had nothing to lose," Lubicz-Majewski said. "I have no words for what this team has done. They did a great job, and this is a great reward for our season."
Oklahoma State women's tennis coach Julius Lubicz-Majewski was impressed with the Cowgirls' victory.
Kansas had opportunities to earn the victory.
To begin the competition, the Jayhawks and Cowgirls split the singles matches, 3-3. Teams were awarded one point for each individual match.
terday. Abatoglou won the match, but the Cowgirls defeated the Jawhaws to advance to the Sweet 16.
Kansas' Kylie Hunt and Jenny Atkerson won their matches in two sets.
Maria Abatjoglou took her match to three sets before defeating Monika Wirthova. 6-3.
Kirchhof lost her match, 3-6, 4-6, to Hadad. Kris Sell and Christie Sim both took their matches to three sets
before losing.
Kansas then needed to win two of its three doubles matches for the victory.
Hunt and Atkerson defeated Martina Hautova 6-2, 6-3 to give Kansas the first doubles win. But Amy Trytek and Abatjoglu lost to Correne Stout and Kym Hazzard, 6-7, 1-6.
The championship then came down to Sim's and Kirchhof's match.
The Jayhawks were the No. 1 seed in the region and 11-0 against conference opponents this season. They were also 1-0 against the Cowgirls.
Making it to Tallahassee had been a team goal.
"Winning this was a goal of ours and something that we had expected," Sim said. "We are a top 16 team, and we should be in, but we are not. This is very disappointing."
Second baseman makes history at Oral Roberts
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team was able to achieve some long-awaited goals last weekend.
The Jayhawks split a two-game series with Oral Roberts University, but for the first time in a while, Kansas got strong back-to-back pitching performances.
Senior second baseman Josh Kliner rewrote the Kansas record books with the Jayhawks'
14-4 victory yesterday afternoon.
Kliner went 2-for-4 with a double and three RBI. The RBI brought his season total to 72, eclipsing the old record of 71 set by Darryl Morrone in 1994.
His 22nd double moved him into a tie with Jeff Niemeier's 1993 record for first on Kansas' single-season list.
Mario Oipari (2-2) won his second consecutive start for Kansas (23-27) allowing three earned runs while striking out five in seven
innings.
Kliner said he had been encouraged with the team's play.
"The guy they started was good but we batted him hard and wore him down in the third innning," Kansas coach Bobby Randall said. "Dimmuck's grand slam was really the key."
Kansas shortstop Joe DeMarco was 4-for-4, including hitting his fifth home run of the year, and Josh Dimmick hit his first career grand slam for Kansas in the third inning.
"It was really big to bounce back from yesterday and actually earlier in the week," he said. "It gave us the feeling of how good we could be if we get focused and come to play."
Kansas received its first strong pitching outing on Saturday when Josh Belovsky pitched the Javhawks' first complete game of the year.
}
But Belovsky (5-6) and Kansas lost 3-1 on Saturday.
Kansas will play Rockhurst at 7 tonight at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
1 2 3 4
---
---
Monday, May 6,1996
SCORES & MORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PRO BASEBALL
American League East Division
W L Pct. GB
New York 17 11 .607 —
Baltimore 16 14 .533 2
Toronto 14 16 .437 4
Boston 10 20 .333 8
Detroit 10 22 .333 9
Central Division
West Division
| | W | 9 | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cleveland | 20 | 9 | 690 | — | — |
| Chicago | 16 | 14 | 533 | 4½ | — |
| Minnesota | 14 | 15 | 483 | 6 | — |
| Milwaukee | 13 | 16 | 448 | 7 | — |
| Kansas City | 11 | 20 | 355 | 10 | — |
W L Pct. GB
Texas 20 11 .645
California 18 11 .600 1½
Seattle 17 14 .548 3
Oakland 14 16 .467 5
Toronto 11, Boston 4
Texas 3, Detroit 2
New York 7, Chicago 1
Milwaukee 13, Baltimore 10
Philadelphia 10, California 5, Minnesota 1
Cleveland 2, Seattle 0
Tonight's Games
Detroit (Aldred 0-3) at New York (Rogers 1-0).
6:35 p.m.
Minnesota (Radke 3-3) at Seattle (Hurtado 1-3), 9:05 p.m.
Cleveland (McDowell 3-1) at Oakland (Wengert 0-1), 9:05 p.m.
Kansas City (Belicher 2-1) at California (Leftwich 0-0), 9:05 p.m.
Only games scheduled.
Tomorrow's Games
Cleveland at Oakland, 2:15 p.m.
Detroit at New York, 6:35 p.m.
Boston at Milwaukee, 7:05 p.m.
Toronto at Montreal, 7:05 p.m.
Toronto at Texas, 7:35 p.m.
Kansas City at California, 9:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Seattle, 9:05 p.m.
National League East Division
Central Division
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Montreal | 20 | 11 | .645 | — |
| Atlanta | 18 | 13 | .581 | 2 |
| Philadelphia | 16 | 13 | .552 | 3 |
| New York | 13 | 16 | .448 | 6 |
| Florida | 11 | 21 | .344 | 9½ |
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Chicago | 16 | 15 | .516 | — |
| Pittsburgh | 15 | 15 | .500 | ½ |
| Houston | 15 | 16 | .484 | 1 |
| St. Louis | 14 | 17 | .452 | 2 |
| Cincinnati | 11 | 17 | .393 | 3½ |
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| San Diego | 19 | 12 | .613 | — |
| Colorado | 15 | 14 | .517 | — |
San Francisco 14 15 15 .483 4
Los Angeles 15 17 17 .483 4
1/2
Sunday's Games
Atlanta 11, Philadelphia 8
Pittsburgh 4, Los Angeles 2
Chicago 5, New York 4
Montreal 5, Houston 0
Colorado 5, Florida 4
San Diego 10, St. Louis 4
Cincinnati at San Francisco (n)
Today's Games
Los Angeles (Nomo 4-2) at Pittsburgh (Hope 1-
4)
2,590 ppm New York (Clark 1-3) at Florida (Leiter 4-2),
New York (Clark 1-3) at Florida (Leiter 4-2),
6,000
New
6:05 p.m.
Chicago (Bullinger 1-2) at Montreal (Martinez
3-1)
6:35 p.m.
Houston (Drabek 0-2) at Philadelphia (Hunter
1-1)
6:35 p.m.
Colorado (Thompson 2-2) at Atlanta (Avery
2-2)
6:40 p.m.
Only games scheduled
Tomorrow's Games
New York at Florida, 6:05 p.m.
San Diego at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m.
Chicago at Montreal, 3:15 p.m.
Houston at Philadelphia, 6:35 p.m.
Los Angeles at Cincinnati, 6:55 p.m.
Colorado at Atlanta, 6:40 p.m.
San Francisco at St. Louis, 7:05 p.m.
PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League Playoffs
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
Pittsburgh 4, N.Y. Rangers 3
Detroit 3, St. Louis 2
Saturdav's Games
Philadelphia 3, Florida 2, series tied 1-1
Colorado 5, Chicago 1, series tied 1-1
Yastarday'a Gamae
N. Y. Rancher $ \mathbf{6} $ Pitbush $ \mathbf{3} $ Pitbush $ \mathbf{3} $ serine led $ \mathbf{1 - 1} $
Colorado at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.
PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
Basketball
Friday's Game First Round
San Antonio 116, Phoenix 98, San Antonio
Saturday's Games Second Round
Seattle 108, Houston 75, Seattle leads series 1.2
TV
Yesterday's Games First Round
Atlanta 89, Indiana 87, Atlanta wins series 3-2
110, Iowa 84, Dakota 6, Idaho wins series 3-2
Second Round
Chicago 91, New York 84, Chicago leads
SPORTS WATCH
Live, same-day and delayed national TV sports coverage for Monday, (schedule subject to change and-or blackouts):
(All times Central)
MONDAY, MAY 6
11 a.m.
ESPN2 -- IRL Auto Racing, prac-
facting at Walmart in Wilmington.
4:30 p.m.
ESPN — Cycling, Tour DuPont,
stage No. 6, at various sites (same-
day tane)
TBS — Major League Baseball Colorado at Atlanta
WGN — Major League Baseball, Chicago Cubs at Montreal
7:30 p.m.
6:35 p.m.
Big 12 boosts softball competition
ESPN — NHL Playoffs, conference semifinals, game No. 3, Colorado at Chicago
■ ESPN2 — Cycling, Tour DuPont,
stage No. 6, at various sites (sameday tape)
Tonight's Game
KANSAS CLUB SPORTS
Houston at Seattle, 8 p.m. (TNT)
The Kansas hockey team won its last game of the season yesterday without a goalie. The Jayhawks defeated the St. Joseph All-Stars 6-5 at the King Louie Ice Chateau in Overland Park. Defenseman John Johnson doubled as the Jayhawks' goalie, and Dean Suttle, Dave Hill and Derek Moscato all scored goals for Kansas.
Moscato had the game-winning score.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Sunday's College Baseball Scores EAST
With a 31-25 record, the Kansas softball team knows that it needs to win the Big 12 Conference tournament to advance into the postseason.
By Jenni Carlson
Kansan sportswriter
Delaware 5, Vermont 3
E. Connecticut 5-10, Plymouth St. 1-4
Farleigh Dickinson 4-10, Marist 1-5
Georgia Tech 8, Maryland 6, 10 innings
Kean 9, Jersey City St. 3-19
LeMoyne 3-0, Sienna 2-1
Long Island U 6, Monmouth, N.J. 5
Bentley 5, Assumpti
But the Jayhawks also know that winning the tournament, which starts Friday in Oklahoma City, will be no small task. The first year of Big 12 softball is producing some of the nation's top competition, with four teams ranked in the latest top 25 poll.
"It's hard to let go emotionally of Big Eight softball," Oklahoma State softball coach Sandy Fisher said. "I have a soft spot for it, after being in it for many years. But in a long-range look, the Big 12 is very exciting."
Competition has been elevated to a higher level as Texas A&M, a team that has almost 700 victories under coach Bob Brock, as well as first-year programs Texas, Texas Tech and Baylor join the already-recognized Big Eight.
"It's already a very good conference — an established conference," Baylor softball coach Paula Young said. "The three schools that have just added softball programs are going to have to rise up to the competition. We feel we can be competitive."
It would help Baylor and other first-year programs to have a couple good recruiting classes, of course. In a few years, the Big 12 could be a powerhouse like the Pacific 10 or Big West conferences. Young said
But Texas softball coach Connie Clark said that she knew the conference would be tough right away when she looked at the Longhorns' schedule for next season.
That strength of schedule is already paying off for Clark in her recruiting.
"The best kids want to play the best competition every day," she said.
ence itself as time goes on, Fisher said. Many high school players don't know what the Big 12 means, but they will come to understand as higher-profile sports such as football, men's basketball and women's basketball begin competing on national television.
the impact of the Big 12 merger on recruiting will grow like the confer-
"If any coach had their druthers, they'd rather play in temperatures in the 60s than in the 20s. We have the challenge of making our facilities better, our schedule better, our coaches better," Revelle said. "Overall, though, this is almost unanimously a good thing."
Possibly the only negative that has emerged from the Big 12 formation is that northern teams such as Iowa State and Nebraska will add four warm-weather schools to their schedule. The Texas schools don't have to schedule practices and games around cold-weather. Nebraska softball coach Rhonda Revelle said that did give the Texas schools an advantage.
Montclair St. 22-7, Trenton St. 3-1
Northeastern St. 2-5, New Hampshire 1-2
Pace 4-10, N.Y. Tech 2-4
Princeson St. 3-2, Cornell 1-8, 2nd game, 10
Providence 10, St. John's 1
Salem St. 4-7, North Adams St. 3-2
St. Anselm 10, Merrimack 9
St. Peter's 5-7, Manhattan 2-7
S. Connecticut St. 7-5, Bridgeport 1-3
West Chester 7, Kutzut 1
West Virginia 9-12, Connecticut 3-11
Wm. Patterson 9-2, Rowan 2-1
Youngstown St. 8- C, W. Post 1-1
SOUTH
Nicholls St. 3, McNeese St. 0
Ark-Little Rock 5, Lamar 4
Armstrong St. 7-1, Wingate 5-2
Auburn ST. 7/3U
Austin Peay 8, SE Missouri 3
Centenary 9-8, SE Louisiana 3-4
Cent. Connecticut St. 1-1, Troy St. 0-8
Coastal Carolina 5-7, Wintrop 0-8
E. Kentucky 5, Murray St. 1
Florida 13, S Carolina 6
Florida Southern 4, North Florida 3
Florida Tech 4, Eckerd 3, 14 innings
Georgia Southern 12, Georgia Coll. 11
Jacksonville 15, New Orleans 5
Jacksonville St. 7, Samford 3
Memphis 7, Ala.-Birmingham 6
Mississippi St. 9, Mississippi 6
Morehead St. 4, MS Missouri 0
Nichols St, 3, McNeese St. 0
N.C. Charlottel 9, Cincinnati 2
NE Louisiana St, NW Louisiana 3
Rollins St, 3, Leo 2
South Alabama 4, Arkansas St. 3
Southern U, 4, Delgado 3
SW Louisiana 11, Louisiana Tech 0
Stetson 6-7, Fla. International 0-9
Tennessee 9, Vanderbilt 8
Tennessee Tech 8, Murray St. 6
Tennessee Tech 8, Mid. Tennessee St 0
Valdosta St, 12, Augusta 2
Va. Commonwealth 19, George Mason 9
MIDWEST
Albion 10, 2-Alma 1-6
Ashland 3-4, Oakland, Mich. 0-3
Bowing Green 4, W. Michigan 1, innings
Gannon 5, Saginaw Val. St. 4-8
Ohio 11-14, Aknor 9-O
Ohio St. 15, Michigan 2-1, 2nd game susp
rain
Otterbein 2-4, Baldwin-Wallace 1-5
S. Illinois 1-1, Creighton 0
Toledo 11-5, Cent. Michigan 7-10
Wis.-Milwaukee 8-2, Iowa 5-0
Xavier, Ohio 11-4, Indiana 0-6
SOUTHWEST
Alabama 3, Arkansas 2
Texas Christian 4, Texas 1
Texas-San Antonio 14, SW Texas St. 6
FAR WEST
Cal Poly-SLO 5, San Diego St. 1
Oregon St. 11. Portland St. 1
Oregon St. 11, Portland St. 1
Pepperdine 14, UC San Diego 0
San Francisco 8, Gonzaga 5
San Francisco St. 6, Chico St. 2
Santa Clara 22, Loyola Mary. 5
Stanford 14, California 7
UC Santa Barbara 10, Cal St.-Fullerton 9
Uhk 24, Air Force 11
TOURNAMENTS
Knickerbocker Conference
Semitifinals
Mount St. Mary, N.Y. 2, Old Westbury 1 John Jay 9, Lehman 7
Old Dominion Athletic Conference
Champlionship Bridgewater, Va. 14, Lynchburg 6
Bridgewater, Va. 14, Lynchburg 6
SUNYAC
Championship
Oswego St. 10, Cortland St. 4
Compiled from The Associated Press and Kansan staff reports.
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راجع
AUGUST, 1996
Tue Wed Thur Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
"Hawk Week" on Campus (Aug. 18-25)
MSF's "BACK TO SCHOOL"
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UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Monday, May 6, 1996
3B
Kansas catcher comes through in clutch
Meadows remembers both highs and lows in his baseball career
24
Matt Flickner / KANSAN
Kansas senior catcher Ted Meadows is one of two current Jaynawks who played in the 1993 College World Series in Omaha, Neb.
By Dan Gelston
Kansan sportswriter
It's a typical pregame scene at a Kansas baseball games this year.
Meadows has been a steady presence both on and off the field for the Jayhawks.
Kansas coach Bobby Randall hits ground balls as the team takes infield practice. With the crack of the bat and the pop of mitts is the constantly encouraging voice of senior catcher and team leader Ted Meadows.
'He, along with fellow senior Clay Baird, is Kansas' last link to its glory days when it had consecutive 40-win seasons and a 1993 trip to the College World Series.
Although Meadows redshirted the 1993 season, he looks back on those days with great fondness.
"That was the best time of my life," Meadows said. "I wasn't on the field, and that does hurt, but I was able to contribute in other ways. I was real supportive of my teammates and learned a lot from the way they played and carried themselves."
But regardless, if Meadows is on the bench or not, he always tried to spur on the team.
"I was always vocal," he said. "As a
senior, I think I'm able to speak out more and really state my opinions more so than in the past."
This year, Meadow has been a pillar for the Jayhawks as their starting catcher. He's hitting .297 with three home runs and 22 RBI, and he has started 39 games.
Meadows came to Kansas in 1992 and was schooled by then-Kansas coach Dave Bingham.
Meadows said he owed a lot to Bingham.
"I loved the guy, I really did," he said. "He brought me here, he took me under his wing and really taught me the right way to play college baseball."
But a broken jaw sidelined him for the season, and he played in just one game his freshman year. He redshirted 1993 but cracked the starting
lineup in 1994, appearing in 42 games.
He had a grand slam and two other hits in Kansas' 1994 Atlantic II Regional victory against Ohio State. That success carried into the next season when he hit .375 in the post-season, including game-winning RBI single in the top of the 12th inning against Oklahoma in the Big Eight Tournament.
"Those were games and series that I really enjoyed," Meadows said. "I think when you get to those types of games, it's just natural to raise your performance level."
The past two years have seen Kansas fall from the nation's elite. As the Jayhawks slumped at times, it would seem natural for a senior to start thinking about individual performances and professional baseball. But that isn't the case with Meadows.
"I care more about the team and the guys on the team than my own stats," he said. "I think that's really selfish to start worrying about that other stuff. It's all about the team."
That selfless attitude quickly became noticeable to Randall, who is in his first year as the Jayhawks coach.
"He's a champion in the truest sense of the word," Randall said. "When I saw him in the fall, I said to myself, 'I really like this guy.'
"I'll miss him greatly. He represented himself and the program in the highest way."
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Monday, May 6
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It even surprised me a little when I heard after Kansas' season-ending
Vaughn will do what's best for himself
loss to Syracuse that Vaughn was thinking about not finishing his college eligibility.
And I've always thought that the amazingly popular, amazingly talented Vaughn might leave the Jayhawks early.
Every day since then and I mean EVERY day
asked me, "What's the deal with Jacque?"
JENNI CARLSON
The best answer I could honestly give them was, "I don't know."
SPORTS REPORTER
Jacque Vaughn set the Kansas sports community on fire as soon as he uttered the words "NBA draft."
As they went around and around with their reasons and speculations, I vowed that I would never write anything that wasn't absolute fact about what Jacque was doing.
My information would have to come from a very,very reliable source.
Obviously, the most reliable would have been Vaughn himself. It sounds as if he will address his eligibility for the NBA draft at a press conference this week, and it is my belief that it will be today or tomorrow.
I've always contended that Vaughn would announce his decision before finals started, which, by the way, is Wednesday, campers.
Just think how difficult it would be to study for three or four finals while deciding whether to take the millions offered by the NBA.
I didn't think that the press conference would come so close to finals, though. The time frame that coach Roy Williams originally laid out, then modified a bit, put the press conference sometime during the past two weeks.
But it didn't happen and didn't happen. Now, here the Kansan is on its final edition this semester, and still I don't have any official word for you.
So now, I'm going back on my pledge never to print anything but absolute truth straight from Jacque.
I just want you to know everything I know and give you the most information possible before I disappear into the night.
As nearly as I can tell, Vaughn will stay at Kansas. The most overwhelming reason I have for believing this is that someone who the Kansan staff trusts saw Vaughn go into the Office of Admissions last week and pick up what was believed to be a permit to
enroll.
But then they would tell me why he should go or why he should stay.
That's no guarantee, but if Vaughn did pick up a permit, it says to me that he had not enrolled before and is now at least considering it enough to walk to Strong Hall and actually request a permit.
I could add this to my reasons why Vaughn will wear the crimson and blue again next season: the draft class continues to get stronger and stronger with the addition of guys like Allen Iverson and Marcus Camby, the Jayhawks are championship contenders with Vaughn, and the brainy point guard could be a Rhodes Scholar candidate if he returns.
I just think too much is telling Vaughn to stay put. Whatever decision he makes, though, it will be the best thing for Jacque Vaughn.
Tennis player finishes last and first
He's too smart to do anything less.
NATURALWAY
By Spencer Duncan Kansan Sportswriter
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Being last may have been the best thing that ever happened to Bianca Kirchhof.
"I was always late and last," Kirchhof said. "I just didn't know about a lot of things for a long time. But
everything is good now."
As she leans forward in her chair, wearing a giant grin, she knows that had she not been last then she would not be at the University of Kansas.
Good is right.
Kirchhof is a junior on the No. 17 women's tennis team. In three years at Kansas, she has compiled a 17-5 singles record in the Big Eight Conference and an overall record of 56-31. She has been ranked nationally and last season was named a Big Eight champion.
COLLEGE
But Kirchhof never would have been where she is now had she not been last.
"I was the worst one in my group at a club that I played at," Kirchhof said. "I was the last one to always be picked."
Growing up in Hittfeld, Germany, Kirchhof picked up her first tennis racket before she was 10, but she was not that good.
However, being picked last never discouraged her. Kirchhof decided to improve instead of quit. She
G
See KIRCHHOF, Page 5.
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1116 W23RD·LAWRENCE·KS 66046
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Bridal Gown Sample Sale 30-70% OFF
Laura's Couture Collection May 7th 11th
Please call for your personal appointment 55th and Brookside Blvd. KCMO (Next to Meastique Jewels) (816)444-1444
All NUDE Celebration of The Sun Summer Nature Our Bodies
June 29, 1996
2pm until Midnight (Camping Available)
Lake Edun
Near Topka, Kansae
Entertainment provided by Lake Edun, the sun and nature.
Return To Edun
Music Provided by
Emotional Feedback (scoustic set)
Mudvine Phenantexagoria
Sam Hill X-35 all subject to change
4th Annual
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Advance Ticket Prices ~ $25 single; $35 couple Must be 18 or older We do not expect ticket to be available at the gate For ticket & more info. Send name & address with check or money order to: Lake Edun * Box 1982 * Topeka, KS 66061
Vaughn will do what's best for himself
It even surprised me a little when I heard after Kansas' season-ending
loss to Syracuse that Vaughn was thinking about not finishing his college eligibility.
And I've always thought that the amazingly popular, amazingly talented Vaughn might leave the Jayhawks early.
Every day since then — and I mean EVERY day — someone has
asked me, "What's the deal with Jacou?"
**
Jacque Vaughn set the Kansas sports community on fire as soon as he uttered the words "NBA draft."
SPORTS REPORTER
JENNI CARLSON
The best answer I could honestly give them was, "I don't know."
Obviously, the most reliable would have been Vaughn himself. It sounds as if he will address his eligibility for the NBA draft at a press conference this week, and it is my belief that it will be today or tomorrow.
My information would have to come from a very,very reliable source.
I've always contended that Vaughn would announce his decision before finals started, which, by the way, is Wednesday, campers.
As they went around and around with their reasons and speculations, I vowed that I would never write anything that wasn't absolute fact about what Jacque was doing.
Just think how difficult it would be to study for three or four finals while deciding whether to take the millions offered by the NBA.
I didn't think that the press confer ence would come so close to finals though. The time frame that coach Roy Williams originally laid out, ther modified a bit, put the press confer ence sometime during the past two weeks.
But it didn't happen and didn't happen. Now, here the Kansan is on its final edition this semester, and still I don't have any official word for you.
So now, I'm going back on my pledge never to print anything but absolute truth straight from Jacque.
I just want you to know everything I know and give you the most information possible before I disappear into the night.
As nearly as I can tell, Vaughn will stay at Kansas. The most overwhelming reason I have for believing this is that someone who the Kansan staff trusts saw Vaughn go into the Office of Admissions last week and pick up what was believed to be a permit to
But then they would tell me why he should go or why he should stay.
enroll.
I could add this to my reasons why Vaughn will wear the crimson and blue again next season: the draft class continues to get stronger and stronger with the addition of guys like Allen Iverson and Marcus Camby, the Jayhawks are championship contenders with Vaughn, and the brainy point guard could be a Rhodes Scholar candidate if he returns.
That's no guarantee, but if Vaughn did pick up a permit, it says to me that he had not enrolled before and is now at least considering it enough to walk to Strong Hall and actually request a permit.
I just think too much is telling Vaughn to stay put. Whatever decision he makes, though, it will be the best thing for Jacque Vaughn.
Tennis player finishes last and first
NATURALWAY
He's too smart to do anything less.
By Spencer Duncan Kansan Sportswriter
- NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
* 820-822 MASS * 861-0100
- 820-822 MASS. • 841-0100•
Being last may have been the best thing that ever happened to Bianca Kirchhof.
"I was always late and last," Kirchhof said. "I just didn't know about a lot of things for a long time. But
everything is good now."
Good is right.
As she leans forward in her chair, wearing a giant grin, she knows that had she not been last then she would not be at the University of Kansas.
Kirchhof is a junior on the No. 17 women's tennis team. In three years at Kansas, she has compiled a 17-5 singles record in the Big Eight Conference and an overall record of 56-31. She has been ranked nationally and last season was named a Big Eight champion.
But Kirchhof never would have been where she is now had she not been last.
"I was the worst one in my group at a club that I played at," Kirchhof said. "I was the last one to always be picked."
Growing up in Hittfeld, Germany,
Kirchhof picked up her first tennis
racket before she was 10, but she
was not that good.
However, being picked last never discouraged her. Kirchhof decided to improve instead of quit. She
C
See KIRCHHOF, Page 5.
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BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility
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Hillcrest Plaza
Body Boutique Is Ready To Help You Look And Feel Your Best This Season!
Summer Student Rates!
- Swimming
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1116 W23RD LAWRENCEKS 66046749-5206
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 6, 1996
5B
Volleyball player will return to Lawrence
By Evan Blackwen
Kansan sportswriter
When Stephanie Blackwell tells people that she will be playing volleyball for Kansas next season, they automatically assume one thing.
"When I first meet people, they say, 'Oh, you're the setter,' Blackwell said.
The 5-foot-4 Blackwell has been taking advantage of opponents who underestimated all her life, and now she'll be doing that for the Jayhawks. Blackwell, a former standout for Lawrence High School, will transfer to the University from Cloud County Community College in Concordia.
Blackwell was an outside hitter at Cloud County, but Kansas volleyball coach Karen Schonewise said Blackwell will be a defensive specialist for the Jayhawks.
"We're going to use her strengths, which are her
quickness and athletic ability," Schonewise said. "I just don't know that she'll be able to hit against the blocks in the Big 12."
Even though Blackwell will be moving to the back row, she enjoyed playing up front for Cloud County.
"I've always enjoyed playing in the front row," Blackwell said. "I like finishing the plays."
Blackwell was the MVP for Lawrence High her senior year in 1994, and she was recruited by Kansas out of high school.
"I kind of wanted to go to a small school," Blackwell said. "I was born in Concordia, and almost all my relatives are there. I got to play in front of my grandparents."
"We look at most of the kids that come out of Lawrence, but Steph wanted to go somewhere where the opportunity would be there to play throughout from the beginning," Schonewise said.
"I finally decided to go back home," Blackwell said.
Blackwell enjoyed the small school atmosphere so much that when she was looking at schools to transfer to, her decision came down to Kansas and Northeast Missouri State.
Blackwell also said that having grown up and having gone to high school in Lawrence, she needed a change of race.
Blackwell will also be reunited with her sister Erica, who runs for the Kansas cross country and track teams. Erica wasn't sure if the Jayhawks would be right for her sister. Michelle said.
Continued from Page 4.
That's what she got in Concordia.
"It's funny because she didn't know if I'd like it here," Blackwell said. "She knows how much I loved it at Cloud County.
"Now that I've made my decision, she's happy I'm here."
began working on her game and after her sophomore year of high school, playing tennis brought her to America.
Kirchhof finished high school in New Braunfels, Texas, at the John Newcombe Tennis Academy. The transition from Germany to America was not an easy one.
"The hardest thing was learning to speak English," she said. "I had to learn a lot of words for things."
Kirchhof worked hard to be better than everyone, and her teammates see that in her today.
"She's feisty and works really hard to be a good player," Kirchhof's doubles partner, Christie Sim said. "She always tries to stay positive. She is very funny and a great person to be
around"
Being the last to find a college turned out to be a good thing.
was one of the last people I signed. I am glad she was available because she has been good for this program."
Kansas women's tennis coach Chuck Merzbacher had seen Kirchhof in a tournament and knew he wanted her. Since she hadn't picked another college yet, Kirchhof was available.
Playing on a nationally ranked program, Kirchhof is no longer last
"Bianca was kind of late to the process," Merzbacher said. "She
g on a nationally ranked program, Kirchhof is no longer last. "I am glad I chose to come to Kansas," she said. "I enjoy playing tennis, and this is one of the best places to play."
Holiday Inn
Welcomes KU 96
Graduation Guests to Join us in the Regency Ballroom Sunday, May 19, 1996 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
ku
For Our Special Graduation Brunch
Omelette Bar - Cooked to Order
Pasta Bar Station
Unlimited Salad Bar
Baked Rigatoni
Stuffed Chicken Breast
Oven Roasted Pork Loin with Hunter Sauce
Roast Beeef Forestiere
Baked Cod Nicoise
Vegetable Medley
Green Beans Almondine
Parsley Potatoes
Assorted Pastries to include Pies, Cakes & Mousses
Rolls & Butter
Coffee, Tea & Decaf
$12.95 Plus Tax
Reservations Suggested - Call 913/841-7077
And don't forget our
Mother's Day Brunch
Sunday May 12
10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
200 McDonald Drive • Lawrence, KS 66044
V
VANGUARD AIRLINES FLIGHT ATTENDANTS
For consideration, please call
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Or send resume to: ECKERD
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Prior airline experience is not a necessity. However, whether checking luggage, providing in-flight services or giving information, your friendly, outgoing attitude will make the difference.
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Customer service is our priority and we're looking for qualified individuals to join our team as Flight Attendants. If you are flexible, team-oriented and are committed to exceeding customer expectations, then Vanguard airlines would like to talk to you about our exciting opportunities.
To see if you qualify to become a part of the Vanguard team, we invite you to attend our information exchange on May 7, 1996. Bring your resume and be prepared for brief interview exchange.
If you enjoy the outdoors, are adept at camping, hiking and sports Child care experience/c college degree are preferred.
Where: University of Kansas
Kansas Union
Alderson Auditorium
Lawrence, KS.
BEDS·DESKS CHEST OF DRAWERS
COUNSELOR/TEACHERS
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Information Exchanges held promptly
11:00a.m.
9:00 p.m.
activities, and can positively influence people, we invite you to pursue a rewarding future as one of our Counselor/Teachers.
EOE
The next Flight Attendant class is scheduled for late May, 1996. Selected applicants should be prepared to attend a comprehensive three-week training class.'
V
LAYAWAY NOW
Don't hang on to them if you can't use them.
Sell Your Books
Textbooks are expensive. And they are like almost no other product you buy. You can actually use them and get up to 70% of your purchase price back. Do you know what your actual cost of using a textbook can be?
New Book Price (example) $50.00
Used Book Price $37.50
Buyback Price -$25.00
Rebate from KU Bookstore -$2.63
Cost of using a textbook $9.87
...AND THEN THERE ARE REWARDS.
KU
KU
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884-4940
Buyback prices vary based on if the book will be used next semester or if a new edition will be available.
You save $12.50 buying Used.
Book being used next semester
Rebate on cash & check purchases
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KU student I.D. required
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions
We buy more used textbooks than anyone in town.
BREAK THE CYCLE: CHANGE YOUNG LIVES
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From the Producers of "JURASSIC PARK and the Director of SPEED"
Don't breathe. Don't look back.
TWISTER
The Dark Side of Nature.
WARNER BROS. UNIVERSAL PICTURES
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THIS FILM HAS NOT YET BEEN RATED
MAY 10
6B
Monday, May 6, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
V
944 Mass.
832-8228
Red Lyon Tavern
Soar this summer with Independent Study!
Rush over to the Independent Study office, north of the Kansas Union, and enroll before you leave the campus. Over 120 classes available including graduate. Call 864-4440 for information. How about...
ENGL 325c. Recent Popular Literature
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Let a correspondence course help your on-campus course load.
Enroll any weekday of the year 8am to 4pm!
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Learning. Kenans 65045-2905
Women's rugby gains skill, attention
EAGLE
Coach says team has chance to be successful in future; lack of funds are an obstacle
By Trevor Martin Special to the Kansan
In women's rugby action Saturday at Broken Arrow Park, the Jayhawks defeated Kansas State 5-0.
For more than four years, the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation has helped sponsor the women's rugby football club. Each year membership has increased.
"We used to have to borrow players from the other team," said Sheryl Moore, Wichita sophomore and team captain, regarding the small size of the squad. "Now we're the ones doing the lending."
Moore plays rugby because it's more fun to do things that people think she shouldn't do, she said.
---
Stacey Stringfellow, Lawrence graduate student and club president, said she played the game because she loved team sports, and there was a lot of unity in this sport.
"People stick out in a game," she said. "But they don't carry the team."
Most of the women on the team said they had found out about the opportunity to play rugby from other players or from members of the men's rugby club.
Although the team has a few experienced players, more than half the team has played for less than one year. The team has experienced some tough losses, such as a 17-0 defeat against Missouri in its second game on Saturday.
Two weeks ago the team placed second in a tournament in Ames, Iowa. This, coupled with the 5-0 victory against Kansas State, is one reason why Coach John Wiley said he thinks this team has the talent to be successful down the road.
"We've lost some games due to inexperience," Wiley said, "But these girls are very coachable, and we will be successful in the near future."
Another obstacle for the program is the limited funds the club receives from the University. The players estimate that they spend about $3,500 a semester on travel and that only $1,000 is given to the program by the University.
According to USA Rugby, women's rugby is the fastest growing sport for women in the world.
USA Rugby estimates that there are 179 women's rugby teams in the United States: 118 university teams, 56 post-college teams and at least five high school teams, including one in the Kansas City area.
10
Gina Thornburg / KANSAN
Ashley Guerin, Lawrence sophomore, passes the ball to Sheryl Moore, Wichita junior, during the Kansas-Kansas State women's rugby game on Saturday.
SHOW YOUR MOM YOU CARE
Happy Birthday
The Kansan Classified get results --- fast
Send the FTD*
Cherished Expressions*
Bouquet
Owens FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana • 843-6111
Keep It Clean
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
RECYCLING
Recreation Services would like to say "THANK YOU"to all of our participants!
H
Basketball
Basketball
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
150
841-PLAY
1029
Massachusetts
See you in the Fall.
We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment
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Recreation Services - 208 Robinson-864-3546.
WANT TO FLY? NOW'S YOUR CHANCE!
VOLLEYBALL
KU Recreation Services Congratulates the...
1996 Schick Super Hoops - Women's Champions
Melissa Emert
Julie Kizzar
Elizabeth Souder
-AND-
1996 Mens Pizza Hut Hoops 3-on-3
Road Trip Invitational Final 4 Representatives
Fred Souder
Derek Lind
Giulio Laratro
John Payne
Ryan Livermore
Great Job!
F-16C
The F-16C is a 5.2-meter (17-foot) fighter aircraft developed by General Dynamics for the United States Air Force. It features a sleek, aerodynamic design with a distinctive tail fin and a low wing configuration. The aircraft is equipped with advanced avionics and sensors, including radar and cameras, which enable it to perform a variety of missions, such as air superiority, ground attack, and defense. The F-16C is powered by a twin-tail engine that produces around 400 horsepower. It has been widely used in military operations worldwide and is known for its agility, stealthiness, and durability.
The Air Force is looking for men and women who want to fly with the best after graduation. Ask about the new eye sight criteria. You may be the pilot we're looking for.Call to find out!
AIR FORCE ROTC
Contact Capt. Dean Wilson At 864-4676 or visit at KU Military Bld.
Congratulations
SAT. NAY 11
SAT. MAY 11
4.14
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 6, 1996
7B
Horoscopes
STAR
By Linda C. Black
Today's Birthday (May 6).
Save money, and pay bills the first part of this year, so you can travel later. Plans you're making now will change. Get started anyway.
Love and money are linked in June. The work you do in September points you in the right direction.
Pay off bills in December. Travel back to a favorite place in late December and January, and win. Try a new career idea in February.
Rating System: 10 is the easiest day, 0 is the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7—Play first thing this morning. You won't have time later. If you meet the boss's strict requirements, you could qualify for a raise. You've been told time and again, all you have to do is remember and stop resisting! Tonight, relax.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 9 — You can get around a problem by doing what worked before. If in doubt, follow an older person's lead. It's a good day to study business, but don't make a major deal. Things that look like they're going one way could reverse later.
Gemini (May 20-June 21) — Today is a 4 — You have to do many things you would just as soon avoid. Paying bills and returning favors both come to mind. If you need more money, consult an expert. You're charming, but if you don't meet the requirements, you'll get nowhere. Keep trying.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) — Today is an 8 — You're overloaded this morning, but help arrives in the middle of the day. Let go of the chores you hate to somebody who likes them. Visit friends around dinnertime, and get inspired to take action. With the right team, you could make a big profit.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 6—This morning could be fun, if you get out for an early romp with a friend. This afternoon could be tough. There's lots of work to be done, and lots of mistakes to correct. Follow a parent's lead tonight.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 9 — This morning may be nerve-wracking, but the day gets better. You're lucky in games, especially those you've played before. If you can make time to travel, go. If not, make plans for later.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Today is a 5 — The day starts off nice, but goes downhill. A domestic breakdown creates costs outside the budget. You may have to fix what's broken or do without. To unwind, write a letter to a distant friend tonight.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Financial concerns this morning lessen as you
discover a new way to make money. Get an old friend to teach you a valuable skill. A co-worker may be in a nasty mood this afternoon. Give that one lots of room.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
—Today is a 7 — You're luckest first thing this morning, but even then there are dangers. Stick with something you've done a million times before. Shop this afternoon for a work-related item. Don't spend much, though.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
—Today is an 8 — Answer your messages first thing this morning.
You may discover something interesting. Later today your luck improves immensely. Take your true love to your favorite place for dinner tonight.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 5 — Early this morning is OK, but the pressure intensifies later. You may discover something you forgot to do last week the hard way. Luckily, you're able to react quickly. Tonight. cuddle.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)—Today is a 6—Go along with your supervisor's strange request this morning. It's easier than arguing a question that has no correct answer. Take a walk down memory lane with friends this evening. Pamper your sweetheart tonight.
Note: Horoscopes have no basis in scientific fact and should be read for entertainment only.
By Scott Adams
DILBERT®
THIS WEEK I KICKED OFF THE "WALLY COMPENSATION EQUILIBRIUM PROJECT."
THIS WEEK I KICKED OFF THE "WALLY COMPENSATION EQUILIBRIUM PROJECT."
MY GOAL IS TO LOWER THE QUALITY OF MY WORK UNTIL IT IS CONSISTENT WITH MY SALARY.
I HATE THE FIRST MONTH AFTER THEY SEE THEIR RAISES.
ID GO ON, BUT I JUST ACHIEVED EQUILIBRIUM.
MY GOAL IS TO LOWER
THE QUALITY OF MY
WORK UNTIL IT IS
CONSISTENT
WITH MY
SALARY.
I HATE THE FIRST MONTH AFTER THEY SEE THEIR RAISES.
ID GO ON, BUT I JUST ACHIEVED EQUILIBRIUM.
The Summer Option
Break Period Hours
8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., M-Sa
12:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m., Su
Won't be in summer school but will be in Lawrence? If you were a KU student in the spring or if you will be in the fall-you can be seen at Watkins this summer. It's the Summer Option. Students not attending Summer Session will be charged on a fee for service basis.
Summer Session Hours
8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m., M-F
8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Sa
12:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m., Su
HEALTH
Since 1906
Caring For KU Watkins
904-2500
Top Cash for Books NOW THRU FINALS
Top Cash for Books NOW THRU FINALS
Two Convenient Buying Locations
Jayhawk Bookstore...Now-Finals
Naismith Hall...May 6-Finals
Home of Guaranteed Buyback
(If Purchased from Jayhawk Bookstore This Semester)
Up-to-the-Minute Computerized Pricing
Plus In-store Discount Coupons
Jayhawk Bookstore
...at the top of Naismith Hill!
1420 Crescent Road 843-3826
Open: Mon-Thur 8-6 Fri-5 Sat 9-5 Sun 12-4 FREE STORESIDE PARKING
C
IMTCI, an international research company is currently seeking children and adults with asthma and/or allergies to participate in medical studies.
"RESEARCH TODAY FOR A HEALTHIERTOMORROW"
ASTHMA & ALLERGY SUFFERERS
IMTCI
(913) 599-2044 or 1-800-669-4682
16300 College Boulevard
Lenexa, KS. 66219
---
To qualify, you must:
· be 4 years of age or older
· be able to complete short visits to our clinic.
Call today to see if you qualify.
If you qualify,you may receive $300-$960 for your participation.
MAKE MONEY... MAKE A DIFFERENCE.
AMERICORPS
A
NATIONAL SERVICE
BE AN AMERICORPS MEMBER!
GETTING THINGS DONE
CALL or WRITE Bridges Across the Heartland AmeriCorps at YMCA (816)561-8122 ext. 273 P.O.Box 32531 Kansas City MO 64171
Kansas City, MO 64171
8B
Monday, May 6, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
105 Persona
110 Business Persona
114 Announcements
120 Lost and Found
男 女
X
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
The Kansas will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, color, national origin, sex, age, disability, gender, religion, sexual orientation,
Kansan Classified Directory
200s Employment
Classified Policy
300s Merchandise
or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that in violation of Kentucky law or regulation, it would not be appropriate to the Federal Fair
X
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Mitocellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Housing Act of 1984 which makes it illegal to advertise 'preference'immigration or discrimination based on race, color, religion, age, handicap, sex, national origin, or other protected characteristic.
itation or discrimination. "
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
100s Announcements
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS:
864-4358
105 Personals
LesBiGayS-KO offers peer counseling to people who are lesbian, bisexual, gay, or unaware. Please叫 KU info at 843-3060 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for more information.
110 Business Personals
Mother's Day/Paster's Day/Great Graduation Gift.
Your snapshots to video. Your music. Unforgettable
memories.
SNO PALACE is open!
M-F 2-10pm , Sat. 12-10pm
MARKETING
We loan cash on sale only of valued CO₂ VC/FS, TVS, stereo equipment, yoga mountain bikes, and more. Lawrence is more liberal loan company. JAYHAWE PAWN & JEWELRY 1804 W. 608, 740-130-9.
STERLING SILVER JEWELRY
Hoops, ring navals with charms, toe rings,
body piercing rings and more!
The Ease Shop
928 Masons
120 Announcements
ATTENTION STUDENTS!! GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE. YOU MAY QUALIFY REGARDLESS OF YOUR GRADES OR INCOME. 1-800-633-3834.
Gay, lesbian, bisexual or unsure? LeEbagK-SG offers a confidential support group Wednesdays at 7:00pm. Call KU Info at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for location.
Attn: Graduation Business or Financial Studies Students...I am searching for the right entrepreneur to expand my business. I have a specialized catering company (Just liqueur & bartending part of business) in Lawrence and will be expanding to Overland Park and Topkaka within 6 months. I will be offering part ownership to the right applicant. You must be professionless on manure, appearance skills. Service inquiries only: 842-3492, Michael.
130 Entertainment
MIRACLEVIDEO CLEARANCE.
All adult tapes on sale starting at $9.88 and up.
1910 Haskell, 817-7540
男 女
200s Employment
Moving & Storage Company. TOP PAY. Packers and
Loaders. Call Store (913) 818-8780
Roofer will train Lenexa area, starting pay to $8. Call (913) 888-6364.
Sitters needed weekends and days in a rural setting. Call Maureen 749-1719.
Creative Babysitter for 2 country kids, ages 7 and 3.
Afternoons all summer. $5hr. References required. 841-
1959
Carpenter wanted for part-time绷装公司.
Experience necessary. References needed. Call 843-7501.
Dressportly seeking, live responsibly person wiper衣
Dressportly affectionately, live responsibly person 5 year-old gift to
Dressportly affectionately, live responsibly person 5 year-old gift to
Dental Lab needs a person to make deliveries from Over-
sea, to 101-847-6250 or 101-847-6251, up to $900
call. Visit 1-800-647-6250 or 101-847-6251.
NEWS AGENCY SEEKS COMPUTER ASSISTANT
Must have experience of Macintosh programs. Send
resume to JOHN WESTBROOK, 1250 WEST 7TH ST.
Midwestern Music Camp is looking for Female RA's for June 3- July 6. Include $400 + room and board. Apply at 409 Murphy Hall.
INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN NEWS AGENCY SEEKS
PARM-TIMES WWW.PARM-TIMES.COM
WWW.VIA Information 749-0000
Part-time help wanted. 20 apply or more. Need to be flexible. minimum wage. Apply at Westridge video. 601
Summer nanny 3, Kids 11, 0.6 years old. Approx 30.
Summer nanny 5, Kid's RST 1 mile from Gateway to
Bridge 811-943-8440
Person wanted to work w/7-year-old boy with autism.
Must have experience in applied behavior analysis
and communication.
Summer sitter/ chauffeur, 2 easy kids, West campus area,
flex her, $100/wk 20-28 hours, have reliable car and refs.
Non smoke please. Start June 13, Call 843-2968.
Wanted: 100 Students; Lose 8-100 lbs. New metallabrium
breakthrough. Host 15 lbs in a w-wasted Results
test.
Housekeeper needed through the summer, references needed and transportation required. Call 842-1843 after 6am.
Sports Minded is hiring 8-10 enthus. indiv. PT brs, ideal for students. $9hr start. No exp. mgnp. Psc.叫 Top Gun Prom Gna) 932|981-5781 or 1-800-744-7709.
Looking for motivated individuals interested in management/training Travel possible Environ- mental support
7:30 am-4:30 pm. Full-time babywriting position available for 3 kids. Infant experience required. $250 per week.
Non-smoker. References required. Mon - Feb. Pri. Start May 22. 855-1851.
ADAMS ALUMNI CENTER. The Learned Club has immediate opening for part time distainless, flexible hours both am and pm shifts. Apply in person at the Adams Alumni Center 1260 Greatway
CHILD CARE. Full time/part time teaching positions,
early childhood or elementary ed., backgrounds. Send
resume or call school. Sunshine Acres Pre-school 2141.
Maple, mclean 842-2223
Farm and崎 helped wanted for the summer rear Lake Perry. Merrh must have experience with cattle and farm equipment. Write to Ranch Office, Route 1 Box 100, Perry, RS 6073.
Immediate help needed, Graduation Photo is looking for fun, energetic people to help us now through June 14. Data entry and problem solving skills preferred. Apply at 2449 J. Iowa, Suite 38 for 841-7100.
MOTHERS HELPER NEEDED IN EXCHANGE FOR A FREE ROOM, APPLICATIONS BEING TAKEN FOR SUMMER OR FALL REFERENCES REQUIRED CALL 842-3890
Hairy attractive dancers and waitresses 18. Apply
person after 7:30 Tue. - Sat. or 841-1422 or 1-800-
625-7242.
205 Help Wanted
Part time work work. No moving for older couple. State experience and pay per hour. 843-6850
Panchero's Mexican Grill Home of the 2lb. burrito.
We are looking for a reliable assist. manager. Flexible.
Hours. Work late night, 20-30 hrs./week.
Therapist needed for 9 year old boy with autism. Applied behavior analysis preferred and training provided. Flexible hours. KCMO call collect (616) 301-294
Full time summer nanny. Must be experienced child care giver. Have own car and be available part time in Spring and next year. Send referrences, schedule and resume to: Terry L. Daly; Kelly Kusan; 119 Stuart-Flaunt Lawrence; SK 60045.
Help Wanted. Now hire line servers. Dining room attendants & dish washers. For summer employment positions. Start May 31. Flexible schedule. Competitive Wages. Free meals. Apply at Nauimith Hall.
BPI BUILDING SERVICES
Is accepting applications for Part-time evening & weekend custodial positions. No experience necessary. Possibility of Full-time summer employment Call Jeanie at 842-894 to apply.
Full & part-time telephone secretary wanted. Taking and relailing messages in your job. Second and third shift avail. Must be willing to work some weekends and weekdays. Apply in at Rosehouss Comm, 244 W. 61st St.
Full-time Pre-school lead teacher position now available. Must have 1 year experience in group child care HDLP, degree preferred. Great benefits. Cover letter & Story Stories 100 Wakanaus Dc 66440 Deadline May 1
Position open. Great job for students. Phone fundraising for SADD (Students Against Driving Drunk) and bus support. We work early evening & Saturday $49c or $12c. Bus commission. B call 845-3019 or alice St. Mt. St. Butee.
Summer intern needed for weekly work. Responsibilities will vary, but mainly encompass production and ad design. Great work environment-great experience. College - 3 hourly wage. Quark Express a
Summer jobs available for full and part time hourly delivery drivers. Must have valid driver license and clean drying record. Heavy lifting is required. Call Fox Car Rental, 200 west 31st, Lawrence NS. AS "for Kale."
United Child Development Center is accepting
applications for the position of Lead Teacher A degree in education or a related field with an emphasis in early childhood is required. Send application to director, 946 Vermont. Lawrence K. 66044 EOE
Yogi Bergers Jellystone Camp-Resort, Divide, Colorado needs clerks, maintenance, camp cook, recit, assist, and high energy and fun living people Salary & Box 781029 San Antonio, TX 78788 (410) 450-8348
Camp Runner Amorco in St. Louis MO is seeking mature, committed individuals for specialists and counselor positions in a creative Day School Camp setting for the summer of 1996. For more information, contact the camp office at Congregation BNia Amora @ (314)576-9900, Ask for Mr. or Miss Anna.
STUDENT HOURLY POSITION AVAILABLE
Duties: Receptionist; filing; duplicating; running
errands; boarding; proofreading; data entry; bulletin
boards; other duties as assigned. Position available May
or June. Must have a Bachelor's degree or equiv.
available at the Student Assistance Center, 22
Strong, 840-4644. Deadline is May 8, 1998, 5:00 PM.
SUMMER HIELL Softball Unipres. - The Lawrence Park and Recreation Department is looking for additional individuals who are interested in working as softball umpires for the Adult Swimlion Leagues. Anyone interested in working as Sports Office office immediately. Some training provided and required. For more information, call Bob at 812-702-922.
Summer Job Opportunities
College Propainters, North America's largest student painting company is now accepting applications for summer painter, crew leaders, and production managers positions. Wages range $6-10 an hour with some positions available all over Kansas and Missouri. Call today for applications as positions fill quickly. 1-800-265-1133.
ARNP. The Bert Nahs Center has a full time position open to provide services to clients, particularly adults with SPM. Knowledge of psychopharmacological interruption is required. Requires nursing required. Eligible for or credentialed as clinical nurse specialist. Send resume/cover to Bert Sell, Bert Nahs CMIC 650 Missouri, LAWRENCE, KS 46044. Open until June 30.
OUTPATENT DRUG & ALCOHOL COORDINATOR. The Bert Nash School has a full time position open for developer/ director outpatient drug and alcohol services to daily diagnosed clients. ADAS and experience required. Master's in social work and psychology and Kansas License preferred. Send resume / cover to M.Sell, Bert Nash CMHC, 336 Missouri, Lawrence, KS, 60644.开放 until EOLED.
Design, pre-production and printing in KCMO insurance ad. dept. Quark Xpress reqs, adv./mktg exp. preferred. Pict. p.l. lrs. good hourly wage, perfect for office-based work. (To apply to 10th to advertising Supervisor at Forrest T. Jones & Company, 3130 Broadway, Kansas City, CA 64111-2406. Fax: 816-908-0577. No phone calls.)
Part-time Graphic Designer
205 Help Wanted
BASIC CLEANING SERVICE is expanding its staff of cleaning associates.
Cottowood Inc., a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for part-time employment in their residential division. All positions include evening and weekend hours, some may require sleep overs. College coursework and related work experience will be required. DRIVING RECORD IS A MUST. Starting hourly pay is $0.10 to $6.50. Please apply at Cottowood Inc., 2801 W. 31st, E.O.E.
$60 hr starting wage
- 10-25 hrs/week
- $5.0 to $11 rr bonus after 60 days probation
- Flexible evening hours
We are currently accepting applications for individual interested in the Human Resources field. This individual must have a minimum of 5 years of training testing and interviewing. The qualified applicant would be need to train immediately and start May 2004, full-time at 8:00 p.m. 5:00 a.m. apply immediately. FUNDED BY THE TEMPORARY SERVICES, 211 E. hs, 749-8200. EOE
SUMMER HR POSITION
Summer Employment - Caterers, Kansas and Burge Union's Catering Department, $4.50 per hour. Monday thru Saturday 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Requires valid driver's license, able to lift 50 pounds, stand for long periods, prefers flat floor. Will work with train Must follow dress code. Begin immediately. Will work through summer with possibility of continued employment in fall. Apply Kansas and Burge Union's Personal Office, Level 5. 18th to Great AME/AAEQ.
You won't find a better part-time job that offers more.
limited openings. CALL TAYLOR-784-0023
WANTED:
Assistant
Responsible, and Reliable
Flexible Hours
Applied
Home of the 2 lb. Burrito
843-6760
Two experienced child caregivers wanted fall 98 for part-time in home care for our one year old daughter. Parents KU professors. Easy walking distance to campus $82,460R
Earn top pay with travel opportunities!
Full time summer employment, 40 to 50 hr
per week. Must be 18 yrs. and have two
ID. s. "Drivers, S.O. or State I.D."
or two "Workers." Call for phone interview to reserve
your position today @ 1-800-329-1277
or apply in person, Chelan American
Moving Services. 1200 W. 63rd St.
ATTN: STUDENTS
TRC can help! Jobs range from general clerical and word processing entry-level positions in business. Terrific pay and benefits. Short-term term assignments & with some of Overland Park Metro KC best companies.
Looking for Summer Employment?
Graduating & Entering the Job Market?
Cottonwood in, a service provider for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for the full-time position of Residential Manager. Responsibilities include, but are not limited to, all aspects of service provision as well as the organization, administration and daily management of a group home. Must have at least 2 years college coursework or at least 2 years experience in a related field. Position will require an interest in and a good driving record. Excellent benefits. Other part-time positions are also available within the Residential Department. Please apply at Cottonwood in, 2801 W. 31st, by March 1st EOE.
Join us for a JOB PAIR TUER, May 7 from m - 12m. *The Holodekine in the Lawrence (200 McDain Drive), drive.*
DATA PROCESSING COORDINATOR
Excellent opportunity! Busy M.I.S. department seeks energetic team player to provide PC user assistance. Responsibilities will include: EDI (Electronic Data Processing) software developed for training. Graminified candidate will be experienced in PC user support and programming on P.C.M. or mid-range computers. C++, A5400 and E401 experience preferred. Successful candidate will have strong communication skills and problem solving skills well with multiple priorities. Ability to perform P.C. repair a plaf. This is a full-time position with complete benefit package. Submit a resume with letter of interest including salary history to: Employment Coordination Packer RD: Lawrence, KS 66049 (913) 842-5333
ATA Programmer COORDINATE
Internal hire. Requires
an individual to administer
data processing functions for
one of KC's top 50 fastest
growing companies. Programming,
data manipulation and basic
algorithms are required.
SCO Unix or/or X-base
background preferred. Position
is full-time with benefits.
Please call Mr. Sell at
0123-456-7890.
**'JUDENT STOCKOOM ASSISTANT.'** $4.25/hour,
20 hours/week deadline; May 10, 1996, 5:00pm.
Inventory responsibilities including stocking, shipping/receiving, preparing stock for technician jobs (staging), maintaining inventory counts and data information.
Requires proficiency in English and KU qualification. Valid KU enrollment and valid KS driver's license; ability to understand and carry out verbal and written instructions; ability to spell and alphabetize names correctly and sort numerically; ability to fluently speak and fully understand the English language; ability to work indoors.
Participates in job training to work M-F, between 5am-5pm. Preferred Qualifications: Previous data entry and personal computer experience. Obtain and complete an application from the Networking and Telecommunications Services reception desk Address: NTS, University of Kansas, Elsworth Campus, KC 60045, 913-854-9310; Contact Ann. Engel, EO/AA
Academic Program Coordinator- McCollum Hall
Half-time position, facilitates academic progress,
encourages good study skills, works with resident
groups in special program activities, promotes an en-
vironment of intellectual inquiry. Not a live-in position.
Requires 5 years of experience and enrollment required for KU student payroll. Enrollment in more than 9 credit hours must be approved in advance. Preferred: Haitian hall living and supervi-
sor position. Must have 3 years of commercially and commercially available software. Must be available at least three weekends. Compensation: 74.650$ from July 28, 1996 through May 31, 1997. Please refer to the Job Description for Apply. Submit letter of application outlining interest and experience, resume; and names, addresses, and phone numbers of 3 references to KU Department of Education, resume; and names, addresses, and phone numbers of 3 references to KU Department of Education, KS, 60045. Deadline: May 17, 1996. EEO/AA
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
205 Help Wanted
New Donors earn $20 Today
Up to $40 this week
New donors include anyone who
haven't donated since Nov. 4
Return Donors - Extra Bucks
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
NOW HIRING!
23RD & LOUISIANA
843-5500
15TH & KASOLD
749-0440
Dual Diagnosis Case Manager. The Bert Nash Center has a full time position open to machinist's degree and experience in computer systems, required, Send resume to M.Sell.Bert Nash CCMIC, 385 Minnow, Lawrence, RS, 60644. Opened until filled.
I Cart Believe In Yogurt!
**Note Takers:** Earn $10-$45 per lecture taking comprehensive notes in large KU lecture classes for the entire course. Participate in a weekly course and related course work experience. Courses open: ANTH, BHG, CHER, CLXN, ECON, GEOL, GEOG, HELP.
**Advertiser** - Distribute filters before class outside of课室. Earn $15 for 30 minutes of work. Punctual.
**Office Assistant** - Service customers at our KS Union Bookstore network. MWF, 9-1AM or 1-5PM TR, 8-1AM or 1-5PM Dates include proofing and filing lecture notes, distributing notes to customers. Pay-42.25hrs
- family Preservation Staff
The Bent Health team is full and part time positions open to provide innovative, intensive, outcome care, time-limited and team oriented in services to families in Dougton County. Positions require a Bachelor's degree or equivalent.
Pick up an application on our office in RSUN Union书店, 2nd floor student union between 9 and 5.
Family Preservation Specialist. Master's in Psychology, social work, counseling, or marriage and family therapy. Req. Bachelor's degree plus two years experience in family based service delivery, or Licensed Bachelor's degree in social work with four years experience in family-based service delivery.
Now hiring for FALL '66 semester in the following positions:
BUSINESS OFFICE
ER FULFILLMENT POSITION
Family Preservation Workers. High school diploma or equivalent and three years experience in family-based service delivery or a combination of experience and college equaling three years required. Send resume / cover to M. Sell, Bert Harn CMHC, 363 Magnus Law, KS3, Open until filled EOE.
Student boursey position: University Press of Kanaas seeks individual to handle order fulfillment/ data entry responsibilities. Work includes learning to interpret data through an order fulfillment system, entering data using an order fulfilment software program, preparing the reports and invoices for the warehouse to staff process, dealing with customer shipping environments and other duties as assigned by the Business Management opportunity for experience in business office setting.
Flexible hours, but aftermores preferable
$5.50 → start, $8.00 → after 3 months.
apply at 2501 W. 15th St. (west campus). For more info
all Sam Giammas; 864-4145. Decline for applications
hours spring or fall 1996.
20 hours / week year-round
Three-quarter time, live-in position during academic year, to facilitate academic progress, help plan a bachelor's degree program, coordinate physical maintenance, and help develop a cooperative academic community in a women's scholarship hall. Required. One year of residential group living experience or completion of institutional requirement enroll kU student payroll. enrollment in more than 9 credit hours must be approved in advance. Preferred:Experience in menu planning, food preparation, or culinary design. Interpersonal and group facilitating skills experience, Salary and Benefit $528 weekly for first year staff. Furnished apartment with utilities provided plus meals when the unit is saving. Employment for full academic year required. Residency of at least three interest and relevant experience; a resume; plus names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references to: KU Department of Student Housing, 422 W.11th St., KU, 60454 May 19, 1998. Deadline EOEA/
Scholarship Hall Director:Douthart Hall
$ $ $
NOW HIRING!
Earn extra cash over Summer break! Many full-time jobs available in Topeka for production, retail, office and warehouse. Work as much as you
want.
Apply at
KEY Staffing
400 SW Croix, Topeka
267-9999
ASSISTANT COMPLEX DIRECTORS Lewis And Corbin Halla
Assistant Complex Directors (ACD)'s hold live-in, academic year, three-quarter time positions, managing student personnel aspects of a residence unit housing students enrolled in the KU School of Medicine with student personnel functions: supervising student staff, facilitating resident's personal and academic resources; providing clinical services; providing counseling and referral services to university and community resources. Required KU student position for KU student payoff. Enrollment in more than 9 credit hours must be approved in advance. Preferred: Residence Life staff experience. Residence hall facilities must be furnished and getting, and administrative duties. Microcomputer experience. Salary and Benefit* Total salary is $7,216per week. Additional benefits including utilities is provided as well as meals when the dining center is serving. Employment from July 28, 1996 through March 31, 1997. To Apply Submit letter of application by May 5, 1997, please include names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 reference to the KU Department of Student House, W. 101 N. 13th St., KU舍谷 6K0445. Deadline: May 17, 1996. EOE/A/4
205 Help Wanted
*STUDENT HOURLY ASSISTANT.* 7.00 hw on 20 hw during academic year, 40 hw w/kw during学期 (in 3 hr blocks of time or more). Deadline 5/10/96 at 6:00 p.m. Duties: I program MDS OOS Z, Windows, Novel and academic writing, documentation, and maintenance of existing software systems. 3. Consult with staff and users regarding voice, video, and data networking issues. 4. Perform other related duties as required. *Requirements:* 1. Demonstrate proficiency in using Microsoft Office successful completion. 2. Knowledge of "C" or Pascal computer languages. 3. Currently enrolled as a student at the University of Kauaus. Preference will be given to graduate students. *Preferred Qualifications:* Master's degree in computer programming environment. 2. Knowledge of the UNIX programming environment. 3. Knowledge of DBASE, FoxPro, Clipper SQL, or other database environments. 4. Knowledge of the C++ computer language. 5. Knowledge of object-oriented programming such as CCTT X.25, IEEE 802 TCP/IP, SNMP, and ISO 6.1 experience. With regard to time, interrupt driven systems. *Application Procedures:* 1. You must provide this position with a cover letter, a vita resume), and a transcript for all college coursework that specifically relates to your academic background. 2. College grade point average will be a factor in selecting candidates. 3. Include a statement about your future plans. Preference will be given to applicants who plan on remaining at the University for one or more academic years. The deadline to apply is 5:00 p.m. May 10, 1996.
Address: Networking and Telecommunications Services,
1240 S. Kensai, Elwinton Airmonds, 1738 Engle Lawrences
1
Phone: 913-864-0310; Contact: Ann Angel EO/AA.
The Kansas City Sta is seeking independent contractors for the outside sales department.
Must have transportation.
Each contractor will have a sales potential of $700 (and higher) per week soliciting student orders.
Call 1-800-726-2340 ask for Kent or Pat Ext.4597
wanted; loving, caring, respondible person to care for girls, 12 and 6ym old. After school from Sept. 1966-May 1967, $5,50/hour, must have own transportation. Please contact Jan Sheldon 864-8484 (h) or 842-815 (h)
SALES AND MANAGEMENT CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
Hughes Lumber is a growth oriented building material retailer with operations in Oklahoma and Kansas. We are seeking energetic, highly motivated individuals who aspire to careers outside Sales and Management.
- Very Competitive Wages.
* Life, Health, Dental Insurance.
* All Health Benefits. Confirmation.
Send resume to:
HR Code: Campus
Hughes Lumber PO Box 2920
Tulsa, OK 74101-9220
Drug free workplace. EOE.
Hughes LUMBER
225 Professional Services
Portfolio photography will help you pat together a good portfolio. Excellent prices! (323) 812-4748 + 12PM
(323) 812-4748 + 12PM
DUI/TRAFFIC/CIMINAL
OVERLAND PARK - KANSAS CITY AREA
ATTORNEY - AT-LAW
ATTORNEY - AT-LAW
Call for a free consultation (816) 361-0944
Criminal Defense For free consultation call
OUI/Traffic
Rick Frydman, Attorney
701 Tennessee 843-4023
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake DUI & 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
235 Typing Services
235 Typing Services
Typing & Editing, Cheap, fast, accurate. Call 841-4997
Call Jacki at 865-3858 for applications, term papers,
support materials, etc. Satisfaction guaranteed. Makin the Grad
NEED SOMETHING TYPEPED? Experience typist can tap on top of typepied you. Laser print, spell check, 842-582-2016 or 842-582-2036.
RESUME-BASED-consultation, cover letters & more.
Graphic Ideas. Inc. 927 1/2 Masson 841-1071.
www.resume-based-consultation.com
Professional Word Processing, Sheetmaps, Tape
Printers and Laser Printing. 842-6703, Fax
Modern 769-8988
ATTENTION STUDENTS! Exams coming up and no time to type papers? I offer computer quality type-written skills for any project, large or small, at a comparable rate. Call Marissa at 838-4793.
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
87 Nissan Pulsaar, T-tops, Air conditioning, excellent condition $3400 call 823-0021
For sale 1980 Vespa P200E scooter. 2800 miles. Extra good condition. $1,000. Call 749-125-125
ROBERT HALF
FOR SALE: FUTON,double with cover. $150 or best offer.
Call 865-3588.
1944 Jeep Cherokee Sport Blue 4 Dr. 8kw, driven A/C,
1737 MK Cassette, Towing Capability 36 kmiles (91.75-78km)
*
WANTED:
We are paying up to $1.000 Reward
Notebook 486.065 8mb RAM, 250 Hard drive $150. 832. 2775. $150.
- Flexible schedules
- Facilitate communication
for your used computer at UMI Computers 2449 Iowa 841-4611
340 Auto Sales
Honda Moped 1989 New Brush, lights etc. Zenith Color TV, cable ready, 20 good* prices! Call 852-2193 leave a message.
FREE JOB PLACEMENT!
FREE SOFTWARE TRAINING
- Interview now, start after finals.
Wedding dress ensemble original design of Tara of Calamary Jane, late medium, vintage Victorian style, black linen.
84 Honda Accord, stick shift, $350 dollars. Please call and leave a message at 832-8278.
- Executive resume experience
* Internship, scholarship opportunities
accountemps. NATIONAL ALLIANCE W/MICROSOFT!
205 Help Wanted
370 Want to Buy
Specializing in Accounting, Office Administration & IS since 1970! If you're looking for the perfect first job or flexible summer employment, give us a call to discuss your options!
Beds, Desks, Bookcases, Lamps, Other Stuff
Layaw Now. 938 Mass
Everything But Ice
- Excellent resume experience
- Internship/scholarship opportunities
Post/Ret. curriculum approval
Now interviewing for:
*Staff Accountants *Accountants *Administrative Assistants
*Customer Service Reps *PC Experts *Sales *Bookkeepers
SUMMER WORK $9.45 to start
Johnson County & KC Metro Area locations! (913) 451-7600- Ask for Michelle
*Part/Full-time, entry level all areas
- No experience necessary - training provided
Workloads & BPA
- Work begins ASAP
- National company
Johnson County & South K.C.
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(913) 381-9675
(816) 455-0117
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Students
Enjoy your summer vacation more this year Call Unifore Services and "Work When You Want To Work." Choose from a variety of fun and interesting positions-office, clerical, and data entry!
EARN TOP PAY AND A SPECIAL BONUS
Call todav!
Contact Shelley at (913) 341-3300
Fax resume to (913) 341-5256
EOE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 6, 1996
9B
400s Real Estate
105 For Rent
1- Sb Bse, Close to KU and Downtown. Available for Fall. Call 812-7644.
1/2 blk. from campus. Studios & 1 bdm. avail.
for summer & fall. Call 842-7044
3-2 bedroom apartment Available June 14. Wood floors
2 bible to KU, near downtown. 842-344-84 or 843-545-84
Get a group? Large homes for rent! Morning Star. 841-
STAR7827).
House for rent. Available August 1. No pets. (913) 541-0128
Huge 2BR between downtown/campus, Pored, WCH
water paid. Avail. June 1, 1800/month. Call 841-7644.
Subtel Studio. 820 Wisconsin. Bus route. No Peta. $300
867-4920
Summer sublease w/ fall option 2BR, available May 18
$850/mo + ull. Call 889-9089
Summer sublease. 1bedroom floor, fully furnished. Call
Jeffii 841-4184. Available from June.
Summer Sublease. 1 bedroom apt. fully furnished.
Call heff at 1-811-4814. Available from June.
WANTED*Student to take over 90-67 lease for Nassim Hali will付400 money when in CAB 838-3524.
MORNING STAR. For rooms, apartments and well kept homes, some houses. Call 841-BISTAR (7827).
Available August 15th; a life, space and software buy-in
Associate August 15th; a life, space and software buy-in
2 to 3 person for airfare, for summer or next fall,
$200ea, for two people $50ea for people. Unl included
travel expenses.
Dibs Dipen, new carpet, dishwasher, W1.70 central air, fenced beech, garden, pool, 4000 max. Avail. May or June; free parking; 24-hour delivery.
3 bedroom house avail. June 1 | 1 bedroom avail. april 1
1. bedroom avail Aug 1 | 2 room avail. April 1, Noppts.
3 BR, WD hooks - close to KU campers and down-
nowable available for FSSS + utilities
3 br. TH 15H - Law Ave, wd, wd, bw, gar, deck, furnished
+ 9000 mL - 1000 mL - Paid base card, on bus route
or 3 or a person house. Go to campus. $25 per person for 4. Or $80 per person for 3. WD hook up and AC.
3 rooms avail. June & July in huge 6 bedroom house.
Wood floor, WD, big closets, all kitchen, front porch
1146 Kentucky. Call 822-0706 for Shannon.
5 b. house no close to campus you can charge for parking.
12 m. house no available Aug. 1. $35 per bedroom. Call
Apache 8.0 apartment for the summer, Available
for the academic year. Comfortable and affordable.
Duda 841-1010
Avail. Ang. **1- unfurl 2R Duplex, 1305-07 E-250 Tee**
W DD, wobook Dep **450 NoDs 450 NoDs**
Coming to KU Med?
Changing the hotel.
4 BR house, good condition, one minute walk to class. $1100/ month. (816) 932-5598
Excellent locations 1341Ohio/ 1104 Tennessee
2 B r-4plx. CA, D/W, W/Dookup.
*4400 Aug. Iops, Tape 842-4242
DRASTICALLY REDUCED Must Stub Server. Large Indium bigTrainer and Midmanufacturer $2500, Available May 1st.
GREAT tennasep aqr. 2BR, all utilities bed, Remodeled,
new carpet in Fall 19S. Only $230 per bedroom. 1 yr lease
available Aug 96. Call 843-5217. Leave a message
Great Summer Subway! Available May 12 by July 31.
Great Summer Subway! Bedroom, wi-fi, tuition $295.
Crib, bern bed, nursery, $295 annually.
LOCATION : 50f. FROM UNION, Summer Sub-
session. 1 or 2 Bedroom, RBH-843. No 79
Phone: 212-265-3421.
House suitable for up to 4 students. Available 6/1/06.
Located near 11th & Rhode Island. 1 year lease. Call 749-
0239 for appointment.
New 2 bedroom duplex in Eardora. Available June 1.
$850/month - utilities. Large yard, dishwasher. WIFI.
Real nice 1 bedroom apartment close to KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, off-street parking. No pets allowed. 749-2919.
Real size 2 bedroom house. Quit neighborhood. Close to KLF. Off street parking. No pets. Available Jail. 1 Call
One, two & three bedrooms pre-leasing now for full. Call 841-7726 for an appointment to your new home at
quiet, comfortable, spacious furnished rooms and 2 bikes to KU, some utilities paid, off street parking. No
Perfect Studio! Avail. immed. Hrdwd firs, fireplace, C/A,
sep, kip, big bath, pets ok! 12th & Louisiana. $310 + low
tuil 748-9352.
Sphacus 5 bedroom house, 2 bath, close to KL, WT/D bus stop, off street parking, pet references, free WiFi.
Sublease June / July, 2 bdmr, CA, walk-in closet, off-street parking. 2bks from KU. 4300/mo. 841-5797 or 832-949, very cheap!
**Summer Sublease** = 2 bdrm, W/ D. 1 room, walk to campground. $500bn. Avail. May 14. May rent free. Please call
Summer Subleave - spares 2 bedroom, 2 full bath.
We pay $40 per month. $500/month. You pay $90/month.
Cell phone: 854-632-5012
Summer sublease available June 1. 128R apartment in old house of 14 flats, canadian, hallway, flowers, VEHY
169. 72 flats, furnished.
Summer Sublease House $155/up (up to 5 people)
Wutherford, daintester, microwave, table pot, teapot,
potato skins, canned vegetables.
**Summer Sublease** Wisconsin wiocation for fall. 3 lt, 2 lb. bath,
dishwasher, AC $695/mo. no maintenance. Available May
1st through July 31st. Call (800) 437-5666.
Summer suburban with options for fall. 218dth Bismuth,
suburban, central air, pool, dwndry/drent $490. Nego
$690.
Summer Sublease! Furnished studio on bus route great condition. AC, microwave. May rent paid $295 per month/H2O paid t. August. Call Instant: fm85 403-8543
**Summer Subnuser.** 4 person account, 1/2 bath. May buy paid, $120/mo. to us. Room size, campus, W/D. BASE 841 5933.
Summer Sublease. Available May 17 August 10, 2
BDRM. Park, AC No. P9e, Close to Campus and Mam
800-634-4900.
Summer sublease. Available June 1. Spaceca 2
bedroom, close to library. Rent terminate. Call Enly
info.
**Summer Sublease.** Furnished by 10m², q10 minutes
walt to carpentry. $65/month. Contact Robert M84.
Phone: (212) 737-8898. Email: robert.m84@outlook.com
Summer Sublease. Large 1 bedroom apartment. Close to campus - no hills. Willing to make deals. Available May 20 through August. Call 838-9037 or leave message.
Summer muledeer. *Spatula* furrowed, one bedroom apartment, Md. and Illinois. Central air, darkwalls.
Tundra elk. *Lepus* furrowed, one bedroom apartement, Md. and Illinois. Central air, darkwalls.
**Summer Submarine** 4 bdm, apt. with the rest in rent by the room at 1115 Lloyds St. #10. #Fm w/2 baths for $390 per week.
105 For Rent
Townhouse 2 blocks from campus and close to downtown, furnished, off-street kitchen, dishwasher, for lease.
Very large 2 BB APt. Peta OKA. Southpoint close to campus. Move in data and rent negotiable. Must be mobile. Applicant must be a native US citizen.
2 bedroom, lower half of house/duplex. 12th and Kentucky. No pets or smokers. Available 91. Utilities paid. Owner occupied. $445 per month. Call 841-9774.
2 Bedroom apartment available Aug. 1.
Close to campus, only 4Km includes, unleashed. No pets.
Bachelor's or higher in any field.
Available: August 31st, 2018, in renovated older house,
10th art room and 9th bedroom. Claw foot ceiling,
cabinetry and custom flooring. Call (347) 527-2950.
Available now. 1 bdm in. 4 bdm townhouse. Pursu-
nished, washer/dryer, garage and on bus route.
$250/month + utilities. May rent is free. Call 749-0989.
GREAT summer suburban w/which option. 2 BH up to 14P on a flat roof, perched, close to KIU downtown, & on bus route.
Summer sublease/Fall option. Need 1 person for 5 month old DW, new carpeting $180/mo. Call Troy or call 212-469-7391.
Summer Submarine 1. I drem, available in a nice vice, kept home $2000 INTEGRAL SUMMER. Close to campuses.
2 bedroom available August 10th, 10th & New York, Window
AC, catting ceiling, W/D hook, upstairs, floor small, living
room, large bedrooms. $400. No pets. 841-1074, you
usually answer 8 PM-11PM.
Available now for non-smoking female. Have use of entire nice house 2 blockS of Watson Law Firm. Pay only money $245/mon or best offer. Free utilities, A/C, etc. washer/dryer over. Off street parking. 841-3680.
Summer sub-lease-Very cute 2 Bedroom House-Great location, 5 minutes from campus. 1722 Louisiana. Hardwood floors, screened in back porch, 2 car garage and fenced in black door. Call Kay or Amanda. 838-4376.
Summer Suiteble- Nicer, never 2 bedroom apartment on the southwest side of Lawrence. DW, WD, CA and FREE cable, water, and water. Available mid May with rent paid. $490/month. 838-4018
4 Bedroom available @ 8/96. 1725 Ohio 2 bath, Fridge, storage, W/D, Garage and offset厢房. Pet parking. $550 + Deposit + references. Call (913) 649-3195 or 865-4873 apt.
Avail June 1. Great 1 Br Apher near campus at 1000 EuryRd. Energy efficient D/W, microwave, ceiling fan, W/D hookups. Balcony/Patio, 425/month. Cable TV paid. No Pets. 841-3800.
Avail. Aug. smaller 2 bdmpt. in, renovated older house,
Old West Lawrence. Wood floor, claw foot tub, window
A/C. No pets. $ 460. Call 841-1074, phone usually
answered 8PW -11PM, or leave message.
Available Away 1. brem, apt. in renovated older house.
Walk to KU or downtown. Ceiling Fan, Window A/C, off
street parking. No pets. Bkp 841-1074, phone usually
offered 8PM - 11 PM, or leave message.
Available on 10月 lease, 1 bedroom apartment, 9th and Mississippi. Wood floor, ceiling fan, foo off, street parking, $350, 841-1074, phone usually answered 8 PM-11 PM.
Great downtown location. 100 yds from South Park
Gazebo, 2 dwellers up/AC. All City utilities paid. $215/br.
12 mo lease available Aug. 1. Call #43-5217. Leave a message.
38m high. brm for rent. central air. Wood floors and carpet. Close to downtown. No peel or smokers. Must see to appreciate. Call 913-237-7893 or local 842-7701.
Lorimar Townhomes
bubbles subsea in 3 bdrm townhome needed for May 28 to July 19. Waihiray, AC, ceiling fan in quiet area off the waterfront.
Now signing one-year lease starting June and August.
Extra nice two bedroom, appliances. CA/Gas low utilities,
bus route and more! No pets. $350 per month.
Spanish Crest Anantara 841-6888
股价 slashed. For June & July, A 2 & 12mps akin to older houses. Walk to KU & downtown. Lots of features, off-street parking, no pets. Starting at $250. Cali 841-7047. Phone usually answered 8am to 11pm.
One bedroom available in 3 bedroom. Appt.冠军 Court 2025 Man. Warder/Door apt. Close to Campus
1928 Man. Warder/Door apt. Close to Campus
Summer Sublease: for 2 rooms of apartment.
Purnished, 2.8 bath, 2 floors, just down the hill from campus $190 per month. Dishwasher, AC, washer, refrigerator, iron.
August 2, 50 small bdpr, to be renovated this summer available.
August 13, 300 block Vermont. Large rooms, large
kitchens, desk, no living room, window AC, crib fanning,
bed, bath, shower, toilet, refrigerator, phone,
usually answered 8 PM-11 PM, or phone
answered 8 PM-11 PM.
Small 2 bedroom apt. in renovated house. Available August. 14th and Connecticut. Walk to KU, downtown, or Dillons. Ceiling fitters, window AC, off-street parking, answer 8 PM, 140-814-1047, phone usually answered 8 PM-11 PM.
Studio, & 1 2 bedroom apts. available starting Summer and Fall. Several locations including next to campus. All on bus route. Good quality. Well maintained. Quiz with affordable rates. Bali 841-1156 for more information
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1409 Tom. a student housing office. Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation, democratic control. Runs a campus website and maintains a Cable Close to campus & Mass. Call or sit by 814-9484.
Summer Sublease
We'll pay $10 per month for you to live in our apt. Yep, we pay you. All you have to come up with is the other $45/month rent. Can't best that. 30bm/28h/petits
for details at 49.884341. Contact call 49.884341 for details at 49.884341
22ND AND HARPER
LUXURY LIVING
Easy Access to K-10
Full size washdryer, fully equipped kitchen, fireplace, Walk in closets, fully monitored alarm system, and much more, NO PETS, Harper Square Apartments, Call Today 913-841-6806. Ask about our move in special.
New 1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS. Laundry facilities 841-4935
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
PRE - LEASING FOR AUGUST 1,1996
1,2,3,4 & 5 Bedrooms Available
Wichita Falls CA, USA
Wichita Falls KU Campus
Custody (015) 789-3794
"Convenient and Affordable"
Wichita Falls KU Campus
COLLEGE HILL CONDOMINIUMS 3 BR/2 BATH, fully equipped kitchen, full size W/D, separate dining room, private patio or balcony
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
LCA
MASTER IN MANAGEMENT
diplexes, Condos,
Townhouses, Apartments,
100+ with fully equipped
1 & 2 bathrooms, with or
without garage / carpots.
have free cable TV
AVAILABLE FOR AUGUST 1,1996
105 For Rent
Over 400 Rentals
Available
941-4095
Graystone Apartments
Under new management.
* 1 & 2 BDMR Apts. 3 BDMR Apts & townhouses
* On KU Bus route
* Adjacent to health club
* 10 top sts
* Summe-Fall leaves
Open House Mon-Fri
1-4:00 pm
Saturday
10:00 am Noon
2512 W, 6th St.
New Phone 749-1102
Naismith Place
- 2 *18h in each aep.
* Close to KU bus route.
* Private balconies / Patios
* Basic cable paid TV / Pets OK
* K篮球 court / Park
* On-Site management
Oudahd * & 8th St. 641- 8151
Call for appointments
---
BERKELEY FLATS APARTMENTS
841-4935
Now leasing for Summer & Fall
843-2116
11th & Mississippi
Sundance Apartments 7th & Florida
FARM WORKSHOP
- Now also leasing for Fall
- Ask about our 3 person special $690 add up
- Furnished Apartments
* 4 BR/2 BA
841-5255
COLONY WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
1&2Bedrooms
On KU Bus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3HotTubs
105 For Rent
Exercise Room
M-F10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
TRAILRIDGE
Check out Trailridge!
Great Studios $355-365/mo.
Want to save money on housing next year?
I need to sell my contract at Nassau Hall 96-07. I save $800 on it in the dorm and food. Plus I show in the office. Call Alain at 835-311 or after May 14 at (872) 508-2901.
1, 2, & 3 bedroom apartments
$440-555 / mo.
2-4 bedroom townhomes $575-935/mo.
Call 843-7333 or come by 2500 W.6th
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE
Holiday
Equal Housing Opportunity
Tropical island
211 Mount Hope Court # 3
For more Info, or Appt.
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
Leasing for Summer & Fall
* 2 Bedroom $420-$435
* 3 Bedroom $610-$630
* 4 Bedroom $735-$745
- On bus route
Pets Welcome*
- Nice quiet setting
- Energy efficient
SouthPoint
ACADEMIC
2166 W. 26th
- Laundry facility
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
- Swimming pool
- On Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
Spring Special
2 BR $ 399
3 BR $ 499
- Laundry facility
- ( on select apartments )
Short time Only!
- Closetocampus
- Sand volleyball court
- water & trash paid
- 1,2,3 & 4 bedroom
- Spacious2bedroom
*Restrictions Apply
- On KU Bus Route
- Send volleyball news
apts. available Now leasing for Spring and Fall
843-4754 (call for appt.)
- On bus route
* Pool
* Hotel Location
* 2 bedroom (1 & 1/2 baths)
* 2 bedroom (2 baths)
* Laundry facilities
* 24 hr. Emergency maintenance
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts
Great Location - Near Campus
Mon-Thurs
12:30-4:30
No appointment needed
CAMPUS LOCATIONS
STILL AVAILABLE
FOR AUGUST!
Chamberlin Court
1 & 2 BR's, microwave, DW, on-site
laundry facilities
17th and Ohio
Abbots Corner
2 BR's, Newly remodeled, full-size washer/dryer, DW, all new carpet,
vinyl & paint
18th & Ohio
Bradford Square
2 8 3 RB's microwave, DW, formal dining area, on-site laundry facilities, private patio/sundecks, on KU bus route cages accepted
CALL TODAY 841-8483
M.F9a.m.-5p.m., 1820 W.6th
SAT19a.m-3p.m., 1740 Ohio
24-hour Emergency Maintenance On-site Management
EDDINGHAM PLACE
405 For Rent
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. June 1 July 3
Colony Woods. 4435mm廊.电话 829-2421.
- Spacious 1 & 2 BRs
* Water & Tread Pd.
* Bedroom Bath Suite
* Heated Spa & Pool
* On Site Management
* 24 Hr. Maintenance
* Basketball Court
* Sand Volleyball
* Laundry Facilities
NOW LEASING FOR FALL 1996
524 Westriss
524 Frontier
842-4444
Aspen West
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Need Furn. call TC Rental 841-7111
Now Leasing for Fall!
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
- Swimming pool
Why stay on Baltimore Avenue When you can ADVANCE TO:
Boardwalk
Snowboard
- Exercise weight room
- Laundry room
- Water Paid
- Energy Efficient
- No Pets
- Laundry room
- On site management
- Laundry on Site
- Reasonable Rates
- Daily 3:30-5:00
KVM
- Dishwashers
Professionally managed by
2900 West 15th
Lawrence, KS 66049
865-2500
Volleyball Court
808 W. 24th
841-6080
841-5444
4 stops on Property
We are now accepting deposits
- On KU Bus Route with
- 4 stops on Property
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
on apartments for the fall term.
We offer 10 month leases. We
feature 1 & 2 bedroomapartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence
Park25
We presently have available a select few 1 & 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Call or stop by today
2401 W. 25th, 9A3
842-1455
Office open Monday - Saturday
(sorry no pets)
--non-feminine non-smoking roommate wanted to share 2B/R,
W/D, A/O, w.argure for full-baso $2500 - u.siliens.
--non-feminine non-smoking roommate wanted to share 2B/R,
W/D, A/O, w.argure for full-baso $2500 - u.siliens.
---
meadowbrook
Large apartments with big closets in a friendly service oriented community surrounded by nature.
2 pools, 3 tennis courts,
2 volleyball areas,
playgrounds, KU bus stops
basketball court,
Lots of room to
walk or jog.
Most of all we have a home just for you!
Walking distance to campus
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon - Fri
10-4 Sat 1-4 Sun
105 For Rent
S
Management
2512 West 6th St. 749-1288
1 BR $345
2 BR $400 - $420
GRAY & LEAGRY STARE APARTMENTS
TOWNHOMES
New & 2 BRs
OPEN HOUSE
1·4·50 Mon · Fri · 10 · 3 Sat
Completely Furnished
405 For Rent
MASTERCRAFT
Studio,1,2,3,& 4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
Hanover Place 14th & Mass.
841-1212
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
MASTERCRAFT
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
Equal Housing Opportunity
430 Roommate Wanted
Hus2 between downtown/campus. Porch, dw, water paid, avail J June 1 4000ml. 841-7654
Non smoking female to share 2 BR b1 bath, 30 min from campus. Must love dogs but not own any pets. 842-7118.
Roommates needed. 3 br, 2 bht at, 9th & Emery. 7k70m + 1/3 lutilies. If interested call 613) 848-6967.
2 roommates need for the summer. May is paid up for $175/mo plus utilities. Wally full. Call 841-1291.
Female needed for summer sublease. $195/mo. May rent free. Call 842-9083.
Summer or Floor 2, bdrm 1, one bath, garage, fireplace,
whridder $225/mo. Call 825-2553.
2 N2 roommates to share College House condo- own room. W2, water paid, August - rent $200/month.
Female, Non-Smoker needed for Fall.
2 bedroom/ 2 bath on bus route $225 a mo.
Water, gas paid call $42.2280.
Female roommate need Aug. 1: 2 bdmr, 2 bath, with
diawathar, bedding, laundry, 157 per month
per unit, 12/units/宴席
Need a nursecom for fall and spring 1967 and 97 semesters to place in live Call Masson at (103) 542-3680 or (874) 801-3850.
Need Roommate to share 3 bedroom apartment at College Hill Condo. On bus route: washers/rayer
Roomsmate must non-smoker for two bedroom/ two bath apartment. $200m, plus half elect. On KU bus. (See page 37.)
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR SUMMER Starting mid-May until August. Jump steps away from Fraser Hall. Rent $215 + 1/2 lift. Contact Tyrion or Lance at 841-7433.
RADIAMA NEEDLEE FOR THE SUMMER APEI at 12th and Louisiana. 6 min to campus or downtown. 890 (niregistable) Call 828-1868 Carson or Andrew Roommate need to share 2 lift apt. almost furnished, $160 mo. + utilities, already discounted for summer beginning. Call 749-9351.
Recommendation wanted to hire 4 BH township with 3
callers; W/D, free cab; 8424-14 - 106
BH city/8424-151
BH city/8424-169
**Summer Sublease.** 1 person for a 3bdm, apt, WT.
central air, close to campus, $210/month.
parking available.
SUMMER SILVERLEAF, use large bn or i n br room,
w 175 mm to 1 ua. May need, 70-320 lbs; ask for Robin
80 mm to 14 ua. May need, 60-90 lbs; ask for Robin
Female roommate wanted to share 4 BR house in school year with 9 female. Smokers @ $2500
$3000
$3000
$3000
Summer sublime. Female non-mum-
pels. 7th & Ohio. Md. July 31st.
unil. Woods, ceiling fans. Call 749-4
Male Roommate建议, Submit summer or Ma-
3 Berm 2 Bath (New Tile and Crawl) W/D
Close to campus. $250/month including water. Cr.
at 843-4087.
Female roommate needed. New all new home west of campus. Roomy, WD, WIC, DA, GWage, Deck, Near bus route. Short or long term lease available. $275.00 /mo.
Call 838-4546.
Rommate, smoker to share condo near campus. WDC, AAC 8250/mo + 1t electricity, H2D paid.
Looking for neat responsible student. Call T7 at 843-2534 or M316 (318) 778-1741.
405 For Rent
Building 1
- Professionally designed interiors
- Full baths
- Washers/dishwashers included
Now Leasing for Spring and Fall 1996
2166 W. 26th St.
Next to
Southpointe
all but details.
Great Location!
Call For Appt. 843-6446
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, May 6.1996
9B
105 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1/2 blk. from campus. Studios & 1 bdm. avail.
for summer & fall. Call 842.7643
Get a group? Large homes for rent! Morning Star, 811-
STAR(7827).
2-3 bed room apartment. Available June 1. Wood floors
2 blocks to IKEA, new downtown. 8423448 or 8433450
House for rent. Available August 1. No pets. (913) 341-0962
Huge 28R between downwind/camps. Porch, Wor-
waterpile. Avail. June 1, 2000. 640m/hil. Call 874-1704
Sublet Studio. $20 Wisconsin. Bus route. No Pets. $300
887-9420
Summer sublease w/ fall option 2, available May 18.
$350 mn + util C838-9038
Summer sublease. I bedroom apt, fully furnished. Call
Jeffie 841-4814. Available from June.
Summer Subleave. 1 bedroom apt. fully furnished.
Call Jeff at 811-4814. Available from June.
WANTED-Student to take over 90-17 door for Nassimhall-Will pay $400 when move in. CALL S88-3024.
MORNING STAR For rooms, apartments and well kept homes, some house. Call 841-STAR (7827).
Available August 18th a nice, spacious two-bedroom
flat in the Westside campus. Close to
Cordillan, Cornell, Call 415-762-3411.
1 person needed for suburban suites in spacious 4 bdm rents. Great location; $210/month. Utilities = Available on a weekly basis.
to 3 person therapy, for summer or next fall.
$800ea, for two people $250ea for one person. Ttl included
with private sessions.
3D Bmph, new carport, dblwhsher, W/D, central air, fenced bryog, pool, 4000m², aval Mk or MP, rear deck, rear hatch, SUV-ready
3 bedroom house awaits. 1 bed room apat. await. 1
bedroom apartment. avail. Apat. Room awaits. 1 no.
pet. Room awaits. No pets.
3 BBE, WD locks -close to KU campus and down-
nowable-available for $585 -utilizes
3 br. TH 15H *Law Ave, Law dw, gar deck, furniture*
3 br. Th 15H *9000m² cut* Puld base cable on bus outlet
or 3 or a person house. Close to campus. $250 per person for 4. OR $600 per person for 3. WD wook up and AC.
3 rooms avail. June & July in huge 6 bedroom house. Wood floor, WD. big closets, all new kitchen, front porch. 1146 Kentucky. Call 832-0708 ask for Shannon
8 in house to close to campus you can charge for parking
1 month, lease reserve 1.825 per bedroom, Call
(800) 655-3425
A spray 1 bedroom apartment for the summer. Available at Spray 841-1010. Compact and comfortable. Bathroom 841-1010.
Avail. Ang.. Unif. Affair 23R Pack. 1305-07 E.25r Terri
WD, CD wookup. 4154 Noises. 4154 Noises. 912-183-252
www.availang.com
Coming to KU Med?
Excellent locations 1341Ohio/ 1194 Tennesse
2 in Br. pluck C/A, D/W, W/D hookups
$400 Aug.1 pets. C81-4242-8
DRASTICALLY REDUCED Must Stubless Large Dump
Call Stubless 802-2982 or 841-1073.
Call Stubless 802-2982 or 841-1073.
GREAT assessment apt. 2B, all utilities paid. Remodeled,
new carpet in Fall 95. Only $20 per bedroom. 1 yr lease
available Aug 86. Call 843-5217. Leave a message.
Great Summer Sublease! Available May 12, July 31.
Cute bib 1 brimmed. 8250 carpet. 8320 upholstery. $149.99
Available Monday through Friday.
Maintenance technician needed. Full time permanent and summation positions available. Apply in person at 804-257-1690.
House suitable for up to 4 students. Available @ 6/106.
Located near 11th & Ribbond Island. Yard calls. Call T821
619-355-7222.
LOCATION - 50Ft. FROM UNION, Summer Sub-
location 1 of 6 feet. HURRY CALL c83-878-34-
000 to reserve your space.
Nice 2 bedroom duplex in Eudora. Available June 1.
$455/month + utilities. Large yard, dishwasher, W/D
hookups, garage. Call 542-3849
Perfect Studio! Avail. immed. Hrdwd firs, fireplace, C/A,
sep. kltp. big bath, pets ok! 12th & Louisiana. $310 + low
util. 749-3625
One, two and three bedrooms pre-leasing now for fall. Call 841.7253 for an appointment to see your new home at
Real size 2 bedroom house. Quiet neighborhood. Close to Ozark airport. No pets. Available Jail. Call 1-800-743-5900.
Quaint, comfortable, spacious, furnished rooms and apts.
RU: RU; all utilities paid, off street parking. No
parking fee.
Real nice 1 bedroom apartment close to KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, off street parking. No pets.
Spacout 5 bedroom house, 2 bath to CLU. W/D
hookup, off street parking, pet, references are
required.
Sublease June / July, 2 bdmr, CA, walk-in closet, off-street parking, 2 bldgs from KU. $400/mo. 841-5707 or 832-949, very cheap!
**Summer Sublease** - 2 lbrm, 10 rnd. walk to camp,
Eldredh. Avail May 19, May 19. Pay please Call
me.
Bummer Sublane - spacious 2 bedroom, 2 full bath
Sublane - spacious 1000/month. You pay $900
month. Call #845462
Summer subleases available June 1. 23R apartment in old house, AC closet on campus, hardwood floors, VEIRY carpet.
Summer Sublease House $185/per (up to 5 people).
Washers/dryer, dairy microwave, milkbox table, pot, pletter.
Laundry hamper.
Summer Sublane w/option for fall 3, bir 2, full bath
Summer Sublane w/option for fall 3, bir 2, full bath
May rent free 8 & 10th Acre | Call 847-0823
Summer sublease with options for fall 2dbrm.庭院 central air pool, water/driver $190, Nugget spa, outdoor pool $450.
Summer Sublease! Furnished studio on bus route great condition. AC, microwave, May rent paid. $295 per/month I/RD august. Visit for 6pm on 4pm
**Summer Sublease.** 4 person, 11/2 bath. May rent
paid; $150/month + utilities. Poor, close to campus.
WLS.
Summer Subscale II. Available May 17 August 10, 2 BDIM. Furn. AC, No Pairs. Close to Cause and Mass. BDIM. Furn. AC, No Pairs. Close to Cause and Mass.
Summer Sublease. Available June 12. Spacious
bedroom, close to campus. Rent negotiable. Call Emily
(555) 780-3400.
Summer Subleave. Pinfinished 1 berm. agt. 10 minutes to walk to campground. Contact Robert @ 841-800-3692 or rob@summersubleave.com
Summer Sublease. Larger bedroom apartment. Close to campus no bills. Will make todees. Available Makeup Artist. Contact 800-794-2500.
Summer sublease. Spacious, furnished, one bedroom apartments. 19th floor. Central air, dishwasher. Parking. 300-245.
405 For Rent
Summer Suitehead. 4 dpm, apt., with the option to rent by the room at 11 15 Ouest. #10. We'll be热衷 of you! Please call (306) 287-6192.
Townhouse 2 blocks from campus and close to downtown, furnished, off-street parking, dishwasher, gas water heater, pool.
Very large 2 BR Apt. Peta OK. Southpoint close to campus. Move in date and rent negotiable. Must see to believe. Call 830-8029.
2 bedroom, lower half of house/Musket. 12th and Kentucky, no potsmokers. Available in Utilities & Leisure. $590 per room.
2 Bedroom apartment available Aug. 1.
Close to campus, only $85 includes utilities. No pets.
available Assignment, 2BH rpt. in, renovated older house, 8th and New York house, Wood eater, floor claw foot, ceiling sink, and more. Call (310) 654-7000.
Available now, 1 berm in 4 bdm, townhouse. Purchased, washer/dryer, garage and on bus run. Fully stocked. 20% off.
FREAT summer sublease w/full option; 2B apt 215/pe-
north, 9th M Michigan, S324484, pets okay, close to RU,
lowndown, on bus route
Summer sublease/Fall option. Need 1 person for a 60m² wd, WT, new carpeting, *180cm²*. Call Troy or
Joe.
Number Surrounders 18xdm, available in a very nice, well-
used condition. IN NUMER. Close to campus.
267 Templeton. 842310.
1 bedroom available August 10th & New York Window
vc ceiling, firing deck, WD wook-ups, wood floor, small living
com, large bedrooms. $400. No pets. 841-1074, phone
answered 8:19 PM-11PM.
available now for non-smoking female. Use have of nice house 2 locks 2 of Watson Library. Pay only $250 or best offer. Free utilities, A/C, etc. washer/dryer use. Off street parking. #431-3689.
Summer soil-loving-Very-cute 2 Bedroom-House Great location, 5 minutes from campus, 1728 Louisiana. Hardwood floors, screened in back porch, 2 car garage and fenced in backyard. Call Kara or Amanda. 834-8767
Summer Subleave. Nice, never 2 bedroom apartment on the southwest side of Lawrence. DW, WD, CA and FREE cable, water, and trailer. Available mid may with rent paid. $490/month. 888-4018
4 Bedroom available 8/16, 17250 North Bridges, Bathroom, WD, Garage off-office parking, Pet ownership $500 + Deposit + references. Call (913) 643-3195 or 865-7837 by apt.
Vauillage J. Great 1 Br Apts near campus at 1000 Eurem
E. energy efficient D/W, microwave, ceiling fan, W/D
ookups. Balcony/Patio, 425/month. Cable TV paid. No!
bets. 841-380-390
Xvll. Aug smaller 2 bmpt mw, in renovated older house.
Xviii West Lawrence. Wood floor, claw foot tub, window
\/C. No pets. $ 460. Call 841-1074, phone usually
unused 8PM-11PM, or leave message.
Available August 1, birmat. inc, in renovated older house,
Walk to UR or downtown. Ceiling fan, Window AFC, off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-1074, phone usually answered 8PM - 11 PM, or leave message.
Available August on 10 month lease, 1 bedroom apartment, 9th and Michigan Street. Wood floor, ceiling fan, door off, street parking #4559 841-1074, phone usually answered 8 PM-11 PM.
dreat downtown location. 100 yds from South Park
azebo 2 dwp艇 w AC All city utilities paid $215/hr.
12 mo lease available Aug 1. Call 843-5217. Leave a message.
Historyic 39 barn house for rent. central air. Wood floors and carpet. Close to downtown. No pets or smokers. Must see to appreciate. Call 913-233-7829 or local 842.2701.
Lorimar Townhomes
b18 bainse la maison in 3km townhouse needed for May 28 to July 31. Warehouse, AC cooling in air quarters are offered.
Now signing one-year lease starting June and August.
We will have a full-time bus driver, bus route and more. No pets. $50 per month.
Bus schedule is as follows:
Monday - 7am
Tuesday - 10am
Wednesday - 12pm
Thursday - 4pm
Friday - 8pm
Saturday - 10am
Price slashed. For June & July 1, 2 & 8bm妒 in renovated older houses. Walk to KU & downtown. Lots of features, off-street parking, no pets. Starting at $250. CAI41-8074. Phone usually answered 6pm to 11pm.
One bedroom was in 4 bedroom apt. Regents court
1603 Mass. Washer/Dryer in apt close to Campus
Westchester
humped, 2 full bath, 5 floors, just down the hill from campus $190 per month. Discounts, AC savings, free Wi-Fi.
2. 5 inch bdrm to be renovated this summer available August, 1300 block Vermont. Large bedrooms, large kitchen, deck no living room, window AC, ceiling fans, windows, hardwood floors, ADR photo, phone usually answered 8-11PM, or leave message.
Small 2 bedroom apt. in reconfigured old house. Available August. 14th and Connecticut. Walk to KU, downtown; or billion. Ceiling farm area, AC off street parkway and parking. $44.018-1074, phone usually answered 8 P.M. +11.
Studio 1, & 2 bedrooms apts. available starting Summer and Fall. Several locations including next to campus. All on bus route. Good quality. Well maintained. Quiet with affordable rates. Bocky Call 841-1155 for more information
SUNFLOWER HOUSE COOPERATIVE 1400 Teen. a student housing alternative. Open & diverse membership, non-profit operation, democratic control Rims Campus, Close to campus & Mass Call or stop by 814-0484.
we will pay $14 monthly for you to live in our apt. *We pay we all. You have to come up with is the other same month rent. I cannot be that. 38dms/2abntables you must call contract. Call 454-843-814 for details at fourhours
22ND AND HARPER
LUXURY LIVING
Easy Access to K-10
MASTER
PLAN MANAGEMENT
New 1 & 2 BEDROOM
APTS. Laundry facilities
841-4935
PRE-LEASING FOR AUGUST 1,1996
COLLEGE HILL COMDINIMUS
3 BR/2 Bath, fully equipped kitchen,
full size W/D, separate dining room,
private patio or balcony
VCA
1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Bedroom Available
WanderDrive Dbshawens, CA
94078-0000
*customer service call* (819) 764-7974
*customer service and Affordable*
Equestrian Housing
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT
Duplexes, Condos,
Townhouses, Apartments.
1, or 2 ELEBROUN units
1 & 2 bathrooms, with
or without garage/carports.
Some have free cable TV
AVAILABLE FOR AUGUST 1,1996
105 For Rent
Over 400 Rentals Available
841-4925
Under new management.
* 1 & 2 BDM Agpts. 3 BDM Agpts & townhouses
* On KU Bus route
* Adjacent to health clinic
* Up to offices
* Summer Fall leaves
Open House Mon-Fri
1-4 00 pm
8:00am
10:00 am-Noon
2612 W. 6th St.
New Phone 749-1102
Graystone Apartments
Naismith Place
BERKELEY FLATS APARTMENTS
- 2 BR
* Jacuzzi in each apt.
Close to KU bus route
private balconies for kids
Pets OK
Basketball court / Park
On-Site management
Oudahl 25th Ct. 841-1815
Call for appointments
841-4935
Call for appointments
5:15 pm -7 Mon-Fri 10-2 Sat
Sundance Apartments 7th & Florida
Now leasing for Summer & Fall
- Now also leasing for Fall
* Furnished Apartments
* 4 BR/2 BA
- Ask about our 3 person special $690 and up
YOUNG WOMEN
ENTERTAINMENT
841-5255
1&2Bedrooms
COLONY
WOODS
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
On KU Bus Route
Indoor/Outdoor Pool
3HotTubs
ExerciseRoom
M-F10-6
SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4
TRAILRIDGE
1, 2, & 3 bedroom apartments $440-555 / mo.
Check out Trailridge!
Great Studios $355-365/mo.
2-4 bedroom townhomes $575-935/mo.
Call 843-7333 or come by 2500 W.6th
105 For Rent
THE ISLAND
Holiday Apartments
Equal Housing Opportunity
Want to save money on housing next year?
I need to sell my contract at Nassailh Nathalim 96-07. You
on it in the dorm and food, plus I throw in the
Callsa at Alasna 538-331 or after May 10
at (842) 908-898
Leasing for Summer & Fall
* 2 Bedroom $420-$435
* 3 Bedroom $610-$630
* 4 Bedroom $735-$745
211 Mount Hope Court #3
For more Info, or Appt.
Call 843-0911 or 842-3841
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
- On bus route
VILLAGE SQUARE
- Energy efficient
South Point
AQUATIC BASEMENT
2166 W. 26th
- Laundry facility
Call 843-0011 or 842-3841
166 W.26th
843-6446
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Pets Welcome*
- Swimming Pool
- Laundry facility
- Swimmingpool
- OnBus Route
- Close to campus
**Spring Special**
2 BR $ 399
3 BR $ 499
- water & trash paid
- 1,2,3 & 4 bedroom
- On RC Bus Route
- Sand volleyball court
- Spacious2bedroom
*Restrictions Apply
( on select apartments )
Short time Only!
apts. available
- Sand volleyball court
- Water & trash pond
- Now leasing for Spring and Fall
843-4754 (call for appt.)
- Quiet Location
• 2 bedroom (1 & 1/2 baths)
• 2 Bedroom (2 baths)
West Hill APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts
Now Leasing for Summer and Fall
Great Location - Near Campus
Mon-Thurs
12:30-4:30
No appointment needed
CAMPUS LOCATIONS STILL AVAILABLE FOR AUGUST!
Chamberlin Court 1 & 2 BR's, microwave, DH, on-site laundry facilities 17th and DIw
**Abbots Corner**
2 BR's, Newly remodeled, full-size washer/dryer, DW, all new carpet, vinyl & paint
Bradford Square
& 2 BR 3, microwave, DW, formal
dining area, on-site laundry facilities,
private parking, 1 BR bus route,
cats accepted
24-hour Emergency Maintenance On-site Management
SAT 11a.m.-3p.m. 1740 Ohio
CALL TODAY 841-8468
EDDINGHAM PLACE
105 For Rent
24th and Eddingham Dr.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BDRM APARTMENTS
- Spacious 1 & 2 BRs.
- Water & Trash Pd.
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. June 1-7月 31.
Colony Words. 445$ month. Call 823-9241.
- Heated Spa & Pool
- On Site Management
* 24 Hr. Maintenance
* Basketball Court
NOW LEASING FOR FALL 1996
524 Frontier
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
Boardwalk
Avenue
- Sand volleyball
- Laundry Facilities
Aspen West
Why stay on Baltic Avenue When you can ADVANCE TO:
- Energy Efficient
Now Leasing for Fall!
- Swimming pool
- Studio & 2 Bdrm
- Exercise weight room
- Fireplace
- Need Furn. call TC Rental 841-7111
- Water Paid
- On site management
- Laundry on Site
- No Pets
- Reasonable Rates
KVM
- Daily 3:30-5:00
Professionally managed by
- Dishwashers
2900 West 15th Lawrence,KS66049 865-2500
2 Pools
808 W.24th
841-6080
841-5444
9 Books
- On KU Bus Route with
- Volleyball Court
- 4 stops on Property
- 2 Laundry Rooms
- Some Washer/Dryer Hookups
We are now accepting deposits on apartments for the fall term.
We offer 10 month leases. We feature 1 & 2 roomapartments that are some of the largest in Lawrence
Part25
We presently have available a select few 1 and 2 bedroom apartments for immediate occupancy.
Call or stop by today
2401 W 25th,9A3
842-1455
Office open Monday - Saturday
(sorry no pets)
--non-mic smoking roommate wants to share 2BR,
W/D, A/O, w/ gargue for $200.-800. u- utilities.
---
meadowbrook
Large apartments with big closets in a friendly service oriented community surrounded by nature.
2 pools, 3 tennis courts,
2 volleyball areas,
playgrounds, KU bus stops
basketball court,
Lots of room to
walk or jog.
Most of all we have a home just for you!
Walking distance to campus
405 For Rent
Meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
8-5:30 Mon - Fri
10-4 Sat 1-4 Sun
S
Management
2512 West 6th St, 79-1288
1 BR $345
2 BR $400 - $420
***
Completely Furnished
405 For Rent
MASTERCRAFT
Studio,1,2,3,&4 bedroom apartments and townhomes
Tanglewood
Hanover Place 14th & Mass. 841-1212
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Sundance 7th & Florida 841-5255
Regents Court 19th & Mass. 749-0445
Orchard Corners
15th & Kasold
749-4226
Campus Place
1145 Louisiana
841-1429
NOW ALSO LEASING FOR FALL
MASTERCRAFT
Mon.-Fri 9am-5pm On call 24 hrs for emergencies
Equal Housing Opportunity
430 Roommate Wanted
Non smoking female to share 2 BR 1 bath, 30 min from campus. Must love dogs but not own any pets. 842-7118.
Roommates needed: 3 hrs at bath and 9th at gym.
Huge 28 between downown/campus; Porch, dw, water
paid, aaid 1 June 1 6000 +84.91-7064
2 rooms needed for summer. May is paid for:
$175/mo. plus utilities W/D, fully furn. call 841-1291.
Female needed for summer sublease. $105/mo. May rent free. Call 842-9083
Female, Non-Smoker needed for Fall.
2 bedroom/ 2 bath on bus route. $225 a mo.
Water, gas paid; call 864-2299.
$270/mo + 1/3 utilities. If interested call (913) 681-8867.
Summer or Fall, 2 bdmr, one bath, garage, fireplace,
whr/dry $225/mo Bid: 822-2553
2 N roommates to share College Hill condo - room, WD, water paid; available August - rent $300/mo
Female roommate Aid, August 1. 2 Bbrm 2 bath, with
dishwasher, cable, AC, and acupuncture ($27.50 per month)
Need a roommate for fall and spring '96 and '97 semesters or a place to live in, you can contact us at (847) 342-3000 or mail Master's writing, the College of Arts and Sciences, at the following address:
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR SUMMER. Starting mid-
August, ADA steps away from Prazer Hall. Rent
the room on the first floor for $150/mo.
Need Roommate to share 3 bedroom apartment at College Hill Condo. On route hauve -washer/dryer
Roommate wants, non-smoker for two bedroom/bath apartment. $220/month plus ball light. On KU has 4 beds.
ROOMATE NEEDED FOR THE SUMMER NCE AP.
80% only (negotiate) Call BIS 58216 Or Andrew
only 80% (negotiate) Call BIS 58216 Or Andrew
Roommate needed to share 2 bfr. apt, almost free,
$160/mo. - utilities, already discounted for sum-
mer.
Roomsawait had share 4 BR townhouses with 3 master beds (1) Aug 1 W.G. 8242 - 8244 Ifil
Summer Sublease. 1 person for a 3dmbr, wP, WD,
central air, close to campus. $12/month.
Please contact us at info@dmb.com or call (808) 579-4000.
SUMMER SUNLARE SALE, await, big bikin in 4 br house,
$1750 + 14 mail, until May 26 for robes or Robin
shirts. $1895 + 14 mail.
Pooled roommate will have to share 4 BR house for next month. Roommate will be rented out daily, W/D near KU hotel. Call S231-805-1274.
Summer sublease. Female non-smoker to share 2 bbm.
age, 7n & 6huile May-July 31st $138/mo *obes = 12
*obes = 12*
Male Roommate Welcome. Suitlet summer or Pair rental. 3 Bdmr 2 Bath (New Tile and Carpeting) W/D and Dish. Close to campus. $250/month including water. Call Nick at 843-4087.
Female roommate needed. Almost new home west of campus. Roomy, RWD, AC, WD, Garage. Deck. Nav bus route.Short or long term lease available. $ 275.00 / mo.
Call 838-4546.
Roommate, non-smoker to cover near campus. W/ A/C, 8250/m² + 1/8 electricity, HQD paid for. Look at neat responsible student. Call TA at 845-223-9434 or MJA at (31) 728-1741.
---
Homes for Sale
405 For Rent
- Professionally designed interiors
- Three bedrooms, two full baths
(KU bus route - Great Location)
Now Leasing for Spring and Fall 1996
2166 W. 26th St.
MN Ore
Southwater
all lakes
Call For Appt.
843-6446
10B
Monday, May 6, 1996
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Department of English Congratulates the Winners of the 1995-96 English 101/102 Essay Writing Contest
Nathaniel Chaar Ashley Hoster Rashima Kingsby
Regan Koch
Earen Rast
Cara Skodack
CONGRATULATIONS 1996
KU GRADUATES
IMPERIAL GARDEN
25 items including soups, salads,
appetizers, fruit, entrees, and dessert.
"The Best buffet in Lawrence"
G
Lunch
Mon-Sat. Sun.
11:30-2:30 $4.95
11:30-2:00 $5
11:30-3:00 $5.95
Dinner
Everyday 5:30-9:30 $6.95
2907 W.6th (across from Dillon's) 842-1688
ATHLETES:
The Iowa State men's team track and field team has won 21 combined conference titles in track and field and cross country since 1984.
Continued from Page 1.
Iowa State men's track and field coach Steve Lynn said he tried to recruit kids from Iowa, but that no one could win a Big Eight title or a Big 12 title with just athletes from Iowa. Iowa State has five foreign athletes, from England, Kenya, Nigeria and Russia on the men's track and field roster.
Lynn said the program's philosophy was to try to win the conference meet.
"We don't care where they're from, whether they're from New York City or London," Lynn said. "If the kid can academically handle it, I think they deserve to be in there." One reason that the recruitment of foreign athletes has grown in the last 30 years is because the number of men's track scholarships dwindled from an unlimited number to 12.6 per school. The number of women's track scholarships allowed is 16 per school.
College teams are vying to recruit the best athletes in the world to fill the limited number of scholarships.
"There should be a limitation, and the reason for that is that I would like to see the greatest percentage of our financial aid provided to American athletes so that their opportunities at the world level are enhanced," Timmons said.
Former Jayhawk and 1952 Olympian Wes Santee said that when he was competing, Oklahoma State then Oklahoma A&M, was the only school in the Midwest that had many foreign athletes.
Santee also said that he would like to see American athletic scholarships given to American student athletes.
"If foreigners want to come here and go get an education, come and go to school and then run as part of that, I would not disapprove," Santee said. "This is more in benefit of the coaches than it is our people."
At present, the NCAA has no rules that limit the number of foreign athletes who are allowed to compete in either track and field or cross country.
Athletes from the United States have had a difficult time competing against foreign athletes because foreign athletes are sometimes older and more mature.
Former Jayhawk and three-time All-American Michael Cox remembered competing against foreign athletes in the 5,000-meter run at the Big Eight championships during his sophomore year.
"I lined up against a guy who was vying for a spot on the Kenya Olympic team, and the guy next to him was ranked 10th in the world earlier in the 5,000," Cox said. "I'm doing my best and just getting smoked by these guys."
Currently, Cox is training for the 1,500-meter run in the Olympic trials. If Cox makes it, he will face a tough field of foreign competitors.
The 1,500-meter run is an example of an event that has been dominated by foreign athletes. Not since former Jayhawk Jim Ryun won the silver medal in the 1968 Olympics has an American won a medal in the event.
Ryun agreed one reason foreign track athletes are special is that they're usually further along in their development. He said that he thinks it's great that foreign athletes are in the United States, but he believes American track and field is at a point now where it needs to be able to develop the American talent.
The concern I have is instead of developing the American talent, we're giving (foreign athletes) scholarships, which doesn't allow the American high schooler to develop." Ryun said. "Basically, what we're doing is picking up the more developed athlete, a foreign athlete. I understand why they (coaches) do it because it gives them some immediate success. But I think it's wrong."
Not everybody thinks it's wrong for American universities to recruit foreign athletes.
Kansas' Theobald said he doesn't think a team full of non-Americans is the worst route to take.
"I think it's more beneficial to America, America's top athletes, to bring in solid competition and let them race against the best," he said.
Theobald, who was recruited from Canada to run cross country and track, is one example of a foreign student athlete on scholarship who's here for his education first, and athletics second.
"I didn't come here to be a professional athlete, I came here first as a student to get a degree," Theobald said.
Theobald is on a scholarship which only provides room, books and board.
"I don't feel like I'm taking an American scholarship away," Theobald said. "It's still costing me a lot more money to go here than some kid in the state of Kansas. I'm proud to be Canadian, but I'm also very proud to be a student athlete at the University of Kansas."
Timmons said if he was a new coach, and his goal was to win national championships, he would recruit foreign athletes.
"Toward the end of my career we had several foreign athletes on the team, but I didn't recruit them," he said. "I thought to myself, 'He's a student in this school. He paid his way, and he should have an opportunity.' I didn't feel like I was two-faced, because I didn't recruit him."
The arguments about foreign athletes may not be applicable to high school athletes, who are looking for the right university.
"I'm not saying don't let them come. I'm saying don't have unlimited numbers on a team."
Brent Wiley, son of former Kansas
sprinter and 1980 Olympian Clifford Wiley, is a senior at Rockhill High School in Kansas City, Mo., and a standout sprinter on the school's track and field team. Brent was ranked fourth in the metro area by the Kansas City Star for running the 400-meter dash with a time of 49.78 seconds.
Wiley has visited Kansas and Iowa State, and he has three more visits ahead of him. Brent's academic background and sprinting abilities have made colleges interested in him.
The number of scholarships that Brent will be offered will depend a lot on his 200- and 400-meter dash times. His father is aware of that.
"I have not once said, 'Now if that school wasn't recruiting those foreign athletes, he'd get a scholarship," Clifford Wiley said.
Clifford Wiley said it's an institutional question of whether foreign athletes should be allowed to have scholarships.
"I think each institution has to decide for itself what kind of athlete they want to select," Clifford Wiley-said. When he competed, Wiley said he had no problem competing against foreign athletes.
"In my book, it's whoever shows up at the meet. That's who you run against," he said.
After the collegiate outdoor track season is finished most collegiate track athletes will use the summer to stay in shape.
Not Kansas' Lisk.
Not only will Lisk be keeping in shape, but he will be training for the biggest 100-meter dash of his life this summer. Lisk has qualified in the 100-meter dash, with a time of 10.25 seconds at the 1995 Big Eight Outdoor championships, to run in the Olympics in Atlanta. When he does, he'll be wearing a jersey from Sierra Leone, Africa, not the United States.
"I think it's like a privilege to have people with talent come over here knowing that they're going to get the best training in the world," Lisk said.
Goodbye Grads!
Tim!!
Congratulations, sweetie!
You did it! I am so proud of you!
The sky is your limit -
Love Always, Amy
Alpha Chi Omega Graduates:
Congratulations and Good Luck!
We'll miss you!
Alpha Chi Love,
Your Sisters
The Kansan news staff would like to congratulate the following seniors:
things you'll need to remember, while trying to resist the Nike temptation up there in your patch of the cornfield, Seth.
First, overflowing with the bathtub is not a customary way to "meet" your neighbors. Second, when you're in a great steak just go down to your local Denny's or Sirloin Stockade, as you saw how yourts turned out! Third, check the bathroom signs before entering. Reel it to that type of interest. Fourth, running and baseball are meant for fitness and fun, not for, well, you know who. Fifth, don't forget to find out where parks in Ames close; how old are you anyway and are you of your own free will? Now, last but not least, when talking to new people, always remember to ask where they are from, if they know so and so, and then end the conversation with a friend Bye Now! I can't believe you're actually done.
Congratulations.
I love you, slovak. Love, targe.
Heather Kirkwood Scott MacWilliams Tom Erickson Joann Birk Robert Allen Christoph Furmans Josh Yancey Amanda Traxler Hannah Naughton
STEAK
GO NEWSIES!! (Wish as lack at next year's softball game!)
@
From, Emily, Brian & Jed Bunny!
We are so proud of you. You are ABSOLUTEly the greatest. Congratulations, we love you!
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
Debbi-
Barnes- In the past 4 years, you have accomplished more than others will in a lifetime. I wish you all the luck in the future and thank you for your friendship, support, and laughter.
Congratulations! -Niehaus
Congratulations Graduates!
Before you graze the fields of success,
steer yourself over to Don's for the
Best Steak Dinner In Town!
- Big Savory Steaks
- Garden Fresh Salads
- Home-Made Twice-Baked Potatoes
- Excellent Wines
2176 E 23rd Street • 843-1110
Plenty of room, so you won't have to wait long for a tablet. Home-owned and operated for 30 years.
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
The Kansan advertising staff wishes our graduating addies Congratulations and Good Luck!
Mike Bell
Debbie Greenfield
Norm Bilow
Heather Niehaus
T.J. Clark
Monish Good
Robin Richardson
Caren Crockett
Brigg Bloomquist
Tom Simon
Matt Shaw
Chris Hartwick
Keith Rogers
Tina Gibbs
Good luck Tri-Delta Seniors
Tammy Alwes
Brooke Bagley
Cari Coleman
Sue Cooper
Jill Couch
Nancy Dodik
Michelle Dowdy
Elise Edmonds
Beth Fry
Joy Goldberg
Karen Hardinger
Julie Hillard
Amanda Hostetler
Holly Hoy
Brooke Karch
Julie Kassik
Kim Koerperich
Darci Larson
We'll Miss You!
Amy McCoach
Stephanie McDonnel
Anne McFarland
Amy Nelson
Melinda Nowlin
Clare O'Malley
Melissa Pinnel
Jean Pinne
Malia Riddell
Megan Sears
Fran Skikne
Becky Splitgerber
Anne Teaford
Becky Sapinski
Tina Thibault
Christiane Watkins
Kristen Wells
We Will Miss You!
To Shawdog, B-Man, and Dannyboy.
brother Matt,
brother Chris,
So here's to all the brothers who are with us tonight. They're happy, they're jolly, they're horny, by golly. So here's to all the brothers who are with us tonight.
n, and Dannyboy,
Cheers!
Thank you boys, for being such wonderful friends. You have no idea how much you mean to me. Not only did you share your lives with me, but you became a part of mine. You danced with me, you sang to me. And hoy, you taught me to drink beer. I love you all, and good luck in all you do. So here's to our last few great nights. Love always, Sister Shelly
Trisha Fenwick
Dana Hess
Jenni Ross
Drue Nelson
Lavifer Gisi
Amy Mauch
Courtney Campbell
Laticia Bryant
Kourtney Gallander
Stacie Cole
The Members of Alpha Gamma Delta would like to wish the Best Of Luck to all who are moving on next semester:
Tiffany Crawford Heather Short Erin Baumgartner Jami White Jenna March Susan Deady Jennifer Addington Susan Murdock Stephanie Fitch
Love,
Your Sisters
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